Upload_transparent

A Witch Like Me - The Spiritual Journeys Of Today's Pagan Practitioners

 
 
 
 
 
Scolder

by Scolder

Value This
Doc
Scribd
Average
     
Pages: 209 43
Words: 50968 13640
Characters: 287404 81678
Lines: 1624 623
     
     
Letters per word: 5.64 5.99
Words per line: 31.38 21.89
Words per page: 243.87 317.21

Add to your reading list

Flag_red Flag this document

Document Information

3,353 Reads | 4 Comments

Description

Offers not just one but 13 intriguing personal stories from today's most prominent witches. Compiled and edited by Sirona Knight, a practicing witch and well-known Pagan author, this one-of-a-kind book provides a lens into the inner world of witchcraft as thirteen leading Wiccan authors describe their spiritual journeys via exclusive interviews.

These 13 men and women, including Patricia Telesco, AJ Drew, Ambrose Hawk, Lady Sabrina, Skye Alexander, Gerina Dunwich and Dorothy Morrison, explain how they came to walk down the Wiccan path, sharing their insights, feelings, thoughts, as well as describing their life-changing experiences. They all come from different backgrounds, live in different parts of the world, and practice different forms of magick.

This exclusive collection of spiritual journeys provides a close-up look into the magickal world of witchcraft, which can lead to expanded awareness, empowerment, and a more enriching life.

Pdf_16x16 209 Pages


Date Added

02/15/2009

Category

Uncategorized.

Tags
Groups
Copyright

Attribution Non-commercial

More info »

 

or use Facebook Connect

Goldilocks Gamgee

Goldilocks Gamgee

dear Te Ariki. Diction 'practise' here is not defined as in the everyday context. It rather indicates spell CASTING, magick MAKING and in very common terms could be ''translated'' as 'to do'. To 'practise' magick therefore suits the context butter than phrasing it "i do magick". Besides, none of us can presume we are ever done practising since we have neither the sufficient knowledge or the power to exert the knowledge we might have gained. If you are done practising, it means you have nothing left to learn, as you have gained all the knowledge and can successfully exert it, you are elevated to a god-status, whereas none of us is perfect. Therefore it is arrogant to presume we can ever stop practising. blessed be

05/26/2009
te ariki

te ariki

I always get amused by people when they use the word 'practising'. As in, (from this book), 'What form of Wicca do you practice?, Do you practice magick every day? Every month? In what ways?' I feel that if you have to practise something, you cannot call yourself a 'witch', or anything until you have mastered that particular thing. So, either you are an adept, or you are not. Saying, 'I practise witchcraft' is like saying, "I still finger paint in kindergarden'.

02/24/2009