Banishing vs Warding.
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Banishing vs Warding.
My favorite simple wards to guard the home
Hanging rosemary above the doorstep, and/or above doors of the house for protection.
Sprinkling a line of dried red pepper on a windowsill, to counter a curse.
Placing a mix of dried & ground eggshells and black pepper in every corner of a room to keep out unwanted spirits.
Placing a decoration representing a witch in the kitchen, to keep away illness and to favor health.
Crafting an effigie (no matter how crude!) and make it into the guardian of your home by charging it with your intent of protection and placing it near the front door.
Crafting small witch ladders to hang around the house.
Fellow Witches: What's the scariest tarot card to pull for yourself during a reading?
The Tower
The Tower (Reversed)
The Hanged Man
The Hanged Man (Reversed)
Death
Death (Reversed)
The Fool
The High Priestess
Not Pagan/Show Results
A dif card I'll put in the replies/tags
Ayo, please reblog for sample size and all that :]
About out to the star spinner tarot for giving me four options for the lovers card
Crystal Knot Magic
Knotting a crystal net is very easy if you are able to use your fingers for this kind of crafting.
They are often called crystal "wraps" and many tutorials can be found on Youtube.
There are many, many ways to make a crystal net. The style you use determines the final appearance. More importantly for us, the style you use determines how many knots there will be, and their size.
We can draw on four common elements of magic: Crystal/mineral correspondences, color correspondences, numerology, and knot magic.
The stone (or other object) is like the battery which holds and radiates power. The object you net should correspond to your core intent.
The color of cord or thread you use can modify or hone your intent. For example, if using clear quartz, the color correspondence might be doing most of the work.
Then again, this spell will work with cotton twine and a river stone, so just do whatever suits you.
The total number of cords you use dictates how many knots total will exist in your spell. Crystal nets are made by tying two strands of cord together. If you use four cords, you will have eight working ends, and therefore you will tie four knots per row. If you have five cords, you will have ten working ends, and you will need to tie five knots per row. I align my numerology to the number of knots, not strands, because the knots themselves are holding the magic.
The knots are used to tie intent and bind power. I create most of my charms in a style that has one big starter knot at the top and one big finishing knot at the bottom. There are tons of ways to utilize knots in this project. The first knot can hold the only intent, while the rest bind powers to support it. Or the intent can be split into its composite parts and each part gets its own knot. Or every single knot can have something unique, or they can all be identical... lots of options.
Conceptually, the inner object is the focal point or battery of the spell. The knots can be understood as tools that the object uses to carry out your will, instructions to guide the object in its work, vessels that carry additional power (like tidepools on a beach), or tangles that capture and bind up unwanted forces.
To perform this sort of magic:
1. Learn how to make the nets first from an arts and crafts perspective :) you can cut the cording off to re-use the same stone later. It is really frustrating to try and do a craft in a ritual headspace if you have to learn the craft simultaneously!
2. Gather up your cording and object to be netted. Do any ritual techniques you prefer to prepare them.
3. Decide how you want your intent to be tied in. Do you want to use the same phrase for each knot? Do you want to chant your intent continuously while you do many knots? Etc.
4. Make the crystal net in your ritual headspace/magic zone. Pour your intent into each knot in whatever methods you choose.
5. I recommend making the final knot of your project into the seal which completes and finishes the amulet ("so mote it be," "as my will it has been done," etc).
6. If you did not raise and direct energy during the spell, ensure the amulet is charged afterwords. Like all amulets and talismans, it requires feeding and repowering as time goes on.
Did you know you don't have to use the entire tarot deck for every reading?
It's fairly well known that you can read tarot by taking out the major arcana cards and only using those 22 cards for a spread.
However, you can divide the deck up in all sorts of ways. This is called reading with a restricted deck. Usually, you will separate the deck out into suits and only choose which suits are relevant to the question at hand.
Everyone has their own meaning for what the suits indicate, these are mine and they are fairly common :) (see more about using suits to read in this other post!)
Pentacles reveal income and money, home life, all domestic issues, family, and platonic relationships.
Cups reveal emotions, romantic relationships, subjective experiences, and personal need.
Swords reveal mindset, objectivity, professional relationships, pain, and difficult or professional (āitās just businessā) choices.
Wands reveal passions, desires, boundaries, sexual relationships, burdens, and choices borne out of inner need.
So for example, if you are reading a question about the future of someone's romantic relationship when they move in with their partner, you can choose to take out all of the Pentacles and Cups and only use those 2 suits for the reading!
Or if you want to identify a person (identity/role/behavior), you can take all the court cards out of the deck and only draw one of them.
You can split the deck and read a special 5-card spread, where you draw 1 card from each pile (the four suits + major arcana) for each card position for an overview of the person's life in that moment.
Reading with a restricted deck is a really great way to learn and practice, since you can just focus on a certain suit and get to know it as a unit. It is really interesting to see a shift in readings when moving from suit to suit :)
"This crystal is good for such-and-such organ!" oh yeah name 3 of that organ's functions
"This will cleanse your body of toxins" Oh? Which ones? What are their names? Why are they bad for you? What symptoms do they cause?
This is the only good addition to this post
The Magic of the Pines & Correspondences š²
āIn the pines, in the pines, where the sun never shines And you shiver when the cold wind blowsā
āDolly Parton
Pine Tree (pinus spp.)
Energy: Ā Both hot & cold
Planet: Ā Mars
Element: Ā Air Ā
Associated Deities: Ā Aphrodite, Astarte, Attis, Cybele, Dionysus, Pan, Venus, The Horned God
Fertility ⢠Love ⢠Purification ⢠Healing ⢠Banishing ⢠Protection ⢠Abundance
There are around 115 types of pine trees and, aside from oak, pine trees are the most successful and widely ranging trees in North America. Ā Pinyon pine nuts are edible and can be ground to make flour, pine oil is used as an antiseptic, pine rosin can be used in soaps and sealing wax, and some Native American tribes used pine gum to treat boils.
The ancient Romans used pine trees cut from sacred groves in a manner similar to modern-day Christmas trees. Ā They would take the trees the night before Saturnalia and place them in temples to be decorated and used as a fertility symbol.
Dreaming of tall straight pine trees means that you will receive good news.
Pine needles can be burned to cleanse and purify the home (mix equal parts juniper & cedar) and to reverse spells and hexes made against you. Ā Scatter the needles on the floor to drive away those with ill-intent. Ā Add crushed pine needles to bath sachets in winter for a relaxing magical cleansing. Ā They can also be used in sleep and dream sachetsājust make sure they wonāt poke through!
Use branches of pine to sweep an outdoor area before performing magic. Ā Branches can also be placed above the bed to keep sickness away, above the entrance to the home to ensure continual joy within, and a cross of pinch branches or needles above the fireplace will keep evil from entering through it.
Pinecones can be carried or hung in the home to increase fertility and to stay well in old age. Ā Place one near your bed or under your pillow to draw or keep a lover.
Burn pinecones in your hearth to protect (and warm!) your home.
Place pinecones in your office to draw prosperity and success.
To draw positivity and blessings to you tie a bundle of pine needles with thread and burn them. Ā Pass pinecones through the smoke and place them on your altar or in a place you will see them often. Ā Send grateful energy toward them as you pass by them and good things will flow toward you.
References: Ā Cunninghamās Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs, Whispers from the Woods by Sandra Kynes, Magical Folkhealing by DJ Conway
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Misinformation and Critical Thinking as a Witch
I am pretty sure that many of us are quite familiar with the amount of misinformation that gets its way around witchy spaces. I know I've fallen for misinformation several times, notably those darn correspondence lists, and I'll probably fall for it again. And honestly, I think constantly yelling "use critical thinking skills!" is all well and good, but if you've been in the American public school system or in an evangelical sect of Christianity (or both), you know that isn't taught to us in any meaningful way. What the hell does critical thinking even look like?
So, I have something that might be able to help. This can also lead you to help research things for yourself in regards to paganism or witchcraft (or both), determine your own personal beliefs and more fully find what craft is meant for you, without just taking a bunch of books at their absolute face value. I find it really helps with my anxiety over not being able to really articulate what I'm saying about a thing - because I more fully understand WHY I believe the things I do, I have less trouble handling discussing it in a critical manner.
There's a few key things to keep in mind when reading a text, witchy, pagan or otherwise. Now, a lack of answer for one of these things doesn't inherently make them "invalid", but it does give you something you can dig into further to make that choice for yourself. As a witch, that is kind of your job - your power is your own, and you really should be making your own decisions on things. So, when you're reading a book, you can take a pause and consider:
What is the author discussing, and what is their conclusion? If a witchy author is talking about The Burning Times, what statement are they making about it? Do they believe this was an actual historical event? You'll usually know very quickly because in my personal experience, anyone who doesn't believe in the Burning Times (myself included), are very passionate about how we feel about this particular bit of misinformation.
What reasons do they have for making this conclusion? You can consider what the overall narrative is. For instance, if the author is vehemently against the story of the Burning Times as historical fact, their reasoning might be that they are a historian working against misinformation. The author may be arguing against the overarching issues of whitewashing within neopagan circles. If the author is making a statement in regards to the Burning Times being true, perhaps their reasoning is to invoke a narrative of continual, ancestral oppression against one singular unbroken group. You may need to real the whole of the book to really get an idea as to what the author is writing all of this "for".
What assumptions are they making in coming to this conclusion? Assumptions are things that we understand to be just kind of universally true, and there is kind of a problem with this in a lot of witchy circles. For instance, there is a problem within the pagan community of making the assumption that because their experience with organized religion was Christianity, the things that took place within their sect of Christianity are true for not only all sects, but other monotheistic religions as well. Conversely, there is the assumption that the "rule of three" is universal, when it is not the absolute law of the universe and is a specifically Wiccan thing. And even then that's debatable, but there are witches out there with a better understanding of that than I do and we're not here for that argument. The point is, it's important to know what is fact, and what is assumed.
Are there any informal logical fallacies present? Thiiiis is a big one, because there are a lot of ways of presenting an argument that tricks you into thinking the point being made is legit, but it really doesn't do anything to present concrete evidence towards the argument being actually true. This is your ad hominem attacks, your strawman arguments, your slippery slopes and false dichotomies. There's a lot to be on the lookout for here's a good link to a basic kind of rundown of several: https://thebestschools.org/magazine/15-logical-fallacies-know/
How true is the evidence presented, if at all? This is very important. There is such a thing as UPG, which stands for unverified personal gnosis - it is your own personal experience in regards to your own singular interaction with a spirit or deity of some variety. This happens in witchy spaces all the time, but it's important to understand that UPG is not evidence. It should not be presented as fact or evidence, and it should not be taken as absolute fact or evidence. You can subscribe to UPG all you like, just understand that it is UPG. Back to our Burning Times example, actual concrete evidence would be in the form of primary sources from the time, secondary sources, historical analysis by experts in that particular field of study, etc., and it must match the actual claim being made. Yeah, there were witch hunts, that's true. But the narrative of the Burning Times as a continuous thing that specifically targeted "real" pagans and witches is not backed up by evidence.
Every author is a human being. Human beings have biases, have their reasons for doing things a certain way, their own rituals and beliefs and faiths. You can't always trust that someone is writing something with your best interests at heart, or that they themselves aren't stuck in thought processes that they've been manipulated into. Some of the best recruiters are the True Believers, after all, but that doesn't mean what they say is infallible. Witchiness, pagan-ness, spirituality and enlightenment do not make a person any less human.
Weird peeve time. Calling lab grown gemstones "fake" is stupid because it's the same shit just not formed naturally. An artificially grown diamond is the same shit as a natural diamond it is the exact same material bro it's all fuckign carbon
It's carbon it's pretty and it didn't involve slave labor what's not to love??? Hi I'm having geology opinions tonight apparently. And I'm right
There is so much bullshit in the diamonds industry to be mad about tbh. It also ties into the bullshit of the wedding industry as a whole but we don't have the time to unpack all that
not even going to lie, the day i learned i could get like 15 lab grown rubies the size of dimes for $20 is the day i spent $20 on rubies, and i have never once said to myself "man, i wish this cost $1,600 and the lives of eight children to produce"
We are a pro-lab-grown mineral blog here, not only is it massively cheaper but massively more ethical as well in many cases.
Do you still do free readings
Hi there,
I tend to only open readings up at certain times of the year, at the moment theyāre closed Iām afraid
Pumpkin Spice and Brown Sugar Roasted Pumpkin Seeds for Samhain
Samhain is, among other things, the witches new year. We look back on the previous year, let go of what no longer serves us, let go of the phases in our lives/versions of ourselves that have reached their death, and look forward to/plan for what is to come. That's why I decided to make some roasted pumpkin seeds for the New Year aspect of Samhain!
Seeds carry so much potential. Potential for life, rebirth, and abundance. Seeds, to me, represent the natural cycles that we must connect with and live by. Seeds contain the life of next year's abundant spiritual harvest. And all of this potential is well protected inside the seed shell, waiting to sprout. These were made with seasonally corresponding spices that align with my intent.
On Samhain, I'll cast my intent on the seeds I eat, as I invision my goals for the coming year š
-------------------
You'll need:
š 1 cup of pumpkin seeds- potential, prosperity, abundance, protection, manifestation and attraction of wishes, rebirth.
š 3 tablespoons of butter- fulfillment, emotional richness, happiness, nurturing energy.
š 2 tablespoons of brown sugar- sweetness in life, love, happiness.
š Ground Cinnamon- protection, spiritual focus, psychic awareness, love, prosperity, money, health.
š Nutmeg- prosperity, money, health, psychic awareness, love, happiness.
š Ground Ginger- health, balance, grounding, love, money, success, clarity.
š Allspice- health, luck, abundance, prosperity, money.
š Salt- protection and purification.
š Black Pepper- banish negativity, protection.
The spices don't have measurements because they're all to-taste :) add plenty!
--------------------
1. I washed the seeds after gutting the pumpkin and let them dry for a day. If you decide not to do that, make sure you wash off any pumpkin gunk and pat the seeds dry well.
2. Preheat the oven at 350°F. Cleanse your space as you choose.
3. Melt the butter, and add to it the sugar, salt, and spices. Keep in mind the magical properties of these ingredients as you add them, and how those properties will serve your intent for the year to come. Stir counterclockwise as you invision all that you'll be releasing from the past year, imagine it dissipating. Take a deep breath. Then stir clockwise as you focus on attracting all that you want for the coming year.
4. Pour the spiced melted butter over your seeds in a bowl. Mix the seeds to make sure they all get coated.
5. Place the seeds on a baking sheet or a nonstick baking pan, you want enough space for the seeds to be spaced out from each other. Doesn't have to be perfect, just make sure they're not all clumped together.
6. If you had let the seeds dry out, they will be done in about 10-15 minutes. Stir them every 5 minutes. If you didn't let them dry out, they'll be done in about 25 minutes, and still stir them every 5-10 minutes or so. They'll be done when they look caramelized and are slightly crispy.
New Lunar Calendar available in my shop!Ā
PBW Witch Shop & Zine Distro
The PBW Witch Shop is a curated selection of witchcraft and magic related zines, books, pin-back buttons, tarot cards and more.
We focus on traditional and folkloric witchcraft, animism, chaos magic, secular witchcraft, magical herbs and plants, queer witchcraft, tarot & Divination, witchcraft & magic in politics, history, culture, and social & racial justice,Ā and aspects of non-Wiccan forms of witchcraft, magic, and paganism.
Pre-Covid the Portland Button Works primarily made custom pinback button. Selling zines and books was secondary and more of a hobby for me to share things Iād like to read. Right now our business is pivoting to focus on books and zines that people can read in the comfort and safety of their own homes. Some items are from well known witchcraft and occult publisher and some are titles from small publishers with interesting items I donāt see in other shops but Iām excited to elevate.
Not everyone has income to buy books right now, we totally understand that, but I would love it if you were able to reblog this post or share Portland Button Works and PBW Witch Shop with your friends.
If you have been looking for a book about something specific, or if you think something would be a good fit for our catalog, get in touch. We can order almost any book in print, even if it isnāt witchcraft or magic related.
With that being said, here are some categories of items we carry:
Some good books to get you started studying witchcraft:
Grovedaughter Witchery by Bree NicGarran
Making Magic by Briana Saussy
Magical Power for Beginners- How to Raise & Send Energy for Spells That Work by Deborah Lipp
Weave The Liminal by Laura Tempest Zakroff
Some creative books to help build your witch craft practice:
Spellcrafting- Strengthen the Power of your Craft by Creating and Casting Your Own Unique Spells by Arin Murphy-Hiscock
D.I.Y. Magic -a Strange & Whimsical Guide to Creativity by Anthony Alvarado
Psychic Witch- a Metaphysical Guide to Meditation, Magick, & Manifestation by Mat Auryn
Urban Magick by Diana Rajchel
Standing and Not Falling - a Sorcerous Primer in Thirteen Moons by Lee Morgan
Tarot Books
Queering the Tarot by Cassandra Snow
Tarot for Troubled Times by Shaheen Miro & Theresa Reed
Modern Tarot by Michelle Tea
Tarot Decks
Next World Tarot (regular and pocket sized)
Science Tarot
Rider-Waite-Coleman Smith Regular sized and Mini sized
Crow Tarot
Modern Witch Tarot
Cat Tarot
Check out the tarot and divination books in our catalog and also check out tarot and divination decks in our catalog here.
Condensed Chaos by Phil Hine
Advanced Magick for Beginners by Alan Chapman
Chaos Protocols by Gordon White
Hands on Chaos Magic by Andrieh VitimusĀ
Liber Null & Psychonaut by Peter Carroll
Other books in the Chaos Magic section
Anthologies: Becoming Dangerous: Witchy Femmes, Queer Conjurers, and Magical Rebels, Bringing Race to the Table: Exploring Racism in the Pagan Community, Shades of Ritual: Minority Voices in Practice
Magical Resistance: Witchcraft Activism by David Salisbury, Magic for the Resistance by Michael Hughes, Revolutionary Witchcraft by Sarah Lyons
Witches and Feminist Perspectives: Caliban and the Witch by Silvia Federici, Witches, Midwives and Nurses by Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English , Witches Sluts Feminists by Kristen J. Sollee
Pagan Anti-Capitalism: Pagan Anarchism True to the Earth: Pagain Political Thology by Kadmus, All That is Sacred is Profaned: A Pagan Guide to Marxism by Ryhd Wildermuth, A Pagan Anti-Capitalist Primer
Queer Witchcraft: Witchcraft and the Gay Counter Culture, Sapphomanteion a Lesbian Oracle, Queering the Tarot
Check out the Witchcraft Culture and History and Witchcraft Politics and Resistance sections of our website.
Green Witchcraft: The Green Witch by Arin Murray-Hiscock, Green Witchcraft by Paige Vanderbeck
Plants and Herbs: Under the Witching Tree by Corinne Boyer, Under the Bramble Arch by Corinne Boyer
The Poison Path: Veneficuim: Magic, Witchcraft and the Poison Path by Daniel Schulke, Pharmo/Gnonsis: Plant Teachers and the Poison Path by Dale Pendell , Plants of the Devil by Corinne Boyer
Witchy Crafts: Pestlework: a Book of Magical Powders and Oils by Bree NicGarran, Sew Witchy by Rachel Henderson, Sigil Witchery by Lara Tempest Zakroff
Other books in our Plants, Herbs, and Magical Crafts section
Books on Atheopaganism
Godless Paganism (anthology)
Atheopaganism by Mark Green
Other Pagan Perspectives
Jailbreaking the Goddess: A Radical Revisioning of Feminist Spirituality by Lasara Firefix Allen
The Wakeful World: Anismism, Mind, and the Self in Nature by Emma Restall Orr
Circling the Star by Anthony Rella
All That Is Sacred is Profaned: A Pagan Guide to Marxism by Rhyd Wildermuth
All Other Pagan books
Traditional Witchcraft: A Cornish Book of Ways by Gemma Gary
A Deed Without A Name: Unearthing the Legacy of Traditional Witchcraft by Lee Morgan
Crooked Path: An Introduction to Traditional Witchcraft by Keldon
Backwoods Witchcraft by Jake Richards
Besom Stand and Sword A Guide to Traditional Witchcraft the Six-Fold Path the Hidden Landscape by Christopher Orapello & Tara Love Maguire
Southern Cunning: Folkloric Witchcraft in the American South by Aaron Oberon
Folk Witchcraft by
The Flame in the Cauldron by Orion Foxwood
Craft of the Untamed by Roger Horne
Check out the rest of the books in our Traditional & Folkloric Witchcraft Section
What are zines? Small independently made magazine and pamphlets filled with stories and unique ideas that you wonāt find from major publishers!
Some topics you will find in zines we carry are Secular Witchcraft, the fantastic Fiddlerās Green Pamphlets and lots of zine on the places where Politics, Paganism, and Witchcraft intersect.
Check out all of our witchy zines here.
Other Stuff
witchy buttons
Ā magnets and hand mirrors
We carry more than just witchy books.
Here are some of the other titles we carry:
You Were Born For This: Astrology for Radical Self-Acceptance by Chani Nicholas
When Language Runs Dry: An Anthology for People with Chronic Pain and their Allies
What is Gender Nihilism?
Be Gay Do Crime by The Mary Nardini Gang
Radical Brewing by Randy Mosher
You Black Friend by Ben Passmore
Learning Good Consent an Anthology edited by Cindy Crabb
How To Talk To Your Cat about Gun Safety and Abstinence, Drugs, Satanism and Other Dangers that Threaten Their Nine Lives
Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Honoring your Ancestors by Mallorie Vaudoise
Do-it-Your Self Guide to Fighting the Big Motherfucking Sad by Adam Gnade
Yes, Iām Flagging: Queer Flagging 101 by Archie Bongiovanni
Full online catalog of books, zines, buttons and more can be found at PortlandButtonWorks.com and the PBW Witch Shop can be found here.
All items are shipped from Portland, Oregon in plain packaging or United States Postal Service Flat Rate envelopes or boxes with the return address as Portland Button Works. We ship daily and most order come with small fun gifts of buttons or magnets.
Thank you so much for supporting your local witch!
For those in the US asking āwhere can I buy good witchy books?ā - this looks like an answer!
For those of us elsewhere in the world, I would recommend every book Iāve read off this list, and have heard great things about a bunch of the others, so Iām totally treating this as reading list inspiration! I wonder how many of them my libraries haveā¦
How to make sea, ocean, rain, stream, or river charged water that is safe to consume
I am so excited to finally put pen to paper about this topic! Itās something Iāve mixed into my craft for a few years now and something Iāve been meaning to post about since I brewed up this method. Over the years, I have seen many witchcraft practitioners consume water or oil infused waters that are not safe or healthy; itās one thing to harm ourselves but another to rampantly spread misinformation. Not pointing fingers or placing blame, Iām not perfect either.Ā
I will preface this by saying, this does not at all involve or condone the consumption of actualĀ water derived from these natural sources. Even when boiled, these waters are not to consume.** Bear with me, because Iām about to clear things up.
What youāll need ⢠a sealed water bottle or drinkable water and a bottle/container for it ⢠the ability to access your desired water source ⢠your intent(s) for this charged water ā¦And thatās about it! Method ⢠Allow your closed/seal container of water to come in contact with the water or submerge if safe/possible. Hold it (or secure steadily) and donāt leave it unattended, lest it become another piece of litter. ⢠Leave it exposed to water or submerged until it feels right to you, or for as long as you are able to. ⢠Pro tip:Ā Consider how the type of natural water you chose will add to your charged water. Does it softly brush the lake shore, crash down into waves, cascade in endless river rapids, or flow slow & steady? Is it saltwater or freshwater? The clearer your intent, the more you benefit. Do this charging method in the day to harness the sunās power, or at night to harness the moonās power. Draw or place a sigilĀ or rune on the container if you wish.
Ta daaa! You got yourself some naturally charged water that is perfectly safe to consume. This should go without saying, but donāt consume the water if your bottle or its seal is compromised.
**I know there are natural sources of running water that are perfectly safe to drink from, in which case, by all means, consume way! Do not consume rain water and please donāt consider consuming natural waters unless youāre certain of the purity.Ā Itās not anotherās job to figure out whatās safe for us.Ā Use common sense and research everything! Donāt rely on others to tell you what is and isnāt safe.
safety tips ⢠my witchy tips ⢠my recipes ⢠researched postsĀ
ā¢Witchcraft is meant to be a supplement, not a replacement. Never forsake medications, medical help, or seeking support; use your craft in addition to other means of self-care.ā¢ā¢
Posted: October 12, 2020
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