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Having daily ritual or ceremony in our lives is very important to keep us connected to what really matters. When we perform or participate in rituals and ceremonies, we
enter into a state of mind that is different from mundane consciousness.
Ranging in significance from bedtime stories to weddings, ceremonies and
rituals are acknowledgments that an event or period of time has special
meaning. As a result, they can have the effect of drawing us into the moment,
inviting us to pay closer attention and tune into the subtle energies that
are always present but that often go unrecognized. In addition, as we perform
the same actions we have performed before and will perform again, we immerse
ourselves in a river of continuity that extends back into the past and
forward into the future. Many of us have distanced ourselves from rituals that may have seemed too
constricting or too attached to an organized religion we have chosen not to
follow. However, we can reclaim the practices of ceremony and ritual to good
effect, imbuing them with our new consciousness, and we do not have to wait
for a big event to do it. We can engage in daily practices that include
ritual and ceremony, reminding ourselves throughout the day of the sacredness
of this life. In fact, if we look closely, we will see that our days are
already made up of rituals, from the time we wake up to the time we retire.
So we do not need to change anything except our perspective to imbue our day
with an air of ceremony.
Most of our daily rituals revolve around nourishing and cleansing, both of
which have always been sacred acts. With this in mind, we may pause before
each meal, close our eyes, and say a silent thank you to the universe that
provides. If we want to get more elaborate, we can light candles or bless our
food. Similarly, as we wash ourselves in the morning and evening, we can
choose to see the grace in this act of cleansing and purification as we
release what has past and prepare ourselves for the new. We can be as simple
or as complex as we like, so long as our attitude is one of reverence for
this sacred moment in this sacred life.
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