Libra Moon welcomes the Sun to Capricorn. Happy Solstice! 12-21-2016

Lovely, “Libra Seeking Balance”… :) We really enjoyed this post, thanks so much …
we wish you a joyous Winter Solstice.. the SGC Team…

Diane L's avatarLibra Seeking Balance

Mars in Libra

From the time the Moon arrived in Libra yesterday evening, she makes no major aspects until late this evening when she will square Mercury in Capricorn. She was inconjunct Mars in Pisces around midnight and will be inconjunct Neptune in Pisces during the afternoon but contacts between Libra and Pisces tend to be understated and non-confrontational. If anything, what we might experience is a feeling of lethargy. Talking issues over with a close friend or partner is constructive today. 🌠☾♎🌠

The Solstice is here and the Sun moved into Capricorn well before dawn. The shift from outspoken Sagittarius to reserved Capricorn is one that takes some getting used every year. It usually hits home after the Holidays are behind us and cold, dark January is upon us here in the northern latitudes. This is a good time of year to work on a project that demands our full attention since no one…

View original post 27 more words

Happy Winter Solstice… Joyuous Yule 2016

The following article is from “The Huffington Post

Darren Staples / Reuters
The Charnwood Grove of Druids gather for a public winter solstice ritual on Beacon Hill near Loughborough, Britain December 18, 2016.

In 2016, the winter solstice in the Northern Hemisphere will begin on Wednesday, December 21 at 5:44 EST. To calculate the turning point in your time zone, click here.

Officially the first day of winter, the winter solstice occurs when the North Pole is tilted 23.5 degrees away from the sun. This is the longest night of the year, meaning that despite the cold winter, the days get progressively longer after the winter solstice until the summer solstice in 2017.

The winter solstice is celebrated by many people around the world as the beginning of the return of the sun, and darkness turning into light. The Talmud recognizes the winter solstice as “Tekufat Tevet.” In China, the Dongzhi Festival is celebrated on the Winter Solstice by families getting together and eating special festive food.

Until the 16th century, the winter months were a time of famine in northern Europe. Most cattle were slaughtered so that they wouldn’t have to be fed during the winter, making the solstice a time when fresh meat was plentiful. Most celebrations of the winter solstice in Europe involved merriment and feasting. In pre-Christian Scandinavia, the Feast of Juul, or Yule, lasted for 12 days celebrating the rebirth of the sun god and giving rise to the custom of burning a Yule log.

In ancient Rome, the winter solstice was celebrated at the Feast of Saturnalia, to honor Saturn, the god of agricultural bounty. Lasting about a week, Saturnalia was characterized by feasting, debauchery and gift-giving. With Emperor Constantine’s conversion to Christianity, many of these customs were later absorbed into Christmas celebrations. 

Kieran Doherty / Reuters
Revelers celebrate the winter solstice at Stonehenge on December 22, 2015. Stonehenge is a celebrated venue of festivities during the winter solstice – the shortest day of the year in the northern hemisphere – and it attracts thousands of revelers, spiritualists and tourists. Druids, a pagan religious order dating back to Celtic Britain, believe Stonehenge was a center of spiritualism more than 2,000 years ago.

One of the most famous celebrations of the winter solstice in the world today takes place in the ancient ruins of Stonehenge, England. Thousands of Druids and Pagans gather there to chant, dance and sing while waiting to see the spectacular sunrise.

 

Pagan author T. Thorn Coyle wrote in a 2012 HuffPost article that for many contemporary celebrants, solstices “are a chance to still ourselves inside, to behold the glory of the cosmos, and to take a breath with the Sacred.”

In the Northern hemisphere, friends gather to celebrate the longest night. We may light candles, or dance around bonfires. We may share festive meals, or sing, or pray. Some of us tell stories and keep vigil as a way of making certain that the sun will rise again. Something in us needs to know that at the end of the longest night, there will be light.

In connecting with the natural world in a way that honors the sacred immanent in all things, we establish a resonance with the seasons. Ritual helps to shift our consciousness to reflect the outer world inside our inner landscape: the sun stands still within us, and time changes. After the longest night, we sing up the dawn. There is a rejoicing that, even in the darkest time, the sun is not vanquished. Sol Invictus — the Unconquered Sun — is seen once again, staining the horizon with the promise of hope and brilliance.

 

Gemini Full wild unknown Super Moon

Gemini Super Moon is complex and pinpoints Donald Trump exactly. This may be a time of great vulnerability for Trump and for all of us as Chiron the WOUNDED HEALER squares the Sun and Moon from PIS…

Source: Gemini Full wild unknown Super Moon

SGC Admin Update:

SGC Admin:

Good morning ladies and gentlemen… we wish to apologize for the lack of posts on SGC of late. We are presently out of the country taking care of a relative who has been diagnosed with Lung Cancer…. if time and ability allows we will try our best to get back to adding some new posts in the near future… we appreciate your patience and understanding in this matter, and we are open to all healing, prayers and good thoughts for us and our family member… we hope we can come home soon… :)