Emil is my "yup this is real wool" detector. It's only real wool that he goes this nuts over
@copperbadge
Emil looks very sweet so I can't make the joke I want to make about orange cats indeed being simple tools. :D

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Keni
trying on a metaphor
Monterey Bay Aquarium
DEAR READER

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Stranger Things
$LAYYYTER

tannertan36
taylor price
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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

izzy's playlists!
Peter Solarz
Jules of Nature
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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tumblr dot com
Sade Olutola

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@andinarcadiai
Emil is my "yup this is real wool" detector. It's only real wool that he goes this nuts over
@copperbadge
Emil looks very sweet so I can't make the joke I want to make about orange cats indeed being simple tools. :D
May you live in intresting BORING times
remember chat. the most hopepunk thing isn’t actually the quest for a better life and a better world. it’s actually to never give up the secret belief that both of those things are possible no matter what and to never let that fire go completely out
a phrase that kinda bothers me when talking about women's historical roles in europe is "cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children." you hear it so often, those exact words in the same order even. and once you learn a little more you realize that the massive gaping hole in that list is fiberwork. im not an expert and have no hard numbers, but i wouldnt be surprised if fiberwork took up nearly as much time as the other three tasks combined, so it's not a trivial omission.
it's not a hot take to say that the mass amnesia about fiberwork is linked to the belittlement of women's work in geneal, but i do think there's a special kind of illusion that is cast by "cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children." you hear that and think "well i cook and clean and take care of children (or i know someone who does) and i have a sense of how much work that is" and you know of course that cooking and cleaning were more laborious before modern technology, but still, you have a ballpark estimate you think, when in fact you are drastically underestimating the work load.
i also think that this just micharacterizes the role of women's work in livelihoods? cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children are all sisyphean tasks that have to be repeated the next day. these are important, but not the whole picture. when we include all kinds of fiberwork—and other things, such as making candles or soap—women's work looks much more like manufacturing, a sphere we now associate more with men's work. i feel like women's connection to making and craftsmanship is often elided.
Nah pop off queen you hit it.
Since we're getting into "did you know that Santa's eight tiny reindeer are a reference to the eight legs of Odin's steed?" season once again, remember: while there are some elements of Christmas (or Hallowe'en, or Easter, or...) observations that are probably pre-Christian in origin, before one believes any of that this-is-really-100%-just-a-Pagan-holiday-with-the-serial-numbers-filed-off stuff, one must consider all of the following possibilities:
Our earliest known records of the cited pre-Christian practices were written down by some random Christian monk centuries after the fact, and we genuinely have no idea how accurate this account is, to what extent the apparent similarities with Christian practice are due to the author deliberately or unwittingly putting a Christian spin on it, or indeed, whether they were just making shit up.
The similarities between the two sets of practices have been exaggerated or misrepresented by Christian writers who were bent for prefiguration theology (i.e., the idea that the Bible echoes backwards in time and pre-Christian religious practices were unwittingly imitating future Christian practices).
The similarities between the two sets of practices have been exaggerated or misrepresented by Protestant writers who believe that all Pagan deities are Satan in disguise, so they think that if they can prove that Catholic practices are secretly Pagan in origin, that proves that Catholics are secretly Satanists.
The similarities between the two sets of practices have been exaggerated or misrepresented by overzealous mythographers trying to prove that all mythology and religion throughout all of human history is secretly a single unified monomyth; if it's pre-Victorian, expect shades of prefiguration theology, while if it's post-Victorian, expect a lot of stuff about the Collective Unconscious.
A bunch of 19th Century proto-Fascists were trying to construct a pre-Jewish cultural identity (and considered Christianity to be tainted by association), but didn't want to give up any of the fun rituals, so they made some shit up about how it was still okay to do Christmas because something something Odin, or whatever.
A bunch of early 20th Century Pagan reconstructionists filled in the gaps in their understanding of pre-Christian ritual with culturally Christian assumptions, then turned around and pointed at their own accidentally Christianised reconstructions as evidence that Christian practices are derived from them.
A bunch of late 20th Century self-help manual authors tried to break into the occult bookstore market by uncritically repeating any or all of the above.
Someone on the Internet just made it up.
The Witch and the Moon
— by majara__
Naturalists have got to be one of the groups of people most susceptible to being tricked by the fae. Travellers these days are much less likely to follow a mysterious light or the smell of roast beef into the forest. Meanwhile, find me a naturalist who would not completely lose themself in pursuit of:
An unidentifiable bird call
A butterfly that’s slightly off-color
An opossum with its head stuck in a yogurt tub
A really big woodpecker
The Fae better be fuckin ready to be tagged and fitted with a Radio Collar for Science then, I got new hiking boots and no other ideas for research grant money.
it’s called fashion, sweaty
He’s never living this down
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Bree’s Simple Runes
Okay, so I was catching up on my reading today, and came across a set of simple instructions for creating witches’ runestones in Kate West’s “The Real Witches’ Book of Spells and Rituals.” The author recommends a set of eight simple symbols painted onto pebbles or disks and cast to find the answers to questions.
Drawing from this idea, I decided to make a simple set for myself and test them out. I haven’t had much luck with tarot or oracle cards, and ogham sticks have been similarly baffling. So one Sharpie and a handful of small mirror discs later, I had my own homemade runestones.
My artistic skills are hella lacking, but I managed to make clear representations of 20 different symbols with meaning for me, and I recorded each of their meanings in my witchbook. (Keep in mind that the following associations are ENTIRELY personal to me and may not agree with or reflect the opinions of others.)
The Sun - Solar, masculine, energy, glory, favorable outlook
The Moon - Lunar, feminine, dreams, intuition, magic
The Leaf - Nature, growth, fertility, health, renewal
The Coin - Chance, wealth, opportunity, luck
The Arrow - Inspiration, Brighid, “look forward,” “forge ahead”
The Harp - Pleasure, Lugh, skill, cleverness, “be crafty”
The Hammer - Protection, Thor, courage, will, “hold strong”
The Teardrop - Choices, Freyja, a journey, “look elsewhere, “search”
The Serpent - Ambition, desire, greed, career
The Spears - Conflict, trials, suffering, illness
The Dagger - Unseen danger, betrayal, a plot, meddlers
The Rings - Unity, harmony, friendship, love, family
The Cat - Independence, serenity, secrets
The Dog - Loyalty, affection, playfulness
The Cauldron - Power, creation, wisdom
The Wand - Influence, directness, proximity, “it is near”
The Spiral - Introspection, confusion, the unknown
The Feather - Release, relief, lightness, escape
The Web - Caution, entrapment, unseen foe, complication, consequence
The Broom - “Start over,” cleanse, banish, re-evaluate
I made a simple casting board with four quadrants - Then, Now, Future, and Within. And with my cheap-o little mirror discs, I did two castings.
The results were clear as a bell and eerily accurate.
I don’t know if it’s the fact that I made the pieces myself, or if it’s the use of symbols that are my own instead of someone else’s, but this set really WORKS for me. And anyone who’s followed me for a fair length of time knows that I am utterly shite with divination.
So for all my witchlings who want to learn divination but are struggling with learning tarot or runes or what-have-you, give this a try! Pick up some discs or pebbles, something with two definite sides, grab a marker or some paints, and make your own set of runes. (Hell, if you can’t draw, you can even use stamps or stickers.)
Use symbols that have meaning for you, and record them in your witchbook or journal. Cast them how you please and read the ones that land face-up.
Have fun!
I’ve been told that this is more akin to lithomancy, though I’ve only ever used wooden or glass discs for my casting set. (Lithomancy specifically refers to stones.) I’m continuing to call them personal runes, since a rune isn’t just a letter in a futhark alphabet, but also a mark or symbol with magical meaning, and “casting the runes” has also been applied to divination of this type in a historical sense.
I definitely recommend the creation of a personal divination set as an exercise for growing your craft. If you’d like more witchcraft exercises, you can find them on this post.
If you’re enjoying my content, please feel free to drop a little something in the tip jar or check out my published works on Amazon or in the Willow Wings Witch Shop. 😊
a graph based on my observations
I would like to apply a Dolly Parton quote to this most excellent graph.
Halloween cat
shadow of the past
photography by dream in ether
Where giants once lived
a cottage full of vines + old books , what a dream 🌿