once i told an astrology person that they should include where the ISS was in the sky when you were born and she was like that’s stupid. okay sorry for trying to make this a tiny bit more fun

Kiana Khansmith
Game of Thrones Daily

izzy's playlists!

pixel skylines
NASA

blake kathryn
todays bird

★
Misplaced Lens Cap
Cosimo Galluzzi
trying on a metaphor

tannertan36
Sweet Seals For You, Always

No title available

JVL
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Show & Tell
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
will byers stan first human second

No title available

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from India

seen from Bahamas
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Italy

seen from Switzerland
seen from Malaysia
seen from Romania
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from T1

seen from United States
@alittlewitchyworld
once i told an astrology person that they should include where the ISS was in the sky when you were born and she was like that’s stupid. okay sorry for trying to make this a tiny bit more fun
When Your Altar Becomes a Dust Collector: What That Means
Hello Beautiful Souls,
Let's talk about something most witches experience but rarely discuss: that altar you spent hours setting up, that used to be the center of your practice, that meant so much when you first created it...
...is now just gathering dust.
The candles haven't been lit in weeks. Maybe months. The crystals sit untouched. There's actual dust on the deity statue. You walk past it daily without really seeing it anymore. It's become furniture. Background. Just another surface in your home that occasionally needs cleaning.
And you feel guilty about it.
Maybe you tell yourself you'll get back to it "when things calm down" or "when Mercury isn't in retrograde" or "when I have more energy." Maybe you feel like a fake witch, like you're failing at your practice. Maybe you wonder if you should just take it all down.
Here's what nobody tells you: an altar gathering dust isn't a failure. It's information.
Your neglected altar is trying to tell you something. The question is whether you're ready to listen.
What a Dusty Altar Actually Means
A forgotten altar can mean several different things, and not all of them are bad:
1. Your Practice Has Outgrown That Form
Maybe when you first started practicing, a physical altar felt essential. It gave you structure, made your practice feel "real," helped you learn correspondences and build skills.
But now? Maybe you've internalized those lessons. Maybe you carry your practice with you rather than keeping it in one physical location. Maybe you do magic in the moment, in the kitchen, on walks, in the shower—not at a designated altar space.
This isn't abandoning your practice. This is evolution.
Some witches need altars throughout their entire practice. Others need them as training wheels and eventually move beyond them. Neither is better—they're just different paths.
Signs this is what's happening:
You still practice regularly, just not at the altar
Your magic happens spontaneously in daily life
You feel spiritually connected even without altar time
The idea of using the altar feels limiting rather than focusing
You've shifted to a more intuitive, less structured practice
What to do: Give yourself permission to dismantle or significantly simplify your altar. You don't need to keep maintaining a space you've outgrown out of guilt or obligation. Keep one or two meaningful items if you want, or clear it entirely and use that surface for something else.
Your practice didn't die—it just changed form.
2. You're Burned Out
Spiritual burnout is real. It looks like:
Feeling obligated rather than called to practice
Going through motions without genuine engagement
Guilt about not practicing rather than desire to practice
Exhaustion at the thought of ritual or spellwork
Your practice feeling like another chore on an endless to-do list
If your altar is dusty because you're burned out, the altar itself isn't the problem—it's a symptom.
Signs this is what's happening:
You used to love your practice but now it feels heavy
You feel guilty when you look at your altar
You're exhausted in general, not just spiritually
Other things you used to enjoy also feel like burdens
You're dealing with depression, major life stress, or significant challenges
What to do: Rest. Give yourself permission to take a break without guilt. Cover your altar with a cloth—not to abandon it, but to give it (and yourself) a rest. Tell your deities/spirits "I need some time, I'll be back when I'm ready."
Burnout requires rest, not forced productivity. Your altar will be there when you're ready to return.
And here's the thing: sometimes the best spiritual practice when you're burned out is doing nothing spiritual at all. Watch TV. Play games. Sleep. Exist without the pressure of practice. That IS spiritual work—it's honoring your need for rest.
3. The Altar Never Resonated With You
Maybe you set up an altar because you thought you were supposed to. Because every witchcraft book and blog post and TikTok said you need one. Because other witches have them.
But it never actually felt right to you.
Some people just aren't altar people. Some witches are walkers, movers, dancers. Some do all their magic in their heads. Some practice in the shower or the kitchen or the car. Some need nature, not a designated indoor space.
If the altar never resonated, that's okay.
Signs this is what's happening:
You built the altar thinking you "should" but never felt drawn to use it
Using it always felt performative or forced
You keep trying to make yourself care about it and failing
Your most powerful magical experiences happen nowhere near your altar
The idea of altar work feels boring or constraining
What to do: Dismantle it. Seriously. You don't need an altar to be a witch. Keep the items you genuinely connect with and release the idea that you must maintain an altar space.
Find where YOUR practice actually lives. Maybe it's on hiking trails. Maybe it's in the bathtub. Maybe it's entirely in your mind and heart. Practice there instead.
Stop trying to fit into a mold that doesn't fit you.
4. Life Legitimately Got in the Way
Sometimes a dusty altar just means you've been dealing with real life and haven't had time or energy for practice.
New job. New baby. Illness. Grief. Moving. Caring for sick family. Financial crisis. Mental health struggles. A global pandemic. Sometimes life is just a lot, and practice falls to the bottom of the priority list.
This is not failure. This is being human.
Signs this is what's happening:
You miss your practice and want to return to it
Life has been objectively overwhelming
You think about your altar/practice with fondness, not guilt or obligation
You're not burned out on the practice itself, just stretched too thin
Things are temporary/transitional
What to do: Be gentle with yourself. Your practice will be there when you're ready. Do what you can, even if it's just lighting a candle once a week, or just thinking about your practice fondly while dealing with everything else.
Small practices count. Inconsistent practice is still practice. Even thinking "I wish I had time to practice" is maintaining the connection.
When life calms down (and it will eventually), you can return. The altar, the deities, the spirits—they understand. They were human (or at least worked with humans) too.
5. Your Relationship With Deity/Spirit Has Changed
If your altar was primarily devotional—focused on specific deities or spirits—and it's gathering dust, your relationship with those beings might have shifted.
Relationships change. Maybe you've moved on to work with different entities. Maybe the deity you were devoted to has gone quiet. Maybe that phase of your spiritual journey is complete.
Signs this is what's happening:
You feel disconnected from the deities/spirits represented on your altar
You're drawn to different spiritual figures now
Your prayers/invocations feel empty or unanswered
You've had a falling out or disagreement with an entity
You're in a period of spiritual questioning or transition
What to do: Be honest about what's happening. Talk to the deity/spirit if you're comfortable doing so. Thank them for the time you spent together, acknowledge the shift, and ask if they have any final messages or requests.
Then update your altar to reflect your current spiritual reality, or clear it entirely if you're in a period of spiritual exploration without clear devotional focus.
It's okay to change gods. It's okay to step back from deity work entirely for a while. Spiritual relationships aren't prison sentences.
6. You're Avoiding Something
Sometimes we stop using our altars because they represent something we're avoiding:
Shadow work we know we need to do but are scared of
A magical commitment we made but now regret
A deity calling that feels too big or demanding
Grief or other emotions we're not ready to process
A part of ourselves we're not ready to face
The altar becomes a reminder of what we're avoiding, so we... stop looking at it.
Signs this is what's happening:
You feel uncomfortable or anxious when you look at your altar
You actively avoid the room/area where it is
You know there's something you "should" be addressing but aren't
The altar represents a version of yourself you're not ready to be yet
You're in spiritual avoidance mode
What to do: Get honest with yourself about what you're avoiding. Journal about it. Talk to a trusted friend. Maybe talk to a therapist if it's deep stuff.
You don't have to immediately tackle whatever you're avoiding, but acknowledging it helps. Sometimes just saying "I'm not ready for this yet" out loud releases some of the pressure.
When you're ready (and only when you're ready), approach the altar again. Or dismantle it and start fresh when you're in a different place.
7. The Aesthetic Trap
Did you build a beautiful, Instagram-worthy altar... and then feel like you couldn't touch it because it was too perfect?
Did it become a display piece rather than a working space?
Are you afraid to light the candles because they'll get messy? Afraid to use the crystals because they're arranged so nicely?
If your altar is too pretty to use, it's not serving you.
Signs this is what's happening:
Your altar looks perfect but feels dead
You rearrange it for photos but never use it for practice
You're more worried about aesthetics than function
Using it would "mess it up"
It's decoration, not devotion (see: previous post)
What to do: Mess it up. Intentionally. Light those candles and let the wax drip everywhere. Move things around for actual use. Get it dusty through practice, not through neglect.
Or simplify it radically—keep only items you'll actually use, arranged for function rather than photos.
An altar is a tool, not an art installation.
What Your Altar's Condition Is Telling You
Look at your altar right now (or picture it). What do you see?
Light dust, but items are still arranged: You've been busy but the connection is still there. You just need to make a little time to reconnect.
Heavy dust, items untouched for months: Something bigger is going on. One of the reasons above applies. Time for honest self-reflection.
Dust plus clutter (mail, keys, random objects piled on it): The altar has lost its sacred designation. It's become just another surface. This suggests either outgrowing it or significant disconnection from practice.
Dust plus some items removed or relocated: You're naturally winnowing down what matters. Pay attention to what you kept versus what drifted away—that's information about your real practice.
Clean but unused: You're maintaining it out of obligation or guilt, not genuine engagement. Time to evaluate if you actually want this altar.
Different items than when you started: Evolution! Even if dusty, the fact that it's changed shows your practice is alive, just in transition.
The Guilt Problem
Here's what needs to be said clearly: You don't owe anyone an altar. Not the gods. Not other witches. Not the concept of witchcraft itself.
The guilt you feel looking at your dusty altar? That's not coming from divine displeasure or spiritual failure. That's coming from internalized "shoulds"—the idea that real witches maintain perfect altars, practice daily, never let dust accumulate.
It's not true.
Real witches are humans with jobs and kids and depression and busy lives and changing interests. Real witches sometimes don't practice for months and that's okay. Real witches sometimes abandon altars and that's okay too.
Your worth as a witch is not measured by how dust-free your altar is.
Let that sink in.
Questions to Ask Your Dusty Altar
Instead of just feeling guilty, get curious. Ask:
"Do I miss using you?" If yes, what's stopping you? Address that. If no, why do you still have it?
"What was I hoping you would do for my practice?" Did it fulfill that hope? If not, what would?
"If I could change one thing about you, what would it be?" Maybe the altar isn't wrong, just the current configuration or location.
"Am I keeping you out of genuine spiritual connection or out of obligation?" Obligation-based practice dies. Connection-based practice thrives.
"What would happen if I took you down entirely?" Would you feel relief? Loss? Freedom? Nothing? That answer tells you what to do.
"Is there a smaller, simpler version of you that I would actually use?" Maybe you don't need a full altar, just one candle and one crystal. That's valid.
"What is the dustiest item here, and why?" The most neglected item often reveals what you've outgrown or what never resonated.
Reviving a Dusty Altar (If That's What You Want)
If you've realized you DO want to reconnect with your altar and practice, here's how:
1. Clean it physically first Literally dust it. Wash items that can be washed. Clear away anything that doesn't belong. Physical cleaning often creates mental/spiritual clarity too.
2. Remove what doesn't resonate anymore Be ruthless. If an item hasn't been used in months and doesn't spark any genuine spiritual connection, remove it. You can always add it back later if you miss it.
3. Simplify radically When in doubt, strip down to bare essentials. Maybe just:
One candle
One representation of the divine (if you work with deity)
One meaningful object
That's enough. Build from there only if genuinely called to.
4. Move it if needed Maybe the location is the problem. Move the altar somewhere you'll actually see and engage with it. Even moving it a few feet can shift the energy.
5. Start small Don't commit to elaborate daily practice right away. Commit to lighting one candle once a week. Just that. Build consistency with small actions before expanding.
6. Ask the altar what it needs Seriously. Sit in front of it and ask, "What do you need from me? What needs to change?" Listen for the answer, even if it's uncomfortable.
7. Set a specific intention "This altar is for [daily grounding practice / devotion to X deity / seasonal celebrations / whatever]." Clear purpose creates clear use.
8. Make it functional, not just beautiful Arrange it for use, not for photos. Put frequently used items within easy reach. Make it inviting to interact with, not precious to preserve.
When to Dismantle Your Altar
Sometimes the right answer is to take it down. That's not failure—it's honoring your truth.
Dismantle your altar if:
You genuinely feel relief at the idea
It's been unused for 6+ months with no desire to return
It represents a phase of practice you've clearly outgrown
Maintaining it causes more stress than spiritual benefit
You've realized you're not an altar person
You need the physical space for something else
Your life circumstances have changed significantly
How to dismantle respectfully:
Thank the altar and any spirits/deities associated with it Say goodbye. Express gratitude for what this space was.
Ask if anything needs to be done before dismantling If you work with deities, check if they want a final offering or ritual.
Cleanse items before storing or rehoming Clear the energy they accumulated.
Keep only what genuinely matters Store meaningful items carefully. Release the rest (donate, gift, dispose of respectfully).
Cleanse the physical space Smoke cleanse or clean the surface where the altar was.
Don't leave an empty wound Either repurpose the space for something new, or create a very simple placeholder if you think you might return to altar practice later.
Let go of guilt You're not betraying your practice. You're honoring your truth.
What Comes After the Dusty Altar
Whether you revive your altar, simplify it, or dismantle it entirely, the question remains: what does your practice look like now?
Maybe it looks like:
Magic in the kitchen while cooking
Prayers during your commute
Monthly nature walks as sabbat observances
One candle you light every morning
A digital practice on your phone
Meditation without any tools
Sporadic spells only when urgently needed
No formal practice but constant spiritual awareness
All of these are valid.
Your practice doesn't have to look like anyone else's.
The dusty altar taught you something: what you thought you wanted in your practice versus what you actually need. Listen to that lesson.
The Altar as Teacher
Even in its dust-covered neglect, your altar has been teaching you:
About your changing relationship with spirituality
About what you need versus what you think you should need
About the difference between obligation and genuine calling
About how you've grown
About what forms of practice actually serve you
A dusty altar isn't a monument to failure.
It's a mirror showing you your truth.
The question is: are you brave enough to look at what it's showing you and act accordingly?
Permission Slips
Here's what you're allowed to do, no guilt required:
✓ Take down your altar entirely
✓ Simplify it to one candle
✓ Practice without any altar at all
✓ Take a break from practice for weeks, months, years
✓ Change what your altar is for
✓ Admit you're not an altar person
✓ Stop working with deities you've lost connection with
✓ Start fresh with something completely different
✓ Practice only when it feels right, not on a schedule
✓ Let your altar stay dusty until you're ready
✓ Never have an altar again
✓ Admit this phase of your practice is over
You don't need anyone's permission, but if you need to hear it: you have permission.
The Bottom Line
A dusty altar is not a moral failing.
It's not proof you're a bad witch or a fake or a failure.
It's information.
It's your practice trying to tell you something about what you need, what's changed, what's no longer serving you, or what needs to shift.
Listen to it.
Honor what it's telling you.
And then act accordingly—whether that means cleaning it and reconnecting, simplifying it radically, or taking it down entirely.
Your spiritual practice is supposed to serve you, not the other way around.
If the altar isn't serving you anymore, you don't owe it continued service out of guilt.
Be honest. Be brave. Be willing to let your practice change shape.
The dust on your altar isn't the problem.
It's the invitation to get real about what your practice actually looks like now versus what you think it should look like.
Accept the invitation.
And do what needs to be done.
Blessed Be.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Photo Source
I don't normally reblog these. I'm not a teacher, and I'm not new at this stuff.
But this one really spoke to me. I think it is good.
(Also I have a couple of altars that got made before fallowtide, and then proceeded to wade out to neck deep in burnout from my job, so they're all in need of some attention)
2026 Witches' Calendar
January 3 ● Full Moon in Cancer (Wolf Moon) January 18 ● New Moon in Capricorn February 1 ● Imbolc February 1 ● Full Moon in Leo (Snow Moon) February 17 ● New Moon in Aquarius February 26 - March 20 ● Mercury Retrograde March 3 ● Full Moon in Virgo (Worm Moon) March 19 ● New Moon in Pisces March 20 ● Ostara April 2 ● Full Moon in Libra (Pink Moon) April 17 ● New Moon in Aries May 1 ● Beltane May 1 ● Full Moon in Scorpio (Flower Moon) May 16 ● New Moon in Taurus May 31 ● Full Moon in Sagittarius (Blue Moon) June 20-21 ● Litha June 15 ● New Moon in Gemini June 29 ● Full Moon in Capricorn (Strawberry Moon) June 29 - July 23 ● Mercury Retrograde July 14 ● New Moon in Cancer July 29 ● Full Moon in Aquarius (Buck Moon) August 1 ● Lammas August 12 ● New Moon in Leo August 28 ● Full Moon (Sturgeon Moon) September 11 ● New Moon in Virgo September 23 ● Mabon September 26 ● Full Moon in Aries(Harvest Moon) October 10 ● New Moon in Libra October 24 - November 13 ● Mercury in Retrograde October 26 ● Full Moon in Taurus (Hunter's Moon) October 31 ● Samhain November 9 ● New Moon in Scorpio November 24 ● Full Moon in Gemini (Beaver Moon) December 9 ● New Moon in Sagittarius December 21 ● Yule December 24 ● Full Moon in Cancer (Cold Moon)
Big respect to anyone who has the brain capacity for a tarot spread with more than four cards. My mind can't play anything bigger than Connect Four.
@aesethewitch
I hope I give off the vibe to all animals that I am their ally and friend
I just yelled at a giant spider in the basement that if I saw him again, he would be dead.
10 Ideas for When You Want to Practice Divination but 'Don't Have a Good Reason to'
Sometimes you just get an urge to do some tarot, or the urge to mess with runes, but there's nothing you really want or need out of it. So I came up with some ideas that scratch the divination magic itch!
To note: for most of these prompts I will be referring to "cards" since I prefer cartomancy the most, however most of these ideas can be adapted into other forms of divination.
Listen. You ARE nature. You’re an entire ecosystem. Your flesh sculpted from the dirt. Your blood brewed from rain water. Thousands of creatures living inside of you, on your skin, who wouldn’t be alive without you just like you wouldn’t be either without them. You are born from the forest and the sea. Be kind to yourself.
Sometimes tangible, real life magic is just a shift in perspective. You can make something mundane magical if you just wish it so.
*some problem or inconvenience arises*
Me: Hold on, I need to go set something on fire about this.
thinking about this bit from an article by Ann Druyan in 2003:
“When my husband died, because he was so famous and known for not being a believer, many people would come up to me – it still sometimes happens – and ask me if Carl changed at the end and converted to a belief in an afterlife. They also frequently ask me if I think I will see him again. Carl faced his death with unflagging courage and never sought refuge in illusions. The tragedy was that we knew we would never see each other again. I don’t ever expect to be reunited with Carl. But the great thing is that when we were together, for nearly twenty years, we lived with a vivid appreciation of how brief and precious life is. We never trivialized the meaning of death by pretending it was anything other than a final parting. Every single moment that we were alive and we were together was miraculous – not miraculous in the sense of inexplicable or supernatural. We knew we were beneficiaries of chance… That pure chance could be so generous and so kind… That we could find each other, as Carl wrote so beautifully in Cosmos, you know, in the vastness of space and the immensity of time… That we could be together for twenty years. That is something which sustains me and it’s much more meaningful… The way he treated me and the way I treated him, the way we took care of each other and our family, while he lived.
That is so much more important than the idea I will see him someday.
I don’t think I’ll ever see Carl again. But I saw him. We saw each other. We found each other in the cosmos, and that was wonderful.”
list of mundane things that feel like ancient human rituals
cleaning or wipe your bare feet
breaking off a piece of bread and handing it to someone
putting the weight of a basket on your hip or head
eating nuts or berries while hunched over close to the ground
seeing something startling just out of your line of sight and very quickly stepping or leaping on to a larger object to get a better view
cupping your hands into running water to wash your face
the unanimous protection of a baby or child in a public space where women are present
when an elderly woman laughs and grips your forearm tightly
May I add?
Touching someone’s face with the back of your hand to see if they have a fever
Stopping to watch animals moving in groups (geese, fish, horses, butterflies, bees)
Helping an elderly person to walk or sit
telling stories around a fire
huddling together for warmth when it’s cold
marveling at sunlight through leaves
wonderment at the brightness of a full moon
bringing food to sick or grieving families
To the Gods lost to time
We may have no way of knowing your name, but we do know you. We know you existed.
We may have no way of knowing what purpose you served in your pantheon, but we appreciate the work that you did, and the work you continue to do.
You may be older than what we think of as the first civilizations, you may be older than evolution, but thank you for being with our ancestors.
Thank you for holding their hands, teaching them how to hunt, which plants were edible, how to walk, how to develop.
It's because of you that humanity exists in the way we know today.
I'm sorry you've been lost to time.
I am the offering, and the fire which consumes it, and the one to whom it’s offered
Prints here! Again, moved all my stuff to Inprnt—better quality and higher margins than Redbubble.
In a world full of instant gratification.. may we never lose sight of the natural cycles of life.. how the moon takes its time to be full or how the crops take their time to harvest..
May we slow down & just be present..
Simple Ways to Practice Magick Everyday
Say a small prayer or do a short meditation before you get out of bed in the morning.
Write down dreams or visions you had.
Stir your first cup of coffee or tea counterclockwise to banish negativity and bad luck or clockwise to bring positive energy.
Draw daily tarot or oracle cards (you can also use a pendulum) for guidance.
Cleansing yourself and home using sound or smoke.
Ancestor or spirit offerings
Pick out your clothes, shoes, jewelry... ect with intention.
Write a sigil or petition paper and burn it.
Take a ritual shower. You can spice it up with candles, herbs, and crystals, or you can simply step under the water and imagine all the negativity and bad energy washing off you. You can also recite a chant.
Every time you look into the mirror, say an affirmation
Take a walk outside and ground yourself to Mother Earth.
Dance!! Dancing is an excellent way to rise the energy, and it helps with opening the sacral and solar plexus chakra and getting in touch with the inner child.
tip jar
tumblr user walking into a forest that got cut down and then replanted like 50 years ago: omg... the fae... the old gods...
As someone who's actually pagan this is funny to me. I've connected to the gods in places that are like, the opposites of forests a lot of the time. My experiences outside with Hel have mostly been through local streets at night. There's a deity I mostly see in train stations. One of my best experiences with Thor was near the 9/11 hole. There's no reason to associate gods with forests or nature unless that specific deity calls for it.
One of my best experiences with Thor was near the 9/11 hole.
Shufflemancy 101: A Brief History & Analysis
Hey! If you like my work and want to support me in my quest for divination theory, digital tools, algorithmic quandries, and research into niche divination tools, consider throwing dollars at my Ko-Fi tip jar! Every contribution helps me keep making posts like this one. (You can also read this post over on Ko-Fi!)
The difficulty with researching something like shufflemancy is that it's a relatively modern phenomenon. I haven't yet found anyone (online or in a book) specifically talking about the origins of shufflemancy as a term or where it might've come from.
So, we start from square one.
What is Shufflemancy?
According to Wikipedia, shufflemancy is divination "by the use of an electronic media player such as an electronic playlist, iPod, or other medium wherein one skips a certain number of songs and the lyrics and/or tune of the song is the answer to the divinatory question."
Simple enough. Use an electronic collection of music that's been shuffled to divine.
This did lead me to the question: What counts as shufflemancy? Does tuning into a radio station count?
It's my opinion that radio divination does not count. There's no shuffle function. Yes, it has an element of chance, and that's what makes it divination. It certainly falls under the wider umbrella of divination via music, too. But it isn't shufflemancy if it doesn't make use of a shuffle function.
So, to make things simple, for something to be shufflemancy, it must:
Use an electronic medium
Involve a randomized shuffle function
Be something the shufflemancer can interpret to answer a question (pretty much anything)
Early Shufflemancy
The earliest form of shufflemancy as we understand it today, using the above requirements, would probably be tape players capable of shuffling music. With the nature of tape, it would take a while for the thing to wind and rewind to find the cue on the tape which signaled the start or end of a song, but it'd work.
With that said, shuffling as we understand and recognize it today would've started with CDs in the 1980s. There were CD players that could hold three to five disks at a time. They could shuffle songs between all disks held in the player, creating a random mix of tunes for listeners to enjoy.
Using either of these methods for divination would work, technically. The results would be somewhat limited, but that doesn't mean it's a bad method to use. Especially if your CD player could hold 5 disks, you could easily put in 5 albums from different artists with all different vibes for a wider variety of outputs.
I certainly remember using my little blue radio that held two CDs at once like this. I'd put in two albums and hit shuffle, and the first song that played would be my vibe and advice for the day. It was divination -- some of the earliest I'd ever done consciously, at the young age of nine. And when I got the bigger one that held three CDs? Game changer.
So this puts shufflemancy's origins somewhere around the mid-to-late 1980s, when Sony put out the first CD player with shuffle. As we moved into the 1990s, CDs became more popular and cassettes faced obsolescence.
The Shuffle Revolution & Early Modern Shufflemancy
In 2005, Apple changed the game again. It had already debuted the iPod in 2001, providing an easy, pocket-sized music experience as a direct challenge to the CD's cultural domination. On January 11, 2005, nearly 20 years ago, Apple announced the iPod Shuffle.
And oh, boy, did it change everything.
I could talk forever about the iPod's impact on the music industry, the death of the in-order album, and the eventual rise of music streaming services. But others have done that to death, so I'll focus in on our topic of shufflemancy.
This is where we start seeing shuffling music as it is now, in the modern day. In my digging, I found mentions of the term "shufflemancy" as early as 2007 -- just two years after the iPod Shuffle was announced. Someone proposed the concept and terminology of "shufflemancy" as we understand it today on a Halfbakery Forum "Idea" post on October 3, 2007.
It's difficult to say whether this is the first instance of the term. In reality, shufflemancy seems to have emerged as a natural by-product of the evolution of music technology. Where there is innovation, witches and diviners will mold it to their purposes. We're a resourceful bunch like that. It grew organically as we moved from buying albums to buying singles to streaming music without buying at all.
People were offering public shufflemancy readings as early as 2009 in places like TarotForum.net. It's spoken about during this era as a "silly" and "new" form of divination that people were trying out. There aren't any dates in that link, but according to the website's data, the first post in the thread was published on June 16, 2009.
From there, shufflemancy saw a gradual rise in popularity. It evolved from using iPods to iTunes, Napster, and eventually Spotify as these new applications emerged.
Shufflemancy Now
If you look up "shufflemancy" using Spotify's search function, you'll receive dozens of results. Many of the top playlists are public ones curated by shufflemancers for themselves and others to use. Options range from general playlists to "mega mixes" containing upwards of 200 hours of music from all different genres, artists, and eras. There are some with a paltry five hours of music, while one that I've seen goes up over the 600 hour mark. (If I can find that one again, I'll reblog it, because... damn.)
Select a "messages from your guides" option from the search or curate your own -- the choice is yours. For one-time shufflemancers, using a pre-made option may be the best, most economical choice. But dedicated shufflemancers sometimes boast multiple hundred-hour playlists for different purposes, all personally curated.
Clearly, it's popular. There are shufflemancers on Tumblr and Etsy offering free and paid services using their specially curated playlists. A quick search is all you need to find someone receiving a divinatory reading via song lyrics, meanings, and vibes. And it seems to work -- sellers on Etsy boast hundreds of positive reviews. Some even offer playlist curation services for personal shufflemancy or messages from deities and/or spirits.
It all begs the question, how does shufflemancy work?
Shufflemancy Methodology
Finding this is significantly easier than pinning down the history of shufflemancy. This post from Tumblr user orriculum, sums it up fairly well. So does this one by the-daily-diviner.
To do shufflemancy, the basic steps are:
Create or find a playlist of songs. A large collection seems to be the most favorable option for a wide spread of possibilities.
Ask a question. Divination 101 -- figure out what you want to know and ask it. Simple enough.
Pick a number. Choose any number and shuffle that many times or skip that many songs.
Listen to the song. Write down lyrics that stick out, messages that come through, and anything else that seems relevant (genre, tempo, vibe, etc.)
Interpret. Take the information gathered during the song and use it to draw conclusions, just like any other form of divination.
Simple enough. Shufflemancy is the sort of method that requires a high level of intuitive thinking. It's very mutable and suits a good amount of personalization.
This is both good and bad, I think. It would be incredibly easy to create a bias in your shufflemancy playlists by selecting songs with primarily one genre, artist, album, emotion, or through-line. The ideal playlist really does have a wide variety of music, and this means selecting songs that the shufflemancer doesn't necessarily like. We all have a genre or artist we hate; excluding an entire genre skews results. Impartial selections of music are critical to the success of good divination. Otherwise, we risk interfering with the outcome.
And speaking of interfering...
The Algorithm Problem
(Note: I'm focusing in on Spotify since it's very commonly used and because it's accessible to me. Shufflemancy can be (and is!) done with plenty of other apps like Apple Music.)
When Spotify was originally launched, it used a version of the Fisher-Yates Shuffle to perform its shuffling of music. In essence, this algorithm takes a finite sequence of data, picks an option from that selection of data, and removes it from the pool. Then, it picks another and another until no more options remain.
At first glance, this seems great! It creates a fairly random output. But as is the nature of randomness, there were clusters. The same artist would play four or five times in a row from a large playlist, and Spotify users complained. It was random, but it didn't feel that way.
The human brain is wired to find connections and patterns. When the same artist plays over and over again despite a playlist being on shuffle mode, it creates a pattern that the brain recognizes. Therefore, the "true" randomness of clustering outputs was unsatisfactory.
So, in 2014, Spotify updated it. Their new algorithm would detect and remember the song it just played and, in shuffling, account for the artist and album to provide a more random-feeling result. The new algorithm detects what's already played and selects accordingly to prevent the same artist from playing twice in a row, just as it prevents the same song from playing twice. It spreads artists out evenly (though not perfectly, to maintain the illusion of randomness) to provide an enhanced listening experience.
What does this mean for shufflemancy, then? If Spotify's algorithm is interfering in the output provided from a playlist, does that mean it's not a reliable form of divination?
At first, I wasn't so sure. I adjusted my thinking -- if a tarot app was preventing certain cards from being drawn (or from being drawn in a particular order) because I'd already drawn them that day or week, would that render the app unreliable? And the answer was yes. It would! It removes the random element from the method, therefore making it not true divination by my definition.
So shufflemancy with Spotify isn't (good) divination, then. Right?
My Opinion & Theory
In thinking about this further, I think it comes down to personal opinion. People certainly have success with shufflemancy via Spotify, or else they wouldn't do it. They definitely wouldn't offer their services (free or otherwise) if they weren't confident in the results it provides.
Thinking that way, I believe there's a way to off-set the algorithm's interference. With enough songs in a playlist, the random element is enhanced despite the algorithm. Not by having the same song multiple times (Spotify would surely detect this and prevent it from playing), but perhaps the same song covered by different artists. Songs with the same vibe, the same meaning, similar lyrics... AND songs from a wide variety of artists and genres, regardless of whether the shufflemancer likes the songs or not.
The person with that 600+ hour playlist for shufflemancy has it right, I think. That's the key. Variety and volume to make up for Spotify's algorithmic shuffler.
Additionally, in listening to my many, many Spotify playlists, I noticed something. If I'm listening to a playlist on shuffle and decide I want a specific song, I can choose to play it immediately. Afterwards, songs I've already heard might play. It seems as though doing this resets the shuffling algorithm in some way. Doing this in combination with a large and varied playlist might be the key to making shufflemancy in Spotify truly, fully reliable.
My Next Steps
Obviously, scholarly research only goes so far in situations like this. In order to properly gauge the accuracy of shufflemancy, I'll have to do it myself.
First, I'll need a playlist. I have a handful of playlists that sit in the hundred-hour range, but they're curated with friends for specific vibes. They're not really suitable for shufflemancy. So making one for myself is step one. I'll use premade playlists as a springboard for ideas, but the end result will be my own. For transparency, I'll make the playlist public and share it as part of the next edition in this series of posts.
The next step is to just... do it. Do the divinations, and do them regularly. Instead of a daily tarot card, I'll do a daily shuffle. I'll form "spreads" and put together a more in-depth methodology that fits my style as it develops.
Then, finally, maybe public ones? For reviews and feedback, obviously. It's one thing to do divination for myself -- confirmation bias and all -- but to do it for others and to be open for immediate feedback is entirely different.
Last, it's a matter of compiling my findings into a coherent document. Easier said than done, but done it must be.
Resources
I pulled from a lot of places for this one. Massive thanks to the Crossroads Discord for listening to me yell about divination for the last several weeks. It will continue.
In any case, here are all the resources I referenced for this leg of research:
Wikipedia - The Fisher-Yates Shuffle
Wikipedia - Methods of Divination
Wikipedia - The iPod Shuffle
PopSci - History of Shuffling Music
Engineering at Spotify - How to Shuffle?
The Verge - The Mixed-Up History of the Shuffle Button
Auntie PanPan (YouTube) - Shufflemancy - What IS It?!?
Halfbakery - Shufflemancy Idea Post
Fox and Faith Wordpress - Radio Divination and Intentional Living in Your Day to Day
Scientific American - How Randomness Rules Our World and Why We Cannot See It
PC World - The CD Player Turns 30
Make Use Of - How Spotify's Shuffle Feature Really Works
Orriculum on Tumblr - Post on shufflemancy technique
The-Daily-Divinre on Tumblr - Post on shufflemancy technique
Empirical Zeal - What Does Randomness Look Like?