Why Training Matters in Witchcraft

Intuition Is Not Enough

There is a phrase that circulates often in modern witchcraft spaces: “Just follow your intuition.”

It is usually said with good intentions. It is meant to reassure, to empower, and to remove fear or self doubt from the equation. And intuition does matter. It is often where the path begins. But when intuition is treated as the whole of the work rather than the place where the work starts, something essential is missing.

Intuition by itself is perception. It tells you that something is happening. It does not automatically tell you what that something is, how it functions, or what it requires of you over time.

In every other discipline that we take seriously, we understand this without much argument. A musician may have a remarkable ear, but they still study theory, technique, and form. A gifted actor still trains breath, timing, and language. A talented artist still learns anatomy, composition, and how materials behave under stress. Skill develops because talent is given structure, repetition, and accountability.

Witchcraft is no different.

It is a practice that works with power, symbolism, altered states, and perception. Those things carry weight. They shape how a practitioner understands themselves and the world around them. Feeling can guide someone toward the work, but feeling alone does not teach how to interpret experiences, how to contain what is opened, or how to live responsibly with the results.

This is where training enters the picture, and it is important to be clear about what that means. Training does not automatically imply a coven, a formal initiation, or a single mentor. Many witches develop their practice independently, and self directed training can be real and effective work. But self training still requires discipline. It requires study, repetition, reflection, and a willingness to question one’s own conclusions. It asks for commitment to learning, rather than reliance on whatever happens to arise in the moment.

Without that commitment, it becomes very easy to mistake emotional intensity for insight, imagination for contact, or desire for meaning for meaning itself. That confusion is common, and it is understandable. It is also preventable.

Training gives intuition context. It gives experience a framework. It allows perception to deepen into understanding, rather than remaining a series of powerful but unexamined moments.


Feeling Is Where Most Witches Begin

Most witches come to the Craft through feeling first. A sense of recognition. A pull toward symbols, seasons, ritual, or the unseen. Something resonates before it can be explained, and that resonance matters. It is often the doorway.

That initial sensitivity is not a flaw. It is the reason many people find their way to witchcraft at all.

But feeling, on its own, is only the beginning of perception. It alerts you that something is present. It does not automatically tell you what that presence is, where it comes from, or how it behaves once engaged.

Without training, experiences tend to blur together. Everything feels significant. Everything feels charged. Over time, that lack of distinction can make it difficult to tell whether an experience is symbolic, psychological, energetic, spiritual, or some combination of all of the above. The work becomes intense, but not necessarily clear.

This is where many practitioners get stuck.

They have experiences, sometimes very powerful ones, but no reliable way to interpret them. They feel movement, emotion, or presence, but they do not yet have the tools to understand what kind of movement they are sensing, or what to do with it once it arises.

Training slows this process down in a useful way. It teaches you to observe rather than immediately conclude. It encourages you to revisit experiences instead of building identity around them. It creates space between perception and meaning, which is where discernment develops.

Over time, that space becomes invaluable.

It allows a practitioner to notice patterns rather than isolated moments. It helps separate imagination from trance, emotional release from energetic shift, symbolism from contact. None of these distinctions diminish the experience. They deepen it.

Feeling does not disappear with training. It refines. It becomes quieter, steadier, and more trustworthy. Instead of pulling you in every direction at once, it begins to point with greater precision.

This is how perception matures into practice.


What Training Actually Provides

Training in witchcraft does not arrive all at once. It accumulates slowly, often quietly, through repetition, study, reflection, and lived experience. Its effects are not always dramatic, but they are stabilizing. Over time, training changes how a practitioner relates to their own perceptions and to the work itself.

One of the first things training offers is language.

When experiences can be named, they can be examined. Vocabulary does not reduce mystery. It gives the practitioner a way to think clearly about what is happening without immediately turning it into myth, identity, or belief. Naming creates a small but crucial distance, and within that distance, understanding can begin to form.

Training also provides containment.

Containment is one of the most overlooked aspects of magical practice. Grounding, boundary setting, and energetic hygiene are not embellishments or optional habits. They are foundational skills that allow the work to remain sustainable over time.

Containment allows a practitioner to open and close deliberately. It teaches how to enter altered states without becoming lost inside them, and how to return fully present afterward. This is about stability. Stability is what allows power to be engaged repeatedly without eroding the practitioner’s sense of self or balance in daily life.

Another gift of training is discernment.

Discernment develops when a practitioner learns to pause before drawing conclusions. It encourages revisiting experiences rather than immediately assigning meaning to them. Over time, this practice sharpens perception.

Discernment helps a witch recognize:

  • when something is symbolic rather than literal
  • when an experience arises from the psyche rather than from external contact
  • when emotion is moving through the body versus when energy is shifting
  • when imagination is active versus when trance is deepening

These distinctions are not rigid categories. They are points of orientation. They allow the practitioner to work with what arises rather than being carried by it.

Training also deepens ethical awareness.

Ethics in witchcraft are not abstract rules imposed from outside the practice. They arise through relationship. Relationship to oneself, to others, to spirits, to land, and to the unseen. Training encourages reflection on impact and responsibility, to notice how actions ripple outward rather than stopping at intention.

Ethical training asks difficult questions. It asks not only what can be done, but what should be done, and why. It also asks at what point action itself becomes the wrong choice. Learning when to leave something untouched requires clarity.

Perhaps most importantly, training builds reliability.

A trained practitioner learns how they respond under pressure, fatigue, emotional stress, and uncertainty. They learn what their strengths are and where their blind spots tend to appear. This self knowledge is not glamorous, but it is invaluable.

Reliability is what allows intuition to be trusted. It becomes steadier and more consistent. It can be tested against experience. It can be returned to. It can be questioned without collapsing.

This is how practice matures.


The Myth of the Natural Witch

There is a persistent idea in modern witchcraft that some people are simply born knowing how to do the work. The natural witch is often described as intuitive, sensitive, gifted, and immediately capable. Experiences come easily. Perception feels effortless. The work feels familiar rather than learned.

Sensitivity does exist. Some people perceive more readily, remember faster, or slip into altered states with little effort. That is real, and it should not be dismissed. But sensitivity is not the same thing as mastery.

Untrained sensitivity tends to magnify everything at once. Emotional states, imagination, memory, desire, and genuine perception arrive together, layered on top of one another. Without structure, it becomes difficult to tell which thread is being pulled at any given moment. The work feels intense, meaningful, and deeply personal, but it often lacks clarity.

Over time, this can lead to exhaustion or confusion rather than growth. Experiences accumulate without integration. Power is felt, but not always understood. Insight appears, but it is not consistently grounded. The practitioner may move from one moment of intensity to the next without developing a stable relationship to the work itself.

Training does not diminish natural sensitivity. It gives it somewhere to settle.

With training, sensitivity becomes directional rather than overwhelming. Perception develops edges. Experiences can be revisited, tested, and understood within a larger context rather than treated as isolated revelations. What once arrived all at once begins to sort itself into patterns.

The idea of the natural witch often carries an unspoken pressure to remain untrained, as though study or discipline would somehow contaminate authenticity. But no other craft expects raw talent to remain untouched in order to stay real. Art, music, and performance all recognize that skill matures through engagement, not avoidance.

Witchcraft is no different.

Sensitivity is an opening. Training is what allows that opening to remain intact over time.


Why This Matters Now

Witchcraft is more visible now than it has been in a very long time. Books, social media, online communities, and aesthetic representations have made the Craft accessible to people who might never have encountered it otherwise. That accessibility has value. It has allowed people to reconnect with practices that were once hidden, suppressed, or quietly transmitted.

Visibility also changes how a practice is approached.

When witchcraft is framed primarily as identity, aesthetic, or emotional expression, the slower work of training can fade into the background. Feeling becomes central. Experience becomes currency. Intensity is mistaken for depth. The pressure to have something happen, to feel something meaningful, can quietly replace the patience required to learn how the work actually functions.

This environment does not encourage discernment. It rewards immediacy.

Without training, practitioners are often left to navigate powerful experiences alone, without context or support. They may interpret everything symbolically, literally, or personally, without having the tools to sort one layer from another. Over time, this can lead to confusion, burnout, or a loss of trust in one’s own perception.

Training offers a counterweight to that pace.

It creates room for slowness, reflection, and repetition. It encourages practitioners to sit with experiences rather than immediately narrating them. It reminds us that not every moment requires interpretation, and not every experience needs to be shared or acted upon.

In a time when certainty is often rewarded and doubt is treated as weakness, training restores the value of questioning. It normalizes not knowing. It allows practitioners to hold complexity without rushing toward conclusion.

This matters because witchcraft is not only personal. It is relational. It shapes how people engage with power, responsibility, and meaning. When those engagements are unexamined, the consequences do not stay contained within the individual.

Training does not make the Craft less accessible. It makes it more sustainable.


Closing

Training in witchcraft is not about authority, hierarchy, or proving legitimacy. It is about relationship. Relationship to perception, to power, to consequence, and to time.

Intuition opens the door. Sensitivity allows entry. What determines whether someone can remain in the work over years rather than moments is how that opening is tended.

Training teaches patience with uncertainty. It teaches how to listen without rushing to interpret, how to hold experience without immediately acting on it, and how to recognize when clarity has arrived and when it has not. It asks for attention rather than certainty, and for responsibility rather than performance.

This kind of practice is quieter than many people expect. It does not always announce itself. It does not promise constant intensity or easy answers. What it offers instead is depth, stability, and the ability to return to the work again and again without losing oneself along the way.

Witchcraft has always required care. Care in how it is practiced, care in how power is held, and care in how meaning is made. Training is one expression of that care.

It is not a rejection of intuition.
It is a commitment to honoring it well.

Sekhmet’s Flame: The Witch as Warrior

Between Mercy and Fire, The Warrior Witch Awakens

Some witches heal with herbs.
Some with words.
And some with war.

Not because they crave the fight,
But because someone must stand at the edge when others cannot.


There is a path within the Craft not often spoken of in gentle circles.

It is the path of the guardian.
The protector.
The one who does not flinch when harm draws near.
Not because they are cold or cruel,
but because they have made peace with fire.

This is the Witch as Warrior.

She is not defined by bloodlust, nor is her power drawn from rage alone.
He is not a caricature of anger, cloaked in ego and shouting hexes into the wind.
They are forged in something older: necessity, sacred duty, and the sharp-edged love that says:

“No more shall this harm pass.”


The Warrior Archetype in Witchcraft

Warrior witches exist in every tradition, though they are sometimes hidden behind softer names.
They are the ones who feel the call to protect, to resist, to draw lines that cannot be crossed.

They are the ones who bless their blades and know when not to use them.

Our myths remember them well:

  • The Morrigan, cloaked in raven’s shadow, weaving fate across the battlefield.
  • Hecate, torchbearer and guardian at the thresholds, holding power over justice and punishment.
  • Baba Yaga, fierce teacher and guardian of boundaries, testing the seeker’s soul.
  • Athena, strategist of war and wisdom, who honors clarity over carnage.
  • Sekhmet, lion-headed Lady of Flame, who burns through plague, tyranny, and corruption, not out of wrath, but holy order.

These figures are not bloodthirsty; they are exacting.
And they hold one thing in common:

Sovereignty.


The Call to Rise

You do not choose the warrior’s path. It rises from within.

Perhaps you found it through trauma, through harm that taught you to shield others where no one shielded you.
Perhaps you woke one day with fire in your belly and a vision of the sacred boundary that must not be broken.

The Warrior Witch is not born from hatred.
They are born from the knowledge that peace, if unguarded, will not hold.

There comes a moment when silence becomes betrayal.
And in that moment, the warrior rises.


Discipline Before Power

Power without discipline is poison.

The Warrior Witch must train, not only with their spells but also with their spirit.

  • Grounding before action.
  • Shielding before offense.
  • Shadow work to know where vengeance lives inside you.
  • Discernment to know which battles are yours and which are not.
  • Restraint to know when to sheath the blade.

Not every fight deserves your power.
But some… do.


What the Warrior Defends

You do not fight for conquest.

You fight for:

  • The child, the elder, the family and the sacred land.
  • The hidden temple inside yourself.
  • The circle you’ve vowed to guard.
  • The truth you will not let be erased.

The warrior does not always cast curses.
Sometimes, she simply stands.
Sometimes, his presence alone says, “Not this time.”
Sometimes, they strike, not with wrath, but with clarity.


Sovereignty, Not Revenge

This path is not about vengeance.
Revenge consumes.
Sovereignty restores.

The Warrior Witch does not retaliate to feed the ego.
They act to restore the balance.
To end the harm.
To protect the future.

They are not ruled by pain, but they have learned from it.


Reflection and Benediction

Are you a witch of the blade?
Of the tower? Of the shield?

What rises in you when injustice knocks?
When harm circles your people?

Can you hold both mercy and fire in the same hand, and know when to use each?

The world is trembling.
And some of us are called to the edge.

If you are one of those, if your Craft has always had a quiet sword in it,
this path is for you.

Welcome, warrior.


Final Blessing

May your sword be sacred.
May your shield be just.
May your heart remain human.

And may your war be worthy.



Invocation of Sekhmet: The Flame That Guards

A Companion to “The Witch as Warrior”

Lady of the Flame,
Lion of the Horizon,
You who stride with burning feet and golden eyes,

Come into me now.
Make my rage holy.
Make my fire clean.

Teach me the sacred strike,
not wild, but wise.
Not cruel, but clear.
Not ego, but justice.

Let me be your mirror in this world of soft betrayals,
the one who does not look away.
The one who says “enough.”

Sekhmet, whose breath scorches plague from the earth,
Whose roar shakes the gates of tyrants,
Stand beside me now.
Make me a blade that sings with mercy and power.

For I will not raise the sword unless I must.
But if I must,
Let it be you who guides my hand.


Optional Ritual Frame: Sekhmet’s Shield and Blade

For solo or group use before War Magick workings

Preparation:

  • Dress in red, gold, or black.
  • Light a red or gold candle for Sekhmet.
  • Have a small blade or wand at hand.
  • Burn frankincense, dragon’s blood, or desert resin.

Ritual Steps:

1. Ground and center.
Visualize a great desert sun rising behind you, filling your spine with light.

2. Speak the invocation aloud, slowly and with focus. You may stand in warrior pose or kneel before the flame.

3. Anoint your forehead with a touch of fire (candlelight hovered over finger, or warmed oil) and say:

“Sekhmet, flame of divine justice, I welcome your presence.”

4. Pass the blade (or wand) through incense smoke or candlelight, saying:

“Let this be the blade of truth, not vengeance. The tongue of fire, not hatred.”

5. Raise your hands and say:

“I do not seek war. But if war seeks me, I will rise.”


Closing:

  • Bow your head to the flame and say:
    “Lady of Lions, leave with me your strength. I go forward unshaken.”
  • Extinguish the candle, or let it burn down if safe.
  • Journal what rose in you.

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

Walking the Edge – Part IV: The Gate That Speaks Your Name

A Guided Meditation to Meet the Guardian at the Threshold


Find a quiet place where the veil is thin,
between breaths, between heartbeats, between thoughts.
Sit with your spine tall and your body grounded.
Feel the weight of the world beneath you,
not as a burden,
but as the Earth remembering your name.

Close your eyes.

Breathe.

Let the breath spiral in.
Let it spiral out.
Like wind threading a labyrinth,
like the turning of a wand in your palm.

With each breath, you descend.

Down through the coils of your spine,
Down through the roots of your being.
The world above fades into silence.
You are walking the edge now.


You find yourself on a narrow path,
worn smooth by countless feet;
witches, seekers, visionaries, fools.
The mist curls around your ankles,
and the air hums with memory.

Before you rises a gate.

Not of iron or stone,
but made of something older,
woven from your choices, your pain, your longing.
It shimmers with the language of your soul.

This is the Gate That Speaks Your Name.


Approach it slowly.

Listen.
What does it whisper?

Is it a challenge? A riddle?
Does it call you by the name you give others,
or by the one you have never spoken aloud?

You reach out.
Your hand trembles. That’s all right.

Touch the gate.
Feel how it responds to your presence,
not as a stranger,
but as something that has always known you.


And then,

From the shadows beside the gate,
someone steps forward.

The Guardian.

This being is neither enemy nor friend,
but a force shaped in the forge of your becoming.

It may wear your face.
Or the face of your deepest fear.
Or something ancient, winged, shrouded, radiant.

Do not turn away.

Look into their eyes.

Ask them what they guard.
What they protect you from.
What they hold back until you are ready.

Listen.

This is the voice of the threshold.


When you are ready,
ask the Guardian:

“What must I become to pass?”

Let the answer rise like smoke in your mind.
Let it burn if it must.
Let it show you something true.


You may pass through the gate today.
Or not.
It does not matter.

You have stood before it.
You have heard your name.

And that… is the beginning.


Return now.

Return with the breath.
Return with the whisper of your name still echoing.
Return with the knowing that there is power in waiting,
and greater power in daring.

When you are ready,
open your eyes.

And write what you saw.

“Dancing with Apophis: Witchcraft in the Shadow of Mercury”

Lean into the Retrograde. Twist the signal. Cast in the static.

But what if the witch doesn’t cower from chaos?

We’ve all heard the warnings:
Don’t sign contracts.
Double-check your emails.
Brace for tech glitches and tangled words.
And above all, don’t cast spells in Mercury Retrograde.

What if we choose to slip into the spiraling signal,  to conjure within the static, to ride the tail of the Serpent of Unmaking himself and rewrite the rules from inside the glitch?

Because this isn’t just Mercury Retrograde; this is a summoning. A signal jam. A psychic hack.
And witches? We were born to speak in backwards tongues.


Shadow Magic Isn’t Passive

The retrograde shadow isn’t a rest stop. It’s the first echo of a storm, and we get to decide if we’re going to build sandbags… or ride the flood.

Yes, it’s a time when things break.
When the ghosts of old conversations knock on the door.
When truths slip between lines of code, and timelines twist like threads in a loom too ancient to name.

But instead of just “working out our shit”…
What if we used the shadow to cast some?


Apophis: The Serpent of the Void

Apophis is the force that challenges Ra each night.
He is entropy, breakdown, the refusal to comply with order.

But that’s not inherently evil. That’s opportunity.
When the structures that constrain are cracking, make something else.

Let Mercury scramble your enemies’ messages.
Let the misfires and missed calls twist around those who would silence truth.
Turn every garbled signal into a ward.
Let every glitch become a gate.


In the Age of Illusions & “Alternative Facts”

We are living in a world built on constructed realities. Misinformation, gaslighting, deep fakes, the entire media-sphere is a labyrinth spun from half-truths and curated chaos. The public is drowning in a sea of “alternative facts,” where the signal is buried in the static. And guess what? That is exactly the terrain Mercury Retrograde thrives on.

This is our playground.

While the masses scramble to fact-check and re-establish “truth,” witches can speak in the language of distortion and projection. Let the unseen sophistication of illusion become our conduit. Where reality is scrambled, magic can float in and reroute the current.

  • Harness the fog: When every feed is saturated in contradiction, layer your own spells in the swirl. Broadcast misdirection to entangle the deceivers’ own webs.
  • Mirror their nonsense: In a realm of gaslighting, mirror the confusion back at their feet. Use verbal sigils that thread contradiction into their messaging machine. Let their own lies immobilize them.
  • Manifest digital chaos: Amplify their nonsense signals by embedding strong witchcraft into viral content. A meme laced with intent travels faster than logic ever could.

Mercury’s retrograde shadow amplifies distortion and confusion, and in that lies opportunity. The more the world splinters in illusions, the more we can engineer our own fractures in systems of control. It’s not about illuminating truth, but weaponizing uncertainty.


Chaos as Spellcraft

For Inspiration:

  • Write a sigil to cause confusion in systems of oppression. Encrypt it in code, scatter it across the web, tuck it into hashtags.
  • Mirror curse: take their own words and twist them back. Mercury’s reversal makes this ripe.
  • Communication tangle jars: use tangled string, broken circuits, reversed speech to bind the mouths of liars.
  • Digital spell bombs: memes, phrases, videos that carry intent. Stealth magick inside the info-stream.

Spell-Weaving Through the Unseen

Try this:

  1. Gather a handful of printed headlines or social media screenshots of blatant alternative facts.
  2. Carve a reversed sigil of chaos into an obsidian mirror.
  3. Arrange your headlines in a spiral around the mirror, face down, source-side hidden.
  4. Chant:
    “Words untrue, fold back on you. Twist the lie into your own. Mirror shards, corruption spawn.”
  5. Breathe into the spiral, visualizing each bit of misinformation fusing into a knot in the mirror’s surface, trapping distorted words within its glass.
  6. Shatter the mirror safely once the chant ends. Let shards represent their tangled illusions splintered apart.

Retrograde is perfect for nonlinear, multidimensional craft.
Do it backward.
Do it in secret.
Do it through symbols and static.


Why This Works in Retrograde

Mercury Retrograde thrives on breakdowns in communication, lost emails, false signals, and scrambled truths. It is the age of illusion distilled. In this period, your reversal and redirection of falsity is amplified:

  • You channel the broken signal, twist it inward.
  • You refract lies into disarray, even lies themselves become traps in your mirror.
  • You reclaim illusion as sacred material, transforming chaos into a weapon.

The Witch as Disruptor

The witch was never meant to soothe the machine.
We are not here to play nicely with empire.

Mercury Retrograde doesn’t have to be feared.
It can be the time we become the signal jam.
The whisper in the wires.
The ghost in the code.

In this era of disinformation, the witch is no longer simply a truth-seeker. You are the architect of misdirection, the signal jammer. Let Mercury Retrograde heighten the world’s dissonance, and let your chaos be the next wave.

Lean in.
Break patterns.
Reverse spells.
Cast hexes that stutter and loop.

Let Apophis kiss your third eye.


This Mercury Retrograde… don’t just survive.
Hack it.
Curse it.
Dance in it.
And remember:
Chaos is not your enemy.
It is your native tongue.

Walking the Edge- Part III: A Witch’s Journey Through Power, Preparing the Vessel

Know Thyself

Before you can wield real power, you must become a vessel capable of holding it.

That sounds poetic, but it’s also literal. Power rushes through the body like fire, like song, like voltage. It cannot be held in a cracked and leaking cup. It requires inner scaffolding, ethics, discipline, clarity, and alignment, so it doesn’t simply burn through you and leave you empty.

And most of all, it requires this:
To hold power, you must know yourself.

Not the fantasy-self, not the spiritual persona, not the carefully curated mirror you show to the world. You must look unflinching into the truest mirror, the one that shows your capability and your shadow. Because power will not lie to you. And even if power did not, the spirits, gods, and adversaries you may face absolutely will not. They will press every weakness, amplify every doubt, and offer tempting shapes to your most hidden desires.

Knowing yourself is not a luxury. It is armor.


Ethical Grounding

You cannot walk the edge if you don’t know where the cliff is.

Ethical grounding is more than knowing right from wrong. It’s learning how to hold power without exploiting others, how to be feared without being cruel, how to lead without controlling. It’s also about boundaries: yours and theirs.

Witchcraft does not hand you a rulebook. It demands something far more difficult: discernment.

Ethics requires that we build our own moral compass. Unlike, many religions, which foist theirs onto their laity, assuming them incapable of doing so. Witchcraft requires your full participation. You must know yourself, examine your motives, and choose the values you will live by, even when no one is watching.

Only you can hold your mirror. Only you can choose your line in the sand.

I have watched many a witch do this work, and I can say honestly: they are some of the most moral people I have ever encountered in my life. Not because they were told what to believe, but because they chose, again and again, to align power with integrity.

In the Wild Blackthorn Tradition, power is a flame cupped between two hands: one is Will, the other is Ethics. Lose either, and the fire goes out, or turns wild and devours.


Psychic Hygiene

Witches are sensitive. That’s part of the gift. But sensitivity without sovereignty makes you a sponge, not a channel.

Psychic hygiene is the daily practice of clearing, shielding, and reclaiming your energy. Just as you wash your body and tend your home, you must cleanse your spirit. Not occasionally. Not only when things feel “off.” But as a habit. As devotion.

A simple daily practice:

  • Breathe deeply.
  • Call your energy home.
  • Visualize a cleansing light or elemental force (fire, wind, water) moving through you.
  • Expel what does not belong. Thank it, then release.
  • Seal yourself with light, symbols, breath, or intention.

Neglect this and you invite intrusion. Practice it, and your light becomes sharp—less buffet, more blade.

Even in the most formal ceremonial traditions, daily spiritual hygiene is non-negotiable. In systems like the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, new initiates (Neophytes) are encouraged to perform the Lesser Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram (LBRP) every day for a full year. This ritual clears unwanted influences, centers the self, invokes elemental guardians, and aligns the practitioner vibrationally with their highest purpose. It also builds confidence, discipline, and internalization.

It’s not the ritual itself that creates mastery; it’s the daily doing of it.

Whatever your path, the principle remains: cleanse, center, protect. Again and again. Power respects those who tend their temple.

Neglect this and you invite intrusion. Practice it, and your light becomes sharp, less buffet, more blade.


Shadow Integration

The edge will cut you if you’re afraid of your own darkness.

Every witch has a shadow. Power will expose it. That’s not failure,it’s an invitation.

Do you long to be adored? Feared? Vindicated? Do you still seek permission? Revenge? Are there wounds beneath your rituals?

Shadow work isn’t about banishing these parts of you. It’s about acknowledgment, integration, and transformation. You must be able to name your hungers before they name you. You must be able to say:
I know what I am capable of, both the holy and the terrifying.

This is the first armor. This is the mirror you must not break.

Embracing your shadow is not only an act of healing but also of creating wholeness. In this wholeness, we are no longer divided. Our power courses freely without obstacle, unblocked by shame or self-denial. This integration can make us more powerful than we ever dared to dream.

As the saying goes: “Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”


Strengthening the Will

The Will is the blade of the Witch.

Discipline sharpens it. Desire drives it. Belief tempers it. But it is forged in fire, by choosing, again and again, to act from the deepest truth of who you are.

Ritual strengthens Will. Repetition carves paths in the mind. Every time you say the words, light the candle, cast the circle, you are reminding the world (and yourself): I choose. I shape. I remember.

You don’t need to feel ready. You need to begin.


The Guardian at the Threshold

There comes a point in every path of power when you meet the one who bars the gate.

Sometimes they appear in dreams. Sometimes as illness, fear, loss, or a sudden pull to abandon the Work entirely. They are not your enemy.

They are you. The part of you that remembers every failure, every trauma, every vow you made to stay small or safe or silent. They wear your face. They know your secrets.

But if you face them, not with violence, but with presence, they become the ally you didn’t know you needed. They test you because power will test you. If you cannot meet your own shadow and stand your ground, what will you do when a real force opposes you?

Next time, I will offer a guided meditation to meet the Guardian at the Threshold.

But for now…
Cleanse your altar.
Name your values.
Look into the mirror.
Feel your breath return to your body.
Strengthen the vessel.
And prepare to knock at the door.


Footnote:
The Lesser Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram (LBRP) is a foundational ceremonial magic rite used to clear space, establish energetic boundaries, and invoke the archangels of the four quarters. Originating in the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, it is widely practiced in Western esotericism and often recommended as a daily practice for beginners to build clarity, presence, and alignment.
A simplified instructional version can be found in:

  • Modern Magick by Donald Michael Kraig
  • The Middle Pillar by Israel Regardie
  • Or online: [Search “LBRP ritual text” or “LBRP walkthrough” for trusted resources]

Walking the Edge – Part II: The Fire Beneath the Thorn

A Witch’s Journey Through Power Series

There comes a moment in every witch’s path where the wind changes.

You are no longer simply learning. The spells you cast begin to ripple outward. Your words take on weight. People turn to you for insight, for healing, for justice. And the power you once touched with trembling hands begins to move through you with ease, sometimes unbidden.

This is not mastery.
This is the dangerous middle.


The Moment When Power Answers

In the beginning, power is something we reach for. We read, we train, we practice. We cast the same spell again and again, tweaking the moon phase or the herb blend, trying to catch the current just right.

But then… something shifts. A whisper moves through you, a knowing rises in your gut. The work deepens because you are becoming more refined.

Your aura takes on a gravity of its own. Ritual becomes less about calling and more about opening. Your presence stirs reaction, resonance, or resistance.

And with that shift, the world begins to test you.


The Ladder to True Power

We speak in the Wild Blackthorn Tradition of a progression; a ladder of fire, climbed not in haste but with care:

  1. Knowledge – The gathering of lore, theory, tools, and stories. Books and breath.
  2. Experience – The doing. The failed spells. The moments of awe. The nights of doubt.
  3. Actualization – The integration. When the witch no longer works the spell, but becomes it.
  4. Wisdom – The still point. When discernment is sharper than desire.
  5. Power – Not the lightning. The conductor. The one who knows what to do with the storm.

This is not a linear journey. We rise and fall through these states. But when one tries to leap ahead, when power is seized without wisdom, when understanding blooms without humility, something fractures.

This is where obsession is born. And obsession is not power, it is power turned inward, festering.


The False Fire

There is a kind of power that masquerades as mastery. It is loud, impressive, and intoxicating. It commands attention. It often gets called “influence.”

But true power does not always shine. Sometimes it walks barefoot. Sometimes it bleeds. Sometimes it waits in silence until the moment is right.

Beware the gleam that demands your gaze. In magic, as in life, the brightest thing in the room is not always the most powerful. Sometimes, it is the trap.


The Peril of Outer Praise

Power wants to be witnessed. This is part of its nature—it radiates. But the desire to be seen as powerful is not the same as being powerful.

There is danger in chasing recognition before the soul is ready. In every tradition, we see those who begin to shine a little too early—and who then reshape their magic around being seen rather than becoming whole.

This happens in subtle ways:

  • We post a ritual and check for likes.
  • We speak in circle hoping for admiration, not alignment.
  • We wear our title louder than our integrity.

The desire for outer validation is often a mask for unworked insecurity. When we seek applause, it’s  because some part of us doubts our worth, and would rather hear others say it than learn to believe it ourselves.

But this kind of validation feeds the wrong fire. It grows the ego, not the spirit.

And ego, once fed too long, becomes a hungry ghost, always needing more. It will whisper that you are wiser than your elders, more gifted than your peers, immune to correction. It will resist stillness. It will panic at silence.

This is not sovereignty. It is spiritual inflation.

The Witch’s power must rise from within, not depend on a mirror held up by others. Otherwise, when that mirror breaks, and it always does, we are shattered with it.


The Forge of Becoming

You must be tempered, Witch. And that tempering is never comfortable. There will be days when the magic feels like fire in your mouth. When your spirit aches from holding boundaries. When you are tempted to use the Craft for validation, revenge, or escape.

Those are the crossroads. Not whether you can cast, but why.

Power without ethics is violence.
Power without devotion is vanity.
Power without will is waste.
But power with all these? That is the mark of the Witch whole.


A Vision: The Path of Ash and Ember

Close your eyes and walk with me.

You stand at the edge of twilight on a mountain pass older than maps. The air is sharp with myrrh and woodsmoke, and beneath your feet, the stones are warm with something ancient, something watching.

To your right, the land falls away into a golden plain lit by sunset. A wide road stretches across it, paved with sigils and scattered with broken wands, dulled blades, and tarnished crowns. Here walked those who hungered for power, who cast great spells and gathered titles—but whose works crumbled for lack of root.

To your left, a narrow path coils upward into mist and shadow. It is hard going. The ground is uneven, the stones slick with old blood and weathered tears. Thorn branches clutch at your sleeves. Along the trail stand cairns, one for each who walked the path to its end. Some bear names carved in languages long dead. Others are unmarked, known only to the stars and the Gods.

Here and there you glimpse offerings: a braid of hair, a ring of iron, a tooth, a prayer etched in salt. These are the tools of the true initiate, not trophies, but sacrifices.

Then, from within the thicket of blackthorn to your left, a voice stirs. It is dry as wind, sharp as bone, and yet somehow your own:

“Will you carry the fire, or be consumed by it?”

The forge is not at the summit.
It is within the climb.


The Power of Restraint

The witch who knows their own limits, and tests them with intention, is already walking toward wisdom.

We must build not just spellcraft, but soulcraft.

Restraint is not weakness. Patience is not passivity. These are disciplines of the deep magician, who understands that a spell well-timed is worth a thousand flung in frenzy.

Power must be shaped, not hoarded.
It must serve something greater, or it will devour its bearer.


The Witch as Keeper of Fire

You are not here to burn the world down.

You are here to carry the ember forward.
To protect the spark.
To light the beacon when others are lost.
To warm. To forge. To cauterize.
To know when to let the fire die into coals… and when to breathe it back to life.


In Part III

In the next part of this journey, we will begin preparing the vessel:

  • Ethical grounding
  • Psychic hygiene
  • Shadow integration
  • Ritual techniques for strengthening will
  • And a meditation on the “Guardian at the Threshold.”

But for now, I leave you with this: What in you is still flammable?
And what in you has already survived the fire?

The Edge and the Spiral, A Witch’s First Reckoning with Power

Power Begins at the Edge

The Witch’s First Reckoning with Risk, Growth, and the Call of the Spiral

Most of us begin the path of witchcraft with small, beautiful things.
A phase of the moon, an herb tucked under the pillow, a card drawn in curiosity.
A whisper, a candle flame, a sense that something more is possible.

These are good beginnings.
Gentle. Curious. Sacred in their own way.

But there comes a time, sometimes after years, sometimes overnight, when something shifts.
The dream becomes a hunger. The candlelight isn’t enough. You want more than spells that look pretty and rituals that feel safe.

This is where the edge appears.


The First Reckoning

There’s no flashing sign that says, Power this way.
Instead, there’s a tension in the chest. A feeling that what you’re doing isn’t wrong, but it isn’t enough, you could go deeper. Maybe it happens in ritual, when your voice shakes as you call the Goddess, and something answers back. Perhaps it’s in a dream, when you wake, sobbing with a name you’ve never heard still on your lips. Or it could be when the world cracks open; grief, love, illness, birth, and the veil thins without warning.

And suddenly, you know: This path is real.
And real means risk.

You are standing on the edge.
And something inside you is asking if you’ll step forward.


The Path Isn’t Straight, It Spirals

No one hands you a map for what comes next. You don’t become powerful all at once.
It doesn’t matter how many books you’ve read or how many tools you own.

Power unfolds in spirals.

You begin with knowledge; learning names, signs, symbols.
You move into experience; casting, contacting,  stumbling, trying again.
You start to understand the deeper structures and the “why’s”
Then, sometimes slowly, sometimes all at once, you grow into wisdom.
And from that wisdom, you begin to touch true power.

You come back to the same ideas again and again, and each time, they meet you deeper. The moon isn’t just a phase. It becomes a mirror.
The spell isn’t just a charm. It becomes a choice.

And here’s the truth no one glamorizes:
The people who succeed at this path, the witches, the magicians, mystics and healers who truly grow, have failed more than most people have even dared to try.
They’ve stumbled. Been humbled. Risked. Gotten it wrong. Chosen again.

Every scar is a sign of movement.
Every mistake is part of the spiral.


Power Will Ask Something of You

This is the part few people say out loud.

Awakening isn’t always beautiful, it breaks things.

You might lose the version of yourself that always played small.
You might lose people who loved that version.

You’ll face your fears. Those of failure and of success.
And you’ll meet your shadow, one who is not the villain you fear, but a wounded protector.

Because here’s the truth:

We all have a dark side.
It is simply hidden, not evil. Built from old pain and forged in moments we had to survive.

If you repress it, ignore it, pretend it isn’t there, it will find its way out anyway.
And when it bursts free, it will do so without your consent, or your control.

But if you turn toward it, if you meet it, name it, embrace it, you begin to reclaim your full self.

Your shadow has shielded you.
It carried the weight you couldn’t bear at the time.
It knows your wounds and your power.

When you embrace it, when you do the slow, brave work of integration you don’t become less.

You become more.
More whole.
More honest.
More powerful than you ever imagined.


You Don’t Have to Be Ready

You don’t need to know everything.
You don’t have to be perfect. You don’t need a coven, a title, a perfect altar, or the current aesthetic.

You need one thing:
A willingness to keep going, to be reshaped, to listen deeply to yourself, to the land, to the gods.
A willingness to walk forward even when the path vanishes into mist.

Because power isn’t a destination.
It’s a devotion.
And it begins the moment you say:
Yes, I will walk.


A Note for the Ones Still Standing on the Edge

If you’re here, if you’re reading this…
If you’ve felt the edge under your feet and the pull of something deeper.

Then you’re already on the path.

The spiral has already begun.

So take one breath.
Take one step.
And trust that you are not alone. We’ve walked this way too.
And the road ahead, while steep, is full of wonder.