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Wednesday, October 31, 2018






LIGHT IN THE TOWER; 
THE WITCHING HOUR!




HAPPY HALLOWEEN EVERYONE!
















SAMHAIN

Samhain (prounced SOW-an) is also known as All Hallows Eve and Halloween.  Coming from the Celtic tradition, it is the last of three harvest festivals, and is the start of winter.  It is also the beginning of their new year – actually it’s both the end of the old year, as well as the beginning of the new year all at once.  Because of the slim space between that overlap, this is known as a “thin time”.

Samhain was also the time of year when the Celts would remember and celebrate their loved ones who had died.  They believed that during this thin time, the spirits of their ancestors could walk the earth and move among us.  To celebrate this event they would carve lanterns and place them outside their homes with candles in them, to light the path for these spirits as they traveled.  They would also set out food for the ancestors to nourish them on their journey.  Sound familiar?  Maybe a little bit like what we do on Halloween as we carve Jack-O-Lanterns and put they outside our homes, and hand out treats to all of the costumed “spirits” who show up at our door?  Of all of the festivals we celebrate today, our Halloween observation is the most authentic to how it was originally celebrated in ancient times.


I love the photo above, of a monument at Lakewood Cemetery, because it’s a wonderful representation of how we merge the final harvest festival, and the remembering of ancestors. Note the sheath of wheat alongside the figure on the top of the monument. 

I have a great love for genealogy, family, ancestors and history, so this is one of my favorite times of year.  It gives me a deep sense of connectedness to those who have gone before me, and is a reminder of the responsibility I have to those who will come after.

HAPPY SAMHAIN EVERYONE!!!












Tuesday, October 30, 2018






ALL HALLOWSTIDE

October brings with it the promise of cooler temperatures and an array of beautiful colored leaves.  Each year I look forward to the decorations Mother Nature provides, but it also seems that we humans are adding our own decorations to the season as well.

Earlier and earlier, I see ghosts, spider webs, skeletons, and witches adorning the yards around the city.  Next to Christmas, Halloween is the most decorated holiday, and it seems to begin way before October even gets here.

I like Halloween, but for a completely different reason.  Halloween is rooted in the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain (pronounced SOW-en).  This was a harvest festival and it was at this time that root vegetables and squash were harvested.  It was also a “Thin Time."




Samhain was both the end of the year and the beginning of the year, and so the ancients believed that the veil between this world and the next was the thinnest.  They believed that the spirits of their ancestors could walk the earth on this night – especially those who had died the previous year - and so they remembered the ancestors at this time

During this time, they would place lit candles in their windows, and carve lanterns out of turnips and place them outside of their homes lit with candles.  These would light the way of the Spirits so they would pass by their homes.





They would also set food out for the spirits so they wouldn’t cause any mischief at their home.  Is this beginning sound like any holiday that we celebrate today?  Like Halloween perhaps?  Our celebration of Halloween today is celebrated more closely to the ancient ways than of our other holidays.

To further the connection, Samhain was always celebrated on the evening of October 31st, so the placement of Halloween was a given.  When the Church began celebrating the feast of All Saints on November 1st, Samhain became known as All Hallows Eve - our current name, Halloween, derives from that.  When the Church later added the feast of All Souls on November 2nd (think Day of the Dead), the three days became known as All Hallowstide, and was a time to remember the ancestors.



I love genealogy and learning about my heritage and ancestors, so this is a natural time for me to visit cemeteries.  I learn so much from them.  Rather than being the home of ghosts and goblins, they are a source of so much history and tradition, and a wealth of information.

This Halloween as you prepare for the trick-or-treaters, please try to spend some time remembering and honoring the ancestors.











Happy All Hallowstide!!!














Monday, October 29, 2018





NATIONAL CAT DAY

Beatrix keeping vigilant watch on National Cat Day!












Sunday, October 28, 2018






AT HOME WITH MONSTERS

Halloween is one of the most celebrated and decorated holidays in the U.S., second only to Christmas. It’s a time when people’s fascination with, and love of, monsters, ghosts, and ghouls come to the forefront. As Halloween rapidly approaches this week, I decided to revisit last year’s Guillermo Del Toro: At Home With Monsters exhibit at the Minneapolis Institute of Art.









I loved this exhibit, first for its diversity of monsters – everything from Frankenstein to Pan’s Labyrinth to the legacy of Poe and much more. And, second, for the intricate detail presented in each of the sculptures and artifacts on display.







This was my favorite sculpture. 



Born in Guadalajara, Mexico, Del Toro’s love of film began when he was eight years old, and began experimenting with his father’s Super 8 camera, making short films with his toys and other objects. From there, his work evolved over to the years to include and number of Mexican and U.S. films, culminating in last year’s Academy Award winning film, The Shape Of Water.









Last year’s, Guillermo Del Toro: At Home With Monsters exhibit at MIA, was a favorite of mine, and always comes to mind now when I think of Halloween.













Tuesday, October 9, 2018





ONE ANSWER

There is only one answer to cold, rainy, fall days in Minnesota.  Hot chocolate with an old friend!












Friday, October 5, 2018







IT'S WHAT YOU WEAR

I was doing some cleaning and came across a box of things from my college days. In it was this great button. Apparently I was already into fashion way back then.

Guess it's never too early to acquire good taste.











Wednesday, October 3, 2018





GINGHAM AND STRIPES

It's a Brooks Brothers Wednesday kind of mood! 
Perfect for the transition into fall.












Tuesday, October 2, 2018





IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR

L.L. Bean mocs with Land' End socks.
Just a sample of my typical fall outfit.