The Seven Sisters of Havenwood and the Age of the Hoarders

Understanding what has really polarized America

I came across a dark little fiction not long ago, a YouTube tale set in a place that never was, called Havenwood. In the story there were seven sisters who tended the land with ritual care. They did not age. They healed cows and mended breech births. They could coax abundance from soil and bones and breath. In return, the town prospered. No famine. No plague. No ruin beyond repair.

Except there was a price.

No one in Havenwood could become what they might have been. No one left. No one risked. No one changed. Possibility itself was tithed to the sisters. The town received comfort and plenty, and gave up the future. It was a bargain for stasis. It was prosperity that did not grow. It was a clock that did not tick.

The story named its fear plainly. Immortality for one can become stagnation for the many. The beneficiaries were not vampires with fangs. They were caretakers, soft voiced and steady handed, who guarded a field where nothing ever truly died and, therefore, nothing ever truly lived.

The tale is fiction. Yet it rang like a struck bell.

From campfire to lab bench

Once the image of Havenwood had lodged under my skin, I found myself looking out at our world with new eyes. The question rose of its own accord. Are there people, right now, who are pursuing immortality in earnest?

The answer is yes. There are companies with vaults of money and brilliant scientists working to tame the chemistry of age. There are labs seeking to erase cellular scars and rewind the body’s clocks. Unity Biotechnology has chased the quiet cull of senescent cells. Calico has funded immense basic research on the biology of aging. Altos Labs and Retro Biosciences have poured lifetimes and fortunes into reprogramming the epigenetic code. The Buck Institute and the Max Planck Institute for Biology of Ageing have tilled the deep soil of discovery that makes such ventures thinkable at all.

Not one of them has conquered death. Not yet. Perhaps not ever. That is not the point. The point is the posture. The point is the direction of the gaze. In boardrooms and clean rooms, in headlines and hope, a philosophy is taking shape. It does not meet mortality as an inevitability to be dignified. It treats death as a defect in the machine.

This is where Havenwood’s fiction becomes a mirror. Because what it reflects is not only a scientific project. It is a spiritual one.

The two ways through the world

There are, as I see it, two ways to be alive.

One way is the mortal way. This way hears a clock. It knows that life is precious because it ends. It plants trees whose shade we will not see. It builds schools for children we will never meet. It saves a river and a language and a song because the river and the language and the song are not ours to keep. It accepts that grief is the tax we pay for love. It turns outward. It gives.

The other way is the hoarder’s way. This way pretends not to hear the clock. It acts as if there will always be more. More time. More power. More territory. More attention. It builds moats and vaults and cages and calls them safety. It freezes what it owns so that nothing can take its place. It denies that grief has a rightful home, then lives inside grief’s shadow without a name for it. It turns inward. It keeps.

The first way is tied to existential truth. Philosopher Soren Kierkegaard’s faith rests on the leap because the abyss is real. Albert Camus finds rebellion and tenderness because meaning cannot be guaranteed by any god or king. Martin Heidegger speaks of being toward death as a clarifying lens. The mortal way is not morbid. It is honest. It is adult.

The second way is a kind of modern alchemy. The old adepts brewed elixirs and sought philosopher’s stones. The new adepts culture cells and edit genes. The symbols have changed. The appetite has not. I have called this posture technological transcendentalism. It dreams of lifting the self out of history, out of decay, out of the commons, out of obligation, out of the cycle that binds us to one another. It does not want to be human. It wants to be an exception.

The gardener and the hoarder

If you want an image for the first way, picture a gardener. The gardener saves seeds. The gardener prunes not to diminish, but to bring the rose to bloom. The gardener tends what came before and prepares what will come after. The gardener lives with seasons in the body. To be mortal is to learn the grammar of winter and spring. To be mortal is to compost what we cannot keep and feed the roots.

If you want an image for the second way, picture a hoarder. The hoarder blocks the door with boxes. The hoarder stacks up newspaper towers until the rooms cannot be used. The hoarder keeps because the hoarder fears, and the keeping grows the fear. To hoard is to deny the season. To hoard is to choose airless rooms over changing weather. Hoarding does not preserve life. It mummifies it.

There is a cruder metaphor I once heard, and I have never forgotten it. Immortality would be like wearing the same pair of underwear forever. At first you laugh. Then you flinch. You can feel it, how a thing that is fine for a day or a month would become unbearable if it never changed.

Call it silly. I call it honest.

For me, this is Existential Humanism versus Technological Transcendentalism. I know those sound like heavy, academic words, and most people who don’t wade through philosophy books may not know exactly what they mean. But here’s the truth: you don’t need to. You’ve felt it. You’ve lived it. One way says that because our lives are finite, we must create, give, and plant for others. The other says that because we fear endings, we must hoard, control, and try to escape the cycle altogether. These are the two ways within the world, and they are colliding in our time with a ferocity we can no longer ignore.

The burden of forever

Literature teaches this lesson in parable after parable. Anne Rice gave us vampires who are beautiful and broken by endlessness. The myth of Tithonus gives us a man granted immortality without youth, who withers without release. The Wandering Jew must walk the earth without a homecoming. Even the ancient figure of Midas carries the same warning. What you turn to gold cannot feed you. What you make untouchable cannot embrace you back.

The seven sisters of Havenwood are in this lineage. Their tenderness and their terror are the same thing. They guard a field where nothing changes. They serve a town that never grows. They are the illusion of safety made flesh.

And here is the heavier truth. You do not have to be immortal to live inside the hoarder’s spell. You only have to align your life with denial. You only have to refuse the season. You only have to mistake control for care.

America, now

This polarity exists everywhere. It is older than our maps. Yet I do not think it has ever been brighter, harsher, or more urgent than it is in the United States at this moment.

On one side I see gardeners. They put food in community fridges. They teach children to read even when the books are banned. They plant memorials for the lost and plant saplings for those not yet born. They build co-ops, clinics, classrooms, and choirs. They are mortal and do not hide from that fact. I have seen their hands dirty and their eyes bright.

On the other side I see hoarders. Some of them are billionaires who speak of living longer than kings and act as if they already do. Some of them are oligarchs who dream of a state captured so completely that no election can uproot them. Some of them are politicians who promise winning as a permanent climate. Some of them are followers who will never know private islands or bespoke medicine, yet hoard grievance and ammunition and myth the way their leaders hoard money and attention.

Not every supporter of a strongman believes in immortality with the lips, but the soul can believe what the slogans deny. The pattern is enough. The posture is enough. You can see it in the way everything becomes a possession. Truth. History. Bodies. Books. Territory. The future itself. The hoarder’s creed is simple. If I cannot own it, then no one should have it. If I cannot keep it, then I will break it.

This is not a debate about left and right. This is a divergence of spirit. Mortals and mock immortals. Gardeners and hoarders. Those who accept the season and those who salt the earth.

Havenwood returns

Return to the sisters. The townspeople prospered in a narrow way. The cow stood. The child breathed. The roof did not leak. But no one left for the next valley. No one apprenticed in a craft that did not already exist. No one wrote a book that had not already been told.

This is the hoarder’s trick. It sells safety and calls it freedom. It sells sameness and calls it peace. It sells dependency and calls it community. It flatters your fear of change until you cannot tell the difference between care and captivity.

In that light, the laboratories of immortality and the rallies of strongmen look like two branches of the same tree. They promise a life without endings. They promise a country without winter. What they deliver is a freezer.

And if you want to see that freezer, look around. Once, we were visionary. Once, we reached for the moon. Once, we sent scholars and scientists into the unknown and brought back marvels. Now, those same scholars flee to other shores. Our scientists seek asylum in the safety of other countries that will support them and their work. Our brightest minds are drained, and the industries we once led are leaving us behind. We will progress, yes, but we will not lead. Not like we once did. Our dynamism is traded for the stale comfort of sameness. Our imagination has been bartered for slogans of safety and security. And when the promise wavers, we send our own military into our own streets to “protect” us, as if cages could ever keep us free.

What the gardener knows

Mortality is not our enemy. Mortality is our teacher. It tells us what matters by telling us it will not be here forever. It turns us into people who pass the flame rather than people who try to cage the sun.

This is why the great works of our species were not born from endlessness. The pyramids stand because men with limited breath lifted stone after stone in service to a vision bigger than any one life. Cathedrals were built by hands that would never see the spire finished and yet carved beauty into the lintels. Poems survive because a mortal hand set ink on mortal paper for a mortal reader who would carry living words onward.

The gardener knows what to do in the face of fear. Plant. Teach. Give. Protect. Tend the fragile and the fierce. Mend what can be mended. When it is time to grieve, grieve. When it is time to harvest, share.

The gardener knows what to do with power. Circulate it. Compost it. Turn it back into soil. Keep it moving.

The gardener knows what to do with time. Spend it on what outlives you.

A choice with teeth

I am not naïve about the sweetness of a little more time. We all want it. One more hour with a dying parent. One more season in a house full of laughter. One more year to learn a difficult craft. To desire time is human and good. The question is not whether we would like a few more pages. The question is whether we must bind the book so tight that it can never open again.

The billionaire who dreams of unending life may think he is brave. The strongman who promises unending victory may think he is strong. In truth both are afraid of the same thing. They fear the grief that is the price of love. They fear the surrender that is the price of belonging to a world that does not belong to them.

Havenwood is not real. Its shadow is. The sisters have different faces here. Some wear lab coats. Some wear suits. Some wear flags. All of them whisper that nothing needs to end and that nothing needs to change.

I do not believe them.

I believe in the season. I believe in the teaching power of winter. I believe in the sacrament of endings that seed beginnings. I believe in hands that plant for strangers. I believe in legacy that nourishes, not monuments that suffocate. I believe that mortality turns us into gardeners. I believe that false immortality turns us into hoarders.

So here is the choice, offered without romance and without apology. We can live as mortals who build for others. Or we can live as hoarders who freeze the world and call it safety. We can move with the cycle. Or we can be devoured by the desire to step outside it.

If you listen closely you can hear the hum that the Havenwood story spoke of. It is in the wires and in the headlines and in the halls of power. It is in the lab where a cell is coaxed to forget its age. It is in the chant where a crowd is coaxed to forget its neighbors. It is the tone of stasis, the pitch of fear.

We have another song. It is the one gardeners sing while they work. It has verses for grief and for joy. It remembers. It releases. It returns. It is a mortal song. It is a human song. It is the oldest lullaby and the newest hymn.

May we sing it. May we teach it. May we leave it behind for the ones who come after.

The Witch Is a Choice: Myth, Memory, and the Making of the Craft

We live in a world that has forgotten how sacred choice is.

To be a witch is not simply to be born with “gifts,” or to feel a pull toward the stars, the bones, the wind. Those things may call you, but calling alone is not enough. Witchcraft is a path walked with intention. It is an act of remembrance. A rebellion. A devotion. And most of all, it is a choice.

The word witch carries centuries of shadow and fire. It has been used to condemn, to silence, to burn. But it has also been used, by those who survived, to reclaim power, to heal, to protect, and to create. The word has teeth and tenderness both. It is not aesthetic. It is not trend. It is an oath.


The Human Birthright

There is a deep truth we must say plainly: the abilities often attributed to witches, intuition, energy sensitivity, spiritual communication, healing touch, dreamwork, spellcraft, the shaping of reality, are not limited to a special few. These are human abilities.

Some of us may awaken to them more quickly. Some may be born into families that nurture them, honor them, or protect them through lineage. But no one is excluded from the birthright. Witchcraft is not elitist. It is not gatekept by bloodline alone.

Every human being has the capacity to sense, to shift, to speak with the unseen. But not every human chooses to walk that path. That is what sets the witch apart.


Remembered in the Blood – The Science of Our Magic

Science is beginning to explore what witches have always known: we carry more than DNA in our cells. We carry memory, emotional echoes, behavioral patterns, survival responses passed down through generations. This is epigenetics: the way trauma, instinct, and sensitivity to the world can be inherited.

So when you feel something stir within you at the sound of a chant, or find yourself dreaming in symbols you’ve never studied, you are not imagining it. You are remembering.

You are tapping into the reservoir of all those who came before you, the mothers who whispered over herbs, grandfathers who watched the stars, ancestors who reached toward mystery in their own language and time.

You are not more powerful than anyone else. But you are awake. You are listening. You are choosing to answer the call and take the next step with reverence.


The Path to Power – No Shortcuts, Only Steps

Power is not granted by aesthetic.

It is not found in a TikTok spell or bestowed by bloodline.

Power is a path. And like all true paths, it must be walked.

There are no shortcuts. The Craft demands evolution. The path unfolds like this:

  • Knowledge – gathering lore, tools, teachings, systems.
  • Experience – testing that knowledge in the world.
  • Understanding / Actualization / Integration – when the lessons become instinct, internalized within you.
  • Wisdom – knowing not only how to work, but when and most importantly why.
  • Power – the quiet, earned hum of alignment between will, purpose, and reality.

You must walk the path. There’s no other way. But each step deepens your roots, sharpens your senses, and strengthens your flame.


Initiation – The Threshold No One Crosses Unchanged

Witchcraft is a path of initiation, but it’s not always in the way people expect.

Yes, there are formal initiations. Ceremonies. Oaths. Lineage rites that pass power and wisdom from teacher to student. And these are real. They are sacred. They matter.

But the Craft also initiates in other ways. Through grief. Through fear. Through the long dark night of the soul. Through the moment when your old life breaks and something new demands to be born.

Initiation means crossing a threshold and knowing that you can’t go back.

The witch is not just someone who studies magic. The witch is someone who has been changed by it.


Alone and Together – The Witch in Solitude and Circle

Many witches begin alone. And there is beauty in that. Solitary practice teaches self-trust and deep listening.

But the Craft is not only solitary. It is also relational.

Historically, magic was communal, shared in kitchens, fields, hearths. Even today, something powerful happens when we gather: we witness each other. We challenge each other. We raise power together.

You don’t need a coven to be a witch. But you do need connection. Every flame needs a hearth. Even the solitary witch benefits from shared fire now and then.


More Than the West – Honoring the World’s Magic

This piece speaks from the perspective of Western witchcraft. But the magical traditions of humanity are vast, diverse, and sacred.

From African Diaspora lineages to Asian animism, from First Nations medicine to Oceanic spirit paths, there are many ways to know the unseen, to work with energy, to honor ancestors and spirits.

Witchcraft is one thread in a much larger tapestry.

We honor what we know, but we also honor what we do not practice. Respect means listening. Learning. And never pretending that all magic looks like ours.


The Witch in the World – Responsibility and Reckoning

The witch does not practice only for herself. She stands at the edge of the world. She sees what others ignore. She heals what others won’t touch.

Witchcraft is not a retreat from reality. It is a response to it.

We are called not just to manifest for ourselves, but to protect the sacred. To resist injustice. To carry forward the flame of remembrance, responsibility, and radical hope.

To be a witch is to hold power, and power must be tempered by purpose.


The Witch Is Not Her Hashtag – She Is the Diamond

In today’s world, you’ll hear: Green Witch. Cosmic Witch. Love Witch. Shadow Witch. And while these names may help express interest, they are not identities. They are facets, not separate stones.

There is only one Craft. One diamond, many glints.

Just as all gods may be facets of one divine diamond, so too are the many expressions of the witch simply different faces of a singular, sacred calling.

You are not just your favorite spell or element. You are the whole gem.


Witch, Sorcerer, Magician – Names with Purpose

Not all magical practitioners are witches. Some are ceremonial magicians. Some are sorcerers. Some are cunning folk, brujas, spirit workers, shaman or mystics.

These are not aesthetic differences, they’re structural. They point to different philosophies, systems, and goals.

Choose your name wisely. Let it reflect what you do and how you walk the path, not just what sounds cool.


The Roots and Rivers – What Shapes the Modern Craft

Modern witchcraft, especially in the West, is shaped by both folk magic and ceremonial systems.

The rituals many of us use, calling the quarters, using elemental tools, invoking planetary forces, were deeply influenced by Western occultism: the Golden Dawn, Thelema, Kabbalah, alchemy, Hermetic thought.

That doesn’t make them impure. It makes them known. And when we know where our tools come from, we can use them more powerfully.


You Cannot Read the Past with Modern Eyes

We often romanticize the ancient world. But we can’t lift ancient practices into modern life without understanding context.

Just as many modern Christians misread the Bible by applying today’s morals and assumptions to ancient Jewish texts, so too do witches sometimes claim antiquity without understanding it.

The truth is: we are revivalists. And that’s not a weakness, it’s a calling.


Taking Off the Rose-Colored Veil

We have wrapped witchcraft in myth, and that’s fine, if we know it’s myth.

But too often, we pretend.

We pretend we’re the unbroken line of ancient priestesses. That we know exactly what was done in Neolithic caves. That our symbols are untouched by history.

It’s time to stop pretending.

We are writing the myths now. Let’s write them with integrity. Let’s build something our descendants won’t have to rewrite.


Mystery Is Not Make-Believe

Witchcraft is a mystery tradition. But that doesn’t mean it’s a free-for-all.

Mystery requires training. A path. A framework. You don’t need a lineage to begin, but you need foundation, study, and respect.

Saying “I’m a witch because I feel magical” is like saying “I’m Catholic because I like Mary,” while knowing nothing of the Saints, Sacraments, or Stations.

Intuition is the start. Not the end.

The Craft deserves depth. And so do you.


What the Tools Really Do

Our tools are symbolic keys. They speak to the subconscious. They unlock ritual states. They help us focus, anchor, awaken.

The candle isn’t magic. You are.

The herb isn’t power. It’s a mirror.

The ritual isn’t theater. It’s alignment.

Tools are the outer shape of inner work. They awaken the part of you that remembers how to cast, how to call, how to become.


Ritual Is the Architecture of Change

Ritual is how we shift our state. It’s the scaffolding for the sacred.

Whether basic or advanced, every ritual has the same goal: to move us from mundane to magical. To align body, will, emotion, and spirit. To create coherence. And from that, to cast change into the world.


Embodied Craft – The Body Remembers What the Mind Forgets

Magic lives in the body. In breath, posture, movement, sensation.

Gesture is spell. Voice is vibration. Touch is energy.

Your body is not separate from your power; it is your power. It holds memories older than thought. It knows how to move energy. It knows how to anchor spirit.

To be a witch is to be fully in your body, not apart from it.


Sidebar: Common Myths About Witchcraft

  • Witches worship the devil.Most don’t. The devil is a Christian concept.
  • Witchcraft is anti-Christian.Not inherently. Some witches blend paths.
  • You have to be psychic or special.You have to practice. That’s it.
  • It’s all love and light.No. The path includes shadow, death, grief, truth.
  • You can manifest anything instantly.Magic is real—but it’s also work.

What Witchcraft Is

Witchcraft is not just a set of tools or spells. It’s a way of being in the world.

It’s conscious. Intentional. Ethical. Responsive.

It’s rooted in mystery, in training, in self-awareness.

It’s not escapism. It’s engagement.

It’s not ancient, but it is real.

It is yours to choose. And yours to carry forward.


Closing Invocation: The Witch’s Choice

I was not born in the mists of Avalon,

Nor raised in a hidden grove untouched by time.

I was born here,

In this fractured world, with its wires and noise and memory.

But something ancient stirred in me.

A voice. A dream. A name.

I remembered the path.

And then, I chose it.

I am not the heir of a perfect line.

I am the stitcher of remnants,

The singer of new songs in old tongues.

I am the witch, not by fate,

But by choice.

I know the myths I build,

And I build them with intention.

I name myself,

Not as one above,

But as one becoming.

I am the flame of many fires.

The facet of many truths.

The echo of ancestors, and the voice of what comes next.

I am witch.

And I am awake