Elysian Holistic Therapies

Elysian Holistic Therapies Offering Reiki, Indian Head Massage, Aromatherapy Blending, Crystal Therapy and Colour Therapy throughout Lincolnshire.

For clients outside of the county, I also offer Distance Reiki Treatments. Elysian Holistic Therapies is based in rural Lincolnshire and offers a range of therapies including Reiki, Indian Head Massage, Aromatherapy Blending, Crystal Therapy and Colour Therapy. After initially training in Crystal Therapy and attaining a ‘Crystal Therapy Practitioner Diploma’, I was drawn to research Reiki and deci

ded that this was a path that I wanted to follow. After completing my ‘First and Second Degree Reiki’, which enabled me offer Reiki Therapy on a professional basis to others, I decided that the next step was to undertake my ‘Masters Degree’ and become a Reiki Master to be able to offer my family, friends and clients an even stronger connection with the power of Reiki. The Reiki that I offer is of the Usui Shiki Ryoho system of natural healing. In order to expand the range of services that I could offer my clients, I then went on to complete a ‘Colour Therapy Practitioner Diploma’ an 'Indian Head Massage Diploma' and an Aromatherapy Blending Diploma. Over time I plan to undertake further training to increase the number of therapies that I am able to offer to my clients. Crystal Therapy and Colour Therapy work beautifully in harmony with Reiki and I regularly combine all three therapies in a single treatment. I offer ‘hands on’ Reiki Treatments throughout Lincolnshire either at my home or by visiting clients in their own homes. I also offer Distant Reiki treatments for those that wish to access my services but are too far away to travel.

20/03/2024

Spring Equinox & The Fairy Hunt.

"And beyond them, almost hidden by the moon shadows, were the Lords of the Ever-Living Ones: the antlered helmets of the Wild Hunt, the moon-silvered spear-points of the Host of Sidhe.
The music swelled until I felt my heart would burst.
And then there was silence-profound, absolute silence, and stillness.
And far off, among the trees, there was a golden glow."

From 'King of Morning, Queen of Day' by Ian McDonald.

Today, March 20th, brings the spring equinox.
On the equinox itself, night and day are balanced: “equinox”, from Latin, meaning “equal night.”
The days will now continue to get longer until the sun is at its strongest point on June 20th, the date of the summer solstice this year.
The spring equinox has always been linked with rebirth, unsurprisingly, and features in many world myths of light defeating darkness and life overcoming death.
Many spiritual figures have feast days at this time and, going even further back, many ancient monuments have alignments recording this important moment including Cairn T at Loughcrew.

In Irish folklore this was a time when the good people moved from one Otherworld doorway to another. It is considered a dangerous time to wander near their mounds or stone circles and fairy trees.
This was also a prevalent belief in Scottish folklore and is remarked upon by many writers including Andrew Lang in his 1891 introduction to the Rev. Robert Kirk's seminal work, The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies.
Lang writes, "They never were, to his mind, plain palpable folk; they are only visible, in their quarterly flittings, to men of the second sight. That gift of vision includes not only power to see distant or future events, but the viewless forms of air. To shun the flittings, men visit church on the first Sunday of the quarter: then they will be hallowed against elf-shots, "these Arrows that fly in the dark."

So, we can see that fairies were a real and palpable danger to human beings and, indeed, livestock on the quarter days. Elf shot had the power to not only maim or kill but also to transport a person to the realm of fairy in spirit.
This particular affliction also turns up in Wentz's mixed-bag anthropological study, The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries.
I would highly recommend buying a print copy of this book but as the copyright has now passed it is also available legally free here.
http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/ffcc/index.htm

Although a person should be cautious on this day, it is also a magical and liminal time and the ancestors and the dead were believed to walk closer to those who needed them most.
When we look to all of our various native and indigenous wisdom-traditions the one lesson they continually tell us is that there is our human time and there is also the time of the Otherworld, wherever and whatever you believe that to be.
Responding a certain way to an event may seem instinctive and even inevitable based on our concept of human time, but when we overcome these conditional reflexes we become part of the Otherworld time, as does our intention.

Although often associated with Samhain, it is surprising that the tradition of the dumb supper is not practiced widely at this time considering how the spiritual world and physical world are believed to converge.
Another ancient festival which takes place at the spring equinox is the Zoroastrian celebration of Nowruz. This feast is more often associated with the start of the Iranian new year in contemporary times.
In Japan, the Buddhist feast of Higan takes place on the spring equinox and is a day to remember ancestors. The name comes from the idea that the river separating the living and dead could be crossed more easily at this time.

As we can see, this has parallels to our own Irish and European beliefs regarding the dead at this time which perhaps demonstrates the authenticity of the observation.
Best wishes to everyone as the days become longer and we enter a time of more light.

(C.) David Halpin.
Image: Omar Rayyan.

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Lincoln
LN43

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