• Blog
  • Contact Us
    • Contact a Guest
    • Guest Services Contacts
  • Privacy Policy
Drala Mountain Center
  • Retreats
    • All Retreats
    • The Buddhist Path
    • Meditation & Mindfulness
    • Creative Expression
    • Yoga & Wellness
    • The Natural World
    • Foundations Retreats
    • Online and Hybrid Retreats
  • Rent Our Venues
  • Solo Retreat
  • Jobs/Volunteer
    • Volunteer
    • Join Our Staff
  • ABOUT
    • Mission and Values
    • Campus
      • Grounds & Facilities
      • Group Spaces
      • Visiting
      • Traveling to Drala Mountain Center
      • Rideshare
      • Lodging / Rates
      • The Great Stupa of Dharmakaya
      • DMC Virus & Flu Protocol
    • Our Living Lineage
    • Meet Our Leadership
    • The Governing Council
    • Financial Assistance
    • Eco-Forestry Work
    • DMC Press Center
  • Donate
  • Click to open the search input field Click to open the search input field Search
  • Menu Menu
  • Link to Facebook
  • Link to Instagram
  • Link to Youtube

How to Prepare for Autumn’s Arrival

Creative Expression, Mind-Body, Mindful Living

by Sara Avant Stover

Autumn is my favorite time of the year, perhaps because I grew up in Connecticut surrounded by the splendor of changing leaves. The season’s crisp winds, golden light, and first days of school instill a fresh, buzzing, alive feeling inside. I feel inspired to complete unfinished projects before the holidays, and I love bringing out cuddly winter sweaters, woolly scarves, and cozy tights. Long walks through crinkly leaves remind me of romping in leaf piles on my way home from school as a young girl.

The magic of the season extends deeper than our wardrobes, though, for during these crucial months, nature prepares for her long winter’s rest and teaches us to do the same. It is time to gather, store, organize, and wind down from summer’s high tempo and the relentless forward momentum that modern living usually demands. When the crisp winds of autumn start to blow, we need to tune in to the signal that it’s time to start slowing down. As leaves fall to the ground, they decay and merge with the earth once again. We too are in the process of letting things wither and fall away to gather only what is essential for the winter months. We’re reminded that, eventually, we have to let go of everything in order to die countless little deaths in each of our lifetimes, and this ultimately prepares us for the final letting go.

Beginning with the fall equinox in September (March in the southern hemisphere), when the dark and the light live in equal measure, the days grow shorter and shorter until the longest night of the year arrives with the winter solstice. In the Jewish tradition Rosh Hashanah calls in the new year, and for Muslims Ramadan is the holiest point in the year, a time to purify and strengthen connection to God. Hindus mark the coming of winter with Nar- vatri, or “the nine nights of the goddess.”

Just as people of these faiths step out of their lives to pray and honor the larger cycles of life, we too intuitively respond to this season’s changes by spending more time at home with our families and immersed in projects and study. This contracting quality draws us not only into our homes but also deeper into our inner, emotional worlds — a big difference from the playful, carefree exuberance of summer. Now’s the time to reap the benefits from the past six months and appreciate all the ways you’ve grown and flowered. It’s time to start spending more time alone to see how those outward expansions translate to your inner spiritual and creative life. What’s essential? What will you take with you into the dreamtime of the winter, and what will you leave behind? 

  • Excerpt from The Way of the Happy Woman: Living the Best Year of Your Life by Sara Avant Stover

About the Author

Sara Avant Stover is a bestselling author and teacher of feminine spirituality. After a cancer scare in her early twenties, Sara moved to Thailand, embarked on a decade-long healing and spiritual odyssey throughout Asia, and has since gone on to uplift tens of thousands of women worldwide. The founder of the world’s first Women’s Yoga Teacher Training, Sara has also been featured in Yoga Journal, The Huffington Post, Newsweek, Natural Health, and on ABC, NBC, and CBS. She lives in Boulder, Colorado. Visit her online at SaraAvantStover.com

August 2, 2021
Tags: awakening, Body, Healing, mindfulness, nature, retreat, Sara Avant Stover, women, writing
Share this entry
  • Facebook
  • Link to Instagram
  • Link to Youtube
https://test2.dralamountain.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Aspen-changing-Fall-SMC30-scaled.jpg 1700 2560 admin https://test2.dralamountain.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Drala-logo-1.jpg admin2021-08-02 17:29:442023-09-14 17:04:21How to Prepare for Autumn’s Arrival
You might also like
5 Tips for Relationships in the Midst of Coronavirus Times
black and white photo of Maria Espinosa Memories of Mexico, SMC, and Writing a First Novel
Daily Practice: Our Reservoir of Sanity
Healing Guilt, Shame and Insecurity (Part I)
What Is the Meaning of Chöd?
Women, Food, and Forgiveness Part 1: What is Forgiveness?
Paying Attention to One Detail: Listening
Acharya Allyn Lyon Sit Still & Let Nature Play: An Interview With Acharya Allyn Lyon
Search Search

Recent Posts

  • Ongoing Stream Restoration at Drala Mountain Center
  • Guru Rinpoche Statue Consecration and Dharma Talk
  • Information on Continuing Education Credit for Health Professionals – The Buddha, the Brain, and Bach
  • Happy Magha Puja!: Celebrating a Way of Life by Santi
  • Amaterasu Omikami, The Sun Goddess Comes to Colorado by Valerie Lorig

Recent Comments

  • The 8 Best Meditation Retreats in the United States - wheretoaround on The Great Stupa of Dharmakaya
  • Michael Gayner on Our Direction for Drala Mountain Center
  • Michael Gayner on Our Direction for Drala Mountain Center
  • Mark Carter on Our Direction for Drala Mountain Center
  • Chodpa on Thoughts on Mahamudra Retreats

Archives

Categories

  • Compassion
  • Creative Expression
  • Daily Practice
  • Death
  • Donor Development
  • Enlightenment
  • Governing Council
  • Land Updates – What's Happening At DMC
  • Leadership
  • Life at SMC
  • Lojong
  • Meditation
  • Mind Training
  • Mind-Body
  • Mindful Living
  • Mindfulness
  • Nature
  • News / Announcements
  • Relationships
  • Resources for Meditation: Articles by Loden
  • Retreats at Drala Mountain Center
  • Self Care
  • Self-Care
  • Social Engagement
  • Solo Retreats
  • Supplementary Program Info
  • Testimonials
  • The Buddhist Path
  • Tibetan Medicine
  • Uncategorized

Visit

  • Traveling to Drala Mountain Center
  • Rideshare
  • Gift Certificates

Giving

  • Donate
  • Volunteer

Policies

  • Rates, Payments, Cancellations
  • Children
  • Land Rules
  • Liability Release
  • Code of Ethics
  • Whistleblower Policy
  • Anti-Discrimination Policy
  • Virus & Flu Safety Policy
  • Financial Assistance
  • Recording Release
  • Rental Guest Terms and Conditions

Contact

  • Address

    Drala Mountain Center
    151 Shambhala Way
    Red Feather Lakes, CO 80545

  • Phone

    1-970-881-2184

  • Email

    frontdesk@dralamountain.org

  • Join Our Staff

  • Program Proposal Form

  • Media Requests

  • Join Our Affiliate Program

© 2026 Drala Mountain Center:: Website by Integritive Web Design :: Asheville, NC | Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions
Scroll to top Scroll to top Scroll to top