Audrey Hazzard Bio

Hi! I’m Audrey, one of the founding members of the Kansas City Sorcerous Arts Collective. I am a Scorpio (watch out, there are a lot of us around!), a feminist, and a nerd for sources.

Magically, I’m less concerned with whether something should work than whether or not it does. Chaos Magick, with its focus on results and flexibility of paradigm, has long been the foundation of my practice. There’s a Mercury sigil on my favorite lipstick and another on my phone. I make planetary offerings in my car on my lunch break, and have more than once yelled “I demand to see the oracle!” when a visionary experience wasn’t providing any clarity. (You should try that. It’s delightfully effective.)

I’ve taught classes in tarot, visionary techniques, energy work, and everyday vs emergency spellwork. Because of my corporate background, I am perhaps a little too dedicated to processes and standards, codes of conduct and spreadsheets. Yes, I have some Virgo in my chart.

I discovered the occult as a teenager through AOL message boards in the late 1990s. I was already reading everything pertaining to religion and spirituality that I could get my hands on, convinced that I could find some Truth outside of the default Christianity that surrounded me. I read the Bhagavad Gita and the Tao te Ching and The Zen Teachings of Huang Po instead of paying attention in Mass.

And then I found Liber Chaos at Border’s, and my quest became less about Truth and more about experiments. I started a coven in my Catholic high school, played around with spirit conjuration and energy work, built an altar in my locker and buried jars in the woods.

Through a thriving Wiccan group in college, I experienced my first intense, intimate larger-group rituals. My vision of the power and possibilities of magic shifted when I saw how deep and transformative group work could be.

Along with other members of the Sorcerous Arts Collective, I’ve worked with/helped to start a few study-and-practice groups over the past 10 years. I spent a few years volunteering with a local festival, writing rituals and working on committees and learning a lot about cult toxic group dynamics.

My desire to continue to work with the people who have inspired and supported me, to do this work in, with, and for the community, pushes me forward. Long ago and far away, I wrote:

"I am inspired by a vision of community that supported and embraced me.... I am grateful to a lovely mixture of talented and spiritual people who came together, on purpose, to make magic, and I am restored in my wild hunger for community, for communion, and for an ideal of spiritual leadership that recognizes the core creative potential of each person, and the ways in which we are all teachers." 

That is the vision that inspires me still. I am grateful to have found people who share it, and I look forward to sharing it with you.

Carey’s Bio – Ritualist

Welcome! My name is Carey, and I’m glad to be joining the Sorcerous Arts Collective. I practice a feral sort of witchcraft influenced by the Feri tradition, and am a devoted Hellenic Polytheist. I specialize in ecstatic embodied ritual that comes from the current of Reclaiming, Diana’s Grove, and Gaia Community. I teach classes on devotional mysticism, practical craft, and ritual arts. As an artist, maker, and lover of languages, I’m finding how my skills can add to the cauldron of talents already assembled in the SAC.

My religious upbringing was a sort of benign unsupervision, so between my parents’ bookshelves and free rein at the school library, I fell deeply in love with Erica Jong’s Witches and Edith Hamilton’s Mythology. I was That Precocious Kid who brought Linda Goodman’s Sun Signs and a pack of tarot cards to school to do readings on the playground during recess. I never really grew out of it.

In middle school, I discovered this new thing called the internet, and Witchvox, and discovered there were more people like me out there and it seemed most of them were practicing Wicca. So I got some Cunningham and a copy of Bucky’s Big Blue Book, and signed petitions protesting the media circus and injustice around the West Memphis Three. Some highschool friends were experimenting with energy work, shielding, aura sensing, healing, and chakra work. Soon out of highschool I joined Gaia Community, and served there as a ritualist for many years. Through friends and relationships made there, I learned about other traditions, like ADF Druidry, Kemetic Orthodoxy, Algard British Traditional Wicca, Reclaiming, Huna, and Hellenic Polytheism. I expanded out to work with CUUPs and with the Diana’s Grove Mystery School. My Saturn Return called me to Feri Tradition, and I studied under T Thorn Coyle for two intense and amazing years at Diana’s Grove before they closed their doors.

A lifelong artist and creator, I’m poised between projects right now, waiting to see where the Muses take me next. Some of my art can be viewed on DeviantArt.

My goal is to present ritual experiences that weave the ancient myths with the deeply personal; to create accessible, welcoming, safe spaces to work magic and open to the divine; to develop processes and praxis that are in service to excellence, enchantment, and radical personal evolution; to dive deeply into the technology or ritual and magic and discover how many levels of engagement can be possible, and how to make these mysteries accessible, practical, inspiring, and relevant to modern seekers of ecstasy, wisdom, liberation, and empowerment.

Workshop: Boundaries and Shielding

Other people’s feelings got you down?  Someone else’s anger stuck in your heart chakra?  Learn to shield and exert your boundaries!

The Kansas City Sorcerous Arts Collective presents a hands-on workshop to develop your energetic hygiene and basic magical shielding skills.  Learn about the anatomy of your energetic body. Experiment with techniques to sharpen both your psychic senses and defenses. Equip yourself to focus better in stimulating and energetic environments.

The workshop is being hosted by the Kansas City Witches, Pagans, and Heathens Meet-Up, as part of their mission to build and strengthen the KC Pagan community through education, service, inter-connectivity and community support, and to inspire others to connect, lead, and leave the world a better place. The venue is Aquarius Books, the great metaphysical store of Kansas City.

Come join us at Aquarius books on Wednesday, 26 June, 2019, from 7 to 9 pm.

Purification At the Sacred Grove

When Audrey, Sean, and I decided to form the Kansas City Sorcerous Arts Collective, we started by looking back over our career as public ritualists and looking for recurring themes. What were our signature moves? Mythic themes like initiation and rebirth. Theatrical tools such as masks, costumes, props. Intense scholarship to link ancient themes and techniques to modern needs. Visceral details, highly specific images.

Next, we consulted the needs of the venue: in this case, the event’s “Sacred Well” theme, the limitations and opportunities presented by the hotel. The theme provided a central conceit. The venue robbed us of smoke and fire, but gave us access to light and electricity; it made the weather irrelevant, but limited us to street-legal costumes.

Finally, we looked within ourselves to try to discern what we and the community most needed in that moment. After divination and soul-searching, the answer we came to was absolution.

The first drafts of the ritual were set in generic woodlands. We experimented with woodland fairy themes. We experimented with Druidic imagery. None of them had the impact that we wanted.

Inevitably, I turned to my background in Classical Studies for inspiration. I recalled the purification ritual described in Sophocles’ play Oedipus at Colonus. There we found the visceral impact we wanted: a central theme of both forgiveness for one’s trespasses and of being cleansed of the wrongs one has suffered; a set of ritual actions unlike what are generally seen in modern neo-Pagan public ritual, dominated as it is by eclectic Wicca, but which could render intelligible to that audience.

It took several drafts to render a hypothetical Hellenic purification ritual — intelligible to Attic Greeks, but not necessarily a ritual that was ever actually performed in any time or place; taking place overnight in a woodland grove with a freshwater spring; guidance provided by a Chorus of “city elders” — into something that we thought would be both authentic to the source material and intelligible to modern Pagans at a hotel conference.

As scripting drew near completion, the challenge became designing the choreography. We were uncertain how large the conference room would be, what amenities would be available, and how they might be arranged. We had no way of knowing how many people would be interested in the ritual. How would we alter the ritual for a smaller or larger space? How would we adjust for more or fewer people?

Props were a different set of problems. What could we do that would be psychologically impactful in a hotel conference room? That would fold up nicely to fit in a car on the drive back and forth between Kansas City and the Twin Cities? That could be set up and taken down quickly?

We boiled the eight (or more, depending on how you count) key ritual actions down to six. We hung tapestries from a photography backdrop frame to create a barrier and illusion of an isolated grove, another tapestry wrapped around a collapsible trash bin to create the illusion of a well. We set up a series of stations where the ritual actions would be performed.

We gathered everyone in one side of the conference room, the stations hidden behind the curtain of tapestries. We gave our introductory remarks, introducing ourselves and giving everyone a bit of background information and forewarning about what was to come.

When all was ready, we assumed our choral personals and processed in to the constructed grove. We cast our circle by invoking the gods named in the play. We bound the participants to oaths of integrity and secrecy. We instructed them on the ritual actions: to name in their hearts the things they had suffered or done that they wished to be purified of; to write those names in black light ink so that they might not be read by anyone but the gods; to bind the paper in wool yarn, and then to anoint it in wine and honey. We instructed them in the hymn they would sing as they walked the stations. One by one they walked, each offering of crimes laid at the feet of the altar of Dawn, and a prayer offered to the Eumenides. Finally, each participant turned their back on the grove and left the room.

The ritual got a dry run early in March, a soft opening for the KCSAC hosted by our friends in the Kansas City Witches and Pagans Meet-Up. We were not quite off-script, yet, at that point, but the ritual was well received by the eight or so people who attended. We learned a lot from the dry run, and adjusted the script accordingly.

We were still practicing our lines as the ritual ahead of us ran long and we waited for the room to clear. We were still setting up as twenty-odd participants filled the hall. Rather than leave them waiting as we ran late, we recruited them to help. To our delight they did so eagerly.

Finally ready, only ten minutes late when we had a quarter of the set-up time that we had anticipated, our participants were as eager as we were. The theme and structure of the ritual excited them. None balked and being warned they would be sworn to secrecy. They processed in with reverence, called the gods without hesitation, sang without reserve. They offered their crimes, their suffering, their tears without hesitation.

It was beautiful.

It’s always hard to say, as ritual facilitator, exactly what experience your participants have had. I think that they all got something out of the ritual. I think that most of them had a strongly positive experience. Our friends and mentors who attended were moved and pleased, and tell us that the post-ritual talk was very positive. What feedback we received ultimately received via the Paganicon staff was overwhelmingly positive.

Inevitably, there are things we will do differently when we lead the ritual again. Nothing is perfect. At the end of the day, though, I think that it was good. I am proud of the work. And I believe that it is an admirable debut for the Kansas City Sorcerous Arts Collective.

Book Recommendations from JSG

Like most folks teaching or practicing magic publicly, we occasionally get asked for one-on-one teaching, apprenticeship, or book recommendations. None of us, unfortunately, are currently in a position to offer much in the way of individual instruction. Here, then, are my personal book recommendations for introductory and intermediate level practitioners.

Readers will immediately note that Andrieh Vitimus’ Hands-On Chaos Magick is listed twice. That is because working methodically through the book will take you from know-nothing to Gnosis and leave you having Seen Things and Done Shit.

Introductory Level

These books require little or no outside knowledge. Rituals and techniques are basic and effective, but not earth-shattering. Due to the vagaries of New Age publishing over the last decade, the histories presented in most of these texts must be vigorously disregarded.

Hands-On Chaos Magick by Andrieh Vitimus

Inner Temple of Witchcraft by Christopher Penczak

Outer Temple of Witchcraft by Christopher Penczak

Grimoire of Shadows by Ed Finch

Intermediate Level

These books presume some degree of knowledge. Rituals and techniques may be conceptually or technically difficult, or may end in initiations.

Hands-On Chaos Magick by Andrieh Vitimus

The Sorcerer’s Secrets by Jason Miller

Seven Spheres by Rufus Opus

Condensed Chaos by Phil Hine

The Way of the Shaman by Michael Harner

Additional Sources

The New Age movement in general and Modern Neo-Pagan Witchcraft in particular have huge problems with history and scholarship. To correct this, please start here.

Drawing Down the Moon by Margot Adler

Triumph of the Moon by Ronald Hutton

The Tarot: History, Symbolism, and Divination by Robert M Place

JS Groves Bio – Satyr and Magician

Good day!  I am JS Groves, one of your hosts. I practice an eclectic blend of modern neo-Pagan witchcraft, Chaos Magick, and ceremonial magic, and specialize in blending ancient and modern magical styles and techniques.  I teach classes on energy work, ritual design, and spirit conjuration.  I am a jeweler by trade, a published novelist, and the artist behind the majority of photos and graphic designs you’ll see on the site.

The beginnings of my magical career are less than dignified. Some come to magic and witchcraft as a calling – through love of a god, a spontaneous vision, or whatnot. Some come to the occult through ambition — the iconic trio of greed, lust, and/or revenge. Myself … well, I was young and dumb. At ten or twelve, I thought I could reproduce the magic of Bedknobs and Broomsticks. When the movie failed me, I turned to the novel. When that failed me, I turned to the rest of the library. It was around the age of thirteen that I found astrology and tarot and the Chariots of the Gods, and turned suddenly from idiot to prescient, and dedicated myself to studying magic, putting off practice until I was sixteen. The rest, as we say, is history.

I began with energy work. Tarot. The Simonomicon. Past life regression. Aura reading and energetic “tag” as I came into contact with more and more magical people. Played with Ouija boards a time or ten. Haunted graveyards and college dormitories. Dabbled in eclectic Wicca for most of a decade. Made a serious study of neo-shamanic visionary practices from ’08-2012. Did an intensive study of ceremonial and Chaos magics that started in 2010 and waned in 2014 but continues to this day. I tried my hand at public leadership with a major KC-area pagan festival from 2014-17. That last ended in burnout and bad feelings all around, but I suspect that’s common with one’s first forays into such public work.

In the meantime, I have been a jeweler and illustrator for twenty years, incorporating occult and magical themes into my work. I have acquired a Bachelors degree in Classical Studies, bringing Greek and Latin language and history to bear in my modern practice. I have published a novel, in and about the Pagan community in the late 1990s — and, you know, werewolves.

Now, I bring my twenty-two years of experience in art and magic to bear to this project: the Kansas City Sorcerous Arts Collective. My goal is to integrate my arts and academic backgrounds into my public magical practice, to use those skills to help teach excellence in ritual and magical techniques to the community. My knowledge is not endowed from on high, not divinely gifted; it is hard-won through research, trial, and error. I come to teach not from a place of high and enlightenment, but rather to share with the community my joy in the craft and practice of magic, that they might learn from my failures and successes, and that I might, in turn, learn from theirs.

The word of the Year is *INVICTVS*

2018 was a hell of a year. We all know it. We were there. We don’t need to rehash it again.

2019 will be a hell of a year as well. Saturn and the south node on the one hand. Jupiter in Sagitarius on the other. The end of one eclipse cycle and the beginning of another. Shit I can’t even name, let alone wrap my head around.

Life goes on. We set our goals. We strive toward them. We succeed or we fail, though chance as much as cunning.

The first goal I have set myself for 2019 CE, the last of the third decade of the third millennium of That One God or Demiurge, is a single word: INVICTVS. It’s Latin. An adjective. Unconquered. Unconquerable. Invincible.

INVICTVS.

I have my goals.

What are yours?