Blue Moon 2018: Unfortunately the moon does not actually turn blue tonight!!!!
You’ve probably heard the phrase “once in a blue moon” used to describe rare occurrences. Maybe you’ve also heard the ballad “Blue Moon,” sung by doo-wop group The Marcels and later covered by Elvis. Blue moons have a song, but what exactly are they, and what’s so great about them? Blue moons are astrologically significant, and so we spoke with a modern witch to find out what you should know about them — plus how to harness their energy for your benefit.
What is a blue moon?
Is there another definition?Yep. Before the 1940s, a blue moon was defined as the fourth full moon in a season. (The next one of that kind of blue moon will happen on May 18, 2019.) In 1946, the astronomy magazine Sky & Telescope published a bit of fake news when it quoted an astronomer defining a blue moon as the second full moon in a calendar month. This definition went viral and was repeated again and again, most notably as an answer in a 1986 version of Trivial Pursuit. Today, it’s considered an alternate definition rather than a mistake.
So is the upcoming calendar blue moon less legit than a seasonal blue moon?
Nah, says Cat Cabral, a New York-based witch, tarot reader, a practical magickian (or practitioner of occult magick). Culturally, we’ve accepted the modern interpretation of a blue moon, which means each blue moon has the potential be as powerful as any other. “Magick is about raising energy,” Cabral says. “The more that people concentrate their collective energy towards something [like a blue moon], the more powerful it becomes.”
What’s so special about this blue moon?
Well, it’s the second one in a year, which makes it “a little more intense than usual,” Cabra says. Plus, the spring equinox just happened, which means that now is the time for rebirth and new beginnings. The blue moon will be in Libra, the zodiac’s most diplomatic sign, known for balance and harmony. Libra energy is the opposite of the energy of Aries, the sign we’re in now: Aries is known for acting first and thinking later.
Did we mention we’re also in a Mercury retrograde? “People have no filter right now, and the full moon will intensify that,” Cabral says. These opposing energies also make the blue moon a great time for self-care, beauty rituals, and grounding yourself outside in nature.
How can I harness blue moon energy to make my life more awesome?
You don’t need a book of spells filled with pseudo-Latin incantations: “Just be clear about what your intention is and do something tangible to show the universe that you mean business,” Cabral says. How you do that is your choice. You can take a cleansing bath (try Species by the Thousands Full Moon Bath Salts, which blends chamomile flowers and peppermint leaves). You can write down a list of things that no longer serve you — like toxic friendships, negative self-talk, or body insecurities — on a piece of paper and burn it. Or you can simply blast your favorite music and dance like no one is watching. (Really let go. Blindfold yourself if you must.)
Prepare for a bit of luck
Many consider the Blue Moon to be a lucky sign in the heavens above.
If by any chance this happens to be true, then you should probably think about your long-term goals and what you want to achieve in life.
If the Blue Moon is lucky then Saturday seems to be a good time to set out on your endeavours.
Astrologist Sarah Varcas said: “Whoever we are, whatever our circumstances and no matter our astrological acumen, we can all use the energy of a blue moon to focus our intent and glean deeper insight into who we are, what makes us tick and how to reinvest current outcomes to forge a positive, productive and perhaps most important of all, authentic, future.”
A Blue Moon Is Coming — Here’s How to Harness Its Magickal Energy. The best way to use the healing energy of the extraordinary supermoon blue moon and blood moon event is by using the power to cleanse your crystals. The best way to use this healing energy of the extraordinary supermoon blue moon and blood moon event is by using the power to cleanse your crystals. https://curiousmindmagazine.com/get-ready-for-the-massive-energy-shift-the-rare-super-blue-blood-moons-eclipse-happens-for-the-first-time-in-150-years/
A good dose of clarity will head your way
According to astrologers at ForeverConscious.com, the March Blue Moon will send a strong dose of lunar energy your way.
The website’s creator Tanaaz said: “This is a powerful Blue Moon that is here to help you balance the scales in your own life.
“Don’t be afraid to do away with things that are no longer serving you, don’t be afraid to let go of emotions that are throwing you off balance, don’t be afraid to forgive yourself, and release yourself from any burdens or guilts you may be carrying.
“Through shedding your thick heavy coat, you will feel reborn and you will be able to tap into the wisdom and messages that reside within.”
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12 Things Happy People Do Differently
By Jacob Sokol
Studies conducted by positivity psychologist Sonja Lyubomirsky point to 12 things happy people do differently to increase their levels of happiness. These are things that we can start doing today to feel the effects of more happiness in our lives.
I want to honor and discuss each of these 12 points, because no matter what part of life’s path we’re currently traveling on, these ‘happiness habits’ will always be applicable.
1. Express gratitude. – When you appreciate what you have, what you have appreciates in value. Kinda cool right? So basically, being grateful for the goodness that is already evident in your life will bring you a deeper sense of happiness. And that’s without having to go out and buy anything. It makes sense. We’re gonna have a hard time ever being happy if we aren’t thankful for what we already have.
2. Cultivate optimism. – Winners have the ability to manufacture their own optimism. No matter what the situation, the successful diva is the chick who will always find a way to put an optimistic spin on it. She knows failure only as an opportunity to grow and learn a new lesson from life. People who think optimistically see the world as a place packed with endless opportunities, especially in trying times.
3. Avoid over-thinking and social comparison. – Comparing yourself to someone else can be poisonous. If we’re somehow ‘better’ than the person that we’re comparing ourselves to, it gives us an unhealthy sense of superiority. Our ego inflates – KABOOM – our inner Kanye West comes out! If we’re ‘worse’ than the person that we’re comparing ourselves to, we usually discredit the hard work that we’ve done and dismiss all the progress that we’ve made. What I’ve found is that the majority of the time this type of social comparison doesn’t stem from a healthy place. If you feel called to compare yourself to something, compare yourself to an earlier version of yourself.
4. Practice acts of kindness. – Performing an act of kindness releases serotonin in your brain. (Serotonin is a substance that has TREMENDOUS health benefits, including making us feel more blissful.) Selflessly helping someone is a super powerful way to feel good inside. What’s even cooler about this kindness kick is that not only will you feel better, but so will people watching the act of kindness. How extraordinary is that? Bystanders will be blessed with a release of serotonin just by watching what’s going on. A side note is that the job of most anti-depressants is to release more serotonin. Move over Pfizer, kindness is kicking ass and taking names.
5. Nurture social relationships.– The happiest people on the planet are the ones who have deep, meaningful relationships. Did you know studies show that people’s mortality rates are DOUBLED when they’re lonely? WHOA! There’s a warm fuzzy feeling that comes from having an active circle of good friends who you can share your experiences with. We feel connected and a part of something more meaningful than our lonesome existence.
6. Develop strategies for coping.– How you respond to the ‘craptastic’ moments is what shapes your character. Sometimes crap happens – it’s inevitable. Forrest Gump knows the deal. It can be hard to come up with creative solutions in the moment when manure is making its way up toward the fan. It helps to have healthy strategies for coping pre-rehearsed, on-call, and in your arsenal at your disposal.
7. Learn to forgive.– Harboring feelings of hatred is horrible for your well-being. You see, your mind doesn’t know the difference between past and present emotion. When you ‘hate’ someone, and you’re continuously thinking about it, those negative emotions are eating away at your immune system. You put yourself in a state of suckerism (technical term) and it stays with you throughout your day.
8. Increase flow experiences.– Flow is a state in which it feels like time stands still. It’s when you’re so focused on what you’re doing that you become one with the task. Action and awareness are merged. You’re not hungry, sleepy, or emotional. You’re just completely engaged in the activity that you’re doing. Nothing is distracting you or competing for your focus.
9. Savor life’s joys.– Deep happiness cannot exist without slowing down to enjoy the joy. It’s easy in a world of wild stimuli and omnipresent movement to forget to embrace life’s enjoyable experiences. When we neglect to appreciate, we rob the moment of its magic. It’s the simple things in life that can be the most rewarding if we remember to fully experience them.
10. Commit to your goals.– Being wholeheartedly dedicated to doing something comes fully-equipped with an ineffable force. Magical things start happening when we commit ourselves to doing whatever it takes to get somewhere. When you’re fully committed to doing something, you have no choice but to do that thing. Counter-intuitively, having no option – where you can’t change your mind – subconsciously makes humans happier because they know part of their purpose.
11. Practice spirituality.– When we practice spirituality or religion, we recognize that life is bigger than us. We surrender the silly idea that we are the mightiest thing ever. It enables us to connect to the source of all creation and embrace a connectedness with everything that exists. Some of the most accomplished people I know feel that they’re here doing work they’re “called to do.”
12. Take care of your body.– Taking care of your body is crucial to being the happiest person you can be. If you don’t have your physical energy in good shape, then your mental energy (your focus), your emotional energy (your feelings), and your spiritual energy (your purpose) will all be negatively affected. Did you know that studies conducted on people who were clinically depressed showed that consistent exercise raises happiness levels just as much as Zoloft? Not only that, but here’s the double whammy… Six months later, the people who participated in exercise were less likely to relapse because they had a higher sense of self-accomplishment and self-worth.
Our life; how we live it
Our relationship to ourselves and others
This is our spiritual practice …
Time to live life on your own terms …
Shine like the whole universe is yours …
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Follow Jacob Sokol on Twitter. This article was republished from: Marc and Angel
One’s-Self I Sing
by Walt Whitman
One’s-self I sing, a simple separate person,
Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse.
Of physiology from top to toe I sing,
Not physiognomy alone nor brain alone is worthy for the Muse, I say the Form complete is worthier far,
The Female equally with the Male I sing.
Of Life immense in passion, pulse, and power,
Cheerful, for freest action form’d under the laws divine,
The Modern Man I sing.
Walt Whitman’s Words
One’s-Self I Sing
by Walt Whitman
One’s-self I sing, a simple separate person,
Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse.
Of physiology from top to toe I sing,
Not physiognomy alone nor brain alone is worthy for the Muse, I say the Form complete is worthier far,
The Female equally with the Male I sing.
Of Life immense in passion, pulse, and power,
Cheerful, for freest action form’d under the laws divine,
The Modern Man I sing.
I celebrate myself
And what I shall assume you shall assume
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
I loafe and invite my soul
I lean and loafe at my ease … observing a spear of summer grass.
If you put the thoughts expressed in these opening lines of “Song of Myself” into ordinary speech, they are rather flat and uninteresting:
I myself am what I am celebrating; and everything that I am, you are also, since you and I are both made out of the same materials I’m really taking it easy, lying around and communing with my soul, while I look at a blade of grass.
Whitman’s lines don’t rhyme and they have no regular meter. There must be other things about them that make them so interesting and suggestive and exciting to read. These things, of course, are the words and the ways Whitman puts them together. By looking closely at these words and uses, one may be able to get closer to the mystery of poetry, of Whitman’s in any case, to be inspired by “Song of Myself” and to write like it and to understand it. I ask my students to pick out words and phrases they wouldn’t be likely to hear in conversation or to read in an essay or newspaper article. What’s peculiar about the way Whitman is talking? My college students find most of the oddities in the lines; and, with a bit more help, I think younger students could also:
1. Nobody ever says “I celebrate”: instead one says “I’m celebrating,” “I celebrate” sounds like someone making a speech on a formal occasion: “Today we celebrate the birthday of a great American.”
2. Myself would never come after celebrate in normal talk or prose writing. What one celebrates is a birthday, a holiday, a wedding, a victory. Celebrating oneself seems crazy.
3. Repeating a word as Whitman repeats the word assume in line 2 with just two words between—what I assume you shall assume—draws attention to the sound of the word in a way that’s not usual in talking or prose-writing. Assume, the second time it’s used, is as much music as it is meaning.
4. It’s not completely clear what Whitman means by assume. In fact, the word seems either to be used wrongly or to mean two things at once. Assume can mean “take for granted” or it can mean “take or put on”—you can assume the role of king, and you can assume that it’s nighttime, because it’s dark. In conversation, or in an article, the writer would have to be clearer and to choose one of these meanings or the other. In poetry, having two meanings at once can be an advantage—it can make what you say suggestive, mysterious, true in some way it couldn’t otherwise be.
5. The word atom is a scientific word that doesn’t belong with words like celebrate and assume. It’s unexpected and a little jarring—as would be, say, the word oxygen in the statement, “come, let us walk through the oxygen.”
6. The repetition of belong, like the earlier repetition of assume, puts an emphasis on sounds that isn’t usual in speech or expository prose.
7. In the phrase “as good belongs to you,” “as good” is a very folksy, plain expression, not at all what you’d expect in a discourse about atoms, and just as surprising after atom as atom was after celebrate and assume. (Another example of folksiness and science might be “This is mighty fine radium.”)
8. There’s a little rhyming in “Assume…assume” and “you” (in line 2and then another “you” in line3) that probably wouldn’t happen in talking or plain prose. Like word repetition, sound repetition (rhyme is one kind) draws attention to the physical qualities of words and gives them music along with their meanings.
9. The idea of loafing seems a big jump from the philosophical speculations on identity that precede it. Such an apparent jump in subject matter might make prose conversation hard to follow. In poetry it can be exciting. In poetry, when there’s a jump, you just jump, and afterwards you see where you are.
10. The lowly, folksy word loafe (an older spelling of loaf) seems out of place in the same sentence with soul, which is a very “high-class,” serious word.
11. There’s a partial rhyme in the words loafe and soul, which would tend to make one keep the two words father apart in talk or in prose.
12. Repeating loafe the way Whitman does in lines 4 and 5 would be needlessly repetitious in prose.
13. The expression “at my ease” would seem repetitious and maybe even stupid in prose, since how else would you “loafe”—tensely? painfully? vigorously?
14. The word observing seems too serious and official for looking at a grass blade. Astronomers observe planets and detectives observe criminals, but why observe a plain old blade of grass?
15. Spear is a strange word for grass—the usual word is blade which was doubtless strange when it was first used).
16. Like the repetitions and the rhymes in other lines, all the s sounds in the last half line draw attention to the physical qualities of the words and make some music.
17. Throughout the passage the present tense is used in a way that would certainly be strange in an article or conversation—as if one were to say, “I turn on the light, I go to the door and take you in my arms.” Who talks this way?
To sum up, one finds in Whitman’s lines a mixture of plain and fancy (including religious and scientific and colloquial) words, repetitions of words and sounds that tend to partly change the words into music, vagueness, seemingly “wrong” uses of words, odd combinations of words, jump in subject matter, and an odd present tense.
These oddnesses and “mistakes” make his lines different from prose and are part of what makes them poetry.
Reading such strangely mixed language so full of leaps and other surprises is not like reading the newspaper. It gives a different kind of meaning and does it in a different way.
Seeing the peculiarities of Whitman’s language can help students to enjoy writing like Whitman as well as to understand “Song of Myself.” A good writing exercise for students is to ask them to write four or five lines using as many of Whitman’s oddities as they can; for example, to also start with a phrase like “I celebrate” (or “I prophesy,” “I command,” “I entertain”) and to follow that with something as unlikely as myself.
Then maybe a line with a word repeated like assume (And what I endorse you shall endorse) and so on. They are likely to have a good time doing this—it’s silly-seeming but inspiring. It leads to something—for one thing, an enlarged sense of what can be done with language, if you try to strange things with it, especially in poems.
Of course, the sense of the opening lines, and of the rest of “Song of Myself,” is closely connected to all that seems odd in the words. For example, for Whitman it makes perfect sense to announce a formal celebration of himself.
A person’s ordinary self is more wonderful than any special particular day or event. And the best way to celebrate the self is just to lie around and take it easy, to loaf and look at things. And a grass blade is exactly the kind of thing that’s worthy of being observed; it’s plain, it’s common, it’s alive, it’s eternally reborn, it’s fresh and green, it proves that there is no death. What better thing to look at? No monument can compare to it.
And if loafing is the right way to behave, you get a better sense of it from saying it slowly, from repeating—“I loafe” and “I lean and loafe at my ease.” Atom is a fine word to use because scientific and literary and plain words are all equal and all parts of the divine oneness and variety that Whitman finds in everything; words, people, animals, places.
There are no privileged characters in Whitman and no privileged words. And so “as good belongs to you,” folksy though it is, is just fine for a philosophical statement. What’s easiest and most natural is what’s truest; profundity’s in plain talk and not in fancy academic or poetical speech. As for the present tense, it is perfect for saying “This is always going on, it’s always true, it’s always wonderful, it’s always right here and how.”
Finally, what Whitman has to say about oneness of all things is quite mysterious. It can’t be logically proven, can’t be rationally shown. But rhymes, repetitions, and even vagueness can help us to feel it. There is an exciting dreamy convincingness in “what I assume you shall assume” that would be lacking, for example, in a phrase such as “we’re just alike.” Once you see, and help others to see, the connections between the (not really separate) language and meaning of “Song of Myself” reading this long, complicated-seeming poem should be easier, and, as Whitman might say, luckier.
Preview Elvis Presley: Blue Moon…