What you need:
- Candles in the following colors: red, yellow, green, blue, white, and black
- Herbs: tobacco, rosemary, lavender, cedar, sage, and rose petals
- Incense: copal, myrrh, or any resin-based incense
r 2 cups of sugar
- 1 chocolate bar per person
- Bells, rattles, drums, and other noisemakers
- A firepot, fireplace, or safe place for an outdoor fire, paper for your intention
The candle colors represent the six directions: north, south, east, west, up, and down (or sky and earth). They also represent the different people of the world.
Gather your friends together at dusk on New Year’s Day and ask them to bring a colored candle (assign them a color), a noisemaker, and an open mind. Ask them also to write out what they want to purge from their life and bring the paper into the circle. The Mayan Fire Ceremony serves to bring positive new influences into our lives and also to dispel what no longer serves for good. This “letting go” can be anything. For me, one year ago, it was cancer, and this year it was too much clutter. For you, it could be an unhealthy relationship, a job that makes you miserable, or a cramped apartment.
Here are the steps to the ritual:
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Build a fire at 5:00 p.m. and have it burning brightly as your guests arrive. Place a big bowl of herbs, flower petals, and incense near the fire.
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Create a circle around the fire and ask the eldest in the group to slowly draw a circle of sugar around the fire.
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When the elder has moved back into place in the circle, each person should light his or her candles from the fire and place it in the sugar circle, creating a mandala.
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Ask the youngest person to lead the group in this chant:My life is my own
I must but choose to be better,
Vital breath of life I breatheNo more pain and strife!
Wise ones, bring us health and life
Bring us love and luckBring us blessed peace
On this our New Year’s Day.
Into the fire, we toss the old
Into the fire, we see our future
On this, our New Year’s Day.
Harm to none and health to all!
Everyone should rattle and drum away, making merry and rousing the good spirits. The spirits of the wise elders will join you.
After the drumming, start around the circle, beginning with the eldest. Allow people to speak about what they want to release from their life, and have them toss their “letting go” paper into the fire. Then the eldest person should lead the group in a prayer for collective hopes for the coming year, and anyone who wants to add something should also speak out wishes for positive change, for themselves and for the world.
Thank the wise elders and ancestors for their wisdom and spiritual aid by throwing some chocolate into the fire. Be sure to keep some for members of the circle to share and enjoy. The Mayans held the belief that a plentitude of offerings to the ancestors would bring more blessings. They also believed that fire ceremonies helped support the planet and all the nations of the word. Gifts to the fire signal to the elders that they can return through the door and to the other world, until you call upon them for help in the future.
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