Listen

Description

The Longest Night of the Year

The Winter Solstice marks the longest night of the year. Across many ancient traditions, it is understood as a sacred time for retreat, rest, and deep reflection—a moment to sit with the darkness as we move through it.

Yet this year, the solstice feels heavier than usual. It feels as though the entire year has been one extended winter, one prolonged dark night.

The world appears turned upside down. Humanity feels as though it is hanging on by a thread, and nearly everyone has been navigating profound challenges in their personal lives.

These struggles do not simply disappear at the stroke of midnight on January 1st. Time moves forward, but our experiences, grief, and growth do not reset so easily.

Resisting the Rush to “New Year, New Me”

Rather than skipping ahead—jumping timelines straight into New Year’s resolutions as capitalism would have it—this moment invites something different. Instead of sacrificing rest, avoiding reflection, or bypassing the darkness in pursuit of a forced “fresh start,” there is value in staying present with what is real.

Entering 2026 does not require abandoning the past year or pretending the difficulties never happened. Instead, it can mean carrying both the good and the bad forward with intention. Learning to navigate the night sky matters, because our ability to thrive in the light depends on how well we learn to move through the dark.

Understanding the True Beginning of the Year

From a seasonal and astrological perspective, the new year does not truly begin until spring. This understanding grants us time—time to prepare, reflect, and grow without rushing into resolutions prematurely or skipping necessary steps simply because they are uncomfortable.

Capricorn season reinforces this approach. It calls for patience, responsibility, and steady work. Saturn, its ruling planet, demands nothing less. Growth is earned through commitment and honesty, not shortcuts.

Reflection Through the Long Night

In the spirit of the solstice, here are a few reflection questions to guide you through this long night.

* What was the hardest thing you faced in 2025?

* Did you try to overcome it? If so, how?

* What did you learn about yourselfabout your lifeas you faced hard things while continuing to show up in the world?

* How can you apply what you learned to the year ahead?

Whether you choose to create your own ritual or follow mine, the invitation is the same: be intentional, loving, and truthful with yourself as you look toward 2026.

This is not about perfection or reinvention. It is about presence, preparation, and honoring the full spectrum of your experience.

Solstice blessings to you and yours.

Tracey L. Rogers' Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.



This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit traceylrogers.substack.com/subscribe