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Reflections from the Spiral Path

​Stories, ceremonies, and pathways of remembering.

The Mystery of Belonging

12/10/2025

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The Mystery of Belonging
A Shamanic Reflection on the Deepening Season

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“Before we learned language,
we learned longing
the soul’s ancient memory
of the place we first belonged.” — Lorriiii Dragon Dream

When Winter Calls Us Inward

As the days grow shorter and the light thins, something in us begins to listen — not to what has arrived, but to what is approaching.

Winter carries this listening. It moves quietly through the body and the breath, asking us to slow, to feel, to notice what has been kept at a distance.

This is a season wrapped in story — lights against the dark, gatherings, the promise of togetherness. And yet, for many, this time of year stirs something more tender.

A sense of standing slightly apart. Of watching from the edge. Of feeling the ache of belonging more sharply because it matters.

Winter does not create this ache. It reveals it.

As the outer world grows quieter, what has been carried silently comes closer — longings shaped by memory, by absence, by bonds that were thin, broken, or never fully formed. This loneliness is not a failure of the season. It is one of its truths.

In shamanic ways of seeing, winter carries the medicine of descent — not into despair, but into honesty.

It draws us inward, the way the wild ones turn toward shelter, the way life withdraws to its roots. In this turning, we come face to face with what longs to belong — not only to others, but to ourselves, to the living weave we have never truly been separate from.

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What the Season has Been Asking of me

I have come to recognize that the ache I feel in certain seasons or spaces is not evidence that I am unworthy or misplaced. It is a reminder of how deeply I long to belong — not in performance or permission, but in presence.

This ache shows me the magnitude of my capacity for connection, not the absence of it.

When belonging feels distant, my impulse has often been to search outward — for proof, for reassurance, for signs that I am welcome. Yet the more I lean into this season, the more I realize the invitation is inward.

Belonging does not arrive when someone else names us; it begins when we choose to meet ourselves.

I am learning not to shrink in the presence of the ache, nor to interpret it as rejection. Instead, I soften toward it, allowing it to remind me to return to myself.

The warmth I seek is not withheld from me — it is waiting to be offered by me. This is the quiet labor of belonging: the willingness to remain with ourselves when we most wish to disappear.

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The Deeper Truth of Belonging

Many of us quietly believe that belonging is something others grant us, and that our worth is proven by how we are received.

Yet belonging is older than approval. It is a birthright we forget—and spend our lives rediscovering.

What rises when belonging feels distant is not proof that we are outside the circle. It is the part of us that remembers the circle exists.

Loneliness, distance, misunderstanding, and silence do not strip belonging away. They invite us to locate it more deeply—within.

In this season especially, the world reflects what has not yet been tended. Each heart stands at its own threshold— grief, change, absence, uncertainty, becoming.

This experience is not unique. It is human.

And when we soften toward it, something shifts. We begin to recognize one another— not through identical stories, but through shared longing.

What calls us now is not disappearance, but embodiment. This is the deeper belonging— not something we wait to be given, but something we learn to inhabit.

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A Threshold

What follows is an original myth — not inherited, not translated, but shaped from listening.

It does not explain the ache of belonging or attempt to resolve it. Instead, it moves beneath it, into an older language — one that speaks in turning, in seasons, in return.

This story is offered as a way of remembering. Not something to analyze, but something to enter.


THE GREAT TURNING
Where Return Becomes Beginning

There was a time before anything asked to be named. Not because nothing existed, but because nothing stood far enough apart to require a name. Life did not arrive or depart. It was simply present — everywhere, all at once — a living weave with no seam and no edge. Nothing leaned outward. Nothing turned back. There was no elsewhere to long for, because nothing had ever been left behind. Everything existed together — undivided, complete beyond noticing.

Within that closeness, something moved. Not a rupture, but a reaching. Life leaned outward into form — curious about touch, about being one thing among many. Shape gathered. Edges appeared. The vast learned how to live inside bodies, inside land, inside time.

Each form carried the whole within it — the immeasurable folded into breath and bone, into soil and bark, into land and sky. Living this way was new, and in learning how to be this, something slipped from the surface of knowing.

Those who moved outward began to feel separate. Not because they were lost, but because the closeness had grown subtle. Distance felt real. The world felt wide.

And the Great Wholeness listened. It listened to the experience of being many. It listened to the ache of distance carried inside form. And it answered — not by undoing creation, but by setting a rhythm into motion.

So life began to move in a great turning — outward into experience, inward toward release. What opened became spring. What lived fully became summer. What loosened became autumn. And what returned became winter.

The turning did not promise escape. It promised remembrance — that what enters form will one day return to wholeness, that wholeness will receive it, and that from wholeness, life will lean outward once more.

This is why winter feels different. Winter brings life closest to the Great Wholeness — closest to the place where form rests, where edges soften, where the mystery of belonging is no longer an idea, but a felt remembering.

As light thins and the world grows quiet, what has lived its season begins to loosen. What has carried shape begins to release shape. And those who have walked the long way through form remember how to rest.

They do return.

Not into disappearance. Not into elsewhere. Into the wholeness that has never ceased to hold them.

And from that wholeness, the reaching begins again. The turning continues. This is what the seasons are for. And this is why, each winter, something in us grows still — because part of us remembers not only where we came from, but where we will return, and how life will begin again.

An original myth written by Lorriiii Dragon Dream
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Belonging Was Never Granted

A Celtic Remembering of Recognition and Land

In Celtic ways of seeing, belonging was never something to be earned or proven. It was not granted by approval or secured through sameness. It was assumed — as natural as breath, as unquestioned as the land beneath one’s feet.

To belong meant to be in relationship — with place, with kin, with the unseen presences that moved through hill, river, stone, and sky. One belonged because one was alive within a living world. Separation was not the starting point; connection was.

This is why the old stories do not begin with identity, but with intimacy. Long before names, roles, or explanations, there was relationship. Before we learn language, we learn longing — the soul’s ancient memory of the place we first belonged. Longing, in this way of knowing, was never understood as lack. It was understood as memory — the body’s recognition of a bond that still exists, even when it is not immediately felt.

The ache does not mean we are outside the circle. It means the circle is still alive within us.

This is also why the turning of the seasons mattered so deeply. The year itself was a teacher — reminding the people, again and again, that life moves outward and inward, that nothing remains separate forever, and that return is woven into the nature of things.

In winter, especially, the world drew close. The veil thinned. The stories slowed. And belonging was felt not as something to reach for, but as something to rest into — carried quietly in the bones, in the breath, in the remembering earth beneath one’s feet.

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Belonging as Initiation

A Spiral Way Teaching on the Gates of Belonging

In The Spiral Way, belonging is not a destination — it is an initiation that repeats itself throughout a lifetime. The ache of not belonging is the first gate — The Calling — where the soul whispers, “There is more for you than this.”

We descend into confusion and loneliness not because we are failing, but because we are being unmade by what is too small. This is Gate Two — Descent — where the ache becomes teacher.

Gate Three — Darkness — is where belonging is stripped of performance and we learn to sit with ourselves without needing to be approved of. Emergence arrives not when others see us, but when we see ourselves.

Weaving begins when we find those whose souls resonate like notes from the same song — kindred, not kin. Devotion is the practice of belonging to oneself even when others cannot meet us.

Return is integration — where we carry home what belonging has revealed. Silence is the deep rest where belonging sinks into the body and becomes presence instead of pursuit. And in Centre — we embody belonging as the truth we are made from.

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Those Who Walk Beside You

Allies for the Path of Belonging

Every soul has an ally of belonging — but they do not arrive because we summon them. They appear when we soften enough to notice.

For some, the ally comes as an animal who mirrors a forgotten instinct: horse, wolf, seal, owl, or deer.

For others, it is an element — stone that witnesses, river that holds contradiction, fire that remembers your spark, wind that whispers your name.

Still others are met by archetypes — the Witness who sees without judgment, the Threshold Keeper who walks you through fear, the Soul-Friend who appears when you are ready to be met without performance.

Some allies are mythic — from Celtic strands, ancestral lines, or the Shining Ones of the Tuatha Dé Danann (TOO-ah-ha day DAH-non) — but many are wordless, rooted in land and experience, not story or culture.

Your belonging ally is the one who does not demand you change to be held — but steadies you as something in you relaxes back into belonging.

You will know them not by their form but by the way your heart unclenches when they are near.

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Listening for the One Who Knows Your Name

Guidance for Recognizing Your Belonging Ally

You do not choose your belonging ally — they choose you. But you can make yourself easier to find.

Begin by asking quietly, without hurry:
What presence steadies me?

Notice what arises in your inner sight — an animal, a tree, a face, a wind, a memory, a stone, a wordless presence. Do not rush past the first thing. It is often the truest.

Allies rarely announce themselves with grandeur. They arrive through repetition and resonance — a creature you have always felt drawn to, a natural element that calms you, a mythic figure that feels familiar, a sense of company when you are most alone, a whisper that carries no words.

When something comes, stay with it. You might say:
If you are an ally, show me how you walk with me.

Notice what shifts — a sensation in the body, a memory surfacing, a phrase, a warmth, a softening of breath, a subtle feeling of being accompanied.

Your belonging ally’s medicine is simple:
they soften the place where you have learned to leave yourself.

They do not rescue. They help you remain.

If you feel unsure, ask again another day. What is true will return — gently, patiently — until you recognize it.

You will know you have found them by the way something in you settles and says:
Oh. That. Yes.
without needing explanation.

That is belonging, answering back.

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Practices for Returning to the Circle

Embodied Ways of Rejoining the Circle

Belonging is not a concept — it is a sensation. These practices are not instructions, but doorways: small ways of softening back into yourself when you feel far from the circle.

The Hand on the Heart
Place your hand on your chest. Whisper, I’m here. I’m with you. Feel the warmth of your palm, even if nothing else happens. This is how belonging learns you will not abandon yourself again.

Leaning Against the Earth
Sit or stand near a wall, tree, chair, or stone. Let your weight rest. Say quietly, Hold me while I learn to hold myself. This teaches the body that it does not have to carry everything alone.

Letting the Ache Speak
When loneliness rises, ask, What are you wanting me to know? Write what surfaces — not to analyze, but to listen. The ache is not the wound; it is the messenger.

Belonging Breath
Inhale, I am here. Exhale, I belong. Not as affirmation, but as remembering. Let breath become a place where you are already welcome.

A Stone to Carry
Hold a small stone when you feel misplaced. Let it remind you, Even what is ancient lives by simply being. You do not perform belonging — you embody it.

Calling the Ally Close
Say, If there is one who walks beside me, let me feel you now. Notice warmth, image, presence, or a subtle shift in breath. Even uncertainty is part of the doorway.

Three-Minute Return
Sit, breathe, and feel your body for three minutes. Each time you return to yourself, belonging grows roots.

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Because belonging is not only understood but practiced, here is something simple you can carry for the moments you feel yourself begin to disappear. A quiet prayer you can hold in your palm or whisper inside your chest.

A Boundary Prayer for Staying With Yourself

I enter this space whole.
What is mine stays with me.
What is theirs stays with them.
I release the need to be understood or chosen.
I am here to witness, not absorb.
Let my presence be enough.

This prayer is not armour — it is a homecoming. A way of remaining with yourself when the old habit is to leave. Let it meet you gently, wherever you soften.

If it steadied you, offer it quietly to another — not as instruction, but as recognition: You belong here too.

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Belonging is not given to us by others — it is remembered within us. The ache we carry is not failure or proof of exile, but an ancient stirring toward return. When we listen to it, soften toward it, and allow it to lead rather than shame us, we begin to discover that belonging is not waiting somewhere else. It is here, quietly unfolding in the way we remain with ourselves. May this season not erase your longing, but deepen your capacity to be companion to it — for that is where the door opens.

May your ache become a guide, not a verdict.
May you learn to stand beside yourself the way you wish others could.
May you feel the quiet warmth of belonging rising from within, and may the unseen ones remind you that you were never outside the circle.
May you return — again and again — to the truth waiting inside you:
You belong.

With you,
Lorriiii Dragon Dream

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© 2025 Lorriiii Dragon Dream | SpiritDrumming.com
Words and images are living offerings — please share with credit and care.

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    Lorriiii Dragon Dream

    a ceremonialist, writer, and poet whose path is shaped by Celtic and animistic traditions. Guided by the rhythms of the Earth and the unseen, her work invites healing, belonging, and remembrance through ceremony, drum, and story.

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  • Home
  • About Lorriiii
  • Reflections from the Spiral Path
    • Whispers from the Spiral way >
      • whispers archive
  • News - Upcoming Events
  • A Year Long Journey Around the Celtic Wheel
  • New Moon Journey Circles
  • Grandmother Moon Drum Circle
  • Celtic Shamanism Teachers
  • Sacred Pilgrimage
  • The Moving Mandala
  • Contact
  • Services/Offerings
  • Products
  • An Introduction to Shamanism - Discovering the 3 Worlds In Person Group Training
  • On Line Group Introduction to Shamanism - Discovering the 3 Worlds