Standing and Not Falling
The Otherworld is ready for you, but are you ready for the Otherworld? A sorcerous primer in thirteen moons.
The Otherworld is ready for you, but are you ready for the Otherworld? A sorcerous primer in thirteen moons.
The Otherworld is ready for you, but are you ready for the Otherworld? A sorcerous primer in thirteen moons.
Magick studies, Paganism & neo-paganism, Witchcraft
The Otherworld is ready for you, but are you ready for the Otherworld?
What would you tell your own less-experienced self about magic if you could go back in time and make a better start? That is the question this book seeks to address. What might you need to slough off, how far might you need to walk from the comfortable and familiar to truly embrace a magical life?
Covering a period of thirteen moons, Standing and Not Falling is a workbook that allows the reader to clear the way before embarking, or to conduct a spiritual detox on themselves before stepping up their practice, or engaging a new beginning. Suitable for practitioners of any type of sorcerous activity from witchcraft to ceremonial magic and beyond. This book takes steady, direct aim at the main causes of disfunction and difficulty that arise for practitioners of the art magical, both individually and in relation to others, and at times also at the key maladies of our age.
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Lee Morgan has a great deal to say about how we navigate inside our own minds, how we perceive the world and relate to it, and how our thinking shapes our experiences. There’s a lot here about being embodied, about animism and relationships based on animist philosophy. There’s great content about ancestry, our relationship with the land, and how we deal with mainstream culture – and for that matter, how it deals with us. There’s a great deal to chew on. Much of it aligns with my own thinking, so that was pleasingly affirming, but at the same time, it’s a very different perspective on those familiar issues and it opened up a great deal of new territory for me. I recommend that Druids pick up Standing and Not Falling to read as a philosophical text. ~ Nimue Brown, https://druidlife.wordpress.com/2019/07/14/standing-and-not-falling-a-review/
Praise for A Deed Without a Name: '...visceral, poetic and timeless... This book should, and will, become a seminal text in the ever-growing Witchcraft phenomenon.' ~ Gede Parma, author of Ecstatic Witchcraft and By Land, Sky & Sea