There is one Presence and Power in the Universe
That manifests to me as Goddess and as God
It guides the stars and the planets
It guides me and moves through my life
For I am a perfect incarnation of God /dess
And a perfect priest/ess of God/dess
I am a complete manifestation of this power
I release all imbalanced energy and it’s effects
I harness harmonious energy
And shape it for the good of all
In accordance with free will
With ease and with joy
With love and kindness
So mote it be
Category: Wicca
You’ve Studied Witchcraft & Wicca, Now Choose A Magickal Name
You’ve Studied Witchcraft & Wicca, Now Choose A Magickal Name
Personality Labels
We all can attest to the fact that our given name has, through the years, labelled us in some manner. First names tend to stereotype people and last names can often present the same type of response, and there are times when we wish our parents had chosen to name us something else other than what we are, but saying that at times we may be proud of our names we go by.
When you enter the craft you are building a new extension of yourself, a new personality so to speak. This new self lives in a no limit world, save for the restrictions that you set yourself. So to speak you are opening yourself to a brand new world. Achievements that you yourself never dreamed of are now all of a sudden possible and the personality characteristics that locked you in a specific pattern are now being lifted and changed to mould the way you want to be and not how others perceive you. Most initiates wish to choose a new name to reinforce that special part of themselves that now exists.
However, in a coven environment an individual may take on two different names. The first being known as the “circle” name, thus being used within the coven and the second being the “magical name” to be used in ceremonial rituals, where it is only known by the god/goddess and the individual or the individuals teacher. The number, type and knowledge of names does not differ from tradition to tradition. As a solitary witch would use the same name till such time as she saw fit to change it, some never change there names at all, others use separate ones for correspondence and such alike.
Care should be taken in choosing your magical name, it should represent the beauty of yourself and your higher personal values and ideals.
Finding your magickal Name
Since your new name does not, well not very often, reach out and pinch you, you might have to look a bit for it. Some witches choose to take a name that is traditionally connected with magick, perhaps from a legends story or a name from the tarot and the runes etc. Some witches scry to find their name, they tend to be kind of mystical names, quite often naming animals such as black panther and silver hawk, these are merely examples.
When looking for your name try the following… Take out a piece of paper and write at the top “my magical name should stand for the following strengths…” Leave blank spaces and go down to about the middle of the page and write “This name should have the characteristics of the following deities, plants, elements etc. Then start to answer these questions, do it over a period of time don’t rush into it as said before care should be taken to ensure that you are truly comfortable with your name and that you shouldn’t have to change it on a regular basis, it tends to confuse others and yourself if you do it to much.
Once you have selected your name, get used to it. Sign all letters with it, practice using it and become as one with your name as it does with you. Set up a dedication ceremony, even dedicating your magical name and the bonding you have with it at the same time.
Source;
THE STORY OF WICCA
THE STORY OF WICCA
Wicca, an alternative name for modern witchcraft is a positive, shamanistic nature religion with two main deities honored and worshipped in Wiccan rites. The Goddess (the female aspect and a deity related to the ancient Mother Goddess in her triple aspects of Maiden, Mother and Crone) and her consort, the Horned God (the male aspect). Their names vary from one Wiccan tradition to the next and some traditions use different deity names in both their higher and lower degrees.
Wicca often includes the practice of various forms of white magick (usually for healing purposes or as a counter to negativity), as well as rites to attune oneself with the natural rhythm of life forces marked by the phases of the moon and the four seasons.
Wicca (which is also known as the “Craft of the Wise” or often just “The Craft”) is considered by many to be both a monistic and pantheistic religion and is part of the modern Pagan resurgence or neo-Pagan movement, as many prefer to call it.
Today, most people who define themselves as Pagans use the word as a general term for native and natural religions, usually polytheistic and their members. In simple terms, it is a positive, nature-based religion, preaching brotherly love and harmony with and respect for all life forms. It is very similar to Native American spirituality. Its origins are found in the early human development of religion. Animistic deities gradually becoming redefined to become a main God or Goddess of all Nature. This God or Goddess (bearing different names at different times and in different places) can be found in nearly all of the world’s historic religious systems. Paganism does not oppose nor deny other religions. It is simply a pre-Christian faith.
The Wiccan religion is made up of various sects or “Traditions” such as Gardenerian, Alexandrian, Dianic, Tanic, Georgian, Ethnic Traditionalist and so on. Many of the traditions were formed and introduced in the 1960s and although their rituals, customs, myth cycles and symbolism’s may be different from one another, they all hold common principles of Craft law.
The main tenet of Wicca Craft is the Wiccan Rede, a simple and benevolent moral code that is as follows…
AN IT HARM NONE, DO WHAT THOU WILT.
In other words, be free to do your own thing. Provided that you in no way bring harm upon anyone, including yourself. (The Wiccan Rede is extremely important to bear in mind before performing any magickal spells or rituals, especially those which may be considered unethical or of a manipulative nature.) The Threefold Law (or Law of Three) is a karmic law of triple retribution which applies whenever you do something good or bad. For instance, if you use white magick (or positive energy) to do something good for somebody else, three times the good will come back to you in your lifetime. By the same token, if you use black magick (or negative energy) to bring harm unto others, the bad or “evil” will also return to you threefold in the same lifetime.
The followers of the Wiccan religion are called Wiccan or Witches. The word “Witch” applies to both male and female practitioners of the Craft. Male Witches or Wiccans are seldom, if ever, called warlocks. The word “Warlock” which is considered an insult in most Wiccan circles stems from the old english word “Waerloga,” meaning an “Oath-breaker” and was used derogatorily by the Christian Church as a name for a male witch.
Although Witches are proud to be a part of the Craft, there are some who object strongly to the use of the term “Witch,” feeling that the word stirs up too many bizarre images and misconceptions in the minds of those who are unfamiliar with the Craft and perhaps a bit reluctant to accept that which they do not clearly understand.
As Wicca Craft is a Nature-oriented religion, most of it’s members are involved in one way or another with the ecology movement and current environmental issues.
Wiccans do not accept the arbitrary concept of innate sin or absolute evil and they do not believe in a Heaven or Hell, other than those which are one’s own creations.
Wiccans do not practice any form of black magic or “evil,” nor worship devils, demons, or any evil entities and do not make attempts to convert members of other faiths to the Pagan way. Wiccans respect all other positive religions and feel that a person must hear the “Call of the Goddess” and truly desire within her or his own heart, without any outside proselytisation to follow the Wiccan path.
Many Wiccans take on one or more secret names (also know as “Eke-names”) to signify their spiritual rebirth and new life within the Wicca Craft. Eke-names are most sacred and are used only among sisters and brothers of the same path. When a Witch takes on a new name, she or he must be extremely careful to choose one that harmonizes in one way or another with numerical name-numbers, birth-numbers, or runic numbers. A well-chosen name vibrates with that individual and directly links her or him to the Craft.
Many Wiccans work together in small groups which are called covens. The coven (which can consist of up to 13 people) is led by a High Priestess and/or High Priest and gathers together to worship the Goddess, work magick and perform ceremonies at Sabbats and Esbats. The members of a coven are known as “Coveners” and the place where a coven meets is called the “Covenstead.”
Wiccans who work on their own, either by personal choice or by circumstance are called “Solitary” Witches.
Wiccans celebrate 8 Sabbats each year, making transitions in the seasons. There are 4 major (or grand) Sabbats and 4 minor (or lesser) ones. The major Sabbats are Candlemas, Beltane, Lammas and Samhain. The minor Sabbats are Spring Equinox, Summer Solstice, Autumn Equinox and Winter Solstice.
The Esbat is a monthly coven meeting held at least 13 times a year during each Full Moon. At the Esbat, Wiccans exchange ideas, discuss problems, perform special rites, work magick and healing and give thanks to the Goddess and the Horned God. A traditional “Cakes and Wine” or “Cakes and Ale” ceremony also takes place at the Esbat. During this ceremony, consecrated food and refreshments are served and coveners take time to relax and discuss important magickal subjects. The “Cakes and Wine” or “Cakes and Ale” ceremony is a traditional custom whenever a Wiccan ritual takes place and the circle is cast.
In a coven, the Goddess is represented by the High Priestess and the Horned God by the High Priest.
The Goddess is known by many different names. She is often called Diana, Cerridwen, Freya, Isis, Ishtar, The Lady or any other name that a coven chooses to use or that a Wiccan feels responds to his or her own mythical vision.
The Goddess is the female principle. She represents fertility, creation, the regenerative powers of nature and wisdom. The moon is her symbol and in works of art, she is often depicted as having three faces, each representing a different lunar phase. In her New Moon phase she is the Maiden; in her Full Moon phase she is the Mother; and in her Waning Moon phase she is the Crone.
The Horned God is a phallic deity of fertility and intellectual creativity who symbolizes the powers of the waxing and waning crescent moons. He is usually represented by a hirsute and bearded man having the hooves and horns of a goat. He is a God of Nature and the male counterpart to the image of the Goddess. In primitive times, He was worshipped as the Horned God of Hunting.
Like the Goddess, the Horned God is also known by many different names. In some Wiccan traditions, He is called Cernunnos, which is Latin for “the Horned One.” In others, He is known as Pan, Woden and other names.
The worship of the Goddess and the Horned God symbolize the Wiccan belief that everything that exists in the universe is divided into opposites: female and male, negative and positive, light and darkness, life and death, yin and yang, the balance of Nature.
Source:
Empathy’s Mystical Occult Site
Wicca & Witchcraft – The Spiritual Seeker’s Guide
WICCA AND WITCHCRAFT
————————————
The Spiritual Seeker’s Guide
Steven S. Sadleir
Wicca, or Witchcraft is the old religion of Europe, which apparently evolved from Druidism. Wiccan is generally a term applied to a “Wise One” or “Magician”, and Wicca is the practice of “magic”, which is the application and utilization of natural laws. As Witchcraft competed as a religion with Christianity (the ‘new’ religion) in the Christianized Western World, witchcraft became repressed as a form of paganism (i.e., a Primative Teaching) and was given an evil stigma, and therefore was not practiced openly. However, with the repeal of the English Witchcraft Act in 1951, many covens, or congregations, have opened up to the public and many new groups have formed. There are now dozens of Wiccan orgnaizations in the United States and Europe, with perhaps, thousands of active Wiccans and Witches. Most witches practicing the craft publicly are considered ‘white’ witches, that is, they yse their knowledge for good ends and practice the Wiccan Creed: “Ye hurt none, do as ye will.” Black Witches (which has recieved most of the notoriety, but are considered a minority) are generally not visible to the public and use thier knowledge for selfish or evil means. Satanism is NOT considered a form of witchcraft, but was created by people who believe there is a Satan, or Devil.
Wicca/Witchcraft generally involves some form of God or Goddess worship, and many involve the workings of spiritual guides as well. Wicca/Witchcraft is a very individualized religion, and each person chooses his or her own deities to worship. Generally, the supreme being is considered ‘genderless’ and is comprised of many aspects that may be identified as masculine or feminine in
nature, and thus a God or Goddess. Originally, the horned God of hunting represented the maculine facet of the deity, whereas the female qualities were represented in the fertility Goddess. The Gods and Goddesses from the personalities of the supreme being, and are a reflection of the attributes that worshippers seek to emulate. Wiccans may draw upon the ancient civilizations of the Druids, Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, or other polytheistic cultures to commune with the particular aspect of the deity that they identify with. Some favorite gods include Osiris, Pan, Cennunnos, and Bacchus. Facotie Goddesses include Isis, Caridwen, Rhea, Selene, and Diana.
Wiccans generally observe the four greater Sabbaths of Samhain, Imbolc, Beltane, and Laghnasadh; and the lesser Sabbaths – the Spring and autumn equinoxes and the summer and winter solstices. There celebrations are typically free-spirited, and are sometimes held ‘skyclad’ (naked) or in various styles of robes. Other services include handfasting (marriage), handparting (divorce) and wiccaning (birth rite). Regular meetings, called Esbats are also held, at which magic and healing are performed. Wiccans/witches meet in small groups (up to twelve) called a coven, whcih typically join with other covens to form a ‘Grove’.
Rituals are typically held outside and consist of forma a circle and erecting the temple (consecrating the circle); invoking, praising, and soliciting assistance from gods, goddesses, and elementals; observing the change of season and energies represented by the various seasons; singing; dancing; ‘cakes and ale’ (sharing of bread and wine); and clearing the temple. Personal practive includes meditation and prayer, divination, development of personal will and psychic abilities through spells and various forms of healing. Most Wiccans/witches have altars where they burn candles and incense and practice their rites. To perform thier rites, other tools of the craft are used, such as an athame, yag-disk or, seaux (a handmade and consecrated knife), a sword, a wand, and sometimes special jewelry, amulets or talismans (magically empowered objects). Sometimes these objects are inscribed with magical writings. Joining a coven or grove typically involves an initiation, which is stylized by each individual group, but generally involves the confirmation that the initiate understands the principals and an oath of secrecy.
Temples, Covens and Groves – Oh, My!
TEMPLES, COVENS AND GROVES – OH MY!
by KHALED
There appears to be a fair amount of ongoing confusion as to what each of these is and what each of them should be doing, so let me stick my oar into it, too. But first, let’s play the definition game.
CIRCLE
Three or more people who gather together to work ritual or Craft. Some are ritual only, some worship only, but most do both. The following are all special cases of a Circle:
GROVE
Circle usually led by, and under the auspices of, a coven. Frequently eclectic in practice, Groves are commonly used as an introduction to the Craft as a whole but not necessarily to any given Tradition. Groves usually don’t initiate. May also be called a study group.
COVEN
Circle gathering at least once per month (with a majority gathering twice) for worship and/or magic. Membership tends to be stable with gradual personnel changes. Normally practicing within a single Tradition, Covens typically have strong group rapport. Most train their members to whatever standard they use. Rites of passage (the “I” word) are the norm.
TEMPLE
Two or more Circles, generally at least one Coven (the Inner Circle) and a Grove (the Outer Circle), the latter being open to the public. Serves the public as a place to worship and/or learn about the Gods with advanced training for those seekers who meet the Temple’s standards. I’m on shakier ground here, never having run a Temple, but I see a Circle/Grove open to the general public as essential to the definition, while the strong affiliation to one or more covens
is a matter of observation (as is the relationship between Groves and Covens cited earlier.)
A fair number of practitioners do not distinguish among these terms (nor, for that matter, among Wicca, Paganism and New Age). Feel free to take issue with any of these definitions, but they are what I have in mind as I write this. Let’s take a closer look at what each of these is and how they tend to function within Neo-Paganism.
A Circle is a gathering of, preferably like-minded, individuals for purposes of magic and/or worship. None of those gathered need be of the same Tradition, nor even Initiate, though it makes for better results if at least some of them are. All Groves, Covens and Temples are therefore Circles. The reverse, however, isn’t always the case since many Circles do not also meet the criteria for a Grove, Coven or Temple.
A Grove, or Study Group, is a Circle of students learning the basics of Neo-Pagan (or Wiccan or any of the other subsets of Pagan) worship and Circle techniques. While normally under the tutelage of one or more Initiates, the members are not necessarily being trained towards Initiation in any particular Tradition, nor need the tutors be of the same Tradition(s) as the students (nor even of each other).Mystery religions, by their very nature, aren’t for everyone, nor is any given Mystery suitable for all Initiates. The Grove is a way for potential Initiates to take a good look at one or more Traditions while learning how to handle themselves in just about any basic Circle. If this isn’t for them, they can easily drop it. If it is, they can focus on the specific
Tradition (or family of Traditions) which seems to speak most clearly to them (assuming they were exposed to more than one). Similarly, the tutor(s) can teach general techniques to any serious Seeker without worrying about an implied commitment to Initiate someone unsuited to their particular Tradition.
Groves do not normally do Initiations (they’re done by the sponsoring Coven, if any), and tend to be oriented more towards teaching and worship than towards magical practice. They are also more likely to be fairly open to new members or even the general public than is the case with established Covens, while study groups, in my experience at least, are more likely to be invitation-only. The most effective Groves (or study groups, of course) are under the helpful eye, if not out-and-out sponsorship, of an established Coven or family of Covens.
A Coven, on the other hand, is a regularly meeting Circle, all of the same Tradition, at least some of whom are Initiates (and at least one of whom holds Initiatory power if the Coven is to survive or grow). Such a group tends to become very close (“closer than kin”) and is bound by the rules and styles (deliberately non-existent in some cases) of its Tradition, and by its own internal rules and customs. A member of a Coven is normally provided training and, when deemed ready, Initiation or Elevation by that Coven’s Priesthood/Elders.
There are also magical considerations which go into the making of a Coven which further differentiate it from a Grove/study group, but it isn’t my intention to go into them here. Suffice it to say that they are connected to the closeness and tend to enhance it. Because the bond is tight, and because a Coven generally intends to be around for a few decades, they’re kinda fussy about who joins. The wise Seeker is equally fussy about which, if any, Coven s/he eventually joins.
You’re not joining a social club here, you’re adopting, and being adopted into, an extended family. And this time round you have some control over who your kin will be!
Neo-Pagan Temples are a fairly new phenomena combining many of the characteristics of Covens and Groves. I think that the clearest description of just what they’re about comes from the (draft) Constitution of the proposed Victoria (B.C.) Temple:
a) To minister to the Pagan community by way of providing support, education, and sponsoring religious celebrations;
b) to establish and maintain a religious sanctuary and place of worship accessible to all who would worship the Goddess and the God;
c) to provide a seminary for the training of Wiccan clergy;
d) to provide accredited ordination for Wiccan clergy;
e) to provide accurate information about Witchcraft to all who would ask and to engage in dialogue with other religious groups with the purpose of furthering understanding and friendship between us; and
f) to do other charitable acts of goodwill as will benefit the community at large.
As stated in my definition of Temple above, I consider the provision of Neo-Pagan (not necessarily Wiccan) religious instruction and services to the general public to be essential, and provision of community services to the local Neo-Pagan population highly desirable. To be taken seriously in the wider world, we need to have our clergy recognized by our government(s), which in turn means that we need to be visibly providing training and ordination which meets
government accreditation criteria (which can vary significantly from jurisdiction to jurisdiction). Such accredited ordination is most easily adminitered through Temples.
To address a diatribe current on the Nets (computer Network Bulletin Boards: Ed.) so long as the governments we seek accreditation from think in Christian terms, then we will have to use Christian terms, carefully defined to earmark differences in usage, to describe ourselves to them. Sure, there’s some danger of picking up some inappropriate (to Wicca) ways of thinking along with those terms, but we’re more likely to import them with converts who were raised as
Christians. The solution to both problems is the same: clearly understood (by the tutors above all!) religious instruction. And if a Christian notion isn’t inappropriate, and if it’s truly useful, why shouldn’t we adopt it? Religious intolerance itself is inappropriate to Wiccan thought, and I think we should be clearer in condemning it.
So how does it all tie together? I think that the Neo-Pagan community needs a mix of solitaires, coveners and templers, along with significant variety among their Traditions, to remain intellectually and spiritually healthy. We also need umbrella organisations capable of meeting the needs of each of them, not only for credibility with governments and the general public, but to spread new (and not so new) ideas around the very community they should exist to serve. I’ll
talk more on what this umbrella organization should look like in a bit. For now, let’s get back to roles of the different types of Circle.
One of the things that fascinates about the Craft is our teaching that the Gods don’t need a Priesthood to run interference between Them and Their worshippers. Nor is this a new idea. Heroditus recorded with a certain amazement that Persians must call on a Magus to perform every little sacrifice, whereas among the Greeks of his time, anyone, including housewives and slaves, could sacrifice at any time, assuming they had the desire and the means. We have a
Priesthood because some people feel called to a deeper understanding and expression of their faith than is the case for many. And while They don’t need Initiated Priesthoods, humans find them very useful both as a source of thoughtful religious instruction and as a ready source of warm bodies to stick with the administrivia of organizing group ritual.
Like sex, however, effective worship isn’t something that just comes naturally. It must be learnt, and practiced. Groves, festivals and Temples are all good places to learn the fundamentals, assuming you weren’t fortunate enough to learn them at home. They are also good places to socialize with people who think much the way you do, a deeply-seated human need we do well not to overlook. If your need runs deeper, you will find Priesthood there to talk to. If your needs prove more mystically oriented, they should be able to arrange contact with one or more Covens, who can in turn, if appropriate, Initiate you into whichever flavor of the Mysteries they practice.
Different Circle structures serve different needs. None is superior to the other except to the extent that it serves your needs better. For those of us simply seeking to express our religious feelings in sympathetic company, whichever form best serves that expression is all we’re likely to need. But those of us who feel called to serve the greater community will need all of them to achieve the mandate we have set ourselves.
To return to our model umbrella organization, to serve a significant majority of
the community it will have to address as many of the rather different needs of
solitaires, Covens and Temples as is feasible without stepping on the concerns
of any of them. To be effective, it has to have some standards, but it can’t
impose them from above without violating the sovereignty that all three segments
of the community value rather highly.
One of the difficulties with any ideal is that it manifests imperfectly, if
indeed it can be brought to manifestation at all. Rather than a discouragement,
however, I find that a challenge: to bring about the best fit possible between
reality and our ideal. Here then are my ideas on some of the attributes such an
organization can aim for. To start from the top, I think the stated purpose of
the organization should be to serve as a liaison between member clergy and the
Establishment, whether government or public. Why clergy? Because we don’t need
government approval simply to worship our Gods, especially if we’re doing so
discreetly and on private property.
It’s our institutions which need public recognition in order to be able to avail
themselves of public resources available to other, already recognized,
religions, not the worshippers themselves. And institutions effectively mean the
clergy. Note I don’t say Priesthood. It’s one of the earmarks of the Craft that
all Initiates are clergy, but in many of our Traditions, Priesthood requires a
deeper understanding of traditional lore and techniques.
The immediate needs such an organization should attempt to fulfill are essentially three:
1) Establishment of a Seminary to provide the training necessary for government accreditation as a minister of religion for those who need or seek said accreditation. To achieve this it will be necessary to look into the minimal training expected by any intended licensing bodies and ensure that those standards are being met or exceeded by all graduates of said certification
program. This accreditation is to serve no other purpose within the organization: all of our members will be recognized by us as clergy, whether or not they seek further accreditation.
2) To act as a public relations and information office on the Craft to the general public. If we exist, we will be used as an information source, so we might as well plan on it and do the job properly.
3) To act as a Craft contact and social network to facilitate Pagan networking among members and non-members alike.
To expand upon the seminary somewhat, any member should be able to sit for an examination without taking the associated classes (a process known in Ontario as “challenge for credit”). If s/he passes, s/he is given the credit, if not, the associated courses must be taken before s/he may sit for another examination on that subject. In this way we can grant credit for existing knowledge without in any way compromising our standards. I think it would be a very bad idea to grant an exemption from this procedure to anyone.
Because very few of us are likely to be able to drop everything for a couple of years to travel to wherever we happen to establish the campus, one should be able to complete the courses necessary for certification by correspondence. Nor should the topics of instruction be limited for those required for accreditation with government.
Let’s also see to it that our ministers have a grounding in the philosophy of religion, comparative religion (especially comparative Pagan religion) and chaplaincy as well. Note too that I keep referring to the document as a Certificate, not a college degree. A university level of education, while great for the egos of graduates, is unnecessarily high to meet the needs of our Pagan laity – a Community College is much more appropriate. The stages of learning in a guildcraft are apprentice, journeyman and master, NOT baccalaureate, master and doctor! Mind, I have no objection to our Seminary offering college level courses, nor any other course or seminar it may choose to offer. I merely object to the insistence in some quarters that since most Christian ministers must hold graduate degrees, then by golly ours must too! Horsefeathers!
Our Organization then breaks down into a Seminary to provide internal education, and accreditation, to Pagan religious tutors; a PR office to provide external education, and referrals to the public; and one or more Festivals, and no doubt a periodical (e.g. a newsletter), to provide for contacts and networking both internal and external.
Further, I see our Organization as an ecclesia in the ancient Athenian sense of the term, and assembly of all those having the right to vote in our affairs. I don’t feel the ecclesia should either set or attempt to enforce any standards beyond those required for government accreditation and a minimal ethical standard for membership. I feel that member-ship should be restricted to ordained clergy within a Pagan tradition, nor should the ecclesia itself set any standard as to what does or does not constitute clergy (though I expect it may have to define criteria for determining what is or isn’t Pagan). All this because any other approach compromises the essential sovereignty of our Covens and Temples (for which purpose I see a solitary as a Coven of 1).
Since our membership is composed of clergy, not Covens and Temples, I favor one-person-one-vote. Certainly, groups with a large number of ordained members will thereby gain a larger number of votes in the ecclesia, why not? The ecclesia has no authority over individual members nor the organizations they may represent. Its most extreme power is to suspend the membership of persons found to be in violation of the ethical code, which code is set and policed by the members themselves. Or to appoint officers to manage the ecclesia’s property and affairs, which officers will be legally and constitutionally answerable to the membership.
On the topic of polity, I see the ecclesia/AGM as setting policy which is then administered and interpreted by the officers. The officers should have no power to set policy themselves. Our structure should be absolutely minimalist to avoid unpleasant takeover bids later. Any office or function which doesn’t need to be there, shouldn’t be there. If someone has grounds for an ethics complaint, an ad hoc committee should be assembled to look into it. If amends are made or the
objectionable behavior corrected, then the case should be dropped (i.e. the committee is focused on correcting unethical behavior, not punishing it).
On the subject of officers and their terms of office, I rather like the notion of electing them in alternate years for two- year terms. A one-year term is too hard on continuity. One possibility to avoid little fiefdoms is to provide each function with two officers, one senior and the other junior. Each year the senior officer retires, the junior officer becomes the senior and a new
junior officer is elected. Continuity is preserved, and each officer gains an assistant who has a year in which to learn the ropes. I think that barring the outgoing senior from seeking re-election as a junior would be wasteful of resources, myself, but it would certainly serve to break up fiefdoms even further, should the ecclesia happen to be particularly paranoid about them.
A not-so-little proposal, but the subject is an important one. This is only somewhat-baked, and I see the need as both real and immediate.
Good Things To Know
Good Things To Know
Moon Phase Correspondences for Magickal Workings.
New Moon Magick:
New Moon workings can be done from the day of the new moon to three-and-a-half days after.
The new moon is for starting new ventures, new beginnings. Also love and romance, health or job hunting.
Waxing Moon Magick:
From seven to fourteen days after the new moon.
The waxing moon is for constructive magick, such as love, wealth, success, courage, friendship, luck or health.
Full Moon Magick:
From fourteen to seventeen-and-a-half days after the new moon.
Prime time for rituals for prophecy, protection, divination. Any working that needs extra power, such as help finding a new job or healings for serious conditions, can be done now. Also, love, knowledge, legal undertakings, money and dreams.
Waning Moon Magick:
From three-and-a-half to ten-and-a-half days after the full moon.
The waning moon is used for banishing magick, for ridding oneself of addictions, illness or negativity.
Dark Moon Magick:
From ten-and-a-half to fourteen days after the full moon.
The dark moon is a time for dealing with attackers, for exploring our darkest recesses and understanding our angers and passions. Also bringing justice to bear.
Daily Correspondences for Magickal Workings:
Sunday: Power magick, health, vitality, money, career
Monday: Intuition, dreams, psychic ability, fertility
Tuesday: Money, enemies, courage, energy
Wednesday: Divination, communications, knowledge, wisdom
Thursday: Happiness, luck, wealth, victory, health
Friday: Love, romance, marriage, friendship
Saturday: Psychic ability, communications, new beginnings, protection, bindings
Color Correspondences for Magickal Workings:
Red: energy, strength, passion, love, career goals, courage
Orange: business goals, career goals, justice, success, ambition
Yellow: learning, breaking mental blocks, confidence, persuasion
Pink: romantic love, peace, nurturing
Green: finances, luck, physical healing, abundance, growth
Blue: wisdom, protection, calm, creativity, patience
Purple: spiritual power, psychic ability, ambition, third eye
Silver: telepathy, clairvoyance, intuition, dreams, astral energy
Black: protection, repelling, binding
White: peace, purity, spirituality, higher self
Herbal Magick
There are many herbs that can be used for magickal purposes; I’ve elected to list only those that could be found in an ordinary kitchen or can be easily found at a grocery store or nursery. Wooden window boxes are fairly inexpensive, as is potting soil. The herbs themselves were only $2 each.
Success: basil, sandalwood
Psychic development: cinnamon, rosemary, thyme
Divination: cloves, nutmeg, thyme
Dream magick: cinnamon, mistletoe
Good luck: chamomile, nutmeg, sandalwood
Health: allspice, coriander, ginseng, thyme
Love magick: basil, catnip, cinnamon, dill seed, ginger, mint, rosemary, sage, thyme
Money: basil, chamomile, cinnamon, garlic, thyme
Protection: cloves, marjoram, basil, sandalwood, African ginger
Handy Stuff to Have Around the House
Harmony Ball – chiming spheres were created by ancient Druids as meditation devices to commune with nature.
Pentagrams – The 5 points represent the elements of all creation –Air, Fire, Water & Earth plus the quality of the Spirit which imbues it
Ankhs – The ancient Egyptian symbol of the radiant life force of healing — both spiritual and physical
9 Healing Herbs: Catnip, Chamomile, Coltsfoot, Plantain, Ginger, Cayenne, Comfrey, Garlic, Lobelia
5 Helpful Goddesses:
Ganesh – Bestower of Success in work, and Remover of Obstacles
Laxmi – Goddess for petitions of Love, Sex, Abundance & Wealth
Shiva – God of Regeneration, Ecstasy, Magic Sex & Transcendence
Tara – Bestower of good. Protectress against enemies & bad luck
Vishnu – Protector of Universe for power, courage & sustenance
Lodestone – Lodestones are naturally magnetic, used to charge spell items. Often 2 lodestones are carried: 1 to repel bad luck and 1 to attract good luck. Lodestones come in blue, gold, green, silver, white & natural
Dragon’s Blood Ink – Typically dragon’s blood is used for love spells. Dragon’s blood is used for power & spell strength
Lighting Sticks- Preferable to matches for ritual use because they reach into enclosed candle holders easily & don’t leave the match scent of sulfur.
Specific Methods of Psychic Protection
Specific Methods of Psychic Protection
1) Heal the aura. The best thing to do this is to go to a reliable healer who should be able to do the job easily.
2) Clear the atmosphere. Use pomegranate leaves or a small brush to sprinkle consecrated salt water all over the house or that particular room. The consecration can be simply done by saying a prayer or repeating an invocation while the salt water is being prepared. This is done by sprinkling a spoonful of salt into a bowl of water. While doing this and while sprinkling the ‘holy’ water onto the walls of the house, repeat your prayer or invocation.
3) Break contact with troubling forces. Move to a new environment with a new set of clothes and with as little belongings as possible. If moving house is not possible, change your room. If you cannot change your room, change the direction of the bed. In moving to a new abode, it is better if one can cross running water (river or sea), as this will help by throwing off the scent of the attacker, but a spirit can still follow you. After arriving at the new place, bathe in salt water while chanting an invocation or prayer at the same time. Do it like a ritual. After this, strengthen your aura once again.
4) Disposal of belongings. Personal belongings such as clothes, shirts, jacket and raincoats etc should be sunned in the open for 3 days before giving them away. Similarly, furniture, chairs and mattresses should also be sunned for 3 days before they are disposed off. Of course hairs, nail clippings, handkerchiefs and menstrual pads should be burnt. Similarly, night soil, urine, sperms and blood material should be meticulously dealt with, because they are all magnetized objects.
5) Ancillary measures. Small quantities of consecrated salt water or nitric acid in small saucers should be left all over the room or house. These are changed every few days. Whole cloves of onions and garlic may also be left in the room for human and non-human visitors. They should also be burnt after some time.
6) Magic Circle. Before one sleeps, imagine a Ring of Fire around the bed in a clockwise fashion (deosil). Do the same to your companion’s bed. Then white light both beds at once.
7) Pentagram. This is performed as according to the diagram. Start with the right hand down across at the level of the left hip. The next step is to move the hand upward to the center above the head with the 1st and 2nd fingers pointing to the heavens. Then move the hand down again to the right hip. Then swing your hand across to the level of the left shoulder with the fingers pointing to the left. Then, cut across with the hand ending at the right shoulder with the fingers pointing away from the body. Lastly, swing the hand across and down to the left hip again. This pentagram will banish all thought forms, elementals, nature spirits and ghosts. As with white lighting, the pentagram can be use to protect our cars, houses, pets and loved ones
8) Green pyramid. This is another form of visualization that can protect us from offending intruders. Either lie or sit down and go into silence, i.e. withdrawing from all external thoughts. Then visualize that you are encased in a green pyramid, whose base is beneath your floor, and the apex is above your head. Make sure that the sides of the pyramid are firmly attached to the base, and tightly converged at the apex. If you need to move, attach wheels to the pyramid, and if you want to look out, create a window. Then open your eyes to survey your surroundings. Finally, you may either go into meditation or sleep, and you can rest assured that the pyramid remains intact. Similarly, you can encase your car, house, and loved ones with a pyramid. This pyramid will prevent any intrusion from all sorts of predators.
9) Protecting the solar plexus. There are 3 methods you can protect your 3rd chakra. Firstly, close all your chakras, except the 7th. Then put a sheet of glass around your solar plexus, when you are interviewing someone, who is sapping your energy. You can still talk, but you will not be sapped. Secondly, you can create a brick wall around you. In this instance nobody can communicate with you. Lastly, like in the cowboy films, press your elbows to your sides and put your both hands in front your solar plexus with both thumbs hitch onto your belt or top of your trousers. In these instances, the person in front of you will not be able to absorb your energy.
10) Gazing. When you are facing a potential attacker, do not gaze into his eyes. Look at his 3rd eye, i.e. the middle of his forehead between his two eyes. When you just concentrate on his 3rd eye he has no power over you.
11) Occult Police. Imagine a black Calvary cross on a circle of scarlet background at your 3rd eye. A Calvary cross is one, which the vertical line is longer than the horizontal line. Then call for help. Either your own guide (guardian angel) or the roaming spiritual ‘police’ will come to your aid.
12) Mirrors. If you are worried that your house will be attacked put small mirrors at every window facing outwards. If you know that a colleague in your office is sending you negative or hate energy, put a small mirror facing him on your desk. The hate energy will revert back to the sender.
Not all the ancillary methods will work for you. However choose one, and try it out. If you fail, try another. If you find one that works with you and you are comfortable with it, stick to that one. However, the most powerful ones are the general measures, through which most attackers cannot penetrate, unless the offender is a very experienced occultist.
Source:
Pagan Magic
Psychic Self Defense
Psychic Self Defense
There are many subtle bodies that surround our physical; some being the mental body, emotional body, spiritual body, and auric body, also known as the etheric body. It’s the etheric body that is the first line of defense against external negative energy. It is akin to an energetic armor or covering that all exterior energies need to penetrate before they reach our intrinsic body. And when we are feeling imbalanced, tired, overwhelmed or traumatized, this outer auric body can become compromised and external energies may pervade. There are many different ways of setting up protection when one feels threatened or maybe just energetically weak and essential oils can provide a supportive encasement for the auric body when used in conjunction with intention.
One technique to use in crowds or busy places, is an energetic shield. Imagine you are encasing yourself in an egg-like shell of impenetrable light. Before heading out in a crowd, visualize a clear membrane of light around you and into this shell you can spritz the essences of either lavender, geranium, melissa, orange, pamarosa rose, or tea tree. The oils will act like a barrier of energy to repel any negativity that those in the crowd might brush off on you.
But more to the point, it is important to keep your etheric body free of energy leeches. There are lower dimensional beings, some of which because of their addictions while in body on earth, have become lost and unable to pass over in death. Often these lower dimensional beings will astrally hang out at bars or mass gatherings where drugs and alcohol are being used and will try to attach on to a weakened aura in order to suck energy. The more drunk/stoned we might become, the less fortified our auras are, the easier for these disincarnate beings to attach onto us and begin pulling energy away from us. This is where psychic self-defense comes in – you need to be conscious that there are beings that can attach in and suck our energies. Then set an intent to disallow them access. Before going out to a bar or a gathering where there will be drinking and/or drug use, spritz an essential oil combination around yourself and clearly state that you wish to be defended against any evil or unwanted influences that seek to enter your energy field without permission. See the mist of essential oil spray become a shield around you that is impenetrable to disincarnate souls and feel deep inside that your etheric body is strong and full of integrity. Then you are ready to step out! Some of the essential oils that are helpful for this kind of protection are frankincense, cedarwood, myrrh, galbanum, elemi, jasmine, sandalwood, vetiver, mugwort, helichrysum and sage.
You may already sense you have unwittingly allowed psychic hitchhikers or psychic leeches (or vampires) to attach into your etheric body, in which case you might already be feeling the effects of the energy drain. You might feel tired, lethargic or in a perpetual state of being hung over and “not yourself”. Often we aren’t even aware that we have holes in the aura or that we are open to leaching energy. One quick technique is to scan your etheric body and sense if it feels whole and full of integrity. We all see or sense our auric bodies differently – maybe it can look like a veil of a cloth that surrounds you, or it can be a suit of armor, or a mist or transparent bubble. There is no right or wrong way of visualizing your own energy field’s defenses. It’s whatever works for you! So, tune in, maybe during your meditation time, and see if you can visualize what your etheric body looks like when it’s in its whole integrity, then check to see if there are any holes or cords/straws attaching in. When we state the intent to see any attachments that have penetrated the integrity of our energetic body, all psychic hitchhikers are bound and sworn to have to present themselves to us. From what I understand there is a Universal Law that says any lower dimensional attached Being has to make its presence known if the person (still alive on earth) commands it. Then, once you see what’s sucking on your energy, you demand that the lower frequencied Being release its hold on you, return to its place of being and no longer bothers you. Essential oils that are really great at getting rid of unwanted psychic bugs and low-lifes are cedarwood, sage, geranium, rosemary, rose, tea tree, eucalyptus, camphor and frankincense. These oils can be burned in an aroma lamp or sprayed in a circle around you as you sit in meditation. This particular clearing off of psychic riff-raff can also be done effectively in the bath, where the essential oils are mixed in sea salts to cleanse away the negative entities.
When using psychic self-defense, it’s good to remember not to use it because of fear. We choose to defend because we love integrity and wholeness, not because we fear we are anything less than perfect. If we hold the idea that we are conscious Beings of Light, we really don’t need to defend ourselves. The truth of our Light usually is enough to keep away dark energies. But as I said, sometimes because of trauma, be it emotional or physical, to our bodies, the strength of the etheric body becomes compromised and a little conscious psychic self-defense is handy. Keep your auric field strong and healthy and you’ll be fine
Source:
Pagan Magic
Basic Truths About Any Type of Magick
Basic Truths About Any Type of Magick
Few Simple, easy to remember:
1. There is such a thing as karma and it will get you if you do wrong, which includes trying to control other people through spells.
2. All magick comes with a price. If you desire harm to another you will have to deal with the boomerang aspect of it. But it will come back to you either threefold or sevenfold. I do not know which is more accurate and I really am not going to find out. Best thing to do is not put it to the test.
3. Make sure you really want what you are going for and that you are specific as to what your wants actually are. Once you receive it, it won’t come with a money back guarantee or return to sender aspect.
Like I said, simply, straight to point and to remember. Which is advisable to always remember them because what you cast does come back to you three-fold.
GOALS OF A NATURAL MAGICIAN
GOALS OF A NATURAL MAGICIAN
To walk in harmony with nature, never taking without giving,To understand that magick is an alliance between humans and the Earth for the betterment of all.
To use magick as an instrument of loving change, not hateful destruction.
To see the spiritual in the physical and to understand that neither is higher nor more perfect than the other.
To wisely use natural energies only when in genuine need, not for greed.
To know nothing is impossible if we will work beyond personal limitations.
To work magick for others only with their permission.
To celebrate magick as a union with the energies that gave us our physical forms. To improve ourselves, our friends, and our world for the greater good of all.
*Quoted from “The Candle Magick Workbook” by Kala & Ketz Pajeon*
Let’s Talk Witch – Using Our Five Senses in Magick

Let’s Talk Witch – Using Our Five Senses in Magick
This is part 1 of a WOTC mini-series on the Five Senses Used in Magick
All material are taken from an excerpt by Marion Sipe’s article, “Engaging All Five Senses in Spellwork” which can be found in the Llewellyn’s Almanac for 2014.Part 1 – Engaging All Five Senses in Spellwork
Spellwork is the practice of bringing the possible into reality whether the spells are for better health, a new job, or tastier garden tomatoes. All of these goals, and most others, work on the principle that the worker uses their own will to shape reality, and because of this, the worker uses their own will to shape reality, and because of this, the worker must be able to form a clear picture of the intended outcome. You can’t create what you can’t imagine so the more clearly the goal is identified, the more likely the desired outcome. Engaging all of our senses in spellwork can help us define that goal and give it aspects that appeal to our need to interact with something to prove to ourselves it is real. Additionally, sometimes we need to define goals that aren’t concrete, but rather involve abstractions such as emotions and memories. Such goals can be hard to represent, but by using our other senses, we can find representation for them, and manifest even the most abstract goals into reality.
While visualization is a much praised and important part of spellwork, each of our four other senses has the potential to connect us to our spellwork in deeper and more intense ways. Human beings are primarily visual creatures, but that does not mean that the visual sense is the strongest for everyone. Nor does it mean that our other senses have less to offer. Many of us already use cues for our other senses in ritual; a drumbeat or music in the background, incense in the Air, cakes and ale. However, we don’t always bring these elements into the spellwork itself. We can use smells, tastes, sounds, and textures in spellcraft to create a deeper link with the magick as well as a more complete representation of the desired result.
For instance, smells provide a powerful trigger for memory and emotion. As an example, you can improve a spell to relieve insomnia by using the smell of fresh linen, applying the scent to a small sachet tucked into your pillow. The scent becomes another part of the spell whether it’s the use of baby powder in a sachet meant to aid in fertility or using a vial of oil as the focus for a calm flying spell.
We can also use scents to bring a spell to mind again after the casting, strengthening the magick or its effect on you. Additionally, spells that you can taste can have a huge impact on the body, and make a great vehicle for workings such as health spells or other purposes involving the body. The sense of touch plays a large role in our interaction with others, but is also the medium through which we interact with and manipulate the world. When we think of something as material, we think of being able to touch it; therefore, giving a texture and feel to the goals of our spellwork lends a quality of realism that brings them closer to manifestation.
“Tomorrow we continue with this series by looking at how our sense of Smell works into our spellwork.”
The ABC’s of a Wiccan Life
The ABC’s of a Wiccan Life
by Victoria Martyn
Accept others as they are. We are all individuals.
Belief in yourself is a necessity.
Concentration is important in any endeavor, both magickal and in life.
Do what you will, so long as it harms none.
Empathy is an important life skill… learn it, practice it.
Find strength in yourself, your friends, your world and your actions.
God is multifaceted… the Lord and Lady, all deities take many names and faces.
Help others every chance you get.
Intelligence is something that cannot be judged on surface.
Judge not… what you send out comes back to you!
Karma loves to slap you in the face. Watch out for it.
Learning is something that should never stop happening!
Magick is a wonderful gift- but it is not everything.
Nature is precious. Appreciate and protect it.
Over the course of time your soul learns many lessons. Make this life count!
Pray.
Quietness both physically and mentally restores the soul; meditate often.
Remember to take time for yourself as well as others.
Spells can help you, but you must also help yourself!
Tools can only do so much… they are not the foundation of all.
Unless you enjoy worrying, keep a positive mindset!
Visualize the success of your goals before you set out to achieve them.
Wisdom can often be found in the least expected places!
Xenophobia (a hatred of those different from you) is a path to misery.
You are a beautiful person who is capable of anything!
Zapping away all of your troubles is not going to happen!
Magical Wiccan Names – 5 Tips To Choosing the Best One For You
Magical Wiccan Names – 5 Tips To Choosing the Best One For You
Upon joining a Wiccan coven, members are usually asked to pick out a new name. This symbolizes the person being “born” into a new life. It also helps the individual separate his old self from his newly chosen one. With so much importance placed on this decision, choosing magical Wiccan names requires a fair amount of thought and effort.
Here are 5 tips to make choosing magical Wiccan names easier:
1. Use a baby names book. These resources are very easy to find at your local library or bookstore and have thousands of names and their respective meanings. If “wisdom” is a characteristic you want to embody, choose names that share that meaning.
2. Use “earthly” words. Because Wicca is centered around the energy and spirit found in Nature, it is common practice to use earthly words, or their derivatives, to help create your Wiccan name. Examples include using names of animals (Raeven, Magwolfe, Serpenta, etc), names of trees and shrubs (Furne, Wadoak, Salvini, etc) or other nature-related words.
3. Use historic names. Pick up a book about the history of witchcraft, and your head will be spinning with ideas for new names. You don’t have to choose the exact spelling. But if there is a past witch whose life you admire, you may use a derivative of that name for your own.
4. Use numerology. Every name can be broken down to a single number, and that number has a meaning of its own. So if you are wanting a magical Wiccan name that has to do with individuality, you would want a name whose single digit value was 1. Doing a little research online will give you a listing of the values of all digits, from 0-9. Make sure that your new name is in line with the characteristics you want to embody.
5. Use elders. If you are having trouble coming up with a new name, talk to an elder of your coven. That’s what they are there for. There are times when an outsider looking in can give you the answer you are looking for.
Choosing magical Wiccan names does not have to be a long or difficult process. But because it will be the name that represents who you want to be in your new Wiccan lifestyle, it needs to be chosen with care.
_______________________________________
Ravine Masters is the owner of http://www.More-Info-On.com [http://www.more-info-on.com/witchcraft-love-spell-what-you-need-to-know/]
Wiccan Names and Meanings – The Importance of Choosing The Ideal Magickal Name
Wiccan Names and Meanings – The Importance of Choosing The Ideal Magickal Name
When becoming a member of the Wiccan religion, many people choose to adopt a new name, usually referred to as a “Wiccan name” or “Magickal Name.” This is done as a symbol of rebirth into a new life and typically represents an alter ego of who the person wants to be. So significant is this process that Wiccan names and their meanings become a solid foundation from which the rest of the Wiccan experience is grown from.
Choosing a Wiccan name should not be done casually. The individual should research names that have meanings he or she would like to live up to. So if the person seeks to be strong, patient and wise, he should find names that represent those characteristics. Oftentimes a simple baby name book can be a beneficial tool.
Sometimes the best name is a combination of two other names. So if the individual finds one name that means “strong” and another that means “cunning”, combining the two names and rearranging the letters can provide a new unique name that encompasses both qualities being sought.
And when talking about Wiccan names and meanings, one cannot leave out the numerology aspect of the name. Using digit summing (reducing the value of all the letters in the name by adding them together), a single number can be found for every name. And that number has a meaning that can be relevant to the person in creating or choosing the ideal name. By adding or removing a letter, you can significantly change the meaning of a Wiccan name in a numerological sense (ie. adding an “e” in Sarah to make the new name “Saraeh”).
Becoming a member of the Wiccan religion, like becoming a member of any religion, is a life-altering decision that should be handled with seriousness and thoughtfulness. Wiccan names and their meanings are the first step into this lifestyle, and taking the time and effort at this critical point will build a strong foundation to spiritually build on.
_____________________________________
Ravine Masters is the owner of http://www.More-Info-On.com [http://www.more-info-on.com/witchcraft-love-spell-what-you-need-to-know/]
WOTC Special Mini-Series Part 4 – The Wheel of a Lifetime
THE WHEEL OF A LIFETIME
(NE – Infancy) Everything is brand new and there is a blur between the self and
others. There is also a sense of trust that we will be cared for. We are still
deeply connected to our parents.
(EAST – Childhood) We become more independent from our families. Friends are
of great importance and we find a great many things we are interested in
learning and doing.
(SE – Adolescence) We begin to be more independent from our families. Friends
become very important. We struggle with the uncertainties of who we are and
what we look like to others.
(SOUTH- Young Adult) We finish our formal education and begin to settle into
jobs and perhaps marriage and a family. It is a busy time of caretaking,
establishing careers and community involvement.
(SW – Middle Adulthood) We begin to take a look at our life and at how we can
bring to balance. There is often a shift of focus, perhaps from job to family
or from volunteer organizations to personal interests.
(WEST – Middle Age) This is often a time when we discover that there are things
we are clinging to and need to release before we can move on; perhaps it is a
relationship, a job a house or a grudge.
(NW – Senior) Children are grown and retirement nears or begins. We find we
take more quiet contemplative time for ourselves. We see things more in
perspective and appreciate things we were to busy to notice before.
(NORTH – Elder) We are grateful for what we have and what we have had in our
lives. We are more accepting of things and are able to guide others without
expectations of how they might use that guidance.
It is important to be aware that we reach these stages at different ages. Some
folks reach the South quite young with an early marriage and family. This may
force them into the care taking of the South before they have had the time to
really process the Southwest. Others take may years to sort out who they are in
the Southwest before they take their place in the South.
WOTC Special Mini-Series Part 3 – The Wheel of the Year
THE WHEEL OF THE YEAR
From “The Witches of Oz”, by Julia Phillips and Matthew Sandow,
Sydney, New South Wales.
The Wheel of the year is of great significance to Wiccans, and is one of the
principle keys to understanding the religion. As we said earlier, Wicca sees a
profound relationship between humanity and the environment. For a Wiccan, all
of nature is a manifestation of the divine and so we celebrate the turning
seasons as the changing faces of our Gods.
The Wheel of the Year is a continuing cycle of life, death and rebirth. Thus
the Wheel reflects both the natural passage of life in the world around us, as
well as revealing our own connection with the greater world. To a Wiccan, all
of creation is divine, and by realizing how we are connected to the turning if
the seasons and to the natural world, we come to a deeper understanding to the
ways in which we are connected to the God and Goddess. o when we celebrate our
seasonal rites, we draw the symbolism that we use from the natural world and
from our own lives, thus attempting to unite the essential identity that
underlies all things.
Undoubtedly the significance of the Festivals has changed over the centuries,
and it is very difficult for us today to imagine the joy and relief that must
have accompanied the successful grain harvest. What with factory-farming, fast
freezing and world wide distribution, our lives no longer depend upon such
things and as a consequence, our respect for the land has diminished in
proportion to our personal contact with it.
Wiccans believe that we can re-affirm this contact by our observance of the
passage of the seasons, in which we see reflected our own lives, and the lives
of our gods. Whether we choose to contact those forces through silent and
solitary meditation, or experience the time of year in a wild place, or gather
with friends in a suburban living room, we are all performing our own ritual to
the Old Ones, reaching out once more towards the hidden forces which surround us
all.
What is of the utmost importance with the Wheel of the Year is that we
understand what we hope to achieve through our festival celebrations, and avoid
the trap of going through empty motions, repeating words from a book which may
sound dramatic, but have no relevance in our everyday lives. That simply leads
to the creation of a dogma, and not a living breathing religion. It is not
enough to stand in a circle on a specific day, and “invoke’ forces of nature,
those forces are currents which flow continuously through- out our lives, not
just eight times a year, and if we choose not to acknowledge them in our
everyday lives, there is no point in calling upon them for one day.
By following the Wiccan religion you are affirming your belief in the sanctity
of the Earth, and acknowledging that you depend upon the Earth for your very
life. Although modern lifestyles do not encourage awareness of our personal
relationship with the turning seasons, or the patterns of life, growth, death
and decay, that does not mean that they no longer exist. The ebb and flow of
the Earth’s energies may be hidden beneath a physical shell of tarmac and
concrete, and a psychic one of human indifference, but they are nevertheless
there for those who wish to acknowledge them once more.
We do this by observing the changes of the seasons, and feeling the changes
reflected in our innermost selves, and in our everyday lives. In our rituals we
focus upon different aspects of the God and Goddess, and participate in the
celebration of their mysteries; thus we re-affirm our connections on the most
profound levels.
The Wiccan Wheel has two great inspirations; it is both a wheel of celebration,
and a wheel of initiation. As a wheel of initiation it hopes to guide those who
tread its pathway towards an understanding of the mysteries of life and the
universe, expressed through the teachings of the Old Ones made manifest in the
turning of the seasons. For a Wiccan, the gods and nature are one. In
exploring the mysteries of the seasons we are seeking to penetrate more deeply
the mysteries of the God and Goddess.
As a wheel of celebration, Wiccans accord to the words of the Charge of the
Goddess, where She says, “Let my worship be within the heart that rejoiceth, for
behold, all acts of Love and Pleasure are my rituals”; and that, “Ye shall
dance, sing, feast, make music and love, all in my praise”. Anyone can
celebrate the turning of the seasons, in their own way, and in their own time.
Wiccan covens will commonly gather together, and make the Festivals times of
joyful merrymaking, but you can just as easily make the celebration a solitary
one, or with just one or two friends. The principles do not alter; just the way
in which you acknowledge them.
Wiccans generally celebrate eight Festivals, roughly six weeks apart, which are
pivotal points in the solar (seasonal) cycle. Four of the Festivals are called
the Lesser Sabbats: these are the Spring and Autumn Equinoxes, and the Winter
and Summer Solstices. The other four Festivals are called the Greater
Sabbats, and relate to particular seasons when in bygone days, certain
activities would have been undertaken, usually followed by a party of some kind.
There are variations upon the names by which these Greater Sabbats are known,
but the simple ones are Candlemas, Beltane, Lammas and Samhain. Candlemas is
also known as Imbolg, Oimelc, or Brigid; Lammas is some-times called
Lughnassadh.
It is important to understand that the Festivals are celebrating a time of year:
a season, not a date. Most books written about Wicca have been written by an
author living and working in the northern hemisphere, who may quite rightly say
that “Beltane is celebr-ated on May Eve.” Northern Hemisphere readers will
automatically interpret this as, “Beltane is at the end of spring, just before
summer gets underway.” IN the Wiccan Book of Shadows, the poem by Kipling is
used at this Festival which says, “O do not tell the Priests of our art, for
they would call it sin; but we’ve been out in the woods all night, a’conjurin’
summer in…. .”
Of course, “May eve” in the Southern Hemisphere is autumn heading into winter,
entirely the wrong time of year to celebrate the portent of summer. In much the
same way, Christmas and Easter are celebrated at the wrong time of year here.
In the Christian calendar, Christmas coincides with the Winter Solstice – and
the growing popularity of the June Yule Fest in the Blue Mountains in NSW each
year suggests an awareness of this, even if it is, in this case, expressed in a
commercial sense. The date of Easter changes each year, because it is the first
Sunday after the first Full Moon after the Spring Equinox, (And they try to tell
us that Easter wasn’t originally a Pagan Festival!) So in the Southern
Hemisphere, according to the rules by which the date of Easter is determined, it
should fall sometime in late September or early October each year. However,
Christianity is not a religion which sees a particular connection between
humanity and the environment, and therefore has no problem in celebrating Easter
in autumn, and Christmas at the Summer Solstice. Wicca is different, and it IS
important to us to attune ourselves to the passage of the seasons, hence we
follow the natural cycle wherever we live. In the Southern Hemisphere this
means celebrating Beltane at the start of summer, i.e., the beginning of
November, not the beginning of May.
The Wiccan year starts and ends with Samhain, which is also known as Hallowe’en,
or All Saints Eve. It is the celebration which falls just before the dark
nights of winter take hold. The Winter Solstice comes next, where Wiccans
celebrate the rebirth of the Sun; at Candlemas about six weeks later, we
celebrate the first signs of the growing light (longer days,) and of spring
beginning to show itself. The Spring Equinox (around 21 September – it varies
from year to year) is the time when day and night are equal in length, and the
Sun is on its increase. Next is Beltane, the Festival where Wiccans celebrate
the union of the young man and woman, and everyone dances around a tree, crowned
with a garland of flowers, and decked with red and white ribbons.
About six weeks after Beltane we come to the Summer Solstice, when the Sun
reaches its greatest height. It is the longest day/shortest night, and in the
Southern Hemisphere, falls around 21 December. Then the Sun begins its way back
down towards winter, but we are still in summer. Six weeks after the Solstice
is Lammas, when in agricultural societies, the harvest is reaped, and we receive
the benefits from our hard work. The Sun at Lammas still has great strength, for
it is the ripening time, rather than the grow-ing time which ceases around the
Summer Solstice. The Autumn Equinox follows this, usually around 21 March
(again, it varies from year to year), which is often celebrated as a Harvest
Festival. The next Festival, some six weeks after the Equinox, is Samh-ain,
which is the time just before the winter really sets in, and when food is
stored, and we remember those who have passed away. In many countries this is
the time when the Lord of the Wild Hunt rides, which is mirrored in the way that
the winds are often wild at this time of year, and the clouds ragged and wind-
torn.
In parts of Australia you will find that some of these seasonal aspects are a
little different, but generally speaking, you should be able to feel the change
from winter to spring; spring to summer; summer to autumn and then autumn to
winter. The specifics will change, but the general trend is very similar – one
season leading to another. You have only to become aware of the natural changes
in your own environment to realize that the concepts of the Wheel of the Year
are valid wherever you may be.
As a Wheel of initiation, the Wheel of the Year is the path which leads us
through the experiences of our gods towards that point which Jungian
psychologists call individu-ation, and which Wiccans call knowledge of the Old
Ones. As with all mystical experie-nces, these mysteries are not communicated
in an academic or intellectual manner; they are direct experiences which each
individual shares with the Old Gods. Different traditions have developed
different ways of traveling the Wheel, but all ways have a common purpose, and
all are equally valid, provided the basic principles are sound.
We gave a very brief description of the cycle of the Wheel of the Year above.
Now we can have a look at this in more detail, using for our framework a
mythology which is used by our own Coven. It is based upon the Gardnerian and
Alexandrian traditions in which we were initiated, but has evolved over several
years, and has been greatly modified to reflect our own understanding of the
turning wheel of the seasons. We should say at this point that we use the terms
“King” and “Queen” to refer to the principle characters in the mythology. It is
important to understand that we are not referring to a modern monarchy, but to
the ancient pagan principles those titles infer. The King is the priest/king of
the forest: his tale is told in many forms in many lands. He is the essential
male that lies within all men, and is the animus (in it Jungian sense) of all
women. The Queen is Sovereignty: she is the mysterious soul of nature; the
essential woman that lies within all women, and is the anima of all men.
So to begin our journey: how do we set out to explore the mysteries of
existence? Well, the journey begins with a question – we have first to be aware
that there is a mystery to explore! And that most basic of questions is:
“where did life come from? how did it all begin?” For a Wiccan there is an
underlying spiritual intuition that the answer to that question is quite simply
that the universe was created by deity. So we celebrate the beginning of the
Wheel of the Year as a being the creation of all life by the God and the
Goddess; we begin with a creation myth.
The Wheel of the Year starts with Samhain; at this time we celebrate the Great
Rite – the joyful union of the God and Goddess in the Otherworld. This touches
the very depths of the mystery. We celebrate at this time the conception that
will lead to the birth of all creation.
Wiccans celebrate all life as a manifestation of the mystery of the gods, but do
not pretend to understand how such life came into being. Nor do we claim to
fully understand our gods; to the Wicca they are a mystery, and when describing
our vision of deity we use symbols to express as best we can the vision we have
seen. We do not know how the universe was created and this remains essentially
mysterious. However, by choosing to take the path of initiation – that is, by
following the Wheel of the Year – we can learn to commune more deeply with the
gods, and experience visions which can reveal a little of the mystery.
The vision that we have of Samhain is of the creation. In the Wicca the
inexpressible mystery of the deity is symbolized in the form of the God and
Goddess. Thus at Samh-ain we celebrate their love as the root of all creation.
Samhain is the time of creation:
the moment when life is conceived in the womb of the Great Mother.
As we proceed to the next of the festivals – Yule – it should not be surprising
to find that following the moment of conception we should seek to understand the
moment of birth. The conception, the moment of creation deep within the
mystery, took place at Samh-ain. The seed planted at this time gestates in the
womb of the Goddess until the child of the gods – in essence, the whole of
creation – emerges from the womb of the Great Mother. This is celebrated at
Yule, which is symbolized by the birth of the Sun. In pre-Christian times, this
time was called “Giuli,” and followed “Modra Necht” – the Night of the Mothers.
Yule is celebrated at the time of the Midwinter Solstice. This is the time of
the longest night, and of the shortest day. The Sun is seen to be symbolically
born anew, as the Great Mother gives birth at the time of the darkest night.
The Sun is a vitally important symbol to us, for it has been long known that all
life on Earth is dependent upon the Sun. The Wheel of the Year itself is based
upon the solar cycle, and the Sun is seen as symbolic of the life force which we
worship as the God and the Goddess. The Sun is the dominant force in all our
lives. Without its light and heat, life as we understand it is impossible. The
passage of the Sun through the heavens regulates the passage of the seasons we
experience upon the Earth, and is therefore the foundation of the Wiccan Wheel
of the Year.
At the Midwinter Solstice we celebrate the rebirth of the Sun. Many Wiccan
covens follow the old pagan tradition of enacting this as the Goddess giving
birth to the Child of Promise. It was at the Midwinter Solstice in the Northern
Hemisphere that the birth of Mithras was celebrated. For the same reason it was
decided in 273 A.D. to appoint this date to celebrate the birth of Christ; the
“son” of God.
In the world of nature, Yule signifies the moment of the rebirth of the Sun. In
our own lives we can take it to represent the moment of physical birth. Thus in
our ritual cycle, we enact the rebirth of the Sun by the lighting of candles,
and especially the lighting of a flame within the cauldron to represent the
emergence of new life from the darkness of the womb of the Goddess. We ritually
invoke the Great Mother and All-Father, and we symbolically enact the Goddess
giving birth to the new year. In human terms the child represents all the
potential for life, as yet unaware that all the mysteries of the universe lies
hidden deep within. Like Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, the child is born
in innocence, created in the image of the gods.
We have taken the second step upon our journey. From now on the days continue
to lengthen as the Sun climbs toward its height at the Summer Solstice. In
response to the greater heat of the Sun, the land begins to awaken as we start
the journey from winter towards spring. The next festival is Candlemas. As we
might guess from the name (given to it by the Christians), it is a festival of
lights which celebrates the growth of the Sun. By Candlemas, the days are
appreciably longer. Our understanding of this festival has been guided by
ancient pagan tradition and our own inspiration. We see this as a time of
purification and most especially a time of initiation into the female myster-
ies. At Candlemas we observe in nature the awakening potential for the fullness
of summer. In human terms we represent this by the first female menstruation.
This is the virgin aspect of the Goddess, marking the awakening of her potential
to become the mother.
We celebrate this ritual by arming the young virgin with the powers of the
elements. We celebrate her initiation into the mysteries of her sex. To
reflect this essential female mystery, we enact the young girl being instructed
by her mother and grandmother into the mysteries of being a woman. Thus we
reveal that the mystery of the virgin is also found within the mother crone as
well.
It is at Candlemas in many parts of Britain that the women of the house dress a
sheaf of oats in woman’s clothing, and lay it in a basket called “Brighid’s
bed.” They also place a small phallic club in the bed and then call out three
times, “Brighid is come, Brighid is welcome!”, and leave candles burning all
night beside the bed. Behind all this we catch glimpses of deeper mysteries
that can only be grasped by passing beyond a mere intellectual appreciation of
the symbolism.
To continue our journey we now come to the Spring Equinox. It might seem that
celebrating Candlemas as a female mystery is rather unbalanced in a religion
which is based upon polarity of male and female; but no; for reasons of
tradition, and because woman reach puberty before men, it is not until the
Spring Equinox that the initiatory male rite is enacted. In this we arm the
young god with the knowledge of his own creative power; he is initiated into the
mysteries of sex, just as the young girl was armed with the powers of her
potential. This ritual expresses the mystery that he contains within his young
life; the potential to become a father and wise old man.
This continues to reflect the turning tide of the seasons. We are now in the
spring. New life is awakening on all sides. The sap is rising in the trees,
and both the young man and young girl have awakened to the mysteries of their
sexuality. The Spring Equinox is a vital moment in the passage of the solar
cycle. Day and night now stand equal, and from this point onwards the light
will dominate the darkness. The long dark nights of winter have at last been
overthrown.
Between the Spring Equinox and Beltane the young man and woman pursue one
another, each becoming more aware of the other sex. Thus the man understands
that there is more to the mystery of life than pure masculinity, and the woman
sees that there is more to life than her femininity. Having found this vision,
they express it in their desire to be joined as one.
We arrive now at Beltane. This is the time of the sacred marriage when the young
man and woman are joined together as husband and wife. With their wish to be
married, they have glimpsed that the mysteries of love may lead to a deeper
union still – in essence, to a union with the gods. By going beyond their sense
of individual self to embrace one another, they have taken a profound step
toward the God and Goddess. They have discovered that deep within themselves
they are both male and female, and the experience of this brings a new sense of
joy and wholeness.
Beltane is a time of joy and celebration; the dark of winter is forgotten, and
summer is coming. It is a time of fertility and fire. We dance the ancient
mystery of the Maypole, celebrating our understanding our understanding of the
mystery of the love of a man for a woman. The pole is crowned with a garland of
flowers to symbolize their joining; the ribbons are red and white, reminding us
of blood and sperm. The dance is the sexual fire, as we dance about the pole
winding the ribbons in the pattern of the spiral, which reveals the mystery of
the serpent; that ancient awakener who slumbers until warmed by the rising Sun.
This is the time of the sacred marriage. It is a moment when human
consciousness has grasped the powers of nature, joined with those powers and
shared in the mystery of life. The land and our lives are married as one. For
those that are able to see it, there is a vision of the creation of all life by
the God and the Goddess. For the mystery is now revealed for all to see – the
woman conceives of her husband. She is pregnant and will bear a child.
Through their union they discover their deeper selves, which we symbolize as the
King and Queen of the land. The man and woman now take up their new roles, and
rule the kingdom of their new found lives. At Candlemas and the Spring Equinox
a man and a woman were instructed in the powers of nature. Now at Beltane that
knowledge is transformed into understanding. For in joining together they have
understood that their lives and the land are one.
The land continues to bring forth life in an ever greater profusion. The woman
who is now the Queen begins to show the first signs of the Beltane seed planted
in her womb by her husband, the King. She is pregnant; the mirror image of the
maturing crops.
Now we come to Midsummer, the height of the solar Wheel. This is the time of
the longest day and shortest night, and a time of maturity, both in the
agricultural cycle and the lives of the man and woman. They rule now as King
and Queen; just as the Sun is at its height, so too they are at the height of
their creative powers. The woman’s mature power is reflected in her approaching
mother-hood. The man’s power is reflected in his kingship, and in his mastery
of nature and rule of the kingdom. Together the King and Queen preside over the
kingdom of their lives, celebrating the vision of creative light.
But the light does not continue to rise. The vision of light must once more
give way to a growing darkness. As things grow, so too they must wither and
die. From Midsummer, the Sun must fall, until reborn once more at the Winter
Solstice. Thus Midsummer is a celebration of the King and Queen’s power, but
must also reflect the returning current of darkness. We symbolize this by the
appearance of a challenger who confronts the couple. Until now the King and
Queen have ruled supreme; they have imposed their will upon the kingdom without
challenge, but now a single dark figure must appear. This is the beginning of
the ancient pagan theme of the battle between the brothers; the light and dark
kings now begin their conflict.
The challenger seeks to abduct the Queen; the child she bears represents the
kingdom. The King must now defend the land. They fight, light against dark,
but as yet the sun is still supreme, and the King drives the challenger back.
But, the challenger is armed with the power of fate; we know that the Sun must
fall. With a single stroke the challen-ger wounds the King, laying open his
thigh; but still the light is the greater power, and the King defeats the
challenger. The light still rules supreme, but a shadow has fallen over the
kingdom.
Thus Midsummer comes to a close. The King and Queen remain at the height of
their power, yet a new force – darkness – is awakening in the world. As the
seasons contin-ue to turn, the gods begin to reveal a further mystery: not only
are they light, they are also dark as well. Thus the King and Queen have
awakened to a deeper mystery; they have seen that not only are they male and
female, but they are also light and dark as well.
As we look at the natural world, we see that the Sun is now waning. The days
grow shorter, and we sense profound changes in the world around us. After
Midsummer, the next festival we come to is Lammas. The crops have matured, and
in the way of nature, aged and turned to seed. The days are still longer than
the nights; the light still rules in the land, but the powers of darkness are
now visibly growing. Summer is coming to an end and we are approaching autumn.
To symbolize the theme of the waning light and growing power of darkness, we
celebrate Lammas as a Harvest Festival. In cutting the corn (wheat), we
celebrate the end of the vision of light. We cut the corn with joy; as we have
sown, so now we reap, but in cutting the corn we signal the end of the cycle of
growth.
As we gather in the harvest we watch as the power of the Sun wanes. The cutting
of the corn is an ancient symbol of death and transformation, and reflects the
seasonal changes at work in the land around us. As we look to the King and
Queen, who were married to the land at Beltane, we see in their lives a
reflection of these themes. Just as the harvest is reaped, so the Queen now
births her child.
The mystery of Lammas is that by fulfilling the vision of light in bringing to
fruition the seed sown in the spring, we must face the vision of death. For the
King bears the wound he received at Midsummer, it is a wasting wound and will
not heal. He slowly weakens, his creative power spent. He is still King, but
his powers are waning, a reflection of the falling light. But Lammas is also a
time of hope, for in the cutting of the corn the seed is gathered in, which is
the hope for life to come. As the King looks to his first born son he looks to
the heir of the kingdom. We celebrate Lammas as a time of fulfillment; it is a
time of joy, when we reap all we have sown.
Both King and Queen have been transformed. The King had to accept the glimpse
of the vision of death in his killing of the challenger and taking of a mortal
wound; so now the Queen dies to herself, for in giving birth she has given the
child a part of her life, passing her power to her son. As the Wheel of the
Seasons turns, it reveals that the gods embrace both life and death. Just as the
man and woman were born, so too they must die. Lammas brings the vision of
mortality, but reveals the hope of the immortal spirit hidden in the new cut
grain, made manifest in the new born child, who symbolizes the awakening
darkness; he is the power of the waning Sun. He emerges from the womb as the
growing darkness appears in the natural world.
We must now move on. Time will stand still for no-one. The wheel must turn,
and we must turn with it. This is our fate, as our lives reflect the turning
cycle of the seasons. We must now make our way to the Autumn Equinox, where
once again the powers of light and darkness stand as equals – but now
it is the darkness that is in the ascendant.
It is the nature of human beings to resist the darkness. Humanity fears death
above all things. It is the root of all our fears; death is the final
initiation. Only through an acceptance and understanding of death can we hope
to understand the goods. Only in accepting death can we truly accept life. Life
and death are two sides of the same coin; we cannot have one without the
other.By the time we reach the Autumn Equinox, it becomes harder to describe the
mysteries that we celebrate. The mystery that can be taught or explained is
not, after all, a myst-ery. At the Autumn Equinox we must face life’s greatest
mystery: death. This is the hardest trial of all. In the ancient mystery
schools, and in shamanic practices, the most important of initiations was – and
is – the near death experience.
The child born at Lammas is now a young man. He is the reflection of the
growing powers of darkness. The old King of Light bears his mortal wound and is
now advancing in years, his powers waning as the days grow shorter, and the Sun
falls lower and lower in the sky. The Queen also is no longer young; the flower
of her youth is past. The King and Queen are aging with the land, for they and
the land are one.
But as is natural in human affairs we none of us want to admit the darkness. We
fight against the coming of the night. So the King and Queen each in their own
way try to hold onto the kingdom they have been at such pains to build. The
King’s powers are waning; his son is in the first flush of youth and vigor, and
has been initiated into the mysteries of his power. The King grows weak, and
must rely upon his son to defend the kingdom. But, the King now fears his son
as a potential challenge to the throne. The Queen likewise does not want to
relinquish her power. She sees that her husband grows weak and infirm, and is
no match for a challenger. To maintain her position in the kingdom she relies
on the power of her son.
Finally, in the dead of the night, the old pagan tale replays itself. The battle
begun at the Midsummer Solstice between the light and darkness must now be
resumed; the King and his son fight as the Equinox comes upon us. Sword against
spear the battle rages; the experience of the King against the naked strength of
his son’s youth. The Queen watches as they fight, torn by hope and fear. But
as they fight, there is a great mystery at work. Both the King and Queen now
face their fear of death, and as they look death in the eye there is a moment of
understanding. The King, the Queen, and the land are one. Thus they are both
the light and darkness. In the moment of vision the King looks upon his son,
and at last realizes that he is only fighting himself, for all things are one.
The King and his son understand the mystery, and they join in love as one. They
give up the conflict of light and dark to pass beyond this world, and they
become the Lord of the Otherworld. The Queen too has seen both life and death,
and knows that they are one. With this realization she becomes the crone, and
understands the ancient myst-ery. The Equinox marks her last menstrual cycle;
she can no longer bear children.
So now we must take our last step upon the Wheel; we come at last to Samhain,
from where it all began. As we saw at the beginning this is the Wiccan New
Year. The Queen has become the crone – the hag, the Witch. She lives alone, for
the King is now dead. The Sun is waning toward the Solstice; winter is upon us,
and the night is now longer than the day.
If we look to the land, the cycle of growth has come to an end. The kingdom of
the old year has symbolically passed away, transformed by the turning of the
seasons. The Queen is now a Witch; the ancient hag crone who knows the
mysteries of life and death. In making her journey she has discovered the
ancient power which lies behind the Wheel of the Year. She has seen the spring,
the summer, autumn and winter, and she knows that an ancient mystery lies hidden
within it all.
Standing alone, for she is feared by those who have yet to walk the Wheel, she
kindles the ancient Samhain fire. As she raises her arms in invocation to the
Lord of the Otherworld, a great storm gathers. The veil is opened between the
worlds. The storm breaks, and the Wild Hunt is upon us as the spirits of the
dead are led from the Other-world by the ancient Horned God; the Ancient Lord of
the Samhain fire. To complete the final turn of the Wheel, the Crone must now
join with his mystery, and go with him back into the Otherworld. She and the
Horned Lord travel together back into the depths of the mystery. There they
join in love as one; the supreme moment of the true Great Rite in which all the
mysteries of the male and female, all the mysteries of the light and dark are
married together as one as the seed is planted deep within the womb of the Great
Mother.
For now in the natural cycle the seeds of nature fall to the ground, the seed of
life to come. The seed harvested at Lammas is now planted in the earth,
fulfilling the mystery of the return. For a while the land sleeps, and lies
fallow. The darkness seems to complete, but of course we know that we will
eventually return to the Winter Solstice, and the cycle will continue.
Let us now approach the Wiccan Wheel of the Year as it is meant to be: as a
mystery. Forget the intellect, and allow your intuition and emotions to be your
guide. What follows is a guided visualization, which you can read onto a tape,
or have one person read aloud, as you follow the journey it describes. Allow
the images to form naturally in your imagination, and you will find yourself
making a magical journey through the mysteries of the gods.
For those who are not used to following a guided visualization, there are a few
simple rules to observe. Before starting any meditation work (which includes
the kind of altered state that guided visualization encourages), seat yourself
comfortably in a quiet room, free from distractions. Take the phone off the
hook, and tell anyone who lives with you not to disturb you. You can of course
do this out of doors, but if you do, make sure you are well off the beaten
track, with no danger of bush walkers stumbling over you, or any other kinds of
disturbance. Have a pen and pad handy, and if it helps you to relax and focus,
use some incense.
WOTC Special Mini-Series Part 2 – The Wheel of the Month
The moons energies affect us on a more emotional level that is hidden to us
unless we carefully pay attention.
The first sliver of the waxing crescent moon represents the Northeast. She is
the newborn moon and reflects all possibilities. That first sight of the new
moon brings a sense of hope for the future.
As the moon moves toward the waxing first quarter inspiration of the East comes
easily. This comes more often in the form of intuitions or dreams.
When waxing gibbous moon begins to assert herself in the sky we are in the
Southeast. We may begin to become more aware of how we are feeling. We must be careful to avoid confusing our feelings with who we are.
The full moon represents the South in all its power and full emotion. We tend to
feel wakeful and full of energy. We can use this energy to get out and enjoy
friends and activities.
As the moon moves into her waning gibbous phase in the Southwest we calm a
little from the high energy of the full moon. Our emotions may begin to come to
balance as we see what we can create and accept what cannot be.
The waning last quarter moon of the West can at times be jarring. The moon seems to be deserting us as she becomes smaller and smaller in the sky. Often emotions must be released in order to be able to move on.
Gradually the waning crescent of the Northwest becomes smaller and smaller. We are able to let go a little easier and are in a highly intuitive, receptive
state. Deep understandings may come to us at this time.
At last we cannot see the moon at all. We are in the dark of the moon, the
North. This is a deeply inner time that restores us in readiness for the first
glimmering of the visible new moon as we continue around and around.
WOTC Special Mini-Series Part 1 – Wheel of the Day
THE WHEEL OF THE DAY
NE – It is just before sunrise. You begin to wake. For a moment you may wonder what day it is or even feel confused about where you are. Your mind is still in an open slate.
EAST – During sunrise or a bit after you are preparing for the day. In your mind you begin to plan. What will you get done this day and how will you do it?
SE – It is mid morning now. As you begin to carry out your plans you demonstrate ‘who you are’ in this day. You choose if you are going to display a positive or negative attitude.
SOUTH – It is noon and early afternoon. You are occupied in the activities of your day. Now is when you carry out your responsibilities to your family and your community.
SW – As your afternoon continues you realize that you cannot get everything done that you planned. You decide what you will do tomorrow. It is a time for finding balance in your day.
WEST – It is evening, The sun goes down. The active part of your day is done. You sit back and evaluate your day considering what went well and what you would do differently next time.
NW – As you retire for the night you gradually let go of thoughts about the day. Your mind becomes more receptive. You may drift between sleep and wakefulness for a while.
NORTH – It is deep in the night now. You sleep and dreams bring renewal that prepare you for the coming dawn when you will begin to travel another wheel of another day.
How to Protect Oneself From Psychic Attacks
How to Protect Oneself From Psychic Attacks
11 Use natural essences from flowers. The scent from the flowers is said to help promote positive emotions around you.
12 Free oneself from fear. When you are fearful you are more susceptible to psychic attacks. Try meditation, yoga or visualization exercises to help you balance and strengthen your mental and emotional states.
13 Read “Psychic Shield: The Personal Handbook of Psychic Protection” by Caitlin Matthews to learn more about how to protect yourself from psychic attacks.
About Psychic Self Defense
About Psychic Self Defense
When we think of self defense, we think of the protection of our physical bodies. But when we speak of psychic self defense, the focus is instead on the harm another may inflict on our inner self. In short, psychic self defense can best be defined as your “intuitive protection” against those who wish to harm your mind or spirit. We all have the ability to transfer negative energy, and psychic self defense helps to guard against the dark force that motivates our enemies.
Identification
Our psychic self defense is gifted to us by our higher self. When something just doesn’t feel right, or you suspect that someone is not being truthful and cannot be trusted, you are receiving information from another level of your being. Often ignored, these feelings or “vibes” are your intuition’s way of telling you that you had better think twice about the situation. This intuition is your psychic self defense. If heeded more often, you may be less apt to allow the feelings of guilt, shame, hurt and self doubt that others bestow on you to infect your mind and affect your health.
Types
The world can be cruel, and psychic attacks can come in many forms. They often are a result of the thoughts and actions of those in whom we place our greatest faith and trust. Jealousy and envy in others can create dark emotions, resulting in destructive behavior and thinking. Unaddressed, these manifestations can maim and cripple our own sense of well being. Although you may not at first suspect that a jealous person means to belittle or whittle down your self esteem, eventually his dark thoughts can be picked up on by your inner radar. An uneasiness or doubt that begins to arise when you are around this person, or are thinking of him, is your psychic self defense kicking in. Recognizing it is to your advantage
Theories/Speculation
For those that practice psychic self defense, it is often believed that their positive auras can counteract psychic attacks. Techniques such as aversion, which entails forcing your mind to believe only in the positive and extinguishing all negatives, will weaken any effect that verbal or mental badgering will have on your psyche. It is also theorized that by developing your precognitive warning system, you can intercept the harmful effects of psychic attacks before they have the opportunity to strike. The precognitive warning system means building up your positive aura through meditation and taking control of your unconscious mind. By always keeping a clear head and maintaining a constant awareness, you will project positive energy that will deflect negative.




You must be logged in to post a comment.