Moon of Eostre
happy easter! in ancient times i'd instead be wishing you a happy eostar ritual, as a celebration for ostara the saxon goddess of spring who was the northern form of astarte. i love the way these words associated with femininity create flowing patterns: astarte, oester, esther, easter, ostara, ostera, oestrus, estrus. naturally, it all comes down to fertility!
spring renewal, the sacred moon hare, painted eggs representing new life...traditions i can embrace! another thing i love about easter is the fact that it is a moveable feast, going by the old lunar calendar rather than a fixed date and always occurring on the first sunday after the first full moon of the vernal equinox.
we celebrated with mimosas
and by making crepes (first time i've tried my hand at them and i really don't think you can go wrong)
and by decorating eggs:
then it turned cold and rainy and darin had to go to work so after everyone left i spent the evening with books and cats and blankets piled upon me watching first this version of Emma with my sickly momma
and later the ever-wonderful and timeless Amadeus
and thus getting inspired about fertility but this time of the creative passions rather than the bodily type.
Comments
My husband and I celebrated by decorating hollowed out eggs with fabric, beads, ribbon, and so on. I love the celebrations and rituals that follow the moon and seasons, things that are tangible and make so much sense to me. Thanks for the post!
those crepes are making me so hungry, I just want a little bite!
Lucas and I were just talking about how, now that we have a kid who is getting old enough to start wondering about such things, we should come up with some non-relgious based Easter traditions and ways of celebrating that will be fun and meaningful for her and make it more about the celebration of Spring :)