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@divining-the--wheel
Up until recently I believed love spells to be something only found in books & movies & even then they often didn't go as planned. You tend to mention them a lot in passing on this blog. I was wondering about how much influence they actually have. There is this person I am in love with & I would love to have a chance with them but I believe that if they haven't seriously friendzoned me that they probably see me more as a sister. Although we are great friends, romantically fear he's way out of my
league. Could a love spell really change all of that?! And to what extent? If a person is set on seeing you a certain way. Set on loving another as their girlfriend & loving you as just a friend, could a love spell change that? Uproot their way of thinking so that is more in line with my desires? It’s just knowing the person the way I know them that seems so… impossible. I guess what I am asking is… is do people sometimes resist love spells? If so how? And is there a way around it?
Love spells have a bad rep because they can be very messy if they’re not handled well and they’re not always the kindest option. In fact, they are most often quite forceful. There are ways to make gentler love spells, but the ones that I’m asked for aren’t always those kinds. Love spells can have a lot of power. But love spells are just magic. Magic is only ever as good as the magician casting it. You can give a potent love spell to a beginner witch, but it doesn’t mean the spell will be incredibly successful. You can also give a beginner spell to a skilled witch and they can make that target person completely submit. Yes, love spells can make people fall to their hands and knees in worship, but if it happens, it’s because the witch who cast it knows what they’re doing. It takes witch fire and skill.
Now, can a subject resist a spell? Absolutely, and it can create a very messy situation if they do. Love enchantments that roll right off of someone are not often because that person is resisting them, it’s simply the sign of a spell with some sort of flaw. Potent love spells will bewitch whoever the target is and make them drool over whomever the caster intends. Spells that are in-between cause complications. The feelings have penetrated the mind, they exist, but they aren’t loud enough to put that person under. Sometimes, they can fight it and kick the spell out. Other times, they will become quite frustrated because they don’t necessarily want the feelings, but they’re there and can’t get rid of them. And sometimes, they will eventually concede to the spell and follow the feelings, despite the fact that (unbeknownst to them) they are artificial. This also all depends on the person being put under the spell. A person with a strong will can be difficult to enchant. Love spells, if done right, can be effective and painless. Broad love spells, not well directed, can create a mess. Find the missing scale on the belly of the beast and shoot Cupid’s arrow. A strong arm and good aim will guide it.
If someone wants to use love magic on another they 100% don’t really love this person, it’s an obsessive attraction, nothing more. If one loves another they’ll only be disgusted by this very idea because first - it’s violence, and second - “feelings” caused by magic are not real. They would never want that, they’d want them to love them back naturally.
I’d say the only good way in this case is to make the other person see all the good things about you and/or draw their attention to you. There is absolutely no violence here as you only show a person what they probably wouldn’t have noticed otherwise, but then it’s up to them if they’ll develop feelings for you or not. And if they’ll do, these feelings will be genuine. And this is obviously more precious than synthetic version forced by magic.
Forcing someone to do/feel something is never a good solution in any case as things will eventually go back to where they should be. No matter how strong magic is, the Universe is always stronger.
And before doing anything to another ask yourself if you want this to be done to you. If the answer is no, think twice.
Love magic doesn’t always wear off. A very skilled witch could make it permanent. A love spell can change the person permanently. Though it isn’t really common, it happens. The Universe is not adverse unless it is made so. If a spirit, deity, or magician wishes to undo the spell, it will have forces pushing against it. If not, it will stay put until its influence fades. Not all spells fade. Some spells last generations. No force of magic bending another person’s perception will really be considered ‘ethical’. Even if you make that person ‘see’ you, and see all your good qualities, it’s still dishonesty. It’s drawing their attention away from something else, especially the negative qualities you have. It’s hard to say that certain spells are ‘bad’ and others aren’t. We live in a world with so many shades of good and evil that it’s sometimes indistinguishable. Are love spells good? For some people, they are. Are they moral? Not always. They can be. You can draw a person to you with all the qualities you wish and who would love you in return. You can hope and pray that someone who could love you will find you. Love isn’t always a force for good. Love can make people blind and drunk. Love magic reflects that. It’s dangerous, chaotic, and primal. It’s when the heart rushes too fast and the blood burns too hot. It’s when feeling overtakes reason. It’s the rush of yearning when one realizes that their dream of having the love they want is right in front of them. And it is a rush. It’s a rush to be the recipient of it and it’s a rush to cast, even for others. It isn’t righteous, it isn’t diabolical. It simply is. Roses bloom from stalks full of needles, but is the hand or the branch that is evil?
There are many ways and reasons to cast love spells. It’s a very broad category of magic. Some are more widely considered ethical than others, but morality is subjective. Is it more or less ethical to cast a glamour on oneself to appear more physically attractive to all observers, vs. enchanting a specific person to see you as more physically attractive? Is there even any difference in ultimate effect to the person you particularly want to attract? Basically – witch by your own rules. If something feels morally wrong to you, you should not do it. That doesn’t mean you have the objectively correct moral stance for everyone and the perfect clarity of vision to know other people’s circumstances well enough to judge them accurately. Also, witch with an awareness of possible consequences. If your love spell is likely to leave you feeling anxious and unfulfilled in the relationship knowing that the other person might never have had natural feelings toward you, consider that before you decide on casting it.
Feelings cannot be permanent even if they’re natural. People love each other, and in years they don’t. We all change, everything changes, nothing is solid and forever, especially when it comes to feelings.
Magic cannot change the person, the essence of who they are, it can only change the perception of something/someone which is an illusion. It is not all powerful, we live in the real world, not a fantasy one. And in this real world humans are just a tiny part of the universe(s), so tiny we hardly even exist in it’s scale. Even the most powerful magic a human being is capable of won’t stand against it if something needs to be altered or is not supposed to happen. I don’t mean spirits or deities (if one believes in them) but something much greater. True, the Universe is not adverse, it just is.
Sure, bending perception of another isn’t ethical. But there is a huge difference between harmless glamour and forcing someone to love you (though it won’t be real, obviously).
The word “love” is extremely often misused in modern world and it has already lost it’s true meaning for many. This is why I said if one truly loves, they’ll never wish to bend the will of another anyhow, they’ll want that person to be happy, whether it is with them or without.
I did love magic twice and it showed that something good will come out of it only if it’s giving a push to what’s already there (even if you don’t know that), not forcing something that isn’t. Violence is always violence, be it physical, psychological, or magical.
To the second reply. The common opinion on this site of morality being subjective buffles me to be honest and I don’t even want to start a discussion on this topic because it leads to nowhere.
It’s very simple: if you don’t want something to be done to you, don’t do it to another.
If you don’t want to start a discussion on it, don’t bring it up, yeah? It’s very simple. Your ethics are your own. Others will have theirs. But that’s the nice thing about witchery, isn’t it? Justice is a power entirely your own. I’m sorry to tell you, but yes, magic can change things irrevocably. I have a friend who is living proof of it. It isn’t always for illusion and perception. Are storms illusions? Misfortune and luck? Pregnancy? These are things that have been influenced by the witch’s art for ages. Not all magic is glamour and illusion. It certainly wasn’t when people were using it to protect mothers from dying at childbirth. It certainly isn’t when people were raising and laying storms. And it certainly doesn’t have to be now when someone wants to change something (provided they have the skill and power to do so). Don’t think that because your own experiences with love magic ended sadly that it always will. To base everyone’s experience around your own is illogical. The thing with love… it’s just an opinion. Some don’t even believe in it anymore. Some say love itself is an illusion. Some say it’s a myth.
Storms are surely not illusions, but humans definitely have nothing to do with them, they just happen and happened long before mankind. Some say they can disperse clouds. Well I can too, everyone can. Because clouds disperse naturally as well as storms, hurricanes, rain, drought and much more happens naturally. A lot of times when I want it to rain or to be sunny it happens. Magic? Hardly. But if it would happen after I made a spell plus to my wanting it would look like I did it. People often see what they want to see.
If magic can protect mother from dying at childbirth I wonder why such deaths were so common before. Not enough witches around? And If people are so powerful they can raise storms why do they still die and lose their homes in hurricanes and tornados? Why was famine such a massive problem for centuries? Just change the weather and the harvest is saved.
400-500 years ago and probably earlier it was common to blame storms (also child deaths, impotence, sterility, etc) on witches, because of the damage they caused to ships and harvest. It’s human psychology - people always need to find the guilty. But no one is and never was guilty, it’s just nature and life. And honestly I’m surprised some people in the 21st century actually believe those medieval superstitions to be true.
I understand it’s very appealing to believe people are so powerful, but if they were life would look differently.
Spare me the ‘poor, weak humans’ speech. I wouldn’t believe these things to be true if I hadn’t seen and experienced them throughout my life. Anything less would be blind faith. I’m sorry that you’ve don’t, can’t, or won’t see it. But I don’t need to explain these things. Those who have seen it and experienced it will know. Others will not. I won’t try to convince you otherwise, but do not preach on a subject that you don’t know. I’m not even talking about praxis, but history… History is another thing. Witches existed. Still do. Even if you don’t believe in their power, their practices remain.
#WhenMagicalPractitionersSayMagicIsntReal
Magic is real but it has it’s limits obviously. Otherwise, like I said, life would look differently.
But it’s funny how “you don’t know” is a typical reply if one doesn’t agree with someone.
It’s a reply when someone doesn’t know history, which is the most basic part of all of this. Jesus, put your face in a book and get it out of your ass. Or actually practice and learn a thing or two instead of making assumptions about the rest of the world and claiming you, the Moral Center of the Universe™, are correct.
Necromancy: Sing Them Awake
After receiving a few requests for a post on this and a bit of extra time, I decided to finally sit down and have a chat about necromancy. Since Biblical days, necromancy has been considered one of the most immoral magics that a magician could perform. The conjuration of souls which have passed through death’s gate was and still is considered a foul act. Fiddling with bones and whispering damnable words makes the skin crawl, and as it should. This is playing with death. The word necromancy refers to the act of divining through the use of the dead. Through the definition itself seems rather ambiguous, the act of necromancy is commonly illustrated through two methods within pop culture and common belief. The first is the actual raising of the body itself to utter secrets. The second is the raising of the soul to relay information. In actuality, the latter is true while the former remains to be a dramatization, though the magicians of some cultures use poison to temporarily paralyze and ‘revive’ people to simulate the creation of a zombie. The idea of what necromancy was changed over time. The suffix of the word was disregarded. In time, the practice of raising the dead, whether bodily or by spirit, was considered to be necromancy. Soon, the definition expanded further into being any magic that dealt in death and spirits of the dead. Necromancy has long been known to be quite a ceremonial art. Grimoires accounting for necromantic rituals give lucid instruction on how to follow the procedure for the most successful result, even giving counter incantations and workings for the possible failure or derailment of the working. Swords, knives, staffs, wands, and pointed weapons were used to command the spirits and force their compliance. Names of God, incantations in Hebrew and Latin (sometimes a corruption of both), and angelic invocation were also used for force compliance of a spirit. Circles and measures of protection were used to keep the magician safe in his efforts to raise the dead, especially for when the spirit was particularly malicious or violent.The ceremonies needed to be followed quite closely, lest the spirits be loosened and either attack the practitioner or flee. However, in places where folk magic flourished, other acts of necromancy became clear. In Northern countries, most acts to become a sorcerer or to gain supernatural power were done in graveyards or churchyards (which would act as a local graveyard for many small towns). In these rituals, the magician would ask the spirits of the dead to lease power or knowledge to them. It might even be suggested that a spirit within that graveyard might act as a future familiar spirit to the magician in question, teaching, serving, and acting as a connector to the Other World. However, even within the accounts of folk Necromancy, a sense of formality is still stressed. A ‘charmed ring’ as described in a tale called “The Ghost of Stythians” is used by a Cornish white witch to protect her client from the possible attacks of churchyard spirits that she intended to raise. Incantations in foreign tongues are accounted for. So too, powers beyond the magician are invoked to control the spirit and force compliance. In Germanic cultures, and later in Anglo-Saxon society, raising the dead was a magical act accounted for in both practice and in mythological source. Volvas, sorcerous Norse seeresses, were told to be raised by both gods and man alike to be asked for advice and tellings of the future. Later, in 10th Century Anglo Saxon England, King Edgar enacts a law that commands that people who live upon the land should drive out all known witches, wizards, and morthwyrtha. Morthwyrtha were people who venerated the dead, specifically, their beloved dead or ancestors. Though this practice was thought to be religious in some sense, it still retained necromantic connotations because it involved working with the dead. Just as witchcraft is, necromancy is a common magical practice found in nearly every culture. However, the method of practice is what makes it unique to each culture. Some traditions account for different methods, while other more rural customs account for others. Of course, the kind of necromancy being talked about makes these methods vary, as well as the kind of connotation it holds culturally. Ancestral Veneration- Is it necromancy? It depends on who you ask. Some will assert that it clearly fits the word’s meaning and definition, and thus clearly can be classified as a necromantic act. Others are less than convinced by this, arguing that necromancy has connotations that would suggest asserting magical dominance over the spirit in question rather than praying to it or venerating it in any way. What is clear is that it is a magical act that has been accounted for in many old tales and myths, most of which include questioning the spirit of an ancestor for guidance. This would, by definition, classify it as necromantic in some way. The way that many cultures partake in venerating their beloved dead is quite varied and at the same time, rather similar. Objects of focus are used to symbolize the dead, whether that be a photograph, one of their belongings, a gift from them to the practitioner, or an altar made in their name. They are fed with food, drinks, gifts, incense, etc. Then, they are prayed to by the practitioner. Cultural intricacies will individualize the practice, but those three steps are the most common in any practice that includes ancestral veneration. Mediumship- Much controversy is put around the claim that mediumship is necromancy. With the recent increase in popularity with the term, any purported relation to such an act as necromancy is vehemently struck down without consideration. It remains, however, that an act of necromancy is often coupled with some form of mediumship. To be a medium is to mediate between the living and the dead, often through a variety of forms. Classic mediums are possessed and relay information that way. Though, some hear or see the Dead, as with those with the Sight. It is popularly, and very broadly, considered to be the ability to perceive and communicate with spirits of the dead. Because it is so intrinsically tied up with spirits of dead folks and because it’s often used by people to gain information, it fits with the definition of necromancy. However, for it to be necromancy, it requires the dead to be summoned or called in some way. It is this act of magic which is found in most necromantic rites. Is it fair to call a gifted medium a necromancer? I would think not without context. If they were to use magic to summon the spirits which they mediate for, then I would be more inclined to believe it. The use of magic in the act of divining through the dead seems to be the indicator of whether it is necromancy or not. Acquisition of Sorcerous Power- As stated before, many rural magical traditions account for magicians acquiring power through the dead in a variety of means. Not only is it thought that the dead would act as helpers to this magicians, but they would be the current through which power would flow to the newly made sorcerer. Most of the workings accounted for take place on a Thursday, usually between the hours of midnight to two o’clock. Some account for going to a churchyard and taking metal from the church-bell and promising to return it in death. Others account for leaving things behind, like blood or gifts. One of the most popular methods, which is not bound to Northern cultures alone, is that of grave-sleeping. Sleeping upon a grave is thought to connect the living practitioner with the spirits of the dead within that place. Through them, power is allowed to flow to the practitioner, effectively making them a sorcerer. Bone Work- Less about the spirit which needs to be summoned and much more about the local spirits is bone work. Bone work involves a practice in which one seeks to commune with and, ultimately either help or control, the spirit found inside of the bones which they have found or been given. Though it is popularly believed now that the spirit completely leaves the bones upon death, the folklore of old is not so clean cut on its belief about death. The soul has parts. Some bits stay and some bits go. When a person, dead or not, leaves a bit of their body behind, it carries a part of their spirit. The rest of their spirit may be accessed and leveraged by the smaller part. This is the intrinsic nature of animism, which is ultimately the relationship between the micro and the macro. By working rites and magic over the bone, the magician is able to control the spirit which is already inside the bone, and effectively gaining contact with the rest of the spirit as well. Beyond this, the belief which is common across many cultures is that the material of bone itself provides connection to the dead. A single human skull may be used as a symbol and a bridge, allowing connection to ancestral spirits and shades. The skull of a fox might act as a go-between, a bridge between the Wild Unknown and the Living Order. It is through working with the bones that the magician is able to work with the spirits, whether native to its remains, or something connected to it in some way, shape, or form. Spirit-Raising- Without a doubt, this is certainly the most recognizable and identifiable acts of necromantic magic. In this, the magician is looking to bring the spirit of a dead individual to them and, presumably, answer their questions or bidding. Methods of this act vary greatly between traditions of magic and cultures, but the nature of the raising itself may also change the method. If perhaps the magician wishes to raise the spirit of a dead loved one, or with whom they are connected in some way, they may not approach the raising as any other necromantic act. In this, gentleness and coaxing is used to bring the spirit back to the magician. Incantations, food, and light can be beacons to the named spirit so that it might return successfully. The magician might also wish to raise the spirit of a man with whom they were not acquainted with in life or with whom we had quarreled with. In this case, a much different tone is undertaken. The spirit might show resistance to the magician and refuse their calls. The spirit might attack the magician for disturbing them. The spirit might attempt to flee. In any case, there is a great chance for issue and flaw. In this case, a much more traditional undertaking is likely to be taken up. Protective measures, likely a circle of some sort, are used to ensure the magician’s safety in this most trying operation. So too are tools or weapons are used for force and compulsion. A blasting rod with forked tongs, a black handled knife, a silver sword, a yew wand, or any number of such tools have been employed in the past for such tasks. Then, of course, comes the next part of the task which is to question the dead. Such tools of complement become of use again. The spirit must be compelled to speak the truth to the necromancer. After they do the magician’s will, they will be given the license to depart. Such an incantation will give the spirit freedom to leave the magician’s bonds, only under the condition that it will not harm anyone or anything on its way back to its place of origin. This is not a banishment and will not force a spirit to leave. Some spirits are intent upon staying, if for no other reason that to try to fight the magician’s will. Under such a circumstance, a banishment and exorcism of the space is required to force the spirit to return from where the magician summoned it. *** With these being some of the most popular forms of necromancy, there are also innumerable other examples of necromantic work. Given that the definition has widened so much into being magic that deals in spirits of the dead, it covers a broad spectrum of magical systems and traditions. Attending necromancy’s reputation of being one of the darkest arts is a large amount of caution which is issued with workings of that nature. Not all spirits will come forward of their own volition. Often times, classic necromantic workings are designed to force compliance. With that, the spirit might become enraged or wish to exact vengeance. A few things need to be taken into consideration before diving into this. Protection- When playing with spirits that are possibly malicious or could become violent, protection of some kind is always suggested. Most magicians will lay a circle of some kind to protect themselves from the powers that they seek to command. They will also carry with them talismans and charms which protect them from the touch of the summoned shades, but will not necessarily deter the working itself. Of course, the tools they carry are also a means of protection. Not only do these tools command such powers as those being summoned, but they act as weapons when the spirits attack or break loose of compulsion. Black handled knives, iron blades, water purified with silver and salt, staves and wands made of hazel or yew, etc. all prove effective as weapons against spirits of the dead. A combination of tools, glyphs, charms, and the like is suggested when one seeks to command the dead. However, these protective measures should be just that, protective, but not an interference with the working itself. Injury is best avoided, but when one practices this art, no one leaves untouched. Tone- Different acts of necromancy call for different approaches. This is a simple thing. However, there are a great many complexities to this. Each act will call for a different method, but above all, it will call for a different tone. In acts looking to summon spirits of dead loved ones, family, friends, or beloved ancestors, the working will look and feel intrinsically different than that of a rite to conjure the spirit of an unfamiliar ghost. Kinder words will be used, gentler motions and actions are taken. Food and offering might be used, and flames and light to be a beacon. This is not something which will pull a spirit from the grave, but invite them to your side. On the other hand, with much more characteristic examples of necromancy, the magician might also wish to conjure the spirit of a person who they never knew, but wish to obtain something from. In this case, caution is taken, as is a pronounced sense of sangfroid. They might use words that are much more commanding, actions and spells that are much more coercive, and ritual components that are generally more saturnian. The tone between rituals changes depending upon the goal and the spirit that the magician intends to conjure. It is for the best of all parties involved, including the spirits, that this is the case. Relationships with spirits may be spoiled or built depending upon the actions of the magician. No word or action hence shall go unnoticed. Knowledge- It should go without saying that no working of necromancy should be approached blindly. The magician requires knowledge to perform the rite to their set goal. What kind of knowledge? Foremost, knowledge about the working they are about to attempt. Are there quirks or important intricacies about the exact rite they are about to perform? Is there a set order in which ritual actions are performed? Is there a specific kind of circle or rite space-preperation that needs to be followed? These are all very general questions, but in matters of necromancy, they are to be followed quite closely. Secondly, but certainly not any less important, is knowledge about the spirit which they will attempt to summon. The more you know about the spirit, the better. Descriptions, especially by familial relation, will help in the summoning of the proper spirit. The thing you don’t want to happen is accidentally summon the wrong spirit. Knowledge about the spirit, about their living life, their interests, their loves, their hates, etc. can help in the summoning. Not only will this help build a proper summoning incantation, but it will help you in deciding the spell components used in their calling. What will lure them into your trap? What will wake them up enough from the grave to come to you? Will it be something that they love, crave, or hate? In that respect, knowledge truly is power. Power- Such a small word with such large consequence. Amusingly enough, this has little to do with the power which the magician carries internally and everything to do with the power they must acquire over individual spirits. Usually, necromantic workings require a representation of the spirit being summoned. These representations, commonly shown as photographs, drawings, possessions, etc. are not only links to the spirit in question, but a means of exercising power over it. Possessions, photographs, drawings, and the like only work as magical links because they carry a piece of that spirit inside of them. It can be used to compel a spirit, though it does not hold absolute power. This conversation of power also includes non-magical methods of gaining the upper hand. Folk tales of necromancy or spirits often include outsmarting a spirit. The living have their secrets. Many think they can carry them into the grave. Such secrets can be used to gain an upper hand against the spirit. They were once living. Reputation still matters for some. This topic intrinsically also has to do with the power used by the magician which stems from a much larger source. Much historical necromancy calls upon God, Christ, or the Holy Trine to compel the spirits that they conjure. The direct use of power lent by God unto a magician is an important one, as it not only addresses the source of a magician’s power over something which many think unconquerable, but it also addresses the understanding of a magician that the power they might draw from a larger source would be infallible in the act of something considered as dangerous as necromancy. It is not only the branching out of spirit relationships, but it is also the amassing of power. This is something found in non-abrahamic examples as well. The calling on deities, demons, or spirits to open doors, control the dead, or give protection during the process is something found in both modern and historical examples. This should give an indication as to the necessity of spirit work before the act of necromancy. Nothing comes from nothing. Power comes from relativity. *** Having talked about those, the details and components of a necromantic working should be expounded upon. Things like location, timing, and ingredients are exponentially important and interestingly unified across cultures. The question of time and place of necromantic acts is usually answered quite lucidly by most texts. It is agreed upon that the hours between 12:00 AM and 3:00 AM are quite fitting for necromancy. Even modern folklore provides backing for this, as most people believe it to be the ‘witching hours’, or a liminal time period in which supernatural activity is at its highest. The best location for it is also usually agreed upon. A churchyard or a graveyard are the most common and considered to be some of the most fitting. Not only is this where bodies lay below, but at night, they are secluded and silent. Some also believe necromantic work is best done in the wilderness. Some hold necromancy rites in their consecrated temples or spaces which have been set aside for such an art. Most agree that to perform it in one’s own home is risky at best, especially in one’s own bedroom. Though as previously stated, some have spaces set aside for their arts. The location and time are not only meant to connect the magician to the dead they wish to summon, but to shroud them. Silence and stillness are best for raising dead, true, but it’s also best for not getting caught. Most necromantic acts are undertaken by a magician equipped with one or more tools of the art. These classic tools include black handled knives, blades of silver or iron, a yew wand, a hazel blasting rod, a rowan staff, etc. The construction of such tools are detailed in old grimoires and require a lengthy process of consecration. Upon creating such a tool, the magician wields it to defend themselves against spirit and compel the spirits they have summoned. It is best not to practice spirit raising without having such a tool. It not only affords power, but it proves to be a source of protection for the magician. The ingredients or components commonly used in necromantic arts are intriguing, as there is a contradiction in their nature. A lot of recipes for rites and spells call for the use of Saturnian ingredients, which is to say that they call for things that are death-like in nature. However, in many cultures, rituals of necromancy also call for the use of things that are to be considered ‘lively’ or full of life, like honey, herbs, flowers, blood, and serpents. These components are a representation of the purpose of necromancy, which is a contradiction in itself. To make the dead live is contradicting. It is through the saturnian components that spirits are drawn and compelled, but it is through the lively ones that they are given voice, breath, and life. To practice necromancy is to contradict both powers of life and death by marrying them, a crime that even Zeus saw as unnatural. Out of all arts, it is one of the darkest and most risky. Practiced with caution and precision, it can be an invaluable tool. Though once started, it isn’t likely to stop. When a magician becomes a necromancer, they open two doors. One is outside and the other is within.
Below, I will provide a few examples of necromantic rites and spells; a Black Booklet, if you will. The process behind each is different and serves a different end. These are simply one witch’s way to achieve what many witches, conjurors, and ceremonial magicians have been doing for centuries. Caution and care should be taken.
Keep reading
Excerpted text below the cut:
“For the Beloved Dead
If the magician wishes to contact the spirits of his departed loved ones, they may do so in a simpler, but no less potent, process.
They shall first cleanse and asperge a table with spring water and sprigs of pine, whose spirit is that of everlastingness. It shall then be covered with a clean white cloth.
So too shall the magician place objects belonging to their beloved dead or likenesses of them.
An object of time will be placed upon the table, such as a clock, a pocket-watch, a timer, or an hourglass. However, this object must not be running or recording time. If an hourglass, then it is set upon its side. If a clock, all hands must be halted.
A red candle with a compass rose cut into its underside will be placed at the center of the table to act as a beacon.
The bones of animals which are gateways into the spirit world and soul ferries may also be placed to assist in the passage to and fro.
Symbols and sigils of conjuration may be made upon the cloth that will bring the souls of the beloved close.
Incense made from tobacco, marigolds, and mallow may be used to draw and feed the beloved spirits that the magician wishes to summon. Food and drink may also be placed upon the altar for the same, especially with offerings of red wine, unleavened bread, apples, milk, honey, and whole eggs. If the magician knows what this spirit likes, it be best for them to provide it.
If the magician decides that their work with their dead is concluded, all light is extinguished, all incense is put out, and all is left still. They will then take all items and wrap them with the altar cloth until time again comes for convocation.
For Necromantic Oneiromancy or to Dream of the Dead
If one wishes to speak with the dead whilst they sleep, a charm is known.
A single dark stone, plucked from the ford of a river, shall be taken and dried in a black cloth.
Then it shall be taken to the grave of the one whom the magician wishes to commune with. In the cloth, it shall be placed upon the grave for a single night.
“Sleep as in the grave below,
wake then at the rooster’s crow
and wake with you the specter’s tongue
then sleep as I with songs they sung.”
The next day, it should be retrieved.
The magician shall then take the stone and consecrate it.
At midnight, it shall be held above a burning mixture of bay leaves, dandelion root, and mugwort. It shall then be marked.
Upon the back, in black, the magician shall paint the scythe of Saturn. On the reverse, in red, the magician shall paint the six pointed star.
Once it is dried and complete, it shall be placed beneath the head of the magician as they sleep.
“A black scythe makes sleep a voice.
A blood red star, burning awake.
In sleeping still, make me cunning and wise.
Tell me the secrets kept in the grave.
*Name of dead* attend me. ”
Repeat it until sleep.
For Protection Against the Dead.
The magician shall place three iron nails in an onion from dusk until dawn. Upon the rising of the sun in the East, the magician shall remove all three nails, wash them with spring water purified by sea salt, and bind them with a strap of leather into a six pointed compass. The bearer of this mark shall not fall prey to the ill will or machinations of the dead.
For the Love Blessing
If the magician wishes to inspire love in the heart of a chosen person, the dead may be of assistance.
The magician shall find the two graves of overs who, in life, never divorced or broke the pact of marriage. Thereupon, they shall wake both gravestones by knocking thrice upon them.
The magician shall go between the two graves and take a handful of dirt. As they do this, they shall address the two spirits.
“You, lovers who dare to bind in death stayed sleep, I shall take of your kingdom. I shall take what lies between your bodies and your specters and I shall keep it until thou bless me. Until _____ loves me, I shall not make thee whole.”
In-between the two gravestones, the magician shall place the image or possession of their intended lover. They shall then walk from the graveyard without looking backward and make a charm-bag out of the dirt.
They shall keep this on their person until their wish is obtained. Then, they shall return to the graveyard, take back the thing left between the graves, and return the dirt.
For the Raising of a Spirit
In this, the most trying act of necromancy comes, which is to raise and control a spirit, especially if that spirit is not in compliance with the wishes of the magician.
The magician shall go unto a place that is proper for necromancy, especially a graveyard, a churchyard, a crossroad, an old bridge, or some other place which spirits may roam freely.
It will begin with the magician drawing a circle upon the ground with the tool they have brought. This will preferably be a staff or wand of rowan, yew, laurel, ash, or pine. The circle should be approximately six feet wide.
“Charmed ring on hallowed ground,
thrice I’ll make ye ‘round and abound.
An’ if I step not o’er your skin,
all I conjure cannot come in.”
Trace the circle thrice and repeat the charm.
With red ochre powder, make one triangle, and with crushed eggshell, make another inverted one atop it, forming a six pointed star. This star is the mark of Saturn. So too is it a six pointed compass, marking the four cardinal directions as well as above and below.
Whistle and call:
“Northern Wind, most cold and desolate, set motion upon the night and bring to me that which I call. Move thyself upon ever corner and every rampart and search and find that which I sing to.”
So too shall you call to every spirit of the wind. The Southern Wind, most passionate and temperamental. The Western Wind, most fruitful and swift. The Eastern Wind, most chaotic and desultory.
Then, point up with the staff as you point down with two fingers.
“If it be in Heaven, so shall it fall to do my will.”
Point down with the staff and up with two fingers.
“If it be in Hell, so shall it rise to do my will.”
Face the Northern-most point of the star, place a lantern or light source there, and point the staff forward toward the light.
“Spirit of ____, I conjure. I name _____, the dead I seek. Attend me by the four winds which I have named. Find yourself in my wake and be compelled. Come to me! Advance! Arise!”
Await for a sign of the spirit’s arrival. If none, repeat the incantation.
When it arrives, burn incense to give it voice and breath. Hold in your right hand a dish of incense made from red wine, mugwort, dandelion flower, and ash leaf. Blow into the burning mixture lightly, emptying your lungs once.
“If ye be robbed of voice or breath,
find it anew past gates of death.
Though another grace you shall find,
that you shan’t tell lies or their kind.”
Do your business with the spirit. If you called it up for answers, then ask away. If you called it for a contract or a service, then propose it.
When you conclude your business with the spirit, you will give it the license to depart.
“Shade of ____, I abjure all bonds and license thee to depart. Go now by the speed of all the winds which brought ye hence. Find again thy place of origin. Return to thy seat of rest. Let peace be between us and look not for reprisal upon the biting of the devouring wind which blows on the Northern mount.”
If the spirit leaves, then the working is done. If not, banishment will be needed. Blow out the candle, put out the incense, and break the circle by walking upon the star counterclockwise until it is no longer visible.”
My name is Brian. I was kicked out of my home Monday on the 12th of April, 2021. I turned 1… Brian Stracke needs your support for I'm Home
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Priestess Talks: Price List for Readings
Tarot Readings
1 card Reading £2:You will receive a description of the card and an interpretation paragraph.
3 card Reading £5:You will receive a description of each card and an interpretation of each paragraph with the overall reading. You will have the choice of determining the spread (e.g. past-present-future) or allowing me to decide
Celtic Cross spread £9:Classic 10 card reading. As above, a description of each card and overall interpretations of each section of the reading.
Fate Spread £9:Personalised 8 card reading. As above, a description of each card and overall interpretations of each section of the reading.
Energy Readings:
Short (200 words) reading:£5 A descriptive paragraph of your energy using symbolic imagery and working with your inner landscape. Provides description and interpretation.
Medium (500 words) reading:£10 As above, a much more detailed description and analysis.
Detailed (1000 words) reading:£15 As above, full description and analysis
Chakra Reading:£15 Description of each of your energy centres. Please note that I do this with full cultural awareness and am happy to respond to queries.
Other:
Pendulum Reading: 50p per question. Provide yes/no, true/false answers.
Bibliomancy Reading: 70p per question. Provide a paragraph from an ancient text descriptive of your situation.
If you would like a reading that is not shown here, contact me, and if I am sufficiently skilled I am happy to negotiate.I am also willing to work on spells, although I would like to discuss beforehand. Depending on how tricky it is I would imagine around £15 would be sufficient. I am basing prices on the time taken to conduct the reading.
All readings will be formatted as a pdf sent to your email. Please message for details. And in the spirit of unprofessional marketing, anyone who reblogs the post will get a pound off their reading. Payment is via PayPal, or direct debit if you do not have that. Don't be put off by the British pounds, Paypal offers you the option to pay in this currency.
BEKKATHYST 8 YEAR ANNIVERSARY GIVEAWAY ~ 2021
~This giveaway is in no way affiliated with Tumblr.~
Please read thoroughly before entering!
Hello lovely Tumblr folk! It’s that time again- I have a giveaway for you all. This time we're celebrating the 8th birthday of my little shop! 💜
We have both an online store and a physical location that could use your support!
My business is just a small, family run establishment that I started here on tumblr in 2013. I’ve been lucky enough to grow to the point where my husband and I opened a brick and mortar store and I’ve been able to employ my mother and several of my siblings! I’ve been supporting my mom and younger siblings since 2016 💜 I’ve always put compassion and ethics above all else in my business!
This giveaway will have one winner.
What the winner receives:
The large assortment of crystals pictured above! There are 25 crystals in total. Their full retail value is about $450
Rules:
You must be 16 or older. (If under 18 you MUST have parent’s permission)
You don’t have to live in the US to join!
Shipping is entirely free, I will cover it. But if you live outside the US and for whatever reasons your country wants to charge you import tax, you are responsible for it. If it gets sent back to me, you will need to pay shipping to have it sent again.
You must be following me, so you can get updates if anything about the giveaway changes.
Please check out our online shop!
DO NOT tag this post as giveaway. That will risk the notes getting messed up, and this will be ruined for everyone.
Reblog this post to enter. Likes count, too. No giveaway or spam blogs. If you reblog on a side blog, let me know in the tags what the name of your blog is that you’re following me with.
Please don’t spam people with reblogs- limit 2 reblogs per blog per day.
At the end, each entry will be assigned a number and the winner will be chosen by a random number generator.
The giveaway ends Monday, May 17th, 2021 at 6 pm Pacific time.
The winner will be messaged and must respond with their full name and address within 24 hours, or a new winner will be chosen.
Please respect me and my rules, and have fun!
on fighting the good fight:
“Sometimes, when I think of what is going on in the world, I wonder why am I writing? The answer is that one simply has to work. Work and go on working. Work and help everyone who deserves it. Work even though at times it feels like so much wasted effort. Work as a form of protest. For one’s impulse has to be to cry out every day one wakes up and is confronted by misery and injustice of every kind: I protest! I protest! I protest!”
—Federico García Lorca
“To be a man is to be responsible: to be ashamed of miseries you did not cause; to be proud of your comrades’ victories; to be aware, when setting one stone, that you are building a world.”
—Antoine de Saint–Exupéry
“Warmth of heart, impulsiveness, pity are not enough. The love of our neighbor in all its fullness simply means being able to say to him: ‘What are you going through?’ It is a recognition that the sufferer exists, not only as a unit in a collection, or a specimen from the social category labeled ‘unfortunate,’ but as a man, exactly like us, who was one day stamped with a special mark by affliction.”
“Duty towards the human being as such–that alone is eternal.”
—Simone Weil
“Only two principles matter: never live of hopes only, but never stop believing that everything you do may help.”
—Italo Calvino
“We’re each of us alone, to be sure. What can you do but hold your hand out in the dark?”
— Ursula K. Le Guin
“Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world’s grief. Do justly, now. Love mercy, now. Walk humbly, now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it.”
— Rabbi Tarfon, Pirkei Avot 2:15
“If I am not for myself, who will be for me? But if I am only for myself, who am I? If not now, when?“
— Rabbi Hillel, Pirkei Avot 1:14
There is nothing new under the sun.
ADHD mood
*Abbott walks in*
*I frantically spin the wheel from Byzantine Erotica to the Summa Theologica*
You know I can’t resist some scriptorium buffoonery