Why I don't celebrate the Wheel of the Year anymore

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 5 ม.ค. 2025

ความคิดเห็น • 100

  • @Mixedequalsbrown
    @Mixedequalsbrown 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Here is a fun fact for those who dont know. Not all german people are also Germanic and/or believed in the whole Norse Pantheon. The southern/ western states are actually of celtic origin ( south Thüringen/Römhild, Bavaria, Franconia, Baden Württemberg, all the way up to Nordrhein-Westfalen. All the coastal regions to all the way down-east along the Elbe and further down to the south of Thüringen are Germanic. Shared Gods are, however, Wod(t)an, Frick and Donar. Possibly equivalent to Odin, Frigga and Thor. Hence the names of some week days. But the southerners had a more animistic Spirituality, ancestor worshipping and sorts of druidism. Not much detailed lore is left as the catholic belief had a grip here much quicker than up north ( see Battle of Teutoburger Forest i.e.)

  • @saffron1996
    @saffron1996 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    i stopped because it never aligned with where i live... now i just celebrate the equinoxes and solstices, and the actual visible changes around me ❤

    • @ventusheart5733
      @ventusheart5733 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same❤

    • @theravenmagick
      @theravenmagick 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same

    • @shaunathornton8032
      @shaunathornton8032 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I celebrate the fall equinox and the winter solstice. Where I live, "Spring" is hard to define, and midsummer also doesn't make sense so I skip those.

    • @bruce-le-smith
      @bruce-le-smith 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "the actual visible changes around me" makes good sense, early Feb May Aug Nov help me as a gardener. there are a lot of things i should be done by the time the wheel spins to the actual solstices and equinoxes

    • @earlybird6069
      @earlybird6069 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same

  • @kylaallen822
    @kylaallen822 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

    I really love the idea of making your own "holiday." That really sang to me. We have mesquite trees and they refuse to "pop" or release their leaves to bloom, until winter is completely over. It may be in the high 80F/26c's and those trees somehow know and will not become green until winter is truly over. I am going to begin a celebration on the day this happens! So wonderful. Thank you!

  • @gnostic268
    @gnostic268 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I'm Lakota and we have our own holidays which go by our seasons and what the stars are doing in the sky.

  • @Darkmoon67
    @Darkmoon67 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    That's the realisation I have come to. I'm celebrating the seasons. Making my own wheel of the year. I'm glad other people are doing that, too.😊

    • @bruce-le-smith
      @bruce-le-smith 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      i like the fluidity of seasons, some years our spring is early Feb and some years its late Feb. its nice to let nature express itself differently each year

  • @cursecuelebre5485
    @cursecuelebre5485 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

    6:03 I completely understand, I’m a Hellenic polytheist and we have our own holidays and just that wheel of year is not for everyone. Even then you don’t have to celebrate the holidays as well if you don’t want to.

    • @ventusheart5733
      @ventusheart5733 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yeah most of people who come into neo paganism/witchcraft fear not doing well those celebrations when they are.... Not that important. Ahahha i mean they have the importance you see into them. I was talking to french people who practiced magick way before wicca became a thing and they are so confused with that concept ahhaa.

  • @brookny_doe
    @brookny_doe 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    I can relate, in Lithuania we kinda have our own wheel of the year and the dates are a bit different from the wiccan one so I always felt a little confused, having to celebrate the same thing twice or choosing one over the other. After a while I think I just got overwhelmed and stopped celebrating, now I'm figuring things out and looking at my heritage for inspiration. It's still nice knowing when those wiccan celebrations are, it feels like a more special day, but I think it's more important to keep my local celebrations from extinction.

    • @6Haunted-Days
      @6Haunted-Days 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well traditional witches don't follow the Wiccan wheel anyways....not sure why she was ...ever. 🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @Venefica82
    @Venefica82 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I am Wiccan and celebrate the Wheel of the Year but at times there is a disconnect, for example March is not spring here in Norway, it is still very much winter for example. Norway is colder than England. But I get you having things to celebrate is nice.

  • @Tiffthehuman
    @Tiffthehuman 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    You scared me lol. You scare me every time you upload videos like this 😂. I always wonder "why?! What happened?! Are they evil?!" Lol, but can see now that this is specific to your very specific practice and life. Although, the "create your own holidays" goal makes a lot of sense...because you're absolutely right in that the wheel of the year holidays are specific to specific people in a specific region. Here I am, a person of mainly African and some European decent, and celebrating something that really has little to nothing do with the majority of my ancestry 😅. You're such a leader! I can see many people following your visions in the near and distant future. You're such an amazing example of what it means to be Pagan.

    • @STrawBerriM1lk55
      @STrawBerriM1lk55 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Being of african decent would you identify as a wiccan or pagan? I ask because I am interested in these paths but im of carribean descent

  • @achillendimond2124
    @achillendimond2124 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    I tried celebrating them and just couldn’t. It felt almost painfully inauthentic for me. New Age/ reconstructionism has never really been my vibe. Love the solar festivals, but I don’t have ties to the rest of them. Still trying to find my thing

  • @solavie8269
    @solavie8269 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Interesting. At 18 I moved from a heavy visual of season changes to a heavy forest- not much temperature change… I love honoring the waxing and waning energy of the sunlight combined with the plant growing cycle.

    • @solavie8269
      @solavie8269 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I am 47 now. Astrology and being immigrant of Norse grandparents heritage wise on my mothers and fathers side… I love honoring the plant cycle- I was raised as a farmer… selling food to support our survival.

  • @DrDino123
    @DrDino123 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I think the wheel of the year is more of a template and I absolutely love seeing people customize it to their tradition, regional location or even what works for them as a person to celebrate what holidays that click with them. Love this video!!

  • @Abmort93
    @Abmort93 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This makes perfect sense to me. I’d highly recommend the book Temperance Alden wrote “Year of the Witch”

  • @ktwolfsbane
    @ktwolfsbane 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I've been using the wheel of the year as a reference for me and using it as a tool to frame what offerings or rituals. Because of my area it matches up to the wheel so I know 4 out of the 8 (I think its 8) are for the 4 seasons and the other 4 make them fit my practice or make them completely different to match if thar makes sense.

  • @melodymulder6483
    @melodymulder6483 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thank you for being honest about needing to wait for the motivation to research certain things. As an ADHD person this was so validating to me lol! Like there are things I really want to learn but it’s all about the timing, sometimes I feel really guilty and imposter syndrome-y about not being able to research the things at any time. It’s a nice reminder to see I’m not the only one and I can just slow down. 🌿

    • @TheNorseWitch
      @TheNorseWitch  7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Tbh I don’t know if I’m neurospicy (but I’m suspecting it) and I’m just learning how to live with it. I’ve always been that way - if I’m interested in something k want to know all about it but if the motivation doesn’t kick in I can’t bring myself to research it. So I’m just trying to ride the wave, at some point it’ll bring me there 😅

  • @Nyxdecay
    @Nyxdecay 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This resonates deep from taking a long break from my practice and spirituality. My first path was Wicca and paganism, but since grown from these traditions and took what serves me. I no longer feel connected in celebrating some of the Sabbats, only the seasonal changes and Samhain and Yule. These hold sacredness to me. But great video, insightful and speaks true for me. Blessed be

  • @MrsHerzueberKopf
    @MrsHerzueberKopf 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Skadi is such a sweet cat. Loving the calming energy!

  • @guelkaratas5164
    @guelkaratas5164 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    So great to see how you develop and create your own way on your path. As always..following the Intuition is the fun part isn't it? It is really a big benefit for the community to hear content creators talking openly about the changes of their practices. It is truly a journey and it takes time. Thank you for the video. ❤

  • @_Kay.D
    @_Kay.D 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I love this, i too started off wiccan but very quickly moved away from it. I would love to see videos on pre Christian norse holidays

  • @ventusheart5733
    @ventusheart5733 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Let's be honest, the wheel of the year exist since the 1950's (and 1970's to the mainstream audience) There's something i learnt after many years of following it : sometimes there's something to celebrate, sometimes not so much... It only depends on you tradition and/or your connection to the otherworld. I spent many great Mabon followed by disappointing Sahmain. So now i adapted to what feels right to me, based on my experience with the land and my surronding.

  • @henrifeng
    @henrifeng 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I live in south hemisphere, so I always get all confused about which one to choose, specially because some holidays like halloween which would be Samhain, happens in the middle of the spring here in the south. Anyways, on top of that, my country have a tropical climate, this meaning we have no standards of spring, autumn, summer and winter.
    I say "happy Samhain" in halloween, but, my altars are always according to my feeling regarding the nature here. This year, despite being in the middle of spring, it's pretty cold because it's raining every day, so I'm feeling like I'll celebrate Samhain on 31st, and I believe this is what witchcraft is about. Look outside, feel how is the nature around you, and adapt your celebrations and rituals according. After all, it's all about being one with nature

  • @ladyemma94
    @ladyemma94 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I stopped following the wheel of the year and a lot of holidays because as a chronically ill person, I can never know if I'm going to have the energy to do anything for these holidays 😂

  • @etiennesportfolio
    @etiennesportfolio 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Waiting for motivation is actually a really good research method xD
    This solved my issue with the wheel of the year being from the northern hemisphere and the difference in lack of seasons

  • @lilykatmoon4508
    @lilykatmoon4508 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I cannot express how inspirational this video has been for me. I discovered witchcraft first and fell into inclusive Norse Heathenry slightly later. I really like the idea of the Wheel of the Year as different times to reflect on different aspects of our lives as part of a cycle. I think that the further back we go, the more in tune with the cycle of the seasons and of life, of nature and the environment our ancestors were. However, I live in SE Texas which is a semi tropical environment and the alignment of the wheel of the year doesn’t really apply. I recently had a birthday and am committed to a year of learning myself, of listening to myself, and experimenting with what feels right and being ok with what doesn’t. This video had given me lots to think about how I can connect with my ancestors even though they lived in environments very different than my own. Thank you so much for sharing your practice and how it has evolved over time. It really helps guide me in my journey and to accept that change in my practice is healthy and ok as I change and grow.

  • @Vi-Prefers-Anonymity
    @Vi-Prefers-Anonymity 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Precious little kitty stretching her paws behind you 🥰!!! Thank you so much for this video! It was very interesting to hear your reasoning for what holidays to celebrate, it makes a lot of sense ✨
    I hope you get to make your own holidays as soon as you'll feel it's right for you
    I usually celebrate a bit of whatever, since for me a celebration will be spending time with friends and family, so I can adapt to that. I'm not rigorously following the calendar on that front
    Cheers!

  • @FirestyledSamaurai
    @FirestyledSamaurai 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It's funny you did this video, becauae I was going to do one on my journalling with what days do I want to cekebrate in and out of the wheel of the year. Your cat Skadi is so soooo cute!

  • @akashicsong9904
    @akashicsong9904 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’m kind of in the beginning of this process myself for my practice. I haven’t identified as Wiccan since 2019 but continued to observe the wheel of the year and a few other things such as altar tool correspondence. Been feeling like it no longer fits my practice but it’s literally the o my thing that has helped me to feel like I have community when the sabbats come around, but I feel like it’s time to decolonize my practice. Great video ❤

  • @abrilesd
    @abrilesd 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video! And I completely agree with you. I've been thinking the same for a long time. When I started to educate myself more in these topics and exploring my spirituality, most of the practices and beliefs were foreign to me, literally. I am Latin-American, and even what I can say is my culture is not something that I can lightly call mine and practice as if nothing. I don't resonate with a lot of things, foreign or from my own culture. I still have a lot of conflicts in my practice, but I recognize that some things have just naturally merged, and I have to play with that and the idea that at the end, this is deeply personal and interconnected. It is really refreshing to see you being so hands-on on your practice.

  • @girl-fromthemoon
    @girl-fromthemoon 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I'm a baby witch from the southern hemisphere (Brazil), and the reversed wheel just doesn't seem to click for me. Idk. It feels weird to celebrate Celtic/British holidays in a completely different date than the original places they originate from. Part of my ancestry is Iberian Celtic, so I feel compelled to celebrate Celtic holidays. But it feels wrong to celebrate them in reverse.

    • @jemts5586
      @jemts5586 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Imagine what Celtic people would do if they suddenly found themselves in Brazil. Would they stick to the progression of the holidays based on their land of origin, or the land where they now found themselves?

  • @shaunathornton8032
    @shaunathornton8032 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I love this. I see this happening all over the "pagan" community. People are starting to reclaim their relationships to nature in a more natural way. I live in America, in the region of the pacific northwest. We have a totally different climate than the rest of the country so I am also working on my own calendar system.

  • @katherineelizabeth6052
    @katherineelizabeth6052 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for this video. I stumbled across it after recently discovering your channel, and I found the subject very validating. I worship several gods and goddesses across Celtic and Hindu cultures (I didn't pick them, they picked me!) and I've struggled with how to honor nature and these deities. Hindu celebrations are very different from Celtic, and the only Celtic celebrations I identify with are Samhain because I am clairvoyant and Yule because I love the night as a lunar witch and the mark of our rainy season that I find peaceful. To hear a fellow pagan witch say they do not follow the Celtic/Wiccan wheel of the year is comforting and validating as I have debated whether abandoning all other solar celebrations is something I want to do.

  • @ViaHarmonica
    @ViaHarmonica 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    100% - if we are to evolve to symbiosis with Nature then we need to become humble and simply observe. Then try to understand. Here in South Africa, the amaXhosa people have always relied on plants and animals (birds in particular) to let them know when it's time to plant, time to harvest etc. That to me is far more reliable and logical than a stone calendar such as Stonehenge based on solar or lunar cycles, far removed from local climate and climate change. For me in the Southern Hemisphere, my year generally starts on 21-September, because I've found that is generally when our spring rains start. So the earth becomes pregnant (Imbolc = "in the belly") around 1-Aug (with the first rite of Spring) and then gives birth to new life on 21-Sep with the Spring Equinox rains. Soil bacteria changes in late winter (21-Jun to 1-Aug) to start decomposing more mineral content, since most organic content is decomposed in the early winter. The Wheel of the Year is a great guide but works even better with local observations and traditions.

  • @RoanThorrson
    @RoanThorrson 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Very well-said. Your videos are always so informative and thought-provoking. Your cat is adorable BTW
    Thank you for your work❤

  • @blubb8341
    @blubb8341 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Moin Bente, einmal auf deutsch, weil es mir einfacher fällt es zu erklären.
    Erstmal finde ich das Thema sehr spannend, weil ich mich in einer ähnlichen Situation befinde, aber generell mit weniger "religiösem" Hintergrund als einem animistisch Ansatz und erleben der Natur. Dabei hilft es mir persönlich sehr mich nach meinen Bienen zu richten. Sprich nach den Bienenjahr, welchen sich nach den Pflanzen richtet, die regional und saisonal anders sein können und sich vor allem jedes Jahr wieder neu am Wetter orientieren.
    Dankeschön 🌼🌞🐝

  • @sandycaswell7056
    @sandycaswell7056 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Yes. I've been teaching this for years.

  • @TheTruthseekerman
    @TheTruthseekerman 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for your explanation. We all have to figure out our journey.

  • @kveldulfskallagrim731
    @kveldulfskallagrim731 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Norse Magic and Beliefs has already made an exact calendar you are speaking about. Everything from the historical sources. You should check that out for your research

  • @jenniferleftwich7
    @jenniferleftwich7 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This video is on point very inspirational, if you will, since I started my practice I've had a hard time figuring out who I am, so now I'm studying the Celtic pagan tradition, because a lot of my ancestors are Celtic British in German and I'm in the south so there is folk magic in that it's kind of scattered for me your video has helped me, thank you for sharing

  • @jenfries6417
    @jenfries6417 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I'm pretty much on the same page as you in re holidays. Personally, I tend to skip holidays in general, not because they don't resonate with me but because I have no sense of the calendar and I always forget that a holiday is coming up. I forget my own birthday, too. I'm more into "festival periods" - please give me a whole month at least to acknowledge a regular life passage, thanks.
    I also never really resonated with the Wheel of the Year. It's very Celtic-esque and rural, and I'm a multicultural American and 100% urban from an even more multicultural major city. I resonate much more with astronomical cycles, personally, so I celebrate the solstices and equinoxes and the solar cycles, which tend to cover several months each. And I observe the life cycles and movements of wildlife, trees, and wild plants rather than the cycles of agriculture.
    There's so much overlap among the holidays of different beliefs, I kind of feel like it shouldn't make that much difference, to be honest. For instance, my personal winter festival period is basically the whole winter, starting with the Winter Solstice and encompassing the Astronomical New Year, Solar New Year, and Lunar New Year. All the other religions' winter holidays fall within that period, too - Yule, Christmas, Hanukkah, Eid, Diwali, Kwanzaa, etc. - so I figure I'm up to accept any invitation I may receive. 😉

  • @rava6781
    @rava6781 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Id love to see a video on what you do celebrate 🎉

  • @Shashu_the_little_Voidling
    @Shashu_the_little_Voidling 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have very little to no connection with my ancestors or agricultural holidays. I only celebrate the solstices/equinoxes, but I do celebrate them on the exact date, because for me it is all about the astronomical alignment and not what the weather or the plants are doing in real time (the seasons are all out of wack anyway)

  • @lostmymindinbooks
    @lostmymindinbooks 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm on a similar route - currently I'm mostly trying to look into local Brauchtum etc and what makes sense for me

  • @liammaple3055
    @liammaple3055 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    The wheel of the year is not Wiccan. The wheel of the year was developed by Ross Nichols, who did work with Gerald Gardner, but would go onto create contemporary druidry. Both religious movements catalyzed the pagan revival, which would inspire later secular and “reconstructionist” movements. That’s why it carried over into more modern pagan practices.
    The sabbats are not holidays, though they can be observed as such. The wheel of the year is a magical tool based on the ceremonial practices the creators were inspired from. It is in essence a magical system and tool and is better compared to something like planetary magick and astrology.
    The purpose of the religion of witchcraft (Wicca) and Druidry was to create magical systems that were completely separate from Christian and Jewish idolatry that was still present in ceremonial magick at the time.
    It’s hard to understand any sort of accuracy and timeline considering the plethora of voices on the matter and a general lack of academic respect for occult practices, so I hope this helps. I’m not criticizing I promise. But one thing to consider when looking at these early 20th century movements is their proximity to mystery cults and hermetics, rather than an attempt at historical accuracy that became more popular in the 21 century.

    • @liammaple3055
      @liammaple3055 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      One thing that I think would help you on your journey to developing your own sun system is to look at other traditional religion’s calendars. High church, especially traditional orthodoxy is VERY specific on their timelines and is based on prechristian planetary calculations. That should give you a good amount of frame work to work from.

    • @StormEscape
      @StormEscape 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Oh thank gods I'm not the only one who mentioned this.

  • @Bjorne1
    @Bjorne1 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It’s funny I have the EXACT same wheel in my dinning room right now.

  • @germwarfares
    @germwarfares 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    i used to be wiccan many years ago but im norse pagan now, i was never really a big celebrator of the wheel of the year and i dont do anything now except prayer and offering and the odd sigil making, but it would be nice to have something to celebrate and do. it's kinda sad to celebrate holidays alone tho

  • @drschonify
    @drschonify 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I am very interested in your process for coming up with a celebratory calendar. Living in the US makes it even more of a mess, not that physical origins matter, but having grown up in or adjacent to cultures would have to help.

  • @macylouwho1187
    @macylouwho1187 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I’m someone who will take allll the holidays whether mine or not because having a day that’s special and different for any reason breaks up the monotony and sameness of the boring daily grind 😂. I’ll take it, any win at all over that. I love decorating and having something be special rather than the alternative of nothingness. Whatever the occasion, I’ll gladly take it. It doesn’t have to mean anything beyond “fun”. People get excited around holidays and enjoy the pageantry. I get that, I’m very much that way myself. We do the typical American holidays big here-like REALLY big 😂. Why not, it’s something cool and different to do that day rather than have nothing special going on at all. But this is definitely a “to each their own thing” thing. Everyone must do what makes them happiest in their own life. It can’t be forced off on people who don’t want it.

  • @viamezo6986
    @viamezo6986 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Oh, this will be long...Sorry. I had a smile on my face for the entire time while I was watching your video. I thought I'm the only one, who creates her own calendar - seeing your video and the comments, it's far from it. I like to celebrate the wheel of the year, but I'm also celebrating the Catholic and Jewish holidays, as well as local ones. Well, not celebrating them all, more like 'I'm aware' of them. At the end of each year, I'm creating an Almanac or Custom Calendar for myself for the coming year, where I add holidays I like to keep in mind as well as new moons and full moons. The wheel of the year is fantastic and for most cases makes a lot of sense - also because they align with most Catholic holidays too, as we know...khm :D On the other hand, some festivals just don't stick. We have a local holiday, called St. Stephen's day or in the folk tradition it's call "the celebration of the new bread" which has the themes of Lughnasadh: gratefulness, harvest, craftsmanship etc. but it's observed on 20th Aug. I always loved to celebrate Easter instead of Ostara (again, same themes). I think official, local holidays also have an influence on how and what you celebrate (we don't have a day off for the spring equinox, but we do for Easter etc.) and your immediate community (we always have a big Samhain/Halloween party because the kids love it)... Thank you again for sharing this, Bente!! And good luck with your research :) It would be lovely to see your Almanac / Custom Calendar when it's done :) Wish you all the best!

  • @TrishaAAllen
    @TrishaAAllen 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    To be honest,the seasons are so messed up in the UK especially, I celebrate when it really " feels" like the change in season, also there are one's I just don't bother with because they don't resonate...Beltain, Midsummer being two I totally skip, really I am a dark half girl so ,anything before fall and after yule, I am like nah lol😂

  • @wren1019
    @wren1019 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    have you watched arith harger?

  • @froggiepogs908
    @froggiepogs908 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Could you cover Fenrir? ❤

  • @christiansyverson3550
    @christiansyverson3550 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You're a saint as always 😭 I've been looking for these exact same things. Searching both for traditional Heathen holidays, but also important German holidays, which is hard to find as an American. I'm so excited to see what you find and make, as always. Would you differentiate the German holidays based on their regional significance (a holiday more important to Bavaria than to Brandenburg, for example) or would you make them all German with a capital G/D?

    • @TheNorseWitch
      @TheNorseWitch  7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I’d try to make them as regional as possible because there’s such major differences between the different areas….for example even just the north being more Protestant and the south more catholic….

  • @kirstyferguson6645
    @kirstyferguson6645 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I am doing something similar. I live in Australia, have Scottish, German and English heritage, and am Norse in my belief system. There is a lot of work to be done.

  • @heidijay5902
    @heidijay5902 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    After I realised Christianity definitely wasn’t for me, I started researching the beliefs, culture, folklore & mythologies of my ancestors. I have only ever used Wicca as a reference for ideas. My father is from Denmark & my mother is from Northern England so I have a broad range of holidays to choose from. However I currently live in the Southern Hemisphere & would prefer to work with the seasonal changes relevant to where I am. I’m also of the opinion that Heathens/ Pagans/ Witches should go with what works best for them personally & love the idea of making up my own. For me currently it’s all about the Equinoxes, Solstices & phases of the moon. I’m sure I’ll figure out more as I do more research, I do have a reconstructed list of holidays for Norse pre-Christian holidays, but I’m still figuring out which works best for me & how I’m going to incorporate it into my own life.

  • @darthszarych5588
    @darthszarych5588 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Im not a Wiccan. I started out paganism in the Atheopagan community and they celebrate the wheel of the year as a form of earth and sun worship and i liked it. Im still techically atheopagan (tho im more pseudo athiest. I dont beleieve in gods but i worship them symbolically to the point where they feel real and im a devotee of Brigit) but i still celebrate the wheel of the year but not as much as i used to focus on it. Some of the ways most wiccans celebrate the wheel of the year with the seasons dont work for me because of the way the the sun and the seasons dont always lign up, but i like to recognize thw changes in daylight (which is good for my SAD).
    I do get a lot of professors and employers telling me that theyre not "real" religious holidays so i cant be excused from work or class for them which is terrible.

  • @Fleur_Ink94
    @Fleur_Ink94 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I never celebrated it in the first place, my practice is based on Hungarian reformed practices, syncretized with Chatolic, as both can be found in my ancestrial background, I've grown up with them, and I cannot toss them away just lie that. I do not really call myself a witch or anylthing like that, in Hungarian lores it is called "bűbájos", from an ancient tale: Mother Moon had two sons, one is Bű, one is Báj, they were the personification of "bad" and "good, darkness and light. They almost eliminated the life on Earth by fighting each other until Mother Moon had enough of it and regulated her children to be in balance with each other. Hence the name bűbájos, or in not so exact translation "Enchantress". I try to avoid appropriatingJewish culture within my practice, so I always do look up if there might be some aspects I need to drop. So my practice is quite limited.White people have no culture at all of their own origin. Let's face the fact, we're thefts since our skintone was born with the first mutations. :/ I am so sad about that. I do not think of myself as a human at all. We're one of the most dangerous viruses roaming on Earth.

  • @francisedward8713
    @francisedward8713 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    For anyone practicing any form of Reconstructionist Paganism, it should be avoided. It is mainly based around the British Isles, where I live, but has no historical basis for me, as a practicing reconstructionist Anglo-Saxon heathen (Fyrnsidu), nor does it even have one really in any form of insular (British) Celtic paganism with the exception of some dates, but the “Wheel of the Year” is completely new age/Wiccan. For a lot of European traditions, if you look at the sources, you can actually gain some insight into their own “Wheel of the Year”. For Anglo-Saxon heathens, the Venerable Bede literally has described the Anglo-Saxon calendar back in the 700s, and this is also a goldmine for all Germanic heathens (Norse, Continental). If you’re a heathen, check out Bede for a reconstructionist approach!

  • @DelaurentisDavis-ti4zc
    @DelaurentisDavis-ti4zc 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Will you ever go back to celebrating the wheel of the year.

  • @tieppomushing
    @tieppomushing 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Celebrate heikki lunta along with all of the yoopers laugh😂

  • @Mixedequalsbrown
    @Mixedequalsbrown 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Als deutsche Person kommt es natürlich drauf an wo man herkommt bzw. wo im Land man sich befindet. Die südlicheren und westlichen Bundesländer sind eindeutig keltisch von daher macht es für einen Franken, Schwaben und Kölner durchaus Sinn die keltischen Traditionen zu leben. Für die Nordlichter und Ostdeutschen natürlich die germanischen. Wobei ich der Meinung bin, dass man sich eher an dem Grund und Boden auf dem man sich befindet beruht als wo man selbst abstammt. Aber das ist natürlich sehr subjektiv 😅

    • @TheNorseWitch
      @TheNorseWitch  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Jo. Und ich bin aus und wohne im Norden. Ergo - nix keltisches.

    • @Mixedequalsbrown
      @Mixedequalsbrown 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TheNorseWitch btw ..das du das unterscheiden kannst war mir klar. Es gibt aber sehr viele Menschen die glauben, deutsch=germanische (norse ) für die ist der Kommentar vlt hilfreich

    • @TheNorseWitch
      @TheNorseWitch  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Das ergibt Sinn. Sorry hab keinen guten Morgen 🤣 wenn du das Kommentar nochmal auf englisch schriebst kann ich es anpinnen! Glaube deutsche wissen das relativ häufig, ner englisch sprachige sehr selten

    • @Mixedequalsbrown
      @Mixedequalsbrown 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TheNorseWitch ich werde gleich noch einen Kommentar machen

    • @TheNorseWitch
      @TheNorseWitch  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @Mixedequalsbrown danke ☺️❤️

  • @StormEscape
    @StormEscape 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Just a note: Most traditional Wiccans do not celebrate the wheel of the year the way new age has made it out to be. It very much came from solitary non initiates. We celebrate the solitices, esbats, and equinoxs and we typically call them such. Thing like Mabon for example ARE NOT & never were Wiccan.

  • @user-wj3yr7xr2f
    @user-wj3yr7xr2f 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was searching for a spiritual practice now as an adult, I tried Christianity but Iam more of an old testament kind of woman. 😉However I realized that even Christianity follows the wheel of the year. Its one of those things they couldn't get rid of. So that was a turning point for me, I started to define myself as a witch instead. But I am a bit stuck on which ones I want to celebrate for the same reasons as you. I cant get rid of Christmas, its too many childhood memories there. I need Valborg and Halloween too. But other than that I dont know...

  • @lavender7063
    @lavender7063 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I can understand that you as a Norse Witch can't identify with celtic-based feasts. I am not a Wiccan too, but I love to feast the wheel of the year with friends. We celebrate outside and we try to orientate ourselves to nature. I am living on former celtic country (Austria), so I am not connected to Norse lore and gods, but to celtic ones. I believe everybody should feast when and where his heart is.

    • @birgittnlilli9726
      @birgittnlilli9726 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Vielleicht bin ich da nicht so bewandert aber waren die Kelten nicht eher in England und Schottland? In Österreich würd ich eher Germanen verorten (und einen Haufen Römer die ihr Zeug dagelassen haben ^^°)

    • @TheNorseWitch
      @TheNorseWitch  7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @birgittnlilli9726 Die Kelten waren tatsächlich auch im Süden Deutschlands, Österreich, Schweiz und Frankreich ☺️

    • @barbarafrings9231
      @barbarafrings9231 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@birgittnlilli9726
      In meiner Gegend rund um Bad Kreuznach (Rheinland-Pfalz) waren wohl zuerst die Kelten, dann Germanen (die sich mit den Kelten vermischt haben), dann kamen die Römer.
      Bei uns im Dorf wurden im Neubaugebiet keltische Gräber und Gegenstände gefunden.
      Wusste ich aber früher auch nicht.
      Lieben Gruß 🙂

  • @JustJane1972
    @JustJane1972 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Scottie is a joy we have watched in a few of your videos. Her stretched out legs, she's gorgeous. 🐈

    • @TheNorseWitch
      @TheNorseWitch  6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Her name is Skadi 🥰🥰 and yes she’s the cutest! 🥰🥰

    • @JustJane1972
      @JustJane1972 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TheNorseWitch my mistake. Skadi makes more sense. 🐈🐾 she really is beautiful.

  • @KimberlyLetsGo
    @KimberlyLetsGo 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I wouldn't give u any reason to not have a party or celebration!

  • @Elemoona
    @Elemoona 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I completely agree with everything you said in the video. 👏🏻
    The only thing I don't agree with is that, in my opinion, it doesn't make much sense to celebrate the Wikkan wheel of the year if you are not Wiccan: if you care so much about holidays, it is much better (as you are doing too) to create your own holidays, based on the geo-climatic characteristics of the territory or possibly on the culture of the people of that region: It's much more authentic and accurate than taking a standard year wheel already made and ready; but also because, if you don't belong to British culture, copying the wheel of the year it seems to me like "cultural appropriation".
    Thanks for sharing this information ♥️

    • @StormEscape
      @StormEscape 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That depends on what wheel of the year you are talking about. The most popular one pretty much all non traditional initates use is not wiccan nor stemmed from completely from wicca. Aiden Kelly was the one to make it into what it is now and it does not align with what actual covens practice. (I realize not everyone is in a coven, but they do practice what wicca started as and continues to be in full context.) So is it cultural appropriation? No. Not really. Especially because yes Wicca is the only religion to come from Britain, but it is not a British exclusive practice. Many Americans and people from around the world were initiated by Gerald gardner and others in his lineage.

    • @Elemoona
      @Elemoona 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Really? 🤔
      I admit that I am still a neophyte, but (after having drawn numerous information from various sources), I understood that, although the most commonly known individual sabbats (imbolc, litha, samhain etc.) had arisen before the creation of the modern wheel of the year, today's wheel of the year had been assembled as it is by Gardner at the time Wicca was founded and had remained unchanged: that's why it seemed strange to me that a non-wiccan would choose to follow it.
      However, in fact you are right about the fact that following Wicca as a non-British/Anglo-Saxon is not cultural appropriation also because, by researching myself better in recent days, I have also understood that many Wiccan practices and traditions are the result of long processes of stratification and syncretism of various cultures and traditions of the past, both British and otherwise.
      Anyway, thanks for the clarification 🙏🏻

  • @soestersmilet
    @soestersmilet 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ive stopped celebrating everything on the very long "you should do this as a witch" list..
    Not all makes sense to me! Also, Honestly I do not have time for that much celebration xD

  • @rileydosh1605
    @rileydosh1605 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm a bit confused by what you include in the Wheel of the Year. To me, as far as WotY holidays go, it consists of the equinoxes, solstices, and the cross quarter days. These dates have been celebrated all of human history because they are directly measurable events (highest and lowest sun, and when the sun rises/sets exactly E/W), and they are universally on the same days around the world. The cross quarter days less so, but they nominally fall halfway between the equinoxes and solstices, but I can see how that is variable. You said you don't celebrate the WotY, but you do celebrate the primary 4 days of it, so I'm left wondering what exactly you aren't celebrating. Is it strictly the cross quarter days you don't celebrate?

  • @_Kay.D
    @_Kay.D 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I love this, i too started off wiccan but very quickly moved away from it. I would love to see videos on pre Christian norse holidays