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Thursday, December 31, 2009

Once In A Blue Moon


A "blue moon" is the second full moon in a single month.  A blue moon occurs once every 2½ years, but to have a blue moon fall on New Year's Eve is quite rare. The last time was in 1990 and the next one won't happen until 2028.

I don't pretend to know what this all "means," if in fact it may be said to "mean" anything at all. This has whatever meaning we choose to give -- just like everything else.

However, if we wish to experiment, we can say that this is an opportunity to do something we very rarely do -- something meaningful to others --- because this is a relatively rare day, impacted by an eclipse, no less, that magnifies everything by a factor of 1,000.

Whatever this means to you... well, I wish you every success.

Happy New Year from Digital Tibetan Buddhist Altar.

I love you.


Where Mahadeva and Umadeva play, there is no time and place; nothing to hold, nothing to relinquish; nothing whatsoever upon which to depend.

5 comments:

  1. Actually this is not a blue moon. A blue moon occurs when there are four full moons in a season rather than three and the third full moon is considered "blue". This full moon is on the other side of the winter solstice from the Dec 2 full moon and hence does not qualify.

    The idea that two full moons in a month constitute a blue moon is a recent journalistic misunderstanding of the farmers' almanac. However, an eclipse on the cusp of a new year is pretty interesting in its own right.

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  2. That's exciting. I'll be sure to look up at the sky tomorrow night.

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  3. ...and Amitaba day!
    Happy new Year!

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  4. Happy new year to you too!
    love
    Pema Tangdsin and Palden Dorje

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