Wishing You and Yours A Very Beautiful Thursday!

Days Of The Week Comments I’m back, lol! I bet you didn’t notice, did ya’? I must apologize for yesterday. I had some type of stomach bug. I still have it today but I at least feel like standing and sitting up. My stomach yesterday hurt so bad all I could do is lay down and run to the bathroom. I guess it is a virus going around. All I know is I am still sick and I hate to be sick. So I am very sorry about yesterday but I hope you understand.  

Thursday Is Ruled By Jupiter

  Named after the Norse Thunder God Thor, Thursday is a great time for rituals and magick focused on strength, devotion, and commitment. Other correspondences for Thursday are: 

Planet: Jupiter 

Rituals: Money, Legal and Religious matters. 

Element: Earth 

Colour: Blue 

Number: 4 
Magickal Graphics

Ritual Tools

Ritual Tools

 
 
While many power objects find a home on the ritual altar and are used in ceremony, they are not necessarily the same as ritual tools. Ritual tools are objects that have very specific uses in a ceremonial setting. The smudge fan purify space. Smudge and incense begin to induce a sacred state of mind. The ritual sword may be used to cast the circle and cut openings in it for participants that need to leave or re-enter. These tools may be gifts from your spirit allies, but they have a purpose other than connecting you to Deity and holding power for you individually.
 
Ritual tools being great mystery and powerful belief to a ceremony. Simply by using them, you may be transported into a magickal state of consciousness. The belief in their power alone can spur you into more effective magick and deeper trance states. This can be particularly true in the early stages of your practice, but continued use can increase their power exponentially. The more you work with these tools, the more conditioned you become to the stages of consciousness that you experience through using them. In this way, they can be invaluable catalysts to the creation of magick.
 
Because of the important role these tools play in the creation of ceremony and the intimate nature of your psychic relationship with them, it is vitally important that ritual tools be properly cleansed and ritually consecretaed and accepted by the deities of your path.
 
Kristen Madden
Llewellyn’s 2007 Magical Almanac

A Witch’s Fire Dish

A Witch’s Fire Dish

Primary Element: Fire

Another favorite tool for outdoor magick is a fire dish. Though you can burn a small fire in a cauldron, having a fire in a special bowl or dish is one of the most magickal experiences, particularly under star- or moonlight. You can carry it with you in the back of the car for rituals on beaches. Some stone circles, such as the Rollright stones in Oxfordshire, have a fire dish in situ to borrow for ceremonies under supervision of the warden.

Ideally, you would use the cauldron for water and the dish for fire: a perfect elemental balance.

The Third Rule Of White Magick: Ask for enough for your needs & a little more

The Third Rule of White Magick:

You can ask for enough for your needs and a little more
 
Magick can be used for any area of your life where you need power, money, healing or protection. There is nothing wrong in asking for the resolution of an urgent problem. After all, you can’t be drawing down lunar energies or healing rainforests successfully if you are worried sick about the bald tire on your car and you’ve got to drive your grandma to the hospital for her annual check-up the next day.
 
Witchcraft is and always has been about real people and their daily needs. As the Christian Lord’s Prayer says, “Give us this day our daily bread.” The religion of witchcraft is no less caring.
 
Our ancestors’ seasonal and domestic rituals were based on the need for enough food, shelter, and clothing. These were days when the harvest or the hunt was crucial to survival. The necessity of enough rain and sunshine for the growth of the seeds and animals formed the focus of seasonal rites. In societies that still depend on hunting, fishing or the harvest, these seasonal rituals have maintained their urgency and central position in the religious life of the community.
 
As long as your needs are realistic, you can usually obtain the resources you asked for, plus maybe an unexpected free upgrade, by doing even a simple spell. Be sure that your heart is in it and that you suspend logic–at least while casting the spell.
 
You can ask for love, health, healing, career success, fertility, concentration and an improved memory to pass an examination or take a test. As long as you do put in the necessary hours of studying or earthly effort to bring your wishes to fruition, magick can give you the extra boost and the confidence to succeed.

The Second Rule of White Magick: What is sent out comes back threefold

The Second Rule of Magick:

What You Send Out Comes Back Threefold
 
This is a great incentive to do magick to help others and for the environment.

If you use magick to send healing, love or abundance to other people, the same qualities will come into your own life unexpectedly in ways you need them, with three times the intensity.
 
Equally, if you send out negative thoughts or wishes in a spell to a nasty gossiping neighbor, you may well succeed in making the target of your spells unhappy. But this may make her gossip even more. What is more, similar unhappiness or nastiness will come back into your own life three times as powerfully–even if the person you are sending bad thought to deserves them. Bitterness and anger are natural emotions, best shared with a loving friend or relative or relieved by an hour digging the garden and not amplified in a magickal way to pollute the cosmos.
 
You know yourself that if you wake in a happy mood, you smile and everyone responds positively to you because your energy field is radiating happiness and so attracting it back. Think of the cosmos as a giant aura or energy field and do your share of Mary-Poppins-style magick.

The First Rule of White Magick: Do as you choose/harm no one

The First Rule of Magick:

You are free to do as you choose as long as you harm no one.
 
This rule sounds deceptively simple to keep. However, scientifically it has been shown that a butterfly fluttering its wings subtly alters the energies of the universe. Therefore any decision, act or spell must affect others. We should never use magick to interfere with the free will of others, though there are binding spells that can restrict the effects of a person’s negative behavior.

Of course in order to survive emotionally and sometimes to survive at all, you cannot always avoid hurting others in everyday life or in magick. So magick does involve a lot of careful thought and evaluation and usually relates to what is happening in our everyday lives.
 
Supposing you needed more money each month to pay the bills, You know a senior colleague at work is holding a comfortable, well-paid position under false pretences. She is leaving you to do her work and taking the credit. However justifiable your resentment you should not do a spell to get her fired. If you were subsequently offered her job you would never be happy in it because you got it by negative magick. You could instead do spells to raise your own positive profile at work so you do get offered promotions and also to take earthly steps to limit your colleague’s plagiarism. You could in addition, cast spells so that you would find a better-paid job where you were appreciated. Usually such free-loaders are noticed by higher management and may get moved on naturally.

White Magick

White Magick

  
Like any spiritual force, magick is neutral, whatever its form. In the past, and even today in some parts of the world, formal religion can be used to justify all kinds of cruelty and intolerance. Magick used for dark purposes is really about power and sometimes people do hide behind the name and practices of witchcraft to abuse the vulnerable, whether physically, sexually or psychologically.
 
Usually these folks aren’t really devil-worshippers as they claim, but have watched some nasty inaccurate horror film about satanism and get themselves into all kinds of psycholgical as well as psychic minefields, not to mention the dreadful harm they do to others — and to the good name of witchcraft.
 
Almost as harmful in terms of misinformation and causing psychological damage, though not intentionally are witch cult films that glorify special effect spells with fire, sulphur and blood sacrifice, ritual sex and medieval demons unleashed to grant their wishes.
 
To real witches all life is sacred even that of the smallest insect. If you’re looking for wild sex, forget witchcraft. You’re more likely to get a list of herbs to learn or the altar silver to polish at your local coven than an invitation to attend a moorland orgy.
 
White or positive magickal practice, the kind recommended in this and other books by responsible witches and organizations such as The Children of Artemis, probably the best on- and off-line resource, is a highly moral and responsible code. Common sense is the key and covens are like gold dust to find. You can be sure if you are offered instant initiation in some lonely place or after a few private lession; you should drink up and leave fast.
 
Natural magick is by its simplicity naturally protective and reassuring. However, in case we do get intoxicated by our own powers, floods, whirlwinds, volcanoes and earth tremors are a sharp reminder that we work with and do not control mother nature.

Attracting or Sympathetic Magick

Attracting or Sympathetic Magick

 
 
Attracting magick is sometimes called Sympathetic Magick because a focus is used to represent a person or need and then magickal actions are carried out upon that focus to endow it with the necessary power. The accumulated power will then be transferred in the release of energy at the climax of the spell into the actual person or need represented by the symbol.
 
In natural magick it is more effective to choose or make a symbol of a natural material or something which is living: flowers for love, a small wooden toy house for a home move, a feather for travel, seeds for the growth of a venture or prosperity and nuts for fertility.
 
Alternatively you can make wax symbols or figures by softening pieces of beeswax or a child’s modeling clay, for example a small baby in a cradle if you wish to conceive a child. You are not creating the much-feared wax images in which pins were stuck. In fact, most wax dolls with pins displayed in museums were actually used as an early westernized form of acupuncture or the ends of the pins were tipped with a healing oil (to symbolize healing entering the person). After the spell has run its course, you can roll the wax back into a ball and bury it with the words: “Return to your own element, with thanks.”

Equally every herb and crystal has magickal meanings and so can be a focus for a spell. A green aventurine crystal will when empowered in a spell bring you good luck and money, especially in matters of speculation.
 
Some spells are best repeated over several nights to build up the attracting powers. If you wanted a new love relationship to develop (with the proviso that it is right to be, the cosmic opt-out clause) you might move two beeswax candles, one pink and one green, closer to each of the three nights before the full moon for increasing energies. Finally, you would join the flames together on the fourth night of full moon power.
 
Contagious magick is very similar but involves using something personal that the person has used or walked over. For example, as Eastern European marriage spell involves a woman scooping up the earth in which a lover’s footsteps is imprinted and planting marigolds, a love and marriage flower, in the soil. As the flower grow, so it is said will the love, leading to marriage. Presumably in modern times there could be a role reversed.

What Is The Difference Between A Spell and A Ritual

What Is The Difference Between A Spell and A Ritual

 
 
In practice the terms “spell” and “ritual” are used interchangeably in magick and throughout used as a umbrella term for magickal working.
 
A spell tends to be a less formal kind of magick, usually cast for a specific purpose or need, for example to protect a named traveller (maybe yourself or a family member) on a particular journey or trip for a specified length of time. The energies are raised and then released so they will bounce back to activate the purpose of the spell which has been represented by a symbol of that journey. This physical focus of the spell might in natural magick be a feather or some chopped fennel herbs to symbolize travel.
 
In contrast a ritual is based on a more general or long-lasting focus. A ritual may be carried out at specified times, for example the first day of spring or to celebrate the birth of a baby. A ritual, even in natural magick, follows a more structured format.
 
What is more, whereas a spell builds up to a climax and release of energy, the ritual may release energy more evenly throughout the weeks and months ahead.

WHEN CURSED BY UNKNOWN PERSON

 

WHEN CURSED BY UNKNOWN PERSON

 

Ingredients

 

Spell and magick be gone (say this three times)
That has been placed on me by person(s) known or unknown to me
Go back from whence you came
Remain with whom you came from
Be with who you were sent by
Then visualize a pyramid going over you.
I am under universal light and universal protection
Nothing less then universal perfection can touch me were I am
The forces of this spell do leave So mote it be.

 

Happy Thursday, dear friends! It seems like forever….

Days Of The Week Comments
…..that I have talked to you all. As you can tell I have been a busy little bee. I hope you like the look of the blog. I never realized I had made so much work for myself, lol! Anyway, it is for your enjoyment and I hope you do. Now on with today’s topic…… 

Thursday is ruled by Jupiter

 Archangel:  Sachiel

Candle colour:  Blue

Incenses:  Sandalwood or sage

Crystals:  Lapis lazuli or turquoise

Use Thursdays for spells for career, justice, prosperity, leadership, creativity, marriage and all partnerships, whether love or business, and for male potency. 

Where possible, work on a hillside, moorland or near a natural sacred site.

Magickal Graphics

Herb of the Day for October 11th – Dodder

Dodder

Folk Names:  Beggarweed, Devil’s Guts, Fireweed, Hellweed, Lady’s Lace, Love Vine, Scaldweed, Strangletare, Witches’ Hair

Gender:  Feminine

Planet:  Saturn

Element:  Water

Powers:  Love Divination, Knot Magick

Magickal Uses:  Pluck the dodder throw it over the shoulder, back onto the host plant (dodder is a parasite), and then return to the plant the next day. If the dodder has attached itself to the plant again, the person in question loves you. If not, no.

Use the “laces”as cords for knot magick (don’t tie the knots too tightly).

Cunningham’s Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs
Scott Cunningham

Full Moon Holy Water

Full Moon Holy Water

pink-self love and friendship
red-passionate love
green-money
blue-healing
purple-increase of psychic abilities
.

Fill a glass of water and place a stone in it to charge it with what
you want to bring to you. Ask the blessings of the Earth and Goddess
and then drink a bit to cleanse you inside. The remainder of the
water can be kept tightly corked to use in spells and recipes
anytime you need the extra power of the Full Moon!

Cellphone Magick

In today’s world, it might seem strange to think of someone not owning a cell phone, and it probably seems equally bizarre for a phone to be associated with magick and casting spells? So it may surprise some people to learn that high-tech gadgets and gizmos do have a very important place in a modern witch’s toolbox.

Although there are some eccentric witches out there who still brew steaming potions in remote corners of forests, they really are quite a rare sight these days. We’ve gone mainstream, and most of us have cell phones. I remember when I purchased my first mobile phone some years ago, even before I’d figured out how to call someone, I was seeking ways in which I could use the device magickally. It didn’t take me long to figure out that by transmitting my desires over the cellular network, I could turn all of my wishes into reality.

I can’t take all the credit for this new way of spell-making. My trusted friend and coauthor, Shawn, helped me to try out many different ways of weaving together these contemporary spells, and after a few months of experimenting we figure out how to make the cell phone work to our advantage.

It’s all in the power and intent of the message. We know, for example, that by sending a thought to the universe, we attract the things we desire. Writing spells with pen and paper is a quick and easy way of getting what you want, but because of the energy that powers cell-phone towers and the speed with which we can send and receive texts, sending spells as text messages takes them to the next level.

Another easy aspect of spell texting is that you don’t need candles or any other objects. All you needs is a companion, preferably one who also owns a cell phone and who knows you well enough to recognize that you are not completely mad! This person doesn’t necessarily have to have any magickal know-how, just as long as they are open-minded and eager to experiment. In the past, I have known some witches wo do this process alone by using two mobile devices, but in my opinion the spells work best if you actually enlist the help of another person.

A Modern-Day White Witch’s Guide
Wiccapedia
Shawn Robbins & Leanna Greenaway

The Elements

The Elements

 

The Elements – Fire
South
Cinnamon or Juniper incense

Passion, enthusiasm, desire , courage, force, lust, fertility , virility. Fire magick : to bring on the new and destroy the old

Season: Summer
Symbol: Sword, Candle ,Burner
Colors:Reds, Oranges, Golds.
Candle- Red
Stones- Banded agate, black agate, brown agate, red agate, amber, apache tear, asbestos, bloodstone, carnelian, citrine, quartz crystal, diamond, flint, garnet, hematite, red jasper, lava, obsidian, onyx, pipestone, rhodocrosite, ruby, sard, sardonyx, serpentine, spinel, sulfur, sunstone, tiger’s eye, topaz, red tourmaline, watermelon tourmaline, zircon.
Fire stones are used for protection, defensive magic, physical strength, magical energy, courage, will power (such as dieting), and purification
Bonfire Magick:burning something for example a piece of paper with your spell or an image for banishing, destroying
Candle Magick: simple easy and effective form to obtain your desire
Sun Magick : using the sun to enhance power,new beginnings,strength,control

The Elements – Air
North/East

Gems,stones,crystals,symbo Frankincense incense
Thoughts, reason ,intellect, memory, knowledge,freedom,Visualization

Season: Spring
Symbol : Wand, Athame
Color : yello,gold,white
Stones- Aventurine, mottled jasper, mica, pumice, sphene.
Candle- white
Mirror Magick: good for looking within,scrying

The Elements – Earth
East/ or North
Salt

stability, strength, warmth ,comfort, animals, farming,harvest. Earth Magick uses herbs and flowers,burying objects, drawing images in the earth, planting trees or plants,working with nature. Good for grounding

Season : Winter
Colors : Browns, Blacks, Greens.
Symbol: Pentacle ,salt ,grain ,stone.
Candles- Green
Stones- Green agate, moss agate, alum, green calcite, cat’s eye, chrysoprase, coal, emerald, brown jasper, green jasper, jet, kunzite, malachite, olivine, peridot, salt, stalagmite, black tourmaline, green tourmaline, turquoise.

Earth Stones related to this element are useful in promoting peace, grounding and centering of energies, fertility, money, business success, stability, gardening and agriculture.

The Elements – Water
West
Bowl of water

Emotions, feelings, intuition, insight,fertility, divination. Water Magick incorporates rivers,ponds,streams, the beach,sand, shells,seawater,mirrors. Intuition,scrying. Good for love spells.

Season: Autumn
Colors : Blue, Light Greys, Sea Greens ,White,silver.
Symbols: Chalice
Candle- Blue
Stones- Blue lace agate, amethyst, aquamarine, azurite, beryl, blue calcite, pink calcite, celestite, chalcedony, chrysocolla, coral, quartz crystal, geodes, holey stones, jade, lapis lazuli, moonstone mother-of-pearl, pearl, sapphire, selenite, sodalite, sugilite, blue tourmaline, green tourmaline, pink tourmaline.
Stones of this element are used in love rituals and for healing, compassion, reconciliation, friendship, purification, de-stressing, peace, sleep, dreams and psychism.

MAGICK IN, MAGICK OUT

MAGICK IN, MAGICK OUT

article

by Janice Van Cleve

“It is really a great honor to be chosen,” I mused, setting down my fork. The planning committee for the autumn equinox ritual had called two weeks ago to ask me to present the communion bread. Tomorrow was the big day. I looked forward to this ritual with a heightened sense of responsibility, because communion had special significance to our circle and I had been entrusted with it. I chose an apple nut bread recipe that seemed most appropriate for the season and made ready to bake.

“So why not start by making magick while I bake?” I said to myself. “My kitchen is a sacred space and my apron will be a priestess robe. If this bread is to be sacred, its preparation should be sacred as well.” It sounded like a new technopagan mantra: magick in, magick out.

With my intention declared, I went to work. I put away the pots and pans and cleaned the counter tops to establish the area. Then I selected the tools and ingredients. The mixing bowl would be the cauldron, the wooden spoon the wand. “The cookbook will be my grimoire,” I cackled to myself.

On the kitchen table, I lit a candle. Next to it I placed a cup of water, a salt shaker and a stick of burning incense. One by one, I took the elements into the kitchen to bless the area and the ingredients. Each time, I repeated my intention to prepare the sacred bread in a sacred way. I called in the watchtowers to guard the cooking space and put a Lisa Thiel CD in the player. Now the magick could begin.

Wisp of incense, heat of oven, song and music mixed with flour and shortening as the spoon stirred in the cauldron bowl. Lightly dancing from counter to book to oven to pantry, I added a pinch of this and a spoonful of that. Soon the energy was rising along with the dough. Three times I kneaded it, until it plumped into a loaf ready for the oven. Then I sat quietly before the candle and prayed.

When the bread was done, I covered it with a cloth and cleaned up the kitchen as a grounding. I thanked the watchtowers and dismissed them, poured the incense ashes and water into a potted plant, returned the salt and blew out the candle.

The next day at autumn equinox ritual, the magick was palpable. The bread seemed to vibrate of its own upon the altar. When the circle raised the great energy and sent it into the communion, it was almost possible to see the loaf float above its plate. At communion, I raised the bread high and felt tingling all the way up my arms. The words of power voiced the magick we could all see: “Behold the mysteries of the Goddess! The bread that is Her Body and the drink that is Her Blood.”

When I offered the bread to the woman next to me and said, “May you never hunger,” I knew she was receiving much more than baked dough. I knew she was sharing the energy of the circle and my own special magick from the night before. When the bread came back around to me, I took a bite, and the full power of our magickal meal filled me.

In this communion, we experienced the multiplication of the loaves in their nutritive, healing and power-giving aspects. The magick that went into the baking and that was enhanced by the group ritual imbued this loaf with spiritual energy. Sometimes, store-bought food is the best we can do for a particular ritual, and that’s fine. But this experience of creating the communion magickally seemed especially important for autumn equinox and the feast of harvest. In a special way, it blessed this food unto our bodies.

HOW TO COOK A GRIMOIRE

HOW TO COOK A GRIMOIRE

by Catherine Harper

In college, I took a class on Hinduism as an elective. The class tended to be well-taught and informative, and only fleetingly inspiring, but one day there was a discussion of the rituals associated with the preparation and sharing of food. During this discussion, the professor said that the kitchen was the ritual center of the house. His words, about a tradition that I’d only approached academically, started something.

As I listened to the rest of the class, it was as if a half-remembered hearth, empty but for a few embers smoldering in the ashes, was fed by this idea and began to send up flames. I’d halfway known this about kitchens already, but I hadn’t put it into words. I’d been confused by the separation of the living room fireplace from the space where food was prepared, and the cramped, tiny, walled-off kitchens of apartments and rented houses; to my mind, the mantelpiece should be the house altar, even though I spent more time by the oven. I rushed home in delight and convinced my mother, at that time my landlord, to let me paint the stove with knotwork and elemental symbols.

For me, food lore has always paralleled my interests in magic. Of course, when I began my formal magical studies in my teens, witchery, which had plenty of room for kitchen magic, was the low art as far as I was concerned. I would not consciously have associated magic and cooking, though in retrospect those were my formative years in the culinary arts just as they were in those magical. My disregard for cooking mostly speaks of what I thought then of magic. Magic to me was something extraordinary, far removed from the tedious bits of every day life. Magic had everything to do with correspondences and ancient languages, and if around the edges I learned to bake a load of bread and make a decent broth, well, eating was necessary

Nowadays, magic to me is more about my relationship with the universe. I’d rather know the place I am right now than try going elsewhere, although I can’t tell you whether I’ve become more ambitious or less. In my garden, I try to learn the land, and the land becomes fruits and vegetables, cooked in the kitchen to be sweet or savory, which I share with my friends and family as they share with me, and which we all then eat and then make a part of ourselves. And shit. And someday die.

This interwoven relationship began early. When I was a child, it was interest in the medicinal and magical uses of herbs that led me to bring home the starts for my first herb garden, but the herbs themselves, oregano, chives, marjoram and mint, led me back into the kitchen. Around the time I set up my first altar, an arrangement of colored stones around two small cat figures, with a small bowl for offerings (I was in second grade), my mother started to let me spice salad dressings by taste. I opened the bottles of herbs and spices one by one, and rubbed the dried leaves of tarragon and basil between my fingers to release their smell. In those bottles were the elusive scents of faraway places. Even more, there was a mystery. Most people I knew were tied to books, from which they would recite as by rote the uses of the herbs. I wanted even then to know the herbs so intimately as to be able to part ways with the staid formulas of tradition and cook with no guides but smell, taste and my own creativity.

As my magic began to become codified to me, herbs were the earliest point of conscious overlap between that discipline and the culinary arts. Herbs are just really cool, and even as a teenager I could see that. Inspired by fiction, I started learning the names and uses of local plants, because my favorite characters always seemed to know that sort of thing. This left me with the start of a collection of books on wild plants and mushrooms and the occasional satisfaction of getting to say things like “oh, that’s wild chamomile” to schoolmates. Few of whom were impressed.

When I was in my mid-teens, I was introduced to my first herb shop, and I fell in love. Reckless, only partly considered love. I tended to choose herbs more by instinct than sense, half-remembering names like hawthorn, damiana, eyebright and yarrow from spells and folklore, but being just as likely to buy shepherd’s purse because I’d never heard of it, or Irish moss because it sounded interesting. I bought books on herbs, so I could learn the uses of the herbs I’d already gotten. I raided the library and took notes.

Luckily, around that time a black cat, my nascent herb cabinet and I moved out and into a room in a shared house, necessitating that I begin to acquire my own collection of culinary herbs and spices. In that house, I had my next herb garden, and somewhere between picking up a couple of different varieties of rosemary with the rue, learning about the magical properties of culinary herbs, the culinary properties of medicinal herbs and so on, the division in my mind between the esoteric and practical uses of these plants vanished.

Nowadays, having graduated from the 26 pots and planters outside of our last apartment to a place with a bit of land, I have three herb gardens, ranging from the formal circle garden outside the kitchen, to the heatloving front garden, to the isolated battlefield of invasive plants, where even now the soapwort and sweet woodruff are testing each other’s boundaries, while maintaining a somewhat more respectful relationship with the citadel of giant mullein. The collection has become defined mostly by what I use and what will survive our climate, although it tends to expand with the various bits and pieces I trip over that intrigue me. Herbs tend to be tough, easy to grow and in many cases perennial or self-seeding. If you are looking to try a bit of gardening and would like to try eating your own harvests, herbs are one of the best places to begin, and they open a tiny window onto a different kind of life, when food was a local thing and our tables were graced rather more directly with the fruits of our own labors.

A lot of my cooking, rather like a lot of my ritual, is a method by which I seek to connect myself with the world, to weave myself in closer to its past and future, tie myself to the land and the turning of the seasons, to in my own way reach for a connection with the divine and try, quietly, to create something sacred. Quite a lot of it seems to reach back toward the past. A rich past that hangs behind us like a shadow at sunset, longer than we are tall. There is a sense of continuity that I’m looking for in those past years that seem from this vantage point to have moved so quickly and changed so slowly, a contrast and ballast to our own rapidly changing world.

But I do not want to live in the past. Likewise, in my own kitchen, I do not try to recreate the past, but to reach back toward the knowledge it might have given me. This sense of the past has enriched my understanding of food. Limiting my use of ingredients by season or location has given me room to better appreciate each one and to understand their uses instead of being confused by the kaleidoscope of options available. I’ve also found myself motivated to look for ingredients that aren’t currently fashionable, and have discovered a neglected bounty of turnips, leeks, kasha, parsnips, grits, kale and okra, to name a few.

My own mother, a skilled cook who has no particular love of cooking, has teased me for my oxtail soup, a dish so old-fashioned that her mother must never have prepared it. And it is venerable dish, a dish I’d never tasted, and only the echo of a memory of it haunted some back corner of my mind. Yet it is a good winter soup, a soup that cooks for days, warming the cold kitchen and scenting the air. It is a thrifty way of cooking the nourishment out of meat and bones few people now even bother with, mixing them with onions and barley, ingredients cheap and plentiful even in winter, and making something warm and rich that can feed your family, friends and whoever else shows up for dinner. And it is a dish that tugs at my soul. In my mind, the iron pot I cook it in is an alembic, sitting upon the transformative fire in the heart of the kitchen, the heart of the house. And over days, the meat and bones are cooked and purified, and the pale watery broth become golden and rich both in physical and spiritual nourishment. A simple magic at the heart of living.

Other wells of inspiration spring from locations in my imagination rather than from any knowledge of the past. For a few years now, a lady of bees and honey has appeared from time to time in my dreams. I am not certain of her name, and know only fragments of her legends, yet I’ve been gradually learning more of bees and bee lore (to the benefit of my orchards, which were suffering a lack of pollinators). Now, I bake moist honey-colored cakes as part of my tribute to her, joining candles, dried herbs and stalks of ripe wheat.

Similarly, a great wellspring of my cooking is the Mediterranean, perhaps because some of my finest ever experiences of food happened while I was in Turkey. Yet, while I love to recreate what I have eaten, I also cook dishes that seem to come from that land but by some less obvious route, things that entered my skin with the sun, the hills and the dry fertility of the land, so unlike the wet mossy abundance of home. Only a few weeks ago, as the sun became noticeably lower in the sky and everything became tinted with gold, I was seized by a another hunger for something I had never tasted, something that turned out to be figs, eggplant and lamb baked in a sauce of caramelized onions, red wine and pomegranate juice. In some part of my imagination, there are olive groves, a latticework sunshade all grown over with grapevines for eating under in the summer, and in the evenings jasmine flowers release their scent into the air.

Other connections I find in my food are social, ideas growing out of my community. I’m not really that much of a gardener, though I’m trying to be a better one, and on the partially wooded acre we have we can only grow a fraction of our food. What doesn’t come out of our own gardens we buy, and I try to be aware of the buying. I hold a lot to the environmentalist mottoes of local, organic and seasonal, but my reasons go beyond the physical environment. Part of what I’m looking for is a spiritual connection to the food. If I grow the food myself, I have worked with it and the land that it has grown in from its beginnings as seeds. Lacking that, food that is grown locally is at least subject to the rhythms of the land and seasons I live with myself, and food that is grown locally is for the most part seasonal. But even beyond the connection to the land, a lot of what connects me to food spiritually is how it ties people together.

So I try to be aware of the people involved with the food I buy. This is also just a generally good practice, because they know about the food, and often have good ideas. I’ve gotten in the habit of talking with the butchers and produce clerks in the groceries I frequent. When I was first dabbling in the culinary arts, they gave me some of my best recipes. These days, it has become a more even exchange, but always beneficial.

More interesting yet are the produce stands and farmer’s markets that let you get even closer to the growers – and the food’s better, too, once you get used to the ungainly shapes and less polished-looking presentation. My husband complains whenever we go to the farmer’s market together because I have to gossip with everyone before I can buy our food. For me, it doesn’t taste as good without the gossip, and how can I know that this is a really good day for beets, but not such a good day for beans, without it?

And even better than the open markets are places like the garden of my neighbors, from which they sell salad greens, tomatoes, squash, beans and herbs right among the plants themselves. I envy them as gardeners, and pepper them with questions each time I drop by. It isn’t just about information. As food can tie us closer to the land, it also ties us closer to people, in many directions.

Bread is another cooking connection that is partly a social thing for me. I started learning bread with a couple of friends from recipes in a book that I’d borrowed from my mother when I moved out on my own. Bread is a wonderful thing in a large household, because even mediocre bread is superb fresh from the oven, and in a large household it is all eaten up before it has a chance to cool. So when I moved into a shared house, I thought I was a good baker. There were more books, and more of me not following recipes. And because good bakers aren’t that common, and until recently most bread wasn’t that great, while I was in college and making holiday loaves for the neighbors, I also thought I was a good baker.

Then, as I became introduced to really good artisan breads, I started to realize that I could buy bread that tasted better to me than any bread I made. I became despondent, and only baked bread on occasion, usually to dip in soup, even when friends encouraged me to again take up the flour and mixing bowl, and return to my kneading board.

Obviously I was lost without a clue, without more experienced bakers to turn to. But my dear friend, lover and circle mate provided the clue I needed, in the form of a well-chosen book as a birthday present (the book being The Village Baker). Now bread is once again part of the weekly rhythm. The book in question has not so much supplied me with recipes, but it discussed techniques and gave me the skills to let me get the loft and crumb I had been looking for.

For you nonbakers, loft is the amount of air trapped in bubbles in the rising loaf; greater loft means a larger, lighter loaf. Crumb refers to the bread’s texture, the amount of elasticity and springiness in the dough, which makes the bread chewier and less crumbly. Loft and crumb are bound up together, because without enough elasticity in the dough, the bubbles will burst instead of being trapped inside the bread, and your loaf will sink like a pricked tire.

Bread, at its heart, is a food more simple and mystical than a pot of oxtail soup, more deeply felt than haggis to a Scot. The honorific “lady” is derived from a word meaning “maker of bread,” reflecting the respect that task was once given. Stripped away from the frippery we tend to deck our breads in, bread is flour, water, yeast, technique, time and an oven, and usually a bit of salt.

At the beginning of bread, and here I mean its beginning historically rather than the beginning of any particular loaf, there is porridge, a mixture of meal made from soaking grains mixed with boiling water, rather like oatmeal. This is usually how I start my breads now, in part because it seems particularly suited to many of the hand-ground grains I use. Freshground flour acts rather differently than commercial flour. And of course, if you grind it yourself, you are no longer limited to the few flours that are sold commercially, and can make flour from any grain, nut or other suitable substance that strikes your fancy.

Even better, The Village Baker gave me some insight into the ways of wild yeast, and the different methods of courting and maintaining it. After years of thinking that yeast was something that came in small jars or packets, of enriching bread with butter and eggs, it is liberating to know that wild yeast enables you to stop with flour and water. Wild yeast is everywhere, and if you leave porridge sitting out for a few days, stirring occasionally, it will eventually start to bubble, and from there can be mixed with more flour to make a good bread dough. This is, admittedly, easier if you have been doing some brewing or baking in the vicinity recently – there is always yeast around, but it’s nice to have a fair bit of it in the air if you want a good culture. A natural fermentation loaf, one leavened from wild yeast, rises slowly, and is something you make over days, but it rises of its own accord and makes a chewier, more flavorful, better keeping bread than anything made with commercial yeast. The yeast itself is unseen and amazing, something invisible and transformative that changes the material world under your hands

When you begin to make bread regularly, it becomes social in another direction, because if you make it you might as well make several loaves. Even if you are grinding the grain yourself it isn’t much more work to make many than just one, and you’ll have more than you can eat. Especially if you like fresh bread, for then you will make it often. When you get into the rhythm of bread-making, especially a slow bread which you tend to only once a day and do not need to watch too carefully in its risings, the baking itself becomes relatively little work.

But you have the work, then, of giving your excess away. It is a joyous work, but more difficult than you might think, because most people are overly impressed with fresh-baked bread. While the admiration is fun, too much gratitude is a burden for everyone, and people will often not believe that you have more than you can possibly eat. It is also a good practice to collect recipes for bread pudding, bread salads and other uses for stale bread, because you will have stale bread, despite your best efforts.

Sharing food and eating with others is in the most general sense an art. Many different times have had their own rules of hospitality, though when I try to study these rules I sometimes feel as though we have preserved only their shadows. “At these times you must offer food,” the rules say, “and offer it to these people. At these times you may accept, at these times you decline. And having shared food, these are the obligations and relations between you.” One set of rules I learned from my mother, though not always the logic behind them. Another, often contradictory set I learned from an aunt, and stray bits and pieces that are obviously not even part of the same picture from friends, co-workers and other people. I’m not very good at muddling through all these rules and coming up with graceful interpretations in the face of disparate, often conflicting desires.

But the sharing of food with people, feeding people and being fed, is sacred. I am not good at rules, I am not good at following the map through these woods, but sometimes I can feel a path under my feet. When I give people food I have prepared for them – and this is the easy part – in some way I am giving a part of myself; the work and care I put into the food and all the ties that are between me and it are now between me and the person who eats as well. I don’t think I can lie with food, but I can give, and it is an easy sort of giving, for I love to cook and have plenty.

Accepting food is a little harder, although I enjoy eating what friends have made and appreciate their love, skill and kindness. I will not eat the food made by someone who I know bears me ill-will, nor will I accept food from someone whom I dislike nor willingly share a table with either such person. There is an intimacy in eating that needs to be respected, and to sup with an enemy seems to be a kind of lie, to pretend friendship where there is none. To set aside enmity and share a meal well, that is another thing altogether, and it can be a good when we can rise to it.

There are many rituals that have revolve around food in my life, sometimes intentionally and sometimes creeping around the edges. As for many people, candles and the good glasses mark a “nice” dinner at our house, which is distinguished for us more by the ritual surrounding it than the food served. Mushrooms and other wild food are a blessing, and should be shared and enjoyed rather than hoarded when found in any quantity. To me, they’re a signal to take a bit of time for mirth – I often stumble across a patch accidentally while I am rushing to do something else. There they are, glorious morels growing next to the optometrist’s hedge, boletes under a row of birch trees at work, thimble berries along the side of the road. So I try to give the them party they demand, calling over friends to taste this unexpected treat.

The selection of food is also threaded with ritual for me, though it means I spend more time on the road and gathering than I might prefer. I keep my eyes open, waiting for the day that soft ripe peaches, scenting the air and covering my hands with their juices, first come across the mountains to be sold along the roadside, another turning in my private calendar. In a few weeks, my peach trees will bear their first fruit. Later there are apples, then the local winter squash as we sink towards winter.

My favorite foods are those that meet some internal measure of reality. Sometimes these are the foods of the season, other times those of the regions, sometimes the odd-looking of imperfect specimens. I love the fruits and vegetables that still carry their scents with them. I can bury my nose in a basket of zucchini or fresh picked tomatoes and smell a reminder of the plant that bore them and the earth that nurtured them. I like to find my food still with specks of the dirt it lived in upon it.

Foods that pretend to be something other than what they are, on the other hand, need to be treated with caution. Non-fat cream cheese, fake butter or sugar, ice milk that is too heavily stabilized to melt and their ilk often seem to me to feed the body poorly and the spirit hardly at all. I can be pleased and content with a salad of fresh tender greens and vegetables or a succulent sliced pear, but that which pretends to richness it does not deliver seems to mock me with its own illusory nature and remind me mostly of what I am denied.

Beyond the cycle of the seasons, there are other rhythms that will suggest and shape the food on your table if you listen to them. Plain simple food, inexpensive and seasonal without rich things like meat, eggs or butter, is for new moons; eat it quietly, by yourself or with a few others and appreciate its austerity. Full moons, on the other hand, are for feasting on the bounty of the season, whether that bounty is from the orchards and gardens, the well-stocked winter pantry or the fruit stand down the way. A good time for a little richness, intense flavor and variety. A good time for something special, though not something so heavy that will leave you half-asleep early in the evening.

Rain calls for food that is soothing and homey, that makes you glad to be indoors, sun for food that can be packed well and doesn’t need to be cooked, that carries with it the sweetness and bounty that the sun gives us. Snow calls for foods that cook slowly, so that the stove that heats them heats the house, and food cooked over a fire if you have a fire that can be used thusly. Such foods are the easy, quick foods, but they needn’t be complicated or take that much tending, and where would you rather be on a snowy day anyway than within smell’s reach of the kitchen, basking in its warmth?

There is rhythm and ritual, also, in the making of food. I’ll work a long day, and come home to a risen bowl full of bread that needs to be punched down, kneaded and formed into loaves. For me, the making falls into patterns as calming as a warm bath before bed, patterns that spread throughout our house and shape the days of those of us who live within it in ways the physical walls that shelter us do not. Chop this, sauté that, cover the pan and let it simmer, and work on the next dish while it cooks. Quiet work of hands, time and memory. Remembering Kim, the kitchen teacher at my high school, showing me how to chop tomatoes without letting the seeds pour out of them and slide across the cutting board. Ed breaking off a piece of dough small enough for me to knead with my six-year-old hands. The queer almost-memory of someone’s hands placing a red, smoke-stained covered dish into a dark oven. Children near my old job selling green beans from their own garden at a table by the sidewalk.

In the late evenings or early mornings, when I am tired, dozing by the oven waiting for the bread to be done, I can almost see the strands of a web, reaching from me to them and them to me, and from all of us to the land and back, the gardens, the trees of the orchard, the spices and their dreams of distant lands, the ripening squash that knows the turning of the seasons in a way that I cannot. A web of millions of strands, new threads arching and reaching and tying us deeper, closer, back to the earth.

Oxtail Soup+ 1-2 pounds oxtails+ 1 large onion, chopped+ 3 large cloves garlic+ 1 1/2 cup barley+ SaltOptional+ Red wine+ Worcestershire sauce+ Dried mushrooms+ Bay leaf+ Chopped carrot and/or celery

Place the oxtails in a large thick bottomed pot (a thick bottomed pot will make up for a burner that isn’t even or doesn’t go quite low enough – extra water will make up for either, but a thick bottom is best). Cover them with enough water that they can float a little. If they are forced to remain in contact with the bottom of the pan while being cooked, they’ll burn. Bring water to boil, reduce heat to a simmer, cover and cook for about two days.

Check the soup a few times a day, adding water if necessary, and keep the heat on the low side overnight, or if you’ll be gone for more than a few hours. After two days or thereabouts, the broth will turn a rich gold color (this effect can be enhanced by throwing in a small onion, quartered, with the skin still on – remove this onion when you debone the oxtails). Sometime not too long after the broth has darkened, you should debone the oxtails. Be careful – the bones tend to separate into smaller pieces and hide.

About an hour before you want to eat the soup, add your chopped onion and the barley. At this time, you can start thinking about other flavoring ingredients you might want to add. A little red wine and Worcestershire sauce is common. I’ll sometimes throw in some dried wild mushrooms – boletes are particularly nice for this. A bay leaf can be nice (curry leaf isn’t bad either). I usually don’t add more vegetables to this soup because part of what I like is the relative austerity of the dish, but they do give a more complex flavor. Salt and pepper to taste.

After the barley has plumped up (let it get nice and plump; it will thicken the broth), the soup’s ready to eat. Serve with some crusty bread to wipe the bowl clean.

Honey Cake+    1/2 cup honey+    1 egg, beaten+    1/4 cup butter, softened+    1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour+    1 teaspoon baking powder+    1/2 teaspoon baking soda+    1/4 teaspoon salt+    1 cup hot water+    Flavoring, optional

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cream together honey and butter. Mix in egg. Slowly mix in dry ingredients, and then bit by bit mix in the hot water until you have a smooth batter. Add flavoring if you wish. (I usually use fiori di sicilia, which is vanilla and citrus – a bit of vanilla extract and lemon zest would probably do nicely. A splash of rosewater or a pinch of cinnamon would also work.)

Pour into a loaf pan, or an eight-inch cake pan, cupcake pans, or what have you. Bake for about half an hour, or until the top is firm when tapped lightly.

Baked Figs and Eggplant+ One large onion+ Several small, or one large, eggplant+ Lamb chops (optional)+ Several fresh figs+ Garlic+ Pomegranate juice+ Red wine+ Olive oil

To make sauce: Caramelize the onion in a bit of olive oil. Do this thoroughly – the onion bits shouldn’t be burnt, but they should be nice and brown, and it will take a while. When the onion is caramelized, add two to four cloves of pressed or minced garlic, half a cup of pomegranate juice (or four tablespoons pomegranate paste and a bit of water), a good glug of wine and salt to taste.

To assemble dish: Preheat oven to 350 degrees. If the eggplant is large, or the skin tough, peel and quarter it. Sear any cut or peeled edges of the eggplant in a frying pan, and likewise sear the lamb chops if lamb chops are being used. Clean and halve the figs. Arrange the eggplant, lamb and figs in a casserole – they can be more than one layer deep, but should fit together as closely as possible. Pour the sauce over the rest of the ingredients, cover and bake for about 45 minutes or until the eggplant is very tender.

Your Deck of Ancient Symbols Card for Sept. 14 is The Cat

Your Deck of Ancient Symbols Card for Today

The Cat

The Cat represents the need for stealth and the freedom to act without restrictions. Acting stealthily in no way implies the need for underhanded behavior. Instead the suggestion here is to move quietly towards your goals and reach out for them when they are within range. It also denotes a need to free yourself from restrictions imposed by others.

As a daily card, The Cat suggests that the opportunity to attain your goals is very strong at the moment. However, you need to keep your intentions to yourself and shed whatever limitations have been put on you by others.

The Emerald Path to Ceremonial Operation

The Emerald Path to Ceremonial Operation

by Frasier L.

article

“True without falsehood, certain and most true. That which is above is as that which is below….” These words taken from an ancient Hermetic tablet embody the theoretical and practical idea of ceremonial operation, and the effective action/reaction created through magick. For this verse, as simple as it is, once grasped and understood, identifies the relationship between the macrocosm and the microcosm, man and the universe, one with all. By nature it is lawfully true that as it is in the heavens, so it is on the Earth. For the heavens contain stars and planetary systems but are quite simply just as the Earth – that is, matter gathered, integrated, and governed by the electro-light energy.

So, all things are materialized and solidified through the All Power (life energy), and the sun being a concentrated center of the All Power (life energy) radiates light (life energy). From that energy (light), there is reaction and influence on matter, and so there is life. And like the sun that begat them, all things integrated repeat the cycle of essence. Simple things reflect this; for example, the landscape you perceive is integrated matter reflecting light from it. So does the life force generate all things, and matter absorbs light and generates heat.

True to form, all living things operate through and display the life energy. Just as the celestial bodies and orbs of the heavens, all living things shine, radiate, display magnetism, and change state: from liquid to solid, from stable to volatile. In man, these energy displays are identified as mood, emotion, and personality. In man, the All Power also takes on new identification, through consciousness. This is the self, the spirit, the soul, conscious energy. Regardless of how one would describe his or her realization of being, this is the universal energy that embodies and empowers all things. The sun, the stars, the planets, and man: This energy never ceases to exist and is not bound to time.

It is then the task of the aspirant to know and understand the principles of operation of matter and energy, the interplay of which the aspirant is a part. To know this absolutely enables one to exercise or manipulate the energy and matter in one’s field of influence. And as all things are from one, it follows each influences the other. Those who aspire will know this.

Ceremonial magick, whether it be operations of theory or practice, is not bound to or composed of any one religion. The process of unfoldment of the self through exercise of unconscious energies manifests a deeper respect for all religions, for they are all exercises of the Oriflammi. This is exactly why many a great master, from Abra-Melin to Eliphas Levi-Zahed, warns against the change or surrendering of one’s religion. Even the Master Therion addressed the need for synthesis of all religion and science in magickal operation. For spiritual strength, usually achieved through exercise of religious experience, is the anchor of the self, needed when the consciousness begins to run and return through the aethyrs of the psyche’s experience of operation. This truth might explain why in some circles, persons at a total loss of equilibrium of the self (that is, fallen into madness) are said to be “losing their religion.”

In an attempt to further understanding, allow me to give an example: One would not surrender a leg to lighten the load in a foot race. Well, the same consideration is applied in approaching ceremonial magick. All experience that has caused or created action or reaction, within or without, internally or externally for you is vital energy necessary in your sphere of influence. If something makes or helps you shine, don’t let it go. Reinitiate your ideas and understanding to encompass the energy of the experience, for this energy is important to you in magickal operation.

And thou shalt separate the earth from the fire, the subtle from the gross…. There will come a point for all true aspirants when — armed with the truths aforementioned — they will embark on a learning path. Magickal operation involves more than rituals and ceremony. An operation merely brings one to a point of focus and concentration so as to raise or banish certain energies to be integrated or disintegrated from one’s field of influence, or to apply or extract energy to influence matter within that field.

So, to raise the level of focus, to expand one’s influence, entails broadening one’s understanding of the powers that be. Now, to exercise understanding one must first gain knowledge, through exposure to wisdom.

Enter the Kabbalah, a system that has been the foundation of magickal interpretation and operation for centuries. The Kabbalah system centers around the “Tree of Life,” otherwise known as the Ten Sephiroth. All pure thought and idea of the Self can be sorted and classified in the ten spheres of wisdom and influence. Now I know, a zealous aspirant might wonder what all this has to do with magick. In working with the Sephiroth, through the study, interpretation, and meditational exercises of the Kabbalistic texts, the Sepher Yetsira and the Zohar, one will build a solid foundation of knowledge. To even consider the idea of mastering the “Pillar System” of the Kabbalah would be a life’s work, and the rewards tenfold.

Another important magickal tool is the Tarot. Locked within this 78-card pack are esoteric and exoteric principles, all captured in images. Through the exercise of the pack on a regular basis, the imagery of the cards causes a reaction of the subtle energies of the unconscious self (that is, the mind).

The pack is also divided into five sets or suits. These suits correspond to the alchemical elements, and to the states of matter. Wands represent fire or volatility. Cups represent water or fluidity. Swords represent air or stability. Pentacles represent earth or solidity. The “trumps,” or major arcana, represent the spirit, and the course of will.

Every suit has cards numbered 1 through 10 as well as four “court cards,” or face cards. Numbers relate to time, whereas the alchemical elements relate to the cycles of the physical being. The working concept is this, it is physical law that matter acts or reacts in time. So numbers are used to reference points of observation or mark a moment of incidence in time. The suits and their number sets correspond to elemental states of the physical self. Court cards, depending on position, identify persons involved in the moment. They also can represent a coming or going of a new energy cycle (or situation). The keys of the major arcana, or “trumps,” represent the state of mind, conscious state, or condition of the spiritual self.

So, through exercising the Tarot regularly, your energy passes into and influences it. It can be used to identify conditions or events pre-term. Or — exercised with the pure knowledge of an open mind — it can help identify negativity and ill effect of your own self. With this knowing, one can set the will to right.

At this point, there might be those who are thinking, there’s got to be more than this. Why is there no information or procedures of certain rites or ceremonies here? Allow me to state the reason. Certain operations of order or circle are kept secret by bond of silence. Do understand, this is done not to impose control, but as an operation of concentration and restriction. For, you see, all manifestation and experience is attained by concentration and restriction of the will (that is, life energy) on matter. This is the art of making. So do understand, one is not at liberty to include such information in this writ. If you truly seek, you will find the guidance to your goal, absolutely.

Do know this, magick is a practice of life, performed daily — it is not just the occasional ceremonial procession. It truly works when you take all that you have attained and introduce and exercise it in all aspects of your living experience.

Keep in mind, you are a reflection of and influenced by your environment and surroundings. If magick is what you wish to attain, surround yourself with items, art, clothing, anything that activates your “magickal” self. Knowledge is power. So make yourself knowledgeable of ideas of magickal content. There are many paths.

In order to gain the most from the operations or exercises requires commitment to study and understanding of the exoteric and esoteric principles of one’s path work. Also of the utmost importance is a disciplined practice and exercise of these principles and the understanding gained. This exercise will build focus and concentration, for once again, magick is the art of making, and it is only what you make of it.

Keep in mind, just as exercise builds, strengthens, and solidifies the physical body, with knowledge and exercise one can also build, strengthen, and solidify the ability to influence and manipulate the energies that are always and eternally present.

In closing, I say to you, “Let the will be done, and shine on!”

Your Deck of Ancient Symbols Card for Sept. 13th is The Phoenix

Your Deck of Ancient Symbols Card for Today

The Phoenix

The mythical, endearing Phoenix has long been a symbol of rebirth, renewal, and coming full circle. Tired in both body and spirit the aged Phoenix combust into flames and from its ashes is reborn. The Phoenix does not indicate change so much as it does renewal and revitalization. It denotes the completion of a cycle and beginning anew.

As a daily card, The Phoenix suggest you are at a place where some aspects of your life have reached the end of a cycle. Your energies may be weakened from use and stretched over too many arenas to be as effective as they once were. As a result, now may be a good time for you to take a step back and allow yourself time to revitalize both your physical and spiritual self.