At the risk of being horribly commercial, I discovered an interesting product that facilitates sex and sigil magick. I received a Tenga Egg masturbation sleeve as an after Christmas gift. After taking the wrapper off to reveal the container had a perfect white surface easy to draw upon, it immediately struck me that the device could be used for charging sigils.
The last picture is a healing sigil drawn on the egg. It seems tailor for adding sex energy to the sigil.
Month: January 2015
‘They worshipped, so they said, the Great Old Ones who lived ages before there were any men, and who came to the young world out of the sky. Those Old Ones were gone now, inside the earth and under the sea; but their dead bodies had told their secrets in dreams to the first men, who formed a cult which had never died…’
Hi James, I really enjoy the podcast and without saying too much I want to thank you for helping begin my Magical journey. I have posted a blog about my beginnings in magic and would love your feedback. Not looking for a plug, just some thoughts. Thanks for the free!
Thank you for your kind words about the podcast.
As you see by how long it took me to answer this, I’ve been a real slacker lately. I’ve been considering letting my other blog, Magical Record, just die off. I haven’t been making daily journal entries and I haven’t posted anything there in months. Your message has changed my mind. While I doubt I will go back to daily posting, I will keep adding when the spirit moves me.
I liked your blog because your first post was very honest. I think we need more honesty in the magical community. There’s too much posturing. I am not a great magician. I own my failures as well as my successes.
I hope you keep going with yours. I started Magical Record because there isn’t enough examples out there on how to practice magick day to day.
I hope you keep turning to the Scroll of Thoth podcast and blog for inspiration. Good luck to you in your Great Work.
Austin Osman Spare (English, 1886-1956), A Book of Satyrs: Here Ends this Book, on 21 sheets framed as one, 10¼ x 14¾ in. overall.
Cover, imprint and logo of the magazine PAN, 1895-1900. Berlin. Published by Otto Julius Bierbaum.