Showing posts with label Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2019

Book Spotlight: The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries By W.Y Evans-Wentz


I am very proud to report that I have finished this tome of collected folklore!  It is a collection of testimony and essays, so it can at points be very...very dry, but if you can push through and re-read those passages where you zoned out you will be gifted with the most comprehension collection of eye-witness testimony of true believers in the fae beings of the Celtic lands.

What Drew Me In

1.  Pages and Pages of testimony from a host of different people living in the Celtic lands who had a personal experience with an intelligent spirit they believed to be of the otherworld - a fae or a fairy.
2.  While the author admitted that he had never had an encounter himself, he was sure of his sources and believed that the wild world had intelligences of non-human origin.
3.  Additionally, there are many essays presenting anthropological theories for these intelligences.

How I Think I Can Apply This Magically

1.  I was introduced to various practices to entice and placate the fae.  
2.  It helped me come up with my own theories on the subtle differences between fae, ghost and spirit.

If you like this post, you may also enjoy:  


Monday, November 19, 2018

Book Spotlight: Underworld by Chris Allaun


I am very fortunate to have been a student of Chris Allaun.  I was very pleased to see his magic come to fruition and be able to own an autographed copy of Underworld: Shamanism, Myth, Magic.

I do think that this book does requires some prerequisite work.  In order to get the most out of this work, you should have some working knowledge of some magical system - preferably with some kind of astral journeying work, and you should be familiar with the concepts of Underworld, Mid-world and Upper-world.  If you live in the Chicago Area, applying for private lessons with Chris Allaun would be the perfect supplement to this volume and his following books.  You can contact him through his Facebook page if you this is an option for you. 

If you have never explored the concept of ancestral work and the Underworld, I would suggest Walking the Twilight Path by Michelle Belanger as a starting point and then moving into the work of Chris Allaun. 

What drew me in:

  1. One of my favorite things about this work is that it reads much like a memoir.  There are many descriptive narratives of the author's personal travels through the Underworld.  
  2. I appreciate that he describes frightening beings that you can sometimes encounter in your Underworld journeys as "chaotic" rather than evil because things that make us afraid can be great teachers.  Good and evil are very subjective.  Hilter, for example, thought he was saving his country.
  3. I really loved his commentary about myth and story.  Imagination is a gateway to personal gnosis and myth and story engage the imagination.

How I think I can apply this magically:

  1. I mentioned that I was fortunate to be Chris Allaun's student.  I have used the techniques in his book to explore the Underworld and I had some interesting revelations there.
  2. I am constantly trying to be the best person that I can be.  I thought this book very much resonated with my personal mission to "have courage to be who I could be."
  3. I was fascinated by his descriptions of the Kabbalah and Qliphoth and is something I would like to explore more.
I would also like to announce that Chris Allaun will be making a guest appearance on my alter ego's YouTube channel in the very near future.  Please visit Fairy Fortunes by Ruby Ruse on YouTube, subscribe and hit the notification bell so you will notified of this interview release!

If you liked this post, you may enjoy some of my other book spotlights:



Saturday, September 15, 2018

Book Spotlight - Psychic Protection by Ted Andrews


I have read other books on the topic of psychic defense, but Ted Andrews' work, in my opinion is one of the very best.

What Drew Me In

  1. Ted Andrews has the intention of making the spiritual pragmatic and more importantly obtainable.  He doesn't cloud everything in secrecy.  He wants you to clearly understand how the psychic works.
  2. Instead of mystically ruminating about the reader's gifts being tested, he instead offers that it is the student who should test their teachers.  He points out that a true teacher will not be offended, because a true teacher understands the need for confirmation and validation.
  3. Exercises like the Cleansing Fire Vortex were laid out in an easy step by step process.

How I Think I Can Apply This Magically

  1. The Cleansing Fire Vortex has become one of my favorite meditation practices.
  2. Sheltering my own energy was something I took for granted.  This book helped me be more aware of how the people I associate with and my environment affect me.
  3. This book suggested that psychic and magical abilities are skills that can be improved and practiced.

If you liked this post you may also enjoy some of my other Book Spotlights


Are you on GoodReads?  Let's be friends!

Saturday, September 1, 2018

Book Spotlight - The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho



I am aware that The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho is a work of fiction, but fiction is the the imagination made manifest and if that's not magic, then I don't know what is.

What Drew Me In

  1. Not only is this a fictional tale, it is almost a fantasy for adults.  There are mysterious kings, frightening bandits, and of course, the Alchemist.
  2. The flow of this tale is so powerful, you simply are swept away.  However, within the fantasy, I felt the connections to the mundane.  The boy, the hero, gets comfortable and I could see how it would be so easy to succumb to the seductive normalcy in his life.
  3. But the boy does not succumb however, he lives his personal legend.  I loved that concept - the idea of a plain sheep herder living a personal legend.

How I Think I Can Apply It Magically

  1.  I like comfort a little too much.  This book reminded me that everyone has the potential to be extraordinary.  
  2.  I started thinking about my life purpose.  What would my epic personal legend be?
  3.  Mistakes are difficult, particularly magical ones.  It's so easy to dismiss magic as fake when my spell go wrong.  Dreams can be misleading but it doesn't mean that they don't possess truth.

If You Liked This Post You Might Enjoy Some Other Book Spotlights


Are you on GoodReads?  Let's be friends! 


Thursday, July 12, 2018

Book Spotlight: The Art and Practice of Geomancy by John Michael Greer

Image result for geomancy book john michael greer

I absolutely love practicing geomancy.  I would describe it as mathematical art.  

What Drew Me In

  1. This text is very well organized.  Each step in casting a reading is explicitly laid out and explained.
  2. Later chapter suggest advanced magical techniques - such as creating magical sigils with the geomancy figures.  
  3. I had the opportunity to take a class from Mr. Greer himself, his book is a thorough as his in person demonstration.  

How I Think I Can Apply It Magically

  1. When do I not apply this magically?  This is my favorite resource book I have ever owned.
  2. I use this nearly every day in my daily divination studies.
If you'd like to see one of my Geomancy castings, I posted a Deluxe Geomancy Reading here on this blog.  


Please visit John Michael Greer's Website for more information. 

If you liked this post you may be interested in some of my other book spotlights:
Your Money Or Your Life
Conscious Dreaming
Option B














Thursday, July 5, 2018

Book Spotlight: Your Money Or Your Life by Vicki Robin

Your Money or Your Life: 9 Steps to Transforming Your Relationship with Money and Achieving Financial Independence: Fully Revised and Updated for 2018 by [Robin, Vicki, Dominguez, Joe]

Vicki Robin has composed a non-magical book that I think works magic. 

What Drew Me In

  1. Actually charting my money on a daily basis was enlightening.  I say that healthy food is important to me and yet why was I spending so much money on fast food that I don't even like to eat?  It gave the expression "food for thought" a whole new level of meaning.
  2. I've never been a fan of budgeting, it didn't really work for me.  This book offered me the idea to graph my expenses and income so I can see where I've been and make a reasonable hypothesis on where I might be going.
  3. There is a whole lot of financial hope in this book - I don't know anyone who wouldn't appreciate that.

How I Think I Can Apply It Magically

  1. What is a magic spell but a detail plan with a dash of faith?  If you're looking for a money spell a charm from the Renaissance may not work, but this book lays out a practical and doable plan.
  2. Many of the antidotes from people describe their financial transformations as "magical."  I believe that they are.
  3. This addresses a bit of the emotional and spiritual aspects attached to money.  Magic isn't just about practicality, it also is very much about feelings and faith.

Have you ever done money magic?  What worked for you?

Other Book Spotlights You Might Enjoy

 

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Book Spotlight: Conscious Dreaming by Robert Moss

Image result for conscious dreaming robert moss

One of my favorite books is Conscious Dreaming by Robert Moss.

What Drew Me In

  1. Mr. Moss introduced the idea dreams are a way for me to access my creative source.
  2. Personal experience is heralded as paramount.
  3. Nightmares are addressed as "aborted dreams."

How I Think I Can Apply It Magically

  1. I have observed that when I am a diligent "dream catcher" I am rewarded with helpful precognitive information
  2. Dreams are a bridge between all religions.  Many of my non-magical friends come to me with help on dream imagery.
  3. There are wonderful exercise to try and apply.  Many are shamanic in nature and stretch me spiritually and magically. 
Do you remember your dreams?  Do you find that the images help you process the events in your life?

Other Book Spotlights you might enjoy:

Thursday, June 21, 2018

Book Spotlight: Option B by Sheryl Sandberg

Image result for option b images

I'm currently reading Option B by Sheryl Sandberg and Adam Grant. 

What Drew Me In

  1. I was drawn in by the idea the resilience to adversity was a skill that can be developed.
  2. I was introduced to the idea that the concept of permanence - the belief that the state of grief will last forever - can hinder resilience.
  3. The comparison of dealing with grief and physical stamina.  It's something that builds with practice.

How I Think I Can Apply It Magically

  1. Magic is all about taking a creative approach to a difficult situation.  If nothing is permanent, then I really do have the ability to change something about my circumstances.  I have power.
  2. Magic is a skill.  You can practice it.  I had never thought to apply that concept to grief and resilience.

Have you ever read a great book that the author had no intention of being applied to a magical life and yet inspires your path?  

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

The Magic of Meditation


As openly pagan, and now that I’m embracing the title of “witch,” I get a lot of curious questioners asking about magic and my spells. I do cast spells, but I’m one that takes a great deal of time designing them, so it really has to be for something I consider very important. That usually does not involve turning a particularly nasty co-worker into a toad. If she already is a slimy mud slinger how would I transform anything by giving her green skin? Though people seem disappointed that I’m not interested in seeing if that might be possible. Spell work is more akin to goal planning than Harry Potter. What I am interested in pursuing, is not precisely what may be possible, but what I can make probable. 

Imagination is the cornerstone of magic. You have to be able to imagine what you wish to accomplish. Once you can see the possibilities, it’s much easier, if not simplistic, to move on to what is probable. I think it is the possibilities that magic offers that pulls people towards a magical path, whether it is interest in witchcraft or the pursuit of ceremonial magic. Those new to it want to dive straight in – let’s cast a spell! I know from experience that it is a huge let down when instead of being trained how to use a wand, one is told to meditate. How can there be any possibility in something that sounds so dismally boring?

I certainly can appreciate that. I have yet to find enlightenment by monitoring my breathing. I am also decidedly not an advocate for spending hours on end chanting “om” in uncomfortable positions while sniffing headache inducing incense. If I were only to describe mediation as simply “quieting” or “focusing” the mind, or counting breaths I can easily see how this might be seen as boring. The point of meditation is to clear all of the mundane noise out of my head so that I can actually see the possibilities. Meditation is used to explore the possibilities to find the probability - which is exactly what fuels magic.

 

The Mantra 

When I first moved to Chicago in 1998, I was very fortunate to see an advertisement for a class on magic being offered by the late and great Karen Jackson. It was the first formal magical classwork of which I had ever been a part and I have never forgotten what she taught me. Karen explained that meditation was important ground work for the magical process but she also said that it certainly did not need to be painful! She explained that clearing one’s mind of all thought was a highly advanced technique that Eastern Monks practice their entire lives with varying degrees of success. Since I’m certainly not living in a monastery, and have to contend with the mundane pressures of bills, parent/teacher conferences and rush hour traffic, I don’t have to aim that high in order to work some magic.

“Set a timer for ten minutes,” Karen said. “See if you can make it that long. Try to do it once a day. See if you can. If you can’t, that’s fine. See if you can work up to it.”

She also explained that getting your mind to focus is much harder than one might think -as the brain is constantly thinking about a hundred different things in a fraction of a second. She had a brilliant plan to redirect all of those thoughts in a more cohesive direction: the mantra. A mantra can be the cliché phrase “om” or it can be any repeated word. Karen Jackson gave me a phrase. I have never forgotten it and I still use this meditation to help me focus, calm down, or just because it makes me feel good.

Karen’s suggested phrase is: I am (my name). I am a part of the earth. I am a part of the unmanifest. I am alive in a universe that is alive. I am here and it is now. 

Naming myself calls me to focus on myself. I am the most important person in these 10 minutes that I’ve set aside for myself. The focus is me.

Focusing briefly on the earth reminds me of the physical world, and the significance of being a member of the flora and fauna that together is the planet earth.

But I am more than physicality. I am also a part of something that is unknown and unknowable. The mantra calls my attention to my life and the role that I play with the living earth which is both physical and tangible and yet vast and mysterious.

The present moment is the focus. Where am I really? The answer is here. What time is it? The answer is now. I cannot process the past nor plan for the future if I am not present in the moment.

Karen Jackson founded the Temple of the Four Winds, an inclusive group of pagan women and men based in Evanston, Illinois. Sadly, it passed into the ether with her. She was a teacher, writer and publisher. I am grateful that I knew her.

The Cleansing White Fire Vortex 


The Cleansing White Fire Vortex meditation is one of the many reasons I loved Ted Andrew’s excellent book Psychic Protection.


This is a visualization to cleanse and revitalize the aura and the main energy vortexes of the energetic body commonly known as chakras.

In this meditation, I visualize a ball of cleansing white energy which ignites the power center above my head (crown chakra). As I exhale, the ball of light travels down to the front of my forehead. When I next inhale it enters the power center within (the chakra associated with “the third eye”). On the exhale it exits the back of my head and travels back to the top of my head. On the next exhale, it then goes to my throat (throat chakra), in that same triangle fashion. This cycling continues for each power center – heart, solar plexus, womb, below the genitals, knees, and feet. The final point is below my feet, at this point, I visualize the ball of energy splitting in two. One ball shoots deep down into the earth, like an anchor, the second returns to the crown chakra traveling up all of the chakras on route. Once it returns to the top it starts circling around my body. I like to imagine it increasing in speed and magnitude as it passes each chakra. I imagine it cleansing and pulling out any stuck “debris” whirling it into the vortex which is now pulsating with all this bright energy. Then, I imagine it spinning itself out, scattering anything it has picked up down into the earth. Ted Andrew says this is good psychic fertilizer for the earth and I love that imagery.

I find that this is especially a good meditation when I am worn out from over stimulus, but I like to engage this meditation for really no particular reason other than it feels like a terrific hot shower after a long or even satisfying day.

Discursive Meditation 

This method was not only described in John Michael Greer’s excellent book, The Art and Practice of Geomancy, but I was also fortunate to hear him speak about it in person.


The word discursive is used to describe an inner discourse. This meditation technique is particularly useful regarding magical symbols. I use it to further my understanding of the 16 divination symbols of Geomancy, a Renaissance and mathematical divination system I absolutely love (and of which John Michael Greer is the leading expert).

The geomantic symbols are simple and easy to hold in my mind, but if I’m working with a more complex symbol, such as a tarot card, then I place the card where I can comfortably see it. Then I just allow my mind to flow. Sometimes characters come alive from the symbol to tell me more about their meaning. Sometimes it’s a series of thoughts and emotions. Either way, I come out of it with a profound understanding of an element of that symbol.

I also use discursive meditation to explore abstract concepts. I have explored what courage, commitment, connection and a host of other topic mean to me on a uniquely personal level.

John Michael Greer suggested that when I catch my mind wandering off topic, not to simply refocus, but retrace the steps that got me off track. The reason for this is to further my development by studying the individual workings of my own mind.

 

The Tree of Life Meditation 

Geda Parma is a young man with an ancient soul. I was fortunate enough to meet him and was truly in awe of the power and the peace that radiates from him. He describes the Tree of Life Mediation in his book By Land, Sky and Sea.


In this meditation I focus on my feet and I imagine that my toes become roots. They start to grow down, burrowing into the carpet under them and piercing the cement foundations of my home until they find the reddish clay earth under my Illinois home. These toe roots continue to push through each layer of the earth’s core until they reach the fire of the earth itself. But as powerful and heated as this life force energy is, it doesn’t burn me, instead that energy fills each of these long and powerful roots with its pulsating heat. This energy travels back up those long roots, through each layer, back to the clay and cement and carpet and back into my feet. My body then continues to drink in the energy, alighting each part of it with the life force energy of the earth until it reaches my head. Then much like my toes became roots, I imagine branches growing from my head until they touch the stars.

This is incredibly healing to me, I absolutely love the feeling of being literally grounded to the earth. Once, I experienced what I can only describe as being as one with the universe. For a fraction of a second I had a glimpse into what was everything. But I collapsed quickly into awe, and it was gone. I have never been able to reach celestial heights since, but if that is not magic in its full magnitude, then I don’t know what is.

 

Witch Sight 

I found Robin Artisson to be a very difficult author to follow while reading his book Witching Way of Hollow Hill. I really had to press through the dream like pattern of his thought process, but he does have some really beautiful gems of knowledge to offer.


One of those is his Witch Sight Meditation. The first step is to allow myself to feel everything - to hone in on every sensation of touch from the very basic of temperature, to the easy to ignore, like the touch of fabric on my skin. Next, without letting my awareness of all those sensations fade, I then open myself up to sound – again from the overt - like the ticking of the clock in the room - to the faded distant sounds of the wind blowing through the trees in the park several blocks away. I don’t imagine what I hear, I just open myself up to everything that I can hear. It can be pretty surprising and it makes me wonder at the living universe that I am living in.

Artisson goes straight to sight next, but I think it is important to go through the senses of taste and smell. Particularly if I have incense burning, I like to explore the different scent notes in the air and how something so removed can affect the palate while I do nothing but sit and take it within.

The final sense to explore is sight. However the goal is something more than just seeing a clock, some fabric – it’s about a deep awareness. The first time I did this exercise I was actually hopping with anxiety! I think it was the intensity of it all. Away from meditation, it is so easy to filter what I experience. It’s a natural process to let some things fade into the background in order to better focus on something more specific. The goal of this mediation is to get me to achieve heightened focus with all of my senses engaged equally.


I keep a journal of all my meditation sessions. I find that if I write them down they are etched better in my memory. And if I still forget them, there is a record to peruse later. There is no doubt that I am more focused and grounded when I am keeping up with daily meditation. Truth be told I’m much calmer, more patient and generally a much nicer person. It helps me to see the possibilities in others around me, I experience deeper empathy, but in a calm way that does not overwhelm me. I am better able to help others if I am grounded in the present and open to the nuances of varied experience.

More than that, mediation shows me paths to try when I am feeling like I have lost options. It shows me possibility and probability.

My meditation is where my magic begins.

Sunday, May 1, 2016

Book Thoughts: The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up




In her Best Selling Book, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, Marie Kondo has written the manual for the art of being tidy.  Readers are introduced to the simple notion that the art of tidying is a skill that must be learned.  This alone should instill a huge sense of relief, many people blame themselves because they feel that they “should be” organized.  However, if you’ve never been taught how to turn on the stove, the likelihood that you will become a great cook is fairly limited.  Tidying, having an organized space, these are things that are valued, and yet at the same time, no one seems to provide the training for this valued skill.  It’s assumed that one will figure it out for themselves. 

Marie Kondo would argue that it isn’t that simple.  Most people will be organized for a finite period of time, and return to the more constant state of chaos.  It all goes back to training.  Being tidy is something that first must be learned, then practiced and ultimately is an on-going process.  Being tidy is a mind-set and in order to get there, we really need to examine the way that we are currently thinking.  Marie Kondo proposes the drastic, “get it done,” approach.  She believes you can’t go at being tidy little by little, you’ve got to attack your lack of tidiness with gusto!  That way, you have a clear "before" and "after" picture.  In her experience, her clients never revert back to chaos because the drastic results manifest a life changing moment that is firmly etched in the memory forever. 

Like most skills, tidying can be broken down into just a few basic components.  The skill of tidying requires only two:  the first is making a decision whether or not to keep something, the second is to decide where to put it the thing you are keeping.  The keeping of things is actually the biggest challenge.  Many people store similar things in several different spaces.  That’s where Ms. Kondo comes to the rescue with a clear step by step manual.  If you go about tidying and organizing room by room, you will simply be spinning your wheels.  The process won’t adhere.  She recommends that you gather up all similar items in one place and attack it with gusto.  It is the only way you will experience the mental shift, by seeing all that you actually have and contrasting that by your actual needs.  

And that’s the rub of it isn’t it?  What do you really need?  How do you decide what items to keep?  Marie Kondo throughout her beautiful manual on tidying, keeps referring to items as almost sentient beings.  We put a lot of extra little attachments into our possessions, and that’s really the root of the problem.  All those possessions, all those things distract us from our own truth.  Being tidy isn’t about storing thing away.  You cannot organize clutter.  Storage is just a temporary means of hiding your disorganization.  If you want to truly embrace a tidy life, you have to be willing to address your own feelings towards your possessions.   You have to be willing to let go.  

Letting go is the most important part.  You can’t even think of putting things away until you have finished with discarding the things that you no longer need.  You have to have a picture of what you want for yourself and your life if you want to really know what you need.  It seems hard, but Marie Kondo states that it’s actually very simple.  The ultimate goal in every life is the same – to be happy. For your possessions to contribute to that goal, they too, need to make you happy.  

That’s why Ms. Kondo makes it clear in her manual, that tidying really needs to be a solo process.  You really can’t involve other people in your life because what makes you happy is ultimately your business.  Especially parents can have trouble watching their children let go of toys and mementos from the past.  The past may have been shared but the burden of responsibility for the possessions usually falls on only one person’s shoulders.  Often those toys and mementos are given as “gifts” to younger siblings or the parents.  Unless the item brings them useful joy, you are not giving a gift, you are giving a burden.  Likewise you cannot under any circumstances assume the responsibility for disposing of someone else’s things.  You cannot ever really know what brings happiness to someone other than yourself.   Especially when you have trouble knowing what brings you happiness!

Of one thing that Ms. Kondo is sure, the process of tidying will bring you happiness.  Particularly when she lays it out for you step by step.  Start with the simple category of clothes, then books, papers, those pesky sundry items and then the sentimental items and all those mementos.  Most people would think it would make the most sense to start with the hardest first, but not in this case.  Tidying is a skill that must first be learned and then practiced.  You can’t expect it to be a working on-going process if you haven’t given yourself an opportunity to learn how to do it by allowing practice and letting yourself make some mistakes.  

Not that I would know anything about tidying mistakes…hmm…

What I can tell you is that I myself now have eight bags of clothes for charity.  And…folding socks makes me expressly happy!