Unit Nine : Green Still Moon
Unit Nine
GREEN STILL MOON
(August - September)
Moon: Green Still
Green Still Moon is the name I use for this tide. For the green growth is
now dark, thick and heavy; there is a sense of waiting, a stillness while
the apples swell, the earth is dry, and the wasps lazily seek out sweetness
to steal.
Find out what other names people and traditions use for this moon, and by
the end of the tide choose your own name for it, one that reflects the cycle
in your environment and your own nature.
Festival: Equinox
During this moon we prepare for the Autumn Equinox, and again I encourage
you to go out at dawn and dusk to chart exactly where the sun rises and sets
upon the horizon near your home. Just as it did through spring, you’ll
see the position changing quickly, the sun emerging and disappearing significantly
nearer the east each day.
Through the inertia of sticky warm days and heavy growth, the undercurrent
of change rising beneath us, drawing us closer to the point of balance. What
do you rely on to hold you balanced through periods of change? How present
or reliable is that in your life? Think about the issue with relevance to
your family or close community, and to all humanity: in the turmoil of change,
what do we need to feel secure? Becoming aware of these issues will be a guide
for the festival rite.
Season: Harvest
This moon takes us through the thick of harvest season, a time which for our
ancestors (until only a few generations ago) meant blistering hard work. Long
hot days spent in the fields, the whole family at work, sharing laughter,
stories, sweat and tears, drinking gallons of ale or cider where safe water
wasn’t available. Once gathered, that harvest was given over to the
land owner, or needed to be sold; either way, its value was crucial to the
community. How much contact do you have with this powerful cycle and understanding
of food? Can you find a way of getting more involved, or - if you do grow
your own food - allowing others to get involved who don’t have the opportunity.
How does it change your behaviour and your awareness of food, of the land,
the weather, the gods?
Perception: Touch
In the sweat of the day’s working, in the lazy evenings, through this
moontide wake yourself to the power of touch once again. This sense is also
a focus in the tide before the Spring Equinox, yet then the land was hard
with cold and sleep. As you explore, be aware of just how is it different
now.
Indulge in the heightened awareness of what the world feels like on your fingertips,
beneath bare feet, upon your cheek or lips, resting on your belly. Explore
sensations of wet and dry, sticky and slippy, sun-baked warm and shadow cool,
prickly thistles, soft moss, hazel leaves and beech leaves, oak bark and cherry
bark. Close your eyes, and touch. Open again to the wonder.
Element: Thirst
Staying with water, through this tide acknowledge the element in its most
precious forms. Explore what happens when you are thirsty, and consider how
that powerful craving is ever-present in many communities of the world.
Find a place where water is scarce and sit, in summer’s stillness and
warmth, until you can feel the value and power of water here. Raise your awareness
of the precious nature of tears and sweat: what is released in these two,
physiologically, chemically, and emotionally? How much do you sweat and shed
tears? Raise your awareness of what is happening when you do.
Recalling how water connects all life, holding memory, how are sweat and tears
so important in and to the stories of our people?
Humanity: Human Beings
Through this moontide, the relationship to work on is your relationship with
humanity as a whole. What do you share with every other human being across
the world? What do you share with human beings who have lived through the
past five thousand years, and the past fifty thousand? What makes your culture,
your family and yourself unique? What makes this period of time unique for
humanity?
In holding awareness of these things, the Druid feels acutely the connections
that link him/her into the energy and consciousness, or the spirit, of humanity,
as it exists within the flow of time, upon the Earth. What is the benefit
of this wakeful connection?
Through our actions and attitudes, we can each make a difference to the wellbeing
of our species; how can you improve what you contribute to humanity? Do it.
Environment: Nuts
The hazel is the tree honoured by many through this moon, and indeed it is
at this point a dense green, putting forward its precious nuts, food that
will be all too quickly devoured by the wild creatures (notably squirrels
here) of any environment. The thistles are at their height where I live, tall
and gloriously spiked, their purple flowers transforming into the softest
cotton down.
Which plants, trees and animal are most visible in your landscape? Which are
putting out nuts and seeds? Amongst the birds, which migrants are already
disappearing and where are they heading? Which are most commonly seen now?
Can you see that mix of inertia and change in the wild creatures around you?
What is the energy and life on the fields that have been harvested?
Self: Harvest
At this time, our personal harvest is becoming clear. Before us are the results
of what began as dreams at Gwyl Fair, of the seeds that we sowed in the spring,
that we nurtured through the sunshine of summer. Some may have thrived and
offer us a harvest of those dreams, bringing an abundance of achievement and
wellbeing. Some will not have germinated, some will have withered and died,
and at times that will have been a good thing, while at others there will
be a sense of failure and regret.
Through this moontide, let us consider our own harvest, looking back to midwinter
and the journey through the tides of this growing cycle. What lessons can
be learned? Where did we push against the season and where did we allow nature
to support our work?
Creativity: Sharing
Sharing poetry is about sharing a perspective. It can be suffocatingly bland,
devoid of inspiration, like a narrative told without enthusiasm. It can be
hugely dull simply because there is no depth or originality in our vision.
However, the poet’s skill is in part similar to that of a photograph:
framing, in time and space, a moment and presenting that moment in a way that
is poignant.
During this moon, writing more and looking at what you have already written,
see if you can touch others with your poetry: not skin on skin, but soul to
soul, as you share the poignance of your perception of a moment.
Ethics: Generosity
What can you do to make life easier for others? In the heavy long days of
August and early September, energy is slow, irritation and apathy rising in
tides, the sun pulling us into a new flood of change. Looking around you,
see who is finding it particularly hard. How can you help?
It is important that what you offer is given because the other person wants
or needs that service, and not because it’s what you think he might
want or need, not because it will make you feel good about yourself.
Think about that powerful word that was so important to our ancestors: generosity.
Big gestures may be appropriate, but continuity is more important; commit
yourself to giving no more than you can wholeheartedly and truly give, ensuring
that you can maintain the gift for as long as that help is needed.
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?

