wish spell

- Image via Wikipedia
photo credit: Ralph BuckleyTake a horse shoe and put it around a red candle.
Put the candle in a darkened room in the middle of a table.
Write what it is you want on a piece of paper with a quill pen dipped in black ink.
Chant the following as you write:
What I want I write here
Please take my dream and bring it near
What I want Is What I should get
Let all my dreams Now be met
Now take the paper and fold it in a square of four creases .
Hold it over the candle with a pair of tweezers and let it burn.
Picture yourself with your wish fulfilled as you burn the paper send waves of love
at the image you conjure of your self.
wish spells
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photo credit: irina slutskyTake a horse shoe and put it around a red candle.
Put the candle in a darkened room in the middle of a table.
Write what it is you want on a piece of paper with a quill pen dipped in black ink.
Chant the following as you write:
What I want I write here
Please take my dream and bring it near
What I want Is What I should get
Let all my dreams Now be met
Now take the paper and fold it in a square of four creases .
Hold it over the candle with a pair of tweezers and let it burn.
Picture yourself with your wish fulfilled as you burn the paper send waves of love
at the image you conjure of your self.
break up spells

photo credit: ind{yeah}Breakup Spell
Breakup spells apply to circumstances in which you want to cause two people to seperate and to bring an end to their relationship or marriage.
If someone is interfering in your relationship or marriage (example your spouse or lover is cheating) this is the spell to get! Your partner is rendered “faithful” while the interfering third-party is sent “away” – all without harm to none.
Celtic Symbol Meanings
Celtic Symbol Meanings
Celtic symbol meanings are tough to track because there are minimal known surviving written records of indicating specific Celtic symbol meanings.
Quite a bit of understanding about Celtic use of symbols comes from conjecture and supposition from authorities and historians of ancient Celtic culture.
This is not a bad thing because this allows us to tap into the mystery of the Celtic way, follow our hearts, and open up to our intuition when it comes to Celtic symbolism.
Below you will find some common Celtic symbol meanings.
Triskelion Symbol meaning Triskelion:
A Greek term meaning “three-legged,” and thus this sign looks very much like three legs running. The Celtic symbol meaning here is appropriate because this symbol stands for competition and man’s progress. For more details on the Celtic symbol meanings of the Triskelion,
Triquetra Symbol meaning Triquetra:
Latin meaning “three-cornered.” It’s a holy symbol, and it’s meanings are many. It varies in its aspects of spirit, nature, being-ness, and of the cosmos. For the full meaning of the Celtic triquetra symbol,
Celtic Symbol meanings for the triple spiral are far reaching Triple Spiral:
Represents the drawing of the three powers of maiden, mother and crone. It is a sign of female power and especially power through transition and growth. See more about the symbolism of spirals here.
Three Rays (Arwen):
The first and third rays in this symbol represent male and female energy (respectively). The middle ray represents the balance of both energies. See also Yin-Yang symbols page. See also fire symbol (Arwen is the 3rd symbol down).
Single Spiral:
Represents ethereal energy radiating out (or inward depending on your perspective) Also symbolizes growth, birth and expansion of consciousness. I’ve devoted an entire page on the symbolic meaning of spiral here (blog).
celtic meaning of five fold symbol Five-fold:
This pattern also represents balance. The four outer circles symbolize the four elements: earth, fire, water, air. The middle circle unites all the elements with a goal to reach balance between all four elements or energies. See this page for more Celtic meanings for the five-fold symbol.
Threefold:
See Triple spiral. The center of this symbol represents the “hub” signifying unity of the three powers. More on the Celtic symbolism of threefold symbols can be found here.
Double Spiral:
A sign of balance and also representative of the equinoxes.
Crosses:
Represent the bridge or the passage between heaven and earth. The circle in the ringed cross signifies infinity and eternal spiritual love. see more on Celtic cross meaning here.
real four leaf clover

- Image by D&J Huber (stuck with dial-up) via Flickr
Four-Leaf Clover:
4-Leaf Clover Leaves
How can identify a real four-leaf clover?: A good way of identifying a real four-leaf clover is that the fourth leaf is usually smaller than the other three leaves.

Four Leaf Clover
Are 4-Leaf Clovers Shamrocks?: By definition, for a clover to represent the Trinity, it would have to bear 3 leaves. 4-leaf clovers have 4 leaves and therefore can’t be considered shamrocks.
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Is there 4-Leaf Clover Seed?: Unfortunately, there is no 4-Leaf Clover seed to plant. They just appear now and then in fields of 3-leaf clover. The odds of finding a 4-Leaf clover is estimated at 10,000 to 1.
chants and spells
A Walking chant/spell.
This spell /walking chant may also be used as a very strong protection when utilising the appropriate oils, herbs and so on.
For this spell to protect a property, simply walk the perimeter nine times each time chanting the following….. Best if said in time with your steps….
“Call the quarters to begin, protect the Space enclosed within.
Air and Water Earth and Fire, keep us safe from all that’s dire!
Three times three, and round we dance, protect all here from word or glance.
Return all ill from whence it came…three times round and back again!
Salt and Iron, Herbs and Hair, Precious Oils to bind the air
Cast your spell around this space, that all may live in Joy and Grace.
That it harm none…..So mote it be!”
Blessed Be!
A spell to dispel anger.
Find a smooth dark pebble, hold it to your third eye, close your eyes and project all the anger into the pebble.
Then dig a shallow hole and bury the pebble with a flower of some sort.
Stamp three times on the place that it is buried and say….
Anger be gone! anger be gone! let Earth bind it let no one find it…Anger be gone!
A Spell to bring rain
Take a small bowel and add to it a goodly pinch of salt, and some small flowers. add cold water to fill.
Stand in a spot where you wish the rain to fall generally and chant three times….
Rain to me…rain to me… bring water down in soft degree, and let it bless entirety of all it touches, and of me!.
Soft and gentle bounty of nature, bring your blessings to me now!
I evoke the element of water. in the name of the great Goddess!
And it harm none ….so mote it be!
Now sprinkle your bowl of water, salt and flowers around you.
A ‘Power’ Walking Chant for Strength
I am wolf.
It is my cry you hear at night, my eyes that gaze at you from the shadows.
It is my heart that beats in your soul, my strength that makes you whole.
I am wolf. I am in you. You are in me….. We are wolf!
death spells

photo credit: xvaughanx
Death Spell
If you have access to any personal article of the offender, this will help.
1. Construct an effigy or a poppet, using the article.
2. Go to the cemetery and get some dirt.
3. You need to vent into the poppit, visualizing the victim, all of the hate you possibly can, especially during its construction. It is imperative here to stay focused with intent. Try to do this during a waning moon. When the moon is in Scorpio or Capricorn is good time.
4. Construct a small box. Cardboard is fine.
5. Light a black candle, concentrate intensely upon the death and destruction of the enemy. DO NOT BE DISTURBED OR LOSE YOUR FOCUS!
6. Put the effigy into its box.
7. Bury it in dirt inside the box.
8. Save some of the dirt.
9. Take it outside, or back to the graveyard and bury it, placing the reserved dirt on top of the box, *knowing* the victim will meet his/her death.
10. Do not think about the spell, or the enemy, as this will interfere with its working.
Local 4-H team brings home awards at Summit County Fair
by Tim Troglen
Reporter
Hudson — The six rebels who appeared at the Summit County Fair last week were not there to wreak havoc among the crowd or consternation with fair-goers.
But the members of Rebels With a Cause were definitely there to horse around.
Rebels With A Cause, a Hudson-based 4-H Club, competed at the Summit County Fair, July 28 to Aug. 2 in Tallmadge to show their horses, ride in competitions and participate in pen filled pork judging.
“Our group did well at the fair this year,” said Debbie Plate-Vargo, who heads up the team, which includes her daughter, Emma Vargo, Josh and Ashley Conger, Brynne and Aurora Burgy and Athena Tarulli.
“Josh and Ashley took their horse, Doc, and competed with him,” Plate-Vargo said. “Ashley did well, and Josh had fun with the ribbon race and other games played, and both did very well with their pigs — both in showmanship and at the auction Saturday night.”
Emma, who fractured her pelvis when a horse fell on her in January, was not allowed to ride for four months following her surgery in February. But she was back in the saddle for the fair.
“She won grand champion of her division on her horse, Hunter, which was very special as everyone knew what she had gone through and how hard it all was — it was very emotional for all of us,” Plate-Vargo said. “She also entered a sewing project that made not only a blue ribbon first place but also Best of Show.”
Plate-Vargo said Emma’s sewing project was a purse with a fish theme she made for her mother.
And, according to her mom, Emma’s fair project presentation on teen leadership was chosen to represent Summit County at the Ohio State Fair, where she was to present it to a judge Aug. 2.
And it wasn’t only horses and sewing that brought home ribbons.
The brother and sister team of Josh and Ashley, who not only ride horses but raise pigs, fared well with second through fourth place finishers.
“They have learned so much,” Plate-Vargo said of the siblings.
She said the prize winning pigs were auctioned off, with the money going toward college funds.
“The kids have to learn about feed and weight and the anatomy of the pig so they understand where the different cuts of meat come from,” Plate-Vargo said. “They even had barn duty where they slept in the barn to guard the pigs.”
Plate-Vargo said all members of the group “struggle with the rule that if you raise and enter a pig in the fair, it must go to auction.”
Plate-Vargo said the team members got involved for myriad reasons.
“Emma got involved as she loved horses and wanted to be in a club that went to horse shows and understood the passion for having a horse,” she said. “I know that Ashley and Josh got involved as their mom was in 4-H as a child.”
And while not every member owns their own horse, “they have a passion for horses.”
“The kids in the club easily attend 10 to 20 horse shows a year, and as part of our club responsibility, we must work at least one of the shows as well, running the entry booth and manning the gates,” Plate-Vargo said.
Members of the club, which meets on a monthly basis, must make an oral presentation before being allowed to participate at the fair, she said.
Educational trips and volunteering to help others also are part of the 4-H activities.
“We went to The Ohio State University Veterinary School and toured the facility,” Plate-Vargo said. “The kids got to see the CT scanner for horses, a treadmill for horses and a surgery suite.”
Members have also raised money for horse rescue and donated time at the homeless shelter in Akron.
Plate-Vargo said 4-H has 6 million members across the United States, Puerto Rico and 80 countries around the world.
“4-Hers participate in fun, hands on learning activities, supported by the latest research of land-grant universities,” she said. “The 4-H pledge tells what 4-H is all about and has as its goal the four-fold development of youth: head, heart, hands and health, and thus the 4 leaf clover with the H’s.”
E-mail: ttroglen@recordpub.com
Phone: 330-688-0088 ext. 3146
Poll: One-third believe in ghosts
WASHINGTON (AP) – It was bad enough when the TV and lights inexplicably flicked on at night, Misty Conrad says. When her daughter began talking to an unseen girl named Nicole and neighbors said children had been murdered in the house, it was time to move.
Put Conrad, a homemaker from Hampton, Va., firmly in the camp of the 34 percent of people who say they believe in ghosts, according to a pre-Halloween poll by The Associated Press and Ipsos. That’s the same proportion who believe in unidentified flying objects – exceeding the 19 percent who accept the existence of spells or witchcraft.
Forty-eight percent believe in extrasensory perception, or ESP. But nearly half of you knew we were about to tell you that, right?
Conrad, now 40, lived in Syracuse, Ind., when her family was scared from the house they rented.
“It kind of creeped you out,” she recalled this week. “I needed to get us out.”
To put the roughly one-third who believe in ghosts and UFOs in perspective, it’s about the same as, in recent AP-Ipsos polls, the 36 percent who said they are baseball fans; the 37 percent who said the U.S. made the right decision to invade Iraq; and the 31 percent who approve of the job President Bush is doing.
A smaller but still substantial 23 percent say they have actually seen a ghost or believe they have been in one’s presence, with the most likely candidates for such visits including single people, Catholics and those who never attend religious services. By 31 percent to 18 percent, more liberals than conservatives report seeing a specter.
Those who dismissed the existence of ghosts include Morris Swadener, 66, a Navy retiree from Kingston, Wash.
He says he shot one with his rifle when he was a child.
“I woke up in the middle of the night and saw a white ghost in my closet,” he said. “I discovered I’d put a hole in my brand new white shirt. My mother and father were not amused.”
Three in 10 have awakened sensing a strange presence in the room. For whatever it says about matrimony, singles are more likely than married people to say so.
Fourteen percent – mostly men and lower-income people – say they have seen a UFO. Among them is Danny Eskanos, 44, an attorney in Palm Harbor, Fla., who says as a Colorado teenager he watched a bright light dart across the sky, making abrupt stops and turns.
“I knew a little about airplanes and helicopters, and it was not that,” he said. “It’s one of those things that sticks in your mind.”
Spells and witchcraft are more readily believed by urban dwellers, minorities and lower-earning people. Those who find credibility in ESP are more likely to be better educated and white – 51 percent of college graduates compared to 37 percent with a high school diploma or less, about the same proportion by which white believers outnumber minorities.
Overall, the 48 percent who accept ESP is less than the 66 percent who gave that answer to a similar 1996 Newsweek question.
One in five say they are at least somewhat superstitious, with young men, minorities, and the less educated more likely to go out of their way to seek luck. Twenty-six percent of urban residents – twice the rate of those from rural areas – said they are superstitious, while single men were more superstitious than unmarried women, 31 percent to 17 percent.
The most admitted-to superstition, by 17 percent, was finding a four-leaf clover. Thirteen percent dread walking under a ladder or the groom seeing his bride before their wedding, while slightly smaller numbers named black cats, breaking mirrors, opening umbrellas indoors, Friday the 13th or the number 13.
Generally, women were more superstitious than men about four-leaf clovers, breaking mirrors or grooms prematurely seeing brides. Democrats were more superstitious than Republicans over opening umbrellas indoors, while liberals were more superstitious than conservatives over four-leaf clovers, grooms seeing brides and umbrellas.
Then there’s Jack Van Geldern, a computer programmer from Riverside, Conn. Now 51, Van Geldern is among the five percent who say they have seen a monster in the closet – or in his case, a monster’s face he spotted on the wall of his room as a child.
“It was so terrifying I couldn’t move,” he said. “Needless to say I survived the event and never saw it again.”
The poll, conducted Oct. 16-18, involved telephone interviews with 1,013 adults and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.
4H Rodeo will feature 300 participants
Thursday, June 18, 2009
George Anderson
Rodeo events include Barrel Racing, Calf Riding, Team Roping, Pole Bending, Goat Tying, Calf Roping, Steer Riding, Team Penning, Chute Dogging, and Bull Riding.
Members of the Dunklin County 4H competing in the contest include Tripp Scales in Steer Riding, Break Away Roping, Poles, and Barrel; Dalton Jackson in Calf Riding, Barrels and Poles, and Goat Tying; Cheyenne Long in Break Away Roping, Poles, Barrels, and Goat Tying; Tatum Lowry in Goat Tying, Pole Bending, and Barrel Racing; Joe Mobley in Pole Bending and Barrel Racing; Max Mobley in Team Penning, Goat Tying, Barrel Racing, and Pole Bending; Rachel Leslie Pole Bending and Barrel Racing; Britlyn Pikey in Goat Tying, Pole Bending, and Barrel Racing; Pierce Watkins in Bull Riding; James Michael Goodwin in Bull Riding; Scott Jackson in Bull Riding; and Sam McHaney in Pole Bending and Barrel Racing.
According to Adult Volunteer Leader, Will Mobley, this is the fourth year Dunklin County has had a club, and this is the second year they have hosted a rodeo.
“The thing that is a little bit interesting is seeing the kids grow up and then grow in their horsemanship,” Mobley said.
“You see the kids growing up and learning about the horses. They start out with a plug and then they graduate to something better and then they get interested in being competitive and trying to win.
“The mothers in the program do most of the leadership,” Mobley continued. “They are pretty strict about the kids being good to their horses and being empathetic. The mothers also all work together. If one kid is doing something inappropriate, its like he has six moms out here.”
Mobley said that any child wishing to be involved with the program can sign up at any time, however, they will not be allowed to compete until the insurance enrollment, which is held in February of each year.
Admission to the event is $6 for adults and $4 for youth between the ages of seven and 12, children six and under may attend free of charge. Concession stands will be available throughout the event.
The SEMO 4H Rodeo is sponsored this year by the Kennett Area United Way and University of Missouri Extension.
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