Thursday, May 1, 2008

Beltane, Celtic festival of summer


Today we stand at the threshold of Beltane, the Celtic festival of summer, when the entire green world is charged with new life beneath the growing sun. In Ireland, Beltane (celebrated May 1st) was known as one of the three "spirit nights" of the year—along with Midsummer's Eve and Halloween—a time when the faeries rode out of their dwellings in the Hollow Hills within the Earth into the human world.
Until the 20th century, many people had encounters with faeries and lived side by side with them in quite a natural way. Some of these faery-seers descended from generations of country-dwellers who kept the old beliefs intact; others were visionaries, poets, and artists who refused to be influenced by the modern, materialistic worldview that, in William Blake's words, can only "see with, not thru, the eye."
The Nature of Faeries

A Guided Faery Medition With Mara Freeman But what are faeries and do they still exist today? Many people still think of them as the delightful, gauzy-winged creatures of children’s books—but this was not always so. Those faeries were a product of Victorian literature. Before that, there was a strong recognition throughout Europe of a host of sentient beings who are mostly non-physical entities, although they can be seen with the inner eye. What’s more, they knew that faeries do not dwell in a far-off realm, but live within the subtle dimension of our world, co-existing with us in the cracks of our everyday reality.

The Hawthorn tree, a common faery dwelling. Photo by Susa Morgan-BlackFaeries range from tall, beautiful, noble creatures to diminutive imps called "little people," with many shapes and sizes in between. There are solitary faeries, like the household brownie who looks like a small stocky man with a gray beard; leathery gnomes who dwell in forests and caves; "trooping faeries" who dance, sing, and feast together in the faery hills; and tribes of Cornish piskies, with red hair, pointed ears, and turned-up noses. One of the best explanations of what faeries are comes from an unlikely source, a 17th-century minister of the Church of Scotland: The Reverend Robert Kirk called them "a middle nature betwixt man and angel." They are creatures of light and energy, of "force" rather than "form," who can shift their shape as they please, unbound by laws of the physical world.


A Faery Encounter, Read by Mara Freeman All faeries are deeply connected to the living Earth. The Faery Queen spoken of in so many ballads and stories is a Celtic aspect of Gaia, the Earth Goddess. The faeries sometimes called "nature spirits" are involved with the processes of nature—birth, growth, decay, and the changing of the seasons—while "elementals" are responsible for cycles of water, earth, air, and fire. Other faery tribes interact more with the human world, bestowing gifts such as healing, music, and seership upon their favorite mortals.
Today, a new awareness of faeries is returning as people are awakening to the reality of worlds not normally apparent. It seems that, with the current crises on Earth, we are being called to reconnect with those beings of light with whom we once consciously shared our planet home. When we pollute, degrade, and destroy the land, sea, and skies, we are destroying their world, too; we tear apart the exquisitely woven tapestry of all creation. And so faeries are bringing messages from the Earth, urging us to change our ways from living in separateness to an awareness of our interconnectedness with all beings, visible and invisible.
I took this article from Beliefnet.com where I visit daily for the angel of the day and thought it would be nice to share with you on this special day. I hope you enjoyed it as much as I did.

Being one with nature, I look forward to this process in spring to reconnect myself to the earth and natural surroundings I live in. It brings me to a place inside myself that reassures me that all is good in this human experience and helps me to stay grounded in this much to crazy world I live in. I've included a meditation link should you care to indulge yourself in this Beltane festival as well. Peace to you. . .


How to connect with faeries...

http://www.beliefnet.com/story/190/story_19019_1.html?WT.mc_id=NL24#

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi Penny,

I think your Beltane article re: the Fey is great. Would you mind if I reprinted it, fully credited of course, on the Celtic Myth Podshow site?

Well done,

Gary
http://celticmythpodshow.com
gary@celticmythpodshow.com

Crane's Nest Creations said...

By all means, help yourself. I'm happy that you enjoyed it as much as I.

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