Sunday, 22 March 2026

Hopkins: pain and money

 





Matthew Hopkins: The Infamous Witchfinder General

Matthew Hopkins (c. 1620 – August 12, 1647) was an English witch-hunter who became infamous as the self-styled Witchfinder General during the English Civil War (1642–1651). He and his kind brought suffering and torture to those who were considered to be witches, often without a fair trail or even logic and often the result of in-fighting and land grabbing by town residents. For Hopkins witchcraft was his business; a business was good!  


Most, however, of his and his kind’s victims were NOT witches but just ordinary people against whom accusations and lies were drawn. All those who were tortured and killed during the witch hunts were victims of prejudice, superstition and corruption. The ones who were actually witches ( or cunning folk) will always be remembered and we hope that such barbarity can never take hold of the West again! Witches will never forget. 



Active primarily in East Anglia (including Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk, and Huntingdonshire), he and his associate John Stearne were responsible for more witchcraft executions in England than any other figure—likely between 100 and 300 people (mostly women) sent to the gallows between 1644 and 1647. This accounted for a significant portion (around 60–70%) of all known English witchcraft executions over centuries.




Torture and killing was good for business 


Hopkins never held an official parliamentary commission for the title “Witchfinder General,” though he claimed it and was hired by local communities to identify and prosecute witches for a fee (often around £1 per witch, plus expenses for his assistants and travel).


Early Life and Background

Born around 1620 in Great Wenham, Suffolk, Hopkins was the son of a Puritan minister, James Hopkins. He grew up in a religious household and later moved to Manningtree, Essex (on the Essex-Suffolk border), around 1640–1644. He may have trained or practiced as a lawyer (though records are sparse), and he inherited enough to live genteelly without heavy labor—possibly including owning or profiting from a pub. His Puritan upbringing fuelled a zealous belief in demonic forces and the need to combat witchcraft, amplified by King James I’s earlier writings on the subject (Daemonologie, 1597). More on this in a later article.


Little is documented about his life before 1644, when he first emerged publicly.


Rise as Witchfinder General

Hopkins’ career began in March 1644 in Manningtree, Essex, amid the chaos of civil war—when local governance was disrupted, fear was rampant, and communities sought scapegoats for misfortunes like illness or crop failure.


Hopkins the man who all feared 


He claimed to have discovered six witches who allegedly tried to kill him with sorcery. This sparked his first major hunt. Partnering with John Stearne (a fellow Puritan enthusiast) and sometimes a midwife named Mary Phillips, Hopkins toured villages, charging fees to “search” for witches. 


The Hopkins Guide to Torture and pain


He used methods detailed in his 1647 pamphlet The Discovery of Witches:

•  Pricking for “witch’s marks” (moles, warts, or insensitive spots believed to be extra teats for feeding demonic familiars/imps). He used blunt or rigged needles to ensure no pain was felt.

•  Walking suspects endlessly (often all night) to exhaust them and prevent summoning familiars.

•  Swimming (ducking): Binding and throwing suspects into water; floating indicated guilt (as water supposedly rejected those who had renounced baptism), while sinking proved innocence (though many drowned or were rescued).

•  Sleep deprivation and psychological pressure to extract confessions, which often named others in chains of accusations.



These techniques would today be considered torture and produced coerced, fantastical confessions involving animal familiars (e.g., Vinegar Tom the greyhound with an ox head, or imps like Newes, Jarmara, or Pecke in the Crowne).


His most infamous campaign started in 1645 with Elizabeth Clarke (an elderly, one-legged widow in Manningtree), whose confession implicated dozens. This led to the Chelmsford Assizes trial in July 1645, where 19 were hanged, and spread to Suffolk (e.g., Bury St Edmunds, where 18 more were executed in August 1645).


Hopkins profited handsomely but faced growing criticism. 


Puritan minister John Gaule denounced his brutal methods in 1646 (Select Cases of Conscience touching Witches and Witchcrafts), arguing they were un-Christian and ineffective. Public backlash, combined with the end of the First Civil War and restored order, forced Hopkins to retire in 1647.



The end of the madness in England. We hope for good !


Death and Legacy - good riddance!!

Hopkins died on August 12, 1647, at his home in Manningtree (or nearby Mistley), Essex, likely from pleural tuberculosis (a lung infection causing coughing and weakness). He was buried in an unmarked grave. He was only in his late 20s.

A persistent myth claims he was accused of witchcraft, subjected to his own swimming test, floated, and hanged—but this is false; he died of illness.



They didn’t kill witches; 

they killed women


Hopkins remains a symbol of fanaticism, opportunism, and mass hysteria. His hunts exploited wartime instability, Puritan zeal, misogyny (most victims were poor, elderly, or marginalised women), and community grudges. Modern historians view him as a semi-demented, dying young man driven by religious fervor and personal gain, or simply a con artist profiting from fear.


His story inspired cultural works, including the 1968 horror film Witchfinder General(starring Vincent Price as a dramatised, older Hopkins) and books like Ronald Hutton’s analyses. Today, he serves as a cautionary figure in discussions of injustice, scapegoating, and the dangers of unchecked authority during crises.


As you sit and ponder this article I ask that you consider the horror of being accused and tortured for something that you did to help others who simply hadn’t done at all. Consider also that such prejudices and superstitions are still prevalent in some countries and cultures.


If we don’t learn from history, we are doomed to repeat it.  

George Santayana

Book of the Week: Self Initiation for the Solitary Witch by

 



Self-Initiation for the Solitary Witch: Attaining Higher Spirituality Through a Five-Degree System” 

By Shanddaramon

Softcover 253 pages 
ISBN 10: 1564147266 ISBN 13: 9781564147264
Publisher: New Page Books2004



This is a book by author Shanddaramon, published in 2004 (with some listings noting 2005 printings) by New Page Books (an imprint under Red Wheel/Weiser, a well-known publisher in pagan, occult, and Wiccan literature). My library has a first edition. 


The book is designed specifically for solitary practitioners of Wicca or modern witchcraft who want a structured path of spiritual development and initiation without joining a coven. It addresses the common challenge that while many feel drawn to Wicca, finding a suitable coven can be difficult or impractical—so it offers a self-guided alternative.



Key Features and Structure

The core framework is a five-degree system, inspired by (but adapted for solitary use) traditional initiatory structures found in some Wiccan and witchcraft traditions (notably with influences or parallels to Alexandrian Tradition elements, as noted in some practitioner discussions). Each degree represents a progressive level of learning, self-dedication, and spiritual attainment.


The book covers foundational and advancing topics such as:

•  Core tenets and principles of Wicca

•  Rituals for self-initiation and dedication

•  Magical practices, spellwork, and energy work

•  Personal spiritual growth and higher spirituality

•  Exercises, meditations, and rites tailored for each degree



It emphasises self-paced study, introspection, and personal responsibility in one’s pagan path.






Having used this book myself to self initiate to fourth and fifth degrees outside my own Coven I found that it serves as a concise yet informative guide to attaining the degrees in Wicca in particular. It can be used for those who, like me, wished to advance further into witchcraft and occult free of the three degree Coven structure. Solitary witches can really gain confidence in their Craft too from this book although of course there is no substitute for traditional Coven teachings by peers. There is of course nothing stopping a solitary going on from this back to formalise their degrees within a Coven later on. 



It’s well written with clear typeface and simple but functional artwork. Wording across its 253 pages is clear and friendly yet suitably authoritative.  Once you’ve done the degrees the book will I’m sure, as is my own, remain on your bookshelf as a reference especially if encouraging new witches to attain their degrees whilst remaining solitary as many do.


Hang on you may say… there’s only 3 degrees!

Not necessarily…


The five-degree system in Shanddaramon’s book  provides a structured, progressive framework for solitary Wiccan/witchcraft practitioners to develop spiritually. It goes beyond the standard 3 degree system which whilst many Covens would frown at the notion, is an ideal framework for further studies and initiation into more advanced occult practices and organisations. No witch should ever stop learning. The path has no end.


It draws inspiration from traditional initiatory paths (like some coven-based systems with three degrees) but expands to five levels, tying them conceptually to the five elements of Wicca (Air, Fire, Water, Earth, and Spirit/Akasha). Each degree functions as a complete, self-paced course of study, with goals, exercises, meditations, rituals, and self-initiation rites. The system emphasises personal responsibility, flexibility (it’s suggestive rather than rigidly prescriptive), and building a unique personal tradition.




Here’s a summary of the five degrees based on descriptions from the book’s contents, publisher synopses, and reader/practitioner references:

•  First Degree: Path of Intellect
This foundational level focuses on intellectual understanding and building core knowledge. It covers basics like Wiccan history, tenets, the Wheel of the Year, elements, tools, altar setup, ethics, basic rituals, spellwork fundamentals, divination basics, and healing principles. Much of the book is devoted here to ensure a strong base. Goals include professing intent to study the Craft, creating and performing a dedication ritual, and self-initiating as a beginner practitioner (often called a “student” or “seeker” phase in related discussions).



•  Second Degree: Path of the Heart
Shifting to emotional and relational growth, this degree emphasises the “heart” aspects—compassion, intuition, love, connections to deity (God/Goddess), raising/directing energy, deeper ritual work, and personal emotional healing. It builds interpersonal and devotional skills, encouraging a more heartfelt bond with the divine and magical practice.

•  Third Degree: Path of the Soul
This level delves into soul-level or spiritual essence work—deeper self-exploration, shadow work, soul purpose, advanced meditation, mystical experiences, and integration of higher spiritual awareness. It often involves rites of rebirth or profound personal transformation, focusing on inner soul development and alignment with one’s higher self.

•  Fourth Degree: Path of the Physical
Centered on the material and embodied world, this degree integrates physical aspects of practice—body awareness, grounding in the physical realm, advanced spellcraft involving the body (e.g., movement, dance, or sex magic in some contexts), environmental magic, practical service, and balancing spiritual pursuits with everyday life. It emphasises living the Craft physically and tangibly.

•  Fifth Degree: Path of the Mysterious
The culminating, most advanced level explores the “mysterious” or transcendent—deep esotericism, mystery traditions, profound union with the divine, advanced energy work, enlightenment pursuits, and integration of all prior degrees into a holistic, mysterious understanding of existence. It represents mastery, ongoing evolution, and attunement to hidden or ineffable aspects of spirituality.


Each degree includes specific milestones, such as writing personal rituals, journaling reflections, and performing self-initiations to mark progression. The system is designed to be adaptable—practitioners can take as long as needed per degree, customise content to their path, and use it to create their own eclectic tradition rather than following a strict lineage.


This structure stands out for going beyond the common three-degree model in many Wiccan books, offering solitaries clear milestones toward “higher spirituality” while remaining empowering and non-hierarchical.


So, if you’re a solitary witch seeking a clear, progressive initiatory program rather than a purely eclectic or free-form approach, this book is frequently cited as a worthwhile option in the genre. It’s still in circulation (available new/used on sites like Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or pagan bookstores) and has a niche but appreciative audience among self-dedicated Wiccans.


https://www.abebooks.co.uk/9781564147264/Self-Initiation-Solitary-Witch-Attaining-Higher-1564147266/plp


About the author 

Shanddaramon is a Pagan author, composer, and poet specialising in modern Wicca, witchcraft, and solitary Pagan practice. They have authored around 25 books, primarily published in the mid-2000s by New Page Books (Red Wheel/Weiser), with some later self-published or small-press works.



Key details from publisher bios and sources:

•  A writer focused on accessible Paganism for solitaries, families, and everyday spirituality.

•  Also a Professor of Music (teaching at a local college), blending arts with mystical/Pagan interests.

•  Lives (or lived) in the Boston, Massachusetts area with family (wife, daughter, pets), per older bios (pronouns often “he” in descriptions).

•  Maintains a low online profile; X account (@shanddaramon, joined 2009) describes them as “I am a Pagan writer,” but shows no recent activity (last posts from 2013–2015).

•  Their website (shanddaramon.com) appears inactive or inaccessible as of recent checks


Notable books include Self-Initiation for the Solitary Witch (2004, their flagship title), A Pagan Book of ABCs (most popular on Goodreads), Living PaganismJust Being: A Pagan Guide to MeditationDewdrops in the Moonlight: A Book of Pagan Prayer, and others on Sabbats, prayer, and children’s Pagan learning.


Shanddaramon is respected in niche Pagan circles for practical, structured guidance for independent practitioners, though less mainstream than authors like Scott Cunningham. No major recent publications or public updates appear since the 2010s.




Saturday, 21 March 2026

Our Magical Solar System: The Moon

 

Our Magical Solar System 

The Moon

The moon holds profound correspondences in esoteric traditions, particularly in witchcraft, paganism, Wicca, and astrology. 

These associations link the moon’s energy to various elements of magic, ritual, healing, intuition, and manifestation. The moon is seen as a feminine, receptive force—ruling emotions, the subconscious, a cycles of change, fertility, dreams, psychic abilities, and the inner world. It governs Monday (its planetary day), the element of water, and the zodiac sign Cancer (with exaltation in Taurus).


Its energy is cool, reflective, magnetic, and nurturing, often tied to the Goddess archetype (maiden, mother, crone). In planetary magic, the moon enhances intuition, protection, illusion, change, and manifestation through reflection rather than direct creation.



General Lunar Correspondences

•  Element: Water

•  Gender/Energy: Feminine, receptive, yin

•  Colors: Silver, white, pale blue, pearl, soft purple, gray, sometimes pale yellow or green

•  Day of the Week: Monday

•  Metal: Silver

•  Tarot Cards: The Moon (illusions, intuition, the subconscious), The High Priestess (mystery, inner knowledge), The Empress (nurturing, fertility)

•  Chakra: Second (sacral/belly chakra) — tied to emotions, creativity, and fluidity

•  Themes: Emotions, intuition, dreams, psychic work, fertility, motherhood, cycles, protection, healing (especially emotional or fluid-related), secrets, illusions, and transformation


Deities Associated with the Moon

Many cultures honor lunar deities, often feminine but sometimes masculine or dual. 


Common ones include:

•  Artemis / Diana (Greek/Roman — huntress, maiden moon)

•  Selene / Luna (Greek/Roman — personification of the moon)

•  Hecate (Greek — crossroads, magic, dark moon)

•  Cerridwen (Celtic — wisdom, cauldron, transformation)

•  Chang’e (Chinese — moon goddess of immortality)

•  Thoth (Egyptian — knowledge, often linked to moon cycles)

•  Khonsu (Egyptian — moon god of time and healing)

•  Mani (Norse — moon personified)

•  Others: Inanna, Aine, Coyolxauhqui, Blodeuwedd, Morgan Le Fay


Crystals and Stones

Moon-aligned stones are often pale, iridescent, or watery in appearance:

•  Moonstone (primary — intuition, feminine energy, new beginnings)

•  Selenite (clarity, cleansing, lunar light)

•  Pearl (purity, emotional healing)

•  Labradorite (psychic protection, magic)

•  Opal (emotional balance, inspiration)

•  Clear Quartz (amplification)

•  Rose Quartz (self-love, nurturing)

•  Black Tourmaline or Obsidian (protection during shadow work)


Herbs, Plants, Oils, and Incense

Lunar herbs are often juicy, watery, sweetly scented, white/silvery, or night-blooming:

•  Jasmine (intuition, dreams, sensuality)

•  Lavender (calm, psychic dreams)

•  Chamomile (emotional soothing)

•  Willow (cycles, grief, flexibility)

•  Lemon balm (clarity, lunar soothing)

•  Moonflower, gardenia, white lilies

•  Rose (love, intuition)

•  Sandalwood, camphor, myrrh (for incense)

•  Others: Poppy, cucumber, melon, cabbage, almond, lotus, evening primrose


Moon Phases and Their Magical Correspondences


The moon’s cycle is central to timing spells, with each phase carrying distinct energy:

•  New Moon (dark moon): Beginnings, setting intentions, planting seeds (literal or metaphorical), banishing old habits, shadow work, starting projects.

•  Waxing Crescent: Growth, attraction, building energy, drawing in love, abundance, or success.

•  First Quarter: Action, overcoming obstacles, courage, decision-making.

•  Waxing Gibbous: Refinement, patience, gathering strength toward manifestation.

•  Full Moon: Peak power, culmination, manifestation, charging tools/crystals, divination, love spells, healing, gratitude rituals, Esbats (lunar celebrations). Colors often silver/blue/white; herbs like rose, sage, lavender.

•  Waning Gibbous: Gratitude, sharing wisdom, banishing minor issues.

•  Last Quarter: Release, letting go, banishing, protection, cord-cutting.

•  Waning Crescent: Rest, introspection, deep cleansing, endings, preparing for rebirth.


Additional Notes

•  Moon in different zodiac signs modifies energy (e.g., Moon in Aries for bold action; Moon in Pisces for dreamwork).

•  Full moons have unique names and themes by month (e.g., Wolf Moon for protection, Harvest Moon for abundance).

•  In modern witchcraft, these correspondences are flexible—personal intuition often overrides strict rules. The moon’s pull on tides and emotions makes it a natural ally for water-based magic, dream incubation, or emotional healing.



People born when there was two full moons in the month are known as blue moon children. 


These draw from centuries of folklore, astrology, and modern pagan practices, offering a framework to align rituals with cosmic rhythms. The moon invites reflection: what hidden truths does its light reveal in your own inner world?


Tye Eternal Enigma: Whispers of the Moon in the Veil of Existence


In the vast tapestry of the cosmos, where stars flicker like forgotten thoughts and galaxies swirl in silent reverie, the moon emerges not as a mere celestial body, but as a profound archetype of the metaphysical unknown. It hangs suspended in the nocturnal sky, a luminous sentinel guarding the threshold between the tangible and the ethereal. 


What is the moon, if not a mirror to our own inscrutable souls? It defies the linearity of human perception, waxing and waning in rhythmic cycles that echo the ebb and flow of existence itself. To gaze upon its cratered visage is to confront the enigma of being: a pale orb that borrows light from an absent sun, illuminating the darkness without ever revealing its own secrets.


Metaphysically, the moon embodies the duality of illusion and reality, a concept that philosophers from antiquity have pondered in hushed tones. Plato might have seen it as a shadow in his cave, a fleeting projection of the ideal form of light, forever unattainable yet eternally alluring.


 It pulls at the oceans with invisible threads, stirring tides that mirror the turbulent undercurrents of the human psyche. Are we not all lunar-bound, our emotions swelling like high waves under its gravitational spell? Lunacy, they call it—the madness induced by its glow—yet perhaps this is no affliction, but a glimpse into the sublime chaos that underlies all order. 



The moon whispers of impermanence: full one night, a sliver the next, vanishing entirely into the void, only to rebirth itself in defiance of oblivion. In this cycle lies a riddle: if the moon can die and resurrect without end, what then of our own fleeting essence? Are we fragments of stardust, destined to orbit unseen forces, or architects of our own luminous rebirths?


Enigmatically, the moon weaves itself into the fabric of myth and mysticism, a chameleon deity across cultures. To the ancient Egyptians, it was Thoth, the scribe of divine knowledge, inscribing fates upon the scrolls of night. In Eastern philosophies, it symbolises the yin principle—the receptive, the feminine, the intuitive shadow that complements the yang’s assertive blaze. 


Yet, it remains elusive, a trickster that plays with light and shade. Consider the werewolf’s howl or the alchemist’s elixir brewed under its beam: these are not mere superstitions, but metaphors for transformation, for the alchemical transmutation of base matter into spiritual gold. The moon’s surface, pocked with craters like ancient wounds, invites speculation: are these scars from cosmic battles, or imprints of forgotten dreams projected from the collective unconscious? Jung might argue it as an anima archetype, the soul’s feminine guide through the labyrinth of self-discovery, leading us toward wholeness amid fragmentation.



But delve deeper, and the moon reveals layers of existential paradox. It is both intimate and distant—a companion to solitary wanderers, yet millions of miles removed, untouchable. In its silence, it poses questions without answers: Does it observe us as we observe it, a cosmic eye reflecting our gaze back upon ourselves? Or is it a blank canvas upon which we project our longings, fears, and aspirations? 


Quantum whispers suggest entanglement; perhaps the moon’s phases entwine with the observer’s mind, collapsing probabilities into perceived reality. In the metaphysical realm, it challenges materialism: if gravity binds it to Earth, what unseen forces bind the spirit to the body? The moon, in its enigmatic orbit, reminds us that existence is not a straight path but a spiral, drawing us ever inward toward the core of mystery.


As dawn approaches and the moon fades into the paling sky, it leaves us with an unresolved cadence, a metaphysical koan to ponder. Is it a beacon of hope in the abyss, or a harbinger of the void’s inevitability? 


The Moon’s physical and psychological effects upon humans and animals.

In our modern age we have been taught to follow the calendar when it comes to female menstrual cycles, flood planes and mental health. Despite, however, the dominance of science and nay sayers there’s convincing proof that we are indeed affected by the phase and location of the Moon . 


Indeed women can unlearn science dogma and monitor and align their cycles with the Moon to great effect.  Consider this: the Moon has a proven effect on water and liquids. We are made up of lots of fluids including blood. It’s not a long stretch to see that our body is being effected.


Know the moon cycles and natural rhythms of our universe and you will better understand your own  .

Animals,plants and humans are also influenced by the Moon. Many animals mate on full Moon . Farmers use their knowledge of the Moon when planting or animal handling. My own grandmother always had a copy of Old Moore’s Almanac to know the planetary and other elements that can affect our world each year. It’s still available today since 1697


The Moon also seems to affect our brains,!stimulating them with its brighter nights. Hospitals and Police in many places take this seriously and allows for this with additional staff especially in hospitals.

After all “lunacy “ has been generally understood by many 


Exploring Lunar Myths: Tales from Around the Globe

The moon, with its ethereal glow and cyclical transformations, has captivated human imagination since time immemorial.


It is personified as a feminine entity, tied to immortality and longing. One of the most iconic Chinese myths revolves around Chang’e, the moon goddess. 


According to legend, Chang’e was the wife of the heroic archer Hou Yi, who saved the world by shooting down nine of ten suns that were scorching the earth. As a reward, he received an elixir of immortality. Fearing it would fall into the wrong hands—or in some versions, driven by curiosity—Chang’e consumed the potion and ascended to the moon, where she resides eternally in a grand palace, accompanied by a jade rabbit.



In Aztec cosmology, the moon is born from acts of divine sacrifice and jealousy. The god Tecciztecatl, often depicted as a proud and wealthy deity, vied with the humble Nanahuatl to become the sun. Both offered themselves to a sacred fire, but Tecciztecatl hesitated out of fear, while Nanahuatl leaped in bravely, emerging as the sun. Shamed, Tecciztecatl followed but shone too brightly as a second sun. To dim his light, another god hurled a rabbit at his face, creating the moon’s mottled appearance and establishing Tecciztecatl as the moon god.   


This “rabbit on the moon” motif, shared with Asian traditions, symbolises humility over arrogance and explains the lunar markings as eternal scars from cosmic conflict.


Among the Inca of South America, the moon goddess Mama Quilla was revered as a protector of women and weavers, her silver tears forming the world’s precious metals. Eclipses were seen as attacks by a jaguar or serpent on Mama Quilla, prompting people to make noise with drums and shouts to scare the beast away, ensuring her return.   


These myths highlight the moon’s vulnerability, mirroring human fears of darkness and loss, while emphasising communal rituals to restore balance.


Inuit legends from Alaska, Greenland, and northern Canada portray the moon as Anningan (or Igaluk), the male moon god, eternally pursuing his sister Malina, the sun goddess. Their pursuit causes the daily rise and set of sun and moon, symbolising forbidden desire and the cycle of light and dark. 


African folklore presents the moon as a creative and unifying entity. In Fon mythology from Benin, Mawu is the moon goddess, twin to the sun god Liza, together forming Mawu-Lisa, a dual deity representing balance. Mawu, the cooler, nurturing aspect, created the world at night to avoid Liza’s scorching heat, embodying femininity and wisdom. Their eternal link symbolises the interdependence of day and night, male and female. 


Western myths often anthropomorphise the moon’s face as the “Man in the Moon,” a figure banished for crimes like theft or Sabbath-breaking. In Germanic and Roman tales, he’s a thief carrying stolen goods, his visage formed by craters. Shakespeare referenced him as “Moonshine” with a lantern, blending whimsy with punishment. 


Associations with lunacy—madness induced by moonlight—stem from ancient beliefs in the moon’s influence on tides and human behaviour , echoed in werewolf lore where full moons trigger transformations.


In Scandinavian legends, the moon is linked to deities like Mani, who guides it across the sky, pursued by wolves.  Greek myths feature Selene, the moon goddess, who falls in love with the sleeping shepherd Endymion, granting him eternal youth in slumber—a tale of unattainable desire.


In Polynesia, Hina the moon woman ascends via a lunar rainbow, beating tapa cloth visible on the moon’s surface.  Maori legends tell of Rona, carried to the moon after cursing it, along with her water gourd and a tree. Australian Aboriginal stories depict Bahloo the moon as an embarrassed figure who shrinks after a canoe mishap, reflecting cycles of confidence and retreat.  Algerian tales speak of tears on the moon, symbolising sorrow and renewal. 


In its quiet enigma, the moon invites us to embrace the unknown, to dance with shadows rather than flee them. For in the heart of its glow lies the ultimate truth: that all is illusion, yet profoundly real; that we are but reflections in the grand cosmic mirror, forever chasing the light we ourselves cast. And so, the moon endures, an eternal riddle suspended in the velvet expanse, beckoning the seeker to unravel not its secrets, but their own.


Learn from our Moon. Be still and quiet and learn the hidden mysteries of our universe and ourselves. She is our eternal companion and the balance to the energies of the Sun. Their eternal dance affects us all .