Dost thou refer to the indistputable protection against evil using traditional magyk? venturing into the woods can leave thee with much peryl, at the edge of the great elm wood, gather together the elderberries and the white flowers of the shrubs, mix together with royal jelly from the valley of the bees, and then add the pure water of the upstream river dour. mix together to form a rich pulp and lather into your scalp. around thy neck carry a small vyle of blood from the local homosexual, thou shalt find him in the stocks in the market square. venture into the woods and douce all the gypsys and wolves or any other impure creatures thou comest across, they will frizzle up into nothing, and take the raisonlike remains and sprinkle in the centre of a ring of mushrooms, this will give thee supreme protection, and fertility to provide strong and swift sons to continue thine work after thou hast crossed the river styx onto haydes.
2007-01-11 09:03:05
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Both occurances are possible. Causing changes in others is no more difficult than cuasing changes within the self. It is simpler actually because you don't have your own subconscious appemtpint to sabotage it in order to maintain you comfort zone. Some will say changing others can't be done....they are incorrect, either due to lack of experience or lack of practical application. Sigil magic can be used to change, the self, other pepole, or the world at large...IF one is willing to undertake the study and develop suficient power to make the changes.
2007-01-11 09:12:52
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answer #2
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answered by kveldulf_gondlir 6
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Yes, it can be used to cause changes in others, like almost any other kind of magick out there.
It's kind of like the cryptographic way of magick, because it propses that there is an underlying structure of all of existence, and the parts of this underlying structure can be activated by focusing on a sigil (or strange-looking letter) whose form (when overlying that structure) interacts with it.
There are other 'sigil'-like things, like the " helms of awe " from Norse-Germanic magicks, which rely on you knowing that they are maps of your existence and that by creating and/or focusing on them, you are redefining/ remapping the existence that you choose to participate in.
I guess bindrunes are kind-of sigil-magick also. In this, several runes are combined by overlapping some of their lines...but you have to have a thorough knowledge of the runes, and watch out for 'accidentally' forming runes that you don't intend in the work.
2007-01-11 18:53:02
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answer #3
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answered by raxivar 5
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Sigils can be used to affect objects and other people, yes.
A form of petition magic involves designing a sigil for your intent and desire, writing it on paper, and burning it to release what you have put into it.
Sigils and bindrunes can be traced onto objects to enchant them with whatever intent you designed that sigil for. A sigil of repelling or protection, for instance, can be traced in sanctified protective oil on a window or door to seal it.
Often I design a sigil ahead of time for whatever desire I wish to accomplish, and go out into the driveway and scratch the sigil in the dirt. I then dance it into oblivion, my footsteps demolishing the sigil, beating it down into the earth where its Intent can be carried.
Sigils representing people, entities and deities, spirits and whatnot can be used as direct sympathetic links to whatever the sigil represents. What you do to the symbol, you do to the thing the symbol represents.
2007-01-11 11:53:49
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answer #4
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answered by Khalin Ironcrow 5
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I do not know of Sigil magic. Sigil is my special word. It is the health stone in the ruins. It is the name of the Reiki guidebook I have written. I would like to know more about it.
2007-01-11 09:02:37
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answer #5
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answered by Nora 7
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I am not familiar with Sigil Magick.
Here a a few sites that might answer your question.
http://home.comcast.net/~max555/book/Sigils.html
http://www.paganlibrary.com/reference/sigil_magic.php
Blessed Be )0(
2007-01-11 09:06:10
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answer #6
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answered by angel 6
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Your own will only. Someone else only changes by their own will, although they may think otherwise - but that's just gullibility.
2007-01-11 09:03:55
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answer #7
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answered by KC 7
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