Posts in category “Ontario Witch”
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Taking On Too Much

I have this twisted compulsion to take on more stuff than I can actually do. It's a form of madness.

Anyway, now I am starting a new Wicca/ Witch site for a network called AIA (All Info About). Why? Because it's there. Also, because I thought of an idea and then I had to put life into it. In other words, do it.

So, this is going to be a Witchy site for people who are Witches. Not looking for converts, going out of my way to explain or defend Witches or Wiccans. I wanted to call it "The Living Witch" but that didn't work out with the format they use. So, I will use that somewhere else. I plan to set up a blog as part of the site. Something I can add bits of stuff to as I go along. My idea of a Book of Shadows.

The rest of the site is going to include sections like: a regional directory of Witch groups, traditions, art, career, romance and relationships, home and garden, environment, health and beauty, spiritual, holidays, and hobbies. I'm sure this will change as I actually get started and change my mind about what will work. But you get the idea, I hope.

So many sites about Wicca leave out the reality, the living of it all. How many times do you really need or want to see the same information about sabbats and rituals? Let's see how it works together in real life.

If anyone has ideas or articles to contribute let me know. It would be nice to hear from you anyway. Later, when the site is up I will send the URL out with this newsletter. Likely this will integrate into the site too.

Take care,

Laura

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Telling Your Beloved (Or the One You're With)

If you read my general blabberings around BackWash you will have heard of Eric, my boyfriend. He is still pretty new but we are getting along great.

Anyway, I haven't really talked with him about Pagan ideas and what it means for me to be an Earth Witch. That is some sort of limbo in everything. I don't mind leaving it there, for awhile. But, I have wondered what he really thinks.

We went for a walk on the frozen beach and while he was testing the thickness of the frozen lake (testing his luck I thought at the time) I was drawing a pentacle in the sand. I used a piece of driftwood and 6 smooth stones from along the beach. I placed the stones around my drawn pentacle. It was something special for the day, for my Grandmothers and for St. Patrick's Day.

Eric noticed it when he came back, not drowned luckily. He said something about it, nothing much. I think just noting that I had drawn it or used stones, something easy going. But I wondered what he was thinking. Anyway, I left it at that. I didn't push it or go into lengthy explanations. It was something personal to me and though I didn't feel I needed to hide it I still wonder what he thinks about this element of me.

How do you begin to share this with someone you care about? Is it something you leave lying on a coffee table for him to find? Is it something you bring up right away and make into a big issue? Or do you let it simmer on a back jet, there and yet not getting in the way? I'm not exactly sure how I want to handle it. So, I will do what I usually do when I'm not sure, I will ask him. Not quite yet though. There is time and space, too much of both right now. We will see.

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The Magic Circle

The magic circle, sounds so mystical... But it's like many things in Witchcraft, it's adaptable to your own style, your whims and personal needs of the moment.

Witch/ Wiccan rituals take place in a circle. Not always, it's not written in stone with blood or anything really dramatic. But, it does make things tidy in it's own way. You draw in power and you keep it to yourself, out of the way of others. Then, when you're done you release it. It goes back to nature and the powerful parts of yourself.

We draw the circle and then we close it. Some people cast the circle and banish it at the end of the ritual. I tend to think of it as drawing and closing the circle. When you draw your circle take a moment to bless each of the elements at each of the 4 directions. Yes, you might need a map to know where north, south, west and east are in relation to your location. If you choose, bless the goddess and god too. Then bless the Earth and life, those are most important to me. When you close your circle just do the steps in reverse order. Gather your pebbles, erase your chalk, whatever you used as you go around in the 4 directions again. Sounds too simple? Why shouldn't it be simple. You're welcome to make a bigger production out of it. I like it simple.

You can use chalk, hemp rope, embroidery thread, pebbles, sand, dust bunnies, anything really. Consider a circle of jack o lanterns for Samhain, wouldn't that be fun! It depends on how fancy you want to be or how close to natural elements. My personal choice are pebbles. I love them. I collected them from a beach here in Ontario. Took my time to find stones I especially liked for their shape, colour or some markings on them.

The circle represents wholeness, the cycles of life and the seasons, the wheel of life to make it simple. In theory it is without beginning or ending and perfect in it's completeness.

To draw the circle is to make a place set apart and sacred. Where ever you are- living room, backyard, beach, clearing in the woods - the circle becomes a place where we focus on magick in ourselves and the Earth around us. The circle is a pure place where we can think, make notes in our Book of Shadows, create and practice rituals, anything. It doesn't have to be dramatic and you don't have to feel you must do something special. It's your circle, your dime.

This summer when I have a road trip out to the beach I want to cast a circle on the beach. Using a piece of driftwood to draw my circle and some stones to point to the directions. I don't even know what ritual I might do. I just want to sit in a circle of my own creation and enjoy the world, life and being alive.

In wilderness I sense the miracle of life, and behind it our scientific accomplishments fade to trivia. - Charles Lindbergh

I take thee, herb, to cure my ills or perhaps while dancing pon the hill. I'll dip you in the cauldron fine Then asperge a circle in the pines. I'll make you into teas and brews when picked from 'neath the morning dews, or hide you in a pillow seam to guard me close, come night and dreams.

  • Marian Loresinger
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Circle Rituals

I'm trying to write about casting a circle for the Wicca and Witchcraft newsletter at BackWash. But... I just can not remember the right term (or the standard term anyway, who says it's right anyway!) for closing the circle. I know about drawing and casting it to begin with. Anyway, the funny thing is, I'm looking at websites about circle casting and such and NONE of them mention closing the circle. Not one single site in over 10 so far talks about ending the ritual by closing the circle. How incomplete of them. I'm surprised yet not astounded.

Still, makes me wonder how many people ignore this part of the ritual then? How many circles are cast but never closed. How much energy is spilled out into the universe due to sloppy rituals? If you build it you must close it too.

Comments

cloverbee

http://www.sibyllinewicca.org/rituals/rit_b_salt.htm

has a nice closure but I can't remember the term either.

I also found this text cached on my computer:

The basic ritual practice of Casting a Circle is complemented by the act of Closing a Circle.

Just as the as the intent of a Circle casting is to allow for the containment and control of energies raised within its' confines, so the closing (or dismantling) of a Circle dismisses those energies, right?? Wrong! The idea of complimenting the "casting" of a Circle with a "closing" of that Circle may not be a correct one in mathematical terms but Wicca is not mathematics and a more useful way of approaching the concept may be to characterize the process as an "Opening" of the Circle.

It is inescapable that the Circle cast must somehow be dealt with when the ritual is finished - but this does not mean that the Circle must be banished! Instead, the Circle is opened after the ritual to encompass the whole world. In this way, the greater good is served through a kind of benediction given by the Circle's energies.

The end of the ritual also marks the return to the ordinary world we left behind when we cast the Circle, but just as we do not leave our beliefs behind us when we leave the sacred space, so is the Circle left "open but never broken".

me

I love that. It's how I see the closing too. I just didn't write it as well.

Thank you :) It may have missed the newsletter but I'll save it for myself.

elementalmuse

In our rituals here, we ALWAYS close the circle, saying something to the effect of, "The circle is open, but never broken, merry meet, merry part and merry meet again."

We don't have a special terms for closing the circle, though. We just simply call it "closing the circle." *grin

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Spirituality for the Home

The original link is 404 now, as are all sites from Geocities.

The Hearth

Folklore

For ancient cultures, the hearth was the center of the home.
It was the provider of warmth through the harsh winter months,
and also provided heat for cooking all meals. It was the
gathering place of the household.
Fire has a special attraction for all of us. Within its
smoke and flame lie the origin of many religions.
Fire, the element of transformation, causes change to occur. It can be
destructive, but through destruction comes creation.
The fire in the house was never allowed to die. It was considered
unfortunate if the household fire went out during the night.
If this occurred, hot coals would need to be borrowed from neighbors.
If the coals died while being transported home, it was an omen
that the family would have an unlucky future.

…more