Showing posts with label Wheel of The Year. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wheel of The Year. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 January 2024

Embracing the New Year

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1NNNltrqxkl3Bg0k0AipBOpogL65zQJEa

Though many people consider Samhain to be the beginning of the witch’s year; the start of the calendar year is also a good time for reflection, setting intentions and starting new projects.

It is a great time to start afresh; and actually, to do some shadow work.

We all deserve to find peace and joy in our lives.

Sometimes that starts with the decision to be happy.

Let’s consider the opportunities a new calendar year brings, and start the year off with some magick - make a positive statement below and know that it will be affirmed when other people like, share, tag, read the post and comment - keeping your positive statement spinning.

I’ll go first. “This year I will be healthy.”

What do you want to usher in? What changes are you going to make this year? Do you allow yourself to be happy?

Monday, 1 January 2024

Happy New Year!

Woman in a green dress with a brown shawl kneeling at a Sheela na gig to place an orange rose

Happy New Year, everyone!

Today my husband and I visited Sheela na gig to speak to her about the coming year.

We reminded her that she is not forgotten, wished her a Happy New Year; and whispered to her the things we want to achieve this year. We asked her for her love and support.

We left her an offering each. She already had gifts bestowed upon her; including evergreens and coins.

A good start to the year. Wishing you all a fabulous 2024.

Love and blessings, 
Wren

Dress by: Ancient Earth Clothing

NEXT - Tarot Method: Wren's Year Ahead Spread 
NEXT - Review: A Spell in the Wild: A Year (and Six Centuries) of Magic by Alice Tarbuck 
NEXT - Higher Transmissions: Tarot Reading Review

Sunday, 31 December 2023

Gratitude

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1WsbYQ3pgC5tqTTuK81FwPE0Q3WVzdlnI

I have been thinking about the things I am grateful for. Though (through no fault of my own) I’m not in the best of health right now, there are so many reasons to be cheerful.

I can study.
I have beautiful surroundings.
I have a home.
I have friends, and make friends, wherever I go.
I have my path.
I have someone to share life with.
I have family.
I have Witchcraft.

I’d love to hear what makes you happy and what you are grateful for. Do you have any big plans for 2024?

Saturday, 30 December 2023

Six Ways to Embrace the New Year

Black and white infographic explaining six ways to embrace the new year

Let's look at six fabulous ways to embrace the New Year! Though many people consider Samhain to be the beginning of the witch’s year; the start of the calendar year is also a good time for reflection, setting intentions and starting new projects.

It is a great time to start afresh; and actually, to do some shadow work.

We all deserve to find peace and joy in our lives.

Sometimes that starts with the decision to be happy.

Let’s consider the opportunities a new calendar year brings, and start the year off with some magick - make a positive statement below and know that it will be affirmed when other people like, share, tag, read the post and comment - keeping your positive statement spinning.

I’ll go first. “This year I will be healthy.”

What do you want to usher in? What changes are you going to make this year? Do you allow yourself to be happy? 

Friday, 11 August 2023

Simple Magick: Power Flow for August

View of the fields over the English Countryside through the branches of a tree

Each month of the year has a different energy and focus.

August is all about enjoying the sun and the vitality of good health. Enjoying friendships and relationships. Reaping and harvesting the fruits of your labour, and just rewards - whether good or bad.

What do you associate August with?

Remember that magickal associations are forged through the connections we make with our magickal tools/relationships- your correspondences may look quite different to mine.

NEXT - Intention: I Call Back My Power
NEXT - Lughnasadh Blessings: Welcoming The Harvest 

Monday, 31 July 2023

Lughnasadh Blessings: Welcoming the Harvest

Wheat-sheaf shaped loaf lying next to a bunch of wheat with a red ribbon

Wishing you all a beautiful Lughnasadh tomorrow, however you may celebrate it.

I find this Sabbat incredibly bittersweet. We are well beyond the Summer Solstice now and we are heading towards the darker part of the year. I’m not looking forward to the damp and cold, which start in September in our old stone house. It means there are only two seasons here; winter and summer, and summer has (nearly) gone all too quickly. I’m actually quite nervous of what’s to come as last winter was so difficult.

What are you doing to celebrate this turn of the Wheel?

What is the harvest you gather this year?

I am proud of my ability to keep going, even though this year has been very challenging and the challenges are not over yet. 

However you celebrate I hope it’s a good one. Love and blessings,
Wren. X

Friday, 23 June 2023

A History: Midsummer Day (24th June)

Roaring fire in a fire bowl with flames reaching out

Midsummer Day (June 24th) is a celebration of summer, enjoyed throughout Europe. It is close to the Summer Solstice and has pre-Christian, Pagan roots. It celebrates the midpoint of the growing season; it is half-way between planting and harvesting.

It is also the feast of St. John the Baptist within the Christian Church, and celebrations begin the night before on the 23rd June, which is known as St. John’s Eve (and Midsummer Eve). Saint John was born six months before Jesus in the calendar year, and predicted the birth of Christ, later baptising him in the Jordan River. Saint John is seen by many Christians as someone who prepared the way for Jesus.

It is believed that the custom of lighting of fires in honour of St. John first happened in England in the 13th Century. One particular monk in Gloucestershire details how the bonfires drove away dragons. The bonfires did more than this - they united communities; bringing people together in celebration to eat, drink and be merry.

Alongside the bonfire celebrations doors were decorated with greenery and flower garlands, interspersed with pretty glass lamps. Bathing in water (to represent Jesus’ baptism) and watching the sunrise were all traditional activities.

Midsummer and St. John’s Day celebrations happen all around the world and are particularly important in Scandinavia and some parts of the U.K. although the date has been changed in some countries, and falls somewhere between the 19th and 26th of June.

Sending love and blessings to you,
Wren. X 

Thursday, 22 June 2023

Happy Summer Solstice!

Setting sun at the beach with words honouring the Summer Solstice sun overlaying the image

Happy Summer Solstice for yesterday, everyone! Wishing you the most beautiful week ahead!

Also, Winter Solstice blessings to our friends in the Southern Hemisphere. Sending all my love and blessings, Wren. X

Friday, 24 February 2023

YouTube Viewing: The Witching Week (24th February)

 Hi Witches! 

Every Friday afternoon at 1600hrs the latest episode of The Witching Week drops on YouTube. Come sit with me and let's have a cuppa while we delve into the topics of the week and talk about all things related to the Wheel of the Year, the changing seasons and other witchy topics. It'd be lovely to see you! 

Sending all my love and blessings,
Wren. X


NEXT - YouTube Viewing: My Witchcraft Journey
NEXT - Introductions: The Cemetery Witch
NEXT - Stone Circle: Clothing for Goddesses
 

Tuesday, 14 February 2023

Lupercalia: A Look at Valentine’s Day

Two matching red Valentine's Day cards flanked by a vase of 12 red roses

The feast of St. Valentine became intertwined with Lupercalia, another Roman festival, to become what we know as Valentine’s Day.

We do celebrate it here. We have hectic lives, children with ex-partners and each of us does a lot for the other due to big challenges that we each face, so we don’t mind the reminder to stop and check in and take some time to appreciate each other.

We had to laugh this morning when we swapped cards. Of all the cards we could have bought, from all the places in town, we managed to buy the same card, just with either “husband” or “wife” written on it.

To make things a little weirder, we used the words “inspire” or “inspiration.” It has been quite a magickal week with a lot of synchronicities, and it seems our luck is changing for the better.

Words written inside a Valentine's Day card

More words written inside a Valentine's Day card

From our house to yours, Happy Day of  Love!


Monday, 23 January 2023

Hello, Morris Dog!

Small dog wearing its own Morris Dancing outfit

Look at this little chap in his Morris coat! We met him on Saturday at the Ketton Wassail, though he hardly stayed still long enough for me to get a photo of him. I did get a lovely cuddle, though!

We had such a lovely time - I recorded most of it, so I have the following Instagram Reels coming:

  • Morris Dancing
  • The History of Morris in Rutland & Leicestershire
  • Wassailing
  • The Ketton Wassail

If you don’t know already I have a YouTube account and will cover these topics in greater depth there. Tomorrow I have a video called The Stoke Dry Witch coming out at 1000hrs.

I hope you’re all keeping warm, it is currently very cold where I am.


Friday, 13 January 2023

Fabulous Folklore: Friday 13th

Image of a Tweet by The Cemetery Witch talking about Friday the 13th

Happy Friday 13th!

Occurring at least once a year, up to a maximum of three times, Friday the 13th is considered a harbinger of bad luck by many people in the west. The irrational fear of the number 13 has its own name: triskaidekaphobia.

The unlucky nature of the number 13 is due - in part - to a Norse myth. Some gods were having a lovely dinner party in Valhalla and then Loki showed up, uninvited, making 13. He then had Balder shot, who died, and the world became dark, making 13 an unlucky number.

Middle Ages superstition combined with stories the of Last Supper may not have helped. There were 13 disciples at the table when Judas (who betrayed Jesus) was added, which was on the 13th of Nisan, Maundy Thursday, the night before his death on Good Friday.

But 13 is also the number of moon cycles and menstrual cycles in a year, connecting the number 13 to the sacred feminine.

Let’s replace fear with feminine celebration. This is a sacred day - for Friday is Freyja’s Day - and it should be treated as such.

Friday, 30 December 2022

Winter - A Time for Rest & Regeneration

Image showing Tweet from The Cemetery Witch about rest and regeneration at Winter.

I hope you’re all finding moments of peace and relaxation during the holidays.

The winter is a time to rest, regenerate and recuperate; there’ll be plenty of time for rushing about when the hours of daylight are longer, and we have more energy.

In the meantime, put on your favourite film, grab a blanket and your favourite cuppa, put your feet up and enjoy the downtime.

What are you doing to rest and relax over the festive period?

Sunday, 25 December 2022

Merry Christmas Everyone!

Wren, The Cemetery Witch in a red dress with a green flower crown standing next to a headstone

After Solstice there is a period of standstill where the days remain the same length. Sometime around the 25th and 26th December the days start lengthening. Quite literally, the “Son” (sun) is “born.”

This year it was the 23rd December, where we gained an extra 7 seconds of daylight. The days will lengthen to an average of two minutes a day until we see a full extra hour of sunlight by January 18, 2023.

Interestingly, the days actually begin to feel a bit longer two weeks before the Winter Solstice. The earliest sunset of the year happens on Wednesday, December 7 2022.

This is because of the Earth’s elliptical orbit around the Sun. The planet moves faster in its orbit during January when we’re closest to the Sun, and slower in July, when we’re further away. The Sun’s path through the sky, when charted on a day to day basis, appears as an “analemma” - a figure-8 pattern.

Because of this pattern, the meridian is rarely at exactly noon, and can be 15 minutes out. This is discrepancy is known as the “Equation of Time” and sundial owners will know it well.

This looping path explains why the earliest and latest sunrises fail to coincide with the solstices. 

Anyway, I hope you all enjoy your day and your Turkey/Nut Roast dinners later! Sending lots of love from the cemetery.

Wednesday, 21 December 2022

Happy Winter Solstice!

Red winter sky overlooking a snowy landscape

Happy Winter Solstice everyone! I’m wishing you a warm, cheery and abundant Yuletide and a blessed Summer Solstice if you are in the Southern Hemisphere.

Astrological Winter solstice occurs at 21:48hrs tonight, UK time. Tomorrow, at dawn, we celebrate the return of the Sun after the longest night of the year. On the 23rd December the day will get longer by 7 seconds, until we have a full hour of extra daylight on the 18th January 2023.

This is always such a joyful time for me. Whilst peak celebrations of the Sun happen at Summer Solstice, there is always that tinge of sadness as the light diminishes. At Winter Solstice things are on the up!

Yes, there is still the coldest part of the winter to endure, but it feels like we have broken the back of the journey towards the lighter part of the year; to be confirmed at Imbolc, of course!

Whenever I think of the Winter Solstice Sun I think of my dear friend Terry, officiating at the Avebury Free & Open Gorsedd. He’d talk about our ancestors’ experience of welcoming the Sun and always say “and if the Sun doesn’t come up, it’s all over!” with a chuckle. It still makes me smile.

What are your plans for today and tomorrow? Are you going to observe sunrise tomorrow?

If you ever need local sunrise and sunset times most weather apps include them for each day.

Wishing you all a very beautiful Solstice. Be well. 

NEXT - Greeting the Sun After the Longest Night 
NEXT - Pagan Holidays: Yule - Midwinter
NEXT - Fabulous Folklore: Mince Pies
NEXT - Lupercalia: A Look at Valentine's Day

Tuesday, 21 June 2022

Summer Solstice Blessings

The summer solstice Sun going down and meeting the horizon over the sea

Litha Blessings to you all!

The summer is a special time for me. From Beltane to Midsummer I have a lot more energy, my bones hurt a lot less and I’m not struggling with the cold in quite the same way. I am filled with optimism, hope and enthusiasm.

The land ~ the world ~ feels different. There is a different vibration; an intensity. I feel very connected to the land in a way that I don’t even know how to explain. I can feel the magick coursing through the air; everything feels very alive and interconnected. Spirits and entities feel close at hand. When I walk the land it feels like someone is walking beside me.

But it is bittersweet, too. The longer days and shorter nights are drawing to a close. It seems like we’ve only just moved away from the winter, and yet after this period of standstill (the Solstice) it’s time to swing back the other way. I know the darkness is a long way off, and I try to put the sadness to the back of my mind; but it’s there…

But for now, celebration! The Sun has reached its peak; its energy at full power. This is a last chance for reflection before we harvest what we have sown the previous year. I didn’t plan to get up for sunrise this morning, but woke up ten minutes before meaning I got outside and enjoyed the Sun.

Enjoy the long, warm day; and if you’re in the Southern Hemisphere have a happy Winter Solstice. The Wheel turns once more. 

Sunday, 10 April 2022

Review: A Spell in the Wild: A Year (and six centuries) of Magic by Alice Tarbuck

A copy of the book A Spell in the Wild: A Year (and six centuries) of Magic by Alice Tarbuck displayed on an altar surrounded by candles and dried orange slices 

About the Author
Dr. Alice Tarbuck is an academic, writer and literature professional based in Edinburgh. A 2019 Scottish Book Trust New Writers Awardee for Poetry, her debut A Spell in the Wild: a Year (and six centuries) of Magic was published in 2020.  Learn more at www.alicetarbuck.net Instagram   


About A Spell in the Wild: A Year (and six centuries) of Magic by Alice Tarbuck Explained simply, A Spell in the Wild is the first-hand experience of a contemporary, urban Witch passing through the year, month by month. But this is not a simple book; Tarbuck has created a seasonal, and yet encyclopedic, guide to witchcraft in the 21st Century, based on the journey she takes in one year.  

A Spell in the Wild begins with an alluring tale in the Introduction, and from the first line it is apparent that not only will you accompany Tarbuck on her journey, but you will be privy to her most personal insights. The author examines who we are as Witches, considers what magic is, and where it can be found. She gets real about the world we live in, relaying her experiences from the view of a British Witch. She is all about finding the magic and letting it in, and encouraging others to do the same, regardless of the shape of our lives, and the environment surrounding them. .  

Before launching into the year, the author pens a note on spells and magical conduct. She talks wisely about the benefits and pitfalls of performing others’ spells, and it is here that we learn that each spell or activity given at the end of each chapter is designed to be adapted. It is also here, amongst the beautiful and wordy descriptions that invoke crystal-clear pictures in our heads, that we realise the author is an experienced practitioner who really knows her stuff. This part of the book has a sense of “coming home”; it helps the reader recognise and understand herself more deeply, and what better way to start a book?  

“Witches are pragmatists. We are interested in effect, not in the minute and careful construction of rituals, however brilliant and fun that might be. We make magic as best as we can, with what we have, acknowledging that everything in the world from the most beautiful thing to the least, exists in relation to us.” - A Spell in the Wild

We jump into the author’s year, starting with September. The subject is foraging, and the reader is bound to recognise herself in Tarbuck’s descriptions of bottled magical items, and jam created with berries collected on an autumn day. In this chapter, we learn all about foraging; doing it in the city and the country, the risks, the joys, and who is driving its popularity. We hear about the apple harvest, wood ear fungus, and the ghosts of the buildings that overshadow the author’s own foraging trips. We learn about the fantastical associations of broom to witches’ flying broomsticks, and we are offered great and responsible practical foraging advice, which we pick out, like blackberries, from the author’s personal stories. Tarbuck analyses our relationship with plants and our interconnectedness with everything in the natural world. She explores some of the things available in September; guiding and educating us in a way that feels like we’re in the company of a favourite aunt. 

This is the way of the next eleven chapters; before we end up back in September again. We learn about Samhain and talking to the dead, fairies, objects with power, demonologies, smelling the weather, sex magic, and so many more wonderful topics that are relevant to the author’s journey, but cleverly map out all there is to know about Witchcraft. We are encouraged to learn about the origins of the festivals that we celebrate; and some of the traditions associated with them. We learn about the blurred line between fairies and Witches, about unseasonable weather days and how they relate to folklore, and how weather knowledge has found its way into some of our most popular, classical reads. The simple activities offered at the end of each chapter give us an opportunity to make an impact on the world, be it for us as individuals, or for the greater good.

The Book’s Strengths A Spell in the Wild is a richly woven tapestry, where the author delves not only into the wild spaces of the natural world, but also into the wild spaces of our hearts and minds; often asking (and answering) the questions we have always wondered about ourselves, witchcraft, and magic. Deeply personal; every word, every sentence, every page is placed perfectly. It makes the reader want to write; to pour out their own heart and soul onto paper. The delightful, easy-to read, no-nonsense way that Tarbuck weaves her words, and the comprehensive content, makes for a compelling read. 

One of the book’s biggest strengths is the sheer amount of history and information that is included over 380+ pages. The author takes an academic and scholarly - but not stuffy - approach, and blends it with an intimate window into her world, expertly fusing the mundane and magic into one. There is no romanticism - yes, we’d like Witchcraft (and our lives) to look a certain way, but we learn that it’s better to accept how things really are, and adapt our magic to suit. 

The author has an entirely intersectional approach. There is something here for the foraging Witches, the activist Witches, and the fairy Witches, but there is also enough history, science, pop culture and anthropology for there to be something for everyone, magical or otherwise. The spells and activities are inclusive, adaptable and non-prescriptive; not everyone has access to a bath, not every Witch is highly organised throughout the year, and not everyone has the money for expensive Witchcraft supplies. 

What You Can Learn... This book is an absolute triumph. It is so much more than one person’s trip throughout the year. It is simultaneously a history lesson, a science lesson, a therapy session, and a diary. It is an honest account of a modern witch’s life, cleverly connecting the reader to the folklore and land that surrounds them. It is a treasury of information; multifaceted, enjoyable, and accessible. 

This book helps the reader to understand the natural world better, making comparisons to our everyday lives to guide us. We are continuously reminded how very special this planet is, and the precariousness of its position. Not in a way that lectures or chides, but in a way that actually makes you want to listen. It makes the reader want to be more conscious and present in their life; certainly in their magic. 

It is sensory enjoyment without the sensory experience. Through Tarbuck’s words the reader can taste, see, sense, smell her experiences. Gentle, warm, welcoming, and reassuring, it’s an incredibly comforting book, where, with every word, we are transported to a place where we recognise ourselves, and feel vindicated in our humanity, and in our Witchhood.  

Gliding beautifully between each subject, it is littered with helpful information and deep insights about our place in the world; and how we can relate this to building our magical practice. This book will make you laugh, it will definitely make you think; and it will tell you that although the world might be changing and running at 100mph, the magic is still there.  NEXT - Review: The Witch-Crafting Handbook by Helena Garcia

Monday, 4 April 2022

Blackthorn Magick: 11 Helpful Correspondences

White blackthorn blossoms with a blue sky in the background

The blackthorn is flowering. It usually blooms before the leaves appear around March or April time; making it easily distinguishable from the hawthorn, whose similar flowers appear after its leaves.

Blackthorn is a hermaphrodite, meaning both male and female reproductive parts are found in one flower - the term (according to my tree surgeon husband) is “monoecious.”

Blackthorn is known for its sloe berries and has traditionally been used for making walking sticks, riding sticks, shillelaghs (sail éille), tool handles, and burnt as firewood. Magickally, it has been used for wands, rods, staffs and stangs. Its thorns are often used in baneful and protective magick.

It is said that “an eldern stake and a blackthorn ether, will make a hedge to last for ever” and it is certainly true that blackthorn makes up a lot of hedgerows across the UK.

Another country saying about the blackthorn is “when the sloe tree is white as a sheet, sow your barley whether it be dry or wet.”

Magickal Correspondences for Blackthorn:
Dispelling negativity
Hope during devastation
Exorcisms
Purification
Warding
Protection
Inflicting strife
Release from Fae magick
The Crone
The Morrighan
The Cailleach

Other names for blackthorn are: wishing thorn, Faery tree, sloe, pear hawthorn. 

Sunday, 20 March 2022

Blessed Ostara!

A white egg laying on gravel with green foliage in the background

Blessed Ostara, everyone!

May this moment hold you in perfect balance as you prepare to step out of the shadow, and into the light. As we move slowly towards Beltane may the lighter, brighter days bring you passion, energy and enthusiasm.

May the chains hindering your growth be broken. May you welcome the warmth and hope of the season with open arms, and may your desires blossom into abundant reality.

May the Earth nourish you. May love be rekindled and renewed.

A Happy Autumn Equinox to those in the Southern Hemisphere!

Wishing you a lovely day, everyone! What are you doing to celebrate? 

Saturday, 12 March 2022

Winter is Still Here

An oracle card showing a wolf and featuring the word "winter" laying next to some runes and some black crystals

Hey everyone, 

Just a little reminder that we’re still in the depths of winter. It’s ok to need to go at a slower pace. This is a time of regeneration, recuperation and rest. As you take the time to look after yourself with sleep, good food, and all the lovely things that comfort you; your body and soul responds with growth. 

As we travel the Wheel, and get nearer to spring, we will pick up more energy. The Sun will soon melt away, not only the literal ice of the winter; but also our troubles. For it’s easier to tackle things when we have the energy. Work on personal protection, and leave everything else free to evolve in its own sweet way. The spring is a new beginning for everyone, and as we approach it, it will be easier to make the changes we need to.

Have faith in yourself, and your abilities, you’ll feel much better soon! 


Runes:

ᛒ - Berkana 

ᛁ - Isa 

ᛖ - Ehwaz

ᛉ - Elhaz

ᚱ - Raidho