Welcome, Returning Light!

The winter solstice “occurs exactly when the Earth’s axial tilt is farthest away from the sun at its maximum of 23° 26′. Though the winter solstice lasts only a moment in time, the term is also a turning point to midwinter and the first day of winter.”

That moment will occur this afternoon, December 21st, at 4:23pm Central Time (which is my time zone), also known as UTC 22:23.

Happy Winter Solstice!

In many parts of the northern hemisphere, winter brings snow. And what better way to enjoy snow than to delight in our furry and feathered friends frolicking in the frozen flakiness.

(Don’t forget to hover over each photo.*)

And finally … there ‘snow better way to say it …


Happy Holidays to All!

The winter solstice or midwinter is one of the eight pagan festivals or “sabbats” from the Wheel of the Year. It is a “quarter day” along with the equinoxes and the summer solstice. The Solstice Night brings celebration as our ancestors awaited the return of the sun to warm the frozen Earth. To all my pagan and non-pagan friends: “Bright Blessings on Solstice and may the warmth of the returning sun bring you great joy and hope”.


Snowhenge

Happy Solstice and Welcome Back Sunlight!

Music by Lisa Thiel
Video by Ephesius wicca

LYRICS:

Chorus:
Enter the night and you’ll find the light,
That will carry you to your dreams.
Enter the night, let your spirit take flight,
In the field of infinite possibilities

On the longest night we search for the light,
And we find it deep within.
Open your eyes to embrace what is wise,
And see the light of your own soul shining.

(Chorus)
Wrap up in the cloak of starry darkness my child,
And you’ll find the center of all things.
For from this space of the deepest dark place,
Life Eternal does spring.

(Chorus)
So when you find that spark
When you dream in the dark,
Hold it close to your heart and know.
All that you see is all that can be
When you give birth to the dreams of your soul.

(Chorus)

(This is a rerun, with revised dates and times, because the holidays – and their celebratory posts – are on an infinite loop … or more precisely, the Wheel of The Year.) ;)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*Hover text for those on Tablets and iPads:
Seasons: “Yes, this is Northern Hemisphere Centric – so am I!”
Axial Tilt Message: “Happy Holidays!”
Penguin Parent and Baby: “Cute penguin talisman protects any post from FAIL”
Squirrel in the Snow: “Nuts to this!”
St. Bernard on Snowy Road: “What kind of rescue dog forgets to bring his grog???”
Dog’s Face Sticking Out of Snowbank: “Please don’t make me come in …”
Bunny Sniffing Snowman’s Carrot Nose: “Who nose how this will turn out?”
Black Bunny Looking Askance: “Basement bunny senses trouble”
Goats Running Down a Snowy Hill: “Levitating … actually quite easy if you are a mountain goat”
Sheep With Snowy Face: “‘Blinded by the White'”
Cat Outside The Back Door Looking In: “There is NOTHING funny about this. NOTHING.”
Cat Leaping With Snowball: “I’ve got it … I’ve got it!”

4 Comments

  1. Sunny Solstice, meeses!

    Remember that the light is always within us even when we are enveloped in what seems like permanent darkness.

  2. Thank you, Jan. Happy Yule! To you and the rest of the Meeses I say “YOU are the Light of the World” – I am blessed with your friendship. We are walking in the growing Light together. Although we are facing the coldest part of the year the Light we bring will lead us through it. Blessed Be.

  3. Thank you Jan. Once again……

    On the longest night we search for the light,
    And we find it deep within.
    Open your eyes to embrace what is wise,
    And see the light of your own soul shining.

    • Thank you, Jan, I was eager to read this before the year ended and now that “IT” (Christmas) is over, I just did!

      Those are great hovers, and I love the photos! Winter has its own peculiar charm, as long as one doesn’t get too much of it—meaning that one can stay cosily inside when it’s snowing outside—and I do love clear winter skies and unobstructed views.

      I also love being here at the Moose Pond. In a time of tribulation it’s a comforting, welcoming place to be. Thank you for providing it for us.

Comments are closed.