Christmas Eve has come and now I can truly rest.
Every year we try to have the Twelve Days of Christmas as a complete holiday,
though a copy editor came near to spoiling that this afternoon by giving me
work ‘to be handed in on 6th January.’ I’m afraid I just turned it
round very quickly, completely unwilling to extenuate a piece of rewriting
through my precious quiet time.
As we approach the next few quiet days from work,
this is a good time to refresh how we can really prepare for the year ahead of
us through the medium of the Twelve Days of Christmas, which in this household
are well kept.
In the medieval liturgical calendar, the
festival of Christmas Day stood alone by itself as a supreme holy day, and so the
counting of the twelve days began from 26 December which is the 1st
day of Christmas until the 6th January which is Twelfth Night, or the 12th
day of Christmas. What has this got to
do with anything?
Well, in Brittany
and in Wales ,
the Twelve Days of Christmas, which mark the intercalary days of the year, are
called ‘the Omen Days,’ and they have a special purpose. ‘Intercalary days’ are
really the days left over from reckoning up the solar year and, in calendars
throughout the world and at different times, they are special because they are considered
to be ‘the days out of time.’ It is in
this interval between the ordinary count of days that gods are born or
conceived in many different mythologies, including the Irish one, where Oengus
Og, Young Angus, is conceived, grown and born at Brúg na Boinne within this
time, all in one day, by the magical workings of the Dagda.
Brúg na Boinne
Within these twelve days lies a wonderful secret
that those dismissive of the Christian tradition might well miss, for each of
the twelve days is assigned to a month of the coming year, with the first day
of Christmas the 26th December as symbolic of January, the second
day or 27th December representing February and so on, right through
to 6th January which represents the December yet to come. It was the custom of many to go out on each
day of the Christmas festival to observe the signs in nature and divine from
them the state of the year to come. The omens experienced on each of the Omen
Days indicate the nature of each month in the coming year.
The
divining of oracles from nature has a long tradition in Celtic lore. The Scots Gaelic tradition of the frith or the augury from the signs of
nature is well established. The listening to bird’s calling was a critical part
of druidic lore, as was the movement and behaviour of other animals. Some of these auguries have come down to us,
like the little white book of meanings in a tarot pack: some people used them,
but others did not. The real skill is to
read the signs in accordance with your understanding at the time, and as it
relates to the question that provoked the augury in the first place. I’ve been teaching this skill for over 25
years and not yet found anyone who couldn’t do it, as long as they first asked
a well-framed question.
Omen in the Sand, Bay of Scail, Orkney
In
this case, you treat each day of Christmas as the opportunity for an augury for
the month it represents in coming year. This might be experienced during a daily walk,
or perceived in the nature of the day itself and how it falls out. Personally,
I like to make a frame for each Omen Day, by asking to be shown an augury from
nature and allowing the next thing I experience, see or hear to be the sign I
am expecting. It helps to find the right
place to do this on a walk, to close your eyes, to spin around on the spot and
then be attentive.
Many
of my students have been doing this for a while and last year I shared it with
an online group of Lenormand Card readers, who are now using the Omen Days to
divine for the year ahead, choosing one or more cards each day to discover the
nature of the months of the year. There
is no right way to do this, only by the unique interaction you have between the
world that is seen and the world that is unseen, but just as real.
That the Twelve Days of Christmas have kept
their assured place at the heart of Celtic divination is one of those wonderful
instances of double-decker belief that are scattered throughout folk tradition
worldwide. The Russians have a good word for this kind of thing, naming it dvoverie or ‘double-belonging,’ a word originally
coined to cover those who had an earlier belief running alongside a later
one. Wherever a newer tradition has come
into a country, the older one doesn’t just die or go away, but becomes fused
with the newer one, so that the traditional continuity can be enjoyed by us
all.
Whatever your beliefs, the Omen Days continue
to offer the opportunity to understand the year ahead so, forget the ‘year’s
round up of news’ and the ‘look-back specials’ on the tv this Christmas and
look ahead to a year full of promise!
I wish you and yours joy, health, love and
peace!
The Green & Burning Tree from
Celtic Book of the Dead by Caitlín Matthews,
art by Danuta Meyer
Caitlín will be teaching Celtic
methods of divination from nature on 15-16 February 2014 Celtic Visions: Seership, Omens
and Divination from Nature This non-residential course explores the realm of Celtic divination
and vision that was once the preserve of the druidic seers of the Celtic world
who used subtle perception to reveal nature's truth and the soul’s
knowledge. Caitlín has made a special
study of the oracular and sacred traditions, finding simple, practical ways by
which these methods can illuminate the present moment. Participants will learn
how to read the omens of the natural world, using traditional seership methods,
including 'the Three Illuminations' - ancient Irish modes of oracular
divination by incantation, resonance and shamanic incubation - and 'the Augury
of Brighid' which was employed by the ancestral freers of Gaelic
Scotland. There will be opportunities to
give and receive oracles and auguries, by means of the dha shealladh
or 'the two seeings' and by other traditional methods.
Participants need to bring a wooden
staff or wand, OR a small smooth stone, a covering for their eyes, and a small
personal object which should be one whose history is known to them and that
they don't mind other people handling – it will return home with them. NOTE: we
will be spending short periods outside regardless of weather.
Fee:
£175, send £75 deposit payable to the Clophill Centre, or directly into the
account of Richard Diss, sort code 09.01.28 a/c 40762541 Enquiries
to Clophill Centre, Shefford Road, Clophill, Beds. MK45 4BT. richarddiss1950@tiscali.co.uk or
01525 862278
If you can’t
come, then this course generated a book on Celtic seership called, Celtic Visions: Omens, Dreams and Spirits
of the Otherworld is available from her at www.hallowquest.org.uk or from all
the usual sources.
Lovely post, Caitlin! I've admired your work for years and hope to meet you one day, dear sister from the East!
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting this again. I never knew this but always had a feeling that they were days out of time when I was a child. Now I can reclaim this belief. Thank you Caitlin xxx
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting this again. I never knew this but always had a feeling that they were days out of time when I was a child. Now I can reclaim this belief. Thank you Caitlin xxx
ReplyDeleteCailin, I love this! I'm curious: which Irish texts discuss divination? Is this information to be found in the Brehon laws? Or is the source material for your teachings to be found in the late medieval texts, like the Yellow book of Lecan? I'd love to read the source material.
ReplyDeleteI’d like to know that too.
DeleteCaítlin, thank you! I have been doing this for the first time, asking both for the nature of the month and for an augury. I find it gets a little harder each day- maybe because the months to connect to are further in the future? Is that a common experience? Much love to you.
ReplyDeleteLeviticus 19:26
ReplyDelete“...You shall not interpret omens or tell fortunes."
Leviticus 19:31
“Do not turn to mediums or necromancers; do not seek them out, and so make yourselves unclean by them: I am the Lord your God."
Me thinks you sinned by seeking this out
DeleteIt is a sin to be here, yet here you are, not only partaking, but attempting to start a brawl. Go off and mind your business. You might want to start adhering to your own beliefs and leave others in peace. Christ did not preach war mongering.
DeleteMisery, spreading fear and distrust
DeleteI do not understand why Unknown would attempt the practice of taking omens during the twelve days of Christmas and then post the biblical condemnation of such practices? Are they worried about some retribution falling on them for practicing a method of interpreting omens? Or have they decided taking omens is bad and they are preaching against it now? What is the point? --- niniann
ReplyDeleteThis is such a blessing - thank you! I am observing the Omen Days for the second year running. I appreciate this practice, its roots, and its 'messages'.
ReplyDeleteInteresting and amazing how your post is! It Is Useful and helpful for me That I like it very much, and I am looking forward to Hearing from your next..
ReplyDeletehttp://www.miraclepianist.com/12-days-of-christmas/
Thank you, fascinating.
ReplyDeleteHi, I find reading this article a joy. It is extremely helpful and interesting and very much looking forward to reading more of your work..
ReplyDeletemiraclepianist
Lovely Post much appreciated thank you Cheryl carey
ReplyDeletewow its very amazing post i like it
ReplyDelete12 Days Of Christmas
So interesting! Thank you. 🙂. I'm a newbie that is excited to try this.. Warm vibes to you..
ReplyDeleteGrateful to be seeing this for the first time this morning, 25 Dec 2020. It's been a year like no other. At times, I've felt my future being stolen from me by the virulence of Covid. Though my physical health is robust, I'm hard pressed to imagine a time to come as much different from this terrifying present. I anticipate taking Nature's hand in trust and excitement through the Omen Days via 'the silver apples of the moon, the golden apples of the sun.' Thank you, Caitlin, for offering this way this day.
ReplyDeleteInteresting article. Well yesterday, 26th, I spent doing a bit of planning, then went on to do some work on my own website. Then, at the end of the day, my webserver crashed just after I'd taken a backup of my website. Hmm. I wonder.
ReplyDeleteToday is 27th. I've had a pretty chilled day, so far. Still in my PJs at 2:15pm. I've done a bit of Italian learning and scrolling through Facebook. And I've also tried to get some prices for my planned trip to Europe (March 2021) with no success, as nobody wants to let us Brits in at the moment, because our government is spouting on about some imaginary new strain of the imaginary COVID thing.
Your numbers are off the scale. Please don’t come to Ireland either.
DeleteThank you for these insights and this evocative post! I would like to quote some of it on my own blog, www.annesbirdpoems.blogspot.com. This part: "... in Brittany and in Wales, the Twelve Days of Christmas, which mark the intercalary days of the year, are called ‘the Omen Days,’ and they have a special purpose. ‘Intercalary days’ are really the days left over from reckoning up the solar year and, in calendars throughout the world and at different times, they are special because they are considered to be ‘the days out of time.’ It is in this interval between the ordinary count of days that gods are born or conceived in many different mythologies, including the Irish one, where Oengus Og, Young Angus, is conceived, grown and born at Brúg na Boinne within this time, all in one day, by the magical workings of the Dagda.
ReplyDeleteBrúg na Boinne
Within these twelve days lies a wonderful secret that those dismissive of the Christian tradition might well miss, for each of the twelve days is assigned to a month of the coming year, with the first day of Christmas the 26th December as symbolic of January, the second day or 27th December representing February and so on, right through to 6th January which represents the December yet to come. It was the custom of many to go out on each day of the Christmas festival to observe the signs in nature and divine from them the state of the year to come. The omens experienced on each of the Omen Days indicate the nature of each month in the coming year."
Please let me know if this is ok. I will quote and credit you.
Anne
Enjoying. Thank you. Still remember coming to you for journeying sessions and you exploding that imagination was what it is/was what it is all about. Your words still ring in my ears and rest in my heart and head. ..
ReplyDeleteAlso John's, especially about Taliesin. You were/are one of my Ceridwens!
ReplyDeleteThis post just came across my FB feed yesterday. Perhaps it was for the first time, but who knows :)
ReplyDeleteI had the intention of trying it and almost forgot this morning until the fox turned up in the fog across the cow field. If our dogs didn't alert me to the visitor, I would have missed it completely.