Last night, April 26, I had a piece of chocolate cake and remembered my mom. It was the twenty-first anniversary of her death.
My family celebrated birthdays and anniversaries with chocolate cake topped with mom’s delicious caramel frosting (we always insisted that she double the recipe). I continue to celebrate family milestones even though most of my family has died. But I bought the piece of cake.
While I ate it I thought of the time we baked a marionberry pie and, when we pulled it out of the oven and it overflowed onto the floor, we laughed so hard my dad rushed into the room to join in the fun. None of us could explain why it was so funny. Last night I also remembered the moment in March 1995 when she asked me to stay in Salem, Oregon, a bit longer, because she “wasn’t going to be here much longer.” While I didn’t understand how intuition worked back then, I heard the truth of what she was saying—and left anyway.
Good memories, sad memories, they’re all part of life. Would we do something different if given the chance for a do-over? Maybe. Maybe not. Life is about next times, and we live them the best we can.
I encourage you all to stop and set a time, even ten minutes, to honor your ancestors, those you knew and those stretching back centuries. Here’s some tips on how to do that:
- Set the place: arrange pictures and mementos, candles, flowers, even a piece of cake.
- Invite your spirit guide to filter for you. (You do have a relationship with a strong spirit guide, don’t you? It’s critical.)
- Get yourself grounded, balanced, shielded.
- Invite your ancestor(s) to join you.
- Relive the memories, good and bad.
- Invite your deceased loved ones to comment.
- Listen.
- When you feel the ceremony is complete, thank everyone for joining you and remove the “place setting” (this breaks the circle, allowing the energy to flow).
- Cleanse yourself with salt, a clearing spray, a walk.
Cherish the memories. Let them help heal you.
Note that some people think that honoring the dead on the anniversary of their death is morbid, keeps the energy stuck, and otherwise isn’t healthy. I disagree. Our experiences shape us, and honoring our ancestors (including our animal family) on these days is sacred, uplifting, energizing, and healing. As we all know, there’s never too much of that.
© Robyn M Fritz 2016
How can we let go of our dead?
See the “angry” setting sun here? It’s really smoke pollution over Seattle last month, but it’s a good visual. The sun is yellow, right? Pollution caused it to be red. In the same way, our energy boundaries are affected by internal and external things, even though we can’t see them.
I am not a shaman. However, I can offer tools modern shamanic practitioners and even regression therapists use, with the addition of alchemical energy and the unique vibration of my crystal, Fallon, the Citrine Lemurian Quartz. We help you as you work to clear your soul, from previous lifetimes to the present. And claim a transformative new life. If I can do it, anyone can.
Think spring and what images come to mind? Nature awakening, baby animals, fresh starts … spring cleaning.
The results are astonishing. People and their spaces thrive. Entities, including ghosts and nonhumans, finally move on. Properties sell and remodels are easier. Rituals deepen, whether they are celebrations of events like marriage (or divorce) and graduations, or memorials for the deceased. If you want to honor and acknowledge any kind of transition, consider starting it with a space clearing.
west member of our crystal community: a larimar ring.
I was hoping my horrific 2014 would not carry over into 2015, but that was wishful thinking. Instead, I now have a radioactive cat. So what does that have to do with intuition? Well, pretty much everything.
It’s an ordinary summer day and then you look up, and it’s magical. What do you find magical?
