Modern Heathens can celebrate Yule in various ways that honor both traditional Norse customs and contemporary pagan practices. As with any celebration, your rituals, feasts, and sacrifices should be personal. If you are unable to have a bonfire, light a candle or turn on a video of a fireplace burning. Don't eat meat (like me) or drink alcohol, and therefore don't feel comfortable buying it as a sacrifice? Offer a hearty mushroom and root vegetable stew or grape juice instead. Your celebration methods are valid, even if they aren't "historically" accurate. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise.
With that said, how can you celebrate Yule?
Yule
Celebrating Hope and the Return of Light
1. Decorate a Yule Tree
The modern Yule or Christmas tree is a combination of traditions from multiple cultures, including those found among the Nordic people. Evergreens, which remain green throughout the winter months, are deeply associated with eternal life, fertility, hope, protection, and renewal. The Norse, among others, were known to decorate their homes with boughs of evergreen, holly, ivy, and mistletoe to celebrate and honor the season, as well as protect their homes during the darkest months of the year. This practice later evolved into bringing an entire tree into one's home and decorating it with lights, ornaments, and ribbons. You can continue this tradition by decorating your own tree (real or fake) with your family.
Decoration Ideas: Pomanders, pinecones, lights, Yule goat, runes, antlers, feathers, acorns, bells, ribbons & bows.
2. Create and Burn a Yule Log
The Yule log symbolizes protection, prosperity, and the return of the sun. Decorate a wooden log with runes, seasonal herbs, or intentions for the year ahead. Burn it safely in a fire pit or fireplace, or adorn it with candles. Some even create an edible Yule log, which is displayed and eaten during the Yule feast.
Yule Log Recipe: Sally, from Sally's Baking, offers a fantastic Yule log recipe, featuring merangue mushrooms, sugared cranberries, and chocolate ganache.
3. Make Yule Oaths
Oath-making during Yule carried significant weight, and breaking such an oath often resulted in harsh repercussions. While Sígrblót oaths aligned with action, victory, and the rising strength of the sun, Yule oaths are forged in the heart of darkness, when the year is at its quietest, and the sun is weakest. This is a liminal night, a threshold between endings and beginnings, which makes it a potent time for promises that shape your path in the coming year. Historically, the midwinter season was deeply tied to frith, kinship, and hospitality. Feasts, sumbels, and drinking rituals often included boasts, vows, and declarations meant to strengthen the bonds between individuals and their communities. During Yule, the focus of such vows traditionally leaned toward survival, unity, protection, and the renewal of luck as people faced the long winter ahead. As with all oaths, choose your words with care and be mindful to fulfill that which you promise to the best of your ability.
Oath Ideas: Commit to personal or spiritual growth, strengthen firth within family or kindreds, heal or release old patterns, pledge service to a deity or cause, set intentions for the returning sun, or dedicate yourself to a new season of one’s life. Once you have decided on an oath you wish to make, raise your cup (or hands) and declare your promise: "In the turning of the year, I [name] vow to… May the gods witness, may the ancestors guide me."
4. Exchange Gifts
The exchanging of gifts during Yule was serious business, as these exchanges were used to strengthen bonds, show honor, and celebrate community. The Norse word gipt meant both gift and marriage, suggesting that not only were the gifts exchanged items, but also vows. We can see this in the Sagas as they relate to Yule oaths, many of which were oaths of marriage. Marriage, like other gifts given during this time, helped to create alliances and strengthen the bonds of the community. Common gifts given among the Norse were arm rings, clothing, weapons, and carved toys.
Gift Ideas: Check out my holiday gift guides for ideas!
5. Seasonal Feast with Family & Friends
Midwinter feasts were essential for morale and survival, and were common practice when celebrating Yule. These festivities usually lasted at least three days and included seasonal dishes and plenty of alcohol. Create a hearty communal meal featuring foods like pork (sacred to the holiday), root vegetables, bread, ale, mulled wine, or winter berries such as lingonberries (a personal favorite of mine). Share stories, blessings, or toasts between courses.
Other Seasonal Foods: Dried fruit, nuts, gingerbread, mince pies, chocolate Yule logs, cranberries, citrus, apples, and wassail.
6. Hold a Yule Ritual to Honor the Returning Sun
Yule marks the darkest night and the first spark of returning light. Traditionally, Yule was less about the sun's return and more about celebrating community. Over time, however, Yule absorbed more and more customs and traditions from the cultures it interacted with, becoming a celebration of the return of light. Sympathetic magic is often worked through the lighting of candles and lights to coax the sun to return and, with it, breathe life back into the land. You can honor Sól and the turning of the year with a ritual focused on renewal, rebirth, and hope. Light a candle, lantern, or hearth flame and offer thanks for the promise of the sun’s return.
Blessing Idea: "Hail Sól, Dawn-Bringer, Lady of the first light, Golden wheel that rises in the deep midwinter. From darkness, bring awakening; From silence, bring breath; From night, bring the seed of day. Shine on my hearth and my heart. Hail Sól!"
7. Hold a Wild Hunt Ritual or Offering
In Norse and wider Germanic folklore, the Wild Hunt is a spectral procession that sweeps across the winter sky. Depending on where you derive your folklore, the Wild Hunt is led by any number of figures. Among Nordic and Germanic folklore, however, it's widely accepted that the Wild Hunt is led by Odin, accompanied by restless spirits, valkyries, wolves, and the dead. It is a furious, otherworldly ride marked by howling winds, pounding hooves, and the eerie presence of unseen riders. The Hunt was believed to pass over the land during the darkest nights of the year, gathering the souls of the departed or seeking omens for the coming season. During Yule, people left offerings outside their homes for Odin and the riders, hoping to win their blessing and avoid their wrath. Doors were barred, fires kept burning, and children were warned to stay indoors after dark. To witness the Wild Hunt was to receive either great fortune or grave misfortune.
Ritual Idea: Step outside into the night, raise a horn (and blow), and say: “Hail Odin, Rider of the Storm, Hail the restless spirits of winter’s way! Ride past my home in peace; Accept my offering and grant your protection.” Be sure to leave an offering such as mead, wassail, bread, meat, milk, oats, or other seasonal treats.
8. Write a Midwinter Prayer, Poem, or Story.
Winter months meant staying indoors, which gave our ancestors plenty of time to work on household tasks, such as mending and repairing tools, ships, and clothing, weaving, crafting, and food prep. It was also a time for gathering for storytelling around the hearth fire. As such, this is the perfect time to get creative and write your own story, poem, or prayer. You can even write a devotional to a deity and leave it as an offering your your Yule altar.
9. Craft a Yule Goat
The Yule Goat or Jólabók is a traditional symbol of protection, fertility, and gift-giving. Some suggest it's an ode to Thor's goat-drawn chariot, while others connect it to the last sheaf of grain of the season from which the Yule Goat may have been made. Originally, the Yule Goat was believed to be a spirit who oversaw Yule preparations and was sometimes depicted as a rowdy creature demanding gifts. During the 19th century, the Yule Goats' role changed, becoming a gift-bringing much like Santa's reindeer. In modern traditions, the Yule Goat is most often used as an ornament, with larger versions being created to decorate city centers. You can create your own Yule Goat from straw, twigs, or even paper. Keep it on your altar or hang it on your Yule tree or above your door to guard your home through the winter.
10. Build a Winter Guardian, aka Snowman
If you live somewhere with snow (which I am super jealous of by the way) you can create a winter guardian (aka snowman) to protect your home. Create a small figure using snow, sticks, and cloth and place it near your front door.
Guardian Blessing: To awaken and bless your winter guardian, say, "Spirit of winter, rise from the cold breath of the season. Guard this space with steady strength, and let no harm cross this threshold until the light returns."
11. Set up a Seasonal Altar
Design an altar for Yule that incorporates symbols of hope, light, fertility, community, and resilience. Decorate with seasonal items such as evergreen boughs, holly, ivy, mistletoe, cranberries, pinecones, and oranges. Be sure to add plenty of candles and lights, or even incorporate a Yule log. Add offerings to the gods or your ancestors and burn incense such as pine, cedar, juniper, rosemary, myrrh, and frankincense. Other ideas include the Yule goat, wreaths, snow/ice, runes, and animal figures/parts such as bears, wolves, boards, ravens, and deer.
12. Light a Bonfire or Hearth Fire
Lighting and keeping a fire burning throughout the dark season was not just to stay warm; it was also used to keep the evil spirits at bay that lingered in the darkness. If you have seen the 2015 horror film titled Krampus, you know exactly what I am talking about. These fires were also burned throughout the season for blessings and are an integral part of the Yule season. If you can't light a fire, use an LED candle or lantern, or pull up a video of a roaring hearth fire.
Ritual Idea: Pyromancy is an excellent form of divination to partake in during the holiday season. With a clearly defined intention, sit comfortably and stare into the flames. Watch the flame's behavior and the smoke it produces. Note how it burns, its height and strength, its color, movement, and sound. A tall, steady flame suggests positive energy and clear progress. A weak or flickering flame might indicate challenges or a lack of energy. Unusual colors should be interpreted according to their association. Moving erratically can suggest trials and tribulations, while a steady flame may represent stability. If it moves in a particular direction, it can indicate a positive or negative response. Jot down anything you observe and spend time interpreting what you saw.
13. Go for a Winter Walk
Take a walk, at night or at dawn, to experience winter in its purest form. Listen to the quiet and observe the trees and nature around you. Use this time to reconnect with the spirits of the land, winter wights, and yourself. Be mindful of any omens or signs you may receive.
Ritual Idea: This winter walk is the perfect time to ground yourself and release stress. Pause for a moment and listen to the quiet of the winter world. Imagine your feet sinking roots into the sleeping earth below the frost and let the stillness of winter settle in your bones, steadying your mind and spirit. Place a hand on your chest, breathe deep, and let the cold air anchor you fully in your body. With each exhale, release what troubles you into the open sky.
14. Hold a Sumbel or Symbel
A sumbel is a drinking ritual in which a horn or goblet of mead or other alcoholic drink is passed around. During Yule, three toasts were commonly given: to Odin, to Njörðr and Freyr, and finally to the king. You can continue this tradition, or modernize it by holding a toast to the gods, your ancestors, and your community. Remember to speak with honesty and respect. Yule is a time of deep magic, and your words carry significant weight. If you make any oaths during these toasts, remember you are obligated to fulfill them to the best of your ability.
Other drink suggestions: Beer, ale, wine, cider, juice, wassail, sweetened milk, or tea
15. Hail the Gods and Goddesses with a Ritual Sacrifice
During Yule, you can honor specific gods or goddesses who are associated with the season, such as Odin, Freyr, Freya, Skadi, and Baldr. Include offerings and prayers in their honor during your ritual. This sacrifice can be an offering of blood (fresh meat, prick your finger, etc) or a sacrifice of something of value to you, such as food, money, or your time.
Invocation Idea: "Odin, Wanderer through the winter night, grant us wisdom and clear sight in the dark. Skadi, Lady of the mountains and snow, stand with us in strength and steady foot. Freyr, bright lord of the coming sun, bless this turning of the year with peace, renewal, and fertile promise. Baldr, shining son reborn in light, remind us that even in deepest winter, hope and beauty shall rise again."
***
Again, how you celebrate Yule is entirely up to you. Remember, plan early and thoroughly so you don't feel rushed and out of sorts when it comes to celebrating. This does not have to be an elaborate or over-the-top sort of celebration. Quiet and thoughtful is just as powerful as loud and raucous. I know most of us tend to spend this time with our families and friends, just as our ancestors did, but I encourage you to find time to relish in silence alone. We all need a little self-care this time of year.

If you liked this post, please consider leaving a small tip in the jar.










