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Wicca voor beginners

door Thea Sabin

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Due to the sheer number of Wicca 101 books on the market, many newcomers to the Craft find themselves piecing together their Wiccan education by reading a chapter from one book, a few pages from another. Rather than depending on snippets of wisdom to build a new faith, Wicca for Beginnersprovides a solid foundation to Wicca without limiting the reader to one tradition or path. Embracing both the spiritual and the practical, Wicca for Beginnersis a primer on the philosophies, culture, and beliefs behind the religion, without losing the mystery that draws many students to want to learn. Detailing practices such as grounding, raising energy, visualization, and meditation, this book offers exercises for core techniques before launching into more complicated rituals and spellwork. Finalist for the Coalition of Visionary Resources Award for Best Wiccan/Pagan Book "In her first book-length work, Sabin presents a first-rate, fresh, and thorough addition to the burgeoning field of earth-based spiritual practice volumes...written in a light, informative style that magically mines depth, breadth and brevity."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)… (meer)
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Between this and the other two "for beginners" type books I read, I think I'm starting to triangulate my relationship to Wicca. I'm definitely going to continue studying and working on becoming a Witch, but I think a lot of the binaries that bother me are so baked in to Wicca that it might not end up making sense to call myself a Wiccan per se. I'm not ruling it out, but yeah.

Meanwhile, more cultural appropriation and more identifying practices as "Native American" (call people by their own damn names for themselves and don't generalize this isn't rocket science).

I did appreciate that this one was a bit more dense, but some of the recommendations I've seen of it were that it presented more options and variety than the average beginner book, and that honestly wasn't my experience at all? And specifically, the chapter on energy work tells you to visualize over and over and over, and... I have aphantasia, you guys. I LITERALLY cannot.

I have some of my own ideas for how I can adapt things for myself, no worries there, I just think these things are often written assuming you're white, straight, cis, neurotypical, and abled. Which, for a religion that prides itself on being different and full of outsiders... I'd really like to see better. Especially in books literally marketed towards beginners. Meet people where they're at.

(Note, this is the third "for beginners" book I've read in a row, so this and the cultural appropriation note are both a cumulative complaint rather than limited to this specific book.) ( )
  MoonLibrary | Oct 21, 2021 |
She begins with the philosophy of Wicca, to set the stage, rather than to jump right into the practices. The history is more accurate than other intro books. “The Wiccan path is based on the Earth not on the Heavens” is a succinct statement of the book’s thesis. After philosophy, she goes into energy, meditation, trance, shielding, and journey/pathwork – the work of preparing the mind and body for the ritual work to come. Orderly progression to Circle casting, the Elements and then the Goddess and God as being two branches of the same tree. She offers a simple practice for someone to begin that relationship with the Divine which is a thoughtful step most books skip. Tools, the Wheel, and only then does she show how to incorporate all that came before into ritual. Approachable style. Recommend for someone new to Wicca ( )
1 stem JaeWillow | Mar 8, 2020 |
After reading the travesty that was [b:Wicca's Charm: Understanding the Spiritual Hunger Behind the Rise of Modern Witchcraft and Pagan Spirituality|408522|Wicca's Charm Understanding the Spiritual Hunger Behind the Rise of Modern Witchcraft and Pagan Spirituality|Catherine Edwards Sanders|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1433822070s/408522.jpg|397826], I picked up Wicca for Beginners by Thea Sabin hoping for a more balanced look. I was not disappointed.

Told from the point of view of a true believer of Wicca, Wicca for Beginners is more than the fluffy teen Wicca books that were so popular a few years ago. Sabin explores what Wicca - her religion - means to her, and how she feels that the magic and worship inherent in Wicca contributes to her own feelings of self-empowerment and giving her life purpose. Unlike Sanders, who treated Wicca as a phase or hobby, Sabin's belief shines through.

While I may not believe Sabin, I believe she believes, and I can respect that. She never denigrates Christianity in the book - or any other religion, for that matter - and actually is surprisingly sensitive to hot topics like cultural appropriation and respecting boundaries. Neither does she espouse wild, discredited beliefs, such as the idea of one linear matriarchal religion that was stamped out by Christians and preserved in secret by bands. Though this has been discussed, Sabin freely admits that this is without basis. What strengthens her book is that her exploration of what Wicca means to her doesn't need that backstory to support it; it's strong enough on its own. And that's what Sanders never seemed to grasp. She thought that saying Wicca was a new religion was a devastating blow, but Sabin shows that that isn't necessarily so.

Sabin gracefully ties the pattern of Wicca's belief system, then supplies the threads that make it up: the altar, meditation, visualization, spells, etc. These are secondary, and act as props to the main belief system. In fact, Sabin highly encourages her students - and readers - to focus on the big picture rather than the threads. Some people, I suspect, become interested in Wicca because they want to play with the threads and ignore the pattern, but if you do that, all you end up with is a big knotted mess.

Sabin isn't writing an academic discussion of Wicca here. She specifically means this for beginners who are interested in the Wiccan belief system. Her writing, and its devout tone, may turn some readers off, but I found it to be more informative than Sanders's screed by far. ( )
  kittyjay | Feb 28, 2019 |
The best introduction to wicca out there. Sabin breaks down the fundamentals with no-nonsense prose in an easy to read format. ( )
  WhimsicalPagan | Apr 11, 2018 |
Great introduction to Wiccan ideals and practices. Includes practical advice on obtaining or making your own tools and basic information and exercises for energy work, visualization, grounding, shielding, trance, meditation and much more. Provides plenty of references to continue your own research. I would recommend this book to anyone who is curious about Wicca or considering dedicating themselves. ( )
  Rowan.Maza | May 29, 2012 |
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Due to the sheer number of Wicca 101 books on the market, many newcomers to the Craft find themselves piecing together their Wiccan education by reading a chapter from one book, a few pages from another. Rather than depending on snippets of wisdom to build a new faith, Wicca for Beginnersprovides a solid foundation to Wicca without limiting the reader to one tradition or path. Embracing both the spiritual and the practical, Wicca for Beginnersis a primer on the philosophies, culture, and beliefs behind the religion, without losing the mystery that draws many students to want to learn. Detailing practices such as grounding, raising energy, visualization, and meditation, this book offers exercises for core techniques before launching into more complicated rituals and spellwork. Finalist for the Coalition of Visionary Resources Award for Best Wiccan/Pagan Book "In her first book-length work, Sabin presents a first-rate, fresh, and thorough addition to the burgeoning field of earth-based spiritual practice volumes...written in a light, informative style that magically mines depth, breadth and brevity."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)

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