Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Happy Solstice!

We hope that today, and all the days that follow, will find you healthy, happy and hopeful. Although Solstice brings the longest night of the year, it also brings the assurance of days that grow longer and a new season that will arrive in 89 days, on March  20, 2022. For now we must keep hope warm on our hearths and in our hearts. I know, easier said than done, but this morning I found a quotation that helped ease my doom and gloom.

“Watching the morning break, I realize again that darkness doesn't kill the light—it defines it.” 
― Richard Wagamese, Embers: One Ojibway's Meditations

Winter Solstice 9:59 am 12/21/21
Winter Solstice: 9:59 am 12/21/21
Photo by J. Harrington

It’s been too long since I last read Embers. It’s now in the stack of books to begin reading next year, along with whatever may end up under the tree or in my stocking, plus Aldo Leopold’s A Sand County Almanac. That’s where Leopold writes about his concept of a Land Ethic.

Ethics direct all members of a community to treat one another with respect for the mutual benefit of all. A land ethic expands the definition of “community” to include not only humans, but all of the other parts of the Earth, as well: soils, waters, plants, and animals, or what Leopold called “the land.”

It’s the emphasis on community that I believe all of US need to be more attentive too. We have forgotten just how interdependent we are. Perhaps this winter, compounded by COVID-19 and its never-ending variants, plus the consequences of climate breakdown and loss of biodiversity, and supply chain disruptions, and related matters, will help US remember how much we need each other. If we do so, and act accordingly, perhaps spring will bring about a renewal of life that exceeds our current expectations. Wouldn’t that be a wonderful, if belated, Christmas present?


    The Shortest Day


    by Susan Cooper


    And so the Shortest Day came and the year died

    And everywhere down the centuries of the snow-white world

    Came people singing, dancing,

    To drive the dark away.

    They lighted candles in the winter trees;

    They hung their homes with evergreen;

    They burned beseeching fires all night long

    To keep the year alive.

    And when the new year’s sunshine blazed awake

    They shouted, reveling.

    Through all the frosty ages you can hear them

    Echoing behind us—listen!

    All the long echoes, sing the same delight,

    This Shortest Day,

    As promise wakens in the sleeping land:

    They carol, feast, give thanks,

    And dearly love their friends,

    And hope for peace.

    And now so do we, here, now,

    This year and every year.

    Welcome, Yule!




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