What does it mean to court prosperity as a witch? For many, money is treated as something mundane—earned, spent, feared, or chased. But to the witch, prosperity is more than currency. It is a living current, a cycle that can be called, rooted, and guarded with the same tools we use for protection, divination, or love. This is the heartbeat of Goldroot Grimoire: Spells of Money, Prosperity, and Power , the newest working book from Evander Darkroot. A Treasury of Spells and Rituals Unlike many books that skim the surface of “money magic,” this grimoire goes deep, offering a full system of prosperity craft. Within its 15 chapters you’ll find: Coin and candle spells for drawing income and anchoring it against loss. Herbal and rootwork charms with basil, cinnamon, High John, and more. Lunar and planetary workings to align prosperity with the tides of heaven. Water, wine, and honey spells that court abundance through sweetness and flow. Sigils in stone and soil ...
The veil leans thin, and silence grows heavy. October is upon us. I’ve written many books of shadow, but this one walks closer to the cold breath of the dead than any before. The Darkroot Séance: Rites of Spirits and Shadows is a grimoire of ghost-work — not a collection of tales, but a manual of practice. Within its pages you will find: Rites for summoning and dismissing spirits. The language of omens — how to read knocks, flickers, whispers, and dreams. Experiments with smoke, dice, thread, and voice. Standalone workings such as the Candle of the Silent Room, the Key of Hollow Doors, and the Bone Candle. Methods for cleansing haunted homes, honoring ancestors, and shaping the phantom body. A full master rite — The Darkroot Séance itself. This is a book for those who do not wish only to believe, but to practice. For those who would light the candle, close the circle, and wait for the whisper. The séance is not a trick. It is not a parlor game. It is a door. And this book i...
Water takes and carries. This sigil is drawn for release — of burdens, of grief, of ties that drag too deep. It teaches the art of drowning without dying: of letting go so that breath may return. How to Use It: 1. Draw the sigil on paper. 2. Speak aloud what you wish to release. 3. Submerge the paper in water, letting ink blur or graphite run. 4. Whisper once: “Gone.” Notes: Best drawn during rain or near running water. Retire by discarding the dissolved remains into stream or soil.
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