solar holiday

Summer Solstice ’23

The major solar holidays are four, and mark the official beginnings of the four seasons in the Gregorian calendar, which is standard in most of the West and indeed much of the world. The solstices are in winter and summer, predictably marking the day with the earliest sunset (and therefore the shortest day and longest night) and the latest sunset (and therefore the longest day and shortest night), respectively. The spring and fall equinoxes are notable for being midpoints between these. The solstices are even more dramatic when observed from far above the Tropic of Cancer or far below the Tropic of Capricorn (note: which may have to be adjusted on maps at some point due to the current pole shift potentially redefining both poles, possibly hundreds of kilometers from their current positions), and incredibly exaggerated very near or at the north and south poles.

Today is the summer solstice, which means it’ll be summer from now on until the equinox ushers in the fall in September.

Seasons in most climates have the esoteric quality of having very discernible tones, perhaps even moreso than years or months. They are that cyclical, and return to us like something we know, year after year. This is perhaps one of the nice luxuries of time.

My new Spotify concept playlist is called That Summer (part of a seasonal set; note that you may have to refresh the page once before the list actually comes up to play on the web interface; you can search for this list as “That Summer (mix)” on the app). It’s a fairly short listen, compiled with summer’s signature tone in mind, as well as my personal ideas of summer as exciting, warm and rhythmic, sweet at dusk, and full of moments that are hard to encapsulate by description. Check it out. Happy Summer.

──── by Lync Dalton ────

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Darkest day

It’s the winter solstice, generally the day of the year with the least light in my part of the world. Are things getting worse here on Earth as our northern days remain short with their long, existential nights, and worse and worse still as they unwind longer and longer into brightness until the summer burgeons and blooms? As it is every year, part of that is our call. What are we choosing each day? Good or evil.

In a static state of enlightenment or in leadership, and increasingly in the average person’s life, one’s philosophies of good and evil had better be on point. They are important to think about and have straight. If you don’t notice suffering nor evil nor the moral crux of things, as many platitudes recommend, you may be too vulnerable to doing evil to others and rationalizing it falsely.

In choosing? It is best to align with Yes and No as they are experienced intuitively, provided they are correctly calibrated in one’s being so that doing the right thing (that which is good) is always a “yes” and doing the wrong thing (including all forms of evil) is always a “no”. You can teach yourself what the intuitive Yes and No feel like to your body. A lot of people do something similar when they decide intuitively if a food is right for them or not. Some people teach themselves this intuitive skill of properly calibrated choosing by meditating on subjects that are very clearly right and wrong respectively, good and evil respectively, as well as the words Yes and No respectively, and observing their body’s natural responses to those intentional mental stimuli, then memorizing them. That guidance is not to be found in brain chemistry, but in subtle physiological cues. Yes and No, right and wrong, good and evil are coming to the forefront of many people’s daily experiences. I observe this.

The pleasure principle– the principle of doing what thou wilt– is opulent at times, but it can lead a person astray. It can make them so lonely, understanding nothing in particular. It can also get boring. I love opulence. It’s better paired with merit. Nothing is as opulent as the Satya Yuga, which is Earth’s future that I choose.

Choose it with me.

──── by Lync Dalton ────

PLEASE DONATE TO WEIRDO CAMP. Do you enjoy and/or enrich yourself with Weirdo Camp? Please send a donation via Paypal (see site sidebar) or to $alchemylynx on Cash App.
Want the coolest tax deduction in the world? Donate to Terra Thesis Institute.