
22 Sep Greater Mysteries ~ Autumn Equinox ~ September 23rd, 2019
Love, love is a verb
Love is a doing word
Fearless on my breath
The wheel of the year has turned, marked by the equinox on Monday September 23rd where night and day become equal. In the northern hemisphere, the Sun’s light begins to fall, heralding the return of Autumn.
In the zodiac, the September equinox brings the seasonal shift from Virgo into Libra, where the Sun finds its place of fall. Under the weakening sunlight, the first subtle omens of winter begin to appear in the ever deepening indigo haze of twilight.
The golden light of the September Sun illuminates the jeweled beauty of glowing leaves and ripening fruits. The figs are purple as the dusk, bursting with juice and seeds. And the pomegranates have deepened into that seductive red, recalling the tragic story of how Persephone, Virgin goddess of fertility, became bound to the underworld.
Fearless on my breath
Teardrop on the fire
In this moment of perfect balance between dark and light, your conscious and unconscious mind will be equally intelligent, offering you a natural sense of equanimity. In this brief repose, seek to find renewed peace of mind regarding the cycle of life and death.
Fearless on my breath
Teardrop on the fire
The sadness in the air slows things down, asking you to ponder and appreciate each golden moment a little bit more. Savor all the beauty you are blessed with. The world is still blushing with warmth and fragrance, but you may begin to perceive the first signs of winter appearing upon the edge of twilight.
Water is my eye
Most faithful mirror
Every pleasure becoming fleeting. In transitory moments such as these, life’s ephemerality reveals itself once again. And with the wisdom inherent in such revelations, you will once again be able to think of your time as being very precious.
In the mystery schools of ancient Greece, the decay of the earth’s resplendent beauty began at the fall equinox, which was associated with the goddess Persephone’s melancholic return to the underworld. The myth of Persephone was in fact the basis for the famed Eleusinian Mysteries.
For those unfamiliar with the story, the generous earth goddess Demeter had a beloved daughter, Persephone, who was abducted by Hades, god of the underworld. Cast down by grief and sorrow, Demeter let the earth grow cold and bare until her daughter was returned.
Teardrop on the fire
Persephone was only permitted to return to her mother for half of the year. Beginning at the fall equinox, she became Queen of the Underworld. Every year, when Persephone descended into darkness, Demeter was said to be in mourning.
The Eleusinian rituals were enacted twice a year at the equinoxes. The Lesser Mysteries took place in the spring when the world came back to life.
But the Greater Mysteries occurred during the September equinox, when the darkness began to usurp the light.
Persephone’s descent summoned the death of vegetation. But the Eleusinian mysteries observed that death was always followed by rebirth. And those who were initiated into the Greater Mysteries overcame their fears.
Just as these ancient mysteries teach, the season of autumn is all about observing nature’s powers of transformation . The leaves fall from the trees, nourishing the soil for the coming spring. And the grapes are fermented into wine.
Fearless on my breath
Teardrop on the fire
Of a confession
According to Manley P. Hall in The Secret Teachings of All Ages:
“The Greeks believed that Persephone was a manifestation of the solar energy, which in the winter months lived under the earth… but in the summer returned again…the flowers loved Persephone and that every year when she left for the dark realms…the plants and shrubs would die of grief…”
In the Eleusinian Mysteries the cycle of Persephone’s descent and ascent illustrated that though the mortal body will surely decay, the immortal soul will rise again.
Most of the great thinkers of ancient Greece and Rome were initiates in the Eleusinian Mysteries, including the philosopher and historian Plutarch who once wrote:
“because of those sacred and faithful promises given in the mysteries…we hold it firmly for an undoubted truth that our soul is incorruptible and immortal. Let us behave ourselves accordingly.”
The rites at Eleusis remain shrouded in mystery, but some of its important elements have been recovered. A great temple to Demeter stood in Eleusis, and on the fifth day of the rites, the initiates took a long walk to the temple, reenacting Demeter’s fruitless search for her daughter.
Thus, they were asked to embody Demeter’s sorrow as a part of their path to wisdom. You can conclude that it is spiritually healthy to feel solemn at this time of year because it is Demeter’s sorrow that will eventually liberate you from your fear of death.
Demeter’s sorrow symbolizes the sadness which penetrates your spirit at the sight of all dying things. To celebrate the mythic meaning of this time of year find a graceful lament, something that heals your darkened mood like Teardrop by Massive Attack. This exquisite song perfectly captures the haunting mystery of Demeter’s sorrow. The lyrics are spare and impressionistic, an elegy for a lost dream.
Black flowers blossom.
In melancholic delirium, you are pulled into its mystery with the primordial rhythm of a heartbeat, that first sound you heard in your mother’s womb.
Absorbed into the darkness by the pulse, you descend into inner space, where time seems to stand still. You can feel Demeter’s pain in the glistening voice of Elisabeth Fraser: how the tenderness of her love has been met with cruelty.
Like all great music, Teardrop breaks your heart with beauty, summoning the light of your soul to emerge from the darkness.
Teardrop on the fire
To know the earth is to know the Mysteries of sorrow and death.
It’s tumbling down (as in love falling apart)
As the light begins to fall and the darkness begins to rise, you may feel Demeter’s sorrow, her mourning for the Virgin’s golden warmth. But do not despair. Light and life are in an eternal flux of rise and fall.
The mysteries of the ancient world surrounded the September equinox with extraordinary veneration. To them, the death of summer opened the gateway to eternity.
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