Very Good Information
The author, Rebecca Beattie, states that while living in London and on tour, she discovered her passion for her craft during one particular tour while performing in Macbeth, her favorite of Shakespeare’s plays. She states that while on this tour they were staying in farmhouses, surrounded by nature at every turn and was getting up with the sunrise, walking in the rural landscape and spending contemplative time in solitude surrounded by trees and fields, and she had time to breathe the air and inspiration flowed in. She states this was what had been lacking in my life, that in all the urban streets she walked down to auditions, in all the dusty rehearsal rooms, and the admin jobs she took to pay the rent, she had been missing her connection to nature and, more importantly, she had been looking in the wrong place for fulfilment – that she had been seeking outside myself. Thus, she realized that her journey to self-discovery had begun, and this path led to her training in Wicca.
The author states that it was on this path that she learned all about the Wheel of the Year, a concept that helped her to understand her place in the world, to deepen that connection to nature she had felt when touring the countryside and to appreciate fully the wonders of its cycle, no matter the season – or location. There are various ways of carving up the year into smaller, more manageable time periods, and our Graeco-Roman months of the year are one way, but other faiths also have their own methods of measuring time. For pagans, since the 1940s or 1950s, the year has been defined and delineated by the Wheel of the Year.
She discusses that Nichols’ druids began celebrating quarter days: the solstices and equinoxes, which mark the beginning of each quarter of the year while the Gardner’s witches were celebrating the Celtic equivalents, which had become known as cross-quarter days as they fell in between the English ones, and in the late 1950s the two practices merged, and the Wheel of the Year was born. Since that time, modern pagans have organized their practices around it, with the following sabbats:
1. Yule or Midwinter – 21 December Imbolc – 1 February
2. Spring equinox – 21 March
3. Beltane or May Eve – 30 April Midsummer – 21 June
4. Lammas – 1 August
5. Autumn equinox – 21 September
6. Samhain or November Eve – 31 October
(The exact dates can vary due to Earth taking slightly more than 365 days to travel around the sun, hence the need for leap years.)
Throughout this book, and in each of the sabbats, the author provides short rituals to help give one a moment to pause, to connect to nature and reflect on our inner thoughts, and she states that the rituals will help all of us to mark transition points and to give them meaning. She further states that we should try to let ourselves go a little, allowing for spontaneity: that is where we will encounter the divine – and find a little magic.
I found the following recipe quite unique: Recipe for Solar Healing Oil:
• A teaspoon of frankincense pearls
• A cup of ‘carrier’ oil – if we want to be properly solar, then olive or sunflower oil would be appropriate, but any plain oil will do just as well
• Six drops of orange essential oil
• Six drops of neroli essential oil
• An empty bottle or clean glass jar to keep it in – do use recycled if you can.
The author states that for her Samhain provides a space to focus on a wider sense of ancestral connection, because whenever life calls us to rebuild ourselves from the foundations up, our ancestors can be crucial in that process. Additionally, Rebecca points out that sometimes, for whatever reason, we cannot look to our biological ancestors. If this is the case, one can turn our ‘logical family’, can be an termed an ‘ancestor’ because they may be someone who have walked path before us in numerous different ways.
Rebecca Beattie discusses each of the sabbats in detail, providing techniques and rituals to awaken our inner child. This is a very good book that I highly recommend for anyone starting their spiritual journey.