| Samhain First off, the thing people seem to wonder most about Samhain. How is it meant to be pronounced? Well, as in most things, this depends on exactly were you are. In Ireland, it is pronounced, "sow-in." In Wales and England, it is traditionally, "sow-een." And in Scotland, because Scots love to be different, it is, "sav-en." Of course, if you happen to be speaking to a Yank, he may well not have a clue what any of these things are while wondering why you don't celebrate, (put in a drawl) "Sam-hane." Samhain is celebrated on October 31st, a date familiar to most people in the Western world today. Although Samhain is considered a cross quarter holiday, the cross quarter does not fall on October 31st, but occurs whenever the Sun reaches 15 degrees in Scorpio. This is usually sometime in the first week of November and coincides with the Catholic holiday of Martinmas. Samhain is one of the most popular of the Witches' Holidays. There are three reasons for this. The first is simply that it's fun (though many would argue not as enjoyable as Beltaine ). The second is that it is the one holiday that the general public recognizes as a pagan holiday (even if they do have plenty of misconceptions about it) and loves to celebrate anyway. In days of yore, the lovely Christian church of old did decide, in the grand tradition of the times, that the people could be allowed to keep the holiday they were so found of, but it need a new name. They also decided that instead of being a holiday to celebrate all dead (for obvious reasons, the Church wished to focus on that part of the holiday), it should only mark the "holy" amongst the deceased. Hence, the holiday comes down through history as Halloween. Samhain is obviously the end of the "summer" half of the year. (The Celtic people divided the year into two parts, summer and winter.) It is the last harvest before the snows. It is the dark opposite of Beltaine, announcing the rule of Darkness and celebrating the Crone. It is also considered to be the first of the new year. Since the Celts viewed time as circular rather than linear, The night that is at once the end of the year and the beginning was considered to be "outside" of time. For this reason, Samhain is a holiday of divination and a time of the dead. A night of contradiction where life and death, opposites but part of the same thing, were celebrated side by side. The most well known aspect of Samhain is it's role as the Feast of the Dead. It is a night to honor the ancestors, to celebrate their lives, and to toast their memories. It is an evening for families to gather and hear tales of Great Grandfather's life and the legends of the Old King and his knights. It was believed that on this night, the dead could return to earth to visit with the living. It was considered polite to set places at the table for those recently deceased and to leave food for them and for wondering souls. Lights should be placed in windows and along roads to help guide the spirits out for the night. This was the beginnings of the ever popular jac-o-lantern. Lights where places in gourds so that the wind would not extinguished them and left as guides and as wards to protect the household from any vindictive souls who may have tracked them down. The other role of Samhain is slightly less known, possibly due to the adamancy to the Catholic church against divination. At Samhain, the veil between worlds is at its thinnest, which is why the dead can cross over on this eve. It also means that it is easier to see the into the future. It is a night to cast runes, deal cards, and scry. It is also a night to make decisions. The Celts have a tradition that is the root of the modern New Year's Resolution. The tradition states that on this day, one should reflect on the negatives in ones life and perform a ritual asking the Crone to help in dissipating them. There are several forms of deviation that are particular to this Eve. The most entertaining were most popular amongst young girls and dealt with finding one's true love. One of the most popular of these was to gather a group of hazel nuts together. On the shells, one marks symbols representing people that one knows. The first nut to crack should have the symbol assigned to your true love. Of course, this can be modified for use with any question, but this is the most fun. Apples are of course, a very popular fall food and it would be unthinkable not to involve them in this holiday. It was said that is one cut an apple in to halves (long wise so that the star in the middle becomes visible) by candle light and ate it in front of one's own image, behind one's shoulder will appear the image of the one who loves you most. A tradition that I remember from my own childhood states that if one peels an apple so that the peel comes off as one long strand and throw is over the shoulder, it will fall in the shape of the first letter of your love's name. A slightly less pleasant method that does not lead to having something nice to eat even if one gets bad advice, it was claimed that a snail placed in the hearth ashes would draw the initial of the one meant for whoever put the snail there. | ||
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Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Samhain
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October Magick
October Magick
Magick doesn't happen just with spells and rituals. It's the activities and events that allow for fun and memories, or that help others. Here are some suggestions on how to make October Magick...
Donate blood (think of Dracula)
Finish any incomplete projects and pay off lingering bills (if possible) to close out the old year and begin the new year afresh.
Go for a walk and collect twigs, leaves, pinecones, moss, seedpods, and feathers.
Leave food out for the birds and other wild animals.
Light candles, a fireplace or bonfire, put up Halloween lights to get a start on the season of light
If you don't have a wicker man left from Beltane, make one from dried grass or grains of some kind. Burn it in your Sabbat fire. If you don't have a fireplace or firepit, burn him in your cauldron, barbeque grill or hibachi.
Make a Scarecrow
Tell ancestral stories and tales around the fire, or at the dinner table.
Visit cemeteries to do a clean up project, visit ancestors, or just immerse yourself in the history
Have a mask-making ceremony in which you create masks to represent your ancestry.
Rake some leaves and jump in the leaves (especially fun if there is a child around to do this with you)
Decorate your computer with Halloween, Samhain or Autumn wallpaper or screensaver
Make a quilt, crochet an afghan or braid a rug using Autumn colors
Make a music tape of Halloween or Autumn inspired music and songs
Go for a drive strictly for the purpose of foliage gazing
Have a wine tasting party
Learn to weave (think of grandmother spider)
Plant trees (Japanese maple is a great Autumn tree) and flower bulbs
Pick apples from an apple tree and make a home-made pie or cobbler from scratch
Make a big pot of soup
Collect pictures of past Halloween's or Autumn activities and make a scrapbook; add pressed leaves, poems and sayings, seasonal sketches
Gather firewood
Samhain is the best time for divination; learn tarot, runes, using the pendulum, scrying
Start to knit a warm sweater
Visit a charity haunted house
Take a late night walk under the full moon
Make a batch of popcorn and hot spiced cider and watch Halloween movie videos
Gather up and press leaves of red, gold, and yellow
Set up an ancestor altar, with candles and your ancestor's pictures
Buy orange pumpkins and red, green and yellow apples
Easy decorations: a cauldron of apples, a candy dish of candy corn, chains made of black and white beads or paper loops, pumpkins.. carved or not
Make foods of fall; beef stew with thick gravy, apple crisp with vanilla ice cream and cinnamon sauce, pumpkin pie with whipped cream.... macaroni and cheese (it's orange!)
Make a Halloween tree; paint branches black and gather into a vase with black stones for anchors. Add orange Halloween lights, drape with dried moss and thin black ribbons. Even add ornaments!
Start a nature sketchbook. With the wonderful colors of fall, this is the perfect time to record the leaves changing colors, bare branches against a stormy sky, squirrels stocking up for winter...
Go on a hayride
Bake sugar cookies and cut out with Autumn-shaped cookie cutters. Frost with chocolate, maple and orange flavored frostings
Make or buy onion braids
Buy lots of orange, yellow, brown and gold candles to brighten up dark days and evenings
Make witch balls (clear glass ornament, swirl around silver paint inside, fill with red threads and herbs)
Collect pinecones for decorations and firestarters
Leave food outside as an offering to the dead
Make hot chocolate, French toast and bacon for Sunday Breakfast
Adopt a black cat (or orange or any color)
Watch for ducks and geese flying south for the winter
The most traditional Samhain activity is to prepare an extra plate at the dinner table to honor those passed. After the meal, place the plate outside overnight for any passing creatures. In the morning, bury whatever remains on the plate in the earth.
Buy some new fall clothes; corduroy pants or green denim jeans; a sweater or a college sweatshirt, a suede jacket, new hiking boots
Wear a costume to greet trick or treaters on Halloween night or accompany trick or treaters
Try a new shade of hair color; such as auburn or dark burgundy (red is the color of witch's hair)
Make homemade applesauce, apple dumplings, apple turnovers..
Make popcorn balls
Have a costume party; for kids only, for adults only, or families
Buy pumpkins and carve jack-o-lanterns
Bob for apples, do apple divination, cut an apple cross-wise to see the star that the seeds make. nature's own pentagram
Make caramel apples
Do a Past-life Regression therapy
Start to meditate if you don't already do this
Harvest and dry herbs
Celebrate a late Oktoberfest with beer and German food
Make and/or collect miniature buildings for a miniature Halloween village
Written and Compiled by Cindi Wafstet
© August 2002
Permission to share freely as long as credit is given.
Magick doesn't happen just with spells and rituals. It's the activities and events that allow for fun and memories, or that help others. Here are some suggestions on how to make October Magick...
Donate blood (think of Dracula)
Finish any incomplete projects and pay off lingering bills (if possible) to close out the old year and begin the new year afresh.
Go for a walk and collect twigs, leaves, pinecones, moss, seedpods, and feathers.
Leave food out for the birds and other wild animals.
Light candles, a fireplace or bonfire, put up Halloween lights to get a start on the season of light
If you don't have a wicker man left from Beltane, make one from dried grass or grains of some kind. Burn it in your Sabbat fire. If you don't have a fireplace or firepit, burn him in your cauldron, barbeque grill or hibachi.
Make a Scarecrow
Tell ancestral stories and tales around the fire, or at the dinner table.
Visit cemeteries to do a clean up project, visit ancestors, or just immerse yourself in the history
Have a mask-making ceremony in which you create masks to represent your ancestry.
Rake some leaves and jump in the leaves (especially fun if there is a child around to do this with you)
Decorate your computer with Halloween, Samhain or Autumn wallpaper or screensaver
Make a quilt, crochet an afghan or braid a rug using Autumn colors
Make a music tape of Halloween or Autumn inspired music and songs
Go for a drive strictly for the purpose of foliage gazing
Have a wine tasting party
Learn to weave (think of grandmother spider)
Plant trees (Japanese maple is a great Autumn tree) and flower bulbs
Pick apples from an apple tree and make a home-made pie or cobbler from scratch
Make a big pot of soup
Collect pictures of past Halloween's or Autumn activities and make a scrapbook; add pressed leaves, poems and sayings, seasonal sketches
Gather firewood
Samhain is the best time for divination; learn tarot, runes, using the pendulum, scrying
Start to knit a warm sweater
Visit a charity haunted house
Take a late night walk under the full moon
Make a batch of popcorn and hot spiced cider and watch Halloween movie videos
Gather up and press leaves of red, gold, and yellow
Set up an ancestor altar, with candles and your ancestor's pictures
Buy orange pumpkins and red, green and yellow apples
Easy decorations: a cauldron of apples, a candy dish of candy corn, chains made of black and white beads or paper loops, pumpkins.. carved or not
Make foods of fall; beef stew with thick gravy, apple crisp with vanilla ice cream and cinnamon sauce, pumpkin pie with whipped cream.... macaroni and cheese (it's orange!)
Make a Halloween tree; paint branches black and gather into a vase with black stones for anchors. Add orange Halloween lights, drape with dried moss and thin black ribbons. Even add ornaments!
Start a nature sketchbook. With the wonderful colors of fall, this is the perfect time to record the leaves changing colors, bare branches against a stormy sky, squirrels stocking up for winter...
Go on a hayride
Bake sugar cookies and cut out with Autumn-shaped cookie cutters. Frost with chocolate, maple and orange flavored frostings
Make or buy onion braids
Buy lots of orange, yellow, brown and gold candles to brighten up dark days and evenings
Make witch balls (clear glass ornament, swirl around silver paint inside, fill with red threads and herbs)
Collect pinecones for decorations and firestarters
Leave food outside as an offering to the dead
Make hot chocolate, French toast and bacon for Sunday Breakfast
Adopt a black cat (or orange or any color)
Watch for ducks and geese flying south for the winter
The most traditional Samhain activity is to prepare an extra plate at the dinner table to honor those passed. After the meal, place the plate outside overnight for any passing creatures. In the morning, bury whatever remains on the plate in the earth.
Buy some new fall clothes; corduroy pants or green denim jeans; a sweater or a college sweatshirt, a suede jacket, new hiking boots
Wear a costume to greet trick or treaters on Halloween night or accompany trick or treaters
Try a new shade of hair color; such as auburn or dark burgundy (red is the color of witch's hair)
Make homemade applesauce, apple dumplings, apple turnovers..
Make popcorn balls
Have a costume party; for kids only, for adults only, or families
Buy pumpkins and carve jack-o-lanterns
Bob for apples, do apple divination, cut an apple cross-wise to see the star that the seeds make. nature's own pentagram
Make caramel apples
Do a Past-life Regression therapy
Start to meditate if you don't already do this
Harvest and dry herbs
Celebrate a late Oktoberfest with beer and German food
Make and/or collect miniature buildings for a miniature Halloween village
Written and Compiled by Cindi Wafstet
© August 2002
Permission to share freely as long as credit is given.
















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