Winter Solstice: A Time for Wiccan Blessings and Healing

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Winter solstice, also known as Yule, is a significant time of year celebrated by Wiccans and many other pagan traditions. It marks the longest night and the shortest day of the year, when the earth is at its coldest and darkest point. This powerful celestial event holds great spiritual and symbolic significance to those who follow the Wiccan path. Wiccans view the winter solstice as a time of introspection, inner reflection, and rebirth. It is a time to honor the cycles of nature and celebrate the return of light and warmth in the coming months. This sacred day is seen as a time for blessings, gratitude, and renewed hope.



THOT

This sacred day is seen as a time for blessings, gratitude, and renewed hope. During the winter solstice, Wiccans perform rituals, spells, and ceremonies to connect with the energy of the earth and the divine. They light candles, burn herbs, offer prayers, and meditate to honor the Sun God and the Mother Goddess.

A Pagan Prayer at Yuletide: Solstice Blessings fro.

The Devils of Wintertide: Witc..

A Pagan Prayer at Yuletide: Solstice Blessings from the Wolf-Woman

  • by Danielle Dulsky
  • 21 December
  • FeaturedVerses of the Wild Witch

May we, on this longest night when the Crone-Gods rule, remember the joyful magick of the holy hag. Let’s brew something bitter for those we love and forgive the simplicity of our root rituals, witnessing the Pagan majesty of a nog brewed to perfection or a kiss well-placed. May we weep in wonder at a beauteously flawed gift made by a child’s hands, and may we nest in the arms of a lover’s ghost for a few short breaths before looking long into the soulful eyes of those who, like us, are still here.

May we, the wildest Witches and most mischievous Maidens, give up the golden majesty of our ceremonial divination and bask in the mercy of a lone candle’s flame. This Solstice holds it all for us, and, tonight, we are all the heathen’s too-rapid heartbeat as she stares through the standing stones with bated breath, waiting for the sun to rise, to make a strong-willed break through the indigo sea of silent nights and somber hymns. Let’s stay true to our ancestral lines and peel back every layer of our Craft, stripping our spells and our Priestess ways down to the barest of bones, ripping away all that is not ours to wield.

May we, the horned wizards and over-frail mothers, seek and find a particular liberation in our solitude, living an entire lifetime of a soft-bodied, woodland creature in the space of a single breath when just the right recipe of chilled pine and mineral-laden mud graces our senses. May we know ourselves as living magick charms, semi-precious calcium gem-bones and holy-water blood wrapped in cob-webbed, glitter fascia and tied up in a skin bag. Until the day we journey all alone into the ethereal infinite, riding the blessed wave of our last exhale away from this heavy-fleshed plane, may we remember our most primal roots connect us to the mother that bore us; we are first and foremost of this Earth, last and leastly of the twisted rules that would bind and blind us.

May we, the wanton sorceresses and pristine sprites, remember that our magick is the conversation we have with the cosmic powers-that-be, and every spell cast is an affirmation of the world in which we want the children of the future to be born. Here, we say. Be born here, in this global community of endless reverence for our planet and our people, our shadows and our passions, our wildness and our wisdom. May the Child of Light be born not to a virtuous, adolescent Madonna but to a worldly Crone with a skull-staff and pendulous breasts. May we resurrect Her, the essence of cunning, feminine power, and may we bid Her leave Her mark in moonblood here, on a land too long scarred and marred by the insidious corruption of colonization and capitalism.

May we, the ones who can speak in the tongue of the ancients, live longer than those who would keep Her in the dirt. May we divine our futures from the nutmeg flakes in our drinks tonight, and may we rest long and warm while the frost forms telling runes on our window panes. So mote it be for you, for those who warm your still-beating heart, and for us all.

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Danielle is a heathen visionary, Aquarian mischief-maker, and word-witch. The author of Woman Most Wild and The Holy Wild., she teaches internationally and has facilitated circles, embodiment trainings, communal spell-work, and seasonal rituals since 2007. She is the founder of The Hag School, the lead teacher for the Flame-Tender Teacher Training, and believes in the emerging power of wild collectives and sudden circles of curious dreamers, cunning witches, and rebellious artists in healing our ailing world. As an Irish-American, Danielle’s witchcraft is deeply rooted in Celtic philosophy and Irish mythology. She believes fervently in the role of ancestral healing, embodiment, and animism in fracturing the longstanding systems supporting white-body supremacy and environmental unconsciousness, is committed to centering the voices and teachings of POC and LGBTQIA+ folks in her work as founder of Living Mandala, LLC and The Hag School and supports organizations and initiatives that do the same. Parent to two beloved wildlings and partner to a potter, Danielle fills her world with nature, family, and intentional awe. Find her praying under pine trees, wandering through the haunted places, and whispering to her grandmothers’ ghosts.

March 23, 2022

May we, on this longest night when the Crone-Gods rule, remember the joyful magick of the holy hag. Let’s brew something bitter for those we love and forgive the simplicity of our root rituals, witnessing the Pagan majesty of a nog brewed to perfection or a kiss well-placed. May we weep in wonder at a […]

October 25, 2021

May we, on this longest night when the Crone-Gods rule, remember the joyful magick of the holy hag. Let’s brew something bitter for those we love and forgive the simplicity of our root rituals, witnessing the Pagan majesty of a nog brewed to perfection or a kiss well-placed. May we weep in wonder at a […]

September 8, 2021

May we, on this longest night when the Crone-Gods rule, remember the joyful magick of the holy hag. Let’s brew something bitter for those we love and forgive the simplicity of our root rituals, witnessing the Pagan majesty of a nog brewed to perfection or a kiss well-placed. May we weep in wonder at a […]

June 14, 2021

May we, on this longest night when the Crone-Gods rule, remember the joyful magick of the holy hag. Let’s brew something bitter for those we love and forgive the simplicity of our root rituals, witnessing the Pagan majesty of a nog brewed to perfection or a kiss well-placed. May we weep in wonder at a […]

April 19, 2021

May we, on this longest night when the Crone-Gods rule, remember the joyful magick of the holy hag. Let’s brew something bitter for those we love and forgive the simplicity of our root rituals, witnessing the Pagan majesty of a nog brewed to perfection or a kiss well-placed. May we weep in wonder at a […]

Danielle is a heathen visionary, Aquarian mischief-maker, and word-witch. The author of Woman Most Wild and The Holy Wild., she teaches internationally and has facilitated circles, embodiment trainings, communal spell-work, and seasonal rituals since 2007. She is the founder of The Hag School, the lead teacher for the Flame-Tender Teacher Training, and believes in the emerging power of wild collectives and sudden circles of curious dreamers, cunning witches, and rebellious artists in healing our ailing world. As an Irish-American, Danielle’s witchcraft is deeply rooted in Celtic philosophy and Irish mythology. She believes fervently in the role of ancestral healing, embodiment, and animism in fracturing the longstanding systems supporting white-body supremacy and environmental unconsciousness, is committed to centering the voices and teachings of POC and LGBTQIA+ folks in her work as founder of Living Mandala, LLC and The Hag School and supports organizations and initiatives that do the same. Parent to two beloved wildlings and partner to a potter, Danielle fills her world with nature, family, and intentional awe. Find her praying under pine trees, wandering through the haunted places, and whispering to her grandmothers’ ghosts.

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Nordic Wiccan

This year the Winter Solstice falls on December 21 for the Midwest USA, under the waxing moon u . If you're in the South it is Midsummer, I will post on that in our June. For many traditions, the Yule is 12 nights and the Winter Solstice is 1 night. Personally, like many of my main blessings, I use three marks to honor the day - past, present and future. I start the night before on the 20th at sunset (4:20 pm). I use it as the Mother's Night for the ancestors. On Winter Solstice the 21st at sunrise (7:20 am), the present moment. Ending with the 21st at the end of twilight (5 pm), the future.

Mother's Night is the first day of Yule. I start it with lighting a candle next to my Yule Log. (Don't leave flames alone!) All this year has been guided by Frigg, mothers, grandmothers and other Ancestors o . It is a time of the year when our deceased Ancestors are closest to us; this is when the dead are more active than any other time. We all have worked hard and produced much over the years. But now is a time to do something else, to reap the rewards. Take a break. Go look at the stars, listen to the wind, feel the warmth of the candle, warm the prayer beads or just touch someone. Remember who you have been, your ancestors and the natural world.

The second part is the sunrise on the day. It is a time to reflect where you are now. Clean your alter, taking items outside to meet the rising Sun Sunna s . Say thanks to her for returning, offer a sacrifice - food, mead or blessed oil. Honor the beginning of the Sun's return and the breaking of Winter. Do something today for others. Have compassion for the homeless with food and clothing. Go down to the animal shelter and help feed the lost pets. Exchange gifts, even with strangers. Tell your family and friends you love them. Live today in the present moment - for yourself and family.

Finally close the holiday at twilight. Hopefully you have taken stock of the past year and are beginning to think about the next year and what you would like to accomplish. Resolutions are promises made to try and accomplish something, a training tool. An oath is binding, fail an oath is to lose yourself. Tonight I write down oaths under the Moon Manni d . I then offer them up to Freyr along with the Yule Log burning for Thor. When lighting the new Yule Log it should be with the charred remains of the previous year's log, which is keep to guard the house. Usually my Yule log burns for a few days into the New Year. May your New Year be filled with happiness, wealth and health.

But there are many names to this holiday and many ways to celebrate it. Note from Silver Book of Shadows.

For people of nearly any religious background, the time of the Winter Solstice (about December 20) is a time when we gather with family and loved ones. For Pagans and Wiccans, it's often celebrated as Yule (Jul), but there are literally dozens of ways you can enjoy the season. Words during this night are said to bear great weight and power. It is a time to count blessings, take stock and lay a course for the future.

Yule is celebrated on the winter solstice , the longest night of the year. It is one of three greatest blessings of the year. The date for Christmas was chosen by the roman Emperor Aurelian in the third century, to coincide with the feast of the Unconquered Sun. So, for both these feasts, we see a strong association with the power of the Sun. Many pagan traditions were incorporated in the Christmas feast. Boniface introduced the Christmas tree, which was a Germanic tradition. Also, Santa Claus is a blend of St. Nikolas and the God Odin.

Celebrations of the Norse New Year, a festival of 12 nights (Yule), is the most important of all the Norse holidays. On the night of December 20, the God Freyr rides over the Earth on the back of his shining boar, bringing light and love back into the World. In later years, after the influence of Christianity, the God Baldur, then Jesus, was reborn at this festival.

Yule signifies the beginning and end of all things; the darkest time (shortest hour of daylight) during the year and the brightest hope re-entering the World. During this festival, the Wild Hunt is at its greatest energy and the dead are said to roam the Earth. The God Odin is the leader of this Wild Ride; charging across the sky on his eight-legged horse, Sleipnir. In ancient times, Germanic and Norse children would leave their boots out by the hearth on Solstice Eve, filled with hay and sugar, for Sleipnir's journey. In return, Odin would leave them a gift for their kindness. In modern times, Sleipnir was changed to a reindeer and the grey-bearded Odin became the kindly Santa Claus or Father Christmas.

North is associated with the sacred element Earth, the season of winter, night and death. An altar may be placed to the North during rituals associated with honoring spirits of the dead, Dark Goddesses, observing winter holidays or during the dark moon. Some symbols for North Earth are the fertile land, soil, hands, evergreens or mountains. Colors commonly associated with North are black, green or brown. For Wiccans, the altar tool known as a pentacle, a disc inscribed with a pentagram, represents the North.

Seek Justice , equity and compassion in human relations. Justice is a concept of moral rightness based on ethics, rationality, law, natural law, religion, or equity, along with the punishment of the breach of said ethics; justice is the act of being just and/or fair. Understandings of justice differ in every culture , as cultures are usually dependent upon a shared history , mythology and/or religion . Each culture's ethics create values which influence the notion of justice. Although there can be found some justice principles that are one and the same in all or most of the cultures. The Tiwaz Rune t is balance and justice ruled from a higher rationality. Tiwaz is a warrior rune named after the God Tyr who is the Northern God of law and justice. The rune of sacrifice of the individual (self) for well-being of the whole (society).

"True peace is not merely the absence of tension: it is the presence of justice." - Martin Luther King

Candles

Encourage light in times of darkness. This light is represented in various ways: the unconquered sun, the star of Bethlehem or simply by the ritual use of candles. Burning candles throughout the night is a practice of both Pagans and Christians. Christians still perform a midnight mass, a symbol of keeping the light burning in the darkest of the night. Pagans let candles burn all night long to give strength to the Sun on the longest night of the year.

Welcome Back the Sun

The ancients knew that the Winter Solstice was the longest night of the year -- and that meant that the Sun was beginning its long journey back towards Earth. It was a time of celebration and for rejoicing in the knowledge that soon, the warm days of spring would return and the dormant Earth would come back to life. In most Wiccan groups or covens, Yule marks the rebirth of the Great God in the form of the solstice sun. On this one day, the sun stands still in the sky and everyone on Earth knows that change is coming.

Sunrise

The sun returns! The light returns!
The earth begins to warm once more!
The time of darkness has passed,
and a path of light begins the new day.
Welcome, welcome, the heat of the sun,
blessing us all with its rays.

Sunset

The longest night has come once more,
the sun has set, and darkness fallen.
The trees are bare, the earth asleep,
and the skies are cold and black.
Yet tonight we rejoice, in this longest night,
embracing the darkness that enfolds us.
We welcome the night and all that it holds,
as the light of the stars shines down.

Gift Giving

The exchanging of gifts is one of the core aspects of the modern Christmas celebration, making the Christmas season the most profitable time of year for retailers and businesses throughout the World. Gift giving was common in the Roman celebration of Saturnalia , an ancient festival which took place in late December and may have influenced Christmas customs. On Christmas, Christians exchange gifts on the basis that the tradition is associated St. Nicholas with Christmas and that gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh were given to the infant Jesus by the Biblical Magi .

Yule Log

Yule was an indigenous midwinter ( Winter Solstice ) festival celebrated by the Germanic peoples, absorbed into celebrations surrounding Christmas over time with Christianization. If your family enjoys ritual, you can welcome back the sun at Yule with this simple winter ceremony. The first thing you'll need is a Yule Log. If you make it a week or two in advance, you can enjoy it as a centerpiece prior to burning it in the ceremony. For some Norse sects, Yule logs were lit to honor Thor , the God of thunder. Feasting would continue until the log burned out, three or as many as twelve days. You'll need a fire, so if you can do this ritual outside. Jumping over the flames brings luck and purification. This rite is one the whole family can do together.

Solstice Evergreen

Another ancient midwinter custom is decorating with evergreens to represent Yggdrasil. The Romans decorated with rosemary, bay, laurel, holly, ivy and mistletoe. The holly and ivy were both important midwinter plants in Great Britain and Ireland, as seen in the mysterious medieval carol which mentions the rivalry between them. The Norsemen had a tradition that enemies who met under a bough of mistletoe were obligated to lay down their weapons. (There is an interesting tale told about the Death of Baldur that explains this mistletoe use) The Christmas tree is of more recent origin.

Yule

Beneath the tree of light and life,
a blessing at this season of Yule!
To all that sit at my hearth,
today we are brothers, we are family,
and I drink to your health!
Today is a day to offer hospitality
to all that cross my threshold
in the name of the season.



A Yule Prayer Song

Here is a special Yule Prayer Song and Winter Solstice Ritual you can use.

At Winter Solstice, we call out with our innermost being for the return of the light, and we honour its return.

This Solstice I know we all are feeling a great need for the light to come back, not just with the sun’s returning this year, but also for humanity in general. We are hoping this Winter Solstice Ritual and Yule Prayer Song will go out around the world, so Wiccans everywhere will be merging our power and actively creating a future for the Earth.

Winter solstice blessings wiccan

These rituals are often held outdoors, where Wiccans can feel the presence of nature and the elements. Blessings during the winter solstice focus on themes such as the return of light, warmth, and growth. Wiccans express gratitude for the lessons learned during the year and the opportunity for renewal in the coming seasons. They seek blessings for health, abundance, love, and spiritual growth. Wiccans may also create altars or sacred spaces dedicated to the winter solstice. These altars often include symbols of the season, such as evergreen branches, holly, mistletoe, and symbols of the sun. Offering food and drink to the deities and spirits is also a common practice on this day. In addition to personal blessings, Wiccans also extend their blessings to others during the winter solstice. They may perform acts of charity, send positive energy, or simply share their joy and warmth with loved ones. Winter solstice blessings in the Wiccan tradition are heartfelt and sincere. They reflect a deep connection with nature and a desire to align with the cycles of the earth. It is a time of giving thanks, seeking guidance, and embracing the transformational energy of the season..

Reviews for "Embracing the Darkness: Wiccan Winter Solstice Blessings for Inner Reflection"

1. Jane - 1 star - I was really disappointed with "Winter Solstice Blessings Wiccan". The book promised to provide insights and rituals for celebrating the winter solstice, but it was full of generic information that could be easily found online. The rituals were basic and lacked depth, and the explanations were vague. Overall, it felt more like a poorly written blog post than a comprehensive guide. I would not recommend this book to anyone looking for meaningful rituals and guidance for celebrating the winter solstice.
2. Mark - 2 stars - "Winter Solstice Blessings Wiccan" left me underwhelmed. The book lacked originality and depth, regurgitating common Wiccan practices without adding any unique perspectives or insights. The writing style was also subpar, with poor editing and repetitive information. While some beginners might find this book useful, those who are already familiar with Wiccan practices will likely find it uninteresting and lacking in substance. I expected more from this book and would suggest looking for alternative resources for a more enriching experience.
3. Sarah - 2 stars - My experience with "Winter Solstice Blessings Wiccan" was not what I had hoped for. The book seemed hastily put together, with a lack of organization and coherence. The information provided was superficial and lacking in detail, making it difficult to fully understand and connect with the rituals and practices. Additionally, the formatting of the book was quite distracting, with odd fonts and inconsistent spacing. Overall, it felt like a rushed and poorly executed attempt at providing guidance for the winter solstice. I would not recommend this book to serious practitioners or those seeking in-depth knowledge on the subject.

Winter Solstice Blessings: Wiccan Rituals for Peace and Tranquility

Wiccan Blessings for Winter Solstice: Celebrating the Rebirth of the Sun