12/29/2025
People who don’t have a sensibility for such celestial things will not notice but this is a very powerful combination that portends of great shifts in the “new beginnings” of the year, which numerology calculates as a “1” year. Hold onto your hat, as they use to say, as change, she is a’comin. Stay tuned for our Full Moon Ceremony as the energies will be very powerful ( for those who do have such sensitivities”.
Five nights from now, one day will hand you two cosmic maximums at once—and neither one will feel the way you expect.
January 3rd, 2026. At 5:03 AM EST, the Wolf Moon reaches peak fullness. The first full Moon of the year. One hundred percent of its face illuminated, reflecting sunlight at maximum visible surface area. And because this full Moon occurs near the Moon's perigee—its closest approach to Earth—it will appear slightly larger and brighter than an average full Moon. A winter supermoon.
Later that same day, around 12:15 PM EST, Earth passes perihelion. The point in our elliptical orbit where we sit closest to the Sun in 2026. About 91.4 million miles away, roughly 3 million miles closer than we'll be at aphelion in July.
One day. Two peaks. Maximum brightness above you. Minimum distance from the fire.
And you will still be standing in the coldest stretch of winter.
If you only consulted your body on January 3rd, you would swear nothing extraordinary was happening. The air will bite. The trees will be bare. Your breath will fog. The ground will be frozen. Every signal your nervous system sends will tell you that this is just another hard January day.
But the instruments will tell a different story.
The Moon will be as full as it gets. Earth will be as close to the Sun as it gets. Light and proximity will both be at their yearly maximum. And yet seasons are not controlled by distance. They're controlled by tilt.
Earth leans 23.5 degrees on its axis. In early January, the Northern Hemisphere still tilts away from the Sun even as the planet moves closer in space. The Sun's rays arrive at a shallow angle, spreading their energy across more surface area, delivering less warmth per square inch. Distance loses to geometry.
That's the paradox January 3rd offers: you can be measurably closer to your source of heat and more fully illuminated than you've been in months—and still feel cold.
Maybe that's not a failure of the universe. Maybe it's an invitation to stop using your feelings as the only proof that things are shifting.
Because here's what else is true on January 3rd: you'll be eight days deeper into the return of light than you were on December 21st. You'll have accumulated roughly 8 to 10 minutes more daylight than the longest night. Your noon shadow will be measurably shorter. The Sun will be climbing higher every day.
None of that will erase the cold. But all of it will be real.
So maybe the lesson isn't that proximity and brightness don't matter. Maybe the lesson is that they matter differently than comfort does.
The Wolf Moon on January 3rd won't warm you. But it will light up landscapes that looked invisible under last week's crescent. Fields that seemed empty will show tracks. Rivers that looked quiet will show ice patterns. Trees that felt lifeless will cast long silver shadows.
Fullness doesn't make things easier. It makes things visible.
Perihelion won't make you feel summer in January. But it does mark the turning point where Earth begins moving away from the Sun again. After January 3rd, the distance starts increasing. But by then, the tilt will have shifted enough that days will be noticeably longer, and the Sun's angle will be climbing higher.
Closeness doesn't guarantee warmth. But it does mark a threshold: after the closest point, you're moving in a different direction.
Maybe that's what these five remaining nights are for—not to prepare for a day that feels miraculous, but to prepare for a day that proves something quieter and more durable: that brightness and proximity can coexist with difficulty, and that doesn't make them less real.
You are five nights away from the fullest Moon of early 2026. Five nights away from Earth's closest approach to the Sun. Five nights away from a day that will ask you to hold two truths at once: things can be measurably better and still feel hard.
If you've been waiting for transformation to feel like relief, January 3rd might disappoint you. But if you've been waiting for proof that the instruments are moving in your favor even when your body hasn't caught up yet—this is it.
The Moon will not ask if you feel ready to be fully illuminated. It will simply reach 100% and reflect everything the Sun gives it. Earth will not consult your comfort level before it reaches perihelion. It will simply arrive at the closest point and keep moving.
You can do the same.
You can let yourself be closer to warmth and more illuminated than you've been in weeks without pretending that means winter is over. You can acknowledge that light is increasing and proximity is real while also admitting that the air still bites and the ground is still frozen.
Both can be true. And holding both is how you survive January without collapsing into either false hope or false despair.
Five nights left. The Wolf Moon is coming. Perihelion is coming. And after both arrive, you'll still have work to do. But you'll be doing it under more light, closer to the fire, with proof that the geometry is moving in your favor whether it feels that way yet or not.
What would change if you stopped waiting to feel transformed and started trusting that proximity and brightness are already doing their work beneath the surface?