This coming Saturday, June 21, marks the annual event known
as solstice, summer in the northern hemisphere, winter in the southern
hemisphere. Literally, it’s the
moment when the “sun stands still” before it starts back in the other direction
and for those of us in the north, it is the “longest” day, meaning the most
amount of sunlight and marks the official beginning of summer.
For half of the year we are inclined toward the sun and for
the other half the southern hemisphere has this distinction. Why this makes any difference to anyone
or to me may be the question so let me offer a brief explanation. It’s almost in the category of “if I
have to explain, you wouldn’t understand” but I’ll give it a go anyway.
I am one of those who follow the sun along the horizon in
its northward and southward trek, most often by watching the sun rise or the
sun set and this way I have a fairly good idea of where we are in the year, on
the planet. I see this solar path
that is a result of both rotation and revolution and I sense a deeper
connection to the earth and the sun.
I happen to love the four seasons and I celebrate each one on the four
dates of the two solstices and two equinoxes.
The lessons for me in all of this can be summed up as
follows: It is a very good thing
to stand still before changing directions and to know on which axis I’m
traveling and why. Secondly, how I
let external conditions affect my internal frame of reference informs me about
how my response will impact those around me. Finally, while I am “in motion” during each of the
seasons, the directions, activities and conditions under which I operate
fluctuate appropriately, especially when I am in sync with the sun, the moon
and the stars. And maybe,
because my birth date is a mere three days after solstice, I am even more
affected than I even know at the conscious level.
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