Many Moons Healing

Many Moons Healing Hi! Its Maranda. A sacred space to unpack and unwind past, present or future. Each session intuitively guided with your goals in mind.

When we heal ourselves we heal the world.

🌱✨ Imbolc + Full Moon Magic ✨🌕Today we celebrate Imbolc — a sacred turning point of the year that honors the first stirr...
02/01/2026

🌱✨ Imbolc + Full Moon Magic ✨🌕

Today we celebrate Imbolc — a sacred turning point of the year that honors the first stirrings of spring.

It’s a reminder that even when the world still feels cold and quiet, new life is already moving beneath the surface.

Imbolc traditionally honors:
🕯️ light returning
🌿 renewal + purification
🔥 creative spark + intention
🌙 hope, beginnings, and gentle momentum

And this year, Imbolc arrives under a Full Moon, amplifying everything — illumination, release, and clarity.

This is a powerful moment to honor where you’ve been, while also calling in what you’re ready to grow.

Ways to honor today:
✨ Light a candle and set intentions for the season ahead
✨ Cleanse your space (physically or energetically)
✨ Journal on what’s ready to awaken in you
✨ Nourish yourself with warmth — tea, soup, baths, rest
✨ Step outside and let the moon remind you of your own cycles

Imbolc isn’t about rushing into bloom.
It’s about trusting the slow unfurling — the quiet knowing that change is already happening.

May this Full Moon illuminate your path forward,
and may you honor your own becoming. 🤍🌕

02/01/2026

🌱 Free native seeds are officially sprouting across Northeast Ohio! The Holden Seed Bank has launched a regional Native Seed Library, a new community resource where you can check out free native seeds and grow plants that thrive right here at home, while supporting pollinators and healthy ecosystems. 🌼🐝

Native Seed Libraries are open at 10 locations across Northeast Ohio, including:
🌱 The Holden Arboretum
🌱 Cleveland Botanical Garden
🌱 Cleveland Public Library’s Book Nook at the West Side Market
🌱 Cuyahoga County Public Library (Parma Heights, Parma Powers & Snow Road)
🌱 Plus more!

Each location offers up to 12 different native seed varieties, from Black-Eyed Susan and Swamp Milkweed to a pollinator-friendly wildflower mix.

🌿 Curious how it works, what seeds are available, where you can get them and why native plants matter? Read the full story on our blog: https://holdenfg.org/blog/native-seed-libraries-now-open-to-the-public/

The Native Seed Library is made possible through collaboration among West Creek Conservancy, Holden Forests & Gardens, Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, Cox Charities East Region, and the Cleveland Metroparks Watershed Stewardship Center. Let’s grow something good together. 💚

🕯️✨Come visit St.Brigid Light the Land Festival!✨ It is seriously so magickal in here. 12:00-4:00..$20 cash at the door!...
01/31/2026

🕯️✨Come visit St.Brigid Light the Land Festival!✨ It is seriously so magickal in here. 12:00-4:00..$20 cash at the door!✨🕯️

My inner girl inside, is so happy. Full circle moments of me a little witch, dreaming of being involved in this community.

01/31/2026

Imbolc — A Folk Pagan Celebration of Returning Light

In Pagan folk tradition, Imbolc is a quiet and deeply symbolic festival that marks the first gentle stirring of spring beneath the stillness of winter. Celebrated around February 1st, it is not a celebration of what has already bloomed, but of what is beginning to awaken unseen.

Imbolc belongs to the old Celtic seasonal calendar and stands midway between the Winter Solstice and the Spring Equinox. In this liminal moment, the days grow subtly longer, the land softens, and life slowly prepares to return. According to ancient Celtic timekeeping, the new day began at sunset, which is why many traditions honor Imbolc from the evening of January 31st, while others focus on February 1st itself. Both ways reflect the same timeless threshold.

The Breath of the Land

In traditional rural life, Imbolc was closely tied to the lambing season and the first flow of milk after winter scarcity. These signs were quiet but powerful assurances that the earth had not forgotten life. Though fields remained bare, fertility had already returned in secret.

Imbolc teaches patience — a trust in cycles that unfold slowly, beneath the surface, long before they can be seen.

Brigid — Keeper of the Sacred Flame

At the heart of Imbolc stands Brigid, beloved in both Pagan and later Christian folk belief. She is the guardian of the hearth fire, the whisper of poetry and inspiration, the warmth of healing, and the promise of renewal.

In folklore, Brigid is said to walk the land on Imbolc night, blessing homes, animals, and those who welcome her. For this reason, households were gently prepared, not with grandeur, but with care and intention.

Folk Customs of Imbolc

🔥 Fire and Candlelight
Hearth fires were cleaned and tended, and candles were lit to honor the returning light. Fire at Imbolc was both protection and promise — a reminder that warmth would soon overcome the cold.

🧹 Cleansing the Home
Homes were swept and refreshed, releasing the heaviness of winter and making space for new beginnings. This act was as spiritual as it was practical.

🧵 Brigid’s Veil (Brat Bríde)
One of the most tender customs of Imbolc is the placing of a cloth, ribbon, or veil outdoors overnight. Known as Brat Bríde, it was believed that Brigid would pass over it, leaving behind a blessing of healing and protection.
Some placed the veil out on the night of January 31st, others on February 1st — a variation born from ancient calendars and layered traditions, both equally rooted in folk memory.

🌾 Threshold Blessings
Brigid’s crosses, woven from straw or rushes, were placed above doorways and hearths, quietly guarding the home and those within it.

🍞 Simple Food and Gratitude
Milk, bread, butter, and grains were shared — humble foods carrying deep meaning, honoring survival, nourishment, and hope for abundance.

A Festival of Quiet Magic

Imbolc is not loud, nor dramatic. It is soft, inward, and hopeful. It reminds us that transformation rarely arrives with thunder — it comes like a whisper beneath frozen ground.

Even in the heart of winter, the light has already begun to return.

01/30/2026

More good news from Re:Source Cleveland's Wheels to Work program: Earlier this month we were able to facilitate the transfer of a donated car to Rebecca, a graduate of our Youth Mentoring and Corner65 programs. Rebecca had been commuting to her factory job in Solon without reliable transportation. Most days, she relied on Uber to get to and from work, spending $50–$60+ a day, which took a major toll on her income. Rebecca is one of six children in a single-parent household, and she is the only one in her home with a driver’s license. Having a car is already making a meaningful difference for her family. It means reliable transportation to not just work but also grocery stores, the laundromat, appointments, and the ability to help pick up siblings from after school activities. While Rebecca hopes to find a job closer to home in the future, she now has the reliable transportation she needs to work toward that goal. This car represents more than just a vehicle. It’s access, stability, and opportunity, built on years of relationship and support through Re:Source programs. We're so happy for Rebecca and excited to watch what's next for her!

🚗 Our Wheels to Work program accepts donated vehicles for transfer directly to clients in need. Learn more and submit an inquiry about donating a vehicle at resourcecleveland.org/wheels-to-work.

When the nervous system feels safe, the body remembers how to soften. 🤍🌿At Many Moons Healing, I believe true release do...
01/30/2026

When the nervous system feels safe, the body remembers how to soften. 🤍🌿

At Many Moons Healing, I believe true release doesn’t come from forcing knots to disappear — it comes from safety. When your body senses it’s supported, held, and no longer bracing, it begins to let go on its own.

That’s when tight muscles soften.
That’s when built-up fascia starts to unwind.
That’s when stored energy — old stress, emotion, and tension — finally has space to move and release.

This is why we move slowly.
Why breath, warmth, presence, and intention matter just as much as technique.
Why healing isn’t something we do to the body — it’s something we invite the body into.

Safety is the doorway.
And from there, the body knows exactly what to do. 🌙✨

May you heal from the things nobody ever apologized for. 🌿The quiet grief.The invisible weight.The moments where you had...
01/29/2026

May you heal from the things nobody ever apologized for. 🌿

The quiet grief.
The invisible weight.
The moments where you had to be strong when you were meant to be held.

At Many Moons Healing, we honor the kind of healing that doesn’t always have words — the kind that lives in the body, the breath, the nervous system, the soft unraveling of what was never fair to carry.

You are allowed to lay it down.
You are allowed to begin again.
You are allowed to heal, even without closure.

01/29/2026
01/29/2026

The Full Snow Moon approaching on February 1 marks one of the brightest lunar events of the winter season. Traditionally named for the heavy snowfall typical of this time of year, the Snow Moon symbolizes clarity, resilience, and the quiet steadiness of mid‑winter. Its clear, luminous appearance offers a natural pause point for reflection as the season begins its gradual shift toward spring. ❄️

01/28/2026

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