Autumn Equinox (Mabon) Gratitude Ritual: Celebrate the Harvest, Balance, and Thanksgiving
By Nicole, Founder of Mystic Ryst
The Autumn Equinox, also known as Mabon, marks the moment when day and night are perfectly balanced before darkness begins to overtake light. This sacred harvest festival celebrates gratitude, abundance, and the fruits of our labor. It's a time to give thanks for blessings received, to harvest what we've grown, and to prepare for the introspective journey into winter's darkness.
This guide explores the spiritual meaning of Autumn Equinox and provides beautiful gratitude rituals to celebrate this sacred turning point on the Wheel of the Year.
What is Autumn Equinox (Mabon)?
The Astronomical Event
- Date: Around September 20-23 (Northern Hemisphere)
- Equal day and night: Perfect balance of light and dark
- Tipping point: Darkness begins to overtake light
- Autumn officially begins: Transition to darker half of year
- Second harvest: Fruits and grains gathered
The Name "Mabon"
- Named after Welsh god Mabon ap Modron
- Also called Harvest Home, Alban Elfed
- Pagan Thanksgiving
- Celebrates second of three harvests
- Time of balance and gratitude
Spiritual Significance
- Balance: Light and dark, giving and receiving, action and rest
- Gratitude: Thanksgiving for abundance received
- Harvest: Reaping what you've sown
- Preparation: Getting ready for winter's rest
- Reflection: Reviewing the year's growth
- Letting go: Releasing what didn't bear fruit
- Transition: Moving from light to dark half of year
Themes and Symbols of Mabon
Sacred Symbols
- Cornucopia: Horn of plenty, abundance overflowing
- Apples: Sacred fruit, wisdom, immortality
- Grapes/Wine: Celebration, transformation, Dionysus
- Wheat/Corn: Grain harvest, bread of life
- Acorns: Potential, wisdom, strength
- Autumn leaves: Change, letting go, beauty in transition
- Balance scales: Equinox, equilibrium
Mabon Colors
- Orange: Harvest, abundance, autumn
- Red: Apples, life force, gratitude
- Gold: Grain, wealth, blessings
- Brown: Earth, grounding, harvest
- Deep green: Last of summer's growth
- Purple: Wine, transformation, spirituality
Mabon Crystals
- Citrine: Abundance, gratitude, harvest
- Carnelian: Vitality, courage, autumn energy
- Yellow Topaz: Gratitude, joy, abundance
- Amber: Harvest, warmth, ancient wisdom
- Tiger's Eye: Balance, grounding, strength
- Smoky Quartz: Grounding, releasing, preparation
Mabon Gratitude Ritual
Preparation (Days Before)
Harvest Reflection
- Review the year since Spring Equinox
- What seeds did you plant?
- What has grown and flourished?
- What are you harvesting now?
- What didn't bear fruit (and that's okay)?
Gather Supplies
- Autumn leaves, acorns, pinecones
- Harvest foods (apples, grapes, bread, wine)
- Orange, red, and gold candles
- Cornucopia or basket
- Gratitude journal
- Crystals (citrine, carnelian, amber)
The Mabon Ritual (September 20-23)
Step 1: Create Mabon Altar (Morning)
- Use orange or brown cloth
- Place cornucopia or basket in center
- Fill with harvest abundance:
- Apples, grapes, pomegranates
- Wheat stalks or corn
- Acorns and pinecones
- Autumn leaves
- Arrange candles around cornucopia
- Add crystals
- Include symbols of your personal harvest
- Make it abundant and beautiful
Step 2: Balance Meditation (Dawn)
Honor the equinox balance:
- Wake at dawn to witness balance of light and dark
- Sit in meditation
- Reflect on balance in your life:
- Work and rest
- Giving and receiving
- Action and reflection
- Light and shadow
- Where are you out of balance?
- What needs adjusting?
- Set intention for greater equilibrium
Step 3: Gratitude Ceremony (Mid-Morning)
The heart of Mabon:
- Sit before your altar
- Light all candles
- Open gratitude journal
- Write "Mabon Gratitude [Year]" at top
- List everything you're grateful for:
- What you've harvested this year
- Blessings received
- Lessons learned
- People who've supported you
- Challenges that made you stronger
- Simple joys and pleasures
- Write at least 50 items (more is better)
- Feel genuine appreciation as you write
- Read list aloud
- Speak: "I give thanks for this abundant harvest. I am blessed beyond measure."
Step 4: Apple Ritual
Apples are sacred to Mabon:
- Take apple and knife
- Cut apple crosswise (horizontally)
- Reveal pentagram (five-pointed star) inside
- This represents:
- Five elements (earth, air, fire, water, spirit)
- Hidden magic in everyday
- Wisdom and knowledge
- Eat half mindfully, savoring abundance
- Offer half to earth or leave on altar for spirits
- Thank apple tree for its gift
Step 5: Harvest What You've Grown (Afternoon)
Literal and metaphorical harvest:
If you have garden:
- Harvest remaining vegetables and fruits
- Thank earth for abundance
- Save seeds for next year
- Compost what's finished growing
Metaphorical harvest:
- Reflect on what you've grown this year
- What goals have you achieved?
- What skills have you developed?
- What relationships have deepened?
- What have you created?
- Celebrate these harvests!
Step 6: Releasing Ritual (Late Afternoon)
Let go of what didn't bear fruit:
- Go outside with autumn leaves
- On each leaf, write something you're releasing:
- Goals that didn't manifest (and that's okay)
- Relationships that ended
- Plans that changed
- Disappointments and failures
- Speak to each: "I release you with gratitude for the lesson. You are complete."
- Let leaves blow away in wind
- Or bury them in earth
- Make space for new growth
Step 7: Mabon Feast (Evening)
Celebrate with harvest foods:
- Bread: Grain harvest, staff of life
- Apples: In all forms (pie, cider, sauce)
- Grapes/Wine: Celebration, gratitude
- Root vegetables: Carrots, potatoes, beets
- Squash and pumpkin: Autumn abundance
- Nuts: Acorns, walnuts, pecans
- Honey: Sweetness of life
Before eating, bless the meal:
"We give thanks for this harvest feast,
For abundance from west to east.
For food that nourishes body and soul,
For blessings that make us whole.
We are grateful. Blessed be."
Step 8: Wine/Cider Blessing (Dusk)
- Pour wine or apple cider
- Hold glass up to setting sun
- Speak: "As grapes transform to wine, I transform through life's experiences. I give thanks for all transformations, sweet and bitter. To the harvest!"
- Pour libation (offering) on earth
- Drink remaining with gratitude
Step 9: Gratitude Sharing Circle (Evening)
If celebrating with others:
- Gather in circle
- Pass talking stick or object
- Each person shares:
- What they're grateful for
- What they've harvested this year
- What they're preparing for
- Listen deeply to each person
- Witness each other's abundance
- Celebrate together
Step 10: Closing and Preparation (Night)
- Return to altar
- Speak: "The harvest is gathered. I am grateful. As darkness grows, I prepare for rest and reflection. The wheel turns. Blessed be."
- Extinguish candles or let burn safely
- Begin preparing for darker half of year
Mabon Activities and Practices
Nature Walk
- Walk in nature on Autumn Equinox
- Notice leaves changing color
- Collect acorns, pinecones, colorful leaves
- Feel earth preparing for rest
- Breathe in autumn air
Apple Picking
- Visit apple orchard
- Pick apples with intention
- Make apple pie, cider, or sauce
- Share with loved ones
- Celebrate apple's sacred energy
Preserving the Harvest
- Can or preserve fruits and vegetables
- Make jams, pickles, sauces
- Store abundance for winter
- Each jar is gratitude made manifest
Gratitude Jar
- Decorate jar with autumn colors
- Throughout Mabon season, add notes of gratitude
- Read them on Winter Solstice
- Remember abundance even in darkness
Balance Reflection
- Journal on areas of imbalance
- Create plan for greater equilibrium
- Commit to balance in coming months
Mabon for Different Paths
For Pagans and Wiccans
- Sacred sabbat on Wheel of Year
- Second of three harvests
- Honor aging god and goddess
- Prepare for Samhain and winter
For Christians
- Similar to Thanksgiving
- Harvest festivals in churches
- Gratitude for God's provision
- Sharing abundance with community
For Secular Practitioners
- Celebrate first day of autumn
- Practice gratitude and thanksgiving
- Honor nature's cycles
- Prepare for winter
Spiritual Lessons of Mabon
Gratitude Transforms
- Appreciation for what is creates more
- Gratitude shifts perspective
- Thanksgiving opens heart
- Abundance is a mindset
You Reap What You Sow
- Spring's seeds become autumn's harvest
- Your actions have consequences
- What you put out returns to you
- Celebrate your efforts' fruits
Not Everything Bears Fruit
- Some seeds don't grow - that's okay
- Failure is part of the process
- Let go without judgment
- Make space for new planting
Balance is Essential
- Too much light burns out
- Too much dark depletes
- Find equilibrium
- Honor both action and rest
Mabon Correspondences
Deities
- Mabon ap Modron (Welsh god)
- Persephone (descending to underworld)
- Demeter (goddess of harvest)
- Dionysus (god of wine)
- The Green Man (harvest aspect)
- Pomona (Roman goddess of fruit)
Herbs and Plants
- Apples - wisdom, abundance
- Grapes - celebration, transformation
- Wheat - grain harvest, sustenance
- Acorns - strength, potential
- Sage - wisdom, cleansing
- Rosemary - remembrance, gratitude
- Marigold - gratitude, sun
Foods
- Apples (all preparations)
- Grapes and wine
- Bread and grains
- Root vegetables
- Squash and pumpkin
- Nuts and seeds
- Honey
Incense and Oils
- Cinnamon - abundance, warmth
- Apple - harvest, gratitude
- Frankincense - thanksgiving, spiritual
- Myrrh - transformation, gratitude
- Sage - wisdom, cleansing
Mabon Affirmations
- "I am grateful for my abundant harvest"
- "I reap what I have sown"
- "I am balanced and whole"
- "I give thanks for all blessings"
- "I release what didn't bear fruit"
- "I prepare for rest and reflection"
- "Abundance flows to and through me"
- "I am blessed beyond measure"
After Mabon: Preparing for Winter
Continuing Gratitude
- Daily gratitude practice
- Keep gratitude journal
- Express thanks to others
- Live in appreciation
Preparing for Darkness
- Stock up on supplies
- Prepare home for winter
- Plan for introspective time
- Ready yourself for Samhain (Oct 31)
Storing Abundance
- Preserve harvest foods
- Save seeds for spring
- Store memories and lessons
- Carry gratitude into winter
Your Mabon Ritual Checklist
Before Autumn Equinox:
- ☐ Reflect on year's harvest
- ☐ Gather autumn decorations
- ☐ Collect harvest foods
- ☐ Prepare gratitude journal
On Autumn Equinox:
- ☐ Create Mabon altar
- ☐ Dawn balance meditation
- ☐ Gratitude ceremony (list 50+ blessings)
- ☐ Apple ritual
- ☐ Harvest what you've grown
- ☐ Releasing ritual with leaves
- ☐ Mabon feast
- ☐ Wine/cider blessing
- ☐ Gratitude sharing (if with others)
After Mabon:
- ☐ Continue daily gratitude
- ☐ Preserve harvest
- ☐ Prepare for winter
- ☐ Live in balance
Final Thoughts
Autumn Equinox reminds us to pause and give thanks. In our busy lives, we often rush from planting to harvest without acknowledging the abundance we've received. Mabon invites us to stop, to count our blessings, to celebrate what we've grown.
What are you grateful for? What have you harvested this year? What blessings have you received?
The wheel is turning. Light is waning. Winter is coming. But before we descend into darkness, we celebrate the harvest. We give thanks. We acknowledge abundance.
Because gratitude transforms everything. And when we live in thanksgiving, we discover we are blessed beyond measure.
Happy Mabon. Blessed Autumn Equinox. May your harvest be abundant and your heart be full of gratitude.
What are you grateful for this Mabon? What have you harvested? Share your blessings and thanksgiving below!