I don't know. Three little words that are liberating.

I have always been drawn to the winter solstice. For me, it feels like an awakening from a deep slumber. The deepest darkest part of the year is ending, and a new year is beginning with a radiant light.

Christmas was not always a happy experience for me. When I lived overseas, this time of the year was just another vacation. Upon returning to Canada, I was shocked that the consumer aspect of Christmas began right after Halloween. It felt and feels so empty! The Coca-Cola Christmas was all glitter and show, with little depth.

Recently, I came across the article below, and it really resonated with me. The idea of a yule season that blended winter, the solstice, Christmas and the return of sunlight brought a deep, warm feeling to my soul. Here is what was missing for me: a deeper meaning to this time of year.

I wanted to share it with you to see if others resonated with the story of the winter solstice.

Read on…

What is Yule?
A Winter Solstice Story

Long before Christmas, long before calendars mapped the year into neat months and weeks, people across Northern Europe marked the turning of the year with Yule, the festival of the midwinter sun. It was a time when the nights were longest, the earth deepest in sleep, and the promise of returning light shimmered just beyond the horizon.

Yule was not a single day but a season—a sacred pause. Fires were lit, evergreen boughs were hung, and feasts were shared, honouring the sun’s slow return and the cycles of life and death that governed the land. It was a time of reflection, protection, and renewal, when households cleared out old energies and called blessings into their homes for the coming year.

The ancient Norse and Germanic peoples celebrated with ritual and revelry. In some tales, Odin himself rode across the skies during Yule, leading the Wild Hunt, a procession of spirits and ancestors that reminded people of the thin veil between worlds. In Celtic and Druidic traditions, Yule honoured the rebirth of the sun, with symbols of light—candles, torches, and golden fruits—offered to guide the returning warmth.

Evergreen trees, now so entwined with modern winter celebrations, were originally symbols of eternal life, standing green amid the winter’s decay. Holly, ivy, and mistletoe—plants that survive frost—were hung in homes to invite protection and resilience. Feasting, storytelling, and song filled the long nights, binding communities together against the darkness.

In modern practice, Yule invites us to pause, reflect, and honour the rhythms of nature rather than rely solely on the calendar. It is a time to light candles, decorate with symbols of endurance and abundance, and mark the turning of the sun with small rituals of gratitude, intention, and connection.

Reflection Questions for Yule:

  • What are you ready to release as the year turns?
  • Where can you invite light, warmth, or growth into your life during the longest nights?
  • Which traditions—old or new—help you feel connected to the cycles of the year?

Yule reminds us that even in darkness, light is returning. The season is a time between endings and beginnings, a pause to honour the past, and a call to step into the year ahead with awareness, intention, and reverence.

Borrowed from: friendsoftheforest.com

May you find peace in the promise of the solstice night, that each day forward is blessed with more light. That the cycle of nature, unbroken and true, brings faith to your soul and well-being to you. Rejoice in the darkness, in the silence find rest, and may the days that follow be abundantly blessed.