Steep a cup of tea and read about Mabon.
T
he cicadas are singing the swan song of summer, and she
is beginning to dress for autumn. The world is still mostly green, but
every so often, a stiff breeze will shake loose a few golden leaves and
blow them past me as a reminder that the wheel is turning. Some people resist these days of waning at first, but that first cool
night that creeps through my screen and into my bedroom lays an old
familiar blanket on my skin and I’m comforted by her touch and her
scent. It’s the scent of tired leaves and ripened seedheads and longer
shadows. It’s the scent of grass cooled by the morning dew and the
cedar chest from where I pulled my extra quilt. She reminds me that
summers never last, but they do indeed come around again after a period
of much-needed rest. After every period of expansion is a period of
contraction, followed by another period of expansion, and so on. Once
you recognize the pattern, you’ll find its threads woven into
everything; in the seasons, in our breath, in green and growing things,
in the birthing of people, planets, stars, and ideas, in living, in
dying. It’s finding harmony in and engaging with this rhythm that
brings me a great sense of security, connection, and enchantment.
On the Celtic wheel of the year, the
festival of Mabon (which is actually a more modern name for the
festival) coincides with the autumn equinox on September 22 (or
somewhere thereabouts) and is the second of the three harvest festivals
bookended by Lughnasadh on August 1 and Samhain on October 31. This
long, decadent stretch of late summer is often called a “fifth season”;
we are not in high summer anymore but not quite settled into fall yet.
Things are being harvested and stores are being laid up for winter.
All of our hard work is coming to fruition and summer is full in our
bellies. I’m eating the last of the tomatoes,
and starting to think about what I’ll do differently in next year’s
garden. There is a business about it that can be overwhelming at
times, but I know that it’s all about to come into balance. That’s what
an equinox is – a balance of night and day. It’s a pause between
breaths, the liminal space between heartbeats. At Mabon, we are
occupying the moment just before the exhale, balanced on the edge of the
blade. The light is noticeably turning towards darkness, seeds are
falling to the earth to go dormant, and everything is preparing to rest
and going inward to build up enough energy to begin the cycle again next
year.
The story of the corn mother
In
pre-industrialized, pre-Christianized Europe, it was believed that the
female spirit of the grain lived in the fields with the crops. Once all
the crops were brought in, she no longer had a home, and so the last
sheaves were reaped in ritual and used to make a corn dolly to embody
and honor her spirit. She was kept warm and safe in a place of honor in
the home all winter, and in the coming spring, she would be tilled into
the earth to infuse the new crop with her generous spirit of fertility.
In Celtic traditions, the female spirit of the divine cailleach (Gaelic
for “hag”), the sacred ancient mother, lived in the harvest. She is
born anew each spring (or every hundred years in some stories) and
matures with the seasons, renewing herself over and over again. Some
villages made a game of her corn dolly, kind of like “hot potato”. The
first farmer to get all his grains harvested would make a corn dolly
from the last of his crop. He’d then toss it into a neighbor’s field
who hadn’t finished his harvest yet. The corn dolly would get passed
along until the last farmer to get all his crops in was stuck with her
for the winter. Some villages would dress the corn dolly to resemble
the cailleach and burn her to honor the death of summer and thank her
for the harvest.
Comments
Have a great day!
Christer.