| Moon
Teachings for October/November 2000
Summoning Spells
Part One: Nagging
the Invisible
By Dana
Gerhardt
When my 7-year-old wants
something he wheedles and whines. He’s done it since he could put
sounds together and point. I don’t think he learned this from anyone
in particular. Spend five minutes in the toy aisles of a major department
store and you’ll discover it’s pretty widespread. Given my dog and
cat do it too, even the birds at my garden feeder when it's empty, this
must be a natural instinct. Whatever the species, nagging represents
our first attempts at the magic of summoning.
Grown-up humans, especially
neo-pagan ones, dress it up a bit. With my girlfriends I exchange
rituals to call in money and love. We schedule our spells for a waxing
moon. We shout “Trinka-five” several times. We burn dollar
bills at the new moon in a silver bowl. We light the properly colored
candles, tie ribbons, mix herbs, recite incantations. But the basic
strategy is the same as my dog’s and my son’s: in the quandary of
desiring something we don’t have and don’t know how to get, we petition
a greater power. The trouble is, this sometimes succeeds.
Overall success rates may
be low, but as long as desire is strong, intermittent reinforcement is
compelling. We’ll use our failures as reason to conjure better
strategies. We become scientists of spell-making. I’ve
learned that borrowed incantations and colored candles (unless poured on
the proper moon) won’t work for me. My son now precedes his “Mother-get-me-this”
spells with “Mom, I’m not really asking you to buy me anything, I just
thought you’d like to see something interesting over here…”
But the truth is, when I
give into my son’s wheedling, it has little to do with his tactics.
Rather: I am too tired to resist, I am too joyful to resist, I was
going to get it for him anyway, or I leverage it to get something I want
from him (how parents wheedle back to their children). But now I
wonder: Is this how it is with the divine powers I petition? Do
my spells actually work or is it all random whimsy?
A few years ago I performed
a ritual to Venus to get both the house and man of my dreams. I wrote
my wishes down, folded the piece of paper, planted it along with a nickel,
some honey, and a candle inside a dinner roll. I lit the candle and
when it was done burning, sent it all to Venus, floating the waxy bread
down a stream at the outskirts of town. It was fun, pagan play.
Given my bank and heart accounts, it would be a year, I thought, before
the fulfillment of either desire was even possible. Within
six weeks, I had them both. It was shocking. Of course, I’ve
tried the same ritual several times since, without that resounding success.
And the man of my dreams has long since ceased being dreamy.
The first time I burned a
dollar bill on a new moon I got a raise. I’ve continued this practice
and my monthly finances remain healthy. But I forgot it one month
and nothing bad happened. We want our spell-work to be as honest
and productive as our work in the world, so we apply as much logic to it
as we can. When spells don’t succeed we tell ourselves we haven’t
cleared all unconscious resistance – or that the universe had something
better in mind. But underneath the rationalizations, sprouting like mushrooms
in the dark, doubts grow. We may distrust our powers, the
powers we petition, the idea of magic.
We are conflicted anyway:
Wanting things seems spiritually out of vogue. Isn’t the greater
skill simply learning to love what we have? Perhaps summoning
spells are charms we’re meant to outgrow. But reading the latest
Harry Potter book got me thinking. There was Harry at the TriWizard
Championship, facing a huge, fierce, yellow-eyed dragon, guarding a golden
egg Harry was supposed to retrieve. The dragon spewed real fire and
thrashed a dangerously spiky tail. But Harry got his prize.
Using a simple summoning spell, Harry called his broom from the dormitory
and nimbly flew at the egg.
Harry’s practice in summoning
paid off. We might take heart from studying his first efforts,
dubious as many of ours. His early practice books and quills lost
nerve before reaching him, dropping floorward like stones. Perhaps
it’s silly to take a fictional boy wizard as a role model. But in
the realm of the invisible, where imagination is queen, the inspirations
of fiction may be the most relevant. Peer deep into pagan roots and
you’ll find plenty poets of impossible things. Why not take
summoning spells more seriously? What if we really could do more than just
nag invisible powers?
There’s something else.
I see it in the astrology charts of the generation that’s made Harry Potter
a worldwide phenomenon. Born with transformative Pluto in Scorpio,
the sign of magic, these children just might be the ones to discover that
magic is real. Perhaps they will need to. There could be
real dragons in their future -- and real treasures worth summoning.
If we follow their lead, we might just help them arrive. Perhaps
our children will finally prove there’s more genuine power to imagination
than has been allowed.
I’d love to hear of your
experiences with summoning spells in our Talking Circle. Check in
for Part Two at next month’s New Moon!
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