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| HALLOWEEN.
MY FAVORITE HOLIDAY! Derived, as most holidays we celebrate,
from ancient customs, the eve before All Hallows Day, evolved into the
Halloween we know and love today. In Celtic times, the Gaelic culture
celebrated with the festival of Samhain to mark the end of the harvest.
They believed at this time (October 31), the boundary between the dead
and the living dissolves. According to the Gaels, this connection caused
problems for the living through possible illness and damaged crops.
In order to placate the (evil) spirits, they held festivals and tried
to mimic them, in hopes they would leave alone the living. When we look
closer at Halloween, we see areas of our lives where we live in the
Halloween state of mind all year long!
Pumpkins When we take a closer, more spiritual look at the pumpkin carving practice, we see poignant symbolism at work in our lives. By selecting the perfect pumpkin, we choose the best representation of ourselves to work on. Then, we carefully clean out the old seeds of thought which will never bear fruit, and throw away the tough fibers of repetitious behavior. Only then, we are left with a clean spiritual slate, to create anything we want in life. We carefully carve out a new face to present to the world, and then we place the white light of understanding and wisdom inside of ourselves, to beam to the world our transformed spirit.
Begging For Food Today, we beg for food of a different kind. We look to others for guidance and direction in our lives. We look outside of ourselves for answers and hunger and thirst for knowledge and meaning. We live lives of “if only I could…” and dream of ways that our positions might improve if we tried things according to someone else’s journey. We spend our precious energy asking everyone around us for insight, all the while neglecting our true hunger for spiritual nourishment. While we may promise nothing in return for receiving tidbits of enlightenment, as humans we practice the same rituals hundreds, if not thousands, of years hence, to attain the same satisfaction.
Costumes The early practices of the Church teach us much about our culture in the present. No longer restricted to Christianity, today we wear figurative masks depicting the best qualities of ourselves that we aspire to put forth. We walk around town, wearing a mask, hoping others notice the disguise and see it as our authentic self. Instead of honoring the miracle of who we are in the present moment, we wear a mask of invincibility, a mask of confidence or a mask of control. Like sweeping dirt under the rug, the housecleaning of our humanity and beliefs cannot be renamed or relocated. We always face ourselves wherever we are in the moment. Just changing the name or face, doesn’t change our spirit itself. In many ways, Halloween today depicts a truly honest holiday. By deliberately and overtly wearing a mask or costume of someone other than ourselves, we unapologetically announce to the world our inauthenticity. No pretenses implied or expressed – just simple fun pretending to be someone or something you’re not. We reach freedom of spirit when we acknowledge ourselves for all aspects of who we are by removing the mask and baring our soul to the world. © Marlene Buffa, 2008 |
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