Magick: The Basis of Power

The basis of magic is power. Though magicians have used it for thousands of years, we still don’t know exactly what “power” is. But we do know how to work with it.

Magic is the movement of natural but subtle energies to manifest needed change.

These energies exist within ourselves, within our world, and within all-natural objects in it.

These energies, whether in avocados or in our own bodies, share a common source, even if their specific manifestations are quite different.

Three types of energy are used in magic.

These are personal power, the energy that our bodies possess; earth power, that which resides within our planet and within plants, stones, water, fire, the atmosphere, and animals; and divine power, which has not yet been brought to Earth in specific forms.

Magic always utilizes personal power. In folk magic, Earth power is used as well: the magician arouses (or awakens) her or his own power through visualization or physical exertion.

Then Earth power (the energy that resides within natural objects) is awakened through visualization.

Visualization (the process of creating images in the mind) fine-tunes these energies, altering them in order to make them useful for a specific purpose.

Once this has been accomplished, and it is easily done, the magician blends the two types of energies.

This is usually done through visualization, but there are other techniques available. Food magic is unique in offering a very natural method of uniting these two energies.

Smudging Herbs and their Properties

Smudging Herbs will drive out negative energies, spirits and influences. Use this as a smudge to purify people and places before any sacred ceremony. There are many varieties of sage, and most have been used in smudging.

White Sage

This sage is used just like desert sage, but many people prefer White Sage because of the sweeter aroma it gives off.

Cedar

This plant can also be used to purify, especially for negative emotions. Cedar needles are used in a similar way to cleanse and bring balance to the emotions and to the male/female (yin/yang) elements. To clear one’s actions and to promote forgiveness, lavender flowers can be added to the mixture to bring the quality of spiritual blessing.

Sweetgrass

This is one of the most sacred herbs used for smudging. This herb is used to bring in positive energy after negative energies are banished by using sage. Sweetgrass is a tall wild grass with a reddish bas and perfume-like, musty odor. We were taught that it was good to burn sweetgrass after the sage or cedar had driven out the bad influences. Sweetgrass brings in the good spirits and the good influences. As with cedar, burning sweetgrass while praying sends prayers up to the Creator in the smoke.

Lavender

This herb will restore balance and create a peaceful atmosphere. It will also draws loving energy and spirits.

Mugwort

This herb can used to stimulate psychic awareness and prophetic dreams. The Lakota also believe that when Mugwort is burned it “makes the bad spirits sick”, and they move away from it.

Copal

This resin was used by the Mayans as a food for the Gods. They believe that as the smoke of the Copal would rise, it would carry their prayers to the ears of the Gods. Copal is used in divination and in purification ceremonies. Copal is the Frankincense of the Western Hemisphere.

Juniper

This herb is also used to purify and to create a safe and sacred space. Juniper was often carried in a medicine pouch or a pocket for protection.

Yerba Santa

This herb can be used to purify and to set and protect boundaries. The name of this plant reflects its nature: “Yerba Santa” means sacred herb.

Osha

The root of this plant can be burned as an incense or carried for good luck and protection from bad influences. Osha is also a preferred gift for Native American elders.

Spiritual Forgiveness

It could be an idea, that for those who are at the beginning of a spiritual path,  the first step is not to attempt to be of service to others.

It may be better, to first take the steps, to know and love the self.

To come into communion with the self, so that one becomes to oneself, the individual that others are to themselves.

It is often the self which criticizes the self the most harshly.

The self has an internal voice, that pulls, and tears at one’s feeling of self-worth.

These negative voices, from within need to be reckoned with.

These voices are speaking to you of pain.

This pain must be investigated and all involved forgiven.

Most of the forgiveness, that is needed at the beginning of the spiritual search, is the forgiveness of the self.

For one may at times forgive others far more easily than one forgives the self.

It may be important to forgive,  love, and care for the self, in a nurturing manner in order that one, may love one’s neighbor as oneself/

After all.

How can service to others be performed, by those who do not love the self?

The Basics of HedgeWitchery

Always connect to Spirit first.

By Spirit, I mean that which you believe runs the universe.

Some call it the source, others God or Goddess, or both, or neither, or whatever, or lots of names with particular influences from different pantheons.

The details don’t matter what matters is that you believe in a greater power

As everyone’s needs for and in spiritual connection are different, there isn’t anyone right belief

What you believe is right for you as long as it doesn’t purposefully hurt anyone.

Power “over” in anything will bring you a whole lot of hurting in the end.

Power “within” is the ultimate vehicle of success. (The universe does not take kindly to negative beliefs, thoughts, or actions.)

Warning: Be careful that the beliefs of others don’t inhibit you; conversely, don’t shove your beliefs on others (it lessens your own personal power).

Believe that you will receive, and it will be so.

Start and end everything, and I mean everything, with a smile!

Smiling raises your personal vibrational level, moving you toward the essence of the universe, which is pure joy.

The magick key of the universe that opens the door to every opportunity is a simple, sincere smile.

Learn to speak the true language of the universe!

The source of all things has its own language: basically, nouns and verbs that focus on the attraction of any given thing.

The All doesn’t acknowledge the rules of grammar as humans have made them.

Instead, we must learn to think and speak in a simple, fundamental syntax when focusing on our desires.

Stick with nouns and verbs to begin.

For example: “I want cookies.”

The words “I” and “cookies” are nouns.

“Want” is the verb.

Then, embellish carefully. “I want chocolate chip cookies.”

More? “I want delicious, freshly baked chocolate chip cookies.”

Remember, by using primal language, we condense our desire into a translation that the universe will understand.

Visualize yourself absolutely delighted with what you want, which should produce a smile, which raises your personal vibrational level, which brings the thing faster.

If you need something right away, be happy!

You must ensure that your conscious and subconscious beliefs about the issue are in agreement.

If they do not agree, then your transmission to the universe will either be changed in a way you didn’t desire or will not manifest at all.

Nothing can grow if there isn’t space.

You can’t receive if you’ve blocked the door and bolted the gate.

For every specific thing that you want, whether it is healing, money, a new job, or a great relationship, let go of anything that inhibits the flow of what you desire.

If you start listing a bunch of excuses, you’ve just lost big time.

No magick elf presents for you! Allow change.

While you are waiting for what you desire, focus your attention on the positive aspects of your life.

Allow new and different energies to keep you occupied, rather than worrying or fretting about what you don’t have.

Instead, learn to honor what you do have (or had), and go from there.

When we are legitimately grateful, we bring closure to any situation and allow fresh, new experiences to energize our lives.

Always remember to say thank you!

Kitchen Witch: Yule

Yule—the winter solstice—is an old solar ritual that has been preserved in the Christian observance of Christmas. Its origins lie deep in the past, in the Mediterranean lands of the sun. The birthday of Mithras, an ancient solar deity, was celebrated on the winter solstice. Later, this holiday was brought to Europe, and an astonishing collection of folk rituals became associated with it.

Yule occurs during the depths of winter. Though some of us live beyond the reach of snow flurries and zero-degree temperatures, this is still the season in which the earth pauses to regenerate herself for the coming spring.

This holiday (holy day; sacred day) astronomically marks the waning of winter. After the winter solstice, the hours of light increase each day. Therefore, Yule is associated with the returning warmth of the sun.

Before the intercontinental shipment of food, this precious substance was usually meagre at Yule. Most of it was preserved, dried in the sun; salted; put up in crocks; submerged in honey; buried in the earth; kept covered in baskets; or laid in the snow for natural refrigeration. Because of its scarcity, food was given a high degree of sacredness.

Over the centuries and in various countries, a wide variety of foods have been associated with Yule. Here are a few of them.

Apples are sacred foods, associated with many ancient deities  Earlier peoples hung apples on Yule trees (the forerunners of the modern
Christmas tree) to symbolize the continuing fertility of the earth. Mulled apple cider is a fine drink to sip on Yule while watching the fire. Any dishes that contain apples are also appropriate, as is wassail.

Gingerbread is the modern version of ancient cakes made of grain and honey, which were offered as sacrifices to the goddesses and gods at Yule. These cakes were also buried with the dead to ensure the passage of their souls into the other world.

When ginger was introduced into Europe from Asia, it was soon incorporated into the ritual Yule cake. This was the origin of gingerbread. Though ginger was once more expensive than diamonds, this spice is now easily within reach of us all.

You may wish to create a gingerbread house at Yule. If so, make it in the image of your own home. If this isn’t possible, visualize your home while mixing, baking, forming, and decorating the house. See your household filled with warmth, love, and happiness—all gifts of ginger and the sun. Eat the house on Yule, sharing it with others who live under your roof, and invite its loving energies into yourself.

Cookies are standard Yule fare. If you wish to make the ubiquitous sugar cookies, cut them into shapes associated with the season: circles (symbolic of the sun); bells (originally used to drive away evil in pre-Christian times); stars (for protection against negativity); and, of course, trees (representing the continuing fertility of the earth during winter).

The idea of creating and eating specially shaped desserts on Yule isn’t new. Prehistoric graves in northern Europe contain cakes modelled in the rough shapes of deities, animals, suns, stars, and moons, and these cakes may have been consumed at the winter solstice in those frigid regions.

Plants and Mythology

The magical plant or herb of immortality sought by Gilgamesh, the hero of ancient Mesopotamian mythology, provides one example of how myths use plants as symbols of life and of the healing power of nature. However, because some plants yield poisons and some die in winter, plants can also represent death and decay.

Various trees, shrubs, herbs, grains, flowers, and fruit appear in myths and legends as general symbols of rebirth, decay, and immortality. Some plants have acquired much more specific meaning in folklore.

Acanthus.The acanthus plant grows throughout much of the Mediterranean region. Its large leaves appear in many ancient sculptures, especially on top of columns in the Greek style called Corinthian. Legends says that after a young girl’s death, her nurse placed her possessions in a basket near her tomb. An acanthus plant grew around the basket and enclosed it. One day the sculptor Callimachus noticed this arrangement and was inspired to design the column ornament.

Bamboo.The jointed, cane like bamboo plant plays a role in Asian folklore. Because bamboo is sturdy and always green, the Chinese regard it as a symbol of long life. In the creation story of the Andaman Islanders of the Indian Ocean, the first man is born inside a large stalk of bamboo. Philippine Islanders traditionally believed that bamboo crosses in their fields would bring good crops.

Beans.Beans have been an important food source for many cultures, except for the ancient Egyptians, who thought beans were too sacred to eat. Many Native Americans—from the Iroquios of the Northeast to the Hopi of the Southwest—hold festivals in honor of the bean. Europeans traditionally baked bean cakes for a feast on the Christian holiday of Epiphany, or Twelfth Night. Some ancient lore linked beans with the dead. The Greek philosopher Pythagoras thought that the souls of the dead resided within beans, while the Romans dreaded the lemures—the evil spirits of the dead—who brought misfortune on a home by pelting it with beans at night.

immortality ability to live forever

deity god or goddess

Cereal Grains.Grain-bearing cereal grasses, “the bread of life,” are basic to the diets of most cultures. Rice is the staple grain throughout much of southern Asia. In many Asian cultures, people perform rituals to honor the rice spirit or adeityof rice, usually a female. Some peoples, such as the Lamet of northern Laos, believe in a special energy or life force shared only by human beings and rice.

Although maize, a grain native to the Americas, is now called corn, many Europeans traditionally used the word corn to refer to such grains as barley, wheat, and oats. Europeans often spoke of female corn spirits, either maidens, mothers, or grandmothers. Grain waving in the wind, for example, was said to mark the path of the Corn Mother. Such sayings may have come from ancient beliefs that grains were sacred to harvest goddesses such as Greek Demeter and Roman Ceres.

In Central America, the Maya believed that human beings were made from maize. After attempts with other materials failed, the gods succeeded in creating people by using ground maize mixed with water.

Clover. Came to represent fertility and prosperity in English folklore, and dreaming of clover foretold a happy marriage.

Coffee.Legends from various parts of the world tell how people learned of the stimulating properties of caffeine, contained in the beans of the coffee bush. An Ethiopian story says that a goatherd noticed that the beans from a particular bush made his goats unusually alert and frisky. People sampled the beans and determined that they might be useful for keeping people awake during evening religious ceremonies. Similar tales from Europe and South America also relate that people discovered the effects of caffeine in coffee by observing animals.

Ginseng.The ginseng root has long been prized in Asia for its medicinal properties. It was also thought to provide strength and sexual energy. A Korean legend says that a poor boy caring for his dying father prayed to the mountain spirit, who appeared to him in a dream and showed him where to find ginseng. A drink made from the root cured the father. Another legend tells of a man who found ginseng and tried to sell it at a high price. When his greed led to his arrest, he ate the root, which made him so strong that he overpowered his guards and escaped.

Ivy.The leaves and vine of the ivy, which remain green year round, often symbolize immortality The plant was associated with Dionysus, the Greek god of wine (Roman Bacchus), who wore a crown of ivy and carried a staff encircled with the vine.

Laurel The evergreen laurel tree or shrub occurs in many varieties, including cinnamon and sassafras. Greek mythology says that Daphne, a nymph who rejected the love of Apollo*, was turned into a laurel tree. The laurel was sacred to Apollo, whose priestesses were said to chew its leaves in order to become oracles.The Greeks also crowned some of their champions with laurel wreaths. According to English mythology, if two lovers take a laurel stick, break it in half, and keep the pieces, they will always remain faithful to each other.

Leek.The leek—a vegetable with a stalk of leaves layered like the skins of an onion—is the national emblem of Wales. According to legend, St. David, the patronsaint of Wales, ordered a troop of Welsh soldiers to put leeks in their caps to identify each other during a battle. When the Welsh side won, the soldiers thanked the saint—and the leek—for the victory.

Mandrake.The mandrake plant has properties that bring on sleep or reduce pain. Many folklore traditions link the plant with sexual behavior. In the biblical book of Genesis, for example, Jacob’s wife, Leah, obtains mandrake root to become pregnant. The Arabs called the plant devil’s apples because they considered the arousal of sexual desire to be evil.MedievalChristians associated the mandrake with devil worship, and witches were believed to make images of their victims from mandrake root. According to one European tradition, a mandrake root cries out when pulled from the ground.

Manioc.Flour made from the manioc root is a traditional staple food of the Amazon peoples of South America. A story about Mani, an old, much-loved village leader, explains the origin of manioc. Before dying, Mani promised to come back to take care of his people, and he told them to dig in the ground a year after his death. What they found was the manioc root, Mani’s body turned into food.

Mistletoe.The mistletoe plant, which grows in trees, appears in European legends as a symbol of fertility and eternal life, perhaps because it remains green all winter. Unlike most plants, mistletoe thrives without being rooted in soil. This may explain why many cultures have believed it to be heavenly or supernatural. Mistletoe has also been said to offer protection from sorcery and evil spells. The Druids believed that mistletoe had great healing properties, especially if it was gathered without the use of a knife and never allowed to touch the ground. Some Africans compare the mistletoe on a tree to the soul in the body, and they believe that

Myrtle.An evergreen shrub, myrtle is associated with birth and rebirth in European mythology. The ancient Greeks carried myrtle with them when they colonized new lands to symbolize the beginning of a new life. The Greeks also associated myrtle with Aphrodite, the goddess of love.

Parsley.The Greeks believed that the herb parsley grew from the blood of a hero named Achemorus who was killed by a serpent. At games held in his honor, they crowned the winners with parsley wreaths. Both the Greeks and the Romans regarded parsley as a symbol of death and rebirth. They often put parsley on tombs, and someone “in need of parsley” was on the verge of death.

Thistle.A Scottish legend tells how the thistle, a plant with purple blooms and prickly stems and leaves, became a national emblem. AroundA.D. 950, Norse raiders invaded Scotland. As they crept toward a Scottish camp after dark, one of them stepped on a thistle. The resulting cry of pain awoke the Scots, who drove the invaders away and saved Scotland.

Tobacco.The tobacco plant originated in the Americas, and smoking dried tobacco leaves was part of many Native Americanrituals.Native Americans of different regions developed various

*SeeNantes and Placesat the end of this volume for further information.

myths about tobacco. In the Southwest and Central America, tobacco is associated with rainfall because tobacco smoke resembles clouds that bring rain. A story from southeastern North America says that tobacco’s origin was related to sex. A young man and woman who were traveling left the path to make love. They married soon afterward. Later the man passed the place again and found a sweet-smelling plant growing there. His people decided to dry it, smoke it, and call it “Where We Came Together.” The couple’s life together was happy and peaceful, so the flower produced by their love—tobacco—was smoked at meetings intended to bring peace.

Yam.In a myth from the African country of Kenya, the creator god Ruwa made humans immortal and gave them a paradise to live in but ordered them not to eat one plant growing there—the edible root known as the yam. One day Death told the people to cook the yam for him. When Ruwa learned what the people had done, he took away their immortality.

The Labyrinth

In Greek mythology, the Labyrinth (Greek labyrinthos) was an elaborate structure designed and built by the legendary artificer Daedalus for King Minos of Crete at Knossos. Its function was to hold the Minotaur, a creature that was half man and half bull and was eventually killed by the Athenian hero Theseus. Daedalus had made the Labyrinth so cunningly that he himself could barely escape it after he built it. Theseus was aided by Ariadne, who provided him with a fateful thread, literally the “clew”, or “clue”, to wind his way back again.

A Life with Natural Magick

The natural world is a powerhouse of magickal energy that can be used to amplify our own personal psychic powers and daily lives even if we do not have the time or inclination for a spell. Well, all possess these abilities but they can get blunted by modern life. Working with nature rapidly restores the instinctive connection with our own inner self and you may find as a bonus that you are more intuitive and aware of hidden factors in your every day decision making. At specific times we can tap into the ever changing energies of the sun , the moon , the sea, lakes and rivers as well as the weather . All these magickal  qualities manifest in different flowers , herbs, trees and crystals .

There is nothing strange about our Magickal Powers;  they are parts of our right hemisphere brain function which includes imagination and creativity. Working with symbols and images, the ability that under pins much magick is located in the right hand side of the brain. With practice we can expand possibilities first in our minds and then during rituals to transform the stored energies and magickal meanings contained in every day symbols and images into magickal powers.

For Example….. If we were working with a wax butterfly we made, it may represent a new beginning as that is the meaning given to butterfly’s through out the ages.

The 16TH Century mystic “Teresa of Avila” described the spirit of the body after death as a butterfly emerging from a cocoon. Where as you may not be conscientiously aware of such a symbolism ,(though much of this symbol code is stored in our genes to be awakened in magick ) you may instinctively know that by choosing a butterfly as a symbol in your spell, it would be a joy bringing focus.

Magick could be termed as “The Sister of Psychology  and good magick operates on sound psychological principals.