Posts Tagged: england

In-Person Shamanic Healing Sessions in the Rose Healing Room, Petersfield, Hampshire, England.

Watch this three-minute video for a tour of the Rose Healing Room and an introduction to In-Person Shamanic Healing Sessions and how they work.  The Rose Healing Room is located in central Petersfield, Hampshire, southern England.

For further information on Traditional Shamanism, go to: https://www.roseautumn.com/shamanic-healing/ or go to my YouTube Channel: https://youtu.be/J-GYYjt8y5c

Spring Equinox & New Year

In England, the Spring Equinox is on Friday, 20 March, at approximately 2:46 pm GMT.  It marks the start of the astronomical new year and the astrological new year, when the Sun reaches 0° Aries, the first sign of the Zodiac.

The New Year

Astronomical spring starts on the spring equinox, which falls around 20 March each year, when day and night are roughly equal in length.  Astronomical seasons are based on the Earth’s position around the Sun, a fact, rather than an arbitrary calendar date, such as 1 January.

The old-style Julian calendar, introduced by Julius Caesar in 46 AD (BCE), had its last year of use in 1688.  At that time, England recognised the New Year starting on March 25.  This was due to our ancestors celebrating the Spring Equinox on that date.

In England, records show that the 25th March was officially recognised as the New Year from 1155 until 1751.

In 1689, the new style Gregorian calendar was introduced, and in 1750, the New Year was changed to the 1st January by the Calendar (New Style) Act 1750.  Note that this was an act of Parliament and therefore was not agreed by the people.  If the people have not consented, then they are not subject to any acts or statutes.

Julian to Gregorian Correction

The Julian calendar was changed to the Gregorian due to a calculation error.

The Julian calendar recognised 365 days in a year, with every fourth year a leap year, making the average length of a year 365.25 days.

However, the Earth’s solar year is slightly shorter, around 365.24 days, causing the Julian calendar to drift by roughly 11 minutes per year, which over centuries meant that dates of festivals moved.

To fix this, the Gregorian calendar adjusted the leap-year rule to reduce drift.  An extra leap year is added if the year is divisible by four.

Further Correction Required

Before 45BC, when the Julian calendar was introduced, the year was counted by 369 days.  As it should be.  369 days split up to 13 months of ~28 days (28.38), in accordance with the ovulation and lunar cycles.

But the Gregorian calendar is still not accurate.  We are supposed to have 13 months of 28 days with one day, the day of resurrection, Easter, as a neutral day. That would make 365 days.

This calculation is based on the consistent mathematics of nature:

  • 13 Constellations, not 12;
  • 13 Moon Cycles, not 12;
  • Each Moon Cycle spans 28 days.
 
Both the Julian and the Gregorian calendars subtracted one month in order to sever the connection between the people and the sun, moon, and stars, which together formed our ancient clock.
 
North America used to be called “Turtle Island” because of its shape, which aligned with a turtle’s shell split up into 13 segments, each representing a moon cycle, encircled by a rim of 28 days for the days per cycle.
 
In Latin, Sept means 7. It is not, nor has ever been, the ninth month.
 
Oct means 8. Nov means 9, and Dec means 10.
 
The first day of Spring is 28 March, therefore the first month would be April.
 

New Calendar Order of Months

1. April
2. May
3. June
4. Sol
5. July
6. August
7. September
8. October
9. November
10. December
11. January
12. February
13. March
 

New Year

Our year does not begin in the midst of harsh, cold winter days that darken in the afternoon. Our year begins in the spring, when the flowers start to bloom, when the grass begins to grow, when the trees begin to leaf, and baby lambs are born.
 
The first day of our year is our neutral day, April 1st, Easter.  Marking the resurrection of Christ.
 
There are 4 weeks in a month.  The first day of every month is always a Sunday. Rishon, in Hebrew (ראשון), literally translates to first. The last day of every week is the Sabbath, the day of rest.
 
The only reason the first of April often does not match up with a Sunday is because the Gregorian calendar derailed us further out of sync with natural cycles.
 

New Date – 2040

If we adjust our years from 45BC onward to 369 days rather than 365, we are now theoretically living in the year 2040.
 
Theoretically, the year 2040, because more than a thousand years of fake history have been implanted into our timeline.
 
The Dark Ages are so called because they never saw the light of day.  They didn’t happen.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Regenerate Yourself on Imbolc 1st February 2024

In Shamanic tribal cultures, the Medicine Wheel represents the changing seasons and natural cycles of the year. Our ancient Celtic ancestors were deeply connected to the land, the seasons, and the natural world and honoured these times with rituals and ceremonies. By following this cyclical way of life we too can be aligned with the rhythms and patterns of nature that can offer us their wisdom and support our well-being.

In England, as the great wheel turns we now find nature slowly re-emerging from the deep hibernation of Winter. The 1st of February marks the Ancient Celtic festival of Imbolc (pronounced Im-molk), the first of eight celebrations held throughout the year to herald the change of the seasons.

Imbolc is a cross-quarter or mid-season festival halfway between the Winter Solstice and the Spring Equinox. It marks the change in energy as the light starts to illuminate the end of the long, dark Winter to activate a new cycle of life, bringing the first stirrings of Spring.

Mother Earth is pregnant with the seeds of summer’s fruits, so Imbolc represents regeneration as the light returns to warm the land and nurture the new growth. As such it is linked with pregnancy and the Goddess Brigid in her role as a Maiden and fertility goddess. She rules the fire of the hearth as well as the fire of imagination through poetry and crafts. She also blessed other skills that required the use of fire, like blacksmithing.

Imbolc is symbolised by snowdrops and milk; the first plants and foods of early Spring. Ancient farmers used it to mark the start of Spring when the first baby lambs were born. They ensured lambs were born before the calves because they could survive better and provide much-needed milk after the long winter.

Over time, this day was absorbed by Christianity as the feast of St Brigid, Ireland’s Mother Saint, and one of Ireland’s three patron saints.

As nature starts to wake up, the new Spring energy invites us to celebrate a point of both seasonal and psychic transformation. We can use this phase to activate a new cycle on a personal level to bring in creative energy for new ideas and behaviours.

To clear the way for the new growth of our intentions we can start with purification, cleansing, and clearing away stagnation that built up over the winter months.

  • Open all the windows and sound cleanse each room by clapping loudly in each corner, or ringing a bell to shift stagnant energies which have built up over the long winter.
  • Burn sage with all of the windows open to remove unwanted energy and attract the new.
  • Spring clean and de-clutter your home.
  • Light a fire or candle in every room.
  • Make a list of the old things you want to let go of and burn it.
  • Collect snowdrops for the windowsill.
  • Drum, dance, recite poetry, and sing songs.
  • Brainstorm, create a vision board, and journal, to plan your new activities, ideas and ambitions for the coming year.
  • Plant seeds for new skills and hobbies: join a choir, take a class, or learn to paint or draw.

If you would like assistance with clearing out old patterns of behaviour and limiting beliefs, book a Shamanic Healing Session with Rose: https://www.roseautumn.com/shamanic-healing/

Some altar items for inspiration:

  • Incense. Myrrh, frankincense, and musk are good for creating a ritual space;
  • Basil, rosemary, and cinnamon are good for uplifting energy;
  • Red or orange candles;
  • Sun symbols;
  • Snowdrops (first flower of spring);
  • Something woollen or a sheep figure;
  • A triskele or other triple goddess symbol;
  • Early greens like wild garlic;
  • A blue cloth represents flowing water;
  • Crystals with solar or passionate associations: citrine, garnet, amber, sunstone.
Many Imbolc Blessings to all.
May your light shine brightly, may your path be clear, and may the seeds that you sow be strong and bountiful.

The other festivals are:
Spring Equinox, or Eostre, 21 March
Beltane, 1-2 May
Summer Solstice, or Litha, 21 June
Lughnasadh, or Lammas, 1-2 August
Autumn Equinox, or Mabon, 2 September
Samhain, 31 October-2 November
Winter Solstice, or Yule, 21 December

Boundaries

Clients are usually given homework to complete after a Shamanic Healing Session. The setting of boundaries is one that often comes up after an extraction or soul retrieval to ensure the problem doesn’t return.

If we set an agreement around the event that created the Soul Loss and Intrusion, we can find that there are repeating patterns of behaviour that are difficult to change.

By changing the agreement to something positive, we can enable new ways of thinking and acting that align with our true selves and ultimately experience better outcomes in our relationships.

We will find it easier to confidently set boundaries with others so that soul loss doesn’t occur again through negative behaviour patterns.

My work is about changing behaviour to enable clients to move forward with their lives; not to create returning customers!