Everyday Sun Magic : Spells and Rituals for Radiant Living
Everyday Sun Magic : Spells and Rituals for Radiant Living
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Author(s): Morrison, Dorothy
ISBN No.: 9780738704685
Pages: 336
Year: 200501
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 23.60
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Embracing the Sun He ends the night and heralds the day He wakes us up for work and play He stirs the seed deep in the Earth And sends it sprouting through Her girth He rules our months, our seasons, and days And with His Fire, He lights our way He brings us joy and warms our hearts He promises a brand new start He doles out doses of Vitamin D To increase our calcium absorbency He brings us air and stirs the tides And all the while, through the sky He rides Without a cross word or a single objection Do you know who He is? Have you made the connection? He is none other than the glorious Sun Who only finds rest when our day is done -Dorothy Morrison The Sun is perhaps the most important influence in our lives. He heralds the coming of each new day, and lets us know that it''s time to get up and get going. But more importantly, His appearance actually makes us feel like getting something done. In His light, we''re motivated to move about, grab our to-do lists, and become productive members of humankind-something crucial in today''s busy world. No one I know can afford to waste a perfectly good day. But the very sight of Him does much more for us than that. It just can''t help but make us smile. And that even goes for folks like me who aren''t morning people at all.


There''s just something downright joyous about seeing the Sun light the world around us. The Sun lightens our moods, quickens our steps, warms our hearts, and just generally makes us happier people. Those aren''t the only things the Sun does for us, though. He also contributes largely to our good health. How? By supplying our recommended daily dosage of Vitamin D, the very substance that helps the body to absorb calcium.1 And not only does the Sun manage this without effort on His part, He manages it without effort on ours. Only about ten minutes of sunshine per day does the trick-and we''re well on our way to having healthy bones and stronger bodies. The Sun''s list of responsibilities goes on and on.


He rules our calendar, starts each week by holding dominion over Sunday, and marks the comings and goings of the seasons in the cycles of His journey. His position in the sky at the time of our births is responsible for our natal signs, and thus He is largely responsible for how the rest of the world views us. He''s responsible for the blowing of the winds, the growth of the plants, flowers, and trees that populate the Earth, and for the oxygen we breathe. And even with all this stuff on His plate, He still finds time to entertain us with sunbeams, rainbows, sundogs, and the like. I''d say that He''s a very busy star, indeed. Taking all this into consideration, it''s little wonder that the Sun has managed to infiltrate our lives as a household word. We say that happy people have a sunny disposition, and refer to those with freckled faces as being sun-kissed. Florida is known as "The Sunshine State," and Japan and Scandinavia are known as the lands of the "rising sun" and "midnight sun," respectively.


We don sunglasses and sun hats, then head for the beach to sunbathe (but not before applying our sunblock; otherwise, we might wind up with a sunburn). We add sun porches to our homes, and have sunroofs installed in our vehicles. But it doesn''t stop there. We also brew sun tea, order our eggs sunny-side up, and purchase Sunny Delight at the grocery store. Even the realm of musical entertainment isn''t immune to the influences of that big, blazing, gaseous mass that warms our backs and lights our way. Remember that fun and campy little song you probably sang in kindergarten called "You Are My Sunshine"? Or maybe you remember "Good Morning, Sunshine," "Sunny," and "Here Comes the Sun" if you''re from my generation. And what about the film and television industries? A Place in the Sun, starring Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift, is a classic, as is A Raisin in the Sun, with Sidney Poitier. And no one could forget John Lithgow''s hilarious sitcom Third Rock from the Sun.


The Sun influences our lives in other ways, too. If it weren''t for the Sun, in fact, life as we know it would simply cease to exist. Without His warming presence, plant life would be nearly nonexistent. Vegetables would be limited to root crops like potatoes and carrots. And flowers? Well, they''d be a thing of the past as well, since even those that bloom at night need His light and warmth to bring them to bud. But even if we could do without all those amenities, other problems would surface. Without sunlight, electric bills would skyrocket, and without warmth, so would heating bills. And there''s no way we could just go back to the basics of firewood and candlelight.


Why? Because without the warming rays of the Sun, trees would be in short supply. And using them for heating, cooking, and melting wax would not only drive them to extinction, but would present a much larger problem: a total lack of oxygen to our planet. The Earth would become a cold, dark, dank place. For all practical purposes, it would be virtually uninhabitable. And yet we tend to take the Sun for granted. We simply expect it to rise each day and light the Earth. Maybe it''s not our fault, though. Since we live in such a modernized world, the magic of the Sun seems nothing less than commonplace.


But no matter whose fault it is, such an attitude is also pure and unadulterated travesty-for the magic of the Sun is truly nothing less than miraculous! Who''s Got the Time? Precisely who first revered the Sun''s daily comings and goings as more than just a common occurrence is anybody''s guess; in fact, it''s been the subject of academic and anthropological debate for centuries. Some insist that the Sumerians and/or Babylonians initially used solar cycles to measure time. However, most believe that the ancient Egyptians were the first to refine this use to the point of any sort of predictability.3 The first clocks weren''t the sundials you might expect, though, and they really didn''t keep track of minutes or hours. Instead, they were more like a calendar in the form of obelisk-shaped stone structures or buildings. And when the Sun shone upon them, He cast a shadow on the ground that not only measured days, months, and years, but the seasons as well. But the Egyptians probably weren''t the only ones who used the cycle of the Sun for time measurement. Take Stonehenge, for example, which announces and measures the solstices.


The rising Sun at Midsummer casts a U-shaped shadow on the stones, and this shadow opens toward the growing light. At Yule, though, the reverse is true. The shape appears again, but only with the setting Sun, and it opens toward the fading light. And while nobody really knows all the intended uses of Stonehenge-some experts think it was originally built as an astronomical observatory, while others insist it was constructed solely as a temple to the Sun-or if it marks or measures other days, one thing''s for sure: the only time this phenomenon occurs is at the solstices. And that makes it a safe bet that time measurement was at least one of the reasons for its construction. Some time around 300 BC, solar time-keeping devices were improved to measure hours. One of the improvements was the creation of a circular arc divided into twelve equal sections with a bead in the center. But since the days varied in length from season to season, so did the hours.


And because these time measurements weren''t very accurate, they came to be known as temporary hours. It wasn''t until the Greeks discovered the use of angles and gave birth to geometry and trigonometry that things began to improve. Even with all of that, though, it took another thousand years to figure out how to determine the equal hours4 we know today. But what about the calendar? How on earth did we wind up with a solar calendar when we know that ancient civilizations initially marked time by the cycles of the Moon? Well, while the Moon definitely came and went with regularity, She just didn''t mark the seasons accurately. And this was an awful problem for the early peoples since they were agricultural in nature. There was no way to know when to plant or when to harvest. This was especially problematic for the ancient Egyptians, though, for an accurate forecast of the seasons also provided an accurate prediction of the flooding of the Nile River. And without knowledge of the latter, the crops that fed and clothed the civilized world might simply be washed away.


So realizing that the Sun-rather than the Moon-announced the change of the seasons, the Egyptians made some changes around 4000 BC. They added five days to their twelve month, 360-day calendar to align it to the Sun''s cycles. In doing so, though, they forgot about the fourth of a day left over, and that was a terrible mistake. Why? Because after years and years, that quarter day added up, and pretty soon, the months they''d marked as Summer were coming in the Winter. The seasons were completely out of sync, and they had a bigger mess on their hands than they''d ever had at the outset. Finally, around 45 BC, Julius Caesar made some changes. He decreed that the first year be 455 days in length to bring the seasons back to order. Then he based the new calendar on the solar year at 3651ΒΌ4 days.


And to catch up with the accumulation of those quarter days, he instituted a leap year that fell every four years. It was a good plan, but it was still a little more than eleven minutes off per year, and even though that doesn''t seem like much, there was still enough of a discrepancy to cause a problem. Enough so, in fact, that by the fifteenth century, things were off by about a week. It.


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