Wednesday, December 20, 2006
winter solstice
Today is the shortest day of the year. A wonderful chance to consider the long shadow you cast in the sunlight of mid-day. An opportunity to notice the light that might exist in darkness ... and how you will find that light and turn it on.
From today's Writer's Almanac email:
In the northern hemisphere, today is the Winter Solstice, the shortest day of the year and the longest night. It's officially the first day of winter and one of the oldest known holidays in human history. Anthropologists believe that solstice celebrations go back at least 30,000 years, before humans even began farming on a large scale. Many of the most ancient stone structures made by human beings were designed to pinpoint the precise date of the solstice. The stone circles of Stonehenge were arranged to receive the first rays of midwinter sun.
I'd love to make a stone structure to do the very same thing.
We treat our dogs, cats, and horses on the evening of the solstice, and we also gift the wilder animals that share space with us. Deer and the birds, others we rarely see, like opossum and raccoon. Walking the perimeter of our property with candles in the dark of night is one of my favorite walks all year long.
Inside, we enjoy a special meal, open a family gift, and spend time together with music. I often think how affected we are by the shortening of daylight, and how many of our phrases associated with struggle and despair use images of night and morning. The long dark night of the soul. In the light of day. The sun will come up tomorrow. Etc.
Many solstice rituals focus on celebrating the lengthening of the days following the solstice, but I think the longest night is a reason to celebrate all on its own. The longest night is a wonderful time to string lights everywhere, light candles, build a fire, snuggle in with books, music, pets, children, one another. A long quiet night to let all things creative simmer and come to the surface. The perfect time to write down the thing you want to let go of or leave behind as the light of dawn approaches. We write ours down on slips of paper and burn them, and on New Year's Eve we take the christmas tree out, make a bonfire, and do it again, just in case there's something we forgot. :)
Two poems we always read out loud as part of our solstice ritual:
The Shortest Day
So the shortest day came and the year died,
And everywhere, down the centuries of the snow-white world came people
Singing - dancing - to drive the dark away.
They lighted candles in the winter trees.
They hung their homes with evergreens.
And burned beseeching fires all night long to keep the year alive.
And when the new day sunshine blazed awake,
They shouted "Reveille!"
Through all across the ages you can hear them - echoing behind us.
Listen.
All the long echoes sing the same delight, this shortest day.
As promise wakens in the sleeping land,
They carol - feast - give thanks and dearly love their friends
And hope for peace.
And so do we - here now - this year - and every year.
Susan Cooper
Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound's the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.
Robert Frost
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
tagged: the five things you don't know about me
Peggy Payne over at her Boldness Blog has tagged me. So here goes, the five things you don't know about me:
1. I am pretty darned clueless about computers and blogging. I had to look up what tagged even meant.
2. I don't know how to make something in this post a link, making it difficult to tag anyone else!
3. My husband is not only a landscape photographer but a brilliant software architect, so he might be able to teach me.
4. This came up the other night while we were eating dinner here at home: I was once a baton twirler who also twirled fire.
5. I once aspired (for a relatively brief period in my life) to become Jon Bon Jovi's hair stylist and go on tour with him.
So!
Time to tag people:
http://drachenthrax.blogspot.com/
http://teacupmantis.blogspot.com/
http://thedarksalon.blogspot.com/
And the SIXTH thing you don't know about me: if I really try, I can figure almost anything out. :)
1. I am pretty darned clueless about computers and blogging. I had to look up what tagged even meant.
2. I don't know how to make something in this post a link, making it difficult to tag anyone else!
3. My husband is not only a landscape photographer but a brilliant software architect, so he might be able to teach me.
4. This came up the other night while we were eating dinner here at home: I was once a baton twirler who also twirled fire.
5. I once aspired (for a relatively brief period in my life) to become Jon Bon Jovi's hair stylist and go on tour with him.
So!
Time to tag people:
http://drachenthrax.blogspot.com/
http://teacupmantis.blogspot.com/
http://thedarksalon.blogspot.com/
And the SIXTH thing you don't know about me: if I really try, I can figure almost anything out. :)
Monday, December 18, 2006
bling-bling
Recently on another blog, I commented that I have an odd repulsion to the word "bling-bling." I wondered where the word came from, and why everyone seems to be using it. Today the answer found its way to my email inbox:
bling-bling (bling-bling) noun
Expensive, flashy jewelry or other items.
[From hip-hop slang, apparently imitative of the sounds of
the clanging jewelry, or of the light reflecting from them.]
I am not much of a hip-hop fan. I like the idea that the word is imitative of the sound of the jewelry it describes, or the light reflecting. But there are other, better words. Clinquant, for one:
clinquant (KLING-kuhnt) adjective
Glittering, especially with gold or tinsel.
noun
Tinsel; glitter.
[From French, present participle of obsolete clinquer (to clink),
from Dutch klinken (to clink).]
The main place I come face-to-face with "bling-bling" is in the tack shop, where it has latched itself on to halters, bridles, stirrups, stock ties, riding crops and whips, even spurs.
I love sparkly things. I love the way the sun sparkles on still water. The sun glittering through newly green leaves. A horse's coat that shimmers in the sun.
I do NOT, however, want fake jewels on my riding attire, or my tack. Give me good well-oiled leather, plain, and nice fabrics without piping or insignia.
There was a beloved vintage dress once, discovered in the bottom drawer of a dresser in a junk shop, that came from Paris and had tiny mirrors and sequins sewn into the bodice. The skirt was voluminous and made of a rich merlot fabric that was iridescent. The entire dress shimmered. I loved that dress, and wore it for signature occasions through a number of years.
It is gone now, and thank goodness, because if I wore it and anyone said the word "bling-bling" something, although I'm not exactly sure what, would be ruined.
Thought for the day: words have great power.
bling-bling (bling-bling) noun
Expensive, flashy jewelry or other items.
[From hip-hop slang, apparently imitative of the sounds of
the clanging jewelry, or of the light reflecting from them.]
I am not much of a hip-hop fan. I like the idea that the word is imitative of the sound of the jewelry it describes, or the light reflecting. But there are other, better words. Clinquant, for one:
clinquant (KLING-kuhnt) adjective
Glittering, especially with gold or tinsel.
noun
Tinsel; glitter.
[From French, present participle of obsolete clinquer (to clink),
from Dutch klinken (to clink).]
The main place I come face-to-face with "bling-bling" is in the tack shop, where it has latched itself on to halters, bridles, stirrups, stock ties, riding crops and whips, even spurs.
I love sparkly things. I love the way the sun sparkles on still water. The sun glittering through newly green leaves. A horse's coat that shimmers in the sun.
I do NOT, however, want fake jewels on my riding attire, or my tack. Give me good well-oiled leather, plain, and nice fabrics without piping or insignia.
There was a beloved vintage dress once, discovered in the bottom drawer of a dresser in a junk shop, that came from Paris and had tiny mirrors and sequins sewn into the bodice. The skirt was voluminous and made of a rich merlot fabric that was iridescent. The entire dress shimmered. I loved that dress, and wore it for signature occasions through a number of years.
It is gone now, and thank goodness, because if I wore it and anyone said the word "bling-bling" something, although I'm not exactly sure what, would be ruined.
Thought for the day: words have great power.
Friday, December 15, 2006
gifts from above
Yesterday a squirrel fell from the sky and landed quite literally at my feet. (no harm was done, as he took off when Keats the cat came running to check him out)
Then the great runic X appeared.
This morning a mysterious seed fell from nowhere onto the dining room floor. I saw it land and heard the tiny click as it hit the hardwoods. I have soaked and planted it to see what grows.
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
intention
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