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"Goddess Ostara" 11x14 acrylic
and Berol Prismacolor pencils on Illustration board The Goddess Ostara’s (Eostre’s) celebration day can vary from the
spring equinox (circa March 21) to the first full moon after the equinox.
She is the Anglo-Saxon / Germanic Goddess of new beginnings,
fertility, hope and renewal. It
is a time of balance between day and night. Her symbols include the hare,
colored eggs, spring flowers, in
older times celebrants wore brand new clothing to celebrate her festival.
Does this all sound familiar? It
should, the symbolism and even the name of Ostaras / Eostre’s festival
were adopted by the Christian celebration of Easter which also celebrates
renewal and rebirth. One
should note, that the holiday of Easter moves every year.
It always falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon after
the Spring Equinox. Ostara is an interesting Goddess because she is considered a Maiden
Goddess but instead of a new crescent, uses full moon energy.
This makes sense if we consider that she is the Goddess who fires
up all the growth in the spring. Physics
teaches us that an object at rest, tends to stay at rest, it takes more
energy to begin momentum that continue it.
Consider the seed sleeping beneath the earth or the bud tightly
wrapped on a tree branch. It’s
like when the alarm goes off while you are snug under your blankets; the
hardest part is just getting up and moving, and it takes a lot of energy
to get started. That may
explain a Maiden with full moon energy. This dynamic Lady of spring
has also had the female hormone Estrogen named after her.
Bursting full of the power of femininity as well as regeneration,
she takes the relay of life firmly in hand as the Crone has passed it to
her from the underworld. As we
note the sprouts, buds and blossoms bursting forth from the deep dark
earth, take a moment to thank Ostara.
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