Waters Three

The tradition "Waters Three" utilizes water during Beltane, a time rich in ritual and reverence and underscores the element's significance beyond its life-sustaining essence. This practice highlights the confluence of three streams as a place imbued with magic and fortune. Anyone in pursuit of blessings for the year ahead and protection from the summer sun's fervor, would seek out these triune waters. By washing their faces in this confluence, they engaged in a rite believed to weave luck and beauty into their fates. Similarly, the act of drawing the first can of water from the well at dawn, a time when the veil between day and night thins, was thought to bestow good fortune upon the bearer. This tradition, adaptable to any meeting of three water bodies, whether natural streams or intentionally poured from tea cups, encapsulates the reverence for water's mystical properties. The morning dew, appearing as if by enchantment upon the grass, further complements this tradition, considered most potent at dawn's liminal hour, serving as a reminder of water's dual capacity for nurture and mystique.


Cover image: Moon Phases by Unknown

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