Kkate Photography

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02/02/2024

Blessed Imbolc to you, my friends. May we all joyfully plant the sweet seeds that will grow our dearest desires. May the gentle returning light show us the way to the brightest places within our souls. And may each cleansing sweep that dispels what is old make space in our hearts and our homes for all that can be new again. Love to you all, so much love.
Xoxororylula

29/10/2023
20/10/2023

Here to steal the spotlight for are the tough and mighty American pikas that inhabit the talus-filled alpine tundra of western North America. These furry mammals, frequently mistaken for their yellow electrical counterpart Pikachu, are herbivores that forage and gather grasses in the summertime to prepare for the cold and harsh winters where they continue to stay active under the snowpack. Blending into the barren environment of the treeless and rock filled alpine tundra, their fur ranges in color from tan to brown. Due to their impressive camouflage efforts, American pikas are typically heard first before being seen. Often described as a lamb-like “bleating,” pikas use their high pitched squeals in an effort to protect their territories and to alert other pikas of an incoming predator.

Adapted to the near freezing summer temperatures of the tundra, American pikas are facing pressures with increasing temperatures limiting the suitable habitat needed for their survival. While many other species are shifting their habitats toward higher elevations to escape the heat, most pikas are already at the highest limits of their habitat. Similar to polar bears, pikas have slowly become another indicator species to symbolize the potential effects of climate change. Although not listed under the Endangered Species Act, pikas are under a potential threat with changing temperatures, and might be one of the first species, along with many more, to disappear from the region if we don’t come together to help and protect our unique wildlife.

How will you help take a stand and protect our wildlife?

Photo: NPS/Patrick Myers



Image description: A close-up photo of an American pika standing with its two front legs perched up on a rock.

10/10/2023
02/08/2023

Blessed Lammas to you, Circle. As you lay your eyes now upon your first harvest, may you discover both what you have in abundance and what you are lacking, what you are at last ready to bring to fruition and what you are at last prepared to shed. May you find yourself at tables laden with food that nourishes your body, and may you be surrounded by companions who nourish your soul. And may your heart be filled with both the bounty of your work and the beauty of your sacrifices. The Wheel turns, the Wheel turns, and I send my love across the fields of this walk to you all. xororylula
Art: Jules Breton

07/11/2022

'All morning it has been raining.
In the language of the garden, this is happiness.'
~ Mary Oliver

Image source: Wallpaper Flare

02/02/2022

Happy Brigit's Day, Lá Fhéile Bríde! 🌼
This Brigit's cross was made at our celebration on Sunday and carries many beautiful intentions from those who joined us online.
The oak was sacred to Brigit so we hung the cross in our lovely old oak tree this morning.
Wishing everyone renewal and growth as we welcome the spring. 🌿🌺🕯

23/12/2021

'Do not be dismayed by the brokenness of the world. All things break. And all things can be mended. Not with time, as they say, but with intention. So go. Love intentionally, extravagantly, unconditionally.'
~ L.R. Knost

Beautiful Image by Simon Wilkes: https://www.simonwilkes.co.uk/photography/

as above, so below☀️🌙
19/12/2021

as above, so below☀️🌙

08/12/2021

The Ancient Midwinter Deer Mother Goddess.

Female reindeer are unique with regard to other deer species in that they grow and shed antlers. This attribute is part of the mythology and spirituality of the shamanistic Sámi people who tell a story of how at the winter solstice the Deer Mother Goddess flew through the sky in order to help the dying midwinter sun find its way back and begin the process of the returning light.

Male reindeer shed their antlers before midwinter so the association between rebirth and antlers is very much a feminine trait in these traditions.
While some stories remind us of the connection between the world tree, Yggdrasil, and the branched horns of the deer, an often overlooked symbolic connection is the shape of the antlered head of the female deer and the uterus.
Another place we see this depicted in ancient goddess cultures is in the relief's of the Goddess Hathor and the horned cow.
Incidentally, within Nepalese shamanism, the world tree of immortality is called Kalpa Vriksha, and it looks even more like antlers because the roots of the tree face upwards.
The reason for the roots touching the sky is to show how growth comes from, and returns to, the upper realms.
Many ancient standing stones and carvings depict the deer goddess holding the moon and stars within her antlers.

Although Cernunnos might be a more familiar horned figure, there is much less evidence for his historical worship than there is for the various horned Goddesses of ancient Europe and Asia.
The anthropologist, Karl Schleiser, noted that the deer shaman was one who could traverse all three worlds associated with ancestors and spirits.
So, not only did the reindeer fly to the upper and lower worlds, but it was also seen as a spirit animal which might help those in the middle world. Perhaps,(and this is a personal observation), this is why the deer goddess was so important to people at the time of the year when life was so full of hardship?

The ability of the Deer Mother Goddess to both nurture and sustain life, and the weakened sun until it regained its strength, is a motif which recurs in all of the animistic doctrines, if we can call them that.
This instinctual knowledge was also notice by James George Frazer when he studied ancient native traditions and beliefs.
Although his work, The Golden Bough, certainly shows its age, (and Frazer's colonialist mindset!), he understood the connection between ancient totemism and inner wisdom very well when he wrote that indigenous peoples, "...conceive of life as an indestructible kind of energy, which when it disappears in one form must necessarily reappear in another, though in the new form it need not be immediately perceptible by us; in other words, he infers that death does not destroy the vital principle nor even the conscious personality, but that it merely transforms them into other shapes, which are not the less real because they commonly elude the evidence of our senses."

The reason why this is important is because, in her many incarnations, the Deer Mother Goddess was a symbol of much more than the hope of a new spring and the rescue of the winter sun; she was a reminder of the belief that the soul itself was eternal and that even after death there awaited a new rebirth.
When the Scythians moved into Northern Europe and mixed and traded with those already living there, they brought with them their knowledge and practices related to Asian shamanism, as well as the Gods and Goddesses associated with the land, sky and constellations, including the Deer Mother Goddess who incarnated in various forms, depending upon the people who recognised her eternal aspects and nature.
Professor Richard Seaford also reminds us that following Alexander the Great's conquest of Western Asia, there followed a further syncretism of shamanistic beliefs within the various philosophical and spiritual traditions already existing in Europe.
This resulted in the incorporation of shamanistic ideas within the mystery schools, of which the greatest was the secret knowledge of the invincibility of the soul and the life that awaits following the trials of the afterlife.

The main sun goddess of the indigenous Sámi people is Beaivi, a deity strongly associated with a white female reindeer. At midwinter, a white deer is sacrificed to her in order to ensure the health of the land and herds.
She is also associated with healing mental illnesses which were believed to occur when the sun disappeared from the sky during the winter. For the Sámi, this might be as long as 40 days, so this is interesting in terms of our own knowledge regarding daylight, mental health and vitamin D.

Beaivi shares other characteristics with horned goddesses associated with midwinter in that she flew through the sky as a deer, but also pulled a sleigh, sometimes made of antlers and bone. The goddess Saule of the indigenous Finnish people was also said to traverse the sky in this same manner and leave gifts by dropping amber down into homes as she passed overhead.
We have come across other ancient goddesses with similar attributes in previous posts, such as La Befana, for example.

So, we have various ancient Goddesses who flew through the sky at midwinter leaving gifts for households and bringing new light and life.
We know today that the earliest evidence for shaman indicates that they were female, and that the practices and iconography moved into Northern Europe and the Mediterranean regions following the various migrations of the Scythians, and the conquests of Alexander the Great.
Although it might seem as though these beliefs and traditions have been forgotten, in fact they have survived in ways not always apparent.
But, also in ways very familiar, as we shall see in the next post in this short series.

(C.) David Halpin.
Photo by Robert Jahns.

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