🌌 Discover the Magic of the Cosmos: "Book of Stars" by Thomas Chaote 🌌
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Book of Stars
📝 The Book Post Summary
🌌 Discover the Magic of the Cosmos: "Book of Stars" by Thomas Chaote 🌌
Are you ready to unlock the
Are you ready to unlock the ancient, hidden energies of the night sky? 🌟
"Book of Stars" is a practical and effective sigil grimoire created by chaos magick and witchcraft practitioner Thomas Chaote. Born out of two years of intense research into astrology, stellar mythologies, and constellations, this unique book serves as a powerful bridge between cosmic energies and practical chaos magick.
✨ What’s Inside?
Stellar Correspondences: Explore the dual nature (light and dark energies) of historical fixed stars like Achernar, Aldebaran, Polaris, Sirius, Vega, and many more.
Practical Sigil Magick: Each page features unique, custom-designed sigils tailored for invoking or evoking star powers, creating protective talismans, empowering altars, banishment, or deep meditation.
Challenging Your Birth Chart: Learn how to shield yourself from negative astrological influences or draw down missing planetary/stellar elements into your life through creative will.
True to the authentic spirit of chaos magick, this grimoire is released under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC 4.0) license. It is 100% FREE to download, read, and share for non-commercial use.
Harness the light of the stars and transform your spiritual practice today! ✨
The Moon holds a secret language and 2026 is already written in her phases.
This 2026 lunar calendar is more than just dates. It’s a map of energy, a guide for intentions, and a rhythm for the soul. Each New Moon invites you to plant your seeds of desire. Each Full Moon reminds you to release what no longer serves. Each quarter, a turning point, choice, reflection, and alignment.
🌙 January through December, the Moon becomes our silent companion:
🖤 She whispers renewal in the dark of the New Moon.
🖤 She expands with us in the waxing light.
🖤 She illuminates our truths beneath the Full Moon.
🖤 She teaches surrender as she wanes.
This calendar was created to be kept close within your grimoire, journal, altar, or simply on your wall, so you never forget that time itself is cyclical, and you are moving in harmony with the cosmos.
🖤 The Moon is not distant. She is within us. Every tide she turns, she turns in us too.
May 2026 be the year you align your magic with her light.
Embracing the Darkness Within: The Archetype of the Shadow Self
The Shadow is not a specter to fear, but a sacred guardian of the parts of ourselves that have been exiled — those hidden desires, fears, and wounds that the light cannot touch. She lives in the folds of silence and darkness, weaving lessons from pain and truth. To engage with the shadow is to embark on a ritual of reclaiming lost fragments of the soul, a rite of courage that challenges the ego’s fragile illusions. When you confront the Shadow, you do not fight her — you listen, honor, and transform.
Tonight, as black candles flicker and mugwort smoke curls through the air, offer an invitation to the Shadow. Whisper softly: “I call to the parts of me hidden in dusk and silence. Come forth, be known, and be healed.” Let her presence be felt as a weight and a gift — an opening to your deeper self. What shadow parts lie dormant in your being, aching for recognition?
Six is a perfect fit, because it’s also the number of birds that Romulus spotted in the sky:
Mox pastores illum in Palatio, hunc in Aventino vultures exspectare viderunt.
Subito Remus vocavit: “Videte! Sex vultures! Sex vultures advolant!”
Iam victoriam suam celebravit, cum Romulus clamavit: “Duodecim, videte, duodecim vultures adsunt!”
Pastores, qui haec audiverant, hunc vicisse consenserunt, illum reliquerunt, in Palatium abierunt.
… but his brother Remus spotted twelve. What was this about?
Romulus and Remus didn’t just go out for bird spotting because the day was inviting. Instead, they went in order to decide who will be the emperor of the city they were about to found. Remus saw twelve birds, and the pastors agreed that the signs had come in his favour.
Counting birds has been a practice known in ancient times already, and to this day it is one of the popular beliefs.
Counting crows is rather popular, and easy when sticking to the nursery rhyme:
One for sorrow, two for joy, three for a girl, four for a boy, five for silver, six for gold, seven for a secret never to be told, eight for a wish, nine for a kiss, ten for a time of joyful bliss.
Birds often represent freedom, the soul, rebirth (especially if we look at the Phoenix), but every type of bird also has its own specific symbolism.
From the pigeon in Roman and Christian belief as a symbol of peace and deliverer of good news, to the caged Nightingale and her song, there’s plenty of stories providing different birds with different symbolism. Let’s look at a few examples:
Crows usually always comes in groups, sometimes accompanied by rooks and jackdaws. These birds are often seen as symbols of death and darkness, as especially crows used to stick near to battlefields to feast on the fallen. This aspect may have been one of the reasons the crow ended up being the symbol of the Morrigan. But crows also symbolise friends/family that can be trusted blindly (as the German saying goes: a crow will not peck out the eye of another crow). Like their bigger cousin the raven, crows also symbolise intelligence, magic and the unknown.
Robins seem to have become one of Britain's trademarks: If there’s winter, there’s Robins. These cute little critters with their red chests are often symbols for endurance, rebirth, and strength. They stay here during the cold winters and somehow always seem to make it through.
Eagles are especially popular birds as national symbols, since they’re considered strong and powerful. If you’ve ever seen an eagle’s claw, you may also know why— in Mongolia, eagles are being used for hunting foxes. Their claws are strong enough to crush their skulls. They also represent wisdom linked to strength: “What do I have to understand to make use of my power?”
Swans are another popular symbol. While white swans symbolise emotions, sensibility, marriage, and beauty, black swans often symbolise intuition in dreams— but they can also be an omen of death, like any other black bird. The popular ‘dying swan’ is a symbol of unrequited love.
Do you have any favourite bird? If so, what do you love about it?
Today we will go into detail about the dream symbol “house”. If you think back to the time we first talked about this symbol, you may remember that it came with a lot of information. I will try to break it down to the essentials, so you can work with the information I’ll give you.
But first we will need to talk about how to use this information.
Dream analysis may sound intimidating and somehow occult, yet it is pretty straight-forward. The way I do it is by taking the things that I dreamed about _without giving them any additional interpretation_. I just take them as they are (e. g. “blue house”, “broken window”, “rain”) and look them up in my lexicon (if I’m not a 100% certain about the meaning, and even then, I might still look it up).
I make sure to make notes of the different meanings one by one, and then (and only then!) I look at them as a group, looking for the connection between the symbols. Note that things like “broken window” may need to be separated into two searches (“broken” and “window”) and then combined to one image before looking at the whole group.
Now, on to the Symbol…
HOUSE.
The question connected to this symbol is, “What do I believe or fear relating to me?”
The house, familiar or not, usually represents the dreamer’s Ego/Personality. It will almost always refer to how the dreamer “builds” their life, and how it looks inside him.
Rooms and other areas of the house represent parts of the dreamer’s personality and experiences. It is important to pay attention to the state of the rooms: How does it look? Is it tidy, empty, messy? If something in the room stands out, it’s also worth looking into: Is there a big desk, a broken window, a bouquet of flowers? All of these are keywords to look up in the lexicon!
To explore the house can symbolise the beginning of self-discovery, especially if the house was familiar, but the rooms were different.
The study refers to work discipline. This doesn’t always need to be job related, but can also refer to work on relationships, friendships, etc.
The bathroom refers to the dreamer’s cleanliness and intimate thoughts. It can refer to a spiritual cleansing, or to the need for the dreamer to morally purge themselves. The toilet often represents letting go of old memories, guilt, etc.
A library would represent the mind, and how the dreamer works with information. It may also stand for the dreamer’s need to learn something. The books in the shelves might give you a better idea of the details.
The roof represents the mind and intellect.
The attic represents experiences from the past and old memories. Here the dreamer will often find suppressed and forgotten memories. It may also give them a hint on what kind of clutter they still hold on to.
The dining room and the living room are pretty similar; both are spaces of social conversation. Only the focus in the dining room is on food. The question here is, what does the dreamer consume, and why?
The kitchen represents the motherly side (may be different if the dreamer’s dad took care of the cooking—this is why it is necessary to always keep the context in mind), and how information is processed.
The house front represents the ‘social mask’ aka ‘Persona’ the dreamer wears for the public.
The fundament represents, you guessed it, the fundaments of the dreamer’s life. Those can be financial security, but also opinions, expectations, etc.
The corridors represent how the dreamer interacts with other people, and how the dreamer refers to them. Remember that the corridors connect rooms, and with that practically the different aspects of the dreamer.
A basement usually represents the subconscious, and experiences with which the dreamer hasn’t dealt properly. It also represents spiritual/mental depth, and sometimes even hidden qualities. If you didn’t grow up with a basement, think of other places with a similar use (e. g. conservatory).
The bedroom represents sex, but also death and birth of the dreamer.
This is only a small overview of all possible symbols. As said before, it is important to look at these things in the context of the dreamer’s experiences, but also in the context of each other (after the initial sorting and defining). Things like the wallpapers, state of the house, the rooms, music playing, things or creatures in this house, are also important to form a complete picture.
Hello, and welcome to the seventh Symbol Saturday!
Today, our members had a choice, even if it didn’t look like it. They picked between three houses. If you want, take a look at them and think of which house you'd have picked:
🏠🏡🏚️
This is what we will be talking about today: “Home” in dreams and its possible interpretations.
Nearly everyone has dreamed of “home” in one way or another. Sometimes you don’t really pay much attention to the house or flat you’re dreaming of, but sometimes it plays a major role. These dreams will usually have you walk through a building that may seem familiar to you in some way. It often doesn’t really matter if the house looks like this in the wake world as well, or if it exists at all. You just know this place.
Sometimes this can be a nice feeling, sometimes it’s uncanny; and there’s a reason for that.
We know these places because they reflect our inner Self according to dream analysis.
Now’s the time to ask yourself, which house did you pick? Even if you picked all of them, which one was your first choice? Of course, this isn’t a dream (from what we can tell *winkwonk*), but the subconscious doesn’t take breaks.
Did you take the house with the little tree? The plain house? Or the abandoned one?
Homes in our dreams are of course usually far more complex than these little house emojis. The part we want to focus the most on is their interior:
What do the corridors look like? Are they narrow or wide? Long or short?
Are there stairs? Are they cluttered, or can you walk them easily?
What’s on the walls? Is there a nice wallpaper? Pictures? Or are the walls cracked and mouldy?
What kind of rooms are there? Are they full? Empty? Locked?
The parts that stood out the most to you in your dream matter the most.
See the house as a reflection of your inner Self, quite literally: Do you like the pictures that hang on the walls of your inner Self? Are the rooms of your inner Self well-lit and clean, or are they cluttered? Are they maybe even locked, because you don’t want to know what’s inside? This could be bad memories, traumatic events, secrets… Sometimes our dream even clutters the stairs, or tears them in, if it doesn’t want us to go up to these rooms of our Self and our mind.
Whatever the home in your dreams looks like, it’ll help you understand yourself better.
🌙❄️ When Saint Nicholas Sleeps, Krampus Stirs… ❄️🌙
While the world celebrates light and joy, there walks a shadow in the cold winter night. Krampus, the heady companion of Saint Nicholas, punishes those who stray, teaching through fear what kindness cannot.
Tonight, we remember the power of consequence, the thin line between mischief and darkness… and how sometimes, the shadows carry lessons.