Beltane & Slow Living
Disclaimer: This website uses affiliate links, meaning: at no additional cost to you, I earn a small commission if you click-through and make a purchase. As an Amazon Associate or other affiliate program participant, I earn from qualifying purchases. Mabon House only features products that I believe in and use myself. Thank you!
According to the Wheel of the Year, Beltane marks the high point of springtime, falling exactly halfway between the vernal equinox celebration of Ostara and the summer solstice celebration of Litha. Later renamed May Day by Christians, traditional Beltane activities focused on reconnecting with nature to take advantage of the renewed energy of springtime.
In the agrarian cycle, Beltane was a time of great activity, when pastures were cleared and fields planted. Beltane rituals were performed to ensure abundant harvests and healthy livestock. In modern times, May is still a time of great activity and preparation. People hurry to get their yards in order before the start of summer; schools get ready for finals and graduation ceremonies; bridal showers are thrown for all the summer brides. There is a sense of hurry up and get it done, so we can relax in summer.
Slow living during Beltane may seem counter-productive, given this emphasis on activity and production. But slow living isn’t always about literally slowing down and doing less. Slow living is about slowing down and being in the moment, focusing on the activity at hand. Slow living during Beltane could be simply trimming your spring to-do list, to give you time to focus on a few key projects or activities.
GROW YOUR GARDEN
Now is the time to plant the seeds you started at Ostara. These can be literal seeds that are now strong enough to be planted outside, or these could be seeds of an idea or a change you wish to make in your life. Either way, if you are trying to plant too many seeds at one time in your life, it can feel overwhelming as you think about all that must happen to turn the tiny seedlings into a full garden. Same for thinking about the seemingly endless to-do list of things you must accomplish to bring a goal into reality. As you tend to your garden, if you feel overwhelmed try slowing down. Just focus on one thing at a time. A flower doesn’t force itself into the world. It grows bit by bit, each day. Consistency is just as important as action.
HONOR YOUR HOME
According to Judy Ann Nock in her book The Modern Witchcraft Guide to the Wheel of the Year, in ancient days Beltane fires were lit on hilltops and then cattle were driven through the smoke, as a way to ward off pestilence and disease. Embers from these fires were carried home and used to light the hearth fires for spring and summer. This was believed to offer protection and prosperity for the approaching harvest season. It was also believed to be good luck to walk the perimeter of one's property on Beltane.
While you may not have the space for a hilltop bonfire (or have any cattle to pass through the smoke) you can light a small fire via a fire pit, woodstove, fireplace or even a candle and give a quiet thank you to the universe and mother earth for your home and all it provides for you. Or give thanks while walking the entirety of your property.
CULTIVATE ABUNDANCE & PROSPERITY
Manifesting and visualizing what you would like to be, do, or have life is another way to harness the energy of Beltane, which is often associated with prosperity and money. In keeping with slow living, think about what abundance and prosperity mean to you. What is it that you desire out of life? You can absolutely desire more money or material things like a new car or house. Or perhaps abundance for you means more feelings of peace, calm, joy, stability, love in your everyday life. Slowing down and getting clear on why you want the things you want can help you take action toward these goals.
In her book The Modern Witchcraft Grimoire: Your Complete Guide to Creating Your Own Book of Shadows, author Skye Alexander offers some creative and easy Beltane spells that harness visualization and manifesting properties.
CREATIVITY AND NATURE
Artists have long been inspired by the beauty of nature. Beltane and its renewed energy, longer days and warmer weather are ideal for connecting with nature and your creative side. Spend time outdoors with your creative tools of choice. This could be your journal, paint and canvas or other handiwork.
Grab the new Beltane Creative Guide to help you get started.
SLOW CELEBRATIONS FOR BELTANE
There are many ways to celebrate Beltane that are simple, low cost or even free.
Gather friends and family for a traditional Beltane bonfire. Write your intentions for the season on a slip of paper with green ink. Toss the paper into the fire and visualize your intentions being absorbed into the universe.
Prepare a special Beltane meal. This is a great way to celebrate Beltane by yourself or with a group. Popular Beltane dishes include dairy foods, honey, oats, mead, and early greens. Here is a free Beltane Meal Planner to help you get started.
Take a walk in the early morning of May 1st, in keeping with the old May Day custom of gathering flowers with morning dew, which was believed to hold magical properties.
How are you celebrating Beltane this year? Share in the comments below!
Beltane & The Season of Creativity
Disclaimer: This website uses affiliate links, meaning: at no additional cost to you, I earn a small commission if you click-through and make a purchase. As an Amazon Associate or other affiliate program participant, I earn from qualifying purchases. Mabon House only features products that I believe in and use myself. Thank you!
Soon it will be the season of Beltane, which marks the mid-point of spring. Celebrated on May 1st, Beltane is when the Wheel of the Year turns fully from winter towards summer. I love this time of year because of the natural energy that abounds. While Beltane is often associated with fertility, it’s also a time to focus on abundance and creativity. Beltane fires are the first harkening of the summer season to come. Why not use this time to reconnect with your own fire? What lights you up? What excites you? What do you want more of in the season to come?
This year, I want to embrace the energy of Beltane and springtime and delve into my creativity more fully. Specifically I want to explore: What does creativity look like in my life? What can I learn about myself through creativity? How can I harness my creativity to find more joy and purpose in the everyday?
I had thought about doing some kind of writing challenge with myself for the month of May, but I don’t really like the term challenge. I feel like it sets you up to fail if you don’t do the thing every single day.
Instead, I’m thinking I’d like to go on a creative adventure to celebrate Beltane. There is no winning or losing; there is only exploring.
Finding Your Creative Flow
I think creativity should give you a sense of accomplishment and bring you joy and, at times, put you in a state of flow - where time stops and you are just IN the moment. For me, writing does that. Not all the time, mind you. There are days when I have to force myself to put something on the page.
But when I stumble upon something that sparks a light inside my soul - I am able to go all in for a period of time - usually no more than a couple of hours at a time. And when I am finished I feel the greatest sense of accomplishment - even if the end result is just a rough draft of gobbly-gook. I know there is something there. That’s how Mabon House started. I had a kernel of an idea that I just let it lead me to where it wanted to go. I followed and here we are. All because of creativity.
Everyone is Creative
I am a firm believer that everybody is creative in their own way. And everyone can benefit from stretching their creative muscles. We do not need to be the best painter, writer, fill-in-the-blank whatever to be creative. Elizabeth Gilbert captures this idea beautifully in her book Big Magic:
“A creative life is an amplified life. It’s a bigger life, a happier life, an expanded life, and a hell of a lot more interesting life. Living in this manner—continually and stubbornly bringing forth the jewels that are hidden within you—is a fine art, in and of itself.”
Choose Your Own Creative Adventure
So in the spirit of Beltane and Springtime, this week’s free printable is a choose-you-own-creative-adventure worksheet, plus a list of ideas to help you get started. I hope you like it!
I’ll be sharing some other creative resources, including more about Beltane and Creativity in the coming weeks. If you are interested in participation in some sort of community adventure around creativity, let me know in the comments section below.
Take care and I’ll see you next week!
Recommended Reading
Setting Intentions for the Springtime
Hello Friends,
I hope this finds you well and safe. The blustery March winds are blowing here in Maine, like a last gasp of winter. The tiny tips of purple snowdrops are just starting to peek out of the ground and the daffodil leaves are tall and stately, but not quite ready to reveal their flower petals.
I’ve been reading up on the history of Beltane and thinking about some ideas for printables and perhaps another course, like the Ostara Course so many of you enjoyed. I also thought it would be great to hear from some of you, about what kind of content you enjoy or would like to see more on Mabon House. So, if you have a couple of minutes I would love to hear from you. I’ve put together this short anonymous questionnaire/poll, to make it easy to share your ideas for Mabon House.
This week’s printable is a Spring Intentions Worksheet. I like this worksheet because it reminds me to make time in my schedule to do things I enjoy. My daughter recently returned to Maine after living out of state for the past two years and we’ve been planning some fun day trips to take now that the weather is warming up. But our work schedules are opposite each other, so if we don’t set aside time NOW to plan for our trips, they won’t happen.
Here’s what I added to my worksheet:
I want to be, do and have: I want to be consistent in my writing practice, do more physical activity to help reduce anxiety and stress, and have more fun and adventure in my everyday life.
I want to spend more time doing the following: writing for fun, walking outside, visiting with my family, getting out and about to visit new places.
I want to spend less time doing the following: Working on the computer and screen time.
Fun activities I want to do this season: Visit some antique stores along the coast, picnic at the beach, go hiking and do some kind of writing retreat.
After reviewing my answers, I decided the theme of my springtime intentions is Adventure. Which feels really good after two years of being home most of the time. I’d love to hear about your springtime intentions and adventures.
I hope the flowers are blooming in your corner of the world and you are able to have some springtime adventures of your own. I’ll see you next week!