thewitchystuff:

Runic Magic or Divination uses stones with alphabetic symbols that are used to predict one´s future. They are from different materials and usually kept in a pouch.

Like Ryley and Ishani found out,  a symbol can mean different things , you need to pick the meaning that applies more to the person who made the question and it also depends on the circle it falls. Be it your “Self”, “Influences”, or “Future Events”. The combination of the runes that fell are the answer to the question. 

✧*:・゚Remember that above all,  it takes time and practice. Remember to be open to different methods and always charge the runes with the energy of the one who asks. *:・゚✧

Sea salt around the world is contaminated by plastic

witchesgrass:

Witches; please take the time to read this!

Sea salt is very widely used in witchcraft. Studies have shown that sea salt from around the world, Specifically the US, China, and France, have tested 9/10 to be positive with the chemicals they use to make plastic water bottles, cosmetics, and more.

Please, take this with a grain, and consider how frequently you use sea salt in your daily life: it could be affecting your health.

Sea salt around the world is contaminated by plastic

Witchy October Bucket List 2017

cannibalcarnage:

Have you seen my original October Bucket List? If not, click HERE for my regular bucket list to complete. Here will be all witchy and pagan things I want to accomplish during the month of October! Like I said before, feel free to join in and pick some things off the list.

  • Collect October’s full moon water (October 5th) 🌕
  • Collect leaves, acorns, sticks, herbs 🍂
  • Do all forms of divination (rune casting, candle wax, tarot) 🔮
  • Have a dead dinner / dumb supper
  • Setup an ancestor altar 
  • Watch The Craft & Practical Magic ✨
  • Have a Mabon altar
  • Have a Samhain altar 
  • Go to a local witchy class
  • Celebrate Samhain 🎃
  • Have the time of my life in Salem! (personal)
  • Go to local pagan vendor shows
  • DIY a besom 
  • Collect any rain / storm water during the month 🌧
  • Create some kitchen witchery (soups, pies, baked goods) 🍞
  • DIY cute, autumn decor 

Recommended Reading

dianaandpansson:

A list of books I recommend. THIS LIST WILL CONSISTENTLY CHANGE. The books are listed in no particular order, although they are fairly decently categorized and anything in italics is one I prefer highly for one reason or another. Clearly there are many books that should be on this list, which I have not had enough experience with to list, but more will come.

* – means the text has a fair amount of discredited or unreliable information.

*REFERENCE* – means the text should be read only for its context rather than its information. Most if not all of the information is unreliable.

Practical Witchcraft and Magic

Witches’ Potions and Spells by Kathryn Paulsen (1971)

Crone’s Book of Charms and Spells by Valerie Worth (2002)

Crone’s Book of Magical Words by Valerie Worth (2002)

The Galdrabok (16th and 17th centuries)

The Greek Magical Papyri translated by Hanz Dieter Betz in (1986)

Hermetic Magic: The Postmodern Papyrus of Abaris by Stephen E. Flowers (2009) [I haven’t studied his history in depth so * the first half of the book but the practice is a good base on the PGM]

Pow-Wows: or Long Lost Friend by John George Hoffman (1820)

Nummits and Crummits: Devonshire customs, characteristics and folklore by Sarah Hewett (1900)

Carmina Gadelica" (Vol. I & II) by Alexander Carmichael (1900)

*Grimoire of Arthur Gauntlet edited by David Rankine (2011)

Gaelic Charms, Incantations, and Blessings Among the Hebrides by William Mackenzie (1895)

 

Witchcraft History and Witch Trials

The Night Battles by Carlo Ginzburg (1966)

Under the Devil’s Spell by Matteo Duni (2007)

Cunning-folk and Familiar Spirits by Emma Wilby (2006)

The Confession of Isobel Gowdie (1662)

Witchcraft and Magic in the Nordic Middle Ages by Stephen A. Mitchell (2011)

Irish Witchcraft and Demonology by St, John D. Seymour (1913)

Thinking With Demons by Stuart Clark (1999)

Ecstasies: Deciphering the Witches’ Sabbath by Carlo Ginzburg (1989)

*Neopolitan Witchcraft by J.B. Andrews (1897)

Ancient Criminal Trials In Scotland compiled by Robert Pitcairn (1833)

Witchcraft, Healing, and Vernacular Magic in Italy by Sabina Magliocco (2004)

Arcana Mundi: Magic and the Occult in Greek and Roman Worlds, Georg Luck  (1985)

Religion and the Decline of Magic by Keith Thomas (1971)

Witchcraft and Inquisition in Early Modern Venice by Jonathan Seitz (2011)

The Creation and Sacrifice of Witches in Classic Maya Society by Lisa J. Lucero and Sherry A. Gibbs (2007)

Paganism, Folklore, Witch Stories:

The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles by Ronald Hutton (1993)

Superstitions and Folk Remedies by Charles Dillon (2001)

The World of the Druids by Miranda Green (1997)

*The Golden Bough by Sir James Frazer (1890)

The Kalevala compiled by Elias Lönnrot (1888)

Táin Bó Cúalnge or the Cattle Raid of Cooley (apx. 12th century)

The Silver Bullet: and Other American Witch Stories edited by Hubert J. Davis (1975)

Icelandic Folktales and Legends by Jacqueline Simpson (1972)

Witchcraft in the Central Balkans I: Characteristics of Witches T. P. Vukanović (1989)

Myths and Legends of Our Own Land by Charles M. Skinner (1896)

*Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland by Lady Francesca Speranza Wilde (1887)

Sami Mythology and Folk Medcine

by Aage Solbakk

Teutonic Myth and Legend

by Donald A. Mackenzie (1912)

The Key of Gold: 23 Czech Folk Tales

by Joseph Baudis (1922)

Witchcraft in Early North America

by Alison Games (2010)



Shamans, Witches, and Maya Priests

by Krystyna Deuss (2013)

Contemporary Witchcraft and Magic

*Mastering Witchcraft: A Practical Guide for Witches, Warlocks, and Covens by Paul Huson (1970)

Triumph of the Moon by Ronald Hutton (2001)

Trials of the Moon [a criticism of the former] by Ben Whitmore (2010)

Witchcraft Today by Gerald Gardner (1954)

Witchcraft for Tomorrow by Doreen Valiente (1978)

*The Meaning of Witchcraft by Gerald Gardner (1959)

Magick in Theory and Practice by Aleister Crowley (1976)

*REFERENCE* Aradia: Gospel of the Witches by Charles Leland (1899)

*REFERENCE* The Witch Cult in Western Europe by Margaret Murray (1921)

Liber Nul and Psychonaut by Peter J. Carroll (1987)

American Conjure and Hoodoo

Mules and Men by Zora Neale Hurston (1935)

Drums and Shadows managed by Mary Granger (1940)

Hoodoo In America by Zora Neale Hurston (1931)

 

Herbs

The Magical and Ritual Uses of Herbs by Richard Alan Miller (1983)

Medieval to Early-Modern Texts

Discoverie of Witchcraft – Reginald Scot (1584)

The Poetic Edda (~13th Century)

The Prose Edda (~13th Century)

The Black Pullet (La Poule Noire) (appx. 18th century) 

The Greater Key of Solomon (14th or 15th century)

The Lemegeton (17th century)

The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spencer (1596)

The Malleus Maleficarum by Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger (1487)

memoryhole51:

redsatinsheets:

redsatinsheets:

since the scum that is western media isnt saying shit about this: cuba is being fucking torn apart by hurricane irma. my people are taking shelter in caves and cold war era bomb shelters. i have zero sympathy for you filthy westerners that only like to use third world countries as a rhetorical device but are nowhere to be found when we need y’all the most.

westerners should reblog this lmfao.

if ya’ll wanna help out those in the caribbean affected by this go to oxfamamerica.org you can choose specifically where you donate to and it’s been highly researched by those at thelifeyoucansave.org and is featured as a trustworthy and effective charity!