Unit Eight
CLAIM SONG MOON
(July - August)
Moon: Claim Song
In the traditions of many peoples, this is the moon during which the harvest
is celebrated; it is for this reason that I call it Claim Song Moon. Having
truthfully acknowledged our own investment in the crop, now is the time to
claim what is ours, whether that be the abundance or the scarcity. Our song
is the expression of that truth.
What is the most relevant name for this moon in your environment?
Festival: Lughnasadh
Lughnasadh, Lammas, Gwyl Awst are names for this festival celebrated in Druidry
and most new Paganisms on or around 1 August. What do these words mean and
what is their history?
Although my grove gathers at the nearest Saturday to this date, I personally
make my rituals when the first field of wheat or barley is harvested in the
valley of my home. At that time, I spend time in the fields of golden corn,
making offerings of song, and making sacrifice in thanks to the gods, the
land, the plants, the wildlife, and the cereal itself, for feeding the people.
As you prepare your ritual of Gwyl Awst, consider what you personally and
what society generally can give in return for this gift of sustenance. How
can we give adequate thanks? And what is the purpose of our thanksgiving?
Season: Harvest Waxing
Though in Britain we use the word autumn and in the US the word is fall, the
older word for the season that follows summer is harvest. This is its beginning.
In the environment where I live, by Gwyl Awst we already have an abundance
of strawberries, raspberries, redcurrants, loganberries, and other sweet red
berries grown for our pleasure and nourishment. If you can, find a farm (organic)
where you can pick your own harvest, and celebrate this profusion of nature’s
generosity.
Be aware of when the harvest of wheat and barley is ready. Although most Druidry
can well be practised in the city, we are all dependent on this harvest; find
a way of knowing how the harvest is going. Has there been enough rain or too
much? What is the state of the land? Take a trip out into the country and
sit yourself down in a field of wheat just before the harvest ... and just
afterwards.
Perception: Dance
Through each moon we have focused on different ways in which we perceive the
world; this moontide’s focus is dance. We may think of dance as an activity,
but in Druidry dance is also a medium through which we experience our own
life and the world around us.
That is not just about our own movement, but about the way in which all of
nature moves. To what rhythms is nature dancing? How can you improve the way
you hear or feel those rhythms? Listen to the earth, to gravity, to the heartbeat
of humanity, to the wind, the rain, to your cravings and your ancestors. Find
a deeper, a sacred and a more meaningful way of dancing.
Element: Water
With the shift in season from summer to harvest, we change focus on elements,
from fire to water, and this moontide we look at water in everything. Just
as it is possible to see earth and sunshine in all of nature, so it is possible
to acknowledge the element of water.
Scientists are now speak of the notion of water having memory, an idea that
is integral to most Paganisms around the world, to homeopathy and other natural
medicines. Find out what you can about this idea. What does that mean in terms
of the power, the spirit or song of a river, of the ocean, of rain? Find out
how much of a human body is water, how much our brain is made up of water,
how much of the earth’s surface is water. Be aware of the water in the
food you eat, understanding where that water came from. What about the water
you drink, water bottled and transported miles for your convenience, and water
drawn from a kitchen tap? How does it feel to have a bath, or slip into a
swimming pool or the sea?
What is the effect on your perception of life with this consciousness of water?
How does it change your behaviour?
Humanity: Connection
Through the fluidity of water, through its omnipresence, during this moontide
the focus is on the way in which we connect with all life.
Druidry teaches us that we are all connected: through blood, stories, breath,
love, grief and landscape, we are linked to our ancestors and our descendants.
Through food, tears, laughter and song, through all we excrete, through every
thought and action, we are linked to the land and seas. Through energy and
consciousness, through the molecules and subatomic particles of our being,
we are connected.
It can be hard to imagine the threads that make up the complete web of life;
seeing them as currents within water can be easier. Similarly, when we are
used to feeling the threads existent in space, to shift that awareness to
water can also be a useful and potent change of perception. Why?
How does your relationship with nature change, and your relationships with
individuals, when you are conscious of these threads and currents of connection?
Environment: Verdancy
Holly is the tree noted by some at this time; who and why? Although holly
is not so prominent in the forest or hedgerows at this time as it is in the
middle of winter, when other trees are bare, it is associated with the harvest
and sacrifice. Can you feel that link?
Growth is heavy and often wet in the valley of my home at this time. The tide
is clearly turning, and hints of darkness and decay are creeping in. Can you
feel them? Leaves are rotting underneath the lush green growth, petals and
fruit fallen, the stark shaven vulnerability of a field newly harvested.
In terms of trees, plants and the wild creatures, what seems to you most awake
and vibrant, most poignant, in your environment through this moontide?
Self: Sacrifice
Sacrifice is the key focus of this moon, for as the harvest is brought in
we rise to celebrate the gifts of the land, of the ancestors and the gods.
What are these gifts?
Yet the word sacrifice has negative connotations in secular modern culture;
why? Many in Druidry consider it to be a key part of their practice. As such,
it is useful to find out why that may be. Talk to others in the tradition,
read and ask questions of practitioners and students of Druidry.
How would you define sacrifice in a positive way, and how would you distinguish
it from the offerings that you make in thanksgiving? Whom do we make sacrifices
to in Druidry? If we recall what our ancestors sacrificed (livestock; what
else?), each item was clearly of significant value. What can we sacrifice
in our modern and relatively comfortable world that would be of similar value?
And what would be the purpose of doing so?
Creativity: The Gift
Having spent a moontide writing poetry, through this moon you are encouraged
to give it away! How? Keep writing, now exploring in your poems your perception
of our complete connection within nature, allowing yourself to receive inspiration
through the growing trust and openness of your interaction.
Some poems you may feel are strong enough to learn and recite to your muse(s),
to those who have inspired you to write, offering the verses in thanksgiving.
Some you may offer to the gods, to the land, to the wind, or may burn, knowing
that poetry, like water, continuously flows if we let it. Nothing is ever
lost, but much decays in order to regenerate in a new form. Let your words
float upon the currents.
Ethics: Payment
Through a moontide during which we acknowledge and give thanks for powerful
gifts of abundance offered by the land, as we consider sacrifice, think about
what you can give back. You may feel this is a good time to clear excess from
your house and give it to charity, or find the courage and generosity to give
an amount to charity or a number of charities, or give a gift to a friend
in need.
This may be a time to do some fundraising for an ethical cause, or perhaps
to give time in voluntary work for a charitable organization you support.
Another form of sacrifice is to stop buying cheap food, determining here to
buy organic and fair trade produce.
It always takes an effort to make a sacrifice; if it doesn’t, no sacrifice
is made.
Review:
In the last few days of the moontide, when the moon is dark, consider what
you have achieved through the cycle. What have you learned, changed, understood,
and given in exchange?