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practice-viriditas

pjt222
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About

This skill guides meditation and contemplation on Hildegard von Bingen's concept of *viriditas* (divine greening power). It provides a structured meditation protocol with seasonal attunement for integrating Hildegardian health and spiritual practice. Use it for reconnecting with natural rhythms, addressing spiritual dryness, or deepening ecological theology.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Primary
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Plugin CommandAlternative
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/practice-viriditas

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

Documentation

Practice Viriditas

Guide meditation + contemplation on viriditas — Hildegard von Bingen's divine greening power permeating creation.

Use When

  • Practice Hildegardian contemplative spirituality grounded in nature
  • Disconnected from natural world or seasonal rhythms
  • Need meditation integrating body, earth, spirit
  • Spiritual dryness or lack of vitality (opposite of viriditas)
  • Deepen Hildegard's ecological theology
  • Seasonal attunement via liturgical/agricultural year

In

  • Required: Current season (spring, summer, autumn, winter) or liturgical (Advent, Lent, Easter, Ordinary Time)
  • Optional: Outdoor natural space access (garden, park, forest) — indoor possible but less ideal
  • Optional: Life situation (burnout, grief, transition, stagnation) — informs focus
  • Optional: Duration pref (5-10 brief, 15-20 standard, 30+ extended)
  • Optional: Experience (beginner, intermediate, advanced)

Do

Step 1: Understand Viriditas Concept

Ground in Hildegard's theology + natural philosophy.

VIRIDITAS — The Greening Power:

Definition:
Viriditas (from Latin "viridis" = green) is Hildegard's term for the divine
life force that animates all creation. It is not merely "greenness" as color,
but the FORCE of growth, renewal, vitality, fecundity, and regeneration.

Hildegard's Own Words:
"There is a power that has been from all eternity, and that force and
potentiality is greenness... God has arranged all things in the world in
consideration of everything else."
(*Liber Divinorum Operum*, Vision 1)

"Glance at the sun. See the moon and stars. Gaze at the beauty of earth's
greenings. Now, think. What delight God gives to humankind with all these
things... All nature is at the disposal of humankind. We are to work with it.
For without it, we cannot survive."
(*Scivias*, Book II, Vision 1)

Theological Context:
- Viriditas is NOT pantheism (nature = God)
- Viriditas is God's creative power EXPRESSED THROUGH nature
- It is the Holy Spirit's work in the material world
- Humanity participates in viriditas through care, cultivation, and contemplation

Viriditas in the Human Person:
- Physical: Health, vitality, energy, fruitfulness
- Spiritual: Growth in virtue, generativity, creative work
- Relational: Life-giving relationships, community flourishing
- Ecological: Tending the earth, participating in regeneration

OPPOSITE OF VIRIDITAS = ARIDITAS (Dryness):
- Physical: Illness, exhaustion, infertility
- Spiritual: Acedia (sloth), despair, sterility of soul
- Ecological: Degradation, deforestation, soil depletion
- Moral: Sin as "withering" or "drying up" of the soul's greenness

→ Understands viriditas = divine life force in creation, not mere aesthetic greenness. Recognizes viriditas/ariditas as vitality spectrum.

If err: theological language inaccessible → frame viriditas as "life force" or "vitality" — power making things grow, heal, flourish. Proceed w/ meditation.

Step 2: Prep — Grounding + Centering

Body + mind ready for contemplative engagement.

Preparation Protocol (5 minutes):

LOCATION:
- Ideal: Outdoors in a natural setting (garden, park, forest edge, meadow)
- Acceptable: Indoors near a window with a living plant visible
- Minimum: Indoors with no view — use imagination and memory of nature

POSTURE:
- Seated on ground, cushion, or chair — spine upright but not rigid
- Hands resting on knees or in lap
- Eyes open (soft gaze at nature) OR closed (inner visualization)
- Barefoot if outdoors and weather permits (direct earth contact)

GROUNDING:
1. Take 3 deep breaths — inhale through nose, exhale through mouth
2. Scan body from feet to head:
   - Notice where you feel tense or closed
   - Notice where you feel open or relaxed
3. Imagine roots growing from your sitting bones into the earth
   - You are rooted, like a tree
   - You are part of the soil, not separate from it

CENTERING:
1. Bring attention to your heart center (chest, sternum)
2. Recall Hildegard's image: "O most honored Greening Force, you are worthy
   of embrace."
3. Set intention: "I am here to witness and participate in viriditas."
   - Not to achieve or produce anything
   - Not to "get" something from nature
   - Simply to attune, observe, and participate

→ Settled, grounded, mentally prepared. Distraction down, awareness sharp.

If err: mind agitated/distracted → extend prep. Add body scan (feet → legs → torso → arms → head) before proceeding.

Step 3: Core Meditation — Observe Viriditas

Structured contemplation on greening power in nature.

Viriditas Meditation Structure (15-20 minutes):

PHASE 1: OBSERVATION (5-7 minutes)
Look at the natural world (or visualize it if indoors):
- Where do you see green? Notice shades: lime, forest, olive, emerald
- Where do you see NEW growth? Fresh shoots, buds, young leaves
- Where do you see MATURE growth? Full foliage, thick bark, flowering
- Where do you see DECAY? Dead leaves, fallen branches, composting matter
  (Note: Decay is PART OF viriditas — it feeds new growth)

Specific Focus Questions:
- Which plant or tree draws your attention? Why?
- Where is viriditas most VIGOROUS? (New growth, climbing vines)
- Where is viriditas most PATIENT? (Ancient trees, slow-growing moss)
- Where is viriditas RESTING? (Seeds in soil, dormant buds in winter)

PHASE 2: PARTICIPATION (5-7 minutes)
Shift from observing to FEELING yourself as part of the greening:
- Place one hand on your heart, one on your belly
- Breathe deeply and imagine:
  - On INHALE: Sap rising through your spine, like a tree drawing water
    from roots to crown
  - On EXHALE: Releasing what is dead, dried, or no longer needed —
    let it fall like autumn leaves

Affirmation (Hildegard's words):
"I am the supreme and fiery force who kindled every living spark...
I flame above the beauty of the fields; I shine in the waters;
I burn in the sun, the moon, and the stars."
(*Scivias*, Book I, Vision 2)

Continue breath cycle 7-10 rounds:
- INHALE: Receive viriditas (vitality, life force, greening)
- EXHALE: Release ariditas (dryness, exhaustion, withering)

PHASE 3: INTEGRATION (3-5 minutes)
- Return to normal breathing
- Ask: "Where in my life do I feel viriditas (alive, growing, generative)?"
- Ask: "Where in my life do I feel ariditas (dry, stuck, lifeless)?"
- No need to answer verbally — simply let awareness arise
- Bow to the green world in gratitude

CLOSING:
Hildegard's Prayer: "O noble Greening, you are rooted in the sun, and in
bright serenity you shine forth in a wheel that no earthly excellence can
comprehend."
Stand slowly. Re-enter ordinary awareness with renewed vitality.

→ Contemplative attunement to viriditas, external + internal life force. Connection to living world strengthened.

If err: meditation feels abstract/ungrounded → reduce visualization, focus only on breath awareness w/ surroundings. Viriditas needs less "doing", more "allowing".

Step 4: Seasonal Attunement

Tailor practice to current season — viriditas manifests differently throughout year.

Seasonal Variations of Viriditas Practice:

SPRING (March-May) — Viriditas ERUPTING:
- Observation: Focus on buds, shoots, seedlings, first flowers
- Meditation theme: Rebirth, new beginnings, potential breaking through
- Affirmation: "I am greening. New life stirs within me."
- Action integration: Plant seeds (literal or metaphorical), begin new project
- Liturgical connection: Easter (Resurrection as ultimate viriditas)

SUMMER (June-August) — Viriditas at FULLNESS:
- Observation: Focus on lush foliage, fruit formation, peak growth
- Meditation theme: Abundance, manifestation, full expression of life
- Affirmation: "I am in full bloom. I bear fruit."
- Action integration: Harvest (literally from garden, metaphorically from work)
- Liturgical connection: Pentecost (Holy Spirit as fire AND greening)

AUTUMN (September-November) — Viriditas HARVESTING and COMPOSTING:
- Observation: Focus on seeds, falling leaves, fruit ripening and releasing
- Meditation theme: Letting go, death as part of cycle, preparation for rest
- Affirmation: "I release what is ripe. I compost what is dead."
- Action integration: Clear clutter, complete projects, prepare for winter rest
- Liturgical connection: All Saints/All Souls (honoring death as passage)

WINTER (December-February) — Viriditas RESTING (not absent):
- Observation: Focus on dormant buds, seeds under snow, evergreen resilience
- Meditation theme: Patience, hidden growth, trust in unseen life
- Affirmation: "I rest in the dark soil. I prepare to rise again."
- Action integration: Stillness, contemplation, visioning without action
- Liturgical connection: Advent (waiting in darkness for the coming Light)
  and Lent (spiritual winter before Easter spring)

NOTE: Viriditas is ALWAYS present, even in winter — it is resting,
not dead. Winter viriditas is the power that holds the promise of spring.

→ Practice adapted to season w/ appropriate focus (erupting/full/harvesting/resting). Viriditas year-round, not just spring/summer.

If err: seasonal variation confusing → practice core meditation (Step 3) w/o seasonal overlay. Seasonal = enrichment, not requirement.

Step 5: Integration — Living as Viriditas

Extend practice from meditation → daily life, embody greening power.

Integration Practices — Daily and Weekly:

DAILY MICRO-PRACTICES (5 minutes):
- Morning: Step outside (or to a window) and greet the day's green world
  with one breath of gratitude
- Meals: Bless food as viriditas (the greening that nourishes your body)
- Evening: Journal one place you noticed viriditas today (in nature, in
  relationships, in creative work)

WEEKLY SUSTAINED PRACTICES:
- Garden or tend plants (even a single houseplant) — literal participation
  in viriditas
- Walk in nature without destination — receptive observation
- Create something (art, music, writing, cooking) — viriditas as generativity
- Practice Hildegard's herbal remedies or holistic health (viriditas in healing)

MONTHLY ATTUNEMENT:
- At each new moon or full moon, return to full viriditas meditation (20 min)
- Assess: Where am I greening (alive, growing)? Where am I withering (dry,
  stuck)?
- Adjust: Add practices that restore viriditas where ariditas has crept in

ANTIDOTES TO ARIDITAS (Spiritual Dryness):
If you feel viriditas has left your life:
- PHYSICALLY: Rest, hydration, nourishing food, time in nature, movement
- SPIRITUALLY: Prayer, music, beauty, community, service
- CREATIVELY: Make something with your hands (no goal, just process)
- RELATIONALLY: Seek life-giving relationships; release draining ones

Hildegard's Insight:
"When the soul is dry, it is like land that is not moistened by rain but is
hard and unyielding. But when it is watered, it softens and becomes fruitful."
(*Causae et Curae*)

→ Concrete daily/weekly/monthly practices sustain viriditas awareness beyond sessions. Life becomes practice, not just scheduled sessions.

If err: integration overwhelming → ONE daily micro-practice only (morning greeting). Full integration takes months/years; start small.

Check

  • Understands viriditas as divine life force, not mere greenness
  • Prep done (grounding, centering, intention)
  • Core meditation practiced w/ observation, participation, integration
  • Seasonal variation noted
  • ≥1 daily/weekly integration identified
  • Aware of ariditas (dryness) as opposite
  • Framed as contemplative participation, not goal-driven achievement

Traps

  1. Romanticize nature: Viriditas includes decay, death, composting — not just pretty flowers.
  2. Seasonal rigidity: Winter ≠ "bad" or "less green" — necessary rest before spring.
  3. Indoor dismissal: No nature access → indoor valid. Hildegard spent much time cloistered.
  4. Productivity lens: Viriditas ≠ "doing more" — about BEING alive + generative in proper season.
  5. Ignore ariditas: Denying dryness → can't address. Name it, then practice restoration.
  6. Solo practice only: Viriditas communal. Hildegard lived in convent. Share when possible.
  7. Theological avoidance: Viriditas = theological (Holy Spirit), not secular ecology. Spiritual dimension integral to concept.

  • formulate-herbal-remedy — plants as viriditas; remedies restore greening to body
  • assess-holistic-health — health = viriditas in body; illness = ariditas
  • compose-sacred-music — Hildegard's music = viriditas made audible
  • consult-natural-history — Physica plants, stones, animals all express viriditas
  • meditate (esoteric) — general meditation framework (viriditas = Hildegardian variant)
  • heal (esoteric) — healing restores viriditas to body + soul
  • cultivate-bonsai (gardening) — bonsai care = literal participation in viriditas
  • plan-garden-calendar (gardening) — seasonal attunement via gardening

GitHub Repository

pjt222/agent-almanac
Path: i18n/caveman-ultra/skills/practice-viriditas
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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