Posts

Put Down the Megaphone and Pick Up the Work

There’s a strange habit that keeps popping up in the Pagan world. Every time things get messy, someone decides what we really need is another grand speech about truth, justice, unity, community, integrity, courage, harmony, balance, and whatever other noble words they can string together like beads on a rosary. The speeches get longer every year. Like a bad, dry sermon in a backwater church. Preaching civic duty.  The wisdom… not so much. You’ve seen them. We all have. Long declarations about what the community must do. Stirring language about standing together. Bullet points about values. Flowery phrases about being the guardians of something or the keepers of something else. And after all the talking? Nothing changes. Because here’s the blunt truth: communities are not fixed by speeches. They’re fixed by work. Real work. The kind that doesn’t fit neatly into a poster graphic or a newsletter essay. If people are confused about witchcraft, then teach witchcraft. If new practitione...

The Variable.

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One of the things no one tells you about magic—or about life, which frankly runs on the same damn mechanics—is that timing is rarely in your control. People talk about intention. They talk about focus. They talk about discipline and will and manifesting like the universe is a vending machine where you just press the right button and wait for the snack to drop. Cute theory. But anyone who has practiced real magic for more than five minutes knows better. Magic is a system of variables. Timing. Energy. Alignment. Opportunity. The right door opening at the right moment. The right person walking into the room. The right piece of information arriving exactly when it needs to. And sometimes every single one of those things lines up perfectly… except one. Just one. That last stubborn variable. And until it moves, nothing else can. It’s a strange place to exist—standing in a moment where you can see the entire path ahead of you with absolute clarity. The bags are mentally packed. The map is dra...

Things You Learn After a Hospital Stay That Changes Your Life in a Week

  (A Non-Exhaustive, Unapologetic List) There are some life lessons you learn slowly. Over years. Through therapy. Through careful reflection. And then there are the lessons you learn when your body throws a coup, you end up in a hospital bed under fluorescent lighting, and your entire life quietly rearranges itself while you’re wearing grippy socks. This is about the second kind. No details. No dramatics. Just observations. Because when your trajectory changes in a week, you don’t get wisdom—you get clarity. And clarity is louder than wisdom anyway. Lesson One: Your Body Is Not a Democracy You can negotiate with your mind all day. Your body does not attend meetings. It issues statements. Sometimes those statements come with IV fluids. Sometimes they come with paperwork. What I learned is this: the body keeps receipts. And when it’s done being polite, it stops whispering. Lesson Two: Systems Are Only Kind When You’re Convenient Every system smiles when you’re compliant, pr...

When the Hummingbird Sits Still

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  Hummingbirds are not meant to pause. That’s the first thing you need to understand. They are built for motion—furious wings, impossible turns, a metabolism that burns hotter than logic. They exist in a state of constant becoming. Even when they rest, they hover . Even when they feed, they work. Even sleep is a half-life of suspension. So when a hummingbird sits still—truly still—it matters. Not because it’s rare in a statistical sense, but because it violates the bird’s own nature. And nature does not break its own rules casually. Animal Instinct Is Not Symbolism — It’s Intelligence Modern spirituality loves to turn animals into mascots. PowerPoint spirit guides. Pinterest omens stripped of teeth and truth. That’s not how animals work. Animals don’t perform symbolism. They respond to pressure, energy, weather, territory, time, threat, abundance. Their behavior is not metaphor first—it’s data first . The meaning comes after, when we’re quiet enough to notice the pattern. A hummin...

Seattle Made Me Mean

I didn’t lose my patience as a personal failing. Seattle sanded it down with traffic, passive aggression, and people who can’t commit to a lane change or a human relationship. Let’s start with the roads, because that’s where the damage is done daily. Seattle drivers aren’t aggressive — they’re indecisive with entitlement. No signals. Sudden stops. Left-lane camping like it’s a personality trait. “Polite” driving that actually just traps everyone else in a shared purgatory of hesitation. Every merge is a gamble. Every on-ramp is a prayer. And if you expect predictability, you’re the idiot. That kind of environment teaches you one thing fast: anticipate stupidity or get hit by it. So you harden. You tighten. You stop assuming good intentions because experience has beaten that optimism out of you with a Prius doing 47 in the fast lane. Then there’s the people. Seattle is full of folks who are “nice” but not kind. Friendly but unavailable. Warm in theory, distant in practice. Everyone smil...

Imbolc’s Quiet Fire: Planting Intent Beneath the Snow

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  Plant seeds where no one can see them yet. Everyone thinks Imbolc is about light. Candles. Brigid. Milk. Lambs. The soft-focus return of the sun. That’s not wrong—but it’s incomplete. Imbolc is not a bonfire sabbat. It’s a coal sabbat . This is not the fire that announces itself. This is the fire that survives. Right now, even if the calendar hasn’t quite caught up, the energetic shift is already underway . You can feel it if you’re paying attention—not in the sky, but underground. This is the season of: Inner fires that don’t need witnesses First roots cracking soil in the dark Quiet planning instead of loud manifestation Subterranean power —the kind that grows without applause Nothing here is flashy. Everything here is real. The Quiet Fire (and why witches miss it) Most people are exhausted right now. Burned out on resolutions. Burned out on “big magic.” Burned out on performative healing. And yet—something is stirring. Imbolc energy doesn’t ask you...

On Being Remembered

  This week felt off. Not dramatic-off. Not crisis-off. Just… misaligned. Like my words were half a beat ahead of my thoughts. Like I talked too much, explained too much, offered context no one asked for. The kind of week where you replay conversations later and wince, wondering if you overshared or just forgot how to be contained. When routines fracture, so do our usual guardrails. Travel will do that. Disruption will do that. Being yanked out of your normal orbit by decisions made far above your pay grade will definitely do that. You start narrating yourself because the ground feels unsteady, and narration is a way to check that you still exist. And then—unexpectedly—I ran into my first supervisor from the agency. From way back. 2018. A lifetime ago in the line of work we do.  And I was remembered. Not vaguely. Not politely. Not with the generic “Oh yeah, you worked there too.” I was remembered with specificity. With warmth. With stories. With affection that hadn’t ex...