Archive for 2015

Fire Divination Method

Fire Divination Method
Posted by Jessica Jewett No Comments »

Bonfire Using fire for divination during Samhain goes along with the tradition of lighting bonfires. At sundown on October 31, bonfires were lit on the hilltops and burned all night while people celebrated, feasted, did various rituals to honor the dead from the previous year, and so forth. Among many other divination traditions, using the bonfire to see visions was quite useful during the night of the Samhain festival. It’s believed in Celtic and Gaelic tradition that the veil between the living world and spirit world is thinnest at Samhain, which is why divination became so popular at this period of the year.

This is essentially like scrying with a mirror or with water. You may do it with a bonfire, a fireplace, or even a single candle. The only thing that matters is you have some source of flame in a dark space, so it’s suggested that you do it during the night.

You’ll want to be still and quiet sitting before your fire. Distractions need to be removed. Some people need total silence. Some need soft melodic music. The point is to create a dark environment where your only source of concentration is on the fire. I was always taught in my family traditions that environment is important with doing rituals, spells, or divination. If you’re uncomfortable or distracted, it’ll mess with the strength and direction of your intentional energy.

Gaze at the fire, letting your vision go soft, but don’t stare hard at it. You want to let yourself go loose and fuzzy as you watch the fire. Focus on opening your senses. For me, it helps to visualize myself as a blooming flower. Feel the fire’s warmth, smell the smoke, listen to the popping and spitting logs, taste the wood in the air, etc. Open yourself to the fire while gazing at it through unfocused eyes. This process can take time. Don’t let yourself get frustrated because then you’ll have to start over again since frustration is a distraction. Some people divine for minutes. Others for hours.

If there are visions for you, then you might see them in the smoke, in the flames, or in your mind’s eye. Be careful of succumbing to imagination, however. A true vision will unfold like a mystery and you probably won’t understand it at first. Imagination will stutter, start and stop, or shift depending on your inner thought processes.

Immediately after instinct tells you to come out of the divination, you must write down everything you witnessed, felt, etc. Some of you will put this in your Book of Shadows if you’re Wiccan (I’m not). Others will put it in a different journal. Regardless, always date your divination sessions and record the environmental details, like where you were, the temperature, the moon phase, etc. This will be important for establishing patterns as you do more in the future.

What did you see? Well, that’s up to your own interpretation system. You’ll get better at it with time. Use these sessions to improve your life and the lives of those around you whenever possible in the year to come.

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Candle Wax Divination Method

Candle Wax Divination Method
Posted by Jessica Jewett 2 Comments »

Candles It’s believed in Celtic and Gaelic tradition that the veil between the living world and spirit world is thinnest at Samhain, which is why divination became so popular at this period of the year. I’ve heard of this particular method used in my family line in the past.

Tools

  • Candles
  • Bowl
  • Cold water
  • Method

    Fill a bowl with water. The bowl should be deep and wide enough to allow candle wax drippings to take shape. Putting the bowl in the freezer for a few minutes will help but don’t let the water solidify into ice.

    Take the bowl of water and your candles to your altar or a place in your home where you can work comfortably in peace. Hearth witches or kitchen witches might consider working in the kitchen. Garden witches might consider working in the garden. That sort of thing. In my family tradition, environment mattered to the success of the divination. Working at night is best too.

    Candles work best when made of natural materials but should at the very least produce a decent amount of drippiness. I generally use white candles since white is an easy substitute if you don’t have desired colors. You may coordinate the color to the subject of your divination question if you choose–green for money, red for love, etc.–but it’s not totally necessary. Our ancestors doing this particular divination method didn’t have easy access to colored candles like we do. They used beeswax, tallow, etc.

    Light the candle and let it warm up pretty good. I have better luck with pillars than tapers but it’s just a matter of personal preference. While you wait for the flame to do its work, concentrate on your question. When the wax gets melted enough, ask your question aloud and then pour the drippings from the candle into the bowl. The cold water will make it harden fast.

    Study the shape of the melted wax in the water. This is where you’ll need interpretation skills. I’ve been doing it for a long time and I never had a key for deciphering shapes in the wax but there are some suggestions online if you’re new at it.

  • Butterfly – freedom, rebirth, soul symbol
  • Cat – mystery
  • Crescent – spirituality
  • Diamond – gift, partnership
  • Egg – birth, starting something new
  • Frog – money
  • Hand – your desires will come to fruition soon
  • Heart – love
  • Hourglass – have patience
  • Leaves – success
  • Lighthouse – guidance
  • Lightening – a sudden occurrence
  • Mask – secrets
  • Star – wishes fulfilled
  • Tree – unity
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    The Myths and Truth of Samhain

    The Myths and Truth of Samhain
    Posted by Jessica Jewett 1 Comment »

    Samhain Ritual If you’re interested in the Celtic or Gaelic festival of Samhain, please observe it correctly. October is not actually Samhain’s month. The festival begins on the night of the 31st of October but the month of Samhain is November. Its beginning corresponds with secular Halloween and that’s why we think of it as an October thing today. In modern society, Halloween is spreading into all of October because, in my opinion regarding America, November is all about Thanksgiving.

    Here’s the basic truth.

    Firstly, Samhain is not pronounced sam-hane. Don’t do that. It’s disrespectful to keep mispronouncing words after you’ve been properly taught. Irish-speaking people tend to say sow-an (my source is Trinity College Dublin) and some dialects of Gaelic-speaking people have said it’s like sahv-in, sow-een, shahvin, sowin (with “ow” like in “glow”). The Scots Gaelic spelling is Samhuin or Samhuinn. Since my people were mostly Irish, I stick with the example Trinity College Dublin offered.

    Samhain is something that often got misidentified before as a “Celtic Death God”, which is not true. There was no such god and the story was, in fact, invented in the 18th century and propagated largely by Protestants nervous about pagans. Samhain is simply the initiation of the winter, the end of the harvest period, and a time to honor the dead in the pre-Christian Irish calendar. Traditions reflect the beliefs of Irish and some Scottish people in “in between” times when seasonal changes coincide with the unseen world and the death of the earth. The last day of October into the first day of November is an in between time, between life and death.

    The pre-Christian Irish and some Scottish calendars were basically divided into two parts – the light half of the year beginning at Beltane (May) and the dark half of the year beginning at Samhain (November). There were other festivals coinciding with agricultural phases, of course, but the year began at Samhain and turned to the other half at Beltane. Winter and summer. Samhain is the end of the harvest period and the beginning of winter when people stayed closer to home and hearth.

    In Modern Irish the name is Samhain, in Scottish Gaelic Samhainn/Samhuinn, and in Manx Gaelic Sauin. These are also the names of November in each language, shortened from Mí na Samhna (Irish), Mì na Samhna (Scottish Gaelic) and Mee Houney (Manx). The night of 31 October (Halloween) is Oíche Shamhna (Irish), Oidhche Shamhna (Scottish Gaelic) and Oie Houney (Manx), all meaning “Samhain night”. 1 November, or the whole festival, may be called Lá Samhna (Irish), Là Samhna (Scottish Gaelic) and Laa Houney (Manx), all meaning “Samhain day”.

    These names all come from the Old Irish samain, samuin or samfuin [?sa??n?] all referring to 1 November (latha na samna: ‘samhain day’), and the festival and royal assembly held on that date in medieval Ireland (oenaig na samna: ‘samhain assembly’). Its meaning is glossed as ‘summer’s end’, and the frequent spelling with f suggests analysis by popular etymology as sam (‘summer’) and fuin (‘end’). The Old Irish sam is from Proto-Indo-European (PIE) *semo-; cognates include Welsh haf, Breton hañv, English summer and Old Norse sumar, all meaning ‘summer’, and the Sanskrit sáma (‘season’).

    (Source.)

    Samhain is a time to focus on and honor the dead, mirroring how the earth is going dormant like death for the cold season. Unlike Halloween, which is light-hearted and viewed as make believe, honoring the dead at Samhain is a deeply spiritual time, often solemn, and many rituals are done in private. This is how I was taught. And I remember fireplaces going in my childhood homes around the Samhain festival. Fire was an important element.

    My grandmother always made sure I understood the difference between Halloween – them – and the importance of remembering the dead, both people and the planet – us. There was definitely an us vs them mentality to many of the holidays we observed in my childhood. I remember being seven and I’d have to listen to stories about relatives I never met while putting on a ballerina tutu to go trick-or-treating with my friends. At the time, I had trouble understanding why dusty photos of long-dead relatives appeared on my grandmother’s dresser amid candles every autumn and winter. Now I recognize it for what it was – an altar. We came from Irish people who held onto the old ways and (and later mixed them with Christian ways, mostly for show). It all got passed to me too, a little seven-year-old girl putting on a tutu on Halloween and wondering why my grandmother was drilling separation of cultures into my head.

    In Octobers and Novembers of my childhood growing up under my grandmother’s care, there was a lot of feasting. It went on from Samhain through Thanksgiving. My school friends liked to come to my house because of the feasting – my grandmother fed everybody she met. I asked her why once because parents weren’t doing that at my friends’ houses and she said it was the way to appreciate harvests on the farm. While she often complained about how hard the work was on the farm (we were agricultural people for hundreds of years up until my mother’s generation), she did maintain cycles of feasts and lean times even while living in an apartment as an older woman.

    November is the time of Samhain. The festival begins at sundown on October 31 and (at least in my family tradition) goes on for several days. In Irish culture, Samhain is the full month. In my family, we eat, we set up our ancestral altars, we practice divination, and we prepare our homes for the cold half of the year. This Samhain, my grandmother will be added to my altar. She died in July.

    I am a witch who enjoys secular Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc., but my real spiritual practices lie in what’s underneath. My spiritual new year begins on November 1, not the literal new year of January 1. In fact, New Years Eve is the one secular holiday I don’t observe. I don’t go out and party. I rarely stay up until midnight to see the ball drop. My new year comes earlier and I’m much more comfortable with my traditions to mark the occasion. Of course, the evidence to say Samhain is the Celtic or Gaelic “New Year’s Day” is actually not very strong but it became a popular theory later when Celtic traditions underwent a revival in the 19th and 20th centuries. It was remarked that Samhain traditions have a running theme of new beginnings, so it became synonymous with the idea of the new year. Is it true in the pre-Christian period? I’m not sure, however, I follow my family traditions. We picked up a sorta kinda idea of Samhain the new year at some point – probably during the revival period of my great-great grandmother’s time.

    Celtic and Gaelic people are still very much living, breathing cultures. I’m not going to write off newer family traditions because they were picked up by my Celtic and Gaelic family members after the pre-Christian period. Hereditary cultures largely based in oral tradition evolve over time. They’re not static. We need to give as much study and attention to all periods of our ancestral cultures, including the state of those cultures today, and learn as much as we possibly can. Being Americans descended from Celtic and Gaelic people means we’re often viewed as not “really” of those cultures. We have to work harder on the bigger picture, not just the pre-Christian period.

    So while Halloween, in essence, came from Samhain, what’s celebrated today is what I think of as an American folk holiday. Samhain traditions are much more internalized to me because the time marks the beginning of winter when the life on earth is going dormant and we prepare for leaner times as we ask for support, love, and blessings from our ancestor spirits.

    There are a lot of stories out there about the pagan origins of trick-or-treating, of carving gourds, of giving and receiving sweets, of wearing costumes, etc., so I don’t need to rehash all of that now. I tried to talk about the things here that get overlooked in favor of the more entertaining things. Feel free to add your traditions to this post! Are you a German witch? Polish? Russian? A completely different culture? How are your dead honored?

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