The Stillness of the Solstice
In the Great Wheel of the Celtic year, the Winter Solstice marks a descent into Midwinter’s deepest darkness, a threshold where the sun retreats and the island is surrendered to a raw, biting cold. This is the moment the sun reaches its lowest ebb and appears to stand still upon the horizon. To the ancient Celts, this was a sacred threshold, the natural order was suspended, the land was stripped back to its skeletal bones and the veil between our world and the Otherworld grew thin.
To endure this death of the year, the community turned toward the hearth. This was a season of communal vigil, a time to huddle together and feast, finding a shared light within the heart of darkness. Great fires were lit and evergreens like Holly, Ivy, and Yew were brought indoors to pull the vitality of the wild into the home. By sharing food and drink in the firelight, the community practiced a collective vow to keep the spark of life alive until the sun began its climb once more.