Category: prompt

Responses to prompts from a variety of sources: Pinterest, Instagram, TikTok, Google, other blogs, and my own curated list. Explore how different prompts inspire creativity across mediums.

  • Anonymous Aaron: A Short Story About Identity, Silence, and Forced Becoming

    Anonymous Aaron: A Short Story About Identity, Silence, and Forced Becoming


    This piece is the first of ten short stories. I will share these periodically across my platforms, including WordPress, Substack, Wattpad, and other publishing spaces. Each story in this series stands alone, but together they form a broader examination of the systems that shape us. These works are released intentionally over time, allowing space for reflection rather than consumption. This series blends literary fiction with social commentary. Here I spend time focusing on lived experience, psychological impact, and the long shadow of decisions made for us. New entries will be published as they are completed.



    Blurb

    The story follows Aaron, who was born a healthy biological girl. Just to be immediately assigned a male identity by her parents and doctors. In this society, a child’s body is treated as a “public object” to be shaped and corrected by others. When Aaron reaches puberty, described as a “blood-red warning siren,” he is placed on hormone blockers to prevent him from developing into a woman.


    Anonymous Aaron

    Aaron was born on an uneventful morning. The air carried the smells of lemon disinfectant and rain-soaked Las Vegas asphalt. A healthy baby girl, the doctor would have said. He would have been pleased with the symmetry of her limbs, the steady thump of her heart, and the decibel her shriek could reach. Her mother cried, and her father laughed too loud. They chose the name Aaron respectfully. Names were not meant to make sense in this world until later in life. So Aaron, the healthy boy, was born, though boy was already a stretch.

    They wrapped him in a blue blanket and told him he was perfect, at least for the time being.

    The photos would later show a calm baby, eyes open, unfocused, already tuned into something deeper beyond the love in the room. Aaron would never remember the warmth of that blanket or the way hands passed him around like proof of success. What stayed, buried deep and wordless, was the first lesson of his life. His body was a public object. It would be shaped, discussed, corrected, and inevitably made into what they wanted it to be.

    Puberty arrived like a blood-red warning siren.

    A single pimple at first, angry and bright on his chin. Then another. Leg hair darkening, spreading in thin lines that felt illicit, something to hide. His chest stayed flat, his voice stayed level, until one red drip from between his legs met the cotton lamb chop character briefs he still wore. The signs were enough.

    The nurse smiled too hard when she called Aaron’s name. His parents sat straighter.

    The first dose of hormone blockers came in a white room that smelled faintly of lemon, eerily similar to the day of his birth. Aaron was told this was kindness. A pause button. A gift. A way to prevent him from becoming something unacceptable. His mother squeezed his hand and asked if he was excited. His father nodded as if excitement were mandatory, like consent was already signed.

    Aaron said yes, of course.

    Inside his head, there was only stillness. No sense of rescue. No feeling of alignment. Just the quiet knowledge that nothing about his body had ever felt wrong until the world began insisting that it was. He liked the way his legs carried him. He liked the way he played with makeup in secret. Likewise, he liked the softness of himself, unaltered and intact.

    But liking it was dangerous, not allowed, even illegal.

    He learned quickly to perform relief. To thank doctors. To rehearse lines about dysphoria he did not feel. Silence became survival. Every unspoken thought was folded smaller and smaller until it fit behind his ribs, where breasts would never be allowed to bud. The world always called Aaron, him, and he did not correct them. At first, he did not even understand the concept of not being transgender. Correcting meant punishment.

    Time skipped forward the way it does when nothing belongs to you.

    At seventeen, Aaron’s mother drove him to the spa where they checked in the night before his eighteenth birthday. The building was all soft lighting and stone floors. Water murmured behind the walls like something alive. It was dubbed a “wellness retreat.” Aaron was handed a robe, a schedule, and congratulations on becoming a man. He barely managed not to scoff at the final “gift”.

    The bed was too clean. The sheets were tucked tight enough to trap him.

    He lay awake, staring at the ceiling, listening to his breath. Tomorrow his female body would be permanently altered. Tomorrow the performance would become irreversible. He thought about the acne that never got worse, and the leg hair that never spread the way it wanted to. He thought about the mirror, about how familiar his reflection still was, and mourned how briefly he had been allowed to know the her he felt he was meant to be.

    Excitement would be painted painfully on his face in the morning.

    For now, horror sat quietly with him in the dark.

    He pressed his hand to his chest, feeling the steady beat that had been praised at birth, never once defective, never once confused.

    And in the silence of his mind, he finally admitted what he had always known.

    He was cisgender.

    He was a girl being forced to become a man in a world where refusing transition was the only unforgivable thing.

    The anesthesiologist walked him through counting backward from one hundred.

    One hundred.

    Ninety-nine.

    Ninety-eight.

    Ninety-seven.

    Aaron drifted off just as he pictured himself in a dress for the first time.


    Before you leave-

    Thank you for reading this first story in the series. I hope Aaron’s journey gave you pause, stirred thought, or echoed something within your experience. More stories will be released periodically across WordPress, Substack, Wattpad, and other platforms. These will each explore the pressures that shape us. Follow along, and check back soon to continue the series. There is more to come.


    Comment below and tell me what you think about my first short story. How would you feel if you lived in Aaron’s world? Does this make you view body autonomy a little differently?
    Consider sharing with someone you think would enjoy reading my first short thriller in my upcoming free-to-read collection, “The Scars of Fitting In: A Collection of Short Psychological Thrillers.


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  • One Selfless Wish: Imagining Equality and Freedom for All

    One Selfless Wish: Imagining Equality and Freedom for All

    Prompt:

    A stranger offers you one wish, but it must be selfless: what do you wish for?

    Answer / Reflection:

    If I could make one selfless wish, it would be for equality, freedom, and equal rights for all humans everywhere. In a world so divided by wealth, power, and privilege, imagining a reality where everyone has the same opportunities, protections, and freedoms is not just idealistic… it’s essential.

    Equality isn’t about giving everyone the same thing; it’s about removing barriers that prevent people from living fully. Freedom isn’t just the absence of oppression… it’s the ability to pursue one’s passions, speak one’s truth, and exist without fear. A selfless wish like this could ripple across generations, changing lives in ways no single person could imagine.

    This wish may not be simple, but it’s universal. It’s for the person struggling in silence, the family denied rights, the communities still fighting for recognition. It’s for the world we can choose to create if empathy, justice, and courage guide us.

    Selfless wishes force us to look beyond ourselves and consider the collective good. Asking, “What would I wish for if it weren’t about me?” challenges us to imagine a better world, and more importantly, to work toward it in our everyday lives. Today, my selfless wish is equality, freedom, and equal rights for all. And a reminder that change begins with vision, empathy, and action.

    If a stranger offered you one wish but they told you it had to be selfless what would you wish for? Make your own list and tag me or tell me here in the comments.

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  • Part Two- National Coming Out Day Reflection

    Part Two- National Coming Out Day Reflection

    The Second Coming Out

    National Coming Out Day isn’t just about one announcement. It’s about every version of ourselves we’ve had to reintroduce to the world and to ourselves.

    This is Part 2 of my coming out story. The first time, I came out as a lesbian. This time, I came out as me.

    The Second Time Someone Saw It Before I Did

    I was 19 when I met an out trans man for the first time. It was at a wedding, and he came up to me like he already knew something I didn’t.

    He said, “Oh my god, it’s so cool to meet someone like us in public.”

    I glitched. I remember thinking, What does he mean, “like us”? I didn’t think he was right, but I also couldn’t stop thinking about it. I wasn’t aware he was trans I just saw a cis man and I was so confused.

    It was one of those moments that doesn’t make sense until years later.

    The Quiet Realization

    Fast forward to when I was 21. I was in an online community space surrounded. This man was filming a Q&A video, answering random questions, when it just… hit.

    I started asking the influencer questions about t and transitioning etc.

    And I thought, Wait a minute. Maybe that guy was trans at the wedding.

    I laughed it off at first. Said thing to myself like, “No, bro.” But, Deep down, I knew something had shifted.

    That’s when I realized: I wasn’t a lesbian who looked masculine. I was a trans man who had finally found the words for what had always been there.

    Transition and Transformation

    At the time, I was in a long-term relationship with a lesbian partner. I didn’t say anything right away. I didn’t feel like I had the space to explain myself.

    My identity wasn’t up for debate, and it didn’t need validation to be real.

    A little while later, I moved to Las Vegas, started testosterone, and began living fully as myself. Two years after that, I got top surgery.

    Now, I’ve been on T for almost 11 years, and post-op for nearly 9.

    No spectacle. No huge reveal.

    I just made a post, changed my name everywhere, and kept living.

    Coming out as a trans man wasn’t some cinematic event. It was quiet, steady, necessary.

    It was me updating my social media, me existing without apology, me living a truth that had been simmering under the surface since long before I even had the language for it.

    Every year on National Coming Out Day, I think back to both moments. To the young girl who came out as a lesbian, and the man who came out as himself.

    Both were acts of courage. Both were survival. Both were me.

    Coming out isn’t a one-time performance. It’s a lifetime of peeling back layers until you recognize yourself: fully, completely, without shame.

    I came out twice.

    Once for who I loved.

    Once for who I am.

    And both times, I chose to live.

    Because that’s what coming out really is. It is choosing life, truth, and freedom, again and again.

    A man and his first chest binder
    A man and his first chest binder

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  • Part 1 — National Coming Out Day Reflection

    Part 1 — National Coming Out Day Reflection

    The Beginning of Owning My Truth

    In eighth grade, I told my best friend at the time that I had to tell her something. Before I could even say it, she looked at me and said, “What, you like girls?”

    No duh, me too.

    That moment was my quiet entry into honesty. It was not a big speech, not a dramatic scene, just truth spoken aloud. I told a few other friends. Most didn’t care, one freaked out a little. You know, the classic “ew, we slept in the same bed!?” comment. In my usual fashion, I just told her, “Yeah, no shit. Doesn’t mean it was anything weird. Just because I’m gay doesn’t mean I’m into all girls.”

    It wasn’t some grand parade or rainbow banner moment. I just stopped hiding it from all my homies.

    High School and Small Town Silence

    I grew up in small-ass Martins Ferry, Ohio. A tiny town, tight gossip circles, everyone knowing everyone’s business. I graduated in 2010, and there were maybe three out lesbians in my class. The rest were “straight in public” or “hush-hush about it.”

    I wasn’t loud about my sexuality in high school. But the moment I was no longer a student, I made my Facebook and MySpace say “interested in women.” No more hiding, no more pretending. Just existing.

    Family Reactions and Reality Checks

    My mom’s best friend was a lesbian who came out in the early 1980s, so she didn’t have much to say beyond not wanting it “broadcasted” to my little sisters. They were nine at the time. But my younger cousins told them. It wasn’t like they knew better.

    One sister said she didn’t care. The other said “ew,” but she got over it fast enough. Kids echo what they hear. And they learn what we show them.

    But there was one adult man, a friend of my mom’s. He was much older than me, always joking that he’d “take me on a date when I turned 18.” Everyone would laugh like it was harmless. I knew it wasn’t.

    Sure enough, once I turned 18, he messaged me on Facebook asking me out. I told him, “Dude, I’m with my girlfriend. I’m gay.”

    He flipped out, said I “lied” instead of just saying no. But I wasn’t lying. I was telling the truth, my truth. But he just couldn’t handle it.

    Looking Back on Coming Out

    Back then, coming out wasn’t about attention or pride flags. It was about not lying anymore. It was survival in small-town Ohio. And being honest even if nobody clapped for it.

    When I think about National Coming Out Day, I think about that moment in eighth grade. The one where I said, “Yeah, I like girls.” I think about every time after that when I had to say it again. Whether that was to friends, to family, to strangers who thought they had a say in it.

    This is Part 1 of my story… the first step in a much longer journey.

    Part 2 will come later today. It’s about when I came out again, not as a lesbian.

    Because coming out isn’t one moment. It’s a lifetime of moments: each one a little braver, a little louder, a little more you.

    Today, on National Coming Out Day, I remember that younger version of me. Who was scared, quiet, and honest anyway. The one who chose quiet truth in small towns where everyone knew your name.

    I came out as a lesbian first. I came out as myself second. Both are chapters worth telling. Both matter.

    Because every story of coming out whether it’s whispered, shouted, or written down… reminds someone else they’re not alone.

    Stay tuned for Part 2: Coming Out as me.

    When Axton first came out socially as transgender female to male. The start of a era
  • Samhain: The Witch’s New Year — A Complete Resource

    Samhain: The Witch’s New Year — A Complete Resource

    Samhain, is one of the most powerful Sabbats on the Wheel of the Year.


    Observed from the evening of October 31 through November 1, it marks the transition from the light half to the dark half of the year. Many witches regard it as the Witches’ New Year, a liminal time when the veil between the worlds is at its thinnest.

    It is a season of endings, beginnings, remembrance, and transformation.

    This resource explores the history of Samhain, its multiple cultural roots, the way people celebrated in the past, how witches celebrate it now, the symbolism and correspondences tied to this sacred night, and ways to practice sustainably.


    History and Origins of Samhain:

    Samhain comes from Gaelic and Celtic tradition and was celebrated in Ireland, Scotland, and the Isle of Man. It marked the end of the harvest season and the arrival of winter. for ancient people, this was not only the division of the year but also a sacred turning point. Archeological sites like the Mound of the Hostages at Tara show alignments with sunrise around Samhain, suggesting the importance of this moment stretches back even further than Celtic times.

    In medieval Irish texts, Samhain appears as one of the great seasonal festivals. The name itself is tied to “summer’s end,” and in the Irish language, Samhain is also the word for November.

    During this time, the burial mounds or fairy hills…were believed to open, becoming portals to the Otherworld. Spirits, fairies, and ancestors could move more freely, and it was customary to honor and appease them.

    Bonfires were central to Samhain. Families would extinguish their home hearths and relight them from the great communal fire. People cast stones, bones, or tokens into the flames, sometimes as offerings or as part of divination.

    The Ashes and fire were believed to carry cleansing and protective powers. In some accounts, livestock were culled and sacrificed to ensure survival through the winter.

    Samhain was also a season of prophecy. Masking and guising also have deep roots here. Villagers disguised themselves to confuse or avoid malevolent spirits, and many went door to door reciting verses or performing small acts in exchange for food what we now know as trick-or-treating.


    Symbolism and Correspondences

    Samhain’s imagery is steeped in themes of death, rebirth, and liminality. The colors most often associated with this Sabbat are black, deep purples, fiery oranges, and blood reds.

    Crystals like obsidian, smoky quartz, onyx, hematite, and amethyst resonate strongly with Samhain energy.

    Herbs such as mugwort, sage, rosemary, cinnamon, and wormwood are commonly used in spells and rituals.

    Symbols that dominate this season include skulls, bones, cauldrons, jack-o’-lanterns carved from pumpkins or turnips, and keys or crossroads imagery.

    Animals tied to Samhain include ravens, crows, owls, bats, and black cats.

    Spiritually, this time is connected to deities of the underworld and death, such as the Morrígan, Hecate, Donn, Hel, or the Cailleach, depending on tradition.

    Fire and earth are powerful elements here, representing both purification and the return of life to the soil.


    Traditional and Modern Practices

    Rituals of Samhain historically centered on fire, offering, divination, and honoring the dead. Today, witches and pagans adapt these practices to personal and cultural needs.

    Altar and ancestor work are central. Many build altars decorated with autumn harvest foods, skull imagery, bones, and photographs of loved ones who have passed. Offerings of bread, fruit, or herbs are common, left either at the altar or outdoors. Some practitioners hold a “dumb supper,” a ritual meal eaten in silence where a place is set for the dead, inviting them to share in the gathering.

    Fire remains an important symbol. Witches may light bonfires, hearth fires, or candles as a way to purify and honor the season. Writing down things you wish to release and casting them into flame is a powerful practice at Samhain.

    Divination thrives during this liminal night. Tarot readings, runes, scrying mirrors, pendulums, and dream work are all seen as especially potent now. Journaling or meditating on what must be released and what new cycles need to begin helps align with the natural energy of death and rebirth.

    Samhain can be a night of shadow work. Or a time to face inner truths and release old habits. Some may focus on protection and cleansing rituals, strengthening psychic shields, or setting wards for the long winter ahead.

    Because of urban living, fire restrictions, and ecological awareness, many witches adapt ancient practices. Instead of bonfires, they light candles. Instead of leaving large offerings at cemeteries, they create home altars or symbolic offerings. Many now prioritize sustainable and ethical practices, ensuring offerings do not harm the land or wildlife.

    Samhain’s rituals often involve burying, burning, or leaving offerings, so ecological mindfulness matters. Use biodegradable materials such as paper towel rolls, untreated wood, or natural herbs. Avoid synthetic glitters, plastics, or toxic inks. Reuse jars, cloth, and candles rather than buying new every year.


    A Flow for Ritual

    A Samhain ritual can be as simple or elaborate as you like. You may begin by cleansing and grounding yourself, then inviting ancestors and guides into sacred space. Lighting candles or a fire connects to the ancient communal flames. Offerings and prayers to the dead bring remembrance and connection. Divination, journaling, or meditation help you gather insight for the year ahead.

    A practice of release: whether by burning, burying, or composting, is powerful at Samhain. Once you have let go of what must die, you can set new intentions, plant seeds, or carry charms to symbolize rebirth. Close the ritual with gratitude to spirits, ancestors, and deities, then return to the mundane world with renewed focus.

    Samhain is a threshold in the year, when endings and beginnings weave together. It honors death as a part of life and opens a space for transformation. Whether you light a single candle, share a feast with friends, or hold a private vigil, Samhain reminds us that magic is not only in growth but also in release. By walking with our ancestors, respecting the cycles of the earth, and practicing sustainably, we carry forward the essence of the Witch’s New Year.


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  • What am I currently growing?

    What am I currently growing?

    Right now I am growing a lot of things. Some are visible and tangible. Some are deeply personal and still unfolding beneath the surface.

    Small Business

    I am growing a small witchy/ poetry business that reflects my passion and my craft. It’s more than just items or spells. It’s a space for magic and intention I am building step by step.

    Poetry Collections

    I am growing collections of poetry, both my own and collaborative works with others. Poetry is a way I give voice to what lives inside me and connects me the world around me.

    A Loving Relationship

    I am growing a loving nurturing relationship and friendships that bring warmth and care into my life. These relationships are a garden of their own, one that I tend with patience and kindness.

    A Career

    I am growing a career as a poet. While carving a name for myself in the world through words and resistance. It’s not always easy, but every step forward is growth.

    Into My Skin

    I am growing into my skin. As I am becoming more comfortable and confident in who I am and how I show up every day.

    Small Meaningful Things

    And then there are the small things I care for just as much. The pumpkins growing in my garden and the grass in my yard that grows green and wild with the seasons.

    All these things be they internal or external, remind me that growth is never just one thing. It’s many layers unfolding and blooming in their own.


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  • What I’ve Outgrown: Shadow Work Reflections on Friendship and Healing

    What I’ve Outgrown: Shadow Work Reflections on Friendship and Healing


    I was His best friend He was NOT Mine!

    I’ve outgrown my adult best friend. The boy I became a man with. The boy who made it feel like I wasn’t alone in a place where nobody felt like me. For years he was the only mirror I had. The only person who got it. Honestly, I’ve been outgrowing him slowly, painfully, one splinter at a time. I didn’t know how to let go. Not until the rope cut so deep I practically sliced my fingers off just trying to hold on. Now there’s no grip left. Just skin and scar. space and peace. I don’t hate him. Which is usually how I let go when my love turns to hate. I just no longer wish to participate in his delusions or fantasies.

    Addiction

    I’ve also outgrown habitual drug use. Or really, drugs in general. At least the illicit kind. I still like my plants: weed, nicotine, caffeine. Those feel more natural to me. Oh, and mushrooms. Can’t forget the little mushroom dudes. Sometimes they’ve taught me more than any therapist ever did. But the rest of it? That chasing? That hole-filling impulse? That’s gone.

    Toxicity

    I’ve outgrown toxic patterns. The ones I clung to because they felt like home, mostly outgrown. I mean chaos was the language I was taught love in. I grew up watching relationships rot from the inside out and thought that must be what connection looks like. So I repeated it. Over and over. Until I didn’t. I still have my self-sabotaging hiccups but no one is perfect.

    Clothes

    I’ve outgrown my clothes. Literally. I dropped over 60 pounds this year. I had told myself I’d do it as my resolution. For once, I didn’t break that promise. My body feels different now. My skin holds me differently. My knees don’t hurt on hikes as quick for sure.

    Allowing Myself to Wallow

    And maybe the biggest thing? I’ve outgrown the lie that my depression controls everything. Some days, yeah, it wins. But other days, a lot of days, it’s a choice. Not to be sick, but to sit in it. To fester in the filth instead of fighting. I’ve started calling myself out on it. Started crawling out of bed even when I don’t want to. Started facing the rot before it spreads. Because healing is choosing again and again not to let the dark devour you whole. If there’s no light in my line of sight I have learned to become the light.


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  • Letter to the Sun, A Summer Gratitude and Request for Growth

    Letter to the Sun, A Summer Gratitude and Request for Growth


    Dear Sun,

    Light

    Thank you for the light you pour over me. Oh and everything else that needs to grow. Whether it is the food we eat or the magic some call upon. You lift life from the soil and charge the air with energy. I can feel it while you warm me to my core. I do not take for granted the way you coax the herbs from the earth. Nor, the way your warmth settles on my skin while hiking lost in the quiet wildness.

    Time

    Thank you for the long days we spend together. When I wander trails as I breathe in the sunlit air and feel myself expand. You give me the freedom to be wild and alive in a way only you can. But I also thank you for the days when you step back. You let the rain move in. The clouds soften the light. The earth drinks deep. I know growth needs balance.

    Strength

    This season, I ask for your continued strength to fuel my journey. Help me carry your fire when the days get heavy. Help me remember that even in the heat, there is rest. Let your light inspire my spells, my words, and my heart. Keep me connected to the land and to myself as I move through the longest days.


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  • When Do I Feel the Most Radiant?

    When Do I Feel the Most Radiant?


    Water

    There’s something about the water that makes me feel alive. I could be kayaking over a calm lake or swimming in the cool depths. Either way my skin tingles and my spirit lights up. Being in natural bodies of water strips away noise and lets me simply be radiant and free.

    Trees

    I feel that same glow in the trees. Sunlight filters through leaves. I breathe the forest air deep into my lungs. The mountains bring another kind of light. This light comes with each step on the trail. Sweat on my shirt and the ache of muscles pushing forward contribute to it.

    Camping

    The campsite, the crackling fire calling to something wild in me. Setting up the tent just right brings a quiet satisfaction, a small victory no matter how long it takes. When the day settles into night, holding a cup of hot tea and writing but, on my phone. Such a sacred moment. Here my thoughts shine brightest.

    These are the places and moments where I let my glow be seen. It’s not always sunshine and sparkle. Often, it’s the wildness of sweat and dirt. Sometimes, it’s the warmth of a fire. Other times, it’s the quiet of ink (digital ink) and tea. This is where I feel radiant, whole, and actually me.


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  • A Shift in the Craft: From Harry Potter to My Own Kind of Justice

    A Shift in the Craft: From Harry Potter to My Own Kind of Justice


    Recently, I received two questions through the feedback section on my site. They are simple at first glance, but powerful after I sat with them:

    How have your views on magic changed over time?

    And

    What’s a mistake you made as a beginner in witchcraft?

    I don’t take questions like this lightly. Magic isn’t just something I practice, it’s something I live. These answers are honest, personal, and maybe a little messy. That’s the only way I know how to write truth. So here goes:

    I used to think magic lived in storybooks. In robes and wands and chosen ones.

    Like so many kids, I fell in love with Harry Potter young. The world, the friendships, the promise that if you were different enough, maybe magic would find you. And it did, in a way. I still love the stories. I still rewatch the films and re-read the books, but always secondhand, always gifted or thrifted. I can separate the art from the author. Such a bitter woman doesn’t own my nostalgia. She doesn’t own the comfort those stories gave me when I had no map for who I was.

    But my magic? It isn’t from her pages.

    I come from deep Christian roots. We went on a haunt once as teens. It was one of those local ghost-hunting nights where you sneak around the back roads hoping for chills. After that, my mom had bedroom radio blessed by a priest because it wouldn’t stop turning itself on. Full volume. Music blaring from speakers that weren’t even hooked up. Power cords unplugged. It’d still play. I thought it was kind of cool. She thought it was a demon. I guess we both believed in something.

    Friends

    Years later, it wasn’t a book or a priest that pulled me deeper, it was friends. Witchy ones. Queer ones. Friends who handed me crystals without laughing, who let me stand in their circles and fumble the words. I started reading. Studying. I found Wicca. Then, I watched it fall away as I followed the older trails back to pagan roots. There were Appalachian whispers, bloodlines, and broken bones. And yes, herbs my grandmother used without ever calling it witchcraft. I built something of my own. My own form of justice. My own kind of holy.

    But if there’s one thing I wish I’d learned sooner?

    Stop talking too damn much.

    Or lightly put:

    Don’t tell people everything.

    That’s the beginner mistake I made: I opened up too much, too soon. I was so eager to be understood. I wanted to be known in this new light. I didn’t realize what I was giving away. In witchcraft, anything can be used against you. Anything.

    Don’t tell them your full name and date of birth. Don’t tell them the name you practice under and, never make that name something easy to guess. Never tell them your protections. Your wards. Your sealing methods. Your undoings.

    They don’t need to know how you anchor your energy.

    They don’t need to know which gods, spirits, or ancestors you speak to.

    They don’t need to know how to unravel you.

    Even the spells I share aren’t the ones I use for myself. Because what works for me has locks built into it. Layers. Hidden keys I’ll never give away. These are just beginning stepping stones that work as is or that you can build into your own.

    Your magic is yours.

    Keep some of it close. Keep some of it sacred.

    Let them think they know the path you walk, but never show them the map.

    Have a question for me? Drop it below, through the feedback page, or send it by email to poeaxtry@gmail.com. I love hearing from you.


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