Christmas is widely celebrated as a season of joy, light and togetherness - but beneath the tinsel and tradition lies a far older and spiritually charged tapestry woven through centuries of mysticism, psychic symbolism and celestial events. Long before the first carols echoed through the snowy landscapes, ancient cultures recognised late December as a time when the veil between worlds thinned, intuitive abilities intensified, and humanity stood at the doorway of renewal.
The Earliest Winter Spiritual Observances
• Zagmuk, a midwinter festival honouring the victory of the light god, Marduk, over the forces of darkness. Although rarely mentioned today, this Mesopotamian festival contained ritual fires, prophetic dream incubation and ceremonies designed to receive divine messages for the year ahead. It is one of the earliest instances of psychic awareness being tied to winter’s return of light.
• Alban Arthan (The Light of Arthur), the Winter Solstice festival of the Druids. Unlike the public feasting, the inner order of Druids performed hidden rites of divination. Few know that mistletoe was not merely decorative - according to Pliny the Elder’s documentation in 77 CE - Druids believed it amplified clairvoyance. It was cut with a golden sickle during Solstice rites because iron was thought to disrupt spiritual visions. This is one of the earliest recorded beliefs associating natural elements with psychic empowerment.
• The Christmas Star - perhaps the most well-known celestial symbol of the season - also has a rich and mystical history. While Christians identify it with the Star of Bethlehem, many scholars and astrologers reference a rare astronomical event: the triple conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn in 7 BCE. This brilliant alignment, occurring in the constellation Pisces (associated with spiritual rebirth), was seen by ancient astrologers as a cosmic announcement of a great teacher’s arrival. Although debated, the alignment’s intensity would have been unmistakable to the Magi - scholarly mystics trained in astrology, dream interpretation and sacred geometry. It is no coincidence that psychic sensitivity seems heightened during the festive season. As the Earth reaches its darkest point in late December, the natural world enters deep stillness - a quiet that ancient seers believed allowed the intuitive mind to open more easily.
• The Solstice - occurring around 21 December - marks the rebirth of the sun, a moment encoded across cultures as a time of revelation, prophecy and inner awakening. Even early Christians maintained the tradition of seeking spiritual signs during this period. In 336 CE - when the Roman Church first officially recorded the celebration of Christmas on 25 December - it strategically aligned the holiday with long-held Solstice rituals. This merging of traditions preserved the belief that late December was a sacred gateway where messages from The Divine flowed more freely.
The Victorians - often associated with quaint Christmas imagery - were deeply invested in the supernatural side of the holiday.
• Christmas Eve - during the 1800's - was considered the most auspicious night of the year for receiving spirit communication. Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol (published in 1843) wasn’t just a moral tale - it reflected a Victorian tradition of ghost stories told specifically on Christmas Eve - when the barrier between the seen and unseen was thought to soften. Spiritualists of the era frequently used crystal scrying, table-tilting and séance circles during December to contact ancestors for guidance regarding the new year. Modern psychics, intuitives and spiritual practitioners still feel this heightened energy. Many report increased vivid dreams, stronger intuitive hits and a deeper emotional resonance with clients during December. This is not merely symbolic; astronomically, Earth is closest to the sun during perihelion, which occurs around 2–4 January each year. Ancient astrologers believed this closeness intensified energetic sensitivity for several weeks before and after, making Christmas a naturally charged spiritual period.
• The Christmas Tree - carries mystical heritage. Long before it adorned living rooms, it represented the World Tree, a cosmic axis through which energies flowed. The practice traces back to the pagan tribes of the 8th century - who decorated evergreen trees with runes, charms and offerings to invoke protection and blessings. Today’s glowing lights echo those ancient offerings, symbolising sparks of Divine Presence.
Why so Many People Feel more Emotional, Intuitive or Spiritually Aware During this Season.
The combination of ancestral memory, celestial influence, collective energy and ritual symbolism converge to create a powerful psychic landscape. December invites us to pause, reflect, listen and rediscover the guidance that whispers beneath the surface of the festive noise. Christmas is not only a celebration of birth, love and unity - it is also a moment of profound spiritual alignment. It is a portal in time when ancient traditions, cosmic events and psychic awareness intertwine. To embrace this season is to step into a continuum of centuries-old wisdom, awakening the same intuitive flame that guided The Druids, inspired The Magi - and whispered through winter rituals long before Christmas existed by name.
In every candle flame, every quiet night, every intuitive nudge and every spark of inner knowing, there lives the timeless truth...
This is the season when The Light within us returns.
— Mage
Next Article -
Annunaki - 5 Festive Ways to Develop Your Intuition This Christmas