CASTING DIVINATION PART 1: Bones, Charms & Runes
Hello beautiful souls ✨
You hold a collection of objects in your hands. You ask a question. You cast them onto cloth. Where they land, how they fall, which ones touch—this is your answer.
This is casting divination: reading meaning in the patterns created when objects are thrown.
Unlike tarot (where cards have fixed meanings) or pendulums (which give yes/no), casting divination is raw, organic, and endlessly variable. Every throw is unique. The same question asked twice will give different configurations—because the energy shifts, the situation evolves, you change.
Today we're exploring three major casting systems:
Bone reading (osteomancy) - ancient, intuitive, deeply personal
Charm casting (cleromancy) - accessible, customizable, modern
Rune casting - structured, symbolic, rooted in Norse tradition
All three share core principles:
You cast objects
You read patterns, positions, relationships
Interpretation is intuitive + structural
The randomness isn't random
This is Part 1 of a two-part series on interpretive divination. Let's dive in.
THE CORE PRINCIPLE: PATTERN AS MESSAGE
All casting divination works on the same foundation:
1. OBJECTS = SYMBOLS Each item in your set represents something (concept, energy, person, theme).
2. POSITION = CONTEXT Where the object lands matters (near/far, center/edge, upright/fallen).
3. RELATIONSHIPS = MEANING Which objects touch, overlap, or point toward each other creates the reading's narrative.
4. INTUITION + STRUCTURE = INTERPRETATION You use both learned meanings and gut instinct to decode the pattern.
Whether you're throwing bones, charms, or runes, you're reading the language of organized chaos.
BONE READING (OSTEOMANCY)
WHAT IT IS:
Bone reading is one of the oldest forms of divination—practiced across Africa, Asia, Indigenous Americas, and ancient Europe.
You cast a collection of bones (and often other natural objects) and read their positions, orientations, and relationships.
TRADITIONAL PRACTICE:
African diaspora traditions (particularly Southern African sangomas): Sets include bones from different animals, shells, stones, seeds, coins—each with specific meaning passed down through lineage.
Readings are done in sacred space, often with ancestor invocation.
Asian traditions: Oracle bone divination (China) used heated bones that cracked—cracks were read as messages.
Indigenous practices: Vary widely by tribe/region. Some traditions are closed; approach with respect and research.
MODERN/ECLECTIC PRACTICE:
Many practitioners create personal bone sets using:
Chicken bones (small, accessible, ethical if you eat chicken)
Cleaned bones from meals (beef, pork, fish)
Animal bones found in nature (check local laws about collection)
Craft/replica bones (if you're uncomfortable with real ones)
Shells, stones, seeds as supplementary pieces
Important: If you're working within a specific tradition (like African diaspora practices), seek proper teaching and initiation. We're discussing eclectic/personal bone reading here.
BUILDING A BONE SET:
START SMALL (5-7 PIECES):
Basic set might include:
Vertebra = backbone, support, foundation, alignment
Rib = protection, breath, vitality
Small limb bone = action, movement, direction
Knuckle/joint = connection, flexibility, transition
Tooth = power, aggression, defense, communication
Shell = emotions, femininity, protection, water element
Stone = stability, grounding, permanence, earth element
You assign meanings based on:
The bone's function in the body
What animal it came from (if known)
What it represents to YOU intuitively
EXPAND OVER TIME:
As you practice, add:
More bones (build complexity)
Seeds/pods (growth, potential)
Coins (money, value, exchange)
Glass/crystals (clarity, energy, intention)
Found objects with personal significance
Traditional sets can have 60+ pieces. Start small.
HOW TO CAST BONES:
1. PREPARE YOUR SPACE
Casting cloth (light-colored so bones are visible, 2-3 feet square)
Mark center (optional—some use a circle drawn/sewn in the cloth)
Cleanse space and bones
2. HOLD YOUR QUESTION
Be specific. Hold bones in both hands. Close eyes. Focus on question until you feel ready.
3. CAST
Methods:
Overhead throw: Toss from above your head (traditional, dramatic)
Gentle toss: Release from chest height (more controlled)
Pour: Let bones flow from hands (gentle, less chaos)
Let them land where they land. Don't adjust.
4. OBSERVE BEFORE INTERPRETING
First impression: What jumps out immediately?
Note:
Which bones landed on the cloth (relevant to question)
Which fell off (not relevant, or "not yet")
Clustering (which bones are grouped)
Distance from center (close = immediate, far = distant future/indirect)
Orientation (pointing toward/away, upright/flat)
Touching (these energies are interacting)
5. READ THE PATTERN
Zones (if using marked cloth):
Traditional approach (many African traditions use compass directions):
North: Future, goals, what's ahead
South: Past, foundation, what's behind you
East: New beginnings, birth, rising energy
West: Endings, death, setting energy
Alternative approach:
Center: Present, you, main issue
Near center: Immediate concerns
Edge: Distant future, external influences
Off cloth: Not relevant or blocked
Relationships:
Bones touching = energies connected
Bones pointing at each other = communication, interaction
Bones crossed = conflict, intersection, choice
Bones parallel = harmony, alignment
Isolated bone = standing alone, independent factor
Example Reading:
You cast about a job decision.
Vertebra (foundation) lands center, upright.Small bone (action) lands near it, pointing toward north.Tooth (power/communication) lands in south (past), flat.Shell (emotion) lands far east (new beginning), but off the cloth slightly.
Interpretation: Your foundation/support system is central and solid. Action is needed and it points toward future growth. Past communications or power struggles are resolved (flat = settled). Emotions about new beginnings are present but not fully in play yet (barely off cloth = emerging).
Read: The foundation is there. Take action toward the future. Past conflicts are done. Emotional readiness is coming but not quite here yet.
DEVELOPING YOUR BONE-READING LANGUAGE:
Spend time with your bones:
Hold each piece
Meditate on its energy
Journal what it means to YOU
Cast repeatedly with simple questions
Track accuracy
Your intuitive meaning matters more than any book's definition.
Over time, you'll develop a relationship with your set. You'll know what a certain bone in a certain position means without thinking.
ETHICS & RESPECT:
If using real bones:
Thank the animal (even if it's chicken from the grocery store)
Treat bones with respect—they were once living beings
Cleanse regularly
Store properly (wrapped in cloth, not tossed in a drawer)
If working within closed traditions:
Don't appropriate without permission/training
Acknowledge sources
Don't claim lineage you don't have
CHARM CASTING (CLEROMANCY)
WHAT IT IS:
Charm casting is the modern, accessible cousin of bone reading.
Instead of bones, you use a collection of small objects (charms, trinkets, beads, stones, dice, buttons—anything meaningful) and cast them to read patterns.
This is the most customizable form of divination. Your set is entirely personal.
WHY CHARM CASTING APPEALS TO MODERN PRACTITIONERS:
No bones needed (good for vegetarians, people uncomfortable with animal parts)
Highly personal (choose items that resonate with YOU)
Accessible (raid your junk drawer, craft store, nature walks)
Evolving (add/remove charms as your life changes)
Instagrammable (let's be honest—pretty charms are more photogenic than bones)
BUILDING A CHARM SET:
CHOOSE 7-15 ITEMS (to start):
Categories to consider:
ELEMENTS:
Feather = air
Stone/crystal = earth
Shell = water
Red bead/charm = fire
Small mirror = spirit
LIFE AREAS:
Key = home, security, unlocking, access
Coin = money, value, exchange
Heart = love, relationships, emotion
Book/page = knowledge, learning, communication
Wheel/gear = career, movement, cycles
PEOPLE:
Crown = authority figure, boss, father
Ring = partnership, commitment, marriage
Baby shoe = children, new beginnings, innocence
Animal figurine = wild card, instinct, pet
ENERGIES:
Dice = chance, risk, gamble, luck
Arrow = direction, focus, goal
Anchor = stability, holding steady, being stuck
Wings = freedom, flight, escape, transcendence
WILDCARDS:
Your own symbols (a charm from your grandmother, a found object, something personally meaningful)
Where to source:
Craft stores (miniature charms in jewelry section)
Dollhouse miniatures
Game pieces (Monopoly tokens work great)
Nature (small stones, shells, seed pods, feathers)
Thrift stores (old jewelry, tchotchkes)
Online (Etsy, Amazon—search "miniature charms")
Make sure items are:
Small enough to cast easily (thumbnail to quarter-sized)
Distinct enough to identify when cast
Meaningful to you (even if the meaning is intuitive, not logical)
HOW TO CAST CHARMS:
Process is nearly identical to bone casting:
Prepare space (casting cloth, cleanse, center)
Hold question (focus while holding charms in hands/bag)
Cast (toss onto cloth)
Observe (what landed, where, how, relationships)
Interpret (use your assigned meanings + intuition)
Example Reading:
Question: "What do I need to know about this new relationship?"
Key (home/security) lands center, uprightHeart (love) lands close to key, touchingDice (chance) lands far north (future)Feather (air/communication) lands west (endings), pointing toward center
Interpretation: Security and love are at the center—this feels stable. There's an element of chance/risk in the future (not bad, just unpredictable). Communication about endings or from the past is relevant—maybe past relationship patterns need discussion.
Read: This relationship has potential for security and genuine love. There's risk ahead (all relationships have this). Address past communication patterns before they sabotage the present.
CHARM CASTING VS. BONE READING:
Similarities:
Same interpretive framework (position, relationship, pattern)
Both highly personal
Both intuitive + structural
Differences:
Charms are symbolic (a tiny key represents security—it's not made from something that was alive)
Bones carry ancestral/animal energy (some practitioners feel this deeply)
Charms are lighter/brighter (aesthetically and energetically)
Bones feel more primal/shamanic; charms feel more witchy/eclectic
Neither is "better." Choose what resonates.
RUNE CASTING
WHAT IT IS:
Runes are the letters of ancient Germanic alphabets (primarily the Elder Futhark—24 symbols).
Each rune is a letter, a sound, AND a symbolic concept.
Rune casting involves throwing marked stones/wood pieces and reading which runes land face-up, their positions, and relationships.
BRIEF HISTORY:
Origin: Scandinavia/Northern Europe, 150-800 CE
Original use: Writing system, not divination (though magical use is ancient)
Modern revival: 20th century (influenced by occultism, Norse revivalism, unfortunately also white supremacist appropriation)
Important: Runes belong to Norse/Germanic cultural heritage. Modern practice should be respectful, not appropriative or tied to racist ideologies.
THE ELDER FUTHARK (24 RUNES):
I'm not listing all 24 here (whole books exist on this), but examples:
Fehu (ᚠ): Wealth, cattle, abundance, mobile resources
Uruz (ᚢ): Aurochs (wild ox), strength, primal force, health
Thurisaz (ᚦ): Thorn, giant, protection, destructive force
Ansuz (ᚨ): God/Odin, communication, divine wisdom, breath
Raidho (ᚱ): Ride/journey, travel, movement, rhythm
Kenaz (ᚲ): Torch, knowledge, illumination, craft
Gebo (ᚷ): Gift, exchange, partnership, balance
Wunjo (ᚹ): Joy, harmony, fellowship, well-being
Each rune has layers:
Letter/sound: Linguistic meaning
Literal meaning: The word it represents (thorn, journey, gift)
Symbolic meaning: Esoteric concepts
Reversed meaning: Some systems read runes differently when upside-down
Study required: You can't effectively cast runes without learning their meanings. This isn't intuitive like bones/charms—it's a structured symbol system.
CREATING A RUNE SET:
MATERIALS:
Traditional:
Wood (especially ash, oak, yew—sacred to Norse tradition)
Carved and burned (or painted)
Modern:
Stones (smooth, flat pebbles—paint or carve runes)
Clay (sculpt, carve, fire)
Crystals (more expensive, energetically charged)
Pre-made sets (widely available online/metaphysical shops)
DIY option: Collect 24 similar-sized stones from a river/beach. Paint runes with permanent marker or acrylic paint. Seal with clear coat.
Consecration: Once made, consecrate your runes (with whatever tradition/ritual feels right—smoke cleansing, moonlight, blood, breath, dedication to Norse gods if you work with them).
HOW TO CAST RUNES:
UNLIKE BONES/CHARMS (where you cast everything), RUNE CASTING HAS OPTIONS:
METHOD 1: SINGLE RUNE DRAW
Simplest. Hold question, draw one rune from bag. That's your answer.
Quick daily guidance, yes/no questions (modified), straightforward answers.
METHOD 2: THREE-RUNE CAST
Draw three runes:
Rune 1: Past/Situation
Rune 2: Present/Challenge
Rune 3: Future/Outcome
Most common method. Good for narrative readings.
METHOD 3: FULL CAST (Multiple Runes Thrown)
Pour/cast multiple runes (5-9 or all 24) onto cloth.
Read only face-up runes (face-down = not relevant to this reading).
Interpret based on:
Which runes appear (themes)
Positions (similar to bone/charm reading—center vs. edge, near vs. far)
Clusters (runes touching = related concepts)
Patterns (do they form a shape?)
This is closest to bone/charm casting method.
METHOD 4: CASTING CLOTH WITH ZONES
Use a cloth divided into sections (past/present/future, or other meaningful divisions).
Cast runes. Where they land determines timing/context.
Example:
Question: "How do I move forward in my career?"
Cast 7 runes. Four land face-up:
Raidho (journey): Center, prominent
Kenaz (knowledge/torch): Near Raidho, touching
Ansuz (communication): North (future), upright
Thurisaz (thorn): South (past), reversed
Interpretation: Journey is central—you're in movement/transition. Knowledge/craft is directly connected to this journey. Future requires communication (maybe teaching, speaking, networking). Past had a destructive force or protection that's now reversed/completed.
Read: You're on a journey of skill-development. Your craft/knowledge is the vehicle. Future success involves communication/sharing what you know. Past obstacles have been overcome—don't let them hold you back.
LEARNING RUNES:
This takes time. You're learning a symbol language.
Steps:
Study one rune per day (24 days minimum)
Meditate on each rune's shape, sound, meaning
Draw the rune repeatedly (embody it through your hand)
Journal personal associations (what does "journey" mean to YOU?)
Practice single-rune daily draws (build familiarity)
Graduate to three-rune spreads
Eventually, full casting
Resources:
The Book of Runes by Ralph Blum (controversial but accessible)
Nordic Runes by Paul Rhys Mountfort (more scholarly)
Runelore by Edred Thorsson (deep dive, Odinic perspective)
Online communities for rune study and discussion.
CULTURAL RESPECT:
Runes come from Norse/Germanic culture.
Respect means:
Study the cultural context (don't just grab symbols divorced from meaning)
Acknowledge the source
Don't mix them carelessly with other closed/specific traditions
Be aware of white supremacist appropriation (Nazi use of runes) and actively distance yourself from that
If you work with Norse gods as part of rune practice, do so respectfully
You don't have to be Scandinavian to use runes, but you should respect where they come from.
PRACTICAL TIPS FOR ALL CASTING METHODS
CREATING YOUR CASTING CLOTH:
SIZE: 2-3 feet square (large enough for patterns, small enough to manage)
MATERIAL: Cotton, silk, velvet (something bones/charms won't bounce off)
COLOR: Light (white, cream, light blue) so items are visible
MARKINGS (optional):
Circle in center
Compass directions marked
Zones drawn/sewn (past/present/future, elements, life areas)
Or leave blank (read intuitively)
CLEANSING YOUR SET:
Regular cleansing keeps energy clear:
Smoke (incense, sage, palo santo)
Moonlight (especially full moon)
Salt (briefly—don't leave bones/some metals in salt long-term)
Sound (bell, singing bowl)
Intention (hold each piece, breathe clean energy into it)
After heavy/difficult readings, cleanse immediately.
STORING YOUR SET:
Bag/pouch (drawstring, fabric)
Box (wooden, lined with cloth)
Keep together (bones/charms/runes should be a set, stored as one)
Respectful location (not tossed in a junk drawer)
PRACTICE EXERCISES:
EXERCISE 1: Daily Single-Item Draw
Each morning, draw/cast one piece. What guidance does it offer for the day?
Journal results. Track accuracy.
EXERCISE 2: Yes/No Simplification
Assign "yes" meanings to some items, "no" to others. Cast for yes/no questions.
Not ideal long-term, but helps beginners build confidence.
EXERCISE 3: Comparison Casting
Ask same question. Cast bones. Note answer.
Ask again. Cast charms (or runes). Note answer.
Do they align? Contradict? Complement?
This develops discernment about which method speaks clearest for which questions.
EXERCISE 4: Pattern Recognition
Cast without a question. Just observe the pattern.
What story does it tell? What do you see?
Trains your eye to read relationships and positions.
WHEN CASTING DIVINATION WORKS BEST
IDEAL FOR:
Complex questions with multiple factors (not just yes/no)
Seeing relationships between life areas (career + love + money + health simultaneously)
Timing questions (using zones for past/present/future)
Visual learners (you SEE the answer laid out spatially)
Kinesthetic practitioners (the act of casting is embodied, not passive)
LESS IDEAL FOR:
Highly specific information ("What day will X happen?")
People who need fixed answers (casting is interpretive, not absolute)
Beginners with no divination experience (might be overwhelmed by complexity)
THE BOTTOM LINE (PART 1)
Casting divination—bones, charms, runes—is reading the language of organized chaos.
You throw objects. They land in patterns. Those patterns contain meaning.
The skill isn't in the throwing. It's in the reading.
Choose your method:
Bones for primal, ancestral, deep work
Charms for personal, accessible, evolving practice
Runes for structured, ancient wisdom, strategic guidance
Or use all three. Different tools for different questions.
Start simple:
Small set (5-10 items)
Clear casting space
Begin with yes/no or simple questions
Build complexity over time
Trust your intuition as much as structure
The randomness isn't random. Your subconscious guides where things land. The universe speaks through pattern. Or both.
Next up: PART 2 - Reading methods (tea leaves, coffee grounds, wax)
These methods don't involve casting—they involve substances that form patterns you then interpret. Different mechanism, similar interpretive skills.
YOUR TURN
Do you practice any casting divination? Which method calls to you?
Have you built a bone, charm, or rune set? What's in it?
What's the most accurate casting reading you've received or given?
Let's discuss. Casting divination is deeply personal—your set, your meanings, your relationship with the practice.
Blessed be 🦴
The bones know. The charms speak. The runes reveal. You just have to learn their language—and trust that when you throw them, they land exactly where they're meant to.











