The Wild Goddess
There is a gap in the hawthorn hedge, just wide enough for someone who knows how to look properly.
On the other side is Mossvale, an enchanted world where fairy folk move through the Storywood at dusk, where banshees keen across the Wild Moors and ancient oaks hold centuries of memory, where the wheel of the year is marked with fire and blossom and long tables pulled into the square before anyone has properly woken up.
The Wild Goddess Podcast is where that world lives.
Each episode is an invitation into the older, quieter, more enchanted version of things, through original fairylore stories, Celtic mythology, seasonal folklore, and the kind of storytelling that settles something in you you didn't know was unsettled. The fairy tales here aren't sanitised. The magic isn't neat. It arrives the way it always has - sideways, through the window you left open, smelling of woodsmoke and something you can't quite name.
This is a podcast for anyone who has ever felt the pull of an old forest. Who leaves offerings for things they can't see. Who marks Beltane and Samhain and the slow turning of the year. Who has always suspected the world is far more enchanted than it lets on.
Come find the gap in the hedge.
Welcome to Mossvale.
The Wild Goddess
Ep 66 - The Twelve Months: A Winter Folktale for January
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
January often arrives heavy with expectation, urging us to move faster, decide more, become something new.
But winter has never worked that way.
In this opening episode of 2026, I begin not with resolutions or reflection prompts, but with an old folktale.
The Twelve Months is a traditional Eastern European winter story, retold from The Telling of the Seasons, in which a young girl is sent into the frozen forest on an impossible task. There, she encounters the twelve months of the year gathered around a fire, led by Old Mother January, keeper of winter’s law and time’s turning.
What follows is a story about humility, patience, seasonal wisdom, and the quiet power of asking, rather than demanding, life to unfold.
After the story, I reflect on what this tale teaches us about January, modern life, and the pressure to rush growth before its time. This episode is an invitation to move gently into the new year, to trust your winter pace, and to remember that rest, waiting, and listening are not failures — they are sacred practices.
This is an episode for anyone who feels out of step with “new year, new you” culture, and longs for a slower, more honest beginning.
Light the fire.
Winter knows what it’s doing.
Telling the Seasons book by Martin Maudsley
✨ If you love Mossvale, you can go deeper inside the membership community, home to walking meditations, the Storywood folklore library, and Marmalade's journal entries from the world itself. Find out more
🕯️ Or experience it through scent
Explore my Wild Goddess candles, each with its own story.
✨ Love the podcast?
Follow, share, or leave a review, it means more than you know.
📲 Find me on Instagram
@the.wildgoddess