My friend sent me this today and I thought it was very important to share for all my fellow Viking/Norse mythology lovers. Daily reminder: fuck white supremacy.
Jeszika Le Vye - Sorceress (Zenith)
Our Wish for the End, Me, Digital Collage, 2020
Thrjár by Maéna Paillet
Sogeum 소금 is salt! It is used in various household god rituals, including feeding Yongwang 용왕 and rites to prevent fires.
It is also used to purify spaces, chase out negative entities and repel bad luck.
There actually isn’t a lot that’s different with how korean folk magic uses salt. Because of its color (white) it is connected to purity. Because of salt’s effects on food (keeping it longer before spoiling) it is connected to dispelling misfortune.
We usually sprinkle it in all corners of the home to purify and cleanse before a rite.
소금 can also be used for offerings, primarily to certain Gashin 가신 (household gods) like Samshin 삼신, the Goddess of Childbirth.
Keep a small bottle or packet of salt on you at all times. If you suddenly get a bad feeling, sprinkle the salt in its direction.
The book says that these are talismans that are meant to be re drawn on paper and carried with you to give the you these abilities.
The Book of Oberon
“In Nomine Babalon” #witch #traditionalwitchcraft #pagan #paganism #goddess #babalon #folkwitch #rosary #prayerbeads #cunningwoman #sorcery #devotion #deity #deitywork #spiritwork https://www.instagram.com/p/Cio1IXtO4cp/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
So much witchcraft emphasizes how important it is to honor and work with the Earth, but then teaches us spells with ingredients we basically have to import using locations we don’t have access to. It’s rare to find an existing grimoire or guide book that actually works with where we live. We can still use them, but it doesn’t enhance our connection to our local land, which to many can feel important. Here are some tips for localizing your practice and working with the land you actually live on.
See what nature exists around you. Explore your own backyard with a critical eye. What plants can you actually go and pick yourself? What are those plants associated with? Do you have access to a creek or river? What does your local land actually have on it? If magic correspondences for your local plants haven’t been written about, you may have to do your own research. Example: I grow several plants on my back porch which I can potentially use for magic.There are magnolia trees and rhodedendrons on the grounds of my apartment complex. My parent’s neighbors have chickens in the backyard, so I have access to some feathers when they shed.
Check out local folklore, legends, etc. This is one of my favorite parts, but can also be the hardest. What are the stories of your area, both on a local and cultural scale. Example: A West Virginian may incorporate legends of the Mothman. Everyone says that one building on my old college campus is haunted (and they’re right.) People talk about that liminal-space feeling when you drive down that one road at night.
Find the magic spots. Sometimes the urban legends will tip you off to these (usually in a bad way) but other times you can find them on your own. A place where the energy is just right for some reason. A place you can go to be closer to nature, or a place you could host a ritual if needed. Sometimes it’s just a place where you can feel your mind open a little bit. Example: The shady corner of a public park. The tunnel downtown. That weirdly-perfect circle of trees in the woods behind Wal-Mart.
Meet your land wights. Spirits of the local land. This could be the fair folk, but also house spirits, the spirits of the trees near you, the nature spirits of wherever you are. They’re there. Be good to them and they’ll be good to you! Note: Some spirits and wights will not be interested in working with you, and that’s okay. I generally think it’s good to at least leave a polite offering to just be on general decent terms even if you never work with them more directly beyond that.
Check in with your Seasons. Harvest holidays generally don’t have actual lifestyle importance to most people reading this. The seasonal shifts other people write about may be from a very different climate than yours! Figure out a calendar that works for you. It doesn’t have to be detailed, but something that ties you to the seasons as you actually experience them. I also love working in any fun annual festivals nearby, if any.
Here’s my contribution to the #regionalwitchcraftchallenge started by Via Hedera
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So I wasn’t sure if I should have taken part in this because #Maine doesn’t really have anything (that I know of) that is specific to the region.
To make up for that, I try to incorporate as much of the local flora, fauna, and landscape as I can.
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-Maine black bear skull, gifted from a local hunter
-Novena candle (one side of my family is Catholic and that has started to influence my craft)
-Locally harvested cedar
-Two keepsakes of my departed grandparents
-Birch Water (à la “An Carow Gwyn”) with bark harvest from my property
-An antique rosary found while thrifting
-A hag stone from the coast of Maine
-Selected bones from my casting kit that are all local animals (red fox, coyote, beaver, bobcat)
-An arrowhead from our state museum
-Ritual blade made from white-tail deer
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I decided this year would be the year I took part in “la Neuvaine aux ancêtres” (the novena for the ancestors). From Oct. 24-Nov. 1 I shall pray to my ancestors and then visit who I can at the graveyard when the novena ends. Thank you as always to @courir_le_loupgarou for your resources 🖤 #fcsorcelleriecf #ancestorveneration #novena #neuvaine #cunningwoman #loupgarou #frenchcanadianfolkmagic #witch #pagan #traditionalwitchcraft #folkcatholicism https://www.instagram.com/p/CkILQwgOnIX/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=