December 21, 2017

Winter Solstice and Dong Zhi

The winter solstice occurs this morning at 8:28 a.m. pacific standard time.

In the Northern Hemisphere, the December solstice happens during the coldest season of the year, when the sun is at it’s lowest angle and is seen for it’s shortest period. This is the moment of new beginnings- the darkest time, with the brightest hope. 

Many ancient solstice traditions are adopted and absorbed into Christmas festivities. I mark the solstice separately from- but linked to- Christmas. This is when I honor the sun, and remember that in spite of our technology, we are still dependent on the sun for life. Our world does revolve around the sun!

Agenda today:
1. Say a prayer
2. Paint a plum tree calendar
3. Christmas Novena, day 6



1. Say a prayer:
Dong Zhi is the Chinese celebration of the winter solstice; it means "Arrival Of Winter". The Chinese have a great feast on Dong Zhi. Everyone wears new clothes, and visits their families with gifts. 

The Dong Zhi Festival is a time of hope, optimism, and thanksgiving for a successful harvest, the fertility of the land, and the reunion of the family. Many people offer incense on the morning of Dong Zhi, and prayers of thanksgiving to Heaven and Earth, the household gods, and to the spirits of the ancestors. People also pray for safety and prosperity in the coming year.

My prayer today: I offer my grateful thanks for life, my family and friends, this warm house in which I am able to stay out of the cold, and for the people who are working daily to make the world a better, more loving place.

2. Paint a plum tree calendar:
Funny looking plum tree!
Dong Zhi is grounded in the Chinese idea of yin and yang- balance and harmony in life. The feminine yin qualities of darkness and cold are most powerful at this time but the solstice is the turning point, giving way gradually to the masculine yang of light and fire.

In China, the number nine is linked with winter because odd numbers are yang, and nine is the largest odd number. Nine represents infinity and extremes. Winter is divided into nine periods, each nine days long, totaling 81 days. 

The Winter Solstice is the beginning of the first nine-day period. The weather should improve a bit every nine-days, and at the end of the ninth period, spring comes!

Before the Winter Solstice, people in China sometimes paint a plum tree with 81 white flowers. The plum blossom symbolizes longevity, hope, courage, and the promise of spring.


Materials: 
  • soft absorbent paper (rice paper or newsprint)
  • bottle of black sumi ink
  • a Chinese brush 
  • or use a black marker!


1. Experiment with the brush. Dip your brush into the ink. Hold the brush vertically, very gently.

2. Practice painting a tree and plum blossoms. To get fine lines, touch only the tip of the brush to the paper. Move your whole arm. Just paint the outline of the blossoms, and five dots in the center.


3. When you feel confident, paint a tree with 81 plum blossoms.


4. Hang the tree on the wall, and, starting tomorrow, color one flower red each day. At the end of nine-times-nine days, 81 red blossoms will welcome the spring!


3. Christmas Novena, day 6:

From the Worldssps site:

In Communion with those Living in Slum Areas

Lord God, You came to give honor to the least, those forgotten, overlooked and misjudged.  You came to give first place to the last, those left behind, misunderstood and undervalued.  You came to give a warm welcome to the lost, those who are orphaned, abandoned and destitute.
Lord God, no one is a stranger to you and no one is ever far from your loving care. In your kindness, watch over the people in pavements and slums, those exposed to extreme poverty, neglect, and unjust systems; those separated from their loved ones, young people who are lost, and those who have left home or who have run away from home.  Bring them back safely to the place where they long to be and help us always to show your kindness and compassion to all and thus expressing our communion especially to those in need.  We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

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