May 1, 2020

May Day

May Day, on May 1st, is a spring celebration of the blooming flowers. Maying is what we call the things we do to celebrate this beautiful month-- going on picnics, picking flowers, dancing around a maypole, and sharing our love.
May Day is an ancient holiday stemming from the festival of Floralia which honored Flora, the Flourishing One, the Roman goddess of spring. 

Flora is a bright nature goddess who makes trees bloom- she is a “lady of pleasure", but also a symbol of motherhood. She wears a garland of flowers in her hair, and in her right hand she holds a columbine, for fertility. In England a young woman is chosen as May Queen, representing Flora, and is crowned with hawthorn blossoms. She is often accompanied by a May King.

Agenda:
1. Prepare a Beltane fire
2. Bring in the May
3. May baskets
4. Make Tippaleivät (Finnish May Day Fritters)
5. Maypole Dances

6. Daily Creative Flow



1. Prepare a Beltane fire:
In some places, May Day celebrations still begin at sunset on April 30. May Day eve is called Beltane or, in Germany, Walpurgisnacht, named for the English missionary Saint Walpurga (ca. 710–777).

A few year's ago I managed to collect oak (planted by a squirrel), grape, birch, fir, apple, and hawthorn
 from our yard in preparation for a fire. (I couldn't find the hazel, rowan and willow, so wisdom, 
life and death were unrepresented.)
Beltane means "fire of Bel"; Bel is a Celtic Sun God. On Beltane the Celts would build two large Bel Fires, lit from the nine sacred woods: 
  • birch for the goddess
  • oak for the god
  • rowan for life
  • willow for death
  • hawthorn for purity
  • hazel for wisdom
  • apple for love
  • grapevine for joy
  • fir for immortality
The Bel Fire was an invocation to Bel, asking him to bring his blessings and protection to the tribe. It celebrated the return of fruitfulness to the earth. The ashes were smudged on faces and scattered in the fields, to heal and purify.


2. Bring in the May:
Hawthorn is called the May bush, because it blooms now in England; ours is just on the verge. Cutting the may blossom symbolizes the beginning of new life. I will hang a sprig of hawthorn at our front door to protect and purify our home.

3. May baskets: 

When I was very young, my siblings and I used to run around the neighborhood on May Day morning with flowers from our yard. We would put the flowers on the mat, ring the doorbell, and run and hide. It was scary and exciting!

Today I will give someone flowers anonymously.


4. 
Make Tippaleivät (Finnish May Day Fritters):

The recipe is here.

5. Maypole Dances!
Our hawthorn tree.
I have a clothesline post in my yard that we have used as a Maypole. My friend Georgia and I made ribbons from 4-inch strips of cloth sewn together, and attached one end of each to a plastic salsa container lid. We rolled the ribbons up for easy storage. When it is time to dance, I nail the plastic lid onto the top of my clothesline pole, and unrolled the ribbons.

I did organize Maypole dances one year with my art class students, but I didn't get photos. It was very disorganized- we could have used some practise. I will try it again someday, but I'm not teaching classes this year.

Here are the dances we tried. 

6. Practice daily creative flow:
For Ramadan this year I'm working to create balance and flow, and not get swept away by purposelessness and anxiety. I've been trying to take one intentional creative action each day. Here are my second week's ideas:
  • F: May Day flowers
  • S: Cut a dove linoleum block
  • S: Continue to crochet baby leggings
  • M: Work on my Tree Talk sign
  • T: Repaint the bedroom window sills
  • W: Print a dove prayer flag
  • Th: Drawing meditations

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