đ¸Lily - Protects against and can break through hexes, curses and other forms of targeted magic - Aids in communication with deities and angels - Guards against unwanted spirits and negativity -Commonly associated with fertility, purity, and prosperity
đ¸Rose - Most strongly associated with love and beauty of all kinds - Also associated with divination and good luck - Can be used to help strengthen intuition - Great to add to basically any glamour spell
đ¸Lilac - Drives away unwanted spirits - Strong protective properties - Can be used to attract short romantic flings - Most common associations are with exorcism, protection, and flirtation
đ¸Tulip - Usually associated with love and positive energies - Can be used to build and strengthen romantic relationships - Can promote happiness and contentment in oneâs lifeÂ
đ¸Daffodil - Symbolizes rebirth and inner peace - Can help you move on from toxic relationships, tragic events and other things that may have damaged your soul - Can aid in big moves and career changes đ¸Daisy - Strongly connected to divination and future telling - Symbolizes youth - Can attract romantic possibilities
đ¸Magnolia - Historically has symbolized dignity, nobility, and purity - Great for all kinds of healing - Can increase emotions related to love and loyalty
đ¸Iris - Associated with inner truth, wisdom, clarity, and creativity - Use when you want to have a more nuanced or truthfull understanding of something -Named after the Greek goddess of the rainbow and messenger to the Gods, Iris
đ¸Orchid - Symbolizes beauty, elegance, luxury, and love - Useful in glamour spells - Can help improve memory
đ¸Sunflower - Attributed with luck, honesty, and loyalty - Great for working with solar deities - Can help you gain confidence
i'll bite the hand that feeds me. i'll just bite in general actually honestly i don't need an excuse.
both. both is good
People obsessed with vampires are either queer or mentally ill
A wild unscheduled post appears. Iâve just been seeing a lot of something lately thatâs been bugging me and I wanted to put it into words, mostly for my own sake. Though my frustration here is rooted in my path as a shadow worker which is the topic Iâm writing about this month so maybe itâs more of a prelude.
Itâs really just a riff on what plenty of other people have put more eloquently â positivity culture is toxic â but with regards to the witchcraft community in particular. I see so many feel good posts about âWhen you donât feel witchy enoughâŚâ followed by a list of affirmations. I watch people get responded to blithely when they ask questions about witchcraft with âeveryoneâs path is valid.âÂ
This, quite frankly, is incredibly shallow.
Feeling bad isnât a bad thing. Itâs positivity culture adding pressure to feel good about yourself and your practice all the time that makes these totally normal and helpful feelings into things that need to be soothed away, into feelings to reject. Feelings â even bad ones â exist to try to help us. This is more complicated in cases of mental illness but, for the most part, feelings exist to help you.
Your bad feelings about your practice help highlight an area that isnât working for you. If you just try to affirm the feelings away, youâll never figure out why the practice isnât working for you in the first place. What I wish those posts would say instead is to look at why you donât feel witchy enough and be honest with yourself. Are you actually doing the work of studying and practicing witchcraft? If not, then what could you do to improve it? If youâre not in a place to work on it right now, how can you practice acceptance for the season of life that youâre in?
That takes work and a willingness to reflect and change, but it does begin to actually resolve the underlying issue at hand. I find it preferable to having to reapply affirmations ad infinitum.
And I would chalk this up to a difference in taste if it werenât how it works its way into all aspects of the witchcraft community. I have frequently been greeted with hostility and âall paths are validâ when I ask questions about how other people think through their witchcraft. The very act of asking questions â especially ones that are beyond a beginnerâs level â gets treated as if people are invalidating whatever it is theyâre seeking to understand. Iâve watched as some communities take a more aggressive stance with practical questions about intermediate witchcraft than they do actual racism, sexism, and homophobia.
Validation, like affirmation, is the easy and temporary way to cope with discomfort. âAll paths are validâ is absolutely meaningless. It is a non-answer in almost every case Iâve seen it used. Itâs also untrue. Paths that appropriate closed practices, have misogyny and racism imbedded in them or as part of the goal of their craft, that are used to justify and further transphobia â not fucking valid. The fixation on not invalidating anyone is wild to me. Why is it that in so many spaces that is valued over open discussion what our personal values and paths actually are?
One of the reasons it took me so long to call myself a witch and to practice more regularly is how this sheen of validity covered up everything useful from any sort of scrutiny to figure out whether it would work for me. It wasnât until I finally found people who could be comfortable with their practice, did not seek my validation, and could answer my questions freely that I ever got anywhere.
I canât control what other people do, but I since Iâve gotten a flurry of new followers I thought it might be good to restate one of my main principles with my work here on this blog â I will never make you comfortable with my materials at the expense of your well being. I will never affirm you staying the same when change is absolutely necessary.
This community wide discomfort with discomfort is toxic, stunts people trying to be become more skilled, and creates a haven for people reproducing systemic oppression in the community. If we donât accept discomfort as a natural part of learning and growing, we run the risk of creating a space that is more focused on feeling like witch than actually being one.*
TL;DR â Feeling bad isnât a bad thing, stop trying to affirm it away. Saying âevery path is validâ gives racists, sexists, homophobes, and transphobes a pass and keeps people looking to learn in the dark. Discomfort with discomfort is toxic.
*I want to be clear that my definition of a witch in this case is someone who studies and uses witchcraft and isnât tradition or skill dependent.
smth smth vampire and werewolf narratives are two sides of the same coin of the horrors of the gay experience smth smth its abt the shame of who you are and the grief that comes with desireÂ
i keep seeing a little bat hanging from the ceiling at the train station i use every day and it lifts my mood every time :)
my friend made this angst art piece with some lyrics of âmary on a crossâ written on it and I donât have the heart to tell them what the song is really about
A lot of the substances we think of as protection against the supernatural (e.g. salt, silver, garlic) are actually antibacterial, and would have helped stave off infections and illnesses that people once attributed to supernatural influence.
Based on this, I want to see a story where vampires are repelled by hand sanitizer.
iâd be a really cool person if i didnât have these issues