The practice of aligning creative and spiritual work with seasonal cycles, recognizing that different times carry different sacred qualities and creative potentials.
Kigo—seasonal reference words in Japanese poetry—represent far more than decoration; they anchor the human heart in the larger rhythms of nature and cosmos. Murasaki Shikibu's narrative pulsates with seasonal awareness: spring's renewal alongside new love, autumn's melancholy paired with deepening wisdom. This was not mere poetic convention but recognition that consciousness itself shifts with seasons. Each season carries its own spiritual atmosphere, its own creative possibilities and challenges. Spring invites new beginnings; summer intensifies emotional life; autumn teaches letting go; winter demands retreat and reflection. When we lose awareness of seasonal cycles, we lose connection to something sacred. We try to maintain the same energy and creativity year-round, exhausting ourselves. A seasonal consciousness suggests that the sacred and creative life requires rhythm and attunement. Rather than fight against autumn's diminishment, we write elegy. Rather than resist spring's restlessness, we begin new projects. This alignment with larger temporal patterns, this respect for the body's and soul's seasonal needs, becomes itself a spiritual practice that honors both natural law and the sacred architecture of time.
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