19yr old practictioner of eastern esotericism. free readings! i offer tarot, oracle, and yes/no divination sessions. i'm working on learning lenormand and using a hermits bag for divination as well!
statements and behaviors such as the ones displayed below are the reason practitioners of color do not feel comfortable in pagan/witchy spaces. allowing it to go unchallenged is complicity
i highlighted the most concerning statements, chief among them her idea that there is a “white country”.
this is white nationalist rhetoric and will not be tolerated. if you agree with the sentiments @/songofthemermaid29 expressed, i encourage you to take a quiet exit the from this community while you reevaluate these beliefs and challenge yourself to be better.
getting into looking for signs and omens but i’m not really sure what to start. i want to be able to ask my ancestors for validation that im communicating with them and want a sign, but im stuck on what to ask for. what do you guys typically look for or ask for?
I love tradition, rules, and antiquity in my practice, but I’d like to take a moment to list a lot of modern comforts I love:
- E-offerings (I love seeing baby HelPols and HelPols that have been practicing for years do these!)
- The occasional junk food offering to the gods
- Pinterest boards
- The accessibility that the internet and social media have brought to this wonderful religion
I may be a hard ass and I may have harsh opinions sometimes, and I’m trying to work on it, but I love our community so much. Everyone’s worship looks a little different, but we’re all here for each other and doing the best with the information we’re given.
a page from my grimoire i did on the plane. recently have been reading up on buddhism and the laughing buddha really resonates with me. the concept of true happiness coming from generosity, kidness, and the wisdom is something im reflecting on currently
my temporary travel altar with stuff i got here in puerto rico! ganesha is here with some good luck bells, a shell i found, and incense burner! stuffs a lot cheaper here, the ganesha was 5$which i felt was pretty good idk
Your altar doesn’t have to look aesthetic. A chipped mug with flowers, a rock from your walk, or a photo that feels sacred to you is more powerful than anything in a witchy Pinterest board.
finding your own correspondences is more powerful than buying and i say that as a someone who does buy witchy products. use your natural abilities to intuit the anima of each item to decide what they can do.
I want to know from the more experienced witches in here wtf is my problem, cause every time I make a spell for myself for abudance, instead of money I attract guys in a romantic way. I mean I'm doing something wrong? What should I do? Is not what I wanted, I wanted money, like you know more job oportunities to work more.
Autumn Allies: Charms, Spells, Divination, and Plant Magic; Part 1
by Keziah Zibelmann
Autumn evokes thoughts of fallen leaves, barren trees, foggy mornings, and rainy nights, of damp earth, of browns and oranges and reds, of gray skies and shortening days, and of the beginning of the dark half of the year. It's a season often associated with death and dormancy, and while this is a fair association, it is also true to say that autumn is a season just as abundant with plant allies as spring and summer. With vegetables, nuts, herbs, and trees aplenty, autumn is an oft overlooked season offering bounty for practitioners of witchcraft, magic, and herbalism.
In this piece, you’ll find a collection of some of the natural allies and tools autumn has to offer, as well as possible uses for these allies. May this article serve all those who make use of it, and stay tuned for part 2.
[NOTE: The majority of these practices and beliefs were taught to me by my maternal grandparents and extended family members I grew up around. I'm from a multi-cultural family in the Southern US, so these customs will likely be a hodgepodge of practices similar or identical those within Southern folk traditions and traditions from Europe, particularly Central European, some Eastern European, and Irish and British traditions. While my main source of this piece is lived experience and things picked up from family and friends growing up, I will include a further reading section at the end of this post including books and/or articles that touch on similar practices.]
ACORNS
Acorns, gifts from the oak tree, are nuts with many magical uses. From luck, abundance, and fertility work, to being used for protection or as offerings, one shouldn't overlook these nuts.
Luck & Abundance:
Acorns are associated with luck and bounty in many folk beliefs and can be used in various ways to attract good fortune and abundance, as well as to foretell about such matters.
Acorns can be carried on one's person as luck charms, or can be worn from necklaces to bring luck as well. You'll also find metal acorn charms for just that purpose, as even the symbol or likeness of an acorn is believed to bring luck.
Planting an acorn (from which oak trees grow) during a new moon is believed to be a blessing for one's wealth and money, and can ensure that more money will always come to you than will leave you.
My grandmother always told me that if you find an acorn on your property when you have no oak trees (likely brought by a squirrel, chipmunk, or the like, though she also told me that sometimes they were gifts from land spirits), this was a good omen and a sign that good fortune was on its way for the household.
If one is currently seeking a new job, a promotion, a pay raise, to start one's own business, or any other endeavor that involves money, they can use acorns to foretell if the outcome of such an endeavor or hope will be in their favor or not. This can be done when one comes across fallen acorns by counting the whole, healthy acorns and then counting the broken, eaten, rotten, or otherwise damaged acorns.
-If there were several more healthy acorns than bad ones, what you seek will easily be yours.
-If there were several more bad acorns, there is no hope at all of gaining what you seek.
-If there are more healthy acorns by a small margin, it's likely you'll succeed, but you should put in extra work to ensure as much.
-Likewise, if there are more bad acorns by a small margin, it's more likely you'll fail, but this isn't yet a sure thing and you can still try to turn it around in your favor.
Keeping an acorn as a charm to attract abundance comes from the acorn being a symbol of growth and fertility. Due to this, acorns can be potent allies to incorporate in your abundance work. They can be included in money bowls or bags, or in bag or sachet spells centered around financial matters or growing one's business.
Protection:
It's said keeping acorns in one's home can grant protection from many things, including malevolent forces and spirits, bad luck, and bad weather. This is said to be done by keeping acorns near the front door (some say to tie the acorn from a string and hang it from the doorframe or on the door itself, and others say to keep an acorn or acorns on any credenza or table one may have in their entryway.
Acorns can be included in bag or sachet spells for protection, especially if one is seeking protection from illness or misfortune.
Health & Fertility:
As acorns, like the oak trees they come from, have long been used as symbols of fertility, growth, and longevity, it's no surprise that they can be put to good use in any spells or magical workings centered around health and fertility.
An acorn kept beneath one's pillow or bed, particularly if one feels as if they may be coming down with something, is said to ward off illness from taking root.
For those seeking a boost of fertility, wearing an acorn charm or keeping an acorn under "the marital bed" (old language from old charms, but an acorn can be placed under any bed on which "the deed is to be done") is believed to help with fertility over all.
Some spells call for carrying an acorn in one's pocket to help boost fertility.
According to my grandfather, gifting a groom with an acorn on the day of his wedding or placing an acorn in the bridal bouquet can be a blessing for fertility or a blessing for a good sex life.
APPLES
These fall favorites are a wonderfully versatile and powerful ally to keep in one's magical arsenal. Apples can be used for divination and in spells and amulets for protection, luck, inspiration, love, and more! In fact, apples offer so many possibilities that I've written entire pieces exclusively about the use of apples in magic — Apple Magic: Using Apples in Spells & Divination and the Apple in Myth: Deities, Figures, & Lore — and they've made numerous appearances in some of my other articles. Apples really are that useful! Here are just a few examples of some of the ways in which you can utilize apples in your craft —
Love:
Apples have long been used in love spells and love divining. This can be done in a number of very simple ways.
To encourage someone to love you or to secure a long-lasting, harmonious relationship with someone, cut an apple in half and split the apple between the two of you, each of you eating one half.
There are many methods of divining about love that involve apples, particularly in folk traditions.
-One of the best known involves peeling the apple and tossing the peel over one's shoulder (usually the left shoulder). One then goes to look at the peel on the floor. Whatever letter the peel most resembles is said to be the first initial of one's soulmate.
-Another method of love divination used to foretell one's soulmate calls for standing in a dark room (usually at midnight) with a candle in front of the mirror. Eat an apple whilst standing in front of the mirror. As you eat the apple, a vision of one's soulmate is said to appear at one's shoulder in the reflection of the mirror.
-Another simple and common way of divining the identity of one's soulmate with an apple is to twist the stem of the apple. With each twist, go through a letter of the alphabet (i.e. the first twist is 'A', the second twist is 'B,' and so on). When the stem breaks from the apple, whatever letter you were on is said to be the first letter of your soulmate's first name.
Apple seeds and apple trees can also be used as charms to preserve, encourage, and protect love.
-My grandmother learned from her grandfather that a newlywed couple should plant an apple tree together in the yard of their first marital home (and, preferably, at every home to follow). As the trees grow and thrive, so shall the love, and the roots of the trees are, he claimed, able to trap any negativity that could come for the couple and prevent it from reaching the home, snaring the trouble in their roots beforehand.
-Apple seeds can be included in sachet spells for attracting or preserving love.
-Apple seeds can also be used in spells and charms for bringing harmony in a relationship.
Money & Luck:
Apple seeds can be potent little features in money spells, such as money bowls and money jars.
A dried apple seed can be carried in one's wallet or purse as a charm to attract money or luck with money.
Those seeking good news about a money matter (such as about a pay raise, promotion, inheritance, or settlement) can use apple seeds both as charms to bring the money in and to divine if they'll be successful in the matters.
-To bring the money in, apple seeds can be place in one's sock or shoe whilst they're putting in work in regards to the matter (such as whilst one is interviewing or applying for a promotion, whilst one is filing paperwork or replying to messages, phone calls, or emails pertaining to the matter, or whilst one is speaking to their lawyer or accountant).
-To divine if you'll be successful in attaining the money (or to tell if the money will be a large or measly sum), cut an apple down the middle and inspect the seeds. If there are 5 or more seeds, this is seen as a good and positive omen, but if the seeds are small or look unhealthy (i.e. feature mold or are ill formed somehow), this is a bad sign and can mean that the money incoming will be delayed, will not ever reach you, or will be an insignificant amount. If there are a lot of seeds, this is seen as a very good sign that the money will come in and will serve you even more than you anticipated it would.
To foretell if one will have good luck in a new endeavor, cut an apple down the middle and count the seeds within. An even number is a good sign, while an odd number is a bad sign.
To have an apple tree growing on one's property is said to be a sign that the household will know wealth and abundance.
Protection:
Apple seeds can be used to protect from unwanted spirits or ghosts. Keep apple seeds in a jar or bowl in your home and, when an unwelcome spirit makes an appearance, grab a handful of seeds and throw them in the direction of the spirit. This is believed to quickly banish them.
Apple seeds can be included in sachets and bag spells used to ward off nightmares.
Similarly, apple seeds are often used in spells (especially in container spells or to form rings around candles in candle spells) for protection.
Cutting Ties:
Apples are used in this very simple spell for cutting ties between two people (from Apple Magic: Using Apples in Spells & Divination).
What you’ll need:
an apple
a knife
(optional) a marker
So, you want to cut ties with someone in your life? This spell will aid in severing the bonds between you and that person, as well as cast distance between you.
What to do:
-Take your apple and either carve your name into one side of the apple or, if you’d prefer, write your name on one side of the apple using a marker. Then turn the apple to the other side and carve or write the name of the person you wish to separate from.
-With your name on one side and theirs on the opposite side, take a knife and cut the apple down the middle. This symbolically severs the bonds between you.
-To cast further distance and create space between you, bury the apple halves on opposite sides of a street or body of water.
CARROT
Carrots have long been associated with fertility and virility, most likely due to their rather phallic appearance.
["Garden carrot" from the Juliana Anicia Codex (6th century AD).]
Fertility:
Carrots should be grown on one's property to increase one's sexual virility.
One can roast whole carrots and serve them to their bedmate to encourage a "rise in passions."
Carrot seeds can be included in sachet or bag spells to promote fertility.
Place carrot seeds in a small bag or fold them up in a piece of cloth and keep them beneath your pillow to boost one's fertility and chances of becoming pregnant.
FEVERFEW
Protection & Health:
Dried or fresh feverfew can be used in spells for protection, particularly protection from illnesses, injuries, and accidents. They can be included in protection pouches or sachets, or can be carried as a charm in one's purse, wallet, or pocket.
Feverfew flowers can be cut and kept at the bedside of someone who wishes to ward off illness if they feel at risk of coming down with something.
My grandfather tells me that putting feverfew flowers in one's shirt pocket works as a charm to repel illness, especially if that illness is magic-sent (such as via baneful working).
LEMON BALM
Love:
Lemon balm can be carried on one's person or pinned to one's clothes to attract love.
If there is someone in the home wishing to attract a partner or marriage, planting lemon balm on the property can aid in doing so.
If one has a particular person in mind for themselves, one should write the name of their love on a lemon balm leaf. That leaf can be used in love workings (sachets or bag spells, especially) to encourage that person to notice the worker.
-Alternatively, the leaf can be placed beneath the pillow and slept on to bring about a dream in which the person whose name you've written will appear. Should they appear facing you, they have interests in you as well; but if they appear with their back to you, your feelings are unrequited.
[by Otto Wilhelm Thomé, in Flora von Deutschland Österreich und der Schweiz (1885).]
Healing:
Dried lemon balm or lemon balm incense can be burned to promote healing and cleansing or to guard against illness entering a space.
Burning dried lemon balm in either herbal bundles or loose is recommended after one has been ill in the home to cleanse the home of any lingering negativity brought about by the sickness.
Protection:
Feverfew is also carried as a charm of protection while traveling. This can be done by wearing feverfew flowers or leaves on one's person (preferably pinned to the inside of one's clothes or kept in one's pocket, sock, or shoe).
ONION
Onions offer a variety of uses in witchcraft, with many folk magical uses in particular.
Protection:
Growing onion on one's property is believed to ward away negativity or ill intentions sent one's way by someone.
Growing onion on one's property is also said to provide protection from evil forces.
Placing an onion on one's windowsill (some call for piercing the onion with pins, needles, or tacks beforehand) is believed to ward away evil; the onion, my grandmother says, acts as a magnet for the evil and malevolence, soaking it up into the onion instead of letting it impact the household.
For protection against illness or evil eye you suspect may have been sent to your home, my grandmother's grandfather recommends cutting an onion into quarters and placing one quarter in each corner of the home. This is believed to draw the evil or illness into the onions, forming a protective barrier to the household. *CAUTION: Do not leave onions down where animals may ingest them.
My grandmother also recommends to protect from depression or to stop a depressive spell from worsening, to cut an onion in half and place the halves across the room from one another, facing each other, in whatever room the person suffering with depression is in. She says the onion draws out the worst of the negativity. The onion should then be discarded, as it has soaked the depressive energy into itself.
Onions, like garlic, can be strung at windows, doorframes, on doors, or on porches to serve as a protective charm, warding away evil, baneful workings, harmful spirits, and even disease and illness.
Onions can be used to cast out evil entities from an area. This can be done by either cutting an onion in quarters and, as in the above scenario, placing those quarters in the four corners of the area, or by hanging onions up either in a bag, from a string, or by their own stalks at the four corners of the area or at the main entrances to the area.
Onions still attached to their stalks can be used to cast out evil spirits or entities as well. This is done by walking, starting from a door or corner, the perimeter of the area, swinging the onion in front of your body in 'X' motions. My grandmother says some swing the onion by the stalk, while some swing the stalk through the air by the onion. Once you've made a complete circuit around the perimeter of the area (this can be done while chanting or reciting incantations or prayers of protection), the onion should be posted by its stalk from the doorframe or corner at which you started walking.
One can braid onion stalks together and keep the braid on their bedpost or under their bed to protect from evil and illness whilst they sleep.
[Woodcut print of a onion, from Hortus Sanitatis (1547).]
Money & Fortune:
My grandfather assures me that finding a sprouting onion in your stash is a favorable omen, a sign that money or a turn of good fortune is soon to find its way to you.
Dreams:
Onions are said to be able to bring about prophetic dreams.
-One method calls for eating an onion-heavy meal before bed.
-Another method calls for biting directly into a raw onion and eating that bite before bed.
-And still another method recommends sleeping with an onion beneath one's pillow or bed.
Please see the soon upcoming Autumn Allies, Part 2 for more!
FURTHER READING:
Culpeper's Complete Herbal: Consisting of a Comprehensive Description of Nearly All Herbs (1880) - Culpeper, Nicholas
Cunningham's Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs (2008) - Cunningham, Scott
Doctoring the Devil: Notebooks of an Appalachian Conjure Man (2021) - Richards, Jake
The Fortune Telling Book: Reading Crystal Balls, Tea Leaves, and Everyday Omens of Love and Luck (2000) - Kemp, Gillian
The Good Spell Book: Love Charms, Magical Cures, and Other Practical Sorcery (1997-1999) - Kemp, Gillian