Saturday, March 26, 2011

Our 9/9/09 Sacred Wedding Day




Welcome and come comfortably dressed, it will be fun

This Ceremony is a Proclamation of the Commitment of Love between a Man and Woman,
To the Magic of Love and it's Transformative Power to Bring Forth a New Paradigm of Heaven on Earth.



With Love and Gratitude

Celebrating That Which Is Within All of Us

Since we are all children that just want to have fun
 





Number 9 Number 9 Number 9
The number nine has been endowed with a special significance in many different spiritual and religious traditions. Nine was the number of muses in Greek mythology and Nine were the number of worlds in the Scandinavian. Nine was the number of doors to the holiest part of the temple in Jerusalem and the month of Ramadan is the Ninth in the Muslim calendar. Moreover, the counting system used by most of the world today includes nine numbers and so the relevance of this number is much ingrained in us. Also, in the Mayan tradition the number Nine plays a predominating role. The only existing inscription from ancient times that discusses the meaning of the Mayan calendar “end date” for instance speaks of Nine “deities” that will descend then as its crucial event. This would in modern wording mean that Nine energies, or Nine cosmic forces would fully manifest then since the ancient Maya would look upon time periods as “deities”. As far as we can tell these “deities”, or cosmic forces, are like evolutionary wave movements, built on top of one another where we are currently riding on the eighth one getting ready to ride on the ninth. In the manifestation of these evolutionary waves we may now as we approach the Ninth level notice an amazing synchronicity. This is the date 9.9.9 (September 9, 2009 in the Gregorian calendar) happens to coincide with the beginning of a Mayan Sacred Calendar count of 260 days.




Location in the Garden

The Circle

Reviewing our seperate and unknown to each other last minute Wedding Vows. Click here to read them



Family & Friends Gather


Minister Marge Begins the Ceremonies


The Happy Bride & Groom


Our close friend Jon Cypher sings a romantic song for us to start the wedding


Marge a Unitarian Universalist Minister reads the official marriage proclamation


My brother Willy Whitefeather honours our Cherokee ancestry by performing a Cherokee Wedding Blessing


The Cherokee Ceremony concludes with the blanket and drinking both of the sacred water





We read our vows and express our love for each other


We are then pronounced Husband and Wife


Ok who's idea was this throwing rice thing

























The Wedding cake and the beautiful roses from Rebecca's father


Slicing of the cake


Mmmm yummy carrot wedding cake, the most sugar we've had in months


Champagne


My brother Willy makes a toast




My Wonderful Nephew Mark and his lovely wife Lisa with their children, Luke and Alise, who helped the Bride get pretty for the Wedding day


Ok enough of the put on smiles, as true Willis' they reveal their true silliness inside




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