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Horizons Magazine, Spiritual Solutions For Florida Since 1992
Andrea de Michaelis, Publisher
Donate a dollar if we feed your spirit Three Fall Equinox Rituals
RITUAL NO. 1
In nature, the Fall Equinox marks the beginning of the new year. While most of us have a different It's worth taking some time to prepare for the arrival of the equinox. Through the personal ritual we will develop here you can help align your life goals with the energies of the equinox. Here's what to do. By answering the following four questions you will help focus your Fall Equinox ritual. 1. What new things have happened in the last year that you are happy with and want to keep in your life? This can include people coming into your life. 2. What is currently present in your life that you are relatively happy about, but you would prefer to be working better or flowing more abundantly? 3. What have you been working on that has not yet manifested (shown up) for you? 4. What is not in your life that you would like to be, but that you have not yet begun to actively work on?
Work on these questions for a few days, it can take a little time for us to think through each of them thoroughly. You're more than welcome to do anything you wish during the arrival period of the equinox. There is no right or wrong to this. Formalizing the Written Exercise: On a fresh piece of paper incorporate your answers to the four questions above with Items #1-4 below. The statements in quotations can be used either as a guideline or said word for word during your equinox ritual. #1: Give thanks for everything you listed in your answer to the first question by saying: "I am grateful for ______________" (then recount what you wrote as your answer to this question). #2: Look through your response to question number two: What is currently present in your life that you are relatively happy about, but you would prefer to be working better or flowing more abundantly? and list those situations and/or relationships in order of their priority. Then say, "I loving ask that __________ (read your list aloud) flow more abundantly into my life." #3: Give your answer to question number three beginning with what is most important to you: What have you been working on that has not yet manifested for you? and say: "I ask that ______________ (state your response) enter my life." #4: Take your answer to question number four: What is not in your life that you would like to be, but that you have not yet begun to actively work on? and say: "I ask for guidance and courage to bring ____________ (state your answer) into my life experience." By following this format, you help clarifying where you would like to be headed over the next twelve months. Nature is not in the position of granting requests. We simply join with the energetic impulse of the Fall Equinox to help improve the forward movement of our lives. Through asking, we formally inform ourselves of exactly what is important to us, and we let that be amplified by the shift in seasonal energy present at the moment of the equinox. At the moment of the equinox you may wish to light a candle and sit quietly for several minutes before you read through Items #1-4. If you would like to incorporate other elements into your ritual, please do so. For the Fall Equinox earth elements like soil, leaves, and harvest from your garden (if you have one) work very well, but follow your intuition and add what seems right to you. After your candle is lit and you feel ready, go through Items #1-4 at your own pace. Of course, it will make everything easier if your prepare this second part in advance. Once you finish reading aloud what you have written, you may find that you want to keep talking. If so, go right ahead and say whatever comes to your mind and do whatever you are motivated to do. There is no need to feel self-conscious. Nature will fully support and deeply appreciate your work with this and every equinox and solstice event. from http://www.michaelkane.org/FallEquinoxP1.htm
RITUAL NO. 2
Plan a meal that uses seasonal and symbolic fruits and vegetables. You can serve bread, squash, corn, apples, cider and wine. Drawing on the imagery of the Eleusinian Mysteries, hold up an ear of corn in silence. Or cut open a pomegranate and feed each other the seeds. The following poem (used by Starhawk in the equinox ritual in The Spiral Dance) comes from Mother Goose. Use this or make up your own variation as a grace. Have everyone at the feast repeat this, adding their own thanks:
We have sown, we have tended - We have grown, we have gathered - We have reaped a good harvest
Giving Thanks
Creating Balance
Learning and Creating This is a good time to begin new projects. As the nights lengthen, you have more time to be alone, to concentrate, to nurture a seed which may not blossom until spring. Give yourself permissions to try something absolutely new. Take a class that teaches you how to do something you've always wanted to do--maybe basket-making Call your local college and ask about community education classes. In Starhawk's Autumn Equinox ritual, there is a time for weaving seed pods, shells, feathers and small pine cones into strands of yarn while thinking of what you want to create in your life. This or some variation of it would make a wonderful group activity or family project. You could also just set aside a certain amount of time (an evening, a Saturday) which is creative time, for you to make anything you want.
Source: Starhawk, The Spiral Dance, Harper San Francisco 1983 RITUAL NO. 3
Celebrate the Autumn Equinox
Mother of Darkness, Mother of Light No matter who we are or where our people came from, our ancestors had many magical ways of honoring the autumn equinox, when the day and night are of equal length and the world finds balance for a breath of time. After this equinox the nights grow longer than the days, so it is traditionally a time to look inward, take stock, give thanks for the harvest, and prepare for the time of dreaming. Give some real time and thought to your own harvests over the past year. What did you learn? What did you do? How have you grown, deepened, or changed? What were the major events or accomplishments you would like to honor? In a world that is often so terribly out of balance, it can be both healing and heartening to celebrate this special time. Taking time to honor your own inner harvests-all the things you have achieved and felt and learned from, over the past months-is a lovely way to connect with this time of year. Make a Dream Pillow: Autumn means longer nights and more opportunities to dream. How lovely! Help to deepen your dreams with these simple-to-make dream pillows: Start with two seven-inch squares of fabric, natural, non-synthetic materials preferred (cotton or silk velvet is lovely and traditional). Pin the right sides together and stitch 1/2-inch from the edges on three sides. Turn right side out and fill with about 2 cups of any combination of the following dried herbs, each associated with sounder sleep, deeper dreams, or better dream-recall: Hops, lavender flowers, mugwort, rosemary, rose petals Stitch the remaining side closed. To use, tuck the dream pillow underneath your regular sleeping pillow. At bedtime, turn your regular pillow over so you breathe in the fragrance of the herbs all night long. Find Your Balance Exercise: 1. Stand quietly with your feet shoulder-width apart, knees flexed, and your eyes closed. What is your body doing? Is it still and rooted, or does it need to sway or adjust in order to be fully balanced? Give yourself a moment to come into balance. 2. Now raise your arms and try to hold them open, stretched out to the sides, for a few moments. Feel how difficult it is. Now begin a gentle movement, bringing your hands in toward your chest, then out again to the sides, a rhythmic motion of opening and closing like the beating of a bird's wings. Feel what a relief it is to have the balance of both motions, both open and closed. Now give some deep thought to the beauty of the balance between day and night, activity and rest. How can you honor your own need for balance? By Cait Johnson, co-author of Celebrating the Great Mother (Inner Traditions, 1995). From http://www.care2.com/greenliving/celebrate-the-autumn-equinox.html# |