A
few weeks back my fellow Brodepti and I took a field trip. Apart from
our regularly planned dinner at a bar to discuss magical things,
community stuff, our current work and things about which to be aware
we decided we would take a trip to a local cemetery. There are three
in the area I want to visit, one because it's near me, one because it
has a folk legend associated with a statue that has since been
removed, and one to find a relative. Hanging with other magicians
seemed the perfect opportunity to check one of the cemetery visits
off the list.
My
town does not have a lot of cemeteries. In fact, I believe we just
have one historical one, with the other more active ones all being in
the neighboring city, or in other towns adjacent to us. The one we
have though is essentially walking distance from me, maybe about a 10
minute walk, and I pass it multiple times a week just going to and
fro. So it seemed like the most reasonable option for creating a
relationship with the local dead.
I
work with my ancestors quite a bit, but with the exception of my
father, none of them lived in my town. Obviously most spirits with
whom we interact won't be ones tied to our locality, but our location
can be a big factor in our magic. So we should make connections with
the local nature spirits, with the land itself on which we reside,
and with natural features that are nearby, particularly if they
impact us our our communities.
Working
with local magic helps in a few ways. It connects the work you're
doing to forces already tied to the place where you are likely
looking to have your impact manifest. Other people in your area may
interact with or be impacted by local spiritual forces even if they
aren't aware of it. These spirits might also have concerns related to
things around you, or connections giving them greater influence over
things around you. If you're dealing with a spirit that means
something to the people of your community, like one which is
associated with a natural formation, or a folk legend, or the spirit
of a local hero or historical figure there is also a significant
local awareness that feeds and empowers that spirit within the
environment in which you're working.
So,
don't overlook your surroundings.
Creating
ties to the local cemetery is something I've wanted to do for awhile,
and it's something I still have further work to do to deepen. But
this was essentially what was involved in my first step.
We
went to the cemetery with offerings, and supplies for our work. We
went a little before dusk on a weekend, so that while hopefully there
wouldn't be a lot of people around, it wouldn't be completely unusual
or suspicious if someone happened upon us since it wasn't at night.
This particular cemetery is an historical cemetery and so there are
no gates or walls, it just sits right along one of the town's most
major roads, next to a building run by one of the biggest land
developers in the state. So it's not particularly discreet, but it's
also somewhere no one really goes these days. We were unlikely to be
bothered, still, we chose our time cautiously, and I carried four bay
leaves in my pocket, one to hide us in each of the four directions.
When
we got there we set to work looking for the oldest grave. The first
body buried in a cemetery is that cemetery's equivalent to the first
man to die, the ancestor of all ancestors who oversees the passage
between life and death and the people who live in the space of the
dead, the cemetery. They're basically the head honcho spirit for that
location. Now, admittedly, my planning was poor here. I did not look
up who it was before hand. One of the other Brodepti decided to
contact her town's historical society and they were able to tell her
which graves were the oldest in her local cemetery. So I would advise
anyone engaging in such an endeavor to start by doing that.
Since
we didn't know the grave we were looking for, we searched through row
by row, eventually we found a plaque that explained the history of
the cemetery, including when the church was built and when they
decided to begin using it as a cemetery. Most of the oldest graves
were 160 years old, and so many were pretty worn, we settled on a
head stone which seemed to be the oldest marked grave. The individual
there was laid to rest within the year following the opening of the
church, and so she seemed a good candidate for the oldest, and if not
the oldest, at least a reasonably respectable contender to a position
of importance within the cemetery.
We
began by taking snow (in less wintery weather dirt or salt or one of
the libations could be used) and making a three-way crossroads on the
grave and making prayers to Hekate, and prayers to the gods and
goddesses of the land of the dead to grant us access to the spirit of
the person laid there, and to join her in receiving the offerings
which we would now make.
We
then poured out libations of wine, honey, milk, and olive oil on the
grave with prayers to strengthen the spirit, stir it to life,to give
it sustenance, and to remind it of the pleasant things in the world
of the living. We left cakes of grain and fruit to further feed the
spirit and asked that we might form an alliance with it and take a
small amount of dirt from her grave as a connection to her.
Once
we had completed our work with that spirit we took whiskey and more
cakes and laid them out in a place towards the center of the patch of
graves but in a space where no one was buried and we made an offering
to the dead of the cemetery in general and asked for the same
friendship with them, and to be allowed to take dirt from the
cemetery generally as well.
So
in addition to linking to the specific ancestor of the cemetery we
linked to the cemetery itself, and had both grave dirt and graveyard
dirt to bring home for magical work and for installing in our
ancestor altars in order to further feed and develop that connection,
and to empower our own dead further by linking them to a local place
of power and soil rich with the presence of the dead.
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