Be at peace with your own soul
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Home » Beneath the Willow Tree » Be at peace with your own soul
Be at peace with your own soul
then heaven & earth will be at peace with you.
Enter eagerly into the treasure
house that is within you,
And you will see the things that are in heaven,
for there is but one single entry to them both.
The ladder that leads to the Kingdom
is hidden within your soul…
Dive into yourself and in your soul
and you will discover the stairs
by which to ascend.
by Saint Isaac of Nineveh
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After the new moon, the sunlit portion is increasing, but less than half, so it is waxing crescent. After the first quarter, the sunlit portion is still increasing, but now it is more than half, so it is waxing gibbous.
After the full moon (maximum illumination), the light continually decreases. So the waning gibbous phase occurs...
Moon Phases Simplified
It's probably easiest to understand the moon cycle in this
order: new moon and full moon, first quarter and third quarter,
and the phases in between.
As shown in the above diagram, the new moon occurs when the
moon is positioned between the earth and sun. The three objects
are in approximate alignment (why "approximate" is explained
below). The entire illuminated portion of the moon is on the back
side of the moon, the half that we cannot see.
At a full moon, the earth, moon, and sun are in approximate alignment, just as the new
moon, but the moon is on the opposite side of the earth, so the entire sunlit part of the
moon is facing us. The shadowed portion is entirely hidden from view.
The first quarter and third quarter moons (both often called a "half moon"), happen when
the moon is at a 90 degree angle with respect to the earth and sun. So we are seeing
exactly half of the moon illuminated and half in shadow.
Once you understand those four key moon phases, the phases between should be fairly
easy to visualize, as the illuminated portion gradually transitions between them.
An easy way to remember and understand those "between" lunar phase names is by
breaking out and defining 4 words: crescent, gibbous, waxing, and waning. The word
crescent refers to the phases where the moon is less than half illuminated. The word
gibbous refers to phases where the moon is more than half illuminated. Waxing
essentially means "growing" or expanding in illumination, and waning means "shrinking"
or decreasing in illumination.
Thus you can simply combine the two words to create the phase name, as follows:
After the new moon, the sunlit portion is increasing, but less than half, so it is waxing
crescent. After the first quarter, the sunlit portion is still increasing, but now it is more
than half, so it is waxing gibbous. After the full moon (maximum illumination), the light
continually decreases. So the waning gibbous phase occurs next. Following the third
quarter is the waning crescent, which wanes until the light is completely gone -- a new
moon.
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Updated: 25 May 2018