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i mean this completely seriously but… a cup of coffee can save your life a little, a shower can save your life a little, making your favorite meal can save your life a little…….little things actually add up to really big things in the long run if you let them, the secret to surviving everyday is infusing a little bit of magic into the mundane i truly believe that
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Just a little PSA for all our mental health (and chronic pain*) spoonies out there! A lot of doctors neglect to mention this little side effect, which means a lot of us are suffering extra from the heat without knowing why.
*Many psych meds are used to treat chronic pain as well, if you didn’t know!
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Happy Summer Solstice ! Here's a bunny buddy for my round little radish mouse. I'm apparently starting a series of critters with vegetables, and I love it😄
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I love that my birthday (June 24th) falls so close to the Summer Solstice! I love that I can celebrate both for days on end and I love that I correlate one with the other. It fills me with such joy!
#bonnibel babbles#litha#summer solstice#summer witch#sun witch#spoonie witch#witchblr#eclectic witch
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𝐋𝐢𝐭𝐡𝐚
⠂⠄⠄⠂⠁⠁⠂⠄⠄⠂⠁⠁⠂⠄⠄⠂⠄⠄⠂⠂⠄⠄⠂⠁⠁⠂⠄⠄⠂⠁⠁





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What is Litha?
Litha is a solar festival celebrated between June 20th and 22nd in the Northern Hemisphere, and around December 20th to 22nd in the Southern Hemisphere. It marks the summer solstice, the longest day of the year and the moment when the sun reaches its peak power. Traditionally, Litha honors the height of light, the fullness of life, and the abundance offered by the Earth in bloom. It is the midpoint of the Wheel of the Year, when nature is at its most alive: fields are green, flowers are open, fruit begins to ripen, and warmth fills every corner. Litha celebrates vitality, strength, joy, and the energy of the sun at its zenith. Fires are lit in its honor, herbs are gathered, and the power of manifestation is strong. Yet, within this brightness lies a quiet turning point, from this day forward, the light will begin to wane. Litha carries both celebration and awareness: the joy of what has flourished, and that all things are cyclical, Now it’s a great time to reflect on personal radiance, express gratitude and to honor the sun and all solar deities.
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History of Litha
The name Litha comes from Anglo-Saxon sources and was recorded by Bede as the name of the months around midsummer. However, the solstice has been celebrated across many cultures for thousands of years. In Celtic lands, midsummer was a sacred time when druids lit bonfires on hilltops to honour the sun and support the fertility of the land. Sacred herbs were gathered at dawn, believed to be especially powerful when infused with the longest light of the year. In ancient Rome, this period was dedicated to Juno, goddess of marriage and women, and to Vesta, the goddess of the hearth fire. Her temple was opened to women, and offerings of grain were made to ensure household blessings. In ancient Greece, midsummer was connected to Hera, Aphrodite, and it was also believed that Prometheus stole the fire from the chariot of the sun and gifted it to humanity at this time. In ancient China, the summer solstice was linked to yin, feminine, earthly energy, in balance with the winter solstice, which represented yang. ⠂⠄⠄⠂⠁⠁⠂⠄⠄⠂⠁⠁⠂⠄⠄⠂⠄⠄⠂⠂⠄⠄⠂⠁⠁⠂⠄⠄⠂⠁⠁
Litha and the Faerie Folk
Midsummer is also a time when the faerie realm is believed to be especially active. Just like Beltane, Litha is considered a liminal time, when the veil between worlds grows thin and the unseen becomes just a little more visible. In Celtic folklore, the fae wander freely during the solstice, drawn to beauty, music, laughter, and offerings left in nature. People once left milk, honey, or bread under sacred trees, near springs, or in gardens to honour them and ask for protection or blessings. Wildflowers and oak groves are especially associated with faerie energy at this time, and some believe that in the shimmer of heat on the solstice horizon, you can sense the opening of other realms: Avalon, Tir na nÓg, the Land of Youth. It’s believed that faeries hold their grand celebrations within mystical faerie rings. These circles, often found in grassy meadows or forest clearings, are thought to mark the dancing spots of faeries. To honor these elemental spirits, offerings of honey, butter, or creamy milk are left in the hopes of gaining faerie favor. (source)
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Midsummer Herb Ritual
Litha is also traditionally a time for harvesting herbs used in potions, elixirs, and spells, a moment long held sacred in magical practice. Since ancient times, it has been believed that when the sun is at its peak and the earth is overflowing with life, the bond between plants and those who work with them grows especially strong. Witches, healers, druids, and others in tune with the land’s rhythms would venture out to gather herbs with deep care, following the natural flow of the day. Some plants were picked at dawn, others at noon, some at sunset, and a few in the gentle quiet of late afternoon. They used small blades, sometimes curved or shaped like serpents, and approached the task slowly, with reverence. Before cutting, they would sit with the plant in stillness, offering a soft prayer or moment of presence. Only a small amount was taken, never more than needed, always leaving enough so the plant could continue to grow and thrive. Gratitude was at the heart of the act, gratitude for the plant, for the living earth, and for the unseen spirits watching over the wild. The herbs gathered during Litha were believed to be especially potent. Little was required. Just sunlight, clear intention, and a respectful hand. Many flowers are linked to this time of year, but the most well-known is St. John’s Wort, valued for its protective and healing properties. Roses, in every color, are also deeply connected to Litha, representing love, passion, and the fullness of life under the midsummer sun.
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The Rise of the Holly King
The myth of the Oak King and the Holly King is often told to explain the shifting balance of light and dark throughout the year. The Oak King rules from the winter solstice to the summer solstice, he is the spirit of the waxing year, of expanding daylight, growth, and vitality. He represents the rising power of the sun and the energy that brings life back to the land. But at Litha, when the light reaches its peak, his brother, the Holly King, returns. The Holly King rules from the summer solstice to Yule, guiding the year into the waning half. He is the spirit of stillness, reflection, and retreat. Their meeting is not a violent battle, but a symbolic shift, one steps back so the other may rise. This story reminds us that light and dark are both sacred, and that every high point contains the seed of return. Just like the sun, we too rise, peak, rest, and begin again.
Litha and Goddess Áine
Áine is a Celtic goddess very closely associated with Litha. is the Celtic Goddess of Midsummer and Queen of the Faeries, deeply tied to both the light of the sun and the mystery of the fae. As a solar deity, she is honored during Midsummer celebrations, being associated with summer, love, protection, fertility, wealth, and sovereignty. On the eve of the 23rd, just after the solstice, people used to gather on Cnoc Áine, where she was said to dwell. They would light bunches of straw and hay tied to poles. These poles were then carried in procession to the top of the hill. Later, people would run with the flames through their fields and between the cattle to bring good luck for the rest of the year. Áine is also connected to horses, animals considered sacred and symbolic of midsummer in Irish tradition. It was said that she could take the form of a red mare named Lair Derg and ride through the fields during the solstice, blessing the land with fertility and magic. Offerings to Áine might include flowers, honey mead, and horseshoes.
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Magic Correspondences
Planets: Sun
Season: Summer
Element: Earth, Fire
Time Of The Day: Noon (when the Sun is at its highest)
Tarot Cards: The Sun, The Empress, The Wheel Of Fortune, 9 Of Cups, The Emperor, The Strength
Colors: Yellow, Orange, Green, Blue, Gold, Red
Herbs: Fennel, Ivy, Yarrow, Verbena, Mugwort, Sage, Mint, Basil, Clove, Thyme
Fruits: Cherry, Raspberry, Peach, Strawberry, Berries, Pineapple, Orange, Apricot, Nectarines
Vegetables: Spinach, Lettuce, Tomatoes, Carrots
Crystals: Jade, Carnelian, Peridot, Citrine, Tiger’s Eye, Sunstone
Runes: Kenaz, Fehu, Ehwaz, Sowilo
Trees: Oak, Birch, Elder, Linden
Goddesses: Brigid, Hel, Amaterasu, Hestia, Juno, Hera, Aphrodite, Áine, Freyja, Bastet, Hathor, Sunna, Flora, Vesta
Gods: Apollo, Helios, Lugh, Baldur, Ra, Zeus, Horus, Dionysus, Aten, Loki, Jupiter, Thor, Cernunnos
Dragons: Fafnir
Flowers: Daisy, St. John’s Wort, Rose, Lavender, Sunflower, Poppy, Calendula, Honeysuckle, Foxglove, Chamomile, Marigold, Jasmine, Peony
Animals: Horse, Bee, Butterfly, Lion, Wren, Moth, Bull, Cow, Hawk, Lizard, Donkey, Hawks, Eagles, Swans
Magical Powers: Good Energy, Solar Magick, Confidence, Healing, Love, Power, Warmth, Success, Fire Magick, Fertility
Symbols: Birch, Sun, Horseshoe, Flower, Butterfly, Summer Birds, Sea Shells, Sun Wheel, Bonfire, St. John’s Wort, Faerie Rings, Roses, Oak, Spiral
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Activities to Do:
☀️ Read A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare
☀️ Take a bath with rose petals or rose essential oil
☀️ Swim on this day to honor both the water and fire elements
☀️ Drink St. John's Wort tea (⚠️Just a quick warning: consuming St. John's Wort while on certain medications, like antidepressants or some painkillers, can trigger serotonin syndrome, which is a serious and painful condition. So make sure to check first or skip it if you're unsure.)
☀️ Craft faerie houses in your garden
☀️ Meditate while lying in the grass, letting the sun touch your skin
☀️ Bake a honey cake for the sabbat
☀️ Go camping to connect with nature
☀️ Craft a homemade sundial
☀️ Leave offerings for the faerie folk
☀️ Create a Litha altar
☀️ Make a flower wreath or crown
☀️ Honor solar deities
☀️ Dance around a Birch tree
☀️ Wear bright colors (yellow, orange, green, blue) to reflect solar energy
☀️ Make lavender lemonade
☀️ Spend time in the sun (don’t forget sunscreen!)
☀️ Do a tarot reading outdoors
☀️ Read poetry in nature
☀️ Host a garden party or BBQ
☀️ Make a Litha magick jar
☀️ Watch the sunset or sunrise from a peaceful place
☀️ Water your garden with intention
☀️ Leave water bowls outside for animals
☀️ Dance around a bonfire at dusk
☀️ Eat fresh fruits in celebration of the season
☀️ Meditate outdoors and ground yourself in the sun’s energy
☀️ Bake sun-shaped cake or bread
☀️ Make a fruit and veggie salad
☀️ Cleanse your crystals in the sunlight
☀️ Leave seeds out for the birds
☀️ Plant trees or herbs in your garden
☀️ Make sun tea by infusing herbs in a jar under the sun
☀️ Hang a horseshoe on your door for luck and protection
☀️ Create a sun catcher
☀️ Spend time outside with your pets
☀️ Make sun water
☀️ Eat honey
☀️ Host a mini gather with loved ones
☀️ Learn about sea witchcraft
☀️ Do your makeup, nails, or outfit in festive Litha colors
☀️ Go collect seashells if you live near a beach
☀️ Draw the sun wheel symbol and place it on your altar
☀️ Bake sun shaped cookies
☀️ Collect flowers and place them on your altar
☀️ Read about solar deities and their myths
☀️ Make lemonade with herbs or edible flowers
☀️ Reconnect with your inner child: play, dance, read, do activities you loved as a kid
☀️ Make a daisy chain
☀️ Set intentions at sunset for the rest of the year (until Yule)
☀️ Craft a sun wheel
☀️ Honor the sun through rituals
☀️ Harvest herbs from your garden
☀️ Start a herbarium
☀️ Research about draconic magick, dragons resonate with Litha’s fire energy
☀️ Have a picnic at noon to soak in the sun’s peak
☀️ Get yellow or orange candles and inscribe them with runes or sigils
☀️ Engage in gardening and connect to the Earth
☀️ Practice a solar plexus chakra meditation
☀️ Perform spells for confidence, personal power, and abundance
☀️ Visit a botanical garden
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Food and Drinks:
Grilled veggies, grilled chicken with rice, barbecued or flame-grilled food, honey cakes, honey, lavender cheesecake, lemonades, orange juice, summer salads, croissants with jam, bread and pastries, cakes with edible flowers, mead, sun tea, mint tea, spiced punch, rum, ale, wine, milk (for the faeries), strawberries, raspberries, peaches, oranges, lemons, pears, grapes, summer squash, sweet potatoes, carrots, tomatoes, butternut squash, carrot cupcakes, tomato soup, mushroom appetizers, spicy foods, curries, spiced cakes, cinnamon toast, pumpernickel bread, bread with grapes, white bread, potato salad, pasta salad, rice salad, strawberry tart, raspberry tart, leafy green vegetables, spinach, basil, thyme, sunflower seeds, pine nuts.
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sources: Midsummer: Rituals, Recipes & Lore for Litha (Llewellyn's Sabbat Essentials, 3); Midsummer: Magical Celebrations of the Summer Solstice by Anna Franklin; Magie Blanche by Eric-Pier Sperandio; https://thebusypagan.com/pagan-holidays/litha/
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litha/summer solstice themed stamps to celebrate the upcoming sabbat!
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This past week has been making me feel oddly refreshed. I have a suspicion that it has something to do with the sky but I do not have the astrology knowledge to know exactly what it is.
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Beating The Heat On The Cheap
For all my European darlings who are suffering through this horrible heat wave, my American friends who don't always have access to air conditioning, and anyone else who needs it....
Here are some tips on how to survive the heat of summer at home when you have next to no money and only household basics to work with.
(I'd love it if readers would reblog this and add their own ideas - people need all the help they can get right now!)
Stay hydrated. This is the most important thing. You're going to sweat a LOT and your body needs that replenished as often as possible. Drink WATER as much as possible and cold is best. Soda won't cut the mustard and sports drinks may replenish your electrolytes, but they are not meant for subsistence. If you need to flavor your water to make it more palatable, do it. And I know cold tea is anathema to some, but a glass of sweet or citrusy iced tea might be just the thing to get you through.
Wear loose, breezy clothing. I know the instinct is to wear your smallest, briefest summer garments, but sometimes wearing something larger, looser, and flowy helps to cool you down. The movement of the fabric creates a little bit of a breeze to draw heat away from your skin and helps all that sweating actually cool you down.
Draw the shades. If you have curtains or blinds or window shades, cover the windows, especially on the sunny side of your home. Shading the place will help keep the heat out, at least a little.
Use fans and appliances judiciously. Keep the air moving. I know sometimes it's just blowing hot air around, but it's better than stagnating. Also if you have an exhaust fan above your stove, USE IT. Draw off some of that heat from your cooking and for the love of all things holy, try not to use the oven. (Also, if you're not using your desktop computer or gaming system, unplug it for a while - those things generate a lot of heat!)
Eat cool and light. Try to avoid making meals that are going to heat up the house. If you can, make cold meals or use the microwave instead of the stovetop or oven. If you have an outdoor grill, use that for the evening meal instead of the stove. Also, if you have a blender handy, smoothies are a great way to cool down and also get in a few servings of fruit or vegetables.
Swamp coolers are your friend. If you've got a towel, a drink cooler, a bag of ice, and a box fan, you can make a homemade swamp cooler as well. Put the towel on the floor and the drink cooler on top. Fill the cooler with ice and position the fan so that it's blowing over and around the open cooler from less than two feet away. Elevate it on a box or chair if necessary. This isn't going to cool your entire home, but it can cool a small space and provides a little relief. Just be aware that there will be some sweating from the cooler and you'll need to replace the ice after a while. (The meltwater may be good for watering the garden or doing the washing up though.)
Cold showers take the edge off of many things. At the end of the day, take a shower that's a few degrees cooler than body temperature. Even if you don't do a full scrub or wash your hair, get in and sluice down, or use a pitcher of room-temperature water to give yourself a rinse. This helps your whole body cool down, cleans off the sweat of the day so you don't get breakouts, and helps you sleep cooler and less sticky. (Also, try sleeping under the duvet cover without the duvet inside to stay cooler at bedtime. And definitely have a fan in the bedroom.)
Make some homemade cold spray. This is something I used to make for camping trips. In a spray bottle, combine tap water and aloe gel in about equal measure. Then, if you have it, add 2-3 drops of peppermint essential oil. Shake to combine. You can store the bottle in the fridge when you're at home or tuck it into your bag if you're out and about. A few spritzes on the chest or the back of the neck helps immensely. (Don't spray it on your face or near your eyes. If you have any allergy or sensitivity to peppermint, leave the essential oil out.)
Keep reusable ice packs in the freezer. These can be a lifesaver. They're a quick way to cool down during the day, by cuddling or leaning against while sitting. If you can't find ice packs, fill a freezer bag 3/4 full of ice water with half a cup of rubbing alcohol, squeeze out the air before closing, and reinforce the seams and edges with duct tape. In an emergency when nothing else is working, or if someone starts to overheat, take an ice pack and put it under the arm. There's a whole host of major circulatory vessels in that area and it's a fast way to bring down body temp if someone's in trouble or while you're waiting for emergency services.
Please feel free to add your own tips and stay safe out there!
#fantastic tips#cold showers or even just rinsing off or using a cold washcloth has been a lifesaver lately#you can enchant your water bottle or cold spray too
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ꜱᴛʀᴀᴡʙᴇʀʀʏ ᴍᴏᴏɴ ɪɴ ꜱᴀɢɪᴛᴛᴀʀɪᴜꜱ: ༉‧₊˚🍓🌕⚘༉♐︎‧₊˚. June 11, 2025
Celebrate how far you’ve come, savor the sweetness of your efforts, and let joy guide you toward whatever calls your spirit forward. Life is ripe with possibility.
Images found on Pinterest.
#bonni's boards#moodboard#witchblr#witchy#witchcraft#full moon#full moon in sagittarius#strawberry moon#astrology#summer witch#summer moodboard
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things should be easier for trans women.
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I may go outside and forage some seasonal plants today! It’s beautiful out and my energy is decent.
I’ll be on the lookout for wood sorrel, violets, nettles, and dandelions. 🌼 🧺
#bonnibel babbles#witchblr#spring witchcraft#herbs#herbalism#kitchen witch#cottage witch#green witch#violets#sorrel#wood sorrel#dandelions#nettle#mint#foraging#spring
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Rough Rose Quartz Stone
📸📷:LizCreationStudio
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ꜰʟᴏᴡᴇʀ ᴍᴏᴏɴ ɪɴ ꜱᴄᴏʀᴘɪᴏ: ༉‧₊˚🕯️🌕 ❀༉‧₊˚. May 12, 2025
Pull the weeds from the garden of your mind: those thoughts, patterns, and attachments that no longer serve you. Clear the space so your roots can breathe and your true growth can begin.
Images found on Pinterest.
#bonni's boards#moodboard#witchblr#witchy#witchcraft#art#full moon#full moon in scorpio#flower moon#astrology#garden witch#green witch#lunar witch#spring witchcraft#seasonal witchcraft#spring witch#spring magick#spring magic#spring moodboard#faerie#fae#fairies#fae folk
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Low Energy Spring Witchcraft
Spring is unfolding outside my window, and though I can’t always meet it with the full energy I long for, I still find ways to greet it. Here is how I've been supporting myself lately as a witch who often has little to no energy:
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀໒꒱. 🌱 ⠈ ⠂ ⠄ ‹𝟹 🌷͙֒ . ₊˚ *ੈ
🪟 If able, I crack the window open and let the breeze in. I take my time to notice the new sensations that come with it. I feel the fresh air against my skin, smell the lingering scent of flowers and soil, hear birds chatter in nearby trees, and try to name their songs. If I am unable to, I still try to look outside my window and watch the clouds drift by. Sometimes I will turn on my little fan for air flow, and light a candle that reminds me of Spring.
🌼 I sit in sunlight when it finds me, letting it warm my face with its strength. I have prisms hanging in my windows that cast rainbows across my room as well.
🌧 If it's raining, I thank it when it falls. I notice the sounds and watch the droplets hit the window. Sometimes I'll open my window just a crack to let in that cleansing energy.
🍵 I steep tea with herbs that remind me of green places, like mint and lemon balm. If I'm unable to do so, I thoughtfully sip my water, reminding myself of the ways I'm connected to this element and its role in nature. Alternatively, I drink pre-made tea that I steeped ahead of time (when I had the spoons to do so) and kept in the fridge. (Tea usually keeps in this way nicely in an airtight container to drink throughout the next few days, in my experience. It will last longer if the tea has a higher level of acidity. Make sure you dispose of it if it gets cloudy or tastes off.)
🪴 I keep crystals and houseplants near my bed and couch, where I often sit. I have a pothos and spiderplant that are both very low maintenance.
🧺 I try to change my clothes and be intentional with my color choices. For example, soft greens and earthy browns as small reminders that I am part of the world turning. If I don't have the energy to change, I try to use the intentions of whatever colors I'm wearing/are around me to motivate me for the day.
📖 In days past, I picked flowers and placed them into vases. On low-energy days, I'll tuck fallen petals into pages of books, preserving little moments of Spring. Keeping around flowers, plants, or even just a jar of soil makes me feel more connected to the earth this season.
🍓 I keep simple, easy snacks nearby if I can't get up. Right now, I have a container of peanuts (grounding, stability, energy, prosperity). If I have the energy to get up, I try to eat at least one thing that is fresh and in season.
🎧 I listen to music that connects me with the energy I want to focus on. I have designated playlists for different seasons, feelings, and intentions. (I may post them on here someday.) ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀. .⠀ ‧˚⠀⠀ 🫧 🪺⠀ ɞ⠀⠀ ˚‧。⠀⠀ :*・゜ 𓍊𓋼𓍊
Even if your practice looks like rest, like noticing, like being gentle with yourself, you’re aligning with the turning of the earth, and that’s magic enough. Let Spring’s renewal be a reminder of that.
#dividers by @fairytopea#bonnibel babbles#spoonie witch#disabled witch#bedridden witch#low effort witchcraft#low energy witchcraft#witchblr#witchcraft#seasons#spring#spring witch#garden witch#plant witch#eclectic witch#spring magick#spring magic#spring witchcraft#seasonal witchcraft#witchy tips#everyday magic#spring equinox
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