Skip to main content

Magic Books by Talia Felix

The Dangerous Magic of Believing Too Much - Why Your Spells Don't Work

believers in demonic conspiracy

There’s a certain point in nearly every magical worker’s life where they brush up against the conspiracy crowd. Sometimes it’s harmless — a weird neighbor who asks whether mercury retrograde is real or just a NASA cover-up. But sometimes it isn’t harmless. Sometimes it’s your friend of ten years, who used to burn candles for clients and make decent oils, suddenly insisting that the Federal Reserve is a front for reptilian soul harvesters and that he won’t use peppermint anymore because it’s “coded” by shadowy authoritarian forces who want to end ESP.

It’s not just fringe weirdos, either. You can be reading a totally respectable book about herb magic and hit a sentence like: “This formula predates Big Pharma and therefore cannot be patented.” That’s fine, until the next paragraph explains that the AMA was founded to suppress ancient Egyptian energy frequencies. And it gets printed because — let’s face it — most of the magical community doesn’t vet sources like academics or scientists do. We're often working in folk traditions, where knowledge comes from oral transmission, old paperbacks, or just what someone’s aunt said back in the 70s.

But magical practitioners have always lived in a gray area between experience and evidence, which is part of what makes it powerful. You don’t prove a spell worked by running a double-blind study — you know it worked because the result came. And that, unfortunately, can make people vulnerable to a particular kind of thinking: if it “feels” true, it must be. If someone sounds confident, they must know what they’re talking about. If the authorities say otherwise, they must be hiding something.

And then suddenly your old spell buddy is telling you the moon is fake and all the presidents are clones.

One of the more frustrating elements of conspiracy theory overlap is how it leans on real history to justify invented nonsense. A friend of mine — who I no longer speak to for reasons that will become obvious — once told me approximately: It’s proven that conspiracies are real. Watergate and MK-Ultra happened. So that proves democrats being ruled by literal Satan is true.

That’s the leap. Because a conspiracy happened, all conspiracy theories must be true. There’s no regard for the difference between a well-documented historical event and a rant on YouTube. The idea that the word “theory” in “conspiracy theory” might mean “unproven speculation” is treated as nitpicking — because deep down, the appeal isn’t about logic. It’s about powerlessness, and trying to make the world make sense.

You’ll see this thinking all over magical subcultures. Someone asks what’s going on in their life, why are they unlucky, and instead of a mundane answer — like that they have a health issue, or are experiencing normal amounts of bad luck, or God help if the answer is something complicated like that technology innovations caused stock market changes that altered the housing market meaning their landlord decided to unload property leading to an eviction etc. etc. — the answer becomes instead a satisfying “you’re under psychic attack by the Deep State.” These aren’t just linguistic errors. They’re magical errors, too. Once you start believing that all bad things must be deliberate acts by a malicious actor, you lose sight of personal responsibility. Even old time hoodoo believers could fall into this trap — in Hyatt, one informant tells a story about tricking a guy who thought he was "cursed by enemies" into just making some lifestyle changes under pretext of magic, that cured his troubles.

More than that — such notions are isolating. Conspiracy thinking breaks down trust. People stop helping each other because they think everyone else is “asleep” or “part of it.” Even the other witches. Even their own students or mentors. It becomes spiritual solipsism.

Don’t mistake me. There are real injustices in the world. Some very real conspiracies have existed. People with money and power do collude to keep it. But a real conspiracy like the Tuskegee experiments, MK-Ultra, or COINTELPRO has a paper trail. It leaves in its wake victims and whistleblowers. It takes years to come to light and is usually unearthed by good old-fashioned investigative research.

That’s not the same as watching a TikTok about how the WiFi router in your house is a ritual altar for Moloch.

We can’t stop people from believing what they want. (Like Government = Govern + Ment, meaning Mind Control as if "ment" is even an English word with a sense of a mind. (It's in fact a common suffix of Latin origin for forming nouns from verbs.)

But as magical practitioners, we do have a responsibility to think critically — not just about science and media, but about ourselves. What are we afraid of? What do we want to be true? Are we letting paranoia substitute for actual discernment? Are we telling ourselves stories because they’re more comforting than uncertainty?

Magic is a tool. Like any tool, it can be used to heal, or to harm, or to dig a hole so deep you lose all light. If your practice has stopped making you feel connected and started making you feel like the world is closing in, it’s not magic anymore. It’s fear, disguised as wisdom.

And that’s one of the oldest tricks in the book — magical or otherwise.

Want professional spellcasting? Visit Hoodoo Online for services, or browse my books on Amazon.

Popular posts from this blog

Blockbuster Spell

Recently tried this one to some good effect. As I did it, I petitioned Ganesha, but any of those crossroads deities (Mercury, Ellegua, Odin) will be able to help you here. You need: Blockbuster Oil Blockbuster Incense (loose or resin works best for this) Van Van Powder or Oil Gunpowder 2 White, Black or Orange Candles Fabric and Thread to wrap spell remains Offering for Ganesha (candy is a favorite) Do this spell on a Sunday or a Wednesday, or in a Sun or Mercury hour. Begin with your candles. White can be used for anything and is always a good choice. Black candles can be used to blot out problems and to bring destruction of all types, and so are a popular choice in Blockbuster work. Orange is used for opening the way and is another possibility if you are feeling blocked. Whatever colors you choose, take one candle and carve your name (or the name of the person the spell is for) onto it. Then carve on the other candle what it is you want to unblock -- this cou...

Paper-in-Shoe Spells

A popular and very traditional hoodoo spell, often used for any situation where you need to control someone with magic , is the namepaper-in-shoe spell. It's very easy: you write the target's name 3, 7, or 9 times on a paper (depending on intent and who's giving instruction) then fold it up, sometimes after dressing it with oils or powders, then put it in your shoe. This "keeps the person underfoot" or "stomps out the trouble" or "puts pressure on them" or any other number of metaphors. I have had this work several times over the years. In one instance, I was working for a very unpleasant boss, on a short-term job. It was the last day, and I only had about 3 hours of work left on the project; and I wanted him to up my pay for the day since it almost wasn't worth the trip across town for the amount he was paying me, for only 3 hours. He was very reluctant. So I wrote his name 3 times on a 5-dollar bill he'd given me, and dusted it...

The Intranquil Spirit

(EDIT: Up to date information about the Intranquil Sprit can be found in my book  The Intranquil Spirit , available on Amazon.  This post has some incomplete information which is clarified in the book.) The Intranquility spell is, unfortunately, the first resort of many a rejected lover. In some ways it makes sense -- the more unhappy and forlorn one is about a breakup, the better this idea of making the other partner feel just as much so starts to sound. Unfortunately, this spell is often not well suited to a case. The purpose of the standard Intranquility spell is to have the person be tormented by the spirit until they make contact with you, or whomever the spell is being cast for. This means that if a person is already in good contact with their ex OR if they're one of those people who cannot restrain themselves from initiating contact, then this already is probably not the right spell for that case. If you've had an Intranquility spell cast and you make contac...

Job Spells in the Internet Age - Hoodoo Voodoo Success and Steady Work Magic

We exist in an unprecedented era. There is now internet , a creation which allows text and images to be instantly transferred from person to person. People can have jobs and never ever see their employer or go to an office -- they might not even live in the same state or the same country as the person they work for! This has an impact on traditional magic spells. Most of your classic old time hoodoo "get a job" or "get business" spells assume you will be interacting directly with the boss or with customers. Some traditional operations of this type include: To have a successful job interview, wash your face with sugar before going to interview. To get a job, sprinkle some salt on the person interviewing you and on the floor of the business. To get customers, wash the floor of the shop with a mixture of your urine, sugar and bluing. For a successful job application, dress your resume with powder such as Steady Work or Van Van . For business success, sprinkle magneti...

On Fast Luck Formula - Free Hoodoo Spell for Fast Luck with Love, Money and Success

Fast Luck is a popular and old-style hoodoo formula, generally used for any purpose in which one needs luck in a hurry, especially in matters of love or money. At Extrascentsory Apothecary, Malcolm Mills writes, " I once had four different bottles of commercial versions of Fast Luck oil, none of which smelled even vaguely like the correct recipe. Two of them smelled like cherry, one smelled like baby powder, and the fourth smelled like lemon. Since Fast Luck is a combination of Juniper Berry, Patchouli and Rose, none of these oils was authentic ." Now, the cognoscenti are probably giggling here. For those not in on the joke, the juniper patchouli and rose recipe is another of the well-known fake hoodoo/voodoo recipes written by "Horrible" Herman Slater . Over at Lucky Mojo, there's an article about the recipe for Fast Luck formula in which she discredits the Slater recipe and provides a simple version from Zora Neale Hurston : Cinnamon Vanilla ...