Month: October 2012

  • History of Halloween.........

     


    Where did Halloween come from?

     

    halloween18 

    On October 31st, you will likely see witches, ghosts, goblins, skeletons, demons, and other evil characters knocking at your door and hollering "trick or treat", and they will expect a treat or you will be tricked. There will be parties where kids (and even adults) bob for apples, tell fortunes, or go through haunted houses. There will be decorations of jack-o-lanterns, witches on brooms, and black cats. It is the only day of the year when we give free food to strangers and display carved vegetables on our front porches.  . . .when you really think about it, October 31st is a very strange day . . .Where did we get this celebration called Halloween?

     

    Halloween’s origins date back to the ancient Celts, who lived 2,000 years ago, in what is now Ireland, Great Britain and Northern France. The Celts were pagan nature worshippers who had many gods, including the sun, which they believed commanded their work and rest times. They believed the sun maintained the earth and kept it beautiful, and caused their crops to grow.

    The Celts observed their new year on November 1, which marked the end of the harvest and summer (“the season of the sun”), as well as the beginning of the cold, dark winter ahead (“the season of darkness and cold”). 

    From October 31 to November 2, the Celts celebrated a 48-hour festival, the Vigil of Samhain (pronounced “sow-in”).  Though if you were in the Scottish Highlands, the name would be ‘sav-en’, or in Wales, ‘sow-een’. 

    bonfire

    Celtic legends tell us that on this night, all the hearth fires in Ireland were extinguished, and then re-lit from the central fire of the Druids at Tlachtga, 12 miles from the royal hill of Tara.  (The Druids were the learned class among the Celts. They were religious priests who also acted as judges, lawmakers, poets, scholars, and scientists.) Upon this sacred bonfire the Druids burned animals and crops.  The extinguishing of the hearth fires symbolized the "dark half" of the year. The re-kindling from the Druidic fire was symbolic of the returning life that was hoped for in the spring.

     

    In the Celtic belief system, turning points, such as the time between one day and the next, the meeting of sea and shore, or the turning of one year into the next were seen as magical times. The turning of the year was the most potent of these times. This was the time when the "veil between the worlds" was at its thinnest, and the dead could communicate with the living.

    The Celts believed that when people died, they went to a land of eternal youth and happiness called Tir nan Og. They did not have the concept of heaven and hell that the Christian church later brought into the land. The dead were sometimes believed to be dwelling with the Fairy Folk, who lived in the numerous mounds or sidhe (pron. "shee") that dotted the Irish and Scottish countryside.

     

    halloween

     

    The Celts did not actually have demons and devils in their belief system. Some Christians describe Halloween as a festival in which the Celts sacrificed human beings to the devil or some evil demonic god of death. This is not accurate. The Celts did believe in gods, giants, monsters, witches, spirits, and elves, but these were not considered evil, so much as dangerous. The fairies, for example, were often considered hostile and menacing to humans because they were seen as being resentful of men taking over their lands. On this night of Samhain, the fairies would sometimes trick humans into becoming lost in the fairy mounds, where they would be trapped forever.

     

    Folk tradition tells us of some divination practices associated with Samhain. Among the most common were divinations dealing with marriage, weather, and the coming fortunes for the year. These were performed via such methods as ducking for apples and apple peeling. Ducking for apples was a marriage divination. The first person to bite an apple would be the first to marry in the coming year -- like the modern toss of the wedding bouquet. Apple peeling was a divination to see how long your life would be. The longer the unbroken apple peel, the longer your life was destined to be. In Scotland, people would place stones or nuts in the ashes of the hearth before retiring for the night. Anyone whose stone had been disturbed during the night was said to be destined to die during the coming year.

     

    By A.D 43, Romans had conquered the majority of Celtic territory.  In the course of the four hundred years that they ruled the Celtic land, two festivals of Roman origin were combined with traditional Celtic celebration of Samhain.

     

    The first was Feralia, a day in late October when the Romans traditionally commemorated the passing of the dead.  The second was a day to honor Pomona, the Roman Goddess of fruit and trees.  The symbol of Pomona is the apple and the incorporation of this celebration into Samhain probably explains the tradition of “bobbing” for apples that in practiced today on Halloween.

     

    Jack-o-LanternShining

     

    By the 800s, the influence of Christianity had spread into Celtic lands. In the seventh century, Pope Boniface IV designated November 1 All Saints' Day, a time to honor saints and martyrs. It is widely believed today that the pope was attempting to replace the Celtic festival of the dead with a related, but church-sanctioned holiday. The celebration was also called All-hallows or All-hallowmas (from Middle English Alholowmesse meaning All Saints' Day) and the night before it, the night of Samhain, began to be called All-hallows Eve and, eventually, Halloween. Even later, in A.D. 1000, the church would make November 2 All Souls' Day, a day to honor the dead. It was celebrated similarly to Samhain, with big bonfires, parades, and dressing up in costumes as saints, angels, and devils. Together, the three celebrations, the eve of All Saints', All Saints', and All Souls', were called Hallowmas.

     

    America did not celebrate Halloween until 1910, more on this at a later date………….

     

    TrickorTreat-DR


     

     

  • The scent of memories.....

     


     

    Memories, imagination, old sentiments, and associations are more readily reached through the sense of smell than through any other channel. – Oliver Wendell Holmes

     

    Smells awakened my memories today. I can smell the wood smoke lingering outside somewhere, reminding me of my childhood, a fireplace warming my family home, as the smoke rose from the chimney on a chilly late-autumn afternoon. Then my mind swirls and it brings to mind campfires, happy times, kids gathering, laughing, flash lights in hand, telling ghost stories. Once again, I sniff the haunting odor of the fiery flora and my mind shifts to beyond this season, I can sense the season to come. The smell of damp wool, wet mittens with icy cuffs, snowballs, hot chocolate and marshmallows. Memories of my son apple-cheeked, smiling, excited for the coming holiday season, he and his friends coming in and out of the sub-zero cold in our home in Wisconsin.

     

     

     

    Ours noses can teach us as much about life as any book. Be alert to the smells in the air that can trigger your memories, and make you feel a live and blessed.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Autumn light brightly shines,

     

    The harvest moon upon the rise.

     

    Twilight lingers in the trees.

     

    Memories of moonlight echo through thee.

     

    Fallen leaves clothe the earth.

     

    Small protection from winter’s coming birth.

     

    The air smells crisply of nature’s breath.

     

    Consuming all life in icy death.

     

    The time of magick life appears

     

    As the witching hour slowly nears

     

     

     

     

     Blessings, Lady of Avalon


     

  • Tree of Life and Love

     


     

     

    Atop the highest mountaintop,
    above the timberline,
    there exists an ancient weathered tree
    that lives in eternal time.

    With boughs that brush the heavens,
    and roots in solid stone,
    it casts a healing shadow
    that makes a heart atone.

    It's a tree of eternal magick
    that was made by Heaven's design
    it provides both shade and shelter
    to those weary from their climb.

    To touch it is life changing,
    for it's the Tree Of Life and Love!
    It heals a heart forever
    with power from above.

    To find it is worth the labor,
    and worth the ardent climb,
    for it grants true love that never
    forsakes one throughout all Life times.


     

    My first post back in a very long time.  I dedicate it to my Tree of Life, my Love...something I have dedicated part of my life to...

    The Living Tree Company

    We now have t-shirts.  If you register as a customer, I will give you a discounted price.

    Until Friday......Blessings to all from the Lady of Avalon