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  • The Return of Helios

    The long nights are yielding once more. The great charioteer of the sky, Helios, has begun his triumphant return, stretching the golden hours further into the dark recesses of winter. With each passing day, the embers of dusk linger a little longer, and the breath of morning arrives a little sooner.

    Tonight, I found myself walking a familiar path, the earth still frozen beneath my feet, the last remnants of snow clinging to the shaded hollows. The trees stood as silent witnesses to the shifting light, their bare arms reaching toward a sky painted in defiance of the season’s grip. A band of fire burned low on the horizon, a promise written in the language of the sun. My companion, a shadow in the twilight, paused with me, ears forward, sensing something deeper than mere warmth—an ancient rhythm, a turning.

    Helios is not yet strong. His return is subtle, whispered through the cracks of winter’s armor rather than shouted in full radiance. But it is undeniable. The birds, the trees, the restless stirrings of the earth itself—they all recognize the shift.

    It is easy, in the depths of cold and darkness, to forget that the wheel turns on. That this, too, shall pass. That the sun, whether veiled or distant, never truly abandons us. And yet, here we are again—standing on the precipice of renewal, watching the fire return.

    We honor his journey, as all who came before us did, not with temples of stone but with reverence in our bones. By stepping outside, by witnessing, by breathing in the crisp air as dusk burns bright against the fading winter. The days will lengthen. The light will grow. Helios rides again.

  • Sirius Leaps Across the Vaulted Heavens

    Last night, I stepped outside and looked up just in time to see Sirius, the dog star, crest the horizon, its brilliant light flashing like a beacon through the cold air. There she was—Molly—poised on the edge of the world, ready to leap.

    Venus stood nearby, steady and radiant, her brilliant glow a silent encouragement. Old Jove and Mars, those ancient sentinels, watched from their high thrones, offering their own silent cheers, the warrior and the king urging her on.

    And then—she leapt.

    With a bound too swift for the eye to follow, she soared across the vaulted heavens, her light stretching beyond time, beyond the weight of earth. In that moment, the great wheel of the cosmos turned, the music of the spheres rang clear, and I knew: she runs free.

    Not gone, not lost—only running ahead.