Spirits, Books & Learning Magick

Just a bit on how I learned magick & my views on learning it

When I set my heart on learning magick,

I had no idea what I was getting into. I had turned away from a religion that meant the world to me because I was denied something I felt was immeasurably important, that I hadn’t done anything so wrong it should be reasonably withheld.

I was eleven or ten or six or…kneeling at the bedside praying, reading books on dogma I didn’t understand, writing poems convincing myself that lying wasn’t the same as breathing, begging a god who was always looking the other way for calm.


When I began learning magick,

it wasn’t through a lens of “magick,” or even “magic.” It was books that put manipulation at their center. Understanding, or trying to, the principles behind manipulative tactics in interpersonal interactions. I read a bit on hypnosis too, but it never grabbed me. It was learning to control the self, and how that extended to others that most moved me. Related I’m sure, was how deeply I valued being able to convincingly lie for a while.

I wanted to learn astral projection. I wanted to learn how to fly, and how to move energy in intense (fiction-focused) ways. I wanted to be a “witch” more than I wanted to hold onto a religion that had scorned me for existing, that had kept me bound in the throws of fear for so long.

It wasn’t through books or spirits. It was in stillness. It was the quiet between the loudness of breath, speech, and movement. It was counting the heartbeats that sped and slowed in fear and calm. It was the fear of shadows loitering overhead and the plunge into the dark.

The first four years of my practice, because by then I was actively and intentionally practicing magick, were sans spirits and sans occult guidebooks. I read a little on spirituality, and definitely on philosophy, quite a bit on myths as well. But that’s because I was (and am) interested in those things, not because I was seeking a certain path or didn’t know where to go.

Of course, it can’t really be said that I did know where I was going, and I’m not sure I can say for sure now that I know where this path winds through but I wasn’t lost. I was limited in materials then too, trying to make my way through manifesting and energy work, trying to understand what would become, and was even then and even before, the foundations of my craft. Which is not only the foundation of my craft, but also so much of who I am, these things are impossibly intertwined (as they should be).

If at eleven I decided to list my grievances of the bible, at fourteen I wondered about atheism, and at sixteen began reading on spirits. There was overlap, between the demon-summoning and begging, desperate, prayers and worship to the god I had revered for years prior. In this time, most of my focus was on energy work and meditation.

The first magick I actively participated in was important to me, it was empowering and in many ways intense. But it was nothing like calling a spirit into my space, like being a conduit for it, or hearing the energy roar and quiet into a calm overwhelming.

The first spirit I set out to call intentionally and did call into a ritual was Dantalion. And among the careful moments of that ritual I’d planned and cautiously executed, I was thrown into another world. One where spirits exist not in a void or vacuum, but as welcomed through us into our world just as we exist through them as part of theirs.

For years, I relied on Dantalion’s teachings primarily to guide me through this craft and practice. So much at the beginning, as had been the case before reaching out to him, was feeling adrift as though there was so much in the mundane and magic worlds both that I had no answers for. I was forbidden from reading certain (many) texts in these years as well. Something that has gotten mixed results when I’ve told others (mostly, though, disbelief, doubt, and scorn).

But why bother to practice in a way that is not ours, mine? How can someone else’s beliefs or removed judgements on my path be more important to me than mine?

Several years into my practice, then, I began discussing with others on similar walks about their paths, about our shared experiences, the types of magick we enjoyed–or even begrudgingly partook of–that resonated. And not even then did I begin to pick my way though occult books, not long revered authors’ words and not contemporary views or guides.

It has long been, for me, reliance on myself, on spirits I’ve welcomed in, and those people around me who have offered stories passed that has brought my magick to life. It was much more recently that I began to contemplate the works of others who have walked this and similar paths before me.

I believe people should not frequent tables to which they have brought nothing.

For that reason, I believe it is crucial for people to form their own views, opinions, and more often than not collect their own experiences before sitting down to learn of others. I, of course, as someone who loves literature, reading, and understanding others’ perspectives, advocate dearly for consuming knowledge and learning from others. However, how can we ever hope to be in conversation with a text–or its author–if we do not have anything with which to converse?

Blind consumption of others’ stories, and acceptance of them ought be reserved for people we trust blindly.


People like to ask how to get started with magick, which books people have read, which resources they have seen, which rituals are the most powerful, which spirits the quickest, what is “the best”? These questions are entirely contrary to what and how I have learned, which is to learn first through the self.

To understand what compels you in the mundane world, what brings you closer to the magical. These are the things which should be exalted as a path into the magical is lit. Even in teachings that seek to standardize avenues of learning and texts consumed, anyone successful understands that people are not all the same and thus cannot all grow when treated as if the external is the only thing which matters, is a catalyst for growth, or otherwise should inform how learning is conducted.

Understanding of the self, however fleeting it may be, is a greater key to your magick and a likely path, than any number of spirits or books can provide. There are many ways to know yourself, at least to dip your feet into the pool of knowledge (of self and others), my suggestion to anyone who wants to learn magick would always be to start with the self.

What has brought you to this path, and when shed, what remains of yourself to follow deeper into it?

Glasya-Labolas: Dark Huntress

white clouds on blue sky

Glasya Labolas

“Author of Bloodshed and Manslaughter”
Winged beast of night
Worm-addled prey at your claws
Blood dripping down spines
Power simmering consumes
All
Lying on ritual floor
Magician included
Eyes alight with flames
Power rich in your clutches

Mistress of the depths of murder
Sadism, torture fair punishment
Fear a meal for the soul

Glasya Labolas,
You who are blessed
with fire deep and pure
Who turns on magicians in a blink
Loud and coiled
Bringer of pain, electric and dry

Your title earned
Bloodshead and manslaughter
Laid at the feet of my altar
and the home of your prisoners

-Laurel Spider

Please note, I’ll be using feminine pronouns for this post.

Formalities

Glasya-Labolas is known as a President in the Ars Goetia. She is associated frequently with strong cursework and baneful magick. “Author of bloodshed and manslaughter” is a particularly potent form of imagery attached to her name. Glasya-Labolas is truly a dark entity, very much a “demon” in many senses of the word. She reeks of power and confidence.

Glasya-Labolas is commonly associated with the element of fire, the color orange, the planet Mercury, and the South. Her enn is as follows: Elan tepar secore on ca Glasya-Labolas.

Glasya-Labolas & I

My experience with Glasya-Labolas is a bit limited in comparison to my experience with other spirits, it’s really confined to two instances within my practice. In the first case a curse and in the second a wake up call about the occult.

My first ritual with Glasya-Labolas was held late at night, hours past sundown and hours before sunup. I had been considering options for a little while and landed at a curse I believed and hoped would be stronger than many other previous workings I had done then. There were some people who were acting in ways I did not appreciate and I resolved to curse them, this closely follows my Halloween Ritual with Sitri (mentioned here, Sitri: Prince of Lust) where I really became intimately familiar with scary rituals.

So I held the ritual, sitting on the floor of my dorm room and turning out electric tea lights as seconds ticked by and they felt oppressively brighter and brighter despite the darkness of the room in the middle of the night, in a dark sky city, with the shades drawn. Along the way toward darkness and the “calmness” of ritual settling in, icicles cropped up. Running cold drops of water down my arms, pricking at my throat, pushing against me and pressing through my body.

Opening my book now I shiver and feel enchanted anew looking down at these notes from a few years ago. The book’s ribbon at just the right page, so I turn it back to begin at the start of the ritual and read through. In the coming days, out and doing mundane tasks, I felt the prick of an icicle at my back drag down. I noted then that it had begun in earnest. Twice more a similar feeling before the final ritual of the set. Results are never lacking in my experience with Glasya-Labolas, not this time and not the next.

The next time I met Glasya-Labolas was when a very similar feeling of all consuming, lightning quick icicles went through me as I stood in front of cabinet doing entirely mundane tasks. And next, when she interrupted one of my rituals. And next, in the very late hours of the night materializing out of no where and showing a form I didn’t recognize but understood as her. These three moments were all connected and a part of the same thing. They shared suffocating, eerie, chilling feelings. And it was absolutely a turning point in my craft.

To Glasya-Labolas, I thank you for all you have taught me. Respect, uncertainty, the power to change.

Glasya-Labolas’ Appearances & Specialties

Appearance

There are two times I felt I “saw” Glasya-Labolas. The first was a part of my curse and during the first ritual where I called to and met Glasya-Labolas. She knelt before me, as I sat on the floor hunched over notes in the dark and writing with the wrong color pen for candle light (real or feigned). Long, black hair with thick waves. Deep, shining black eyes. Shades, shadows, darkness pulled to a tight cloak. Perhaps a sword.

The second time I saw Glasya-Labolas was at night, a surprise to me, and oppressing in terms of energy. A dog appeared, floppy eared and as if made of incense smoke or clouds. Wings held open to some degree, but neither open, closed, nor moving. Because I hadn’t really done research too thoroughly before this–and even then it had been a substantial amount of time since I’d intentionally met with Glasya-Labolas for the cursework, it took me discussing with another magician and days, if not weeks to make the connection that this appearance is a common enough one.

Even now, having looked a truly limited amount into Glasya-Labolas myself, I typed her name into the search bar to make sure of the imagery commonly associated with her. When I realized after though, I felt no relief at the SPG. Anything I could have felt was overshadowed by the energy in the room those last few meetings.

Energy

Strength and power fill the air where I’ve met with Glasya-Labolas. There is no place for meaningless reassurances–although I was guided throughout the ritual in certain directions–or colorful extra language. When I’ve met Glasya-Labolas, there has been a job and it has been set out to be accomplished, stripped of frills and thinned out to bear the truth of the matter.

Cold. In a much more tense and pressing way than I’ve felt coldness with other spirits. Very finely pointed coldness. A coldness that pierces your soul, feels like it’s clawing into your body and shooting through your organs and bones alike (not always, but it leaves a lasting impression).

It’s a suffocating kind of darkness as it surrounds and swarms. It’s as if all light is too much, like sight can be limited to feeling. Righteous for some reason is another of the feelings I got from Glasya-Labolas when working with her.

Specialties

“Author of Bloodshed and Manslaughter” should really say it all. But further to that, curses, intimidation, divination.

Let’s Talk Money Magic

So, Saturday night is coming up tomorrow (and it’s the first weekend of the month), which makes it perfect for my money manifesting rituals. Generally, I’m a bit hesitant to talk on my own rituals, because I design all the rituals I preform myself but this is pretty simple and has been helpful to me in the past. Whether it’s trying to get a new job secured, an interest in a good bonus, looking for some overtime as an hourly worker, eagerness for some extra cash to appear, or anything else, wealth rituals matter.

In truth, I didn’t hold my first true “money magic” ritual until last year, which is part of why it’s something newer (not job hunting, but money as it is, alone) in my list of rituals for hire offered. I was kind of intimidated the first time I held this type of ritual; it was the first time for this new category and I was eager to reap the rewards of it. While I do believe that desperation has (or can, at least, have) a fascinating role in magic and witchcraft, I did not go into that ritual with a real, tangible, or desperate need. I was just looking for a bit of comfort and to try out something new and different in my practice.

At this point, I’ve been practicing ritualist magick for over a decade! So, I’m rather familiar now with sitting down and having before me something I’ve never done before. It was exciting, and a tiny bit nerve-wracking as well.

It was a Saturday and I’d been in conversation with another couple practitioners about days and times (planetary correspondences) with regard to money specifically. I figured, since I wasn’t planning on inviting any spirit(s), that I needed to find a way to set the ambiance. It had been some time since I’d actually moved myself into my ritual area, affectionally called “Temple” even if it isn’t quite at the dictionary-level definition of such a place, and held a true ritual–as opposed to a quiet meditation or just energy directing–for something I wanted without a spirit present.

Ingredients

Have a look at what I brought to the first of these rituals (those in italics have been featured in later rituals):

shallow focus photography of four leaf clover
  • 2 green tea light candles
  • 1 half-size, tall green candle
  • Incense: I believe a stick of green-colored jasmine
  • Crystals/stones
    • Bigger: Kyanite, kunzite, pyrite, dragon’s blood jasper
    • Towers: Moss agate, kunzite, another
    • A selenite “wand,” a long cylinder shape with curved edges
    • A little glass jar of hematite crystals
    • A little stone, with one of those natural holes going through it
  • 2 dragon heads
    • Beautiful resin pieces I’ve custom ordered, filled with stones and the like
  • A resin “fairy door”
  • 2 bay leaves
  • Money
    • 1 larger bill, 1 medium bill
    • Coins of varying values placed atop the dollar bills
  • Tarot cards (Smith-Waite, Centennial edition)
    • 4 of Pentacles, Ace of Pentacles, 10 of Pentacles
  • A small (torn), blank thick piece of white paper and sharpies
  • A Spotify playlist!
  • My ID & debit card
  • Some items that belong to Sitri and typically reside on his altar
  • Different variations of dollar bills and coins
  • Cloves, more bay leaves, salt, water
  • A pendulum
  • Additional/different incense, rocks, crystals, and tarot cards

What you’ll find about the items I gathered and placed onto my altar, is that many are personal to me. I’m a firm believer in magic being something that comes from within. Something that circulates into the air around us and then grows with our breath into becoming what we desire (of it, of/for ourselves, etc.). I strive to make my rituals somewhere I feel comfortable, somewhere my mood suits the tone of the goal, and somewhere I feel myself. While rigid rules and regulations regarding magic and similarly called craft have a place, I prefer to go the way I feel called to before indulging in others’ carefully regulated rituals.

These ingredients will not be necessary to all successful money magick castings. Instead, you should explore the items in your own home and practice that resonate with you, your ideas of abundance, and your practice of the craft. Perhaps coins, bills, and bay leaves are important; or perhaps it’s a set of green candles and a statue of some kind that make it onto your altar. Magick is what we make of it, and pretty trinkets are never where your magick comes from–you are.

My suggestion, of the listed ingredients, would be physical currency, a candle or two, bay leaves, cloves, and something personal to you (something that represents you). However, this still isn’t something that need to be followed to the letter. The ritual described in this post is one of many, each slightly different to each other, each personalized by the inspiration of the moment. Whatever you have on hand, whatever you feel is needed, or best left out, that is what’s right for you. A clove, bay leaf, crystals…these things will not be what makes or breaks any ritual founded on personal energy and power, as this ritual is.

Ritual

Let’s get into this! So, all things appropriate scattered around the altar and dressed as one dresses for such rituals, I took my place in Temple and set about lighting candles, turning off lights, and getting the music started. I try to begin rituals, especially those without any spirits present, with a decent mediation.

Once focused, there’s a moment to pause and consider if everything is as it should be. Is the music still right? Are the candles where I want them? Does everything look like it’s somewhere it belongs? Do I feel like I’m in the right place? Etc. Making adjustment as needed for a few moments, soon everything is as it should be and ritual continues on to the next stage.

And the next stage is…meditation! There’s something great to be said for meditation. The stillness, the power that fills in the void, the voiceless echoes of energy banging around, the way you feel the swell of magic rising and becoming so “tangible.” Not all meditations are this way, but in ritual I tend to try to lead them there. When I feel myself, when I feel like power is whatever Sitri’s not-description of it is, is filling me to the brim and running freely from my fingertips and not-claws, I let the energy move through me, move me.

When we listen to music, when we become possessed, when we breathe without restriction, the body moves. So I let my body move as it likes as I breathe and listen to the music and sit quietly in temple, staring into the candles’ growing flames and watching as both physical items and non-real shadows flicker and run across the altar. And when I feel comfortable in this distortion of reality, the shift from where we usually walk, and the feeling of infinite power that drenches the mock-quiet of temple, I make my move.

A calm, steady focus on each aspect of the ritual is next. Each tarot card, each stone, each coin and dollar bill. And with each, the accumulation of their energy into the altar, into myself, into the air around me and “held” within Temple. Everything has an energy, ascribed or inherent. This time is set aside to parse out the sounds/words to the music, to breathe feeling or life or direction into this moment of time where everything is amplified. A subtle shift in gaze from the 6 of Wands to the 10 of Pentacles, a slight movement to better look upon a stone tower, or a closing of the eyes and deep breath before looking, meaningfully, importantly, to and between the feeling of what is in this moment and the debit card laid out among bay leaves, candles, and cloves.

What is ritual if not coming to terms with ourselves?

How have my rituals changed?

I’ve changed my go-to ingredients a little, and I now have a go-to sigil and a couple of incantations and/or spells to choose from when I’m in ritual. I also have made the choice to call Sitri into my wealth rituals as he was eager to participate once and now is more than welcome and appreciated.

copper colored coin lot

Abundance Banishing Clairaudience Creating Curse Dantalion Death Demon Divination Dreams Energy Evocation Focalor Furcalor God Goetia Grounding Halloween Healing Health Invocation Jinn Magic Magick Manifestation Meditation Mind Obsession Poem Possession Premonition Protection Results Rite Ritual Shadows Shadow Work Sitri Spirit Communication Story Tarot Reading & Cards Trance Visions Visualization Wealth

What About Offerings?

There’s an idea of offerings & What we must give to get

In this world of spirits, people will sometimes fall under the impression that to get or to receive, we must first give something to a spirit. This idea, in and of itself, is something each of us should contemplate on our own; something we should all reach our own conclusions about, as this is an important deliberation for each of us and becomes fundamental to how we view spirit-human relationships.

What I will say is that fruits and wine and incense and whatever others statues and material offerings we find placed upon our altars, these are not the things which drive our relationships with them. It is instead entirely us, ourselves, who enhance or dull our relationships with them.

Even a spirit which might have a personal vendetta against someone, if we take an example, might find themselves more willing to offer help if that person becomes dedicated, to any varying extent of the word. The reason for this is not because that person lights a candle every fourth day, or because that person says something reverential about the spirit to others; the reason is far simpler and something that should be internalized instead of read and held as fact or the an opinion of another.

Offerings made

…should be offerings of yourself.

What this means is not that you need to dedicate a finger or a spleen to a spirit, and it’s not either than you need to fill a cauldron to the brim with blood to place on the altar. It’s much more simple. Offerings are always meant to be of yourself. They are an amalgamation of your time, thought, energy, interest, etc. Whether candy, poems, or (yes) blood, offerings are meant to be displays of your dedication to a spirit.

Not your interest in what they can provide for you — offerings are not materials levied in a deal or trade, they are given as tokens of respect and interest. Thus, when we give offerings we should strive to be giving an offering of ourselves, regardless of whether it’s coins in a dish, blood over a sigil, a fruit from the store, or simply our energy.

If we aren’t making offerings of ourselves, not necessarily laden with pain or suffering, but that come truly from us as opposed to being inane objects we’ve carelessly collected to leave as offerings, then truly what is the point? While pretty trinkets and expensive incenses can be nice on their own, is that the relationship you’re seeking to have with spirits? One where you go out and find or order nice things without thought? Or, are you more interested in cultivating something a bit deeper, something “meaningful” (by my understanding of the word, though yours may be different)?

Offerings are not just about what you dig out to put on the altar; they are about what you are willing to give (to do) and what of yourself becomes given in the process. It isn’t a question of intention, money spent, time expended, but rather of meaning.

Offerings & Worth

What an offering is worth is something that seems to matter to people newer to magic and/or evocations. It’s also something I find is a fun discussion to have with more experienced practitioners. The reason for these things, I think, is because there are many layers to offerings and they are something personal to each of us. From ancient to present times, people have made offerings to their gods (and others). And still, there is so much question about them. About what is “right” or “wrong,” what can be given or not, what an offering is worth…(and why).

There will be, of course, those who disagree with my view. However, I think it’s important to at least consider as many perspectives as we can with regard to these things and arrive, always, at our own conclusions. So, what is the worth of an offering?

The worth of an offering is not only decided by how valuable it is/would be to us, and not only decided by how valuable we believe it should be to a spirit. And it is not always determined in the same way either. While wine and blood may be the “best” offering in one situation, perhaps a meditation with a certain spirit in mind is the “best” offering in another instance. Whether we offer sweets, sex, or blood is also not always relevant to worth; and neither is a pound of flesh (metaphor) inherently more valuable than a single drop of blood.

But the truth is, in my view, that offerings are a lot more about our efforts than anything else. This isn’t constricted to any one way of putting effort into something. What they are worth though, that depends on your relationship with the spirit you’re making offerings to, what you’ve gone through to attain the offering, what it means to you, what you intend it to mean once offered, and more.

As an Exchange

Some people ask whether they can exchange, or trade, a stick of cinnamon and half a glass of alcohol for something like an obsession or a some obscene amount of money or some similar feat. Others wonder if lighting a candle for 6 days, burning it half an hour a night will be sufficient to bring them what they want. And still others wonder if, when working with spirits, offerings must be made at all. The truth to these queries is that offerings are something personal, something that can be as intimate or public as you would like, but they should always connect you to the spirit.

In terms of exchanges: It doesn’t matter whether you drag in moon water and toss several dozen kinds of herbs into it and then wash your altar with it before laying down a basket of fruits and desserts. It doesn’t matter if you dedicate half an hour before or after your ritual to reading pretty poems to a spirit. It doesn’t matter if you don’t offer anything substantial enough that you consider it an offering. While all of these might have a place in your practice–or none of them–what matters isn’t the thing itself, but rather what is held within it.

Offerings are as important as we make them. If we collect something to set aside as an offering because we know a certain spirit likes a certain type of offering, then we should make sure that it’s brought to the altar with that respect, not just because we read somewhere that Dantalion likes [almonds] and so “here they are.”

Offerings should be made from you

…to the spirit.

If the spirit wants something, you are incredibly unlikely to be the spirit’s only method of attaining it. Instead, it is that you are the one giving something, offering something that makes the impact. You are the variable here. Make that meaningful when you give offerings.

Do not treat them as an exchange. When a god, demon, angel, or other spirit wants to help you, a sliced fruit, a bowl of fancy chocolates, a burning stick of incense, a perfectly colored candle…none of these things alone are going to matter. Make offerings of yourself, of your heart so to speak simply because you want to. While they may show a spirit dedication, they are not a guarantee of anything; thus, do not treat them as if they ought to be.

atmospheric candles and incense on a braided mat


The Weight of Equality

Let me ask you, does your plate of pennies and bowl of overripened apples have an equal worth to that raise you just asked for?

If you contemplated an answer to that question, you’re not understanding the point of this post, which is that offerings are not about deals and trades, they’re simply an offering we make, they are not meant to be lorded over spirits as “carrots” and not meant as negotiating tactics. Offerings often accompany ceremonies, routines, prayers, worship, remembrances, and many other “rituals.” They are not meant to put you on equal footing with a spirit, such a thing doesn’t come from pretty trinkets or wandering smoke.

There is a time and a place for careful negotiations to be made, but making offerings is simply a giving of yourself, in whatever form that takes to a spirit to whom you are respectful, grateful, or merely wish to include in your practice. I say offerings are of the self because we should not make them randomly and they are not made through other people; we are the medium through which they are given and in being this medium, we participate in the offering itself.

white lily flower

Abundance Banishing Clairaudience Creating Curse Dantalion Death Demon Divination Dreams Energy Evocation Focalor Furcalor God Goetia Grounding Halloween Healing Health Invocation Jinn Magic Magick Manifestation Meditation Mind Obsession Poem Possession Premonition Protection Results Rite Ritual Shadows Shadow Work Sitri Spirit Communication Story Tarot Reading & Cards Trance Visions Visualization Wealth