Sunday 29 November 2020

Simple Magick: 11 Tips for Beginner Witches

Three black tarot cards on a wooden worktop with crystals around them

My tips for a new witch would be:

Follow your intuition.

Remember that your path is your own. No matter how learned or experienced someone might be they can’t possibly know what’s best for you.

Read everything and anything you can get your hands on. Second hand bookshops are your friend! 

Take notes. Keep a Grimoire and/or Book of Shadows.

Remember there is no right or wrong way.

Be patient and persevere.

Know that you won’t have all the answers straight a away; the joy is discovering them.

Do the practical work - the only way to truly learn.

Follow the subjects that interest you; your path will unfold.

Know that you don’t have to know everything from the top of your head, you may be like me and have memory/cognition issues and that’s ok - this is what a Grimoire/Book of Shadows is for!

Saturday 28 November 2020

Simple Magick: Commitment to Learning

Grey filtered image of a bookcase full of witchcraft books

One of the things I love most about Witchcraft is that it’s a path of personal development and self-discovery, and within that is a commitment to learning.

And it IS a commitment. I have been treading this path for 26 years and I am still learning new things every day. Which is an absolute joy. Some days I feel confident in what I do, other days I feel wary of posting because I’ll have a confidence attack, and feel that there are bigger and better voices equipped to discuss whatever topic it is I’m broaching, but I remind myself this is MY journey.

To those that are new to the craft and feel overwhelmed, you have been given a gift.

The gift is the joy of learning. The gift is something that’s as much about the journey as it is the destination. The gift is something that has endless topics to delve into and discover. The gift is finding out the answers, and about yourself, as you travel along. The gift is attaining experience that you can truly claim as your own. The gift is Witchcraft.

Things to remember on your Witchcraft journey:
Don’t rush, you’ll get to where you want to be in the end. You won’t have a lot of the answers at the beginning, but you will find them as you go along.

Don’t compare; comparison is the thief of all joy.

Connect with others in real life. There are plenty of moots and groups that meet up, you can find them through organisations like the Pagan Federation.

Be committed. It’s the only way.

Don’t be afraid to mistakes. It’s the only way to learn, so dive right in.

Take a break if you’re getting tired or bored.

Ask for help. People won’t mind if you have tried looking for the answer first.

Be prepared that your witchcraft journey will be different to others.

Enjoy the journey. It’s a long one. Thank goodness.

NEXT - Simple Magick: 8 Tips For Honing Your Intuition

Thursday 26 November 2020

Review: Of Blood & Bones by Kate Freuler

Close up of book Of Blood & Bones by Kate Freuler surrounded by holly

This book by the wonderful Kate Freuler (@freuler_witch) explores shadow magick and the dark moon current. I thoroughly enjoyed this one as it filled so many gaps in my own personal knowledge and craft.

About the Author

Kate Freuler lives in Ontario, Canada. She has owned and operated the witchcraft shop White Moon Witchcraft (whitemoonwitchcraft.com) since 2010. When she’s not writing or crafting items for clients, she is busy being creative with art or reading a huge stack of books.

About Of Blood & Bones: Working with Shadow Magick & The Dark Moon This book explores shadow magick and working with dark moon energy, and whilst I am no member of the “Love and Light Brigade,” shadow magick is not my forte, either, so I was keen to see what this book would reveal to me. I knew I was in for a fantastic ride when I saw the foreword was written by Mat Auryn, and after a wonderful brief on what to expect from the book, I was even keener to get started.

Freuler’s Introduction “It’s Not All Love and Light” is the perfect beginning; it puts the reader at ease, and I immediately felt better about myself and the personal shadows I cast. The Introduction gets the reader thinking about the ethical quandaries that many of us face, for example, how we should treat people who do bad things, and encourages the reader to think about the outcomes of magick, and how solutions can be subjective. We also get to read about curses and blessings, controversy in the witchcraft community, and how to use the book; all super helpful topics, and expertly and intuitively placed. 

“Feelings of anger, revulsion, and dislike are natural. They exist within us for survival. They force us to fight for our territory and our safety and to protect what is ours. War gods and goddesses are not evil or bad; they represent a very real part of our human experience.” - Of Blood & Bones: Working with Shadow Magick & The Dark Moon

The body of the book is broken down into four parts, the first introducing us to shadow work and the dark moon current. The author offers simple and clear explanations of topics related to the Dark Moon and its role in the lunar cycle and magick, and I found it answered the question many of us have asked; should the Dark Moon be used for work, or for rest?

Part two is the book’s namesake, covering blood and bones, and providing comprehensive information on bodily fluids, animals and their parts, and skulls and bones. This part is an absolute gem as it includes a wealth of information on safety, and how to gather and clean bones, which is invaluable to those of us who have always wanted to work with them, but haven’t had the foggiest idea where to start.

Part three is The Forbidden Craft and really gets to the heart of shadow magick. It covers the squeamish topics that are generally avoided. Objects and curios related to the recipes and rituals contained throughout the book are discussed here, and it covers how, and when, to perform a curse. Part Four looks at death, working with the dead, and rebirth, and is written in such a comforting, pragmatic, and beautiful way; providing the reader with simple, useful, and practical exercises, including a funeral rite. 


The Book’s Strengths Without doubt, one of the best things about this book is the author’s direct approach to an abundance of controversial topics. Not sentimental at all, Freuler provides information and personal experience, whilst allowing the reader to arrive at their own judgment on whether something is right for them. She provides a great foundation on which to build a dark practice, and encourages the reader to do their own work and research, which is exactly how one’s experience of the path of witchcraft should be, dark or otherwise. 

As the book progresses, you are slowly eased into the ‘icky’ stuff, and for those who wish to avoid using animal parts in their spells and workings, there are vegetable substitute suggestions. Freuler intuitively answered my questions as they appeared, and I felt like I had a comforting hand holding mine as I approached, and traversed, these subjects. These are just a few examples of the sensitive, methodical, and considered way the book has been written.

There is an abundance of helpful and practical information from magickal correspondences to spells, rituals, recipes, and charms, all clearly and concisely laid out. In my opinion, none of the workings contain weird or unheard of items, making this book truly meaningful and accessible to all.

What You Can Learn... From the start, the author describes how this book is not meant to change minds or sway opinion, but rather to educate and inform on subjects that are often silenced due to the taboo nature of them, even from within the witchcraft community, which makes for a refreshing perspective, and certainly filled gaps in my own personal knowledge.

There is so much to learn from this book; from junk oracles, to cursing, to using live animals in spells (without harming or disturbing them, of course), to focusing on the many subjects on which it may be difficult to obtain information, or the things you might be curious about but were previously afraid to try.

In many ways, due to the huge amount of information contained in this masterpiece, this book serves as a shadow magick Grimoire, and Freuler acts as High Priestess; guiding you, and showing you the way with honesty and encouragement, but leaving you, quite rightly, to do the work. Her honest and direct approach personally appealed to my straightforward nature, and there is no time – or need – to dissect these subjects further, or get overly emotional about them; the information is simply provided for you to do with as you wish.

I feel like I have become more connected to my craft by having the blanks filled in, and I don’t hold back in saying that for many this book is likely to be a game (Craft) changer, something that became apparent only a few pages in.

I absolutely loved this book, and got totally lost in it. It was like a trip to a bazaar or an antiques shop - so many treasures to sift and sort through, some unusual surprises, unpredictable, and thoroughly enjoyable. NEXT - Review: The Healing Power of Witchcraft by Meg Rosenbriar

Wednesday 25 November 2020

Simple Magick: 8 Tips for Honing your Intuition

Grainy grey picture of a stack of tarot decks on a wooden table

My intuition never lets me down, and has kept me safe over the years. I believe that we all have intuition. Here are my tips for honing it.

Be Open
The first step to honing your intuition is making the intention that you are going to use it.

Pay Attention
Once you are open to the idea of listening to your intuition, it’s time to pay attention to it. Listen to your body, and notice any “strange” feelings that you experience with people or situations. Intuition is like muscle; the more you pay attention to it, the stronger and more toned it becomes.

Be Aware
I watch the world around me, and I often notice patterns in people’s behaviour. I pay attention to my environment. This is all information for the brain, and I believe that subconsciously we often picking up on tiny clues as a result of these observations. Pay attention to your world, it makes all the difference.

Do your Shadow Work
By accepting and loving ourselves we are able to use our energy and minds for other tasks, and consequently we are much more susceptible to receiving higher messages.

Take up Divination 
Learn a divination method, such as tarot. It helps trigger the intuitive part of your brain. When you are using divination listen to the thoughts and feelings coming into your head. Are any of them urgent in nature? What does it feel like if you ignore them? What does it feel like if you pay attention?

Connect with your Higher Self via Meditation 
Meditation is a great tool for tapping in to your inner voice, it calms the brain, allowing it to function better.

Pay Attention to your Dreams
They give us clues on how we are thinking and feeling, and sometimes they carry messages and warnings. Pay attention to them.

Don’t Stress
I liken good intuition to being in a “flow state”. Don’t stress or try to force it, that will only hinder the process. 

Thursday 19 November 2020

Simple Magick: Genius Loci

Grey filtered image of the stone arches at Waverley Abbey, Farnham, Surrey

When we think of spirits what do we think of? The spirits of people, and perhaps animals, will most likely spring to mind, especially if you’re not a witch. But what about spirits of the land? The Genius Loci?

It was the Romans who brought the idea of genius loci into our minds and hearts, the idea that each place has a guardian spirit; an essence, almost tangible, that can be felt and understood.

Each home has a genius loci. I referred to ours earlier in my post about Copernicus, one of our House Guardians, but of course each place has one, too.

The depth of the connection to the genius loci of the land I live upon came something as a surprise to me this summer. I have only been here two years this month and yet the land wights - the unique spirits that reside in each plant, rock, stone, tree, animal, crystal and mineral - spoke to me by imparting some herbal and local knowledge to me, which upon later research turned out to be true. I can only describe this experience as a sudden and intense “knowing”, like someone had whispered this information in my ear, or the resurrection of information that had somehow been buried deep within me, many years ago, waiting for the right key to unlock it. That day I had definitely immersed myself in the energy and essence of the land, I felt connected to it even before these magical moments.

You can work with genius loci, as it’s a guardian spirit, however you must come to know it first. That means exploring and forming a connection with your local area, be it local or urban. Creating an altar in dedication to the genius loci is a great way to honour it. You can call upon the genius loci in your magical workings, and you can call upon the energy and feeling that the genius loci of a place gives you if you are away from that place.

I am still exploring this subject and look forward to learning more. Do you work with genius loci?

NEXT - Simple Magick: Our House Guardians 

Wednesday 18 November 2020

Review: The Healing Power of Witchcraft by Meg Rosenbriar

Close up of The Healing Power of Witchcraft by Meg Rosenbriar

I had the absolute pleasure and joy of reading and reviewing Meg Rosenbriar’s wonderful new book, The Healing Power of witchcraft: A New Witch’s Guide to Spells and Rituals to Renew Yourself and Your World.

This book is aimed at newer witches, but there are enough beautiful healing spells (100+) to appeal to everyone.

This is definitely a book I wish I’d had 26 years ago when I started out on this path, and I’m so proud of Meg for creating such a masterpiece whilst being super busy supporting other witches via Witch With Me.

To read the review on Witch With Me head over to the Witch With Me blog (www.witchwithme.com

About the Author Meg Rosenbriar is a practicing hedgewitch with a focus on healing energy work, herbalism, tarot, yoga, numerology, and embracing an intentional, witchy lifestyle. She has been a student of spirituality her whole life with a degree in Religious Studies from Merrimack College and a Master of Arts from Yale University School of Divinity. She is the cofounder of Witch With Me, a community platform by witches for witches dedicated to discovering, honouring, preserving, and sharing authentic witchcraft. Meg resides with her husband and two sons on the Connecticut shoreline. 


About The Healing Power of Witchcraft: A New Witch’s Guide to Spells and Rituals to Renew Yourself and Your World
As a member of the author’s Witch With Me community, I was excited to review this book, and honoured to be able to step into her magickal world. As the title suggests, this book explores the healing power of witchcraft and how it can be used to improve and enhance the lives of yourself and the people around you. In the introduction, Rosenbriar explains that although she has religious and esoteric qualifications, the true path to magick and manifestation begins at the altar; immediately encouraging the reader, and putting them at ease, and making one truly believe that the healing power of witchcraft is within us all. Rosenbriar explains what to expect from the book, which was more like a list of all the things I loved about it. 

Part One is packed full of comprehensive information; and as such, it provides a useful framework for the new practitioner setting out on her or his path. It includes helpful explanations, magical correspondences, and practical suggestions for sourcing and obtaining the things a new witch needs. It covers states of mind, setting powerful intentions, and gives helpful definitions. It demystifies subjects such as clearing up after a spell. In fact, it has everything a witch, new or old, needs to hone and hold their intentions; lots of information being packed into a relatively small space, which is both useful and impressive. 

After such a considered and thoughtful start, Part One equips the new witch with all the tools, skills, and information they need to enjoy the rest of the book, which is purely spellwork. Parts two, three and four take the reader through a myriad of uplifting spells and rituals to heal the body, mind, spirit, communities, groups, and consequently, the World. 


The Book’s Strengths The author immediately sets the stage for healing work with the notion, from the start, that the witch knows exactly what she or he is doing, and that all witches have the ability to heal. Despite things being explained in a concise and factual way, I felt as if the author was sitting beside me on a warm and comfy sofa, gently explaining and encouraging me as I read, and this was one of the things I loved most about this book. The supportive tone combined with the huge amount of information provided, is a great tool for new witches starting out on a healing witchcraft journey. Those that are curious but anxious will be comforted, and those who feel that their path is too newly trodden to make a difference will be reassured. 

Wisely taking into consideration the busy pace of life, and how easy it is to get bogged down when you first find witchcraft, the author provides information for only ten herbs, spices, crystals and essential oils; compiling them into manageable, bite-sized chunks. She also, rather honestly, explains that there are only really seven items a witch needs, but still provides information on a range of other tools. As a new witch it is easy to be intimidated, but the author makes the first steps into the world of witchcraft simple and pleasurable. Through her words and actions, the author educates and excites, but never overwhelms. 

“If we are to feel deeply, connect broadly, and restore wholly, then a joyful approach to living, despite the odds, is a truly magickal thing indeed.” 

- The Healing Power of Witchcraft: A New Witch’s Guide to Spells and Rituals to Renew Yourself and Your World.

There is something for everyone in this book; direction and guidance for newer practitioners, and a vast array of spells which will appeal to more seasoned witches. The workings provided are created from simple items, making this book truly accessible to all. There is so much information and such a diverse variety of spells that after reading this book anyone has the tools to create their own spells, and this book with its beautiful incantations proves that magick doesn’t have to be long, laborious, or complicated. 


What You Can Learn... If you are interested in magick for health and wellbeing, or just curious about witchcraft, this is the perfect place to start. It’s directional, but not confusing, heavy, or intimidating. It allays fears, and enthuses. It gives you all the tools to craft an individual practice for yourself, and I wish I’d had this book 26 years ago when I started out on my own path. 

Aimed at helping you grow personally, and as a witch, this joyful book has one main message: all witches can heal. Empowering, gentle, beautiful, insightful, calming, and considered, this is a great book for young people, especially, with spells focusing on healing body positivity and good mental health. It’s apparent in the author’s work that she has a huge passion for healing, she’s keen for you and I to join her in creating a ripple effect of healing that will benefit the World. Let’s go. 

The Healing Power of Witchcraft: A New Witch’s Guide to Spells and Rituals to Renew Yourself and your World may be purchased here. NEXT - Review: The Magic of Marie Laveau by Denise Alvarado

Monday 16 November 2020

Simple Magick: Our House Guardians

Grey filtered image of a stone head mounted on a stone wall

This is Copernicus. He is one of the six stone heads that are mounted on the exterior of our home, who I refer to as our House Guardians. (You can see the others on my “Welcome to our Cemetery Lodge - Part Two” Reel).

Copernicus is named after Nicolaus Copernicus, the Renaissance-era mathematician, astronomer and Catholic clergyman, who formulated the idea that the Sun was at the centre of the universe, rather than Earth (a Greek astronomer had actually come up with the same idea some eighteen centuries earlier).

He has been here since the house was built in 1860, “outliving” any of the humans that have stayed here, looking down on us as we enter and depart the building.

I feel the House Guardians - but especially Copernicus, who resides at the back of the house - watch over our home and keep us safe. Whenever we leave the house I petition Copernicus to look after our home, and when we return I thank him. I believe he helps me connect with the genius loci of our home.

We always intended to name the other Guardians, but so far they haven’t come forward with names. Although I don’t feel spirit in those as strongly, they definitely work alongside Copernicus to help keep us safe.

Do you have an animist view? Does the spirit of something other than an animal or human keep you safe? If so what is it? And do you think that modern homes are less protected by spirits than older ones? I’d love to hear your views.

NEXT - Simple Magick: Liminal Spaces 

Wednesday 11 November 2020

Mushroom Magick: 8 Correspondences & Warnings

Grey filtered, close up image of two large mushrooms growing on a log

Disclaimer: this article is about the symbolic nature of mushrooms in spells and rituals. You must never ingest (eat) mushrooms unless you are sure of the type. If you are unsure about collecting or picking mushrooms please enlist the help of an expert.

Mushrooms come in all shapes, sizes and colours, and as such some are conducive to magickal practice.

Magickal Correspondences for Mushrooms:

Chanterelle
Abundance, happiness, house warming, fertility, joy.

Death Cap - POISONOUS
According to folklore, a Death Cap picked under the New Moon has its roots in the Underworld. Associated with binding, curses, hexing, but also abundance and joy.

Fly Agaric - POISONOUS
Associated with astral travel, divination, forest matters, the Fae, hexes, protection, psychic ability.

Liberty Cap -POISONOUS
A magical amplifier, Liberty Caps are associated with creativity, and are metaphorical for the night, stars.

Oyster Mushroom
Aphrodisiac, emotional healing, forgiveness, lust and love.

Saffron Milk Cap
Change, cleansing, growth, healing, honesty, justice, strength.

Shiitake Mushroom
Earth, fertility, good health, grounding, healing, strength, virility, youthfulness.

True Morel
According to folklore the Fae and other elementals make homes in the Morel’s small holes. Used for breaking curses, Fey magick, glamour magick, necromancy, protection, and spirit work.

Do you use mushrooms in your Craft?

Tuesday 10 November 2020

Spell: Orange Charm for Courage

Selection of spell ingredients including orange fabric, herbs and ribbon

One of the easiest ways to work with the energies of the Earth is by using herbs. I love this spell from Lammas: Celebrating the Fruits of the First Harvest by Anna Franklin and Paul Mason.

Orange Charm for Courage Spell

Ingredients:
6 inch square of orange cloth
Red thread or ribbon
Dried thyme, basil, and a few black peppercorns
Sweet orange essential oil

Method: 
Lay out the cloth, sprinkle the herbs on it and say;
“The strength of the bull, the daring of the boar,
Grant me courage, now and more,
Grant me bravery in my life each day,
To follow my path and have my say.”

Tie the sachet up, and keep it near you. Place beneath your pillow when you sleep.

Every full moon replace the herbs and oil. When the sachet has served its purpose untie the knot and dispose of responsibly.

NEXT - Spell: Graveminding Ritual
NEXT - Word Magick: Courage - What Does It Mean?
NEXT - Simple Magick: Protecting the Integrity of Your Spells on Social Media

Thursday 5 November 2020

Simple Magick: Liminal Spaces

Grey filtered image of a path running through a graveyard past yew trees

This week’s @witch.with.me prompt over on Instagram is “Working with the Cosmos”. Cosmos is originally a Greek word, meaning both "order" and "world”. The ancient Greeks thought that the world was perfectly harmonious and in impeccable order. This got me thinking, and I arrived at liminal spaces.

To be in a liminal space you have not yet left somewhere, and you have not yet arrived somewhere else. It’s a space between an ending and a beginning, a world between worlds, a transition between two phases.

Examples of Liminal Spaces:
Cemetery gates
Cliff edges
Stairwells
Doorways
Graveyards
Crossroads
Wells
Valleys
Abandoned buildings
Shorelines

The veil is considered thin in these places; they’re a boundary between this world and the other world, and as such their energy can increase the power of spells and rituals. They are great places for spirit work, meditation, astral travel and divination.

NEXT - Simple Magick: Horse Brasses