Oh Ruth,
I hope you'll forgive me for being so talkative on this topic but I'm truly excited about the possibilities, and I've been doing so much research now that I've discovered that at least some forms of Wicca are so supportive of abstraction. In fact, I went to one site called The Atheme's Edge that offers individual mentoring for wannabe witches. From what I've read there they take the religion very seriously.
However, at the same time they speak to the issue of how abstract it must be and how much Wiccan must guard against dogma. They talk about viewing the Goddess and God as everything from Pantheism, to Polytheism, to Animism, to Anthropomorphism, and so on. They don't want to dictate to anyone how they need to view the spiritual power.
And they even speak about rites and rituals as being totally abstract and encourage individual creativity and design for such things as incantations, spells and rituals of gratitude and reverence.
You'd think after all that they wouldn't have much left to 'teach'. It's almost like they are just saying 'Do your own thing'. However, there are clearly guidelines that can help people become spiritually focused and how to learn how to accept and wield spiritual power. So as abstract as it may seem it does have underlying principles that serve as a conduit of spiritual energy and a means of communiqué with the spiritual entities in whatever form the individual shaman prefers to perceive them.
For me this is quite exciting because it's a religion (or spirituality) that I can work with without feeling confined, and yet it still has useful structure to offer. I can also vividly see elements of other religions that I trust within the Wicca motif. For example, I clearly see the psychic elements that are present in the philosophy of the Law of Attraction, and in Buddhism, as well as being compatible with much of North American Indian spirituality. And I'm sure there are many other religious philosophies that are compatible with Wicca once any dogma of precisely how the Goddess and God must be visualized has been unveiled to reveal the core beliefs.
I have been warned about two things. One is to beware of forms of Wicca that are indeed becoming dogmatic and trying to claim specificity in precisely how the Goddess and God must be viewed as well as precisely how rituals must be designed and carried out. It is unfortunate that there are always groups of people who will try to ram their ways of viewing things down everyone else's throats. But at the same time there does seem to be a need for balance before someone just walks in and changes the whole thing into something else altogether.
In any case, I'm not going to concern myself with what Wicca may evolve into over the ages. I'm merely concerned with how it can be useful to me. And thus far it has already been useful in ways that I can't easily convey.
The second thing that people have warned is to not let it turn into a hobby.
I can certainly see that one. Especially after having visited a few a view online occult stories that truly do come across more as hobby shops then religious outlets. They have 'kits' for every spell you can imagine. Well I can understand that for some people, I really can. But that's definitely not for me. I could never feel right using a premade kit-spell for the basis of a ritual. It include an incantation and everything, but I'd rather write my own incantation anyway. I view incantations as prayers, and while even the most traditional religions use formal structured prayers, it would be insane to never speak to god in your own words. So for me a personal incantation is much more meaningful. Although it is nice to see other incantations for creative ideas just as it's nice to hear other music before writing a piece of your own.
However, getting back to the 'hobby' issue. I think Wicca does loan itself to great romanticism. Which can indeed incite people into wanting to collect brooms, cauldrons, fancy candle holders, etc. Not to mention athemes and bollines.
I've just purchased an atheme and bolline myself. And in a very real way I viewed them as 'gifts' for the Goddess and God. I can see where someone could easily fall into the trap of wanting to buy an endless list of gifts for the Goddess and God. I'm not going to go there. In fact, I was originally going to make my own atheme and bolline, but I chose to purchase these items because they would be difficult to make as nice as these are.
I'm already in need of a cauldron and I need a rather large one. I'm hoping to find something in a kitchen supply store rather than an occult store. I actually need two cauldrons. One for destruction and one that I can trust for food preparation. Although I think owl a crock pot for the latter. In fact, I'm sure I will now that I think about it. I actually already have several crock pots so I only need a cast iron cauldron for destructive spells. I might even have one in the garage.
It might sound like I'm getting carried away with focusing on the tools, but I'm just starting out so I have nothing. I have purchased some candles and holders for the altar but they were very inexpensive.
Oh, back to the broom, by the way,...
You mentioned sweeping out negativity. I've heard it expressed this way quite often in terms of sweeping away negativity, or sweeping away negative vibrations, or even evil spirits. I suppose that's the popular view. I think of it quite differently actually.
I think of it more in terms of a vibration eraser. Or vibration neutralizer. This is the very reason why the broom needs to be charged with good vibrations. Sweeping it around the area isn't merely a ritual, the broom is actually doing something! It's filling the space with its vibrations and this is precisely how it eliminates all other vibrations (good or bad). This is why it's important to always store the broom in a place reserved specially for it. That very spot becomes attuned to the broom's spiritual vibrations and builds up over time become more and more potent.
Now Jeannie, might say, "You don't need all the toys! It's all in your mind. Just use your hand as a broom if you want to sweep away negative vibrations".
Well, that may very well work. But I think the idea behind the magick broom is truly a physical idea as well as a spiritual idea. The broom is indeed a physical object that can story vibration energy, especially on the frequencies of the spiritual realm. If the broom is always used for the same purpose and always charged with the same spiritual emotions (via meditation rituals), then this broom will actually begin to resonate at that personal frequency to a very high degree. It actually become a vibration oscillator of that energy configuration. And this is why it will work more powerfully than merely waving your hand over the area.
Actually Jeannie should understand this because it's all about frequencies. It's not just about thoughts, it's about frequencies (i.e. Spiritual Energy).
The same goes with all the magickal tools of witchcraft. Each tool is storing and becoming a physical oscillator of the spiritual frequencies that are associated with the particular rituals and spells that the tool is being used for.
It is the
build up of this spiritual energy that makes the tool become increasingly magickal. And the energy 'builds up' by causing the particular tool to become a resonator at that frequency.
The atheme itself will be used for so many different frequencies that it might be difficult to understand how it can load itself to storing them. But I personally believe that the reason the atheme can be used for so many different frequencies is because of it's very use. It is used as a conduit of spiritual energy. To direct the spiritual energy in a given ritual. And it is used for this time, and time, and time again. Over time it becomes attuned to
changing rapidly to accommodate a large burst of spiritual energy on a new frequency. And thus this tool becomes a powerful spiritual oscillator that can transfer spiritual energy rapidly and transform it from one frequency into another.
This may sound more technical than many witches might care to think about. I tend to be a scientist and thus I look at things with the eye of an alchemist. Although I do believe that even the earliest shamans and witches understood this process deeply. Can you not see an ancient witch grabbing her broom from the hands of unknowledgeable person and placing it back on it's hook saying, "Never touch this broom!".
There's a reason. She doesn't want it to be contaminated with improper frequencies. And even though she may be thinking of it in terms of 'spiritual energy' the physics is still there.
Same goes for a shaman who grabs the wrong tool from the hand of a neophyte and says, "No you don't use this tool for that!". That's because the tool is charged for a particular spiritual emotion and or task, and using it for the wrong task would interrupt it's frequency of vibration (or spiritual energy ).
This is why tools become more powerful the more you use them.
So they do much more than just help the visualization process, they actually participate in the conduction, storage, amplification, and transfer of spiritual vibrations. They aren't just crutches for visualization as I had preciously thought. They have a very useful and practical purpose.
They truly are tools and not just toys.
This is why I will view the magick broom as actually filling the area with the sacred vibrations that I will have charged it with during mediations with it. Those vibrations emanating from the broom will indeed erase or destructively interfere with any negative vibrations in the area. In fact it will also remove any vibrations good or bad and replace them with the vibrations of my own personal mediations, because I am the person who charges the broom. And I charge it during spiritual meditation.
Hug your boom and meditate.
JEANNIE! That's a great idea for a painting! A young witch hugging her broom meditating. If I had cash I'd commission it from you. I guess owl need to do a ritual asking for cash now.
Or maybe I could just make a bunch of magickal brooms and sell them to the witches to raise the money.