The Fall Equinox Approaches!

To cap off our summer, we can revel in another triumph of human achievement, the soft landing of the Vikram Lunar Lander near the South Pole of the Moon!  It’s hard to overstate the magnitude of this accomplishment – the Moon has no atmosphere to slow a lander, so a soft landing is very, very hard.  Harder than one on Mars, for instance – even though the moon is thousands of times closer to us. 

Not only did India succeed in a soft landing on the Moon (only the 4th nation ever do to so  – joining the Soviet Union, the United States, and China), but it’s the first near the Moon’s South Pole!  Plus, the Pragyan rover successfully carried out a bunch of scientific experiments, travelling over 100 meters, and the mission already accomplished all of it’s goals!  We’ll see next week if it survived the deadly lunar night, with temperatures hundreds of degrees below zero, lasting for 14 days.

Whoever you are (from India or not), I hope your summer was good. We are now approaching Mabon, the Fall Equinox already!  Here are some online ritual opportunities, and below that, Fall Equinox celebration ideas.  Plus, the growing darkness brings many changes to our lives – the feel of the fleeting day, the urgency of preparations for winter, and more time to see the wonders of our sky.  That sky has greater potential now for auroras with sunspot cycle 25 roaring to life. 

In the Northern Hemisphere, the Fall Equinox is celebrated soon (it is September 23rd this year) as Mabon, also called Harvest Home.  (Those in the Southern Hemisphere celebrate the Spring Equinox, Ostara, at this time.)

 Fall Equinox Celebrations

First, here are some online opportunities for those of us without a local Pagan group (whether a member or a visitor).  Wow, there are a lot of them already (some additional ones from OBOD – https://www.facebook.com/druidry– and practical Magic – https://www.facebook.com/practicalmagicstore, seem likely)!  For any of them, please be sure to check well in advance – some require registration ahead of time.

17-Sep 19:00 Wyoming Valley CUUPs https://www.facebook.com/wvcuups/posts/pfbid02hDqRsmwrATera1Xiexua1NRTAeMKDRuaZ4forhhWmLCLwshpgwbjwwY8Uch34geAl
17-Sep 11:00 AM EDT Phoenix of the Grove – Mabon Service Livestream https://www.uujackson.org/services/equinox-fruits-of-the-harvest/
22-Sep Anytime you want John Beckett https://www.youtube.com/user/mircea142
23-Sep 2:30 am EDT Seawyld yoga https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/equinox-co-creating-ceremony-and-meditation-tickets-715273090067?aff=erelexpmlt
23-Sep 5:00 pm CMT? Druids of the Light https://druidsofthelight.org
23-Sep 8:00 PM EDT Covenant of Earth and Sky CUUPs  https://www.facebook.com/events/1516237065873582/?acontext=%7B%22event_action_history%22%3A[]%7D
23-Sep 9:15 PM EDT Southern Arizona CUUPS https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=285534457566459&set=a.131627916290448

Growing Darkness……

Mike Nichols writes of the day: “Mythically, this is the day of the year when the God of Light is defeated by his twin and alter ego, the God of Darkness. It is the time of the year when night conquers day.” The metaphor for the natural solar cycle is perfectly clear, and easily appreciable by naturalists – as is the promise included within the metaphor that the darkness is temporary, and the light will return.  Likewise with the agricultural myth of John Barleycorn, personification of the ripened grain:

“Often this corn spirit was believed to reside most especially in the last sheaf or shock harvested, which was dressed in fine clothes, or woven into a wicker-like man-shaped form. This effigy was then cut and carried from the field, and usually burned, amidst much rejoicing.”

Bart Everson observes that the autumnal equinox gets short-shrift in our culture because of our aversion to death:

“Perhaps that’s why this equinox seems like such a blindspot in the American imagination. Themes of loss and darkness don’t fit well with the national narrative.

“Yet there is much to celebrate, if we aspire to a full and comprehensive vision of what it means to be human on this planet. The metaphors of the equinox can work for us, if are open to the possibility. …

“This might be a time for drawing in, for gathering together. The equinox can be a time for reflection, for making changes and starting projects, for setting priorities and recognizing intentions. … For truly darkness and loss, though they present challenges, are not to be feared if we can only gain adequate perspective.

Bart has also put together a great playlist of Mabon/Equinox-themed music.

Celebrations

Glenys Livingstone of PaGaian Cosmology, celebrates this as a time of abundance and thanksgiving, but also of loss.  She associates it with the myth of Persephone’s descent into the underworld, ritually enacting a moment of “letting go”. “Demeter” goes to each participant:

”(name), I give you the wheat – the Mystery – the knowledge of life and death. I let you go as Daughter (Child/Mabon), most loved of Mine … you descend to Wisdom, to Sovereignty. You will return as Mother, co-Creator with me. You are the Seed in the Fruit, becoming the Fruit in the Seed. Inner Wisdom guides your path.”

Response: “It is so. I am Daughter (Child/Mabon), becoming Mother – Seed becoming Fruit. I am deepening into/descend to, Wisdom, into Sovereignty. The Mother knowledge grows within me.”

[PaGaian Mabon 2009]

NaturalPantheist of the Nature is Sacred blog recites the following from ADF Solitary Druid Fellowship ritual on this day:

“As I stand here on this celebration of Harvest Home, the Autumnal Equinox, the sacred wheel of the year continues to turn. As my ancestors did in times before and my descendants may do in times to come, I honour the old ways. Today is the day of balance, of equal light and dark. The sun has begun to wane while the nights grow steadily longer and the weather becomes cooler. We head towards winter. It is the time of the second harvest, the harvest of fruits, of apples, nuts and grapes. Change is all around. The leaves are turning beautiful colours, the birds are preparing for migration and the squirrels are gathering their foods for winter. I give thanks for the abundant gifts of the Earth Mother.”gourds

Áine Órga describes the equinox as the beginning of a period of psychological release:

“As the Autumn Equinox marks the second harvest festival on the wheel of the year, like Lughnasadh it represents a time of retrospection, appraisal, and gratitude. But although Lughnasadh was primarily about gratitude for me this year – a time of abundance and joy – the Autumn Equinox very definitely marks the turning point into the dark part of the year, and as such it also signals a time of release and introspection.

“At Samhain, I will fully submit to the dark of winter, fully releasing everything that needs to be released this year as I turn twenty-five. The Autumn Equinox, for me, begins the work of this descent into the dark. I start to assess and let go of what is no longer working.”

Jon Cleland Host of the Naturalistic Paganism yahoo group describes how his family observes Mabon:

“Fall harvest décor is appropriate, with dried cornstalks, squash, gourds, Indian corn, etc.  The social aspect of our lives is highlighted by this harvest theme – a time when friends and family get together for the harvest.  …

“Dinner will of course have a harvest theme, including squash, homemade bread, cranberry sauce, etc.  …  One part of the ritual is often the pouring of a little wine at the base of the trees in our yard as thanks for the summer shade and the coming fall colors.  We also have a harvest party – this year will be our 18th annual Equinox party.”

Another great activity, courtesy of Jonathan Blake of the Naturalistic Paganism yahoo list, is measuring your latitude on the equinox using only the sun, a stick, and some basic calculations.

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Image credit: Wikimedia Commons user Tauʻolunga.

John Halstead and his family re-enact the passion of the Egyptian gods Isis and Osiris.  They gather grains of corn together, as Isis gathered the parts of her dismembered husband, and then bury an ear of corn wrapped in a black cloth, an effigy of the dying and rising god of the harvest.  John explains:

“In rituals like the one we will do today, we identify with the sacrificed God.  In doing so, we honor the circle of life.  Waxing and waning, birth and death, growth and decline: all take place in nature, in the human life cycle, and in the human soul.  Each stage is to be welcomed in its proper time and season, because life is a process of constant change.  When we identify with the god, we choose to surrender to the Cycle, to ride the Wheel that is the Goddess.”

This is an  updated version of the yearly Fall Equinox post.  Feel free to share  your own naturalistic celebrations below.

One Comment on “The Fall Equinox Approaches!

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