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Your Own Celebrations of Spring
Three months.
Three glorious months. After a
long cold winter, it comes just when you need it most: Spring.
We may not
realize it, but we spend 25% of our lifetime experiencing Spring. While many people mark the first day of
Spring with ritual, Spring itself is a ritual; it is a celebration that lasts
for three months. You already may be
celebrating the season in more ways than you think.
The Ghost of Springtimes Past
Keep a
journal? (Of course you do, even if it’s
in your head!) Page back through your
memoirs of last Spring. What was going
on in your life? What troubled you? What filled you with joy or kept you busy
during those months? What was life like
for you just a wheel’s turn ago? Now
page back even further, back into the memories of Springs long ago sprung. How many Springtimes back does your journal
go? Two, three, a dozen? Frolic through you own recollections of
things that took place in late March, April, May and early June. Do you see a pattern? Do similar challenges keep springing into
your life around this time of year? Look
at how your situation has changed since then, and see the progress you’ve made
over the seasons. Note both what has changed
and what has stayed constant. Now, after
looking back at your own life through your journal, look ahead at what you
might expect for this coming Spring?
Divination
If Springtime
looks ahead toward things to come, why not try doing a special form of
divination tailored for Spring? How
might divination methods vary with the seasons?
What method fits best for you, and with Springtime’s unique energy? In addition to the time-tested traditional
tools of divination, you might try using a few objects naturally associated
with Spring. Try using the seeds of
seasonal fruit, ones that are abundant in your area come Spring. Maybe you could scry into a bowl of water
collected from April showers? Or perhaps
use petals from the May flowers? (She
loves me; she loves me not…only a daisy knows for sure!)
Spring Rituals
Spring is a
time of looking ahead; it is full of promise for the Summer to come. Its gentle warmth is just a tease of Summer’s
heat. It’s the time where we look ahead and plan the outdoor events we savor. Ever notice that first sunny Spring day when
all the toys come out? People enjoy the
outdoor fun that they waited for all Winter long: riding the motorcycle, washing the car,
opening up the windows, walking barefoot and being free of sleeves and coats
and gloves. Springtime is freedom! If you live in a place that springs its
clocks ahead an hour, how do you spend that extra hour of daylight? See that hour as your own private celebration
of the season!
In addition
to play, Spring is often filled with its own unique work to prepare for the
coming season. Whether caring for a
simple garden, or tilling acres of farmland, Springtime is rooted in
preparation for Summer growth.
Spring
cleaning, a seasonal ritual in itself, can be a magical event. In addition to dusting out a year’s worth of
clutter, use your Spring cleaning to shed whatever emotional, physical or
spiritual baggage you no longer need.
Use this as a time to separate yourself from things you might not want
to “replant” within your life this coming season. You might shed a bad habit, or a few people
who hold you back. Don’t be afraid to
“pull a few weeds” this Spring…
Spring as a Rebirth
Many cultures
celebrate Spring as a rebirth, as a rejuvenation, where something or someone
springs back to life: Ostara, Easter,
and even wearing green on Saint Patrick’s Day (March 17th, near the first day
of Spring – when the Earth itself is about to start wearing green again too!) What do you look forward to rekindling this
Spring?
While you can
mark these formal holidays, you can also mark a few informal celebrations of
Spring. Students have Spring Break;
sports fans mark baseball’s Opening Day.
Even paying your income tax can be a celebration of Spring. Here in the US, once a year taxpayers square
their debt with Uncle Sam on April 15th.
See your taxes as a magical tool, channeling energy towards positive
social change, funding our schools, libraries, hospitals, protecting religious
freedom and fueling social progress. If
you have a refund coming this year, celebrate it as one of Spring’s many
gifts. (For numerologists, you might try
listening for a little message hidden in the exact numbers you see when you do
your taxes this Spring.)
Spring Activity Around Us
In the Spring,
we re-open our windows after shutting out Winter’s chill. We take the fresh Spring air into our homes
and lungs. Likewise, with these open
windows, we take in the sounds of the season too. The birds singing, the children playing outside,
the neighbors laughing – these are the sounds we missed when Winter’s windows
were shut tight!
Look
around. Springtime is a busy time. Nests are being rebuilt by those who flew
south for the Winter and now have migrated home. Leaves are sprouting, flowers blooming. But remember, the growth we see above the
Earth is a reflection of the less-visible growth that occurs beneath the
Earth. Once the soil thaws, it allows roots
to grow a tiny bit deeper and take in what they couldn’t during Winter’s deep
freeze. Sometimes it’s easier to
understand what you can see by looking beneath the surface, acknowledging the
things you cannot see.
We’re not all
that different from what we see out in the yard. In the Spring, we too change with the seasons. Where Winter keeps us indoors, looking
inwardly, Spring takes us outside, out of our homes and out of ourselves. Look at the trees -- their sap begins to run
again in the Spring. So do our own
creative juices. But unlike trees, we
are not physically, tangibly rooted.
Much of our essence is less tangible.
You can’t see our “roots” but they are there none the less. We hibernate when its cold; we spring back to
life when its warm. At the same time the
Earth paints Herself with color and anoints Herself with fragrance – we too are
breaking out our Spring wardrobe! As
reincarnated beings, our cycle of life is like the seasons. We too once sprang back to life, growing
until we peak and bloom. We eventually
wither and fall, to rest again for a Winter-like sleep, dreaming of things to
come the next time around…
But remember
that the seasons are regional. Not
everywhere in the world celebrates Spring when you do. When it’s Spring in the southern hemisphere,
it’s Autumn in the northern hemisphere.
Thus, the seasonal celebrations are often reversed as well, where most
people celebrate the first day of Spring on September 21 and Beltane on October
31. Earth is an extremely diverse place!
However you
celebrate the season, make this year’s Spring something special!
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