Gran Bwa and Beltane!

Beltane is the point in the year when everything is in motion. The ground has warmed, the trees have filled out, and what felt quiet not long ago is now active and visible. It’s easy to focus on the surface of that. Flowers opening, air softening, that sense that life is finally back.

But that visible growth doesn’t happen on its own. There is something underneath it that holds it steady.

That’s where Gran Bwa comes in.

Gran Bwa is not a seasonal figure and not a symbol. He is a lwa of the forest, rooted in the deep places where growth begins and is sustained. He is tied to the trees, the earth, and the structure of the natural world itself. Not just the beauty of it, but the order of it. The part that keeps everything from collapsing under its own weight.

At Beltane, when everything feels like it’s expanding outward, it helps to remember that growth always has a foundation. Roots go down as branches go up. The land doesn’t just bloom. It holds.

That’s the difference Gran Bwa brings into the season.

He is not rushed. He is not flashy. He does not respond to force or impatience. He responds to respect, to steadiness, to a clear understanding of where you stand. When things begin to move quickly, his presence brings them back into balance.

This is especially important at Beltane, because the energy of the season can make people want everything to happen at once. To grow faster, to open wider, to push things forward before they’re ready.

Gran Bwa does not move that way.

He supports what is rooted. He strengthens what already has structure. He works with what belongs, not with what is being forced into place.

So during this season, it can help to shift your focus slightly. Not just on what you want to grow, but on what supports that growth.

Look at what is already steady in your life. Look at what has a foundation, even if it’s small. Look at what you are building from, instead of trying to build from nothing.

Those are the places where real movement happens.

Beltane brings the energy to grow, but Gran Bwa reminds you how to hold it, how to respect it, and how to let it build in a way that lasts.

In Service,

Sister Bridget

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