Just What Kind Of Craft, Is Witchcraft? The word witch is enough to stir up all kinds of small town trouble, but is it really that big of a deal? What do witches do anyway that have people talking till the cows fly home, singing opera and wearing cute tights? Witchcraft illicits great fear … fear that creates a lot of black magick in itself. So stay with me for a few moments here. I want to dispel the myths and verify the magick, all while freeing you from the fear that causes the most blackest of arts.
Magick is all around us and within us. It could be said that we are made of magick … It is a natural part of the human experience, a natural reaction to life and an external expression of humanity’s psychic connection to the universe. Believed to be a survival technique developed in times of need, witchcraft is a belief that humans co-exist with nature in an organic and cooperative relationship with the Universe that is deliberate with intent. The relationship with the Universe, with life, with nature creates heightened states of awareness and sensitivities in the practitioner, opening them up to a more awakened life experience. The craft, short for witchcraft, is practiced by diverse people, in a pan-global context. It has simply been defined as the craft of the wise. Although the craft is nature-oriented with pre-Christian roots, the framework and definitive identifiers continue to evolve and change. It can be practiced in either an agnostic or atheistic belief system. The belief in divinity is not necessary to practice the craft, although many who do have a belief in immanence of the divine. The craft often coexists with other religious, scientific and spiritual views. There is a lot of liberty … a source of attraction to many. A practitioner of the craft creates change with nature-based spirituality and techniques. This special skill set that brings about the change that occurs with the craft is called magick. The co-creational process of change involves vibrational life energy, resonant energetic magnetism, focused willpower or prayer, natural laws and greater than