RavenOfSummer Posted January 2, 2018 Posted January 2, 2018 Here is a wonderful spread created by Chiriku[/member] and first shared by them at AT. This is one of my favorite spreads for winter, so I wanted to share it here and to work with it as a reading circle spread. I highly recommend you read Chiriku's original AT post- it is so poetic! All the spread info below is quoted from that original post: * * * The Gift of Winter * * * **A spread to be used at any time in relation to Winter: in the month or two before, to anticipate its coming; at the time of the Winter Solstice, to revel in its deepest and darkest hours; or in the winter months afterward, to celebrate the "here-and-now" of this awe-inspiring season in our world. The layout is arranged in the shape of a five-pointed star crowned with the highest star (#6) above and illuminated by flame (#7) from below. When I use the spread, I speak aloud the request that accompanies each of the seven gifts as I lay out each corresponding card. *************************6************************ **** *************************1************************ **** **************2***********************3*********** **** *******************4************5***************** **** *************************7************************ **** 1). Winter's daylight seems fleeting and its nights are long. As humans, we are taught to seek out light wherever we find it; unlike other creatures, we do not flourish in the dark. Being in the darkness for long is like living underwater, out of our natural habitat. Yet darkness has many blessings, too; it shields us from our enemies, lulls us to sleep, and softens the harsh realities exposed in the daylight. The night can be a comforting blanket settling over us to give us needed respite before we face the hard slog of the morning. Winter, bring us the Gift of Darkness ---in this, we will find protection or rest this season 2). There is invigoration, mental clarity, and refreshment to be found in the bite of colder air. You can't sit outdoors for long lazy stretches of time; you must be alert and have your wits about you to keep both your physical and mental activity levels "up" and survive the cold. Cold air can be bracing, reviving us, slapping us across the face and waking us up to view the world with new eyes. The cold air touches your face and you are certain you are alive. Winter, bring us the Gift of Cold --this is the biting truth that stings but also revives, awakening and invigorating us 3). Ice and snow-- maybe you long for these things denied you at winter, or maybe you hope to escape them. Either way, like most things, they have a downside and an upside. Here, we celebrate the purity and beauty of ice and snow, whether we experience them firsthand or merely in our minds. Winter, bring us the Gift of Ice and Snow -- this is something pure and beautiful that will touch your life this season 4). Did you know that in some parts of the world, many trees and plants prepare themselves for winter's cold or snow by slowing down their own growth? Underneath their blankets of white, they are not fully dead but merely dormant, conserving their energy and nutrients for periods of future growth. And many animals--humans included!-- go into hibernation during this time, sleeping long hours to avoid cold and hunger and surviving on their stores of fat or gathered food. Winter, bring us the Gift of Hibernation ---this is what you will learn or the benefit you will reap by spending time alone this season 5). We need not spend our whole winter in solitary hibernation. Just as we might huddle to conserve body heat when the temperatures drop, we can also, during the cold and dark times, benefit in mind and spirit from the fellowship of others. Perhaps they are family members or close friends with whom we gather for a meal or holiday. Perhaps they are new acquaintances we meet at a winter gathering like ice skating or a winter sporting event. In the northern hemisphere, you might gather with others for a Yule/Hanukah/Christmas festivity; in the southern, perhaps you might attend a winter solstice celebration. In many cultures, wintertime--which involved less outdoor work now that there are fewer animals to be hunted and no more crops to harvest---was the storytelling time, when people would gather before the hearth and share parables and myths to both entertain and instruct. Winter, bring us the Gift of Fellowship --this is what you will learn or the benefit you will reap by spending time with others during this season 6). Does it seem to you, as it does to me, that the stars appear brighter in the night sky during a northern winter? Perhaps it is the perceived clarity of cooler air. Or perhaps when there are less people about, less inclined to loiter outside when it is cold or dark, our minds can better focus on the heavens above. Then there's the official scientific explanation: in the northern hemisphere winter months, we are facing towards the "spiral arm" (i.e. the near outskirts ) of the Milky Way; this means we see fewer stars, and fewer stars stand out sharper and clearer to us, un-obscured by the haze formed by the millions of distant stars one faces in a northern summer. In northern Winter, the heavens are crystal-clear, bright white against darkest blue or black . Perhaps a northern winter star, brighter and clearer as it seems to us, is easier to wish on, hope on, dream about, reach towards. Winter, bring us the Gift of Stars --this is the wish you will realize or the hope that will guide you this season 7). Paradoxically, although winter is a time of darkness, it is also a time of light--the magical light that humans have wrought from flint and stone: Fire. In winter, fire in its many forms both warms us and lights our way: the glow of candles, the heat of the hearth, and even, in an urban environment, the dance of those burning torches that barkeepers set in the outdoor patios to warm the patrons as they laugh and talk. Fire is most fully appreciated and enjoyed in the darkness and cold, and this is another paradox and gift of winter. When night falls, light blooms in the form of this sacred and magical element, touching us with joy. Winter, give us the Gift of Fire --this is what will light your way throughout the winter, the flame that will keep you going, warming and cheering you even when you've grown weary of winter's other gifts of solitude, darkness and cold
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