- Posted on
- ⢠Uncategorized
đŻď¸ The Wiccan Rede (Dark, Honest, and Weirdly Empathic) "An it harm none, do what ye will."
- Author
-
-
- User
- sick
- Posts by this author
- Posts by this author
-
â ď¸ Please read with care: This blog shares personal, sometimes painful experiences. My intention is to support and speak honestly not to harm. Iâm not a professional, just someone who understands how hard it can get. If you're struggling, you're not alone please reach out for professional help.
Sounds lovely, doesnât it? Simple. Gentle. Like a spiritual permission slip written in soft candlelight. But then reality. Then people.
The Wiccan Rede isnât a fluffy motto for floating through life like a chiffon-draped faery. Itâs a challenge. A dare from the universe. A whispered reminder:
âBehave⌠or the cosmic slap is coming.â
đ The Hard Part: âHarm Noneâ
This is where most of us trip. âHarm noneâ sounds saintly until you actually try it. Have you met people? Theyâre messy, loud, selfish, loving, broken, healing, hopeful, cruel, and kind all in the same breath.
Youâre going to harm sometimes. With words, with silence, by accident, by simply existing differently than someone wants you to.
The Rede isnât saying you can avoid harm altogether. Itâs saying: donât be careless. Donât throw hexes around like confetti. Donât wield your will without thought.
Real compassion is hard work. It means stopping to breathe before you lash out. It means trying really trying to see another human as a tangled ball of needs and pain, not just âthe enemy.â And when you do harm (because you will), it means owning it, repairing it, not pretending it never happened.
đ¸ď¸ âDo What Ye Willâ
Now for the fun part. Freedom.
The Rede doesnât cage you. It doesnât hand you a checklist of âgood witchâ behaviours. It says: choose. Make your will real. Sing to the moon. Dance barefoot in your kitchen. Call on gods, ancestors, or just the wild stubbornness in your own chest.
Youâre allowed. Youâre free. Thatâs the beauty.
But hidden in that freedom is a catch: responsibility.
If your will becomes sloppy, selfish, or cruel, it doesnât matter how beautiful your altar looks youâre feeding chaos, not craft.
So if you manifest a clingy Capricorn with mummy issues instead of your dream soulmate⌠thatâs on you, sunshine. Magic is only as precise as the witch casting it.
đŽ The Rule of Three: Karma With Interest
Every thought, every act, every muttered curse what you send out ripples back.
The âRule of Threeâ isnât about math, itâs about consequence. Energy multiplies.
When you spit venom, it doesnât just stick to the target. It circles back and coats you, too. When you bless, heal, or protect, that good energy lifts you as well.
Think of it like throwing a boomerang with a jet engine strapped on: it will return, and it might hit harder than you expect.
So yes, when Mildrid from HR steals your stapler and you mutter âmay you stub your toe forever,â donât be shocked when the universe gifts you with a coffee spill, a sulking cat, and a cracked phone screen.
đŻď¸ The Ritual of Not Being an Arsehole
Hereâs the deepest magic of all: Itâs not in fancy robes, obscure herbs, or knowing which phase of the moon is best for prosperity spells. Real witchcraft is how you live.
Showing up for your friends when Mercuryâs in tantrum mode.
Choosing peace over pettiness (most of the time).
Walking your path without trampling someone elseâs.
Offering kindness like youâd offer salt: simple, necessary, life-preserving.
It doesnât mean you never curse, never rage, never slam the door. It means you own your power. You wield it deliberately. You donât waste it proving points to people who donât matter.
Thatâs what the Rede is trying to whisper: your will is sacred, but so are the ripples you leave behind.
đ Final Blessing (Such As It Is)
So hereâs the Rede, in plain language for a messy, human, hurting, healing world:
Do what you will. Love deeply. Harm carefully. Own your magic. Own your consequences.
When you must hex, do it artfully. When you must forgive, do it fully.
Live your craft. Not with perfection, but with presence.
And for the love of all that is holyâtry not to set anything on fire. Unless, of course, itâs part of the ritual.
I write in ink and fury, in breath and broken bone.
Through storm and silence, I survive. That is the crime and the miracle.