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Michele Morgan - Simple Wicca

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Michele Morgan Simple Wicca
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Simple Wicca: summary, description and annotation

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Wicca, a positive, Earth-based spiritual practice, is both old and new, traditional and ever-changing- and Michele Morgan has captured its essence in this small book. She invites readers to follow their hearts into a spiritual practice that has sustained ancestors from time immemorial. In Simple Wicca, practitioner Michele Morgan dispels the many myths that surround this centuries-old tradition, explains its main tenets, and offers interested readers the basics of how to begin to practice. While other books have been written on Wicca, none are as straightforward and easy to follow. Simple Wicca offers not only practical guidance in the craft, but also an emotional and spiritual understanding of the practice.

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PRAISE FOR SIMPLE WICCA

Simple Wicca is a concise, easy to read and understand introduction to Wicca for both potential Wiccans and the curious. Michele Morgan has pulled together the essential elements of Wicca in a book that demystifies and opens new doors to knowledge and growth.

Edain McCoy, author of Making Magick and Celtic Myth & Magick

A lyrical, joyous, magickal glimpse into the heart of a spiritual path that has an ancient soul yet is forever young. Simple Wicca tells us what it feels like to reach out and touch the hands of the old gods of nature and what it is to know wonder again.

Amber K, Priestess of Wicca, former National President of Covenant of the Goddess, author of True Magick and Covencraft

This edition first published in 2008 by Red WheelWeiser LLC With offices at - photo 1

This edition first published in 2008 by

Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC

With offices at:

500 Third Street, Suite 230

San Francisco, CA 94107

www.redwheelweiser.com

Copyright 2000 by Conari Press.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC. Reviewers may quote brief passages. Originally published in 2000 by Conari Press, ISBN: 1-57324-199-7.

Cover design: Kristine Brogno

Text design: Claudia Smelser

Cover photography: David Swain

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Morgan, Michele.

Simple Wicca/Michele Morgan.

p. cm.(A Simple Wisdom Book)

ISBN 978-1-57863-418-7

1. Witchcraft. I. Title. II. Series.

BF1566.M715 2000

133.4'3dc21

00-029499

Printed in the United States

MV

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials Z39.48-1992 (R1997).

To Mom and Dad... for believing
SIMPLE WICCA
FOREWORD

L et's time travel backwards a few centuries.

Imagine yourself standing beneath a beautiful star-lit sky whispering your wishes to the moon. Imagine yourself at midnight, dancing atop some fragrant tree-covered hill.

Do you prefer daytime to night? No problem. Just envision yourself ambling through a sunny, gorgeous, fertile field, not far from a flowing river, knee-deep in aromatic foliage, your basket overflowing with berries and wild roses and plants bearing mysterious, evocative names like love-lies-bleeding, life-everlasting, and queen of the meadow.

Here's another scenario: envision yourself standing on a wild, wave-tossed shore, exhilarated by the powerful winds of an on-coming storm. Alternatively, imagine yourself watching the sun rise over some long-ago Midsummer's Day, hoping for a glimpse of fairies returning to their mounds after their all-night revels.

No need to limit romantic fantasies to the outdoors: envision yourself within your very own dimly-lit home (pre-electric lights, of course!), secretly performing ancient, arcane, spiritually potent and beloved but unfortunately now long-forgotten magic rituals. The key word in that sentenceand the unspoken word in every one of those other scenarios, toois secretly. (There's also another unspoken word inherent in each scenario but we'll save that one for later.)

Let's revisit those fantasies, shall we, adding just a bit more detail. Once again, envision yourself at home just a couple of centuries ago, performing those beloved, long-cherished rituals yet unable to completely maintain your focus because one ear is permanently cocked listening for an unwelcome knock at the door.

Imagine yourself sliding discreetly into your seat at church on the attendance-mandatory Feast of Saint John, the newer, official, safe name for Midsummer's Day, hoping no grass stains on your clothes betray secret nocturnal celebrations, hoping that no one notices that you've arrived late, thus exposing yourself to suspicion, gossip or worse. Imagine yourself slipping home silently after any of those outdoor adventures praying that you fail to catch the eye of any betraying neighbor.

Imagine having to weigh the risks of dancing under the full moon, of being observed taking sensual pleasure from wind and waves, of enjoying cherished rituals in the privacy of one's own home. Envision yourself constantly torn between the desire for spiritual fulfillment, joy and fun and the equally crucial desire to just blend in, be obedient and safe. Doesn't sound as romantic anymore, does it?

Remember those beloved, long-cherished rituals celebrated secretly at home? Exactly how secret, you ask? Time travel backwards again with me for a minute. Envision yourself longing to share those rituals with your children, passing them down the same way you learned them, from parent to child over literally countless generations but simultaneously afraid to do so, terrified of endangering your children with potentially fatal knowledge, terrified of betraying yourself through revelation of your clandestine, forbidden activities. Here's the dilemma in a nutshell: how do you keep old, precious rituals alive while simultaneously keeping your kids (and yourself) alive, too? Which do you choose? It's no accident that so many of those age-old, once-cherished rituals are now lost and forgotten, dead and gone.

These visions of the past are not fantasies but stark reality, a reminder of what life used to be like for a long time for a lot of people, especially women but men too and children of both sexes and all ages. For centuries, just a few hundred years ago, magical practices (or anything construed as such) along with pre-Christian religions and spiritual traditions were outlawed and harshly punished to varying degrees in virtually every European nation and colony. Neighbors and family members were rewarded for reporting rebellious backsliders and non-conformists to authorities.

Let's put this into perspective: it's no exaggeration to speak of time-traveling back only a couple of centuries to experience these terrors. Although the witch-craze had dissipated by the 18th century, the two women generally acknowledged as the last to be officially, hence legally, executed as witches were burned in Posen in 1793, only slightly over two hundred years ago. The French Revolution was in full swing. George Washington was sworn in that year for his second term as president. Hardly the distant Dark Ages.

From the modern perspective, those scenarios from the past seem so innocuous, don't they? Romantic but harmless activities: dancing around at night; exulting in the feeling of wind on your skin; hoping for a glimpse of the supernatural. Don't underestimate them. These were revolutionary acts, acts of subversion, acts that honor and affirm the rights of individuals to believe and behave as they choose.

And, oh yeah, in the midst of genuine life-threatening danger, people defied oppression to have fun. Fun is the other unspoken word inherent in every one of our initial time-traveling scenarios. During a long era when fun, pleasure and laughter were suspect (I kid you not nor do I exaggerate. Remember the Puritans. Remember Savonarola.), people risked their lives to experience joy and to personally connect with the divine.

From our comfortable and so much safer vantage-point in the 21st century, it is vital to understand that those initial romantic episodes encountered during our time travels were all that was once required to be persecuted, perhaps killed, as a witch. That's all it might take to land in deep trouble.

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