Merry Ostara!
cherry valley forever
Not today Justin
YOU ARE THE REASON
No title available
tumblr dot com
Show & Tell
Cosimo Galluzzi
Mike Driver

PR's Tumblrdome

oozey mess
noise dept.

pixel skylines
ojovivo

No title available

izzy's playlists!

blake kathryn
we're not kids anymore.
Keni
macklin celebrini has autism
Stranger Things
seen from Argentina

seen from Brazil
seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy
@blossoming-dawn
Merry Ostara!
From Witchtober this year, prompt: tools
What do you think?…
Prompt: Tools
I'm just a girl, Gurella Gardening in the name of Lady Persephone
Hellenistic bronze sculpture of Hermes. Now in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Photo credit: LACMA.
I think what I love most about mythology is that the “Trickster God/Spirit” is an archetypical character found in almost every body of folklore. It’s like “Oh, here’s our God of the Sun, our God of the Sea, our God of Fertility, and our God of Being A Wretched Little Gremlin Who Causes Problems On Purpose”
Restarted my money bowl, you know what that means!
[Smash cut to me standing and watching a bunch of things burning in a bowl for nearly ten straight minutes]
And yes, I did stand too close and get a face full of heat, smoke, and basil when I tried to blow them out. But I blew them out regardless.
I did also eat some of the basil by accident but sometimes you need to eat your spell to make it work.
consumption is a magical act. more folks should eat their spells
Considering a lot of people want to eat their Blorbos, it makes sense to eat your spells. Brings it all closer.
Nazis will never be welcome in paganism. They have no space in our communities, we will have a zero tolerance policy when it comes to nazis. You have no right to the cultures, gods and religions you hijack to spread your disgusting ideologies. You will find no refuge or comraderie amongst pagans.
Reblog to let nazis know they’re not welcome here.
Ykw?? Imma start calling inconveniences curses now.
My period?? That's definitely a curse.
Migraines?? I'm cursed today!!
My roomies inability to remember to turn off the stove when she's done cooking?? A curse.
My partners weird infliction of never being able to put down a blanket without it tangling?? Curse.
Everyone's got tiny curses. No one's gotta cast them but they are curses to me now
Ykw?? Imma start calling inconveniences curses now.
Tried to figure out how I've been running these things and I came up with this
SO MUCH THIS. it drives me up a fucking WALL when people call male witches wizards
my take on this
I drew some dividers inspired by Greek goddesses, feel free to use them if you like it! (credit given would be appreciated)
Hera
Hestia
Demeter
Aphrodite
Athena
Artemis
Persephone
Okay, okay, so many of you wanted more stuff with Helios
Take him 🧑🍳✨
(Be advised that this is UPG/opinion/interpretation)
This comic, for me, beautifully illustrates the relation between Olympian* Gods and Titans/Primordial Deities.
Helios is immensely powerful in a way that dwarfs even Apollo, because Helios is the Sun. He is the cosmic celestial body around which all planets in our solar system orbit. Whereas Apollo is sunlight - he is the Sun on Earth, the warmth and visibility provided to its inhabitants.
Similar to how Selene is the Moon, but Diana is the Moon’s effects and interpretation through the eyes of humanity.
Gaia and Demeter.
Ouranos and Zeus.
Oceanus and Poseidon.
I just think it’s so beautiful - the depth and complexity to be found within our pantheon 🕯️
- Aön
*I know the title of “Olympian” is not always accurate and that a lot of practitioners have opinions about the label. I am open to other labels if anyone has suggestions - Olympian was just the best one I could think of at this time.
Why is Wicca not a preferred way of practice? I’ve read a couple of posts, and Wicca isn’t favored.
Moral puritanism and performative outrage, plain and simple. There's nothing inherently wrong with Wicca or Wiccans. Some people in the community just aren't doing the work and seem to think that decolonizing our thinking begins and ends with screaming BOYCOTT at anything they deem even remotely reprehensible.
Let's do some of the work and dig a little deeper, shall we?
The main complaint is that Wicca started with people who had problematic worldviews and has had some growing pains and issues with racism, sexism, cultural appropriation, and bad actors in the community as it has evolved, reaching into the present day.
But here's the thing - SHOW ME A RELIGION THAT DOESN'T HAVE THESE PROBLEMS SOMEWHERE IN ITS' HISTORY OR CURRENT CULTURE. GO AHEAD, I'LL WAIT.
It's neither fair nor reasonable to judge a religion based on its' beginnings, or to dismiss the ability of a community to grow and evolve over time, or to pretend that the modern witchcraft movement doesn't owe a large part of its' existence to Wicca. Like it or not, if it weren't for Wiccans, we wouldn't have the kind of organization or recognition that we do, nor would we have had certain landmark legal cases that led to pagans being able to claim the protection of law against religious discrimination in the States.
(And because someone somewhere is going to demand the encyclopedia answer - This is not to discount the contributions of other groups, but the historical fact remains that the people responsible for the foundations of Wicca kickstarted the movement in the UK and subsequent practitioners brought it into public view in a positive light during the counterculture movements of the 1950s and 1960s. And it was Wicca that was first pagan religion in the US to be recognized and therefore included under the constitutional guarantee of religious freedom. This does not change the CULTURAL AND SOCIETAL response to witchcraft or paganism, or the problems that witches and pagans still face in other places, only the presence of civil rights that were not there before. And that has, in fact, contributed to an increase in wider normalization and acceptance. We may not owe EVERYTHING to Wicca and Wiccans, but we would not be where we are as a movement or a community without them.)
Not to mention, Wicca hasn't even been around for a whole century yet and already it's being judged like it has the same kind of cultural and political clout that, oh say, Christianity does in much of the Western world. And it's no coincidence that a good number of the criticisms leveled at Wiccans are the same ones flung at Christians.
Wicca DOES have a strong influence on modern witchcraft, because Wicca and Wiccans were such a big part of the foundation of the movement. Furthermore, many of the published works viewed as standard beginner texts were written by Wiccans or heavily influenced by Wiccan ideas and concepts. Admittedly, there was a tendency for quite some time to think of Wicca and Wiccan tenets as the default for modern witchcraft, and now that we're moving away from that and discovering just how much of our thinking relies on that framework and the ideas present within it, there's backlash happening.
It's important to try and decolonize your thinking as much as possible when it comes to witchcraft. But that involves more work and more effort than just pointing fingers and broadly condemning anything remotely problematic or anything that's ever been touched or influenced by people whose moral and ethical codes don't pass muster under a modern lens. We cannot and should not expect people from 50+ years ago to toe the line when people living today can't even do so reliably.
So to wrap it all up - there's nothing wrong with Wicca and there's nothing wrong with being Wiccan. We are none of us completely unproblematic and until we address the fact that issues with racism, sexism, manipulation, cultural appropriation, and so forth exist in MANY parts of the modern witchcraft and pagan community, we don't get to tar and feather any one group. A bit of critical thinking and self-reflection, and a great deal of Knowing Our Own History, is the key to moving forward here.
Because until the people voicing these complaints most loudly can realize the head-splitting irony of condemning Wicca in one breath and celebrating the Wheel of the Year or venerating a Maiden-Mother-Crone-model goddess in the next, we're not actually getting anywhere.
Anyway, I hope this helps to answer some of your questions. For more information, I highly recommend reading Margot Adler's "Drawing Down The Moon" and Ronald Hutton's "Triumph of the Moon" for a more comprehensive overview of the history of the modern witchcraft movement. Both are written from an outside scholar's perspective and are presented as research rather than rhetoric. Part of knowing where we are and deciding where to go next is knowing where we started and where we've been, after all.
I did a tarot reading for the first time in years just to see if I still had it and I do! Of course
But uggghhh.. this morning Aphrodite ripped me a new one.
Harvest
Small Aphrodite altar / pocket shrine inspiration 🐚🤍🪞💒