Pink: The Colour of Mysticism
Pink colour nowadays represent soft, sweet and feminine tones and hues. The colour is famously regarded as a feminine colour and is used in various media for depicting healing, love, and beauty. However, beneath the delicate surface of this colour, lies the biggest mystery. Unlike all other colours, pink colour doesn’t exist as a single wavelength in the visible spectrum. The colour is said to have no frequency or vibration in the spectrum, but we still perceive it.
Our brains create this beautiful colour by combining frequencies and wavelengths. For example: In a Rainbow, there is no pink colour, but it can be created by uniting red and violet colours. Hence, it won’t be wrong to say that Pink is a colour that bridges the gap between two worlds such as seen and the unseen, matter and spirit etc.
Pink Colour and The High Priestess
I know that generally high priestess is associated with blue colour in most tarot decks. This blue colour here symbolises her knowledge of various truths about the universe. In the Rider Waite Tarot Card Deck, High Priestess sits between two pillars coloured as black and white. Her central position is the indication of her unique ability to bridge the gap between two different worlds.
As mentioned previously, Pink also connects different worlds to each other. Therefore, Pink is highly associated with the colour of the Divine Feminine. And as High Priestess is also associated with Divine Feminine, they both represent the relationships and connections between people, groups or cultures.
Transition from Day To Night and Vice Versa.
Pink is often seen covering the sky during sunrise and sunset, the transitioning moments between night and day.
This transitional period has always been considered holy by many religions and cultures. Spiritual leaders, poets, and psychic individuals have regarded dawn and twilight as the only time when the barriers between the two worlds begins to get blurred and it becomes a little easier to meditate without interruptions.
So, it is correct to assume pink as a mystic colour that nature paints itself during the transitioning periods.
Conclusion
Pink, then, is the true colour depicting mysticism, not for concealing secrets but because it incites our creative imagination by highlighting that life is much more vast and expansive than we think. As, life’s deepest truths emanate when two opposite ends are connected, just like how the visible universe merges with the invisible one and the ordinary becomes extraordinary.
Source: Pink: The Colour of Mysticism













