• GETTING STARTED IN THE CRAFT

    From Ty Holder@RICKSBBS to all on Fri Jul 25 07:19:25 2025
    GETTING STARTED IN THE CRAFT
    by Fiona Oceanstar (fi@whittaker.rice.edu)

    Western vs. Eastern mystery traditions --> one of the first
    things you need to conceptualize, if you're interested in
    witchcraft, is that it's a WESTERN mystery tradition. The
    important dichotomy here is outer-vs.-inner. In the Eastern
    traditions, the adept commonly seeks some sort of mystical union
    with the great Oneness, which implies a withdrawal from the
    common, everyday life of human beings, and a focus on one's
    internal processes. In the Western traditions, the adept is very
    much a part of the activities and community of humankind. A witch
    does indeed have a special awareness of their inner world and
    their connection with the all-permeating Oneness (Goddess), but a
    witch is also a member of society--a farmer, a healer, a parent, a
    warrior, a writer, a scientist, an artist, a computer programmer,
    etc. In becoming a witch, you don't dissociate your spiritual
    life from the rest of your life--rather, you apply the principles
    of the Craft in everything you do. You seek to take what you have
    learned on an inner level and MANIFEST that awareness on an outer
    level. This is not to be confused with the Christian dichotomy of
    works vs. faith. Witches don't have to BELIEVE in anything--they
    are much too concrete, too practical for such notions. The
    rituals of the Craft all get down to the same thing: sanctifying
    the everyday activities of your life. When a witch makes love,
    writes a program, cooks a meal, rides a bike, these are all the
    rituals of the Goddess.

    What to do:
    --learn some simple form of meditation, and practice it often,
    the idea being to master the art of a QUIET MIND. In order to be
    attentive to the world around you, you have to learn to let go of
    the inner chattering.

    T.S. Eliot (in "East Coker") puts it this way:
    "...the mind is conscious, but conscious of nothing--
    I said to my soul, be still, and wait without hope
    For hope would be hope for the wrong thing; wait without love
    For love would be love of the wrong thing; there is yet faith
    But the faith and the love and the hope are all in the
    waiting.
    Wait without thought, for you are not ready for thought:
    So the darkness shall be the light, and the stillness the
    dancing."

    Listen to everything. Above all, listen to your body.
    Starhawk recommends a regular program of exercise, and I agree.
    Again, it quiets the mind.

    --get in touch with the movements of the Earth and the Moon.
    Get a calender that has Moon phases, and make a point of knowing
    what phase you're in, at all times. Notice the differences
    between the dark of the moon (empty but ready for new birth), the
    new moon (time for initiating things), the waxing moon (growing in
    power), the full moon (peak of intensity), and the waning moon
    (fading, turning inward, consolidating gains). If you are a
    woman, pay attention to your menstrual cycle, and how it matches
    up with the phases of the moon. If you are a man, get in touch
    with the cycle of a female friend or lover. Get out under the
    moon as much as possible. When She is full, lie in a grassy field
    or on a rooftop and LISTEN to her.

    --pay attention to the natural world: the seasons, the plants,
    the insects, everything around you. If you can, go out hiking and
    camping as much as possible--alone, or with someone else who can
    be silent and observant. Even in the city, even in a very
    restricted urbanized environment, you can see things of nature all
    around you. Try to walk to work, if possible. Go out in your
    back yard and sit on the grass and look at the world close up.
    When inside, observe your pets and your fellow human beings. We
    are all flesh: we have smells, we have appetites. When you have
    sex, try to forget the cultural context (lace underwear, etc.) and
    focus instead on the body, the pleasures of the body. When you
    play music, let your body dance.


    What to read:
    --for the rational side of you --> Margot Adler's _Drawing
    Down the Moon_ (a good overview of many pagan systems)
    --for the spiritual side --> Starhawk's _Spiral Dance_

    But reading is less important than observing. You will be
    tempted to try to become a witch by reading, because those of us
    w/ big brains and big educations always operate that way. Try to
    keep a balance between hours spent reading, and hours spent
    walking in the woods.

    Other references:
    --Joseph Campbell's PBS series on mythology is now available
    on video. He's a good storyteller and has a wonderful philosophy
    of how to incorporate myth into your life.

    Objects/tools/toys:
    --anything can be a tool for working magic and gaining
    understanding (a leaf, a stone, a pen, a plastic dinosaur)--it's
    all in what you invest it with
    --be slow to acquire toys (blades, wands, etc.)--it's better
    if they find you, then your finding them
    --more important than a lot of gidgets, is setting aside a
    special place in your home as an altar. Start with candles and
    incense, and invent simple rituals: lighting a candle while you
    read, burning incense while you meditate.
    --because it's nonverbal in form, the Tarot is actually a
    better source for learning about the Craft, than any book. Seek
    out one of the less Christianized decks--I personally like the
    Barbara Walker and the Motherpeace.

    Sacred space:
    --the first formal "magic" you should learn, is how to set
    aside sacred space. Pick a place in your home or your yard where
    you will practice this, and practice often, even if at first it
    makes you feel self-conscious.


    I realize that a lot of this sounds terribly vague. I used to
    get frustrated when I read books about the Craft, and they didn't
    have, like, RECIPES to perform. The hard part of it is, that you
    learn more from the Goddess, than you do from any human being.
    But that doesn't mean you can't do some simple spells, right from
    the very beginning: both Adler's and Starhawk's books have some
    straightforward descriptions of working magic.

    Don't get hung up on issues of reality, or the unknown, or the
    verifiable, or whatever. Just DO. It's far more important to TRY
    things, than it is to READ about them.

    Ty Holder
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
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