
Real Celtic Spirituality: Messy, Rooted, And Not For Sale
Let me just say this right off the top: if your Celtic altar looks like it was designed by a fae-obsessed interior decorator with a discount moss subscription and a glue gun addiction—no judgment. Okay, maybe a little judgment, but only the kind that comes with love and a long sigh.
Because the truth is, I used to think that was Celtic spirituality. The twisty knotwork. The tea-stained scrolls with vaguely Gaelic blessings. The faux stone candle holders etched with triskelions and mass-produced in a factory somewhere with zero ancestral connection but excellent marketing.
And look, I’m not here to yuck anyone’s yurt-flavored yum. But at some point, I had to ask myself: is this mine? Or am I just cosplaying a culture I barely understand because it looks good on Instagram?
Spoiler: It was the second one.
The Knotwork Is Pretty, But It’s Not the Root
The aesthetic? Gorgeous. The spirals, the forests, the standing stones wrapped in fog like the land’s wearing a mood hoodie? Yes, please.
But Celtic spirituality—real Celtic spirituality—isn’t something you can pin to a vision board and manifest with a bundle of lavender and a playlist of tin whistle remixes. It’s not a costume you throw on like an Irish Halloween. And it’s definitely not a competition to see who can recite the most obscure myth in original Old Irish while foraging in a circle skirt.
What it is, as I’ve started to figure out, is something deeper. Older. Messier. And, frankly, harder to sell in a neatly packaged starter kit.
How I Realized I Was Doing It All Wrong (and Weirdly Right)
It started, like most things in my life lately, with a move and a mistake.
When we landed in BriarVeil, I was grieving. Raw. Tired. And about 47% convinced I’d lost my mind uprooting everything to open a metaphysical shop in a town that wasn’t entirely sure it believed in metaphysics—or me.
I was craving something ancient. Something grounding. Something that didn’t feel like I was faking it until I broke down in the candle aisle of a craft store.
Then I had a conversation with an Anishinaabe elder I’ll never forget. I was floundering my way through a spiritual identity crisis, and she just looked at me and said, “You’re trying to figure out where you’re going. But you don’t even know where you’re from.”
Gut punch.
I went home and stared at the triquetra pendant on my altar like it might suddenly explain itself. It didn’t. So I started digging—not into aesthetic, but into ancestry. Into land. Into story.
And that’s when it began to change.
What Even Is Celtic Spirituality, Then?
This isn’t a definitive guide. I’m not a scholar or a priestess. I’m a woman with a lot of questions, a decent library, and a wind chime that rings when the universe is feeling shady.
But here’s what I’ve learned so far:
1. It’s land-based.
Not metaphorically. Literally. The ancient Celtic worldview was rooted in connection to specific places—rivers, trees, stones. The land wasn’t just scenery; it was sacred kin.
When I started walking the trails around BriarVeil and paying attention—really paying attention—I noticed things. Not just the pareidolia faces in rocks and trees (though those were a trip), but the feeling of the land. That it was alive. Watching. Waiting.
2. It’s cyclical and seasonal.
The Celtic calendar turns with the Wheel of the Year—Samhain, Imbolc, Beltane, Lughnasadh—marking not just dates, but energetic shifts. These festivals weren’t just party excuses (though they partied hard). They were moments of communion with nature’s rhythm. Celtic seasonal festivals like Samhain and Imbolc marked major spiritual and agricultural shifts (here’s a great breakdown of the Wheel of the Year from Learn Religions).
You don’t need to light a bonfire on a hilltop in a cloak made of ethically-sourced sheep hair to celebrate Beltane. You can light a candle. You can breathe. You can notice the flowers that dared to bloom.
3. It’s story-driven.
Celtic spirituality is full of stories—myths that aren’t just entertainment, but coded teachings. Tales of gods and goddesses who behave suspiciously like humans on a bender, but who embody forces we still wrestle with: sovereignty, sacrifice, transformation, ego, grief.
These stories aren’t neat. They contradict themselves. They make you work. But when one hooks you? It’s like remembering something you didn’t know you’d forgotten.
4. It’s ancestral.
And this is where it gets sticky.
When the Lineage Is Broken
I wasn’t raised in a tradition that honored ancestors. I was raised on casseroles and cryptic emotional repression. My idea of heritage growing up was boiled potatoes and “don’t make a fuss.”
So when I started trying to reconnect with Celtic practices, I had a lot of guilt. Was I appropriating my own culture? Was I playing dress-up with something sacred?
If you’ve ever felt that tension—Who am I to claim this?—welcome. You’re not alone.
Colonialism didn’t just take other people’s cultures. It erased and sanitized our own. My people were taught to forget, to assimilate, to trade story for silence. Reclaiming it now feels like building a house out of smoke and fragmented memories.
But I keep going. Because I need to. Because I want to know where I come from—not just genetically, but spiritually.
What My Celtic Spirituality Practice Looks Like (Without the Cauldron)
Let’s be clear: I’m not doing this “right.” There’s no certificate of authenticity hanging over my altar. But it’s mine. And it’s real.
Here’s what it looks like:
- I walk the land barefoot when I can. Or in sandals with a questionable sole. The point is, I touch the earth.
- I light a candle for my grandmother on Samhain and talk to her like she might be listening.
- I leave honey for the fair folk. Sometimes it’s on purpose. Sometimes it’s because I forgot my tea on the windowsill.
- I read the Mabinogion and yell at the characters like it’s Celtic Netflix.
- I talk to trees. Not in full sentences. But with respect.
- I butcher Irish pronunciation and then apologize to the spirits.
- I show up. I fumble. I learn.
And that’s the point. It’s a relationship, not a performance.
But What If You Want the Cloaks and Ceremonies?
Then wear the damn cloak.
Seriously.
If robes, incense, sacred chants, and elaborate ceremony are what help you connect—beautiful. Do it. Lean in. Don’t let anyone shame you for being “too extra” or “too woo.”
Just make sure it’s yours. Not someone else’s fantasy. Not a Pinterest board trying to out-druid the druids.
Authenticity doesn’t mean rustic minimalism. It means resonance. If your ritual makes your bones hum and your soul exhale? That’s the good stuff.
This Isn’t a Trend. It’s a Tending.
Celtic spirituality isn’t a lifestyle brand. It’s a slow, stubborn tending—a return to roots that are deeper than memory and older than doctrine.
It’s not something you buy. It’s something you become.
And some days, that becoming looks like reading mythology under a tree and crying for reasons you can’t explain. Other days, it looks like rolling your eyes at a fairy-themed TikTok and then realizing you’re also wearing a fairy-themed necklace.
We are walking contradictions. So were the Celts. Embrace it.
You Don’t Have to Look the Part
This is for anyone who’s ever thought:
- “I don’t look Celtic.”
- “I don’t speak the language.”
- “I didn’t grow up with this.”
- “I’m too late.”
You’re not. You’re here. That’s enough.
Your ancestors probably didn’t have matching altar cloths or perfectly aligned chakras. They worked with what they had. You can too.
You don’t have to be a perfect practitioner. You just have to be present.
Final Thought: What’s Calling You?
Maybe it’s a story. Maybe it’s a stone. Maybe it’s a dream you keep having about a woman with moss in her hair who says nothing and everything all at once.
Whatever it is—follow it. Even if it doesn’t make sense. Especially if it doesn’t make sense.
Celtic spirituality isn’t a destination. It’s a remembering. And if you’re reading this? Something in you already remembers.
Let’s Keep Digging Together
If you’re on your own spiritual scavenger hunt—fumbled steps, half-formed prayers and all—I’d love to hear from you. Drop a comment, share your story, or tell me what myths have you questioning your entire life at 2am.
And if you want to know how this all unfolds in real time—chaos, coffee, questionable omens and all—check out other posts and join my mailing list below so you don’t miss the launch of Backcountry Mystic, coming May 26. It’s a story rooted in grief, grit, and growing into something ancient.
💜 Everlie


