Culture Witchcraft isn’t all broomsticks or cauldrons. How real witches make magic


By Scottie Andrew, CNN
Sat October 26, 2024

img-7927.jpg
Elwynn Green, a witch based in Northern Ireland, makes walking in nature a daily ritual to commune with the world around him.

Elwynn Green’s morning routine is relatively unremarkable, at least at the start.

With his wife, Green wakes up his three daughters, makes them breakfast and prepares their lunches. Once they’re shipped off to school, and after he’s had a moment to meditate, he’ll take a walk near his home on Northern Ireland’s rugged Causeway Coast.

While he’s out, he’ll typically talk to the wind.

Green might feel the air swirl around him or the force of a gust pushing dark clouds into the sky, blotting out the blue. He hears the wind speaking, so he may feel compelled to ask it a question. Sometimes, the wind will answer. He has a similar impulse when he overhears trees whispering to each other or the waves crashing.

“For most people in everyday life, that’s a sign of madness,” he said.

But Green is a witch, and communing with the world around him is at the heart of his craft. He asks questions of the wind and trees, ancestors and spirits. Sometimes answers never come. But witchcraft, to Green, isn’t about finding answers to life’s big questions (or death’s, for that matter). It’s about finding beauty within the chaos.

“Sometimes it’s not about knowing,” Green said. “Knowing is overrated.”

The way Green practices witchcraft defies stereotypes of broomstick-wielding, cauldron-toting, pointy-hatted witches. He doesn’t belong to a coven. He’s not Wiccan or pagan, religions that are rooted in witchcraft. He has a few cats, though they’re better suited for snuggling than serving as helpful familiars.

There is no one way to be a witch, he said. Tenets and rituals are unique to all who practice. The traits others might find strange only strengthen one’s witchcraft, Green said.

“We’ve never belonged,” he told CNN of witches. “If we belonged, we wouldn’t be witches. And so my advice to people about that is, usually, get used to not belonging. It’s a good place to set up shop.”

Witches can be born and made​

Green is a “hedge witch” who exists in the metaphorical “hedge,” the liminal space between our world and a spiritual realm with which he interacts. His witchcraft is heavily informed by animism, or the belief that everything possesses a spirit. To Green, there’s magic in all things — the air we breathe, the water in the ocean, the animals and plants with which we share our planet.

Witchery runs in Green’s family. He was raised by his two aunts, both witches, who shared their house with spirits and encouraged Green to find his magic. Though both have since died, Green said one of his aunts’ spirits occasionally “pops in” for a chat.

Andrea Samayoa, meanwhile, wasn’t raised a witch. She came to the craft innocently as a child, when she and her friends would make “potions” with leftover condiments from neighborhood parties. Playing pretend-witches, they’d cast “spells” to make it rain and dance under the moon.

“We didn’t know what we were doing at the time,” the Floridian witch said.

c-screenshot-2024-10-18-at-1-41-14-pm.jpg
This still from TikTok shows Andrea Samayoa dressed up as a witch for Halloween in 2023.

The practice became more important to her when Catholicism, the religion in which she was raised, started to feel too restrictive. Samayoa said she resists inflexible rules, which is partly the reason why she doesn’t belong to a coven, either.

Even in her early 30s, Samayoa retains a carefree approach toward witchcraft. Her “eclectic” interpretation, which pulls from several witchcraft traditions, has very few rules, if any. She even published a spellbook called “Lazy Witchcraft for Crazy, Sh*tty Days,” inspired by the way her chronic illness has impacted how she practices her craft.

Witchcraft is surging in popularity​

Green and Samayoa are both full-time witches, proficient in the typical rituals and spells of witchcraft — Green performs a banishing ritual every morning to rid his environment of negative influences, and Samayoa makes a curse-removing wash with herbs, citrus, witch hazel and quartz to keep harm at bay.

While they practice witchcraft solo, they’re performing it for an audience. Green and Samayoa are both popular figures on WitchTok, a popular TikTok community whose members share tips for improving their craft with fellow witches of all experience levels.

On TikTok, Green, who also hosts a podcast and a Patreon, performs readings using bones and tarot cards for commenters who ask him heavy questions about their love lives, careers and safety of their families. It’s a weighty task, so Green chooses his words carefully.

c-img-4611.jpg
Green has practiced witchcraft since he was a boy. He's sharing his talents with thousands on TikTok.

Samayoa, meanwhile, often shares no-nonsense rituals in videos peppered with profanity that require little more than an open mind. (She also sells spell kits.) Earlier this month, she taught her followers how to create a simple protection sigil with pen and paper, which she used to protect her Tampa home from Hurricane Milton. It worked, she said: Her house wasn’t harmed in the storm, though a few pieces of her fence were blown out.

WitchTok surged in popularity in 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic inflicted extreme stress and uncertainty upon the world. Even in the months before the pandemic upended life as we knew it, witchcraft was on its way to a comeback, partly as a response to societal unrest in the wake of the 2016 election and the #MeToo movement, The Atlantic reported in 2020.

Pam Grossman, a pagan witch and scholar, told The Atlantic that “the more frustrated people get, they do often turn to witchcraft,” because the typical channels through which they accomplish things have stopped working.

But witches who come to the craft to attain power or control will be disappointed, Green said. Witchcraft is a way of interpreting the world and finding one’s place within it, but there are never easy answers or flawless fixes.

“Control within nature doesn’t work — it’s chaos,” he said. “It teaches us.”

Magic isn’t hard to find, if you keep an open mind​

Being a witch doesn’t require belonging to a coven or nailing a complicated spell, both witches told CNN. Witch-centric media like “Hocus Pocus,” “American Horror Story: Coven” and “Agatha All Along” may show fictional sorceresses brewing potions in cauldrons, making soul-sacrificing pacts and harnessing their magic for dark purposes, but none of that is required to be a witch.

One doesn’t even have to understand how magic works to be a witch, Green said: “Just accept that it’s there and use it.”

In fact, both witches said, fictional depictions of witches are almost entirely inaccurate. As long as your intentions are clear and your mind is open, you can become a witch, Samayoa said.

“I feel like everyone has magic within themselves,” she said.

While Samayoa’s book includes spells intended to bring their casters money and abundance, some of the most essential spells she shares are for self-care and healing. It’s not easy to tell when those spells have worked, as there’s very rarely a simple fix for problems so nebulous. But once they’ve worked, a witch will know, she said.

“Since the magic is coming from you and you alone, if you’re not feeling like you love yourself, your magic isn’t going to be as strong as you want it to be,” she said. “Taking care of yourself is better for your witchcraft.”

Both witches said that practicing witchcraft is healing, even if the process remains unfinished.

“Witchcraft is a transformative thing — it changes us,” Green said. “I believe we have to embrace every aspect of ourselves, the hardest parts, we have to love it. That’s our empowerment.”

Related Article: The witch isn’t dead: New book explores witchcraft’s rebellious history – and modern transformation (archive)
 
People turn to this stuff to attain personal control over chaos or trauma in some way while aligning yourself with no real moral code of conduct or specific ritual guidelines for your practice (power and freedom by your standards with no checks so you don't feel guilt that requires reformation of character). It's really appealing for narcissistic individuals and those with high anxiety. Christianity is ironically what would cure them. "Lean not on your own understanding."

I hope they return home to the Father soon.
 
Men can’t be witches. Those are called warlocks.
Let me guess, you are only a witch if you believe males can be witches as well
I'm not a neo-pagan by any means, but witch was always a unisex title. I'm not sure how or when it became explicitly feminine. Wizards, warlocks, sorcerers, and so on, are all different things, and are not the male variants of witches.

I only know this 'cause I became fascinated with the historical/biblical context of pagans in the early stages of writing a fantasy book. They were up to some depraved and evil stuff. It's no wonder they were scorned since the beginning of time.
 
Dya know what I actually respect 09A more than these faggots, atleast they actually commit to trying to use magic, not treating it as prayer
"Haha I cast a spell/prayed for it not to rain on my birthday, and it worked!"
"What about when you cast a spell/prayer for your grandad not to die of cancer and he did?"
"It just worked differently/in mysterious ways"

At least those left hand path faggots have some conviction in their bullshit
 
Look, ill take my down votes now but...

Witchcraft when not pozzed, repackaged and commercialized (like every other religion. Including atheism), is nothing more than a system of belief and way to interact with the world.

Its no more, or less crazy in theory** than believing in literal Christ, Yaweh, or Shiva. Or the Bhodisavvas. Or *whatever*.

**insane actions of various followers being still insane.

It doesn't make you special. Its not goth or edgy, although plenty of people get that twisted. Its no more a requirement to be cringe ill educated idiots than it is a requirement to be a mber of Westboro Baptist to be a flavor of Christian.

The popularization of "witch" aesthetic over the past 10 or 15 years has been absolutely disastrous in the community, as has been the comingling of liberal only politics, as was the white lighter/burning times shit before that.

To be clear. I speak in broad generalities that would classify your local Heathen seidr practitioner, as well as any adherent of crowley/buckland/gardner in the same bucket as a non theistic druid. Which is unfortunate but the distinctions as largely irrelevant to larger society. And modern culture has only intermingled and watered them down further.

Theres a huge split in whether magic is a thing, or simply repackaged prayer and frankly for the sake of polite society, a number of witches will lie and claim the latter so that their coworkers/neighbors have a touch stone that won't get them in social trouble. Make of that what you will. Good luck getting a true theological consensus across religions on prayer either.

Humanity is hardwired for some kind of religion, and they'll find it somewhere even if its politics, atheism, or edgelording (untraditional definitions).

Almost any witch who is willing to take the spotlight publicly is gonna be a cringe attention whore, with a few naive ones mixed in. this has been true for decades. You arent going to find your local otherwise sane pagans this way.

Lastly, your reminder that *reddit* of all places is a cesspool of misery troons that wanted something traditionally seen as "feminine", and tiktok witches are on tiktok for fucks sakes. They're no better than the rest of reddit or tiktok. Quoting reddit about anybody is generally as good as quoting reddit about us. Fucking murderous right wing frothing at the mouth nazis we are eh?
 
Thats not witchcraft. i know a thing or 2 about that because i lived around some of their holy places. witchcraft is about taking shrooms in the woods and having sex with ugly chicks in the dirt.

the only scary witchcraft is what the crazy neonazis do. they use blood letting for oaths and drink the mixed blood, like some super aids cocktail.
 
Back