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Today's Document
AnasAbdin
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“new tumblr users you must know that likes are useless and do fuck all” incorrect! likes let me send a tiny little kiss to my beloved mutuals
Crow Time - Statue 2
Please like, comment, follow! Pet a crow!
[PART 1] [Read Crow Time] [Patreon]
The worst form of pseudo-philosophy is shit like "everything in reality is either Chaos or Order," "everything in reality is either Masculine or Feminine," "everything in reality is either Dark or Light" like dude you haven't discovered some deep truth about the universe you've literally just discovered Adjectives. I can say everything in reality is either Heavy or Light depending on whether I can lift it over my head but that doesn't give you any profound fuckin insight I'm just describing shit and yes this is about jordan peterson
my number one woman behavior is saying i’m fine with any pronouns and silently ranking people in my regard based on what they do with that information
This is George Costanza behavior
GEORGE, at a function: Pronouns? Oh, you know, anything. Anything fine. It’s the twenty-first century, right?
-Cut, establishing shot of Jerry’s apartment, bass riff.-
GEORGE: He/him, Jerry!
JERRY: No, they just him’d you?
GEORGE: HE. HIM! I gave them a BUFFET, and they went for plain white bread. Genders as far as the eye could see! Something with an X in it!
JERRY: The X ones are fun…
Heavenly Lavender Scones
A Spell for Happiness and Anxiety Relief 💜🦋✨
I think we all need a little bit more joy and a little less spiraling misery. I won’t pretend that life isn’t deeply challenging right now, and I wrote this spell to carve out a bit of delicious relief. Make these scones and see for yourself <3
Lavender is associated with calm and anxiety relief, and it’s also associated with Selene, goddess of the moon. The heady scent of dried lavender serves as a reminder of summers past and that there will be summers again.
Scones:
* 2 cups (250 grams) all-purpose flour
* 1/3 cup (67 grams) granulated sugar
* 1 tablespoon (12 grams) baking powder
* 1/2 teaspoon salt
* 5 tablespoons (70 grams) unsalted butter chilled and diced
* 1 tablespoon dried lavender
* 2/3-3/4 cup (158-177 milliliters) heavy cream plus extra for brushing
* 1 large egg
* 1/2 vanilla bean or 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
* Decorating sugar
Vanilla Glaze:
* 1 cup (120 grams) powdered sugar
* 1/2 vanilla bean or 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
* 1-2 tablespoons (15-30 milliliters) milk
* Dried Lavender for garnish
Instructions:
* Preheat oven to 400˚F (200˚C). Line a baking sheet with parchment or lightly grease.
* In a large bowl, combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt.
* Quickly cut in the butter using a dough blender, food processor, two forks, or your fingers until blended and no pieces are larger than a pea.
* Pour the tablespoon of lavender right into your hand and imagine a white light surrounding the herbs. Imagine that it is a light of gentle healing and joy. Say to yourself “I invite joy and relaxation into my life” while focusing on holding the light around the herbs.
* In a small bowl, whisk together your now enchanted dried lavender, 2/3 cup (158 ml) heavy cream, egg, and seeds from the vanilla bean (or extract).
* Gently mix the cream mixture into the dry ingredients until the dough just comes together. Add most but not all of the cream mixture at first. You want a shaggy dough. Add a little more cream only if the dough is too crumbly to hold. It should not be sticky.
* On a lightly floured surface, smush and pat the dough out into a circle, pressing it together so that it is not shaggy anymore. The circle should be about 3/4” high.
* Cut the circle into 8ths and transfer to a prepared parchment lined baking sheet.
* Brush the tops of the scones with a thin layer of heavy cream and then immediately sprinkle with your decorating sugar. Bake in preheated oven until lightly golden, 21-24 minutes. Gently transfer the scones to a wire rack and cool to room temperature.
* In a small bowl, combine the powdered sugar with the seeds from a vanilla bean or vanilla extract. Whisk in 1-2 tablespoons milk until a smooth glaze forms.
* Drizzle the glaze over the cooled scones and immediately sprinkle with a small pinch of dried lavender if desired.
* Allow the glaze to set. These Lavender Vanilla Scones are best served the day they are made.
Keep them on their toes, baby ✨
Happy Lughnasadh
Bedridden witch: Kitchen edition
Kitchen witchin’ without the kitchen!
With help from: @magical-girl-ilex and @spooniewitches!
Set up:
A tray of some sort - something to create a solid surface over your bed.
Cookbooks and herb books tucked somewhere nearby.
A crate of spices and herbs.
Shelves that can store ingredients that are within reach of the bed/above the bed.
Get a mini crock pot and set it up near your bed.
Hang bundles of herbs to dry from the walls and ceiling.
Keep simple, easy to open snacks nearby - saltines have salt, right? Cleansing!
A pitcher/container of water.
Herbs planted along the bedroom windowsill.
A portable kettle that is safe to use within reaching distance of the bed.
Rags or towels for spills.
Room decorations that make you feel extra cozy!
Things to do:
Make infused honey.
Draw sigils on the bottom of your plate/tray/mug before consuming things.
Create tea blends and keep them in jars for the next time you want tea.
When you eat or drink, feel it’s energy working to heal you.
Make a spell bottle - include your favorite spices!
Make a pinterest board of all the foods/recipes you want to try/make.
Make tinctures!
Plan menus for hypothetical meals - sabbats anyone?
Burn candles that remind you of cozy smells coming from the kitchen.
Create correspondences for the BRAT/Y diet.
Look up recipes!
Make cold infusions (basically tea, but with cold water and a longer waiting period).
Process herbs; grind them, separate the leaves from the stems, get them ready to dry.
Infuse water with things like: Lemon for energy, strawberries for love, cucumber for patience, etc.
Connect with deities of home/hearth/baking/food/etc.
Etch sigils into food before you eat it.
Make herb packets and mixtures, that way you can just pop it in when you have enough energy to cook!
Two words: Tea Magic.
Utilize color correspondences of candy if that’s all you can get down. (Yellow = energy, red = self love, green = vitality).
Place herbs in different places depending on their correspondences, so they can work a little magic.
Other bedridden witchcraft posts:
Nature edition
Worship edition
Divination edition
Stale Energy edition
Elements edition
Pastel edition
All other posts linked here
Hearth Witchery Ideas
Cooking witchery is at least a little bit the name of the game. Put herbs corresponding to your intention into the food to enchant it -- a dash of coriander, orange zest and apple into the wine of a loved one to ensure their loyalty, for example.
You could also verbally encant the food, particularly for soup or beverages because you can say a hymn or psalm in a way that it stirs the surface.
Learn to cook over a fire -- like a wood fire. you can enchant the food using the fire you cook the food with. You take the herbs corresponding with your intention, wet them, and put them into foil with holes poked in it so that it will smoke and imbue the food with its magic. That way you can use also mildly poisonous herbs in the enchantment that should not be consumed.
If there is an oppressor in your life, make a poppet from beeswax/tallow, put it by a fire so it melts, and while it is melting stick it full of hawthorns. Making the poppet is half of it, but what you do to it is where you can really use your environment to your advantage. So in this example, the heat from the hearth fire can be used defensively in spells.
Knitting or crocheting - use the color of the wool that corresponds to your intention, and every stitch repeat your intention. I think this is particularly useful for creating garments intended for glamours such as invisibility or avoiding the law.
Liminal places are typically the most used parts of the houses. Such as the threshold and the hearth, traditionally, but also the kitchen, staircases, and doorways.
Make friends with your house spirit! In Slavic mythology we call it a Domovoi, in Irish mythology its a Brownie, whatever it is according to your area or ethnicity at least acknowledge it. This connection with your house can help you especially if the energy of your house is rancid or you live with unpleasant people.
Combining the energies of shapes and colors is a powerful practice within art witchcraft. You can look for these combinations in your color castings, or other artistic forms of divination, or use them to boost your intent in spells.
Stay tuned for more free resources and information related to art magic and color craft. My inbox is always open!
-LUMI
I'm in a desperate need to follow more witchy/pagan accounts so my feed won't be as dry as it is right now, so like (or reblog) if you post any of those and I'll give you a follow:
- Rodnovery/Rodzimowierstwo/Slavic paganism;
- traditional witchcraft & paganism;
- Void magick;
- anything relating to Slavic culture (whether it be East, West or South Slavic);
- anything that involves history of art and literature;
- or art and literature alone;
- folk magick;
- demonology (whether Abrahamic or not);
- divination;
- kitchen witchcraft;
- spirit and/or ancestral work;
- slavic and/or witchy memes;
- mythology (of any kind, but as you might've guessed, especially Slavic);
- anything witchy if you're an active blog.
nazis, terfs and any of that bullcrap not welcome!
Witchy *Free* PDF book list Masterpost
Hey lovely witches! I wanted to share some of my PDF witchy books I have on my computer. I know it’s hard to find these books and not everyone has money to buy them or easy access. I hope I can help someone with this <3
Most of the books are on my google drive library, you can click on the link and then download if you’d like to.
A Manual of Occultism, by Sepharial
Mastering Witchcraft, by Paul Huson
Natural Magic, by Pamela J.Ball
Pagan Spells, Author Unknown
Herbal Magick - Herbal enchantments, folclore and divination by Gerina Dunwich <3
Spell Crafts - Creating magical objects, by, Scott Cunningham and David Harrington <3
The Book of Power, by Idres Shah
The Complete book of Incense, Oils ad Brews, by Scott Cunningham
The Essential Skills of Magick - Benjamim Rowe
The Ultimate Book of Spells - Pamela J. Ball *my favorite spellbook*
50 of The Most Powerful Spells, by unknown author
Witchcraft Today, by Gerald Gardner
The Gardnerian Book of Shadows
The Basics of Magic, by K. Amber
8 Sabbaths of Witchcraft, by Mike Nichols
Witchcraft Today, by Gerald Gardner
Celtic Mythology and Religion, by Alexander Macbain
The Art and meaning of Magic, By Israel Regardie
An Introduction to the Study of Tarot, by Paul Foster Case
The Alchemy of Abundance, by Lisa McSherry
Encyclopedia of Acient Roman and Greek Mythology, by James Belton
Asgard and the Gods, by M. W. MacDowall,
The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Spells by, Michael Johnstone
Witches’ Bible by, Janet and Stewart Farrar
The Witch’s Master Grimoire, by Lady Sabrina
The meaning of Witchcraft, by Gerald Gardner
Aleister Crowley book collection (google drive)
Lid Off the Cauldron, by Patricia Crowther
A Grimoire for Modern Cunningfolk, by Peter Paddon
The A to Z of Dream Interpretation, by Pamela J. Ball
The Dream Oracle, by Pamela J. Ball
The Great Book of Spells, by Pamela J. Ball <3
The Techniques of Astral Projection, By Dr. Douglas M. Baker
The Opening of the Third Eye, By Dr. Douglas M. Baker
Historical Dictionary of Witchcraft, By Bailey Michael
The Goddess is in Details, by Deborah Blake <3
Circle, Coven and Grove, by Deborah Blake
A Witch’s Dozen, by Deborah Blake <3
Witchcraft on a Shoestring by Deborah Blake
Egyptian Magic, By Ernest Budge
Advanced Candle Magick, By Raymond Buckley
Amulets and Magic, By Budge Walli
Pen and Ink Witchcrafr , By Collin Calloway
Basic Sigil Magic, By Philip Cooper
The Occult Properties of Herbs , By W.B Crow
Shadow Work Guidebook, by Jessica Cross
Gemstone Sorcery, By Gerina Dunwich <3
Wicca A to Z By Gerina Dunwich
Every Witch Way By Ellen Dugan <3
Power Of The Witch By Laurie Cabot <3
The Spiral Dance By Starhawk <3
Spiritual Power - Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee
Book of Shadows By, Phyllis Curott:
Witchcrafting By Phyllis Curott
Spells for the Solitary Witch By Eileen Holland
Wiccan Magick By Raven Grimassi
The Witch’s Familiar By Raven Grimassi
Magical Candle Crafting By Ember Grant
Magical Powder Recipes By Lady Gianne
Wicca For Beginners By Lisa Chamberlain
Scott Cunningham’s Books:
Divination for Beginners
Wicca in the Kitchen <3
Book of Shadows
Living Wicca
Crystal Gem and Metal Magick <3
Wicca
Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs
Magical Household, Rituals and spells for the home <3
D.J Conway’s Books:
Mystical Dragon
Norse Magic
Wicca, The Complete Craft
Falcon, Feather and Valkyrie Sword
Celtic Magic
Christopher Penczak’s Books
Gay Witchcraft - Christopher Penczak
The Living Temple of Witchcraft V. II- Christopher Penczak
The Gates of Witchcraft
The Living Temple of Witchcraft V.II
Mystic Foundation
The Outer Temple Of Witchcraft
The Inner Temple of Witchcraft
The Witch’s Shield
Cassandra Eason’s Books:
A Practical Guide of Witchcraft and Spells,
Fabulous Creatures, Mythical Monsters and Animal Power Symbols
Candle Power
The Art of Pendulum
The Complete Guide to Psychic Development
Illes Judika’s Books:
Magic When You Need It - 150 Spells
Pure Magic
The Element Encyclopedia of Witchcraft
Ellwood Taylor’s Books:
Pop Culture Magic
The Pop Culture Grimoire
Multi-Media Magic
Manifesting Prosperity
For those of you who wish to see my full library on the drive, feel free to send me a message and I will send you the link!
HAVE FUN! :)
😍😍😍 Thank you for this!
REBLOG FOR LATER
Oof, I’m going to need this
Stop talking shit about your tarot card pulls!
DEATH is TRANSFORMATION & NEW LIFE
THE TOWER is MUCH NEEDED CHANGE
THE DEVIL is RELEASING YOUR CHAINS
10 of SWORDS is the END OF A CYCLE
5 of PENTACLES
3 of SWORDS is AN OPPORTUNITY TO GROW
Herbs for Magical Teas
Alfalfa Leaf: home protection; money draw; prosperity; security.
Bergamont: money draw; success.
Black Cohosh: relaxation; turn worries aside.
Boneset: call upon devas; divination; protection; ward negativity.
Burdock Root: protection; purification; ward negativity.
Chamomile: calmness; meditation; prosperity; purification.
Chickweed: Crone Wisdom; divination; honesty; love; trust.
Comfrey: health; money draw; safety.
Damiana Leaf: attraction; divination; love.
Dandelion Root: divination; Fairies; good luck; honor/invoke devas; psychic power.
Echinacea: body’s self-defense; empowerment; invoke healing devas.
Elder Flower: Fairie blessing; honor/invoke the Goddess; healing; prosperity; rest.
Eyebright: mental sharpness; psychic awareness.
Fennel: healing; honor/invoke Horned God; protection; purification.
Fenugreek Seed: attract money; skill in verbal communication.
Feverfew: health; protection; purification; ward sickness.
Goldenseal: healing; honor/invoke the God; joy; prosperity; success.
Hops: comfort; good health; relaxation; well-being.
Hyssop: purification; ward negativity.
Irish Moss: invoke Fairies; luck; money draw; protection.
Lemon Balm: health; love; success.
Linden (Tila): love; luck; Otherworld; protection; rest.
Mint: Devas; money; protection; prosperity.
Mugwort: Hecate; divination; inspiration.
Mullein: between the worlds travel; courage; divination; health; protection.
Nettle: healing; love; protection; ward negativity.
Orange Peel: divination; love; luck.
Parsley: purification; protection.
Raspberry Leaf: Fairie blessings; health; love; protection.
Rose Hips: divination; consecration; Elves; protection; ward negativity.
Skullcap: healing (esp. headaches); hidden knowledge; Lord of Shadows; protection; wisdom.
Slippery Elm Bark: clear communication; persuasive speech; protection from envy, gossip, and slander.
Uva Ursa: divination; honor/invoke Artemis; purification; psychic awareness.
Valerian Root: Crone magics; love; protection; purification; psychic awareness.
White Oak Bark: fertility; honor/invoke the Green Man; health; protection.
Wild Cherry Bark: creativity; divination; love.
Willow Bark: health; mental acuity; reduce headache pain.
From Ann Moura’s “Grimoire for the Green Witch”
Hey y'all,
I'm making a deck of tarot cards as part of a school project, so I thought I'd share my progress!
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Here is my 1st page:
brainstorming
This is where I dumped all of my ideas and some notes relating to tarot cards, their meanings, and possible designs, media, and presentation.
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Next, I did my 2nd page:
inspiration
Here we had to show anything that inspires us in our art or creation process.
*note: none of the digital art (in the pride, art, mythology and fantasy sections) is my work!! I found it on Pinterest and I don't want to claim I created it - I wish I was that talented!! I am the creator of the photos in the nature section.
------------------------------------
Next is the 3rd page:
ideation
Here I elaborated on some of the deck designs I brainstormed on page 1.
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I'm up to page 4, so I'll probably post that tomorrow!!
with love,
~ daydream
p.s. let me know what you think!!
Two spells - one for joy, and one for calmness
🍸🌻🌼Witchy drinks…. YAS🌼🌻🍸
🌌 Witchcraft PSA: The Chakras & Cultural Appropriation ❌
Warning: This is probably the longest post I've written so far, so be prepared for a VERY long read.
Disclaimer: I do not claim to be an expert, a historian, or a theologist. I am simply a witch, a student, and a POC living in the United States where many aspects of pagan spirituality are often appropriated from other cultures and perpetuated through simple ignorance. I'm sure this post will generate some type of controversy, but I do not mean to attack anyone or their beliefs with this post.
So. Here's the big one, guys. The post I've been dreading making but have really wanted to write for a while.
Cultural appropriation is one of the hottest topics in the modern witchcraft community, and the discourse about it on tumblr is far-reaching and incendiary at best. The problem: Where should witches draw a line between explorational spirituality and cultural appropriation?
I'm not here to lay down laws of morality. I'm not the cultural police. But I DID have a very eye-opening experience recently that led me to create this post.
I'm a white-passing minority, and I won't pretend that this doesn't lend me a degree of privilege in America. Especially as a witch, many doors are open to me. Just within the witchcraft community, I look white enough to be welcomed whole-heartedly into most neopagan circles. That's not to say that blatant racism is abundant within the pagan community, but we can't deny that many non-white cultural practices are heavily stigmatized. For instance, as SOON as any of my "light worker" friends hears that I have a family background in Santeria and Brujeria, the FIRST thing I hear is, "Oh, I don't mess with that dark stuff," or "Well, I don't like the idea of hurting animals and other people." And don't get me started on the ignorant conversations one of my dark-skinned, Vodou-practicing friends has had to sit through before.
Like, what?
Because of this, I'm often the first person within my social circles to stand up for cultural barriers and denounce cultural stigma. Above all else, I try to respect the hell out of closed cultures and educate myself about cultural appropriation.
So, it was much to my dismay when I discovered that I have been culturally appropriating the chakra system for the last 11 years of my witchcraft practice.
The chakra system and its use in western occultism is one of the most heavily debated topics in the witchblr community. A simple search will yield dozens upon dozens of posts, each filled with witches claiming that usage of the chakra system either IS or IS NOT appropriation. For the most part, I've tried to stay out of this debate. I've incorporated the chakras into my practice since I began, but I thought my oriental heritage and my "thorough" understanding of the chakras made this okay. But, lo and behold, I was sorely mistaken.
So, after some deep research into this topic, and after talking to several Hindus and Buddhists, here's my attempt to shed some light on this issue.
What are the chakras (according to Western occultism)?
As a brief overview, the chakras are believed to be spiraling energy centers that exist within the subtle body. There are seven of them, and they lie along the spine in places where large amounts of nerves and vital organs exist. Similar to the way our brain is a large compilation of nerves, these chakras are believed to be the intersection points of energy currents within our spirit.
Each chakra rules over a particular psychological, physical, and spiritual state of being, and disruptions within the chakras are believed to lead to different types of mental, emotional, and physical illnesses.
These chakras are depicted as lotus flowers with varying numbers of petals, and each is represented by its own color. Each one also corresponds to a Sankskrit syllable mantra which is believed to activate the chakra when spoken aloud.
In order, they are:
❤ Muladhara - The Root Chakra - Connection to the Earth and the Self - Located at the base of the spine - Depicted as a red lotus with 4 petals - Mantra: LAM
🧡 Swadhisthana - The Sacral Chakra - Connection to sexuality and instinct - Located near the sexual organs - Depicted as an orange lotus with 6 petals - Mantra: VAM
💛 Manipura - The Solar Chakra - Connection to will and identity - Located in the Solar Plexus - Depicted as a yellow lotus with 10 petals - Mantra: RAM
💚 Anahata - The Heart Chakra - Connection to love and relationships - Located in the heart - Depicted as a green lotus with 12 petals - Mantra: YAM
💙 Vishuddha - The Throat Chakra - Connection to voice and communication - Located in the heart - Depicted as a blue lotus with 16 petals - Mantra: HAM
💜 Ajna - The Third Eye Chakra - Connection to spiritual awareness - Located above and between the eyes - Depicted as a purple lotus with 2 petals - Mantra: OM
🌈 Sahastrara - The Crown Chakra - Connection to Source/the Universe - Located at the top of the head - Depicted as either a purple, rainbow, or white lotus with 144,000 petals - Mantra: Silence
Along with these associations, each chakra is often associated with various crystals, herbs, and spirits.
What are the chakras within their original cultural context?
The concept of 'chakras' arose from a practice known as Tantric Yoga. This was a spiritual system that began to gain popularity in India and other eastern cultures between 600-1300 CE. Up until this point (and concurrently as well), most types of spirituality in these cultures was very transcendental - that is, they had a fundamental belief that the Divine was transcendent and inherently 'above' the natural world. Therefore, in order to commune with the divine, it was believed that the material world had to be renounced and denied, and higher states of consciousness had to be achieved in order to commune with divinity.
Tantric spirituality flipped the script. It adopted the idea that divinity was an inherent quality of the natural world, and that a person could freely commune with the divine by opening themselves up to the world around them through mindfulness and all-embracing compassion.
The philosophies and teachings of tantric yoga (loosely known as 'tantras') became extremely widespread throughout this period and dramatically shaped many emerging sects of Hinduism and Buddhism. As this philosophy spread, many different types of specific spiritual practices arose, many of which can be recognized in our Western ideas of holistic meditation - such as mantras, mudras, mandalas, and even modern Western yoga.
One such concept that gained popularity was the idea of chakras - focal points of spiritual energy in the body. However, these chakras were very different than what Westerners think of today.
There were a LOT of different traditions that arose from Tantric teachings, and each one had its own unique belief about chakras. The most obvious difference between these chakra traditions was that each one believed in a different number of chakras. Some systems had three, others had six, others had seven, others had nine, others had 10, others had 21, etc.
Each one approached the chakras a bit differently, and so each one believed in a different number of chakra centers.
What are some of the primary differences between Western Chakras and Tantric Chakras?
The most eye-opening difference for me was that Tantric chakras have none of the associations that Westerners believe in today. Original practitioners of Tantric spirituality did not associate specific colors with each chakra, they did not associate physical or psychological states with them, they did not associate any herbs or crystals or planets with them, and they did not even associate Sanskrit syllables with them. What's more, they didn't even believe they were located in fixed points on the body.
Loosely, they believed that the chakras - like all things spiritual - were very fluid. They could often be accessed through general areas of the body, but they definitely were not stagnant, fixed points. This also accounts for the varying number of chakras, because it was believed that the chakras would manifest in different ways depending on what traditional practice you used to approach them.
Many traditions did believe that these chakras could be depicted as lotus flowers with various petals, but these were not meant to inherently describe the individual chakra. Rather, these depictions were meant to serve as a visualization for a person to meditate on when trying to access a specific chakra.
Along with this, these traditions did not assign specific names or syllables to these chakras - at least not the ones we use today. Rather, it was believed that Sanskrit syllables carried an inherent magic or divine energy within them (similar to Kabbalistic views of the Hebrew language), and they assigned various letters and syllables to the petals of each lotus flower, which corresponded to various energies in nature.
The symbols, names, and Sanskrit syllables popularized in the West today don't even correspond to any kind of Tantric chakras. They actually correspond to the elements within certain traditions of eastern spirituality. They also are not meant to be uniquely associated with any individual chakra. Rather, these syllables were used in meditation to invoke specific elemental energies into different chakras depending on the situation.
If your tradition believed that the heart chakra could affect the relationships in your life, and your personal relationships happened to be very stagnant, you could vibrate the syllable for the Wind element and invoke that energy into your heart chakra to help your personal relationships become more dynamic. Etc.
This brings me to the final thing I'd like to talk about: Westerners are NOT using the chakras for their original purpose.
The only concrete associations that tantric traditions had for the chakras were deities. These traditions believed that each of their chakras was associated with a specific Hindu deity (though the specific order or deities listed varies between tradition and time period).
The original purpose of 'working with chakras' was to eventually invoke the energy of these specific deities into a person's chakras in order to become closer to these gods and goddesses and emulate their behavior and teachings in daily life.
How did the original concept of chakras get misconstrued in Western culture?
Oh, boy. This is a tough answer that's soaked in 1000 years of colonialism, racism, cultural and linguistic barriers, and simple misunderstandings.
But, simply put, the appropriation of tantric chakras can be narrowed down to four specific individuals.
In 1577, a spiritual teacher and academic named Purnananda Yati wrote a treatise of tantric teachings called the Shatchakra Nirupana, or roughly 'An Explanation of the Six Chakras'.
In this treatise, Purnananda lays out the modern framework we see today - six chakra centers within the human spirit, with an additional seventh chakra above the head that connects the spirit to the divine source. He based this concept off of an earlier writing from the 13th century, which also details this framework but openly acknowledges that this is just ONE tradition, and that many other traditions also exist.
In 1918, a British scholar named John Woodroffe translated Purnananda's treatise from Sanskrit into English, and unfortunately, there were many mistranslations in Woodroffe's version. This translation was what eventually gained extreme popularity throughout academic and occult circles in the West.
Throughout the 1930's, 40's, and 50's, the renowned European psychologist, Carl Jung (who you might recognize from your Psych 101 class), became fascinated with the idea of chakras and their relation to consciousness. Throughout this time period, Jung wrote extensively about potential connections between the seven chakra centers and various psychological states. This is where the chakras became associated with different states of being, such as instinct, will, and sexuality.
Finally, in 1987, an American occultist and spiritualist named Anodea Judith published a book entitled Wheels of Life. In this book, Judith talks extensively about the seven chakras, and even lists correspondences between the chakras and various herbs, crystals, elements, planets, tarot cards, deities, and archangels.
Her book became wildly popular within holistic and spiritual circles, and set in stone the way that modern neo-pagans view the chakras in the West.
So, are chakras part of a closed culture?
Yes and no.
Chakras as we view them in the West are, at best, a distorted and bastardized version of a beautiful, ancient belief. They were studied and theorized by many traditions for over a thousand years, and many of these traditions still exist today. Most commonly, they are still used in Shaivism, which is one of the most prevalent forms of Hinduism in the East.
Many of these living traditions ARE, in fact, closed. But more than that, to perpetuate (and worse, claim spirituality from) a distorted, white-washed version of an Eastern religious belief is just plain disrespectful and potentially racist at its worst.
That being said, though, there are certain living traditions which ARE NOT closed, such as the exceedingly popular Tibetan Buddhism. These traditions recognize many of the same teachings and are freely shared with people of any nationality or background - as long as you put in the work to learn about them.
The Main Takeaway
The chakras, as viewed in the West, are incorrect. This is not to disclaim any type of spiritual experience Westerners may have had by utilizing chakras in their practice, but I'm of the opinion that Westerners should recognize that the "chakras" they believe in don't actually have any basis in ancient spirituality.
That being said, the concept of a subtle body and energy centers within the human spirit is not unique to the Far East.
The concept of currents and centers of energy within the body can be found in cultures the world over, from India to Japan to Korea to Africa to the Middle East, and even among the Native Americans who never came into contact with these other cultures (as far as we know).
The human soul, the subtle body, and spiritual energy are concepts that supercede cultural boundaries, and if studying and utilizing them is an integral part of your craft, then I encourage you to follow your personal path and find connection with the Universe in whatever way you feel called to.
But. Perhaps developing your own unique system and beliefs about the energy centers within the body is the best course of action for us Westerners. Until we ourselves make the effort to go join one of those (open) traditions, subscribing to the modern Western system of "chakras" is, in my opinion, cultural appropriation.
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Brightest blessings, and best of luck 🌙