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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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izzy's playlists!
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

oozey mess
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if i look back, i am lost

roma★

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Love Begins

shark vs the universe
Noah Kahan
One Nice Bug Per Day
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🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
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@riverbedwitches
yall cisgendereds too bold nowadays we gotta start driving that fucking bus again
10 Unconventional Spell Ingredients
Ingredients for spells can be found pretty much anywhere. Here are ten you may not have thought of, most of which I’ve used!
The ribbon used to tie a bouquet: Very versatile ingredient! Can be used to symbolise love, connection and happiness. The ribbon’s correspondences can be varied based on the situation by which you acquired the bouquet. A bouquet given to you by your partner on your first anniversary, for example, will have strong love energy and could even be used in a spell to reignite the ‘spark’ in the relationship. If the bouquet was given to you by a best friend on your birthday, it would correspond with friendship and potentially have solar energy (with a birthday celebrating one revolution of the sun). The ribbon could also symbolise your connection to whomever gave you the bouquet. I keep the ribbons I get off bouquets for this purpose!
The thorns from a rose given to you: I kept the thorns from roses that were given to me by an ex and used them when performing a curse. Really good for symbolising toxic relationships or helping someone realise they’re causing you pain. You could use thorns off roses in your garden, but the thorns will act better as a taglock if they’re given to you.
Bobby pins: Structure, organisation and beauty. An air of temporary composure when things might be falling apart. Perfect for glamours for this reason.
Greeting cards: Happiness, love, relationships, friendship, connection, celebration, appreciation. The occasion upon which they were given and who they were given by will of course affect their energy.
Old clothes: Another versatile ingredient. If you feel the old clothes represent a version of yourself that you want to let go of, they could be used in a cleansing ritual (perhaps by burning). If they were clothes you really liked but wore so much that they’re breaking, they could symbolise beauty, comfort or contentment. Also a good taglock if they were gifted to you by someone. Poppets are extra potent when constructed from this fabric.
Train/bus tickets: Discovery, exploration and opportunity. If the ticket is taking you to a favourite place it might correspond with happiness. If the ticket was acquired on holiday it might correspond with relaxation.
Stickers you still have from your childhood: Innocence, happiness, creativity. Can symbolise bringing back something which has been lost.
Washi tape: Small blessings, excitement, beauty, adding something good to an otherwise ordinary situation. Colour and symbol correspondences may also come into play here.
Wrapping paper: Can symbolise happiness, disappointment (if the gift sucked) or gratitude. Could be used in beauty spells or for glamours. If the wrapping paper came from a disappointing gift, it could even be used in a hex/curse for someone who tries to sugarcoat terrible situations, or changes the topic/turns it on you when you try to approach them about issues in your relationship. Could be use for prosperity or money spells.
Guylian seashell chocolates: Really great offering for Aphrodite (chocolate and the ocean). Useful in sea witchcraft, or as an offering to ocean deities. Good for beauty and love spells.
✨💀 my other original content || tip the author 💌 ✨
5/3/20 4:22 PM
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Doctors sound alarm about patients in their 30s and 40s left debilitated or dead by strokes. Some didn’t even know they were infected by cor
Mike Roberts and colleagues summarise key aspects of this complex multi-system clinical syndrome A covid-19 infection starts as a local uppe
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)30628-0/fulltext
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BETTER SHIT TO PUT IN YOUR GRIMOIRES THAN THE BASIC SHIT EVERYONE SAYS:
Maps! Maps! MAPS! If you're a death witch, get one for the cemeteries you visit and mark gravestones/areas you've practiced in! Garden witches! Map out your gardens! Green witches! Map where you find specific herbs in your area! Lunar witches! Mark the best spots to go look at the sky! Make a key! Take notes!
Recipes for COMPONENTS! Write down how to make the mixtures you use in spells often- A special salt mixed with herbs and put under the moon, a mixture of oils for protection, the herb mixes sachets you keep making to add to sachets, whatever!
For green witches- press samples of stuff and glue them in! Go to an arboretum and ask for permission to take leaves to press, they'll usually let you take some- add them in with your notes about trees
Cool ways to make spells! I make spells in envelopes and on empty spools, what are some ways you do?
The local plants in your area and what they do. You're not going to be likely to find chrysanthemums to forage in Missouri, but you will find creeping charlie and prairie plants. What can you do with a thistle?
When you celebrate a sabbat, write down what you did and include samples! Ribbons from your Beltane altar, a pressed sample of your lemmas harvest, a scrap of your Yule decorations. Maybe do a spell and tape the remnants into your grimoire in a plastic baggie
Learn how to make an envelope out of paper just by folding it, how to string seeds, how to dry plants, how to macrame rocks and hang them from your window. Find those little witchy skills and write them down.
How to incorporate your hobby into your magic. Sigiling origami paper, weaving knot magick into your crochet, making blessed bookmarks, etc
Substitutes! Rosemary, rose and clear quartz are good for most things, but there are more substitutes to be used that are more powerful. Roanoke bells are good substitutes for bluebells, apparently.
Correspondences of odd things. Turns out different kinds of cats have different correspondences, huh.
Superstitions and such from where you're from.
For kitchen witches: easy to alter recipes. An egg noodle recipe that takes herbs really well, a simple bread recipe that can be dressed up for spells or rituals, how to make a good pie crust that you can sprinkle nutmeg in or whatever you desire.
Or: What foods go good with what herbs. You'll make a better apple pie (and get the benefits of apples, nutmeg, and cinnamon together!) If you know how your herbs taste together with your cooking. (Most kitchen witches know this stuff, but for a green witch who likes to make teas or a sea witch that likes to make soup, etc, this is important)
Fried Honey Cakes
🥞🌸🥞🌸🥞🌸🥞🌸🥞
for Beltane
1/2 cup sweet white wine
2 tablespoons sugar
1 egg
1 cup honey
2/3 cup flour
1/8 teaspoon nutmeg
1/8 teaspoon cinnamon
Oil for frying
1/8 teaspoon salt
Beat the wine and egg in a medium bowl. Combine the flour, cinnamon, salt & sugar in a small bowl. Stir into the egg mixture. Let stand 30 minutes. Combine the honey & nutmeg in a small bowl. Heat 1/2-inch of the oil in a frying pan until hot, but not smoking. Drop the batter into the oil 1 tablespoon at a time; fry until golden brown. Drain on paper towels. Dip into the honey.
Yield: 1 ½ Dozen
🥞🌸🥞🌸🥞🌸🥞🌸🥞
These cakes are similar to ones women in the past would make the night before Beltane. If you practice faerie magick you may want to put some outside with a bowl of honey milk sprinkled with flowers or sweet herbs. This recipe is much like one my mother used when I was a child when she would make fry bread, minus the wine. If you find it's too sweet for you, 'flitter bread' was another favorite of mine, she made it with leftover dough from making biscuits in the morning by frying the dough instead of baking it. We would then dip the warm bread in a mix of butter and honey. I'm sure it's not a healthy food but it's so delicious.
y'all will circlejerk yourself to the mysticisms of faeries and elves in european countries for centuries and take it as fact but the second native americans ask you to respect our spirituality and culture suddenly you're all aetheists
non natives can, should, and will reblog this.
same goes for african rooted religions.
Ethereal Visions Tarot Aesthetics
μηδὲν ἄγαν - nothing in excess
Written above the temple of Apollo in Delphi
COVID
Or, How to Abandon Pants & Save the World at the Same Time
Hey all. Seems like it’s getting tough out there.
Seems like shit is getting really real, really fast.
I’m here in New York, doing ICU transfers for one of the hospital systems, and I can’t lie to you… it’s bad.
We’re storing bodies in refrigerated trailers because the morgues are full.
The City is reopening potter’s fields and digging mass graves.
Hundreds of people a day are dying. Soon, thousands.
Mostly older. Some previously-healthy adults. Mercifully, not many kids.
It’s real, and it’s bad.
But I promise you, the world is not ending.
And I also promise you this post will end with HOPE, even if it’s hard to read.
But I want to talk about something… a misconception I’ve been seeing over and over again.
Seguir leyendo
me, eating 3 sea salt & caramel lindor chocolates in a row: blessed yule
Y’all goyish “progressive” pagans love to worship your appropriated faux “Lilliths” and then stand aside silently when a Jew or Roma or Sinti person is being attacked by a Nazi trying to hide their bs behind European pagan reconstructionism. Even after being explicitly asked to help out. Do better.
“that’s just the way the world works” it literally doesn’t have to be but okay
if anyone ever tells you “humans are just selfish / life is cruel / that’s just how the world is, get over it” be critical of them bc there’s a 75% chance they’re just using that as an excuse for their own shitty behavior so that they don’t have to put an effort into being better, kinder people
Something I think we tend to tend to forget, when talking about closed religions, is to think about why they’re closed. Because there is ALWAYS a reason for it; no community just shuts itself off from others just because it feels like it.
Some religions are closed because they’re based on cultural values and beliefs that outsiders, who weren’t raised with and immersed in those beliefs, wouldn’t be able to ever truly understand. Brujería is an example of this, as far as I know.
Some religions are closed because they’re based on location, with their beliefs centered around local things that don’t make sense outside of that location. There are some small Shinto sects that are closed for this reason.
Some religions are closed based on race, because people of a specific race banded together under terrible circumstances and formed beliefs based on their shared experiences. Hoodoo, for example, was created by African slaves so it’s only open to Black people (mainly African diaspora).
Some religions are closed because you have to be born into them, usually because it’s part of the religion’s tenants and foundation. Modern Zoroastrianism almost never recognizes converts.
Some religions are closed because, historically, they were mistreated and often criminalized, with sacred practices being stolen and bastardized by outsiders who were allowed to witness them. Those religions ended up closing to outsiders in order to protect themselves and survive. This is why the majority of indigenous religions are closed.
It’s important to understand the reasons behind religions being closed, not only so that we can learn to accept that decision, but also so that we have a better understanding of history and other people.
Let’s talk about the elements!
I’ve written a lot about the seven classical planets and celestial/cosmic witchcraft. I think it’s time to bring things a bit more down to earth, though!
This is a new two-part series! It will focus on the natural elements as understood by the Western Magical Tradition.
In today’s article, I’ll be explaining a bit about the history of these concepts and how I see them. I hope you find this interesting and informative!
Thinking About the Elements
Elements are one of the first concepts I learned when beginning a journey into witchcraft.
But! How do we view the elements as concepts? Lets consider how they relate to us and the whole universe. Here’s my views!
Some believe the elements are simply words for natural phenomena. In other words, Fire is fire - the burning of a campfire or candle, or another flame. Water would always be something like a stream, the ocean or other liquid. I don’t see it this way. They’re far more complex than that!
The four elements stem the observations of ancient philosophers. These thinkers guessed that these substances were the building blocks of physical reality. Of course, they were wrong! In reality, atoms comprise matter. Matter and energy, then, make up the physical universe.
We could associate four classical elements with the four states of matter. These are solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. They’d correspond to earth, water, air, and fire in turn. This is a very simplified view, though!
These concepts were fundamental to the ancients. A wealth of lore has developed around them. They have grown into complex metaphors for aspects of the human condition. The physical manifestations of the elements have become potent symbols.
They represent various mental and emotional phenomena. Symbols are important in witchcraft. The way I see it, all tools of the Craft are symbols used to connect with larger forces that work within the universe.
The elements themselves, and their attributions, are in fact, somewhat arbitrary. This means that each of us will have a different idea of what each element represents!
There’s nothing wrong with this, though. The point is to use them as symbols. What they symbolize to you is your own business!
Qualifying the Elements
In the Western Magical Tradition, there are four core (classical) elements: Earth, Air, Fire, and Water.
Some traditions do posit a fifth element called the quintessence, also known as Spirit or Aether. This fifth element stands apart from the other four, as it doesn’t behave in the same way.
I’ll be focusing on these four, not on the quintessence. Spirit as an element is a very large topic best suited for its own series of articles.
Alchemical thinkers have placed these four into categories. . They’re quite useful for understanding the system.
Each element is either “hot” or “cold,” as well as either “dry,” or “wet.”
This doesn’t describe the physical qualities of the phenomena in question. Rather, these terms are metaphors. They refer to the roles taken by the concepts each element embodies.
Hot and Cold Elements
Hot elements are active in human existence.
They stand for concepts that penetrate and alter the world around them. An outdated way of putting this would be to describe them as “masculine.” This comes from historical stereotypes about gender. I tend to use the term “active” to describe hot elements. That’s Fire and Air.
Cold elements are passive and receptive.
They represent concepts from which we draw nourishment. They are the structure or substance that forms our mental landscape. The hot elements tend to be the essence or organizing principle.
Cold elements are often stereotyped as “feminine.“ They are Water and Earth, both of which play a nourishing role in human existence.
Wet and Dry Elements
Dryness as a concept within the Western Magical Tradition refers to a fixed state. In other words, the dry elements are things that don’t often change. These elements are full of stability.
The key feature of a dry element is lack of intense motion. We can depend on the stable parts of our existence, represented by these elements.
The dry elements are Fire and Earth. It may seem strange to call fire stable, but it is a reliable source of warmth to us. It represents a constant feature of human life.
When we speak of wet elements, we mean the two elements that aren’t fixed. In other words, elements that flow ,change and transform. It is the concepts associated with these elements that drive the changes. They are reliable, but only insofar as change, itself, is something to rely on!
The wet elements are Air and Water. Both are natural features that shift and flow through our lives. The inclusion of Air as a wet element shows that these are metaphorical, not literal terms.
Much more could be said about how people have described the elements throughout time. The above image shows the alchemical view of how the elements can combine to create secondary principles.
As you might guess, “fixed” and “volatile” here stand for what we’ve been calling “passive” and “active.” If you want to know more about these further topics, I recommend Robert Bartlett’s book, True Alchemy.
The entire concept of the elements is a metaphor, though. It’s a metaphor that can work for you. It can help with your Craft, and help you connect with the universe. I’ll be posting the next article tomorrow! In that, I’ll be discussing each element in detail.
Everything Wrong with the Westernization of Chakras
As a yoga instructor and witch, this is something I come across every day. As a white woman who is definitely not Buddhist or Hindu, I don’t wish to speak for or over anyone, so please inform me if I’m mistaken.
That said, I am distraught by the westernization of the chakra systems and would simply like to shed some light on the truth.
1. CHAKRA SYSTEMS
The idea of energy centers commonly known as chakras originated from Tantric Yoga around 600 AD. Tantric yoga describes several different chakra systems, including but definitely not limited to the one shown in the picture above. There’s even a system with 21 chakras! Western culture has presumed to define one chakra system, and one system only, defining those chakras and saying “that’s how it is,” without taking into account the full theory.
2. CHAKRA MEANINGS
In western culture, every chakra has a meaning. For example, the crown chakra causes loneliness and depression if it’s imbalanced. Where did that idea come from? There is literally no mention of anything like that in Indian texts (and don’t worry, I’ll add sources at the end so you can check for yourselves).
3. ACTUAL ASSOCIATIONS
Y’all ever heard of mudras? How about “om”? This is what the chakras were actually meant for- the yogi was meant to chant a specific sound that resonated with the chakra in order to summon energy from whatever Hindu deity was associated with that particular chakra. Nowadays, we use chakras as a way to heal our thyroids, or to unlock compassion in our hearts or whatever. Again, where did that come from??
You know what? That’s all I’m going to get into. I’m not in the place to assume that I know everything about chakras, but neither are you witches with color-coded shelves on which you keep your crystals associated with each chakra, or you yoga instructors with your statues of the Buddha in your studios.
If you aren’t Hindu or Tantric Buddhist, and the chakra system actually works for you, I’m not asking you to stop using it. Just maybe don’t call them chakras?
Because long story short, the western idea of “chakras” is all made up and has almost nothing to do with the origin of the theory. And presuming to say that your way is the right way just because you meditate for five minutes a day and went to a yoga retreat in Bali that one summer? That’s called cultural Appropriation my friend.
Sources: https://hareesh.org/blog/2016/2/5/the-real-story-on-the-chakras
https://anodeajudith.com/chakras-ancient-and-modern-how-do-we-know-whats-real/
https://www.theodysseyonline.com/the-chakra-basics
:) please stop using chakras :)
Authors to Watch Out For in Hellenismos (WIP)
I will only list the Hellenismos-related books by these authors.
Timothy Jay Alexander - creator of the so-called Pillars of Hellenismos. Homophobic.
A Beginner’s Guide to Hellenismos
Hellenismos Today
The Gods of Reason: An Authentic Theology for Modern Hellenismos
Galina Krasskova - writes about paganism at large, usually Heathenry. Defends fascist neo-nazi organization AFA, sold Bacchic Lives Matter pin on Etsy, etc. Basically endless with this one. Just look her up on Tumblr.
Sacramentum: A Devotional for Dionysos
On Divination
Devotional Polytheism
Honoring the Ancestors: A Basic Guide
Ferryman of Souls: A Devotional to Charon
Magic and Religion
Philosophy and Polytheism
Building Regional Cultus
Ancestors and Hero Cultus
Ecstatic Practices
In Praise of Hermes: Nine Days of Devotion to the God of Travellers, Mischief, and More
To Rejuvenate and Nourish: Nine Days of Prayer to Asklepios, God of Healing
Divination and Oracles
With Clean Minds and Clean Hands: Miasma - What It Is and How to Treat It
Honoring the Mothers: Novenas to the Mothers of Our Gods and Heroes
Combatting the Evil Eye
Unto Herself: A Devotional Anthology for Independent Goddesses
Out of Arcadia: A Devotional Anthology in Honor of Pan
Guardian of the Road: A Devotional Anthology in Honor of Hermes etc.
Edward P. Butler - Neoplatonic pompous academia. Defends Krasskova and has a big persecution complex (spends at least half his twitter presence railing on ‘monotheists’). Antisemitic.
Essays on Hellenic Theology
Essays on a Polytheistic Philosophy of Religion
Tony Mierzwicki - Misinformation I have yet to verify this personally, but it is telling that he publishes through Llewelyn, the New Age publishing house of misinformation. Apparently he puts a rant about GMOs in a book about Hellenismos, and has strange ideas about what it means to be Greek.
Graeco-Egyptian Magick
Hellenic Polytheism Today
Sannion/H. Jeremiah Lewis - Neo-Nazi. Seriously, he has Nazi symbols on his blog. Transphobic, basically everything possible. Here’s the book’s he’s written:
Ecstatic: For Dionysos
End to End
Everything Dances: Strange Spirits 3
Gods and Mortals: New Stories of Hellenic Polytheism
Going Forth
Hunting Wisdom: A Bacchic Orphic Diviner’s Manual
Masks of Dionysos: Getting to know the God through his Heroes and Heroines
Monstrous Things
Pandæmonium and Silence
Spirits of Initiation: A Study of the Toys of Dionysos
Strange Spirits Volume One
Tending the Bull: A tradition of Dionysian devotion
THIS IS NOT AN EXIT: Strange Spirits Volume II
Thunderstruck with Wine
What Flowers in the Dark: A Poetic Journey Through Anthesteria
Wine Dark
Tony Mierzwicki - Abuser of women. His ex-wife took him to the courts.
Hellenismos: Practicing Greek Polytheism Today
Graeco-Egyptian Magick
(He also does events)
Please feel free to add!
Alright, I’ve made an important addition. Mierzwicki is a total piece of shit too. Avoid his events, his books and his website.