I’m intrigued to discover that historically, for thousands of years in fact, various cultures have celebrated the birth of the sun, and sun deities like Isis and Apollo, on the fourth day after the winter solstice. That’s 25th December when daylight in the northern hemisphere is just perceptibly longer and the darkness slightly less dense.
So wherever and however you are, and whether you like to celebrate the birth of the Sun, or the birth of the Son...or anything else, or nothing...I wish you all a Very Healthy, Peaceful and Merry Midwinter! ❤️
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The church bosses were very handy at matching Christian feasts to existing ones - that's where our rather terrifying traditions here in the Alps came from (makes Black Pieter in Holland look quite cuddly) and the ubiquitous eggs for Easter...
ha ha, there is much ado about *zwarte piet* ( black peter ) since quite e few of our new citizens want us to stop with the tradition. So we had yellow and green Piets looking strange. Now Piet has carbon stripes as a compromise.
What a wonderful post. Captures our celebrations from another angle. Looking forward to marking many more winter and summer solstices moving forward. Hoping your holidays are filled with joy and peace.
Very nice idea, attuned to nature and a larger world of ritual. Perfect for those of us who do not celebrate Christmas. Thank you. May you heal sooner than the summer solstice!
I also learned that the traditional Yule Log would have been a whole tree trunk, big enough to burn for the full 12 days/nights (to Jan 5th) and then the last little bit of it would be saved as kindling to light the new one the following year.
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