blog: winter solstice 2025
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title: Winter Solstice 2025
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date: 2025-12-21T17:14:44.703Z
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slug: 2025-12-21-winter-solstice-2025
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author: Thomas Wilson
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Last night was the longest night, and today was the shortest day (in this hemisphere at least).
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The past few years I have come to appreciate and acknowledge the solstices more. It's around this time that winter can start to feel just a bit... eternal? We're far enough away from daylight outside of working hours to remember any kind of pleasant balance; and we're staring down the socially and culturally barren months of early spring. It happens every year and, golly!, isn't it boringly uncontentious to say: but isn't it dark?
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I take the solstice as the moment to acknowledge that it doesn't _actually_ get any darker from here (at least for another six months). That might not feel true every day henceforth – a 15:59 sunset doesn't leave us with lavishly clement and accessible outdoor conditions – but it is getting better.
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Today I managed to get out on my bicycle for more than a sixty-minute ride (the Oxfordshire winds make for tough autumn conditions). Spending several hours surrounded by (largely dormant) nature is restorative. This evening I will be drinking mulled wine curtesy of Anna Jones (see: [*A Modern Cook's Year*](https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/the-modern-cook-s-year-over-250-vibrant-vegetable-recipes-to-see-you-through-the-seasons-anna-jones/2612993)). I will be roasting some parsnips, a cook-from-frozen Yorkshire pudding (I'm not spending the shortest day on from-scratch puds), and toasting in gratitude and excitement for everything that has happened, or will happen, between the two nearest summer solstices.
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Whatever you celebrate at this time of year (Divine intervention; objective planetary movements), take some moments to celebrate it.
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