The Untamed Witch
Reclaim Your Instincts. Rewild Your Craft. Create Your Most Powerful Magick.
-
-
5.0 • 1 Rating
-
-
- $11.99
Publisher Description
Personalized magick is the most powerful magick. The Untamed Witch empowers you to use your own instincts, intuition, and personal environment in your witchcraft.
Witchcraft is not one defined, arbitrary path. Rather, it is a diversity of practices that you can curate and align with based on your lifestyle and unique gifts. Moreover, those practices are not meant to be done the same way by every witch. Someone else’s love spell is how they conjure love. Why use lavender in a ritual if it isn’t native to your surroundings or you simply don’t like it?
This guide gives you the insight and tools to undomesticate your craft from formulaic—to inspired—practice.
The Untamed Witch also outlines:
Tools and practices to access the subconscious How to work with the life, death, rebirth cycle How to use elemental and land witchcraft Ancestry work and communicating with spirit guides and entities With this book at your side, learn to use your instincts to rewild your magick.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This handy introduction to witchcraft by witch Pradas (The Complete Grimoire) explores how practitioners can personalize their craft. The author details the basics, which include grounding (strengthening one's "link to the current moment"); bringing one's body, mind, soul, and environment into alignment; and tapping into one's "inner energy." She encourages readers to develop their own style of magic by considering such questions as "What attracted you to practicing witchcraft?" and "What are your views on death, reincarnation, and the afterlife?" Pradas discusses common methods for practicing magic and notes that candles can be powerful "ritual tools" that are well suited to sending one's "energy to the web of fate," while crystals are versatile and can be arranged in geometric patterns to enhance their energies. Exercises include befriending trees by merging their energy with one's own and creating a personal "wheel of the year" that marks annual events of significance to the practitioner. Pradas's mix-and-match approach to spirituality is this volume's greatest asset, though the Taoist and Buddhist influences (she discusses the life force qi and the eightfold path) go underexplored. This thorough primer will appeal to novices who want to practice witchcraft on their own terms.