Saint Brigid of Kildare & Imbolc the beginning of Spring

Ireland, Beara Peninsula ©ChloeRain 2013

Imbolc, also known as the Feast of Brigid, on February first, celebrates the arrival of longer, warmer days and the early signs of spring.

It is one of the four major "fire" festivals (quarter days), referred to in Irish mythology from medieval Irish texts. The other three festivals on the old Irish calendar are Beltane, Lughnasadh, and Samhain.

Prayer to St. Brigid of Ireland

Brigid
You were a woman of peace.
You brought harmony where there was conflict.
You brought light to the darkness.
You brought hope to the downcast.

May the mantle of your peace cover those who are troubled and anxious, 
and may peace be firmly rooted in our hearts and in our world.
Inspire us to act justly and to reverence all God has made.

Brigid you were a voice for the wounded and the weary.
Strengthen what is weak within us.
Calm us into a quietness that heals and listens.
May we grow each day into greater wholeness in mind, body and spirit.

photographs, Travel through Killarney National Park, Beara Pennisula Ireland

St. Brigid's Feast Day is February 1st.

The word Imbolc means literally "in the belly" in the old Irish Neolithic language, referring to the pregnancy of ewes.

In ancient Irish mythology Brigid was a fire goddess. Nowadays her canonization is celebrated with a perpetual flame at her shrine in Kildare.

St. Brigid represents the Irish aspect of divine femininity in her role as patron of babies...

more : Thoughts on Finding Inspiration In the In-between Times : The Spiritual Significance of Imbolc

Chloë Regen

Chloë Rain is de oprichter van Explore Deeply. Ze is getraind in ceremoniële praktijken en sjamanistische helingtechnieken van twee levende traditionele geneeswijzen, één in Noord-Amerika en één in Zuid-Amerika. Ze is een gecertificeerde Native American Healing Arts Practitioner en heeft een Master in Inheemse Studies van de Arctic University van Noorwegen, waar ze vier jaar onderzoek deed naar het heilige landschap van Sápmi, het land van de inheemse Sámi bevolking.

Door haar werk hoopt ze meer mensen te inspireren om te luisteren naar de roep van hun ziel, en ze wat beter te laten kijken naar zichzelf, naar de natuurlijke omgeving om hen heen en naar andere mensen en onze overtuigingen van scheiding, ras, cultuur en religie.

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