Since my youth, I have created little altars in my home, even in my childhood bedroom. If I was unable to go to church on Sunday, I knelt before the altar in my room and recreated the familiar ritual in my own way. Altars were a way of nourishing my soul and elevating my spirit.
My altars and rituals are not aligned with an institution anymore, but rather with my soul and the cycles of nature. Throughout my home, I have tiny altars that remind me of goodness and beauty in the world, a spiritual perspective, and my deepest aspirations.
Every season has its rituals. Autumn brings cleaning up the garden and putting away outdoor cushions and potted plants while nature is transitioning from summer to winter. When I look at the window in my office, I see the last windstorm blew the leaves off the trees; there are only a few still clinging to branches. Will this be the last time of the season to clean up leaves or will snow come first?
Bare branches remind me of the season we are entering. The month prior to the return of the light, is when we are drawn inward to prepare our homes and our hearts for the celebration. While we await the light in the outer world, we nourish it inside.
Besides holiday decorating beginning, I make space in my life for soul preparation and a place within my soul for light and love to dwell. When the Thanksgiving meal is over and we have celebrated the harvest, I bring out the decorations and engage in seasonal rituals.
I change the cloth on the sideboard from orange to white; flowers in the big vase are replaced with naked branches strung with tiny lights and hung with straw stars.
During these four weeks before the winter solstice, one of the ways I prepare my soul is by reviewing the year that is ending, clearing space for love to be born anew. It is a process of sifting through the sediment of what came to pass, to find the golden nuggets.
What has been rejected or unprocessed is given attention. Avoiding suffering only increases it. I allow myself to note, feel and accept what came to pass; there is no way to change what has already happened, except to change my perspective of it.
While looking back on the year, I engage the four aspects of human beings, noting one each week: mineral, plant, animal, and human. On the altar in my home, I create a winter garden.
The first week, I place a rock on the altar to represent human’s physical nature. On the second week, I put a plant, to represent our life force. On the third week, I add something from the animal world, to represent our soul quality.
Then on the fourth week, I put an object to represent our highest consciousness, our divine nature. Along with those gestures, I engage in soul-searching to review the year coming to an end. I wonder about four questions. Questions are always an invitation to discover something new.
Week one: What happened in the physical realm (successes and failures) this year?
Week two: What practices did I adopt or refine?
Week three – What happened in my relationships (new friends, conflicts, deepening of old relationships)?
Week four – How did I become/express my Self, my destiny?
When I ponder and write about these questions, my awareness expands, gratitude grows, I become conscious of who I am and who I am becoming. I locate my north star. I celebrate the joy of giving and receiving. I become willing to note and to accept what is, to create space for what is possible, to begin again like a child.
In the process, I have also created a beautiful display, a winter garden on my seasonal altar. It is adorned with simple elements from nature; ones that young children can relate to, wonder about, and contribute to.
The winter solstice, when the light begins its gradual return, each day grows a little longer. It is nature’s whispering of hope that spring will come again. It is powerful although subtle. In the still of winter we witness with awe the wonder of creation!
We welcome the light! We welcome the birth of all that is new and precious and innocent! Let the glory of life be expressed and may each of us be awakened to love!
Let’s prepare our homes, our hearts and our souls to be ready for what is coming, saying yes with every breath!