Introduction

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The hidden magick of Faeries and nature spirits

Faery Magick

Faeries and nature spirits can be fun, feisty, helpful, tiny silver-winged, gossamer light, and ethereal creatures of faery tales who grant wishes and ensure a happy ending to our current dramas. You may also encounter mischievous tricksters who offer food or gold that turns into dust in your hand as they dart away laughing, or black, hairy scary orcs with glowing coal eyes who chase you through the bushes and laugh as you scratch yourself to pieces.

Do Faeries Exist?

Of course they do, and what can be more exciting than having an entire world, parallel to our own, sharing the same space, whose inhabitants fly and float and flit and dance in and out of view, delighting little children and perplexing our pets?

It would seem an arrogant, blinkered idea that we alone exist in the known universe. Not that nature beings care whether we believe in them. In their view, it is us­—the great clodhopping humans—who share their space, pick their flowers and put them in vases to wither, and leave messy houses and outbuildings for the sturdy no-nonsense, overworked, and sometimes bad-tempered brownies to clear up. Indeed, try to cut the grass in a faery garden; little darts and arrows will poke at your ankles and arms (faeries love stealing silver pins to act as swords), and you will remember too late that you forgot to explain and ask permission to prune the roses.

Because faeries and nature spirits are lighter in substance than humans, they can only be seen by children or those with clairvoyant sight—unless they choose to appear. In this case, they appear to be as solid as you or me. A giant, however, will appear to be the size of a double-decker bus and about as dainty. Some tree spirits are excellent at camouflaging themselves so they can hardly be seen in a forest, and you may only hear chattering in the leaves or a voice on the wind—on a good day, helping you to find your way when your mobile phone tracker is out of range. On a fey’s bad-hair day, they may lure you farther and farther off track into marshy land, where you panic and drop all your treasures to be added to a faery hoard. With hope, your clairvoyant sight will be so developed by the end of this book that you will be falling over faeries even in the supermarket plant section.

If you go faerie-hunting for that purpose, you can guarantee the forest will fall silent and you will be pelted with acorns and nuts from every tree. Those who need proof of faeries rely mainly on anecdotal evidence for fey folk, often carefully gathered and analysed by scholars. One of these scholars is W. Y. Evans-Wentz of Oxford University, whose research The Faery Faith in Celtic Countries, first published in 1890, is still a bestseller.1 There are occasionally intriguing historical accounts witnessed by a number of people at the same time that do suggest fey folk are objectively real. One of the most intriguing accounts of actual fey people came from the twelfth century, in a place called Woolpit in Suffolk, England. It is recorded that two green-coloured children who could not speak the language suddenly appeared out of nowhere. They would eat nothing but beans and were very distressed. The boy died. It is not known what happened to the girl. Gillian Tindall, the UK author who described the incident, believes that it is possible that old races of small people might have lived in the United Kingdom until the end of the Middle Ages when the vast forests were cut down and the marshlands drained.2

My Experiences with Faeries

I have always been passionate about faeries and nature spirits and remain so at the age of sixty-four. I still drive family, colleagues, and friends wild on what is supposed to be an “away from it all” trip, or en route to serious business, when I trek through acres of mud and scrub to find a faery pool or glade.

This is my third published book on nature spirits and faeries. With each one, I amass a whole lot of new accounts and experiences and frequently revise opinions I thought were so certain until I was “pixy led” to uncharted territory and realised I had accepted faery gold as facts.

I was not exactly overwhelmed by pretty little faery princesses in childhood. I grew up in the centre of an industrial town in the Midlands of England where grass was the eighth wonder of the world, with a sooty backyard and a solitary raggedy-leafed tree clinging to a mound of earth, from which my swing precariously dangled. Every Christmas my mother took me to a big department store to see Santa Claus in his grotto, where bored shop staff would dress up in tinsel and faery wings. I was totally disillusioned when I saw a faery having a cigarette behind the toadstool.

What I did not realise, as I creaked to and fro on my swing, was that the brown creatures scurrying around the tree and up and down the roses that grew around the outside toilet door, were real faeries. In researching the fey folk, I have discovered just how many faeries and nature spirits do live right in the middle of towns, even in potted trees in concrete shopping malls.

Hour after hour I watched the little creatures flutter their dark-brown, leaf-like wings and hop around the tree trunk playing a form of tag. My backyard fey occupied their independent world and I was even then aware I was of little more interest to them than the old ginger cat, observing them idly as he cleaned his paws.

It was not till more than forty years later I saw similar creatures around an old tree in the forests above the Gold Coast near Brisbane in Australia. It was then that I realised my childhood fey creatures were more than imagination.

During a radio broadcast in Australia, I mentioned my bush faeries to Lia, the presenter, and she told me:

Oh, I know what they are. My brother Gary went missing in the bush for eleven days in 1984 in a place called Pannawonica when he was twenty-four years of age. Gary was freezing and had stripped some bark off the paper-bark tree and covered himself with it, like the Aboriginals did, though the wind would blow these bits away. He used this bark as a covering to stay warm during the night, though the wind would blow these bits away. One night at his lowest and coldest, the “little bushmen,” as he called them, ran about him chasing the bark and tucking them all about him. He says he lay on his side and saw these “little brown beings” running about him quite quickly tucking the bark about him.

For more than thirty years, I have researched faeries around the world and collected local fey legends passed on by word of mouth, many of them first-person anecdotes sometimes witnessed by two or more family members, but never told because of fear of ridicule. These experiences include meeting grumpy gnomes and gruesome but sometimes benign trolls in Sweden where I lived for eleven years. While there, I personally witnessed trees moving where there was no wind, the hidden Huldra folk, leaning over to touch me in deep pine forests. I also visited the enchanted fountains of Celtic mist-shrouded Brittany where at night beautiful white ladies frolic, the Korrigans, who turn into hideous hags by day. I have peered into the Ban Ban springs, home of the Australian creator rainbow serpent in North Burnett, and pursued the trail from waterhole to waterhole of the hideous water dragon-like bunyip who dragged young girls into the pools to be his slaves. Most fascinating are nature beings who travel with their own human clans; for example, the Simbi, Central African water spirits, who came to the South Carolina low countries and guarded the African slaves who were unwillingly transported from ports in West Central Africa.

About the Book

This is far more than a book of research. The information I offer is to provide an understanding of different fey energies so you can create your own rituals and empowerments with faeries and nature spirits who will improve your life in countless ways, bringing what you most desire and need in your life. Above all, faeries can help you and your loved ones live in harmony with nature, as well as with the beings who are not only part of nature but are nature in animate, personalised form.

The Difference between Faeries and Nature Beings

Just as you get beautiful porcelain-like humans and others with huge red hands, loud voices, and the ability to shoulder a load of bricks as if they were feathers, so fey magical beings vary according to the element in which they live (by that I mean earth, air, fire, or water), their size, and the role they play in the fey universe. But they are all fey or magical beings just as we are all humans in spite of our variations.

The words “fey” and “faery” (or “faerie”) originally come from the Old French word faery that in modern French is féerie. The word was first used around the thirteenth or fourteenth centuries. Going back even further its roots are in the Latin fatae, three sisters who controlled human and divine destiny in the mythology of many lands and became the faery godmothers of every good Disney film.

Faeries tend to refer to traditional winged creatures that can vary in size from a child’s little finger to stately shimmering figures that are talented in arts and music and live in crystalline, subterranean royal courts. Some, such as the light elves of Scandinavia, are associated with high places. You have encountered light elves if you have read J. R. R. Tolkien’s Lords of the Rings. They are slightly smaller than humans and rather more beautiful than your average size-zero human fashion model; they have pointed faces and shimmering eyes.

In contrast, nature spirits are the workers of the fey world, resembling and caring for the element or natural feature where they live, such as trees or waterfalls. They often take names and their characteristics from their habitat. Faeries, even in their most ethereal stately form, are different from angels, though both are spiritual beings. While there are a number of accounts described in this book, including the one of Greg in the previous section, of how faeries will help humans in trouble, they are not one hundred percent beings of light and goodness dedicated to serve humans as are angels. Fey beings have their own agenda and are not there to serve humans. They can be very unpredictable and at times spiteful, a reason why I describe ways of protecting yourself while working with the best and most benign of the faeries and fey energies.

Faery Magick

As previously stated, faeries are not just part of nature, but are nature. There are four main kinds of fey energies relating to the four main kinds of fey beings, and each has its own kind of magick.

The first kind is earth, which includes the beings of the forests, meadows, rocks, crystals, and plant energies. There are often earth faeries in mines; for example, the Bolivian El Tio mine spirit who receives offerings of cocoa, cigarettes, alcohol and llama blood to ensure protection and good fortune for the miners.

The second kind is air for all ambitions, wishes, and dreams. They are usually winged spirits of sky, mountains, winds, and weather, such as the tall winged sylphs who are so protective of their mountains.

The third kind is fire for passion, inspiration, creativity, and fast-moving matters. They include the spirits of the hearth fires, bonfires, and the desert djinns, commonly known as “genies of the lamp.”

Most varied are the creatures of the waters, from gentle mermaids to fierce bokwus. The bokwus is a Native American male spirit found near rushing water in North American spruce, larch, and fir forests; they bring love and reconciliation but can also wash away feelings that are destructive or no longer wanted, such as guilt and fear.

Fey magick can be cast in natural settings, backyards, on balconies of city apartments, or indoors by a potted plant, which can be as rich in spirits as any untamed forest.

But enough of talk. Let’s try two basic fun but very effective fey rituals.

Activity: Bringing Wishes into Actuality
through Spellcasting with Faery Energy

When we are children, we know anything is possible and ask the faeries to grant our wishes, which often they do, even if in unexpected ways. In actuality, children tap into innate psychic powers people have known about and used since cave times. We all possess psychokinesis, or mind power with the ability to draw to us what we need and repel what is potentially harmful. This power is demonstrated again and again in every wand-waving faery godmother tale and anecdotal account of faeries granting wishes for mortals. The fey ability to grant wishes is no different from modern scientific theories of energy we read about in bestselling books such as The Secret by Rhonda Byrne. For if we reach out for what we most want as though it is already ours and remove self-imposed limitations, we can move the parcel of energy containing what we most need from the thought plane into our lives through the power of words and actions to stir those energies.

Fey magick shortcuts doubts. Through simple wish rituals, it generates the impetus to launch our needs and desires into the cosmos so they bounce back into our lives fulfillable and fulfilled. This inrush of fey power not only draws your desires and needs to you, but guides you automatically toward your particular opportunity.

Wish Magick in Practice

Wish magick is associated particularly with air faeries as wishes are released into the cosmos, though you can also burn wishes and activate the fire essences you may often see as shadows or in sparks around a bonfire. There are also earth wishes that are slow growing if planted as images scratched on stones beneath thriving garden or pot plants, and water wishes as you release petals as offerings off a bridge, launching your desires into a fast-flowing stream.

A Basic Air Fey Wish Ritual

Air faeries may travel as butterflies, dandelion seeds, or thistledown. Although gardeners and farmers do not welcome the practice, children as well as young lovers have blown dandelion clocks and sent faeries on their way, making wishes at the same time.

This is a good loosening-up exercise if the logical adult mindset intrudes.

Now let’s try one more wish spell.

A Faery Dust Wish

In the faery lore of old Ireland, it was believed if you found glittering faery dust, fallen from the cloak of the beautiful faery Queen Oonagh whose white gown shone with pearls and diamonds, any wish would be granted.3

If you are casting the wish spell indoors or on a paved area, use faery dust or glitter that can be purchased in a tiny phial at New Age stores; alternatively, use any tube of silver glitter. When outdoors, substitute rose petals, dried lavender, or dried rosemary (known as the “faery herb”) to avoid damaging the environment.

You will need:

A small tube of silver glitter or a dish of rose petals, lavender, rosemary, or any small white or pink petals.

Timings:

Perform the spell when you wake in the morning. If you can find a faery ring or a natural circle of toadstools or mushrooms, the spell is doubly powerful, but you can cast the spell in any area where the vegetation is long or wild or within a circle of trees or bushes; alternatively cast it in a paved or indoor uncarpeted area and create a circle of green potted plants to work within. If the dew is on the grass, it is even better.

The spell:

In the next chapter, we will create a faery place and learn more about the fey or magical people who allow us to share their space.

Introduction Sources

  1. Evans-Wentz, W. Y. The Faery Faith in Celtic Countries. Lemma, NY: Lemma Books, 1973. Evinity Publishing, 2009. Kindle version.
  2. Tyndall, Gillian. A Handbook of Witches. Plymouth: Mayflower Press, 1972.
  3. Wilde, Lady. Legends, Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland. Mineola: Dover Publications, 2006.

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