Hedges require work |
In a sense the work 'hedge' creates a problem because sometimes it is used to refer to what could better be called Green Witchcraft, a much more herbalist type of witchcraft. If I can't feel pavements under my feet and see street lights, I have a panic attack, and can't sleep in the country because it's too quiet.
The answer is that the hedge is not always a literal hedge but can be illustrated by the idea of a real hedge. A hedge is a liminal place separating one from another. By crossing the hedge you go into a different place, in a magical sense into different worlds, where you see things differently and come back transformed by the journey and what happened to you. A traditional hedge is something requiring much work and being built up into an almost impenetrable barrier over years or even centuries. If you try to get through this barrier, you will almost certainly come up against insurmountable odds, which would make it seem very unlikely that you will succeed in your journey. The challenges you meet in, on , and through the hedge are the initiatory traumas that the hedgewitch passes through and returns transformed. They can never be predicted beforehand, but hints that this is happening would include that you experience illness, pain, loneliness, and have to make decisions with no real assurance of the likely outcome.
A different sort of hedge |
Of course this experience has wider implications for the person's life, and he or she will certainly have to lose things along the way. The witch will also find that it is necessary to break some dearly-held conventions. This is, of course, the essence of the left hand path, but it is also the way in which people exceed limitations and access previously unthought-of resources of strength and creativity.
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