Monday, October 7, 2013

What To Purchase At A Wiccan Supply Store Online

By Angel Dudley


Though tiny compared to more established religions, Wicca has been growing faster than any religion in the English-speaking world for the past twenty years. As recently as the 1950s, the religion was practiced by a small group of English witches. Since then, an estimated two million people have claimed Wicca for their own, with no ceiling in sight. Unsurprisingly, businesses have sprouted to service this new community, including dozens of Wiccan supply store online.

Some religions are very spare in their material accouterments and sacred objects. They prefer a spare room, with simple prayer or meditation for a ritual, appropriate to their rather simple metaphysics. This is fine for them and for their adherents, but Wicca is just about the opposite of such a religion, and practically explodes with potential objects of religious practice.

For those in the Wiccan movement, there has always been an issue about whether and how much one should shop online or at one's local brick-and-mortar occult shop, largely because local stores are so often attached to local covens. In those cases, much or all of the covens' operating expenses are derived from selling both religious objects and services to foot customers. Purchasing over the Web, though, has grown common, and is part of almost every witch's shopping for occult gear, since no physical shop can equal the variety, and few can equal the great bargains available on the Internet.

A significant number of those who run the web based shops are practitioners of Wicca themselves. This matters to people considering where to shop, because a distinct portion of the products sold there are advertised as magical objects meant to produce magical effects of very specific kinds. In these cases, everything depends upon the individual who mixed or made the objects possessing magical expertise and knowledge of a great many oils and herbs.

There are both incenses and oils which are blended in particular ways to achieve very specific magickal effects. A banishing blend might be made from sage, bay leaves, and other plants and herbs. It is used to cleanse living spaces and other areas from malevolent influences that have either been directed against the individual, or which might be lingering in a residence due to the influence of an earlier occupant.

An incense blend or oil blend produced to attract a partner might be made up of rose, musk, or other elements, depending upon, for instance, whether the customer is looking for love or straightforward sex. There are innumerable other mixes meant to draw anything from money to the favor of the Goddess in a health crisis. Needless to say, those who produce these blends have to know a lot more than simply how to produce a nice aroma.

To adherents of Wicca, a feat of magic or more conventional worship can be done either at home, in one's own dedicated chamber, or in the open, beneath the Sun or Moon. When indoors, ritual is typically conducted at an altar, and equipping that altar inevitably takes up quite a bit of cash, especially at the beginning of the Wiccan's practice.

Further, any shop worth its pentacles will have statues, a range of tarot cards, and Books of Shadows. Most places will in fact offer "starter kits" which have all the essential pieces of equipment necessary to begin practicing the religion. Anything one can imagine needing is available somewhere at a Wiccan supply store online.




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