Spooky Things

September through December is my favorite quarter of the year. It’s when I feel most connected to Earth’s energies and cycles. I particularly love all the holidays you find in nearly every belief system and continent that honor the dead. Celebrations, feasts, spooky fun traditions, and so much symbolism.

Day of the Dead
All-Hallows Eve
All Saints Day
All Souls Day
Grandmother Moon
Corn Harvest Moon
Night of the Ancestors
…to name a few.

Pumpkins and apples, spirits and spices, gatherings of friends and family, gatherings of ghosts and other un-embodied things. We make offerings. The energy gets crisp and clear, the veil thins, all that is needed is known. And after that, we reset. We rest, clear our calendars and our minds, cozy up to the hearth or the kitchen table, or maybe we just hide under a warm blanket in our favorite chair.

The truth is that everything dies. It decomposes. It rests. In the darkness and the invisible places deep within the earth, seeds gather what they need to begin again. To renew. To start fresh, take an idea and grow (step by step) into something beautiful. Ripe with possibilities and hope, they wave hello to a passing earthworm or two.

Every person has their own beliefs, their own understanding of life and death and spirit and breath. For me, death isn’t an ending. It’s part of the greater cycle. And the dead aren’t truly gone. We miss them– we grieve, get angry, scream and cry and ask a million whys. It hurts to live sometimes. But the dead are still with us, if we want them to be. In our hearts, in our memories, in our journals and counseling sessions and favorite old wooden spoons. Family recipes, old photos, remembered stories, and the life choices we make in honor of where we come from, and the sacrifices we made to survive. To quote an old movie: Death is only the beginning.

Return to the Earth Moon

New moons are my favorite. Full moons are great, too. But there’s so much unknown, so much possibility and creative opportunity in a new moon. Return to the Earth Moon has many names. It usually happens in September. This particular moment of darkness and new beginnings actually focuses on decay.

Trees change color and lose their leaves, and the leaves fall to the earth to rest during the winter, and become compost that nourishes new growth in the spring. Some First People call this Salmon Moon, Sturgeon Moon, or one of the autumn Harvest Moons. Traditionally, bears spend a lot of time catching big fish, pulling them out of rivers and leaving their carcasses to rot and become compost under the trees and among the autumn leaves.

The cards I pulled for this particular September New Moon are these:

Nutmeg: Justice, Travel, Good Fortune, journey, movement, attraction.

Horse Chestnut: Consideration

A blank card from The Druid Plant Oracle: The future is unwritten.

The Herbal Tea Magic Oracle deck by Elsie Wild is one of my favorites these days. The NUTMEG card suggests that “Good vibes are here, and I’m not just saying that because I just had a Pumpkin Spice Laté, but because nutmeg is one lucky nut… well, seed. Nutmeg has always been associated with good fortune, especially while traveling.” If you’re looking for justice, it’s coming, though you may have to plant the seeds and nurture the outcome you want.

Seeds and spices often travel long distances to reach our gardens and kitchen tables. And it’s our job to search for them. To nurture them. Don’t be afraid to try new things, taste new flavors. Our communities and our stomachs are only strong and healthy when we don’t get lazy and rely on the same one meal or one friend over and over. You may not be ready to spread your wings and jump into a new project or a new community quite yet, but consider planting those seeds now. Spend the autumn and winter nurturing yourself and your community. Diversify. Grow bold.

The Wisdom of the Trees Oracle by Jane Struthers is an old favorite, too. The HORSE CHESTNUT card is all about slow growth and careful consideration. Everything you come across has more than one use, more than one purpose. Consider many different perspectives and options before you make your judgement. “Be particularly careful not to assess other peoples’ actions at a superficial level.”

There is more than one way to mix peanut butter. There are many ways to water a garden, too. Just because someone doesn’t do things the way you do them doesn’t make their way wrong. Just because you’ve always done things a certain way doesn’t mean it’s the best way forward, either. Consider why someone chooses to do things the way that they do. It will help you have a greater, more positive impact when you offer suggestions or chose your own next-steps forward.

If you’d like a personal card reading, please fill out the form on my home page, or send me an email.

Blessings on your Journey, Friend.