• Oak Moon — Walking the Wheel Guide 3

€9.99

Guide 3 — Oak Moon

The longest dark. The turning that cannot be seen but can be trusted.

The Oak Moon holds the Winter Solstice — the longest night, the moment the dark has gone as far as it can go, and the light begins, imperceptibly, to return. This is the moon of Newgrange. Of the single beam of light entering the womb of the hill on the morning of December 21st. The most sacred moment in the ancient Irish calendar.

The oak was sacred to the Druids above almost all other trees — not for its beauty but for its endurance. Deep roots. Steady trunk. The capacity to inhabit the winter rather than merely survive it, growing ring by ring in the dark where no one can see.

This guide asks what in you has that quality. What is still standing. What is growing where you cannot see it yet.

Guide 3 — Oak Moon

The longest dark. The turning that cannot be seen but can be trusted.

The Oak Moon holds the Winter Solstice — the longest night, the moment the dark has gone as far as it can go, and the light begins, imperceptibly, to return. This is the moon of Newgrange. Of the single beam of light entering the womb of the hill on the morning of December 21st. The most sacred moment in the ancient Irish calendar.

The oak was sacred to the Druids above almost all other trees — not for its beauty but for its endurance. Deep roots. Steady trunk. The capacity to inhabit the winter rather than merely survive it, growing ring by ring in the dark where no one can see.

This guide asks what in you has that quality. What is still standing. What is growing where you cannot see it yet.