Sunday 22 September 2013

Mabon Tarot Blog Hop

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 Greetings and welcome to the Mabon Tarot Blog Hop!

Depending on which way you are reading around the Master List, you may have arrived from Andy Boroveshengra or in reverse from Aisling at TarotWitchery. I am so happy to welcome you to Wynn Tarot.

Mabon is the festival of the Autumn Equinox, occurring between Lammas (beginning of August) and Samhain (end of October) and celebrates Day and Night being of equal length. After which the nights grow long and we prepare for the coming of Winter.

Our wonderful wrangler for the Hop is Cristiana C Gaudet and the theme for this Mabon festival is Divination and Myth. As you can see by the tabs on this blog, I have a love of the Festivals and of myth and legend so am thrilled to be taking part in my very first Blog Hop.


I live in Kent in the South East of England, and the above photo shows the nearby Coldrum Longbarrow all shrouded in Autumnal mist. This 3000 year old chamber reminds me that the land on which I live contains a wealth of ancient memories and didn't just appear as 21st Century suburbia!

Where our home lies is slap bang in the middle of an area once shared (not always peacefully) by Jutes, Saxons and Celts. At one time our very garden was part of the land owned by a Saxon general and was covered in woodland of Beech and Oak before gently sloping down to the River Medway.

According to ancient texts (including the Lacnunga - an Anglo Saxon book of healing charms and remedies) dense woodland was both a help and a hindrance to the population. Wonderful for a ready source of timber for shelter and fuel, but problematic due to the Elves. Yes....Elves! 
These dwellers of the dark forests were thought to be the cause of certain illnesses, wild behaviour in humans and livestock as well as nightmares and addled minds. Many historians claim that the probable diseases were due to damp, mould and airborne germs ('elf-shots') - but these were superstitious folk who believed they were sharing the land with the Elves, and that offerings and respect were required. In my own family, whenever we grew fruit and vegetables we were told never to strip a plant bare, but to leave some fruit 'for the fairies' (....and I still do)


When relations between human and Elf were good, the people would be invited to one of the dance rituals the Elves loved. It wasn't unheard of for some Elves to emerge from the woods and come and live underneath a human home (apparently the tidier the better. No chance here then!) and there are many tales of love and marriage between the two. Elves would sometimes bestow a gift of an Elf Book, which showed various magical ways of divining the future.

 Our ancestors and their Elf neighbours needed to live in harmony with the wheel of the year, and moving from light to dark marked a shift in daily living. I have created a Tarot/Oracle spread to journey from this festival of Mabon towards the festival of Samhain at the end of October. I'd like to share it with you....and the Elves!


1 What I balance between the light and dark parts of myself
2 The energy I need for my journey to Samhain
3 The strength I didn't know I possessed
4 What I bring to the dance!

Wishing you bright blessing through this Mabon Blog Hop - I shall now venture into my rain-lashed garden with my offerings .......and sit....and listen....

'Til next time

Margo


Photo of Coldrum Longbarrow by Margo Benson. Illustration 'Elves' by Arthur Rackham

13 comments:

  1. Lovely! What I bring to the dance is a great question! Will have to try this one out. The picture of the Longbarrow...thank you. :D

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  2. What a lovely magical tale... and I'm going to try your spread later... Thanks! :)

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  3. I love the Elf story, and the spread is great, will have to try it later this evening!

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  4. Thank you chaps! I was so nervous as it's the first Hop I've done x

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  5. I love Elves! <3 (Thank you for the spread :) )

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  6. Lovely story about the elves. In The netherlands we have our gnomes who love a saucer of milk in the evening.:) thanks for the spread. :)

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  7. 'What I bring to the dance' is very appealing - I'll be trying this later. And the elf story is fascinating...more myths to add to the treasury!

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  8. This is my first time reading an elf story! Too cool. Love your spread too.

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  9. "What I bring to the dance." Oh, yeah. Fabulous! Welcome to the hop, and what a great first offering. I hope we see you at Samhain as well!
    Thank you for sharing the story of elves. In my household we had elves at Yule who would bring presents. Under the tree there would be packages from "A Elf." Clearly elves don't always have great grammar.

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  10. I'm so glad you all liked the Elves and the spread. Yes, Christiana, I'll be on the Samhain hop!

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  11. Great pic, by the way. I think I see the fairies in the mist in the corner...Laid out your spread using Ciro Marchetti's Legacy of the Divine Tarot, got QCups--JudgementR--KnCupsR--2Swords. Bit of a challenge, I think. My energy and strength are bound in the shadows of Reversal, so it will take a combination of the deeply felt connection of the Queen and turning around to face my fears with impartiality (2Swords) to exercise the energy of rebirth and the passion of KnCups in their upright positions to meet the challenges from now to Samhain. Thanks for the heads-up!

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  12. Thank you Joanne! Lovely to hear about the spread too - I am in awe of how you mange to convey so much information in so few words!

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