As a collective we have been, and are still living through, very difficult and unprecedented times. Times where members of our chosen communities and families are being abused, discriminated against, and even murdered. Experiencing these kinds of collective trauma can leave us feeling helpless and lost, a deep seeded sense of grief and sadness.
Performing a Ceremony of Honourable Closure can help us to process through each step of the journey towards healing, both individually and as a whole. This ceremony date was chosen because it falls on the eve of the Super Pink Full Moon in the house of Scorpio. Falling in the sign of Scorpio, the bright Moon will help to illuminate things for us, bring a sense of closure and deeper understanding. While the Super Full Moon may be intense and highly detoxifying, it also carries with it a sweetness which reminds us to be grateful, and to find beauty in the path we have walked so far. Under this sensitive Scorpio Moon, we may also find that our intuitive senses have been heightened.
Together we will explore different cleansing rituals, guided meditation, chanting and other traditional healing modalities that will help to release negative energies that no longer service us as well as other obstacles that may be keeping us from letting go of our grief.
Honourable Closure ceremonies are so much more than the rituals themselves. They are an opportunity to be in support of one another and to have a safe space to release, create and empower. A place to honor our individual and collective healing and growth in ritual and ceremony.
All of life grieves. Mammals, birds, trees, plants, and other beings grieve the death of a partner, a child, a friend or a community member. Each of our grief has its own time frame. Whether it takes days, months, or years to heal from grief, honouring the process through ceremony can help us through each step of that journey.
In shamanic cultures ceremonies are performed to honour the transition of a community member. Ceremonies can also serve to honour the grief of loved ones. Grief has its own process and we go through different phases of grief. Ceremonies might not heal grief immediately, but they can begin a process that is an important passage in life.
Access to this ceremony is free to all BIPOC, Asian and LGBTQ+ people. Please reach out privately for your free access code.