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Wabi Sabi

Wabi Sabi - space for silence, a place for the soul
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The Magic

This month, nature heals us

 

August, in all her sweltering heat and vibrant life, reaches out to revive us, like an old forgotten garden that had been left largely untended for the last ten years. At first, it may seem that much has died off in this time, but on closer inspection, there are buds and vines that are still alive. Nature, in all her maternal love, reaches out to us, to come back into communion with her. She invites us to reclaim the summers of the inner child, colored by the imagination. To push our hands against the soil as our mothers once did, with curiosity (and more impatience) at what might grow. Never knowing that as we frolicked through our yards, the Magic (as written of in The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett) was working itself upon us. When our hands stained yellow picking dandelion bouquets, or we scraped a knee climbing a tree, or sat on the sundeck watching the fireflies emerge at night–these were moments of true presence and awe of simple wonders of life. The child’s mind knows the wind and the trees to be good friends, and brings interesting knobs of wood and rounded pebbles home out of fascination. It is held enthralled by the scent of jasmines and magnolia trees, and holds out until nightfall for the moonflower to open her petals at last. It remembers that we fit perfectly into a natural space, that wonder and the imagination and play is our natural state. Our purpose is not as elusive as it might seem. When we allow ourselves to reclaim the fullness and Magic of this understanding, we too are transformed into something wild and healthy and vibrantly blooming. 

 

This month brings me on a pilgrimage through ancestral, maternal lands that have summoned me for a second time. There seems to be a theme of revisitation, with different people and circumstances. Though I do not know what new things may await me in familiar spaces, I hope to approach them in a new light, recognizing the Magic, or life force, that courses through all.

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Lunar New Year Reading

January 20, 2023

Happy Lunar New Year!

 

What makes the Lunar New Year different from the Western New Year? The Lunar New Year is a Chinese holiday based on a lunisolar calendar. The lunisolar calendar is based on astronomical observations or the sun’s placement and the moon’s phases, as opposed to the Gregorian calendar. The Chinese primarily use the Gregorian calendar, but they still refer to the lunisolar calendar for special holidays.

 

This year the date falls on January 22nd, 2023. Unlike Western astrology, which cycles through 12 zodiac signs within a year, Eastern astrology dedicates one Zodiac animal to a year. The Chinese system is further specialized into a stem branch system, working with the yin and yang (female and male) principle of each of the five elements: wood, fire, earth, metal, and water. On January 22nd, we begin the Yin Water Rabbit cycle, also known as “the Year of the Black Rabbit.” The black rabbit represents sensitivity, intuition, and a sense of inner peace. 

 

Some say the Lunar New Year is a winter solstice celebration, meant to chase away the darkness with fireworks, lanterns, and candles. According to a legend dating back thousands of years, a terrible beast called Nian was believed to feast on human flesh on New Year’s Day. In addition to fire, he feared the color red and loud noises. Fireworks and red paper decorations were used to scare him away. 

 

Ten days before the Lunar New Year, families clean their homes to allow good luck to enter. Once the Lunar New Year begins, festivities continue for two weeks. For those of us who do not celebrate the holiday, perhaps we can still take inspiration from this special occasion and clean our homes. This will chase out negative and stagnant energy, and allow positive energy and good fortune to enter. The Lunar New Year is also our second chance to get a start on the new year. Perhaps we burned ourselves out by going too hard on our new year goal. Is there a way we can slow the process down, while still honoring our long term goals? 

 

Lunar New Year Reading

A Note: As a Western tarot reader, I have chosen to read with the Starman Tarot Deck, in honor of the recent anniversary of David Bowie’s birth and death. For an authentic Chinese Lunar New Year reading, I’d highly recommend looking into getting an I Ching reading.

 

The Wheel (reversed)

Song: Changes - David Bowie

 

The Wheel appears to remind us that all is in a state of ebb and flow. All things are an expression of universe consciousness; it is only the form that changes. This includes the cycle of life, death, and rebirth. It also represents our personality cycling through various facets and personas–all the things that we imagine ourselves to be on our road to self discovery. We cycle through these different representations of ourselves not just in the present but also across time—who we once were, who we might have been and who we will become. We see ourselves and our lives going through a series of evolutions and changes–but deep down there is an unchanging, eternal center of being. We struggle when we try to control, instead of meeting the present with no judgment, nowhere to be, and nothing to do. We can consider ourselves as the character on a stage, subject to a play for which we do not have the script; or we can shift perspectives to the stage in which the play takes place. 

 

The Wheel also reminds us not to be overly attached to the outcome of our fortune. That which seems like a wonderful opportunity, for example a new job or house, may not turn out to be as amazing as we thought it would. Contrary wise, an illness that might seem unfortunate could lead to a revelation about life or a remarkable dream that we can use as the foundation of our next big creative project.

 

In a reversed position, the Wheel is asking us to slow down and put any new projects on hold. We need to practice introspection and look at our life patterns, which might get us blocked or caught in another cycle that we could avoid. Is our next project truly deserving of all our efforts, passions, and life force? Or will we end up back where we started, as a more burned out version of ourselves? Sometimes we must accept the inevitable and ride the wave. Sometimes the only way out is through. 

 

Remember too that there is value in the yin (female) principle; stillness, introspection, receptive energy. All too often in a Western society we are taught in terms of opposing polarities and binaries; that light is preferable to dark, masculine to feminine, etc. But the spirit of the Wheel is best understood with an Eastern lens. Yin and Yang are both complementary and necessary components of life. One cannot exist without the other. 

In Angel Intentions Tags Starman, lunar, new, year, reading, Tarot
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