Coven Rochester will be holding another workday on September 24, 4 to 6 pm. The topic with will be protection magic and spells, mostly traditional in origin. We will cover general daily protection methods/techniques/practices first. The spells will cover a wide spectrum such as protection on a journey, protecting a garden from pests, protecting an object from theft, as well as the usual home protection magics like Witch Bottles. There will be some older spells mixed in, such as a home protection spell from colonial times and a method for making a personal protective amulet from a 19th century witch's workbook. There will also be a discussion of the old witch jewels and amulets. We will not be covering breaking or reversing curses. Participants need not bring anything. There will be a bunch of handouts.

*** Blessed be to those who serve the Great Mother and the Horned Father.

* Copyright to Coven Rochester



This is a protection spell thousands of years old that has survived into modern times.

If you can walk around it, you can bespell it so that no one will touch it until you reclaim it.

*** Blessed be to those who serve the Great Mother and the Horned Father.

* Copyright to Coven Rochester



I think I can fit almost all of this on 10 pages of a big spellbook gift.

To Reverse Bad Luck
To Bring Peace and Purity to a Home
To Remove Blockages Holding You Back
The Dog of Defense Invocation
To Return a Psychic Attack or Negativity
The Wicked Shall Decay (19th century, Devon, England)
To Protect an Item from Theft
The Comfrey Root Talisman
To Burn Away Evil or Negativity (Roman/Latin)
To Break a Curse (Maori)
A Curse Breaker (Babylonian)
A Protection Bottle
Herbal Hexbreakers
-- To Purge a Love Hex
-- To Counteract a Hex Delivered in Food or Drink
-- To Send a Curse Back to its Maker
-- To Purify the Home of a Hex
-- To Avoid Impending Evil
-- To Purify a House of Ill Luck
The Iron Key Amulet
To Break a Curse by Fire
The Circles of Light
To Unbewitch Men and Cattle (17th Century . . . still works great!)
The Turnabout Bottle

Breaking a curse by fire is fairly easy. There is also a great cursebreaker done by fire and water, and I will tell you about it now.

There are many curses that require that the curser leave something at the house of the person to be cursed. Perhaps a poppet, perhaps a carved apple, a beef tongue splashed with ghost pepper sauce and pinned together by nails, maybe just a piece of paper, maybe a letter mailed to the house with some stuff in it (sometimes as simple as a few grains of salt and pepper, or dirt from another state or country), the stump of a burned black candle, a cairn of shame made of small rocks. I've seen it all. Whatever you find, go get a glass jar with a tight-fitting lid that will fit the object. As small a jar as will be serviceable, mind you. Wearing gloves, pick up the item and put it in the jar. Fill the jar 50% to 75% with water. Add a tablespoon of vinegar. Add to it nine pins, nine needles, and nine iron nails. It would be lovely if you could get the iron nails from a working blacksmith. His art of shaping and reshaping by fire and water has made him half-magical, himself, and he will understand that other magical people sometimes need a bit of iron. Make sure the jar is lidded tightly. Let it sit for three days to marinate and rust.

During the day, build a small campfire somewhere safe. Wear thick boots. Bring work gloves. When it is burning nicely, set your sealed jar in the fire, and then clear out, preferably very well shielded and blocked. The sealed jar, of course, is going to explode and, when it does, it is going to send pins, needles, and nails flying everywhere. When you hear the explosion, you will feel a release in your heart or solar plexus. Feel free to say a phrase of your own making: "Thus I send the curse back to whence it came!" or "The curse is deadT" or "It is done!" or "So mote it be!" or "Take that, you knucklehead!" Whatever you like. After the explosion, put out the fire or let it die out. Clean up as best as you can. Throw any remains in the garbage.

This is not used much anymore, I have to say. Apart from finding a safe place to set off a glass grenade filled with pins, needles, and nails, it is very difficult to clean up. It is unlikely you will get all the glass and sharp objects. Who knows whereunto they might have exploded off to? and that means you will be leaving a bunch of sharp stuff around in nature. Which isn't very nice.

Still, it is worth telling the story and knowing the technique. If you ever need it, perhaps your own ingenuity will suggest a safe way of accomplishing the same effect. Throwing the jar down the caldera of a volcano, then running like heck? Maybe.

*** Blessed be to those who serve the Great Mother and the Horned Father.

* Copyright to Coven Rochester

Protection

Dec. 5th, 2022 03:32 pm
Although we are currently the custodians of the four-volume Hexopedia for intellectual and historical purposes,



On the Shelf



Volume IV, entitled

we are very loath to engage in any curse work whatsoever. There are other efficacious methods for dealing with negative people or experiences. On the top of that list: protect yourself. You have a right to do so and, if others depend on you, a responsibility to do so.

A victim of false and malicious gossip? It's been a problem for thousands of years. There is a very popular ancient Greek spell that is still used to this day. Let the person prattle on. The spell turns the prattler into a cassandra. He or she might be heard, but his or her false statements will be thought mad and not believed.



OMGs, You Can Do Better Than That

My old Witch Mother once asked me what I would do, magically, if a person were aiming negative energy at me. Either just in day-to-day nastiness or as a formal curse. I think I replied with something elaborate and brainy. She sighed and, in a grandmotherly hand-patting gesture that seemed to say, "oh, my stupid little child," told me what a Witch of the old persuasion would do: make a poppet. In modern days, it can be stood in front of a cheap mirror. In the old days, it would be suspended in a tree, by neck and legs, face down, over still water (a pond or old well). Either way, anything evil coming from the person would immediately be reflected back to him.

Different cultures seem to make their poppets in different ways. Cloth dolls seem popular amongst southern Witches. My old Witch Mother did not mind working in wax. In the Northeast US, a popular style is fallen sticks, pine boughs, and yarn.

Of course, making the poppet is just the technical part, not the magical part. It is the conception of the spell, but not its birth. Your Witch Mother (or Father) will tell you what to do over the next couple of days. You have to be a bit patient. Babies are birthed in their own good time, and so are poppets. But, once the poppet has been magical-ized (for want of a better term), the rest is child's play. And long, long, long lasting.

The boss of one Witch was terrorizing the Witch at work. The Witch made a poppet for protection. The boss suddenly retired two weeks later, out of the blue. The friend of another Witch was being cyber-bullied. "Come bring these things . . . (A, B, C, X, Y, Z) . . . and I will show you how to protect yourself." The bullied friend last reported: "The spell is working. Magnificently."

There is an old Witches' Proverb: Never banish something that may be freed by a blessing. A similar thing applies here: Never curse another when simply protecting yourself does the job.

So mote it be.

*** Blessed be to those who serve the Great Mother and the Horned Father.

* Copyright to Coven Rochester

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