December 21, 2013
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Engrained Season
Today, Dec. 21, winter solstice, first day of winter, the least amount of daylight, is called the shortest day of the year. Winter, the season that gets better from the very moment that it begins. Yes, although the temperatures may be more extreme, we will have more sunshine by a minute or two each day from now until summer begins on June 21 next year. We can start to enjoy winter because the days will now only get better. No wonder this day caught the eye of even the most ancient men. Every afternoon sitting in their cave watching the sun set farther and farther south causing less and less time during the day and more and more time in the darkness of night. More time spent guarding against the predators of the night and less time during the day spent hunting for food and shelter. They seriously wondered if the sun would return.
When did they realize that the sun could be depended on to finally ebb at its furthest reach and slowly begin travel of the reverse bringing with it needed daylight and warmth. I’m sure they celebrated this day as they watched the sun set and rise on the two landmarks they may have physically or mentally erected on the horizon. As should we. They could measure their stored food reserve and know that they would either have enough to last the remaining half of their most sparse days or not enough. They would know that their lean days and confinement would indeed end. Although the remaining days of the season may be hard, they would at least be measurable.
When I notice the sun shining through our south windows and reflecting from the glass doors on our old book-case, without looking at the calendar I know that we are approaching this season. Not as elaborate as Stonehenge but just as effective. And deep down in the core of me, I still feel a sense of relief that the growing darkness is contained and the sunshine will remain just a little longer each day. Although, my food supply is as close as our neighborhood grocery store and the fuel for my fire is delivered to me effortlessly, I have this innate feeling of relief on this day each year. A core feeling that is as surely as much the evidence of the remains of our ancient ancestors as the huge heavy stone pillars of Wiltshire or the small stone circles and charcoal of their ancient fires. The core feelings from the remains of their DNA memory. Their feelings of survival, relief and wonder are in me even though my life is now much easier.
The changing of the seasons are powerful events for man, events that their survival depended on. They mark celebrations, the beginning of tasks and the beginnings and endings of hot and cold climate and the abundance of food. Man is finely tuned to them. We are finely tuned to them because of the feelings and behaviors that were engraved into our DNA from early ancient man as they observed, learned and adapted to those predictable seasonal times.
I wonder what feelings and behaviors we are engraving into the DNA memory of future man from the powerful events of our days. We are not just leaving the ruins of our buildings, pottery, weapons and bones. We are leaving behind either the good knowledge or the ruins of our minds in our inherited DNA. Which of these, the knowledge or the ruins, from today’s events of our civilization will be engrained and become innate behavior or feelings of our future man? What ingrained seasons will we pass on for them to celebrate?
Such is the life of John
Comments (11)
A wonderful reflection. I believe that we will leave it all – the ruins and the triumphs. Hopefully the disasters will trigger a small twinge and cause them to pause to listen to that genetic memory (intuition?) and perhaps turn away from danger…
Our intuitions and instincts must come from some where, don’t they. Glad you enjoyed these reflections. Yes, I’m afraid we have to leave bad along with the good. I like your antlers, very becoming on a mouse!
I enjoyed this thoughtful blog.
Glad you stopped by to read and you liked it. I like your Santa hat.
This is so interesting AND thought provoking! I hope we as human-beans will remember the ruins, if only to remember what has been…so we can move forward to better days. I hope we can celebrate the triumphs and pass on the good to the next generation.
I love so much about Winter and I try to enjoy it while it’s here.
Merry Christmas to you and your family!
FestiveRibbonHUGS!!!
Hope the memories of being good will be an inherited dominant instinct and not a repressive gene. Festive Ribbons to you and yours too!
I hope so, too!

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JackFrostNoseNippin’HUGS!!!
(I’ve got all these Christmas hugs to pass out before the big day!
Jack Frost has sure been busy Huggin’ today!
I always look forward to the lengthening of daylight…very interesting about the engraved/engrained dna, sometimes I know things that must surely come from some familia memory dna,and if that is in fact true then surely mine will pass on to the next generation. Happy growing golden days to you!
Happy longer days to you and Happy Holidays to you!
GingerbreadWoman HUGS for you today!!!