Summer Solstice 2022: Why Is the Longest Day of the Year So Special?

Jessica Warren
5 min readJun 13, 2022

5 practices for a modern magical day

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Summer Solstice: The Longest Day of the Year

The summer solstice (or midsummer) is the “longest day”; or the one with the greatest time gap between sunrise and sunset. With the Earth’s axis tilting most closely to the sun. This occurs each year on June 20 or 21 in the Northern Hemisphere, and December 21 or 22 in the Southern Hemisphere; with these dates switching for the shortest day of the year, or winter solstice.

The 2022 summer solstice falls on Tuesday, June 21. Under the astronomical definition, this is the day summer starts; although meteorologists consider summer being between June 1 and 31 August. Midsummer marks the end of six months of the days getting longer since the winter solstice. After this peak, nighttime gets back in the driver’s seat and the days shorten once more.

Solstices are beautiful natural, rhythmical reminders of life’s ups and downs; and that everything changes and is impermanent.

The traditional significance of the summer solstice

People around the world have noticed the movements of the sun across our skies for millennia. We marked the change in seasons at the summer and…

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Jessica Warren

Investor. Coach. Wellness Consultant. Women’s Circles. Left-handed Londoner. Ex finance. Join the community to get updates @ https://www.jessicawarren.co