Why We Only Get 12 Months….

Why We Only Get 12 Months, and Why That Might Be the Problem…

You know what’s mad?

As soon as July slips off the calendar, I feel a coldness creep in. Not just in the air, but somewhere deeper. Like something’s pulling away. The light goes a little thinner. The evenings arrive too early. And I can’t help but feel like the seasons are out of sync, like life is shifting, but we’re all pretending we don’t notice.

Here’s what I’ve come to believe:

We weren’t meant to live by this crooked calendar. 12 uneven months, 30 here, 31 there, and poor February with 28 days, barely hanging on.

Why?

Why all this imbalance when life itself, nature, bodies, tides, and even moods, tend to cycle in 28-day rhythms?

Turns out, there was another way.

Long before emperors carved their names into the calendar, many ancient cultures followed the lunar cycle, 13 months of 28 days, totaling 364. Add a day of rest, and you’ve got a neat, complete year. Simple. Rhythmic. Natural.

The moon, after all, doesn’t lie. It waxes and wanes in 28-ish days. Women’s bodies still remember. So do farmers, animals, and ocean tides. So maybe we do too, somewhere under all the noise.

But empires don’t like moonlight. They prefer order. Squares. Systems. Power.
So along came Julius Caesar, reshaping time itself in 45 BCE. He gave us the Julian Calendar. Twelve months, solar-based, for military and farming. Then Augustus Caesar decided he wanted a month too, and that’s why July and August both have 31 days. (Ego doesn’t come cheap, so February lost a day to balance it out.)

And just when you think it couldn’t get any more twisted, along came the Gregorian calendar in 1582. Pope Gregory XIII decided the Julian version wasn’t precise enough. So, to fix a seasonal drift (especially around Easter), he skipped 10 whole days and revised the leap year rules. People literally woke up to find the date had jumped from October 4 to October 15. Imagine that, ten days of your life gone by decree. And yes, people rioted: “Give us back our days!

But the real crime?

They still left the calendar lopsided. Twelve awkward months, all patched up like a bad haircut. No room for the moon. No rhythm that matched the body.
The calendar got more “accurate” for taxes and holidays, but we became less aligned with nature.

Now, when I feel the season shift at the start of August, I trust it. It’s not just me being dramatic. It’s memory. Body memory. Earth memory. Moon memory.

There was a time when we lived in sync with that, Thirteen moons. Thirteen natural months. Rest days. Sacred cycles. Celebrations that marked the real turning points.

Maybe that’s why we feel so tired, so rushed, so disoriented sometimes.
Maybe we’re not lazy or broken or moody. Maybe we’re just living in the wrong rhythm.

And maybe, just maybe, it’s time we remembered. My bones do.

Mae 🧡

Both the Mayan and Celtic calendars reflect deeply spiritual and cyclical understandings of time. The Mayan calendar, with its intricate systems like the Tzolk’in (260-day sacred calendar), tracked cosmic rhythms and was used for divination and ritual. Similarly, the Celtic calendar followed natural cycles, with festivals like Samhain and Beltane marking seasonal thresholds and spiritual portals. Both traditions emphasized the importance of aligning with the rhythms of nature and the unseen world.


Comments

24 responses to “Why We Only Get 12 Months….”

  1. Joey Jones Avatar
    Joey Jones

    I love this Mae. It makes so much sense.. I’m so tempted to draw up an alternative calendar to start on New Year’s Day 2026…Genius! Yet so simple and obvious xxx

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Ohhh, do it Joey!! I swear it feels like the system needs a cosmic reset anyway, why not start with the calendar? 🧡

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Joey Jones Avatar
        Joey Jones

        I’ve been thinking about your post whilst I was out with Patch. You write so much which reso ates with me… Next year’s calendars will be in the shops soon. I shall use it as a template and adjust it to the 28 day cycle..

        Liked by 2 people

      2. Good. Joey, I stopped celebrating all the ‘Hallmark’ holidays years ago. When I actually thought about it, we are so programmed. You’ve got to do this, you’ve got to do that, and so on. Why? Most believe everything we have been taught. Time has been controlled; does it even exist? I could go on and on.. 😂 So I will stop here. You are taking back your power lady xx Go for it 🧡

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Joey Jones Avatar
        Joey Jones

        I’ve not celebrated any ‘ holiday’ for years Mae…well except January 1st. I love that day.

        Liked by 1 person

      4. Joey Jones Avatar
        Joey Jones

        …..even though one of your people says it’s absurd. I shall hang two calendars side by side next year and see/feel how it plays out x

        Liked by 1 person

      5. I think its amazing 🧡

        Liked by 1 person

      6. Joey, I get that. Holidays can feel hollow or loaded, depending on your history with them. But January 1st… Quiet. Fresh. Like the world takes a breath and hands you a blank page. I love that you’ve kept that one; it makes sense.
        🧡

        Liked by 1 person

  2. We still have both. Solar calendar for official purposes. And lunar calendar for religious purposes.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Makes you wonder why the rest of us ditched the balance, doesn’t it? Time to bring the moon back into the spotlight! 🧡

      Liked by 3 people

  3. It will change. It’s just a question of when, and whether we all kill ourselves before we get there. Time will tell. It always has. Nature will always have the upper hand, however downtrodden she may appear to be.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Absolutely Tony. Nature is patient, ancient, and infinitely more resilient than we are. She’ll outlast every empire, ideology, and ego. I think the question isn’t whether change will come, it’s whether we’ll be wise enough to align with it before we’re forced to. 🧡

      Liked by 3 people

      1. There are signs that the wisdom is there, but they are still small and distant… We can but play our part and hope.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. Beautifully said, Tony. That’s the thing, isn’t it? The glimmers are there, faint, but real. All we can do is keep holding the thread, play our part with as much grace (or mischief) as we can muster, and trust that it all adds up in the end.🧡

        Liked by 2 people

  4. Especially mischief! 😉

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Absolutely Tony, my middle name 😂🧡

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Calendars are a certain peculiarity. It gets even more complicated with the Sino-Viet lunar-solar calendar. We traditionally follow both the moon and the sun. Except the moon and sun have their own rhythms. So we have not leap days but leap months in order to sync the sun and moon. In terms of years, the start is Spring. But spring is not the spring equinox. It is between the winter solstice and spring equinox. The climax is the equinox. The midpoint is the beginning. What begins at a climax? But this syncs with the Moon’s own cycles. It is not mere timekeeping but a worldview. It’s a little overcomplicated but it’s not as arbitrary as the Julian/Gregorian calendar. January 1? People have lost their ways.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Absolutely fascinating, and beautifully put: “The midpoint is the beginning.” That says everything about how different worldviews shape not just how we mark time, but how we understand life itself. The Sino-Viet lunar-solar system sounds so much more organic and meaningful, rooted in actual rhythms and not arbitrary papal decrees and political convenience.

      Leap months, not just leap days, now that’s a calendar that respects cosmic nuance!

      You’re right: it’s not just a calendar, it’s a philosophy. And honestly, the idea that January 1st marks any kind of meaningful beginning feels absurd once you’ve felt the natural hush of the winter solstice and the slow, quiet turning toward light.

      Modern timekeeping may be efficient, but it’s like cutting a symphony into 4/4 beat loops. Convenient, but a little soul-crushing. Thank you for that. Mae 🧡

      Like

  6. I sometimes wonder if we too obsessed about placing fences around time, as if we are trying to exert some control over it, “domesticating” it, by placing time within compartments and names.

    I must always keep one foot in that world that requires such framework for the purposes of business and common ground when I communicate with other people. But my other foot does not even rely on the moon for the cyclic measures, as I suspect that Time is nothing more than a fickle thing. Instead, I tend to dip my toes into the river and let that guide me on my journey.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, this resonates, Michael. The image of fencing in time like we’re trying to tame a wild creature… It’s such a human impulse, isn’t it? To name, divide, schedule, all in the hope of feeling a little more in control of something utterly beyond us.

      And yet, that second foot you speak of, the one that steps outside the grid, into the river, that’s where the real magic lives. There, time isn’t a sequence of boxes, but a current that carries us if we let it.

      I think we need both feet, just as you say, one in the world of clocks and calendars, and the other in the timeless, the sacred, the intuitive. A dance between structure and surrender.

      I actually wonder if time exists? At least not in the way we think. Time could just be how our brains make sense of change. Without us to measure it, maybe everything just is. Deep thoughts 😂
      🧡

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’m less certain about the nature of time as I grow older. I used to conceive of it as a fixed, linear and quantitated thing. Now? I’m less certain. It certainly seems variable, depending on the conditions in which it is observed. And I’m not convinced it is linear now either.

        Not that discovering this about time bothers me overmuch… 🙂

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  7. “The moon, after all, doesn’t lie. It waxes and wanes in 28-ish days. Women’s bodies still remember. So do farmers, animals, and ocean tides. So maybe we do too, somewhere under all the noise.”

    Loved this ❤

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you 🧡

      Like

  8. Willie Torres Jr. Avatar
    Willie Torres Jr.

    Interesting take, Mae. I’m all for endless fall. Mild, cozy, and winter-free. 🍁

    Liked by 1 person

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