Triquetra
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Triquetra
https://artsystudiofinds.etsy.com/listing/4405304130
New addition in my Etsy Shop
Hand crafted Celtic Cross Pendant Necklace setted with real moldavite. The necklace in made in solid 925 silver in antique style
Created by @artsystudiofinds
OSTARA
"Na wszystko godzę się co jest zgodne z Tobą o Wszechświecie. Nic mi nie jest za wczesne ani za późne, a co Tobie w porę. Wszystko jest mi owocem, co przynoszą twe pory o Naturo. Z Ciebie wszystko, w Tobie wszystko i w Ciebie wszystko."
~Marek Aureliusz - "Rozmyślania"~
Sacred Geometry
Sacred Geometry is the examination of patterns and relationships found in nature. This is focused on geometry (shapes) and how they can be found in nature. One of the more well known sacred geometry is the Fibonacci Spiral and the Triquetra. The Fibonacci Spiral (pictures below) embodies divine proportions, growth, and harmony. Triquetra (pictured below): The Trinity Knot symbolizes the three…
"Unbroken Lines: Insular Art, the Triquetra, and the Celtic Philosophy of Continuity"
Modern psychology and culture have made us entirely obsessed with the concept of the "clean break." We crave absolute closures. We demand clear starting lines, definite finish lines, and neatly bound chapters. We want to completely bury the past before we dare to step into the future, operating under the illusion that life can be chopped up into sterile, isolated segments.
The ancient Celts did not view reality through such a fragmented lens.
This alternative worldview is captured perfectly in the masterpieces of Insular Art—the distinct style of illumination and metalwork that flourished in early medieval Ireland and Britain, preserved in breathtaking manuscripts like the Book of Kells and the Book of Durrow.
Consider the geometry of the Triquetra, the traditional three-cornered Trinity Knot. To the untrained eye, it looks like a complex cluster of separate shapes woven together. But if you trace the path with your finger, you discover the truth: it is one, single, completely unbroken thread that loops over and under itself in perpetuity. It possesses no true beginning, and it features no definitive end.
This wasn't merely a decorative choice or an exercise in geometric skill. It was a profound visual cosmology.
The Celts understood that time, history, and human experience exist as a continuous, flowing tapestry. History is not a sequence of jarring, disconnected events. Your personal life is not a shelf of isolated, closed books. The "over and under" mechanics of the knotwork reflect a deep psychological truth: the moments where you loop downward—the seasons of failure, grief, and regression—are not dead ends. In the architecture of the unbroken line, that downward loop is precisely what dives beneath the surface to provide the structural tension and support needed to lift the next arc upward.
Your past is never truly closed off; it is actively weaving the foundation of your present. Your triumphs are structurally dependent on the hardships that came before them.
We exhaust ourselves trying to reach arbitrary finish lines, waiting for life to finally become simple and linear. It never will. Strength doesn't come from a clean break from your past; it comes from integrating it into the continuous pattern of who you are becoming.
Stop looking for a neat conclusion to the chapter. Just keep drawing the thread, traveler.
My newest pattern, the Stained Glass Triquetra Granny Square, on my Etsy, RoseOfMayGreece! Link: https://roseofmaygreece.etsy.com/listing/4338941327
@heffer-wen.