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Chronically Magickal, by Danielle Dionne

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NAVIGATING CHRONIC ILLNESS WITH WITCHCRAFT

Praise for ChronicallyMagickal

“An essential and nurturing guide for anyone integrating their spiritual and magickal practices with the realities of chronic pain or illness. Danielle Dionne, one of my favorite witches, shares her own journey and insights in a way that resonates deeply with those facing similar struggles. This book provides a compassionate framework that recognizes the physical and emotional terrains of chronic illness. Danielle offers spells and magickal practices for handling health with clear, actionable steps for readers to enhance their well-being and reclaim their personal power. Chronically Magickal is a source of hope and fortitude, a balm in the journey toward spiritual health and empowerment.”

—Mat Auryn, author of Psychic Witch and The Psychic Art of Tarot

“This beautiful book came at the right time for me. I’m helping a family member navigate a new reality with a chronic illness. It’s been challenging, but Chronically Magickal has become the perfect companion on this journey. The magickal rituals and potions have given us new tools to support both me and my loved one. I also appreciate the practical life advice and personal stories Danielle sprinkles throughout the book. Whether you struggle with health issues or caregiving, you’ll want to keep this witchy book close at hand.”

—Theresa Reed, author of The Cards You’re Dealt

“Danielle generously opens the door to her life, home, and heart to not only share her journey with you but offer the hard-earned wisdom that comes from truly living a magickal life and apply that magick to her health and well-being. If you are struggling with your health or with your magick in relation to your health, Chronically Magickal will be an immense support. Filled with great magickal wisdom and technique, the sections on the spirits of disease and the spirits of medication in particular will be powerful steps in the journey.”

—Christopher Penczak, bestselling author of the Temple of Witchcraft series

“A candid, raw, and (if you’ll forgive me the pun) infectious perspective with actionable magical and mundane work that we can incorporate into not only our practice but our day-to-day lives, no matter how low on spoons we may be.”

—Mortellus, author of The Bones Fall in a Spiral

“The practices, insights, and life experiences shared in Chronically Magickal are applicable to all of us. This book offers an approach to claiming the fullness of being human that embraces the depths and the heights, the bright and the dark, and she offers practical methods to be as well as you can be. This is the first book I’ve read that truly applies the tools of witchcraft and magick to the long-term process of living well with the challenges of incarnation. Danielle’s voice in the book is kind and gentle but is not sugar coated.”

—Ivo Dominguez Jr., author of the Witch’s Sun Sign series

About the Author

Danielle Dionne is a professional psychic medium, witch, herbalist, and author of Magickal Mediumship. She is a High Priestess in the Temple of Witchcraft Tradition, serving as Scorpio Ministerial Deputy for death and dying, sacred sexuality, and ancestral connections. She trained under internationally renowned mediums, including John Holland and Tony Stockwell, and under prominent magickal and occult teachers such as Christopher Penczak and Devin Hunter. Additionally, she studied at the Arthur Findlay College, a spiritualist college in Stansted, England. She has been teaching psychic development since 2009. Danielle runs Seed and Sickle, an online space where she offers psychic and mediumship sessions, herbalism consultations, mentorship, and consultation on death care support and living with chronic illness. She lives in southern NH at Crossroads Farm, a spirited homestead that raises heritage breed livestock. She enjoys connecting with those like herself, who are magickal practitioners living with chronic illness. Visit her online at DanielleDionne.com and SeedandSickle.com.

CHRONICALLY MAGICKAL

NAVIGATING CHRONIC ILLNESS WITH WITCHCRAFT

DANIELLE DIONNE

Chronically Magickal: Navigating Chronic Illness with Witchcraft Copyright © 2024 by Danielle Dionne. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, including internet usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd., except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

First Edition

First Printing, 2024

Cover design by Shannon McKuhen

Editing by Laura Kurtz

Interior sigil art by Danielle Dionne

Llewellyn Publications is a registered trademark of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data (Pending)

ISBN: 978-0-7387-6939-4

Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd. does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business transactions between our authors and the public.

All mail addressed to the author is forwarded but the publisher cannot, unless specifically instructed by the author, give out an address or phone number.

Any internet references contained in this work are current at publication time, but the publisher cannot guarantee that a specific location will continue to be maintained. Please refer to the publisher’s website for links to authors’ websites and other sources.

Llewellyn Publications

A Division of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.

2143 Wooddale Drive Woodbury, MN 55125-2989 www.llewellyn.com

Printed in the United States of America

Other Books by Danielle Dionne

Magickal Mediumship: Partnering with the Ancestors for Healing and Spiritual Development (Llewellyn, 2020)

Aquarius Witch: Unlock the Magick of Your Sun Sign (as contributor, Llewellyn, 2024)

In memory of David Erwin. Rest easy, Magickal Uncle Dave.

And for all those who struggle but still persist.

Contents

List of Exercises xi

Acknowledgments xiii

Disclaimer xv

You Are Not Alone xvii

Foreword xix

Introduction 1

Part One: Caring for You

Chapter 1: Acquainting Yourself with Your New Reality 11

Chapter 2: Accepting Help 27

Chapter 3: Spiritual & Physical Hygiene 37

Chapter 4: Your Sacred Home 49

Part Two: Opening to the Magick

Chapter 5: Crafting Spells for Health & Healing 67

Chapter 6: Healing Systems 93

Chapter 7: Divination for Support 101

Chapter 8: Magick for Empowerment 107

Part Three: Finding Allies

Chapter 9: Healing Spirits 125

Chapter 10: Plant Spirit Allies for Chronic Illness 139

Chapter 11: Stone Allies for Healing 153

Chapter 12: Animal Spirits 169

Chapter 13: Practical Matters 179

Conclusion 189

Recommended Reading 191

Resources 193

Bibliography 195

Chapter 7

Using a Pendulum 102

Chapter 8

Shadow Journaling 108

The Four Questions of the Work 110

Body Blessing Ritual 111

Magickal Amu-Let-It-Go 117

Bad Day Tea 119

Affirmations with Meditation Beads 120

Chapter 9

Meeting Your Healing Guide 127

Spirit House for Spirits of Disease 131

Communing with the Spirit of Your Disease 134

Connecting with the Spirit of Medication 137

Chapter 10

Communing with a Healing Plant Ally 140

Making a Flower Essence 150

Chapter 11

Communing with a Healing Stone Ally 155

Cleansing Stones in the Moonlight 162

Programming a Stone 164

Creating a Healing Crystal Grid 166

Chapter 12

Communing with a Healing Animal Ally 169

Spend Time with an Animal 177

Chapter 13

Cold Water Method 183

Slow Belly Breathing Method 184

Vagus Nerve Neck Exercise 185

The Half Salamander 185

Acknowledgments

Thank you to Austin Dionne, my loving partner, and my family, for all the help they supplied so that I was able to write this book. I couldn’t have done it without you.

Thank you to Chris Morris, for letting me pick your brain.

To my Temple of Witchcraft community, I’m so grateful for the camaraderie, support, wisdom, and love that you provide to me. You fill my cup.

To Heather Greene—thank you for your guidance and support digging into my drafts to get to the good stuff.

Disclaimer

The material in this book is not intended as a substitute for trained, licensed medical or psychological advice. Readers are advised to consult their personal health care professionals regarding treatment, especially regarding the use of herbal medicine and plants. Avoid ingesting or working with plant material without the supervision of a trained medical professional if you are taking pharmaceuticals or supplements or are pregnant. For safer alternatives, please see the section on flower essences, which contain no medicinal components and are safe to use for everyone.

The publisher and the author assume no liability for any injuries caused to the reader that may result from the reader’s use of the content contained herein. Common sense is recommended when contemplating the practices described in the work.

You Are Not Alone

Chronic illness often goes hand in hand with mental illness. If you are struggling or don’t have someone you can contact about your mental health, that doesn’t mean you’re alone. Remember that counselors are available 24-7 at the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline in the United States. If you live in another country, visit www.findahelpline.com to find free, confidential support from a helpline, warmline, or hotline near you.

Foreword

In a hotel in San Jose, I met a radiant being. Or two. It was PantheaCon in 2019, and all the authors you’ve ever heard of were crowded into a hotel to learn, laugh, shop, and connect. I had chatted into the wee hours (especially three time zones away from home) with Mat Auryn the night before, and he gushed about all the friends that he’d already seen on the first day. “I have to introduce you to Danielle. You’d love her,” he gushed.

And he was right. She walked in wearing a gauzy black ensemble covered in delicate flowers with a soft and reverent smile on her face, and I knew we’d get along famously. We talked most of the evening, and I felt like I’d made a friend for life. Someone who understood my struggles with chronic pain and chronic illness, someone who could listen without judgment, and someone with whom I could share my point of view about my struggles with both. You see, it can be hard to talk to someone who doesn’t share those experiences. They mean well, but they can be unintentionally hurtful. They offer words they think are helpful (“Other people have it so much worse.”) or can be unintentionally cruel (“Just wait until you’re older!”).

Danielle offered a kind ear, and you can hear that kindness expressed throughout this book. She is helping people all over the world through her discussions of chronic illness as a magical being. In the United States currently, 40 percent of people have at least one chronic illness. In magical communities, that number can seem low because we attract people who are not happy with the status quo and seek to change their life circumstances.

A book like this is so validating to find on the shelf because we feel seen and heard when someone else has had a similar experience. Hospitalizations, broken bones, wheelchairs, and the like aren’t going to appear on a carefully curated social media post about the experience of Witches, Pagans, and other magical people. Danielle is coming from an authentic place that really resonates with magical practitioners of all kinds, because she not only has had experiences like these, but she’s dealt with the onslaught of people who want to help by commenting on posts talking about a chronic condition. People in chronic illness spaces share experiences among each other, like having well-meaning friends and loved ones suggest getting better from everything from fad diets and yoga to “cleanses,” therapy, and soul contracts. We have heard it all, I promise you. “My cousin’s dog walker’s best friend was cured by … [insert the current trend in health].” Danielle isn’t suggesting “miracle cures” because if there were cures for these things, we wouldn’t call them chronic illnesses. She offers a soothing tome of solutions that revitalizes and reinvents the idea of self-care for Witches.

Last year, I was lucky enough to run into her at TempleFest, a conference for the lovely people at Temple of Witchcraft, co-founded by Christopher Penczak, Steven Kenson, and Adam Sartwell. It was so empowering to have Danielle, who saw my cane and knew I was having a rough time with the weather that day, without me having to explain that many chronic conditions have a spectrum of mobility. She just knew and was able to make the accommodations I needed without arguing or explaining. After five years in a wheelchair and three years with platform crutches, sometimes I need my cane and sometimes I don’t. It all depends on a variety of factors including amount and quality of sleep, immune system response, weather, recent amount of activity, planned amount of activity, and more. I never thought being disabled would require so much math in order to figure out how much energy I can expend in a given day.

Conference spaces should be handicap-accessible, not something we have to plan for. As followers of a nature religion, sometimes we experience the world out of doors. Being in touch with Danielle and having someone who genuinely understood what it meant to experience the conference with a physical disability was life-changing. Books like Chronically

Magickal give us the tools to see and experience the world in such a way that opens doors rather than looking in from the outside. Remember, being able-bodied is temporary: anyone can join our ranks at any time and almost always without warning.

To Danielle: You’ve accomplished a lovely book, and I’m so thankful for the work you have put into making witchcraft even more accessible— for me, for you, and for everyone who needs it. Blessings.

Introduction

Having a chronic illness may feel like a solitary journey, but it’s a lot more common than you might think. According to the American Hospital Association, an estimated “133 million Americans—nearly half the population—suffer from at least one chronic illness.” 1 The CDC reports that six in ten adults in the United States have a chronic illness, while four in ten have two or more chronic illnesses.2 Chronic diseases are defined broadly as conditions that last a year or more and require ongoing medical attention or limit activities of daily living or both. I knew there were others facing health challenges around me when I was in the throes of my initial blood disorder diagnosis, but I didn’t know how to connect with or find others. I hope this book inspires witch folx to connect over shared experiences. Even though I don’t know exactly what you have gone through, the fact that you’ve had to face difficult health news and the ups and downs that come with not feeling well is enough common ground for us to start somewhere. Promoting safe spaces to connect and share in person and online will provide some sense of connection in otherwise lonely and isolating times. I’m glad you are here. I’m glad you picked up this book for yourself or someone you know. I’m sorry for what you are going through. You are

1. “Health for Life,” American Hospital Association, accessed February 22, 2024, https:// www.aha.org/system/files/content/00-10/071204_H4L_FocusonWellness.pdf.

2. “Chronic diseases in America,” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. Reviewed December 13, 2022, accessed February 11, 2023. https://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/resources /infographic/chronic-diseases.htm.

not alone in this. Let’s make some magick together and find connection in our shared experiences.

It Happened to Me

To share some background and context for what inspired this book, it would be helpful to know a bit about me and where I am coming from. At the time of writing this, I am in my late thirties and have been dealing with a rare blood disorder called thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) since 2021. Prior to that I’ve had autoimmune issues stemming back to being a teenager with no true diagnosis to date. Working diagnoses have been Still’s disease, inflammatory arthritis, and suspected lupus or rheumatoid arthritis. Much like illnesses, I don’t fit neatly in any one box. I have arthritis that affects me daily and flares that show up randomly and can be debilitating. I also have had migraines my whole life. I am someone who has and does wrestle with and confront depression, anxiety, trauma, PTSD, and eating disorders. After my TTP hospitalization in 2021, I was diagnosed with medical PTSD, and it has been a real beast to work on.

Knowing what you now know about me, let me share some of the things I’m proud to have accomplished: I’ve been a practicing psychic medium for more than fifteen years. I’ve been privileged to study with many international and famous mediums and spiritual teachers who have shaped and helped define my craft. A lot of my focus over the years has been on healing modalities for people and animals as well as death work. I have volunteered in hospice and oncology clinics and have had the honor of holding vigil for the dying on many occasions. I have led and cofacilitated Death Cafes and Mortal Musings discussion groups for many years. I have a background in research, data, and statistics, and I had a successful career working in health care culminating as the director of Quality, Infection Prevention, and Education at a community hospital. I left the hospital to open a spiritual education center, Moth and Moon Studio, which I owned and operated for four years until the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. Throughout my tenure in health care, I worked evenings and weekends out of local metaphysical studios and shops teaching

and providing readings and counsel for folks. It was wonderful to finally make that my full-time life.

My magickal studies have led me to several magickal traditions, but my main involvement and immediate community is with the Temple of Witchcraft. I am a high priestess in the Temple tradition, having graduated from their mystery school and seminary program. I serve as the ministerial deputy for the Scorpio Ministry, which is concerned with death and dying, ancestral connections, and sacred sexuality. I also am a member of the Sacred Fires tradition and work within and outside of a coven.

I am fortunate to live on a small homestead, Crossroads Farm, that raises heritage-breed livestock and maintains medicinal and magickal gardens. I am a practicing herbalist and homesteader. The caretaking of animals, land, and people is a dearly loved part of my life and work. My farm is home to cows, pigs, chickens, goats, bees, an elderly turkey, and a flock of Shetland sheep. I am a burgeoning shepherdess. I am also a licensed foster parent and in the process of adopting a toddler and teen. I identify as a bisexual and queer cisgendered woman married to a bisexual and queer cisgendered man. My pronouns are she/her.

You’re in Good Company

Let me emphasize this up front: This book will not heal you. I’m not offering promises that after reading and applying the methods, you will be healed. I still live with chronic illness. It’s part of my daily life. However, there are things I’ve found to make my world better, and there are many things I’m continuing to work through now. I am not cured, I am not perfect, but I am a witch. Adam Sartwell, a friend and founder of the Temple of Witchcraft, is quoted to have said “Are you thinking like a witch?” When in my days of despair and pity parties (which are totally allowed and sometimes needed), this question has inspired me to zoom out and look at the bigger picture and what can be done about it. I hope that this book helps you to start thinking like a witch when it comes to the health challenges and daily dealings with your or someone you love’s chronic illness. I also hope this book provides some direction and guidance to take matters

into your own hands, especially in times where everything may feel out of control.

In my first book, Magickal Mediumship, I took my years of study and practice as a psychic medium and witch and distilled it into the book I wish I had read at the beginning of my spiritual journey or along my way to honing my practice. In this book I’m offering some vulnerability and sharing my personal and magickal experiences as a person living with chronic illness. I hemmed and hawed about if this is a book I wanted to write. I ultimately decided to do so because when I was in the throes of my autoimmune blood disorder ordeal, I looked to icons in my life who inspired me and went on to face chronic or difficult diagnoses. It made me feel less alone, and my hope is that I can offer that to you too.

Trust the Process

I’ve accomplished a lot of things. And while I can appreciate credibility and its place in the world, a lot of what this book discusses will be informal compared to all the formal education and learning I’ve been lucky enough to have. A lot more of the content here has come from my own challenges and curiosities as well as what has motivated me or gotten me out of funks when I’ve been deep in them.

When I closed Moth and Moon Studio a few months into the coronavirus pandemic, I flung myself into farmwork and buckled down on homesteading. While it was a difficult time, in many ways it was one of the most profound years of my life as I got to work in tandem with the land, animals, seasons, and spirits by staying home and offering my services remotely. Magickal Mediumship came out at the end of 2020, and I had one of my most successful mediumship demonstrations alongside two of the best and well-respected mediums I know. I was living my best life in many ways. I even recall thinking, “Aha, I’m in my right alignment with self.” I was physically strong and healthy, and I was kicking butt professionally. I was living at home, working the farm, cooking delicious food, having good sex, and doing all the best things. I was also about to enter the Temple of Witchcraft’s fifth level and seminary program, which was an intensive year-andseveral-months program.

At the beginning of the descent of the goddess work, the seven-week intensive that kicks off the yearlong solar work, I began to experience some weird health issues reminiscent of an autoimmune issue I had a decade earlier. I felt tired and began to have rashes and joint pain. As the program continued, I quickly began declining into what appeared to be an autoimmune flare-up. This was particularly upsetting as I had been milking my cow for a few months and was making grand plans for the coming spring and my farm. Soon I had to quit milking because my hands didn’t work. I began to see my doctors and rheumatologists again, and while they clearly knew something was wrong, nothing definitive could be diagnosed. They thought perhaps it was lupus or rheumatoid arthritis, but these diagnoses can take a long time to be determined. I continued to plow through my homework as best I could and felt like a terrible student. Have you ever done the minimum required, knowing you were capable of much more? That’s how I felt again and again. I felt like I was a burden to my partner, who was having to take over farm chores on top of their full-time work. I felt helpless and hopeless in many ways. My spiritual practice became bare-boned, and while I knew the timing of this illness was particularly interesting with my Witchcraft 5 journey, I was not in great spirits.

Witchcraft 5 requires a lot of independent projects to complete, including a master spell, goal list, personal challenge from your teacher, and final project. I was stressed and worried that I was going to need to drop out, which would have been devastating. When I entered the program, I had been studying seven years in the school, and there would be a wait before I could get back in. I somehow managed through the first seven-week intensive. The thread and theme that emerged from the intensive work concerned healing maternal wounds in my bloodline and confronting motherhood. At this point I acknowledged the calling I had to be a mother in this lifetime, something I teetered on until this time. I wondered about having biological children and did some intense processing around this idea. I struggled personally with bringing life into a world with so much intensity and uncertainty. Physically, I wondered if it would even be possible. I thought about my genetics and potentially inherited mental and physical health

concerns and the generational burden my biological descendants may be handed. I came to the conclusion at the last lesson before the solar work was to begin that biological children were not going to be a reality for me.

I was so sick of being sick. My symptoms started in February and come May, I was convinced it was time to move on from this “whatever.” I managed to let my cows out to pasture on Beltane and officially announced I was on the mend and doing better on social media, not realizing how confused my brain actually was at the time. That same week I had a significant astrological transit in my chart that I interpreted as a blessing and boon. I have a Jupiter cazimi, where my natal Sun and Jupiter are on top of each other. It can be an incredibly lucky placement, so the day Jupiter was going to transit that position in my chart, I took it to be auspicious. It was, but not how I had hoped! I turned yellow on that Friday. (Well, Jupiter rules the liver, which I thought was interesting.) I had a doctor’s appointment scheduled that Monday morning, so I decided to wait to see what was up.

Two days later, on Mother’s Day of 2021, I was cooking dinner in my kitchen when I began to feel funny. Luckily, my partner, Austin, was home. My face went numb, and I looked at Austin and knew this was not good. I was having a transient ischemic attack (TIA) or what’s known as a ministroke. We rushed to the hospital. After some testing it was determined that I had twelve platelets. I remember the nurse looking at that and saying it must be a mistake. I watched the team who was working me up for stroke symptoms realize this was something else happening. After a few consults and more tests, they told me they believed I had an extremely rare blood disorder and that I needed to go to Boston immediately—I was tanking. They started infusing blood, I was loaded in an ambulance, and I saw Austin standing in the parking lot as they closed the doors. That liminal ride became the end of my old life.

It’s funny to think about now but wasn’t at the time. I was sharing my death wishes with Austin as they were preparing me for the ride. Because this happened during COVID-19, he wasn’t allowed to go with me. I have a death plan with information on body disposition and funeral ideas that my family knows about. However, it was unlikely that during the pandemic I’d have a home wake and natural burial, so I was trying to be nice

by telling him it was okay if I was cremated and couldn’t follow it with a service due to the state of the world. My brain automatically goes to death. My poor partner was in shock, and I was not helping the situation. I just didn’t want him to feel the burden of it if I did die, and I very much could have. If I hadn’t had the TIA ministroke, I would have been dead within twelve hours. People die of TTP because they can’t figure out the problem, and it was an absolute miracle the small community hospital I went to figured it out and got me to where I needed to go in time.

I spent a month in the hospital where I received twenty-three plasmapheresis treatments, was placed on a biologic that targeted my wonky β-cells but also suppressed my immune system and increased my risk of infection, and was jacked up on loads of steroids. This was my baptism into a new way of living. I did not adjust well to it. However, one of the messages I received that deeply impacted how I look at the entirety of my health and situations as they unfold is this: my disease is TTP and, to me, it stands for “trust the process.” And so that’s what I do.

It’s Not Your Fault

As mentioned, this book is not meant to be a cure-all. I wish I could give that to you, but alas, not so. I can offer information on wise ways that can assist and promote healing, magickal efforts to help with all that comes from being ill, and self-empowerment techniques that can boost your energy, mood, and visions for your future. I believe my illness has provided learning opportunities to know myself better and guide me on my path, and I hope you may find that with yours. But there’s something I would like to address before we proceed further. It’s that good ol’ belief that has swirled around people who get sick or have had bad things happen to them, the infamous “Is this my fault?” question. Did I do something bad to make this happen to me? Is this a lesson I must learn? I certainly had these thoughts when sitting in my hospital bed pondering what the heck just happened to me. I sat with my thoughts and asked my spirits about it. I even asked spiritual friends to check on it for me because I was so distraught about it. Did I anger the spirits? Had I deserved to almost die? The truth that I believe—with even more certainty

as I look around at the good company of folks who also have chronic illness—is that, no, it is not your fault. Seriously, if anyone tries to tell you otherwise, do not listen. It’s cruel to say to someone with cancer that they deserve it and need to learn a lesson from it. Cancer can be a wonderful teacher, but you didn’t deserve to get it, period. Do not internalize this. I almost did, and I see others who have struggled here too. It’s not your fault.

Who Is This Book For?

This book is for anyone who is currently or has struggled with being sick or is supporting someone going through illness. You might be someone with a chronic illness, invisible illness, chronic pain, autoimmune issues, ongoing mental health issue, terminal illness, or acute illness. While our experiences may differ, I hope I can provide something everyone can use in this book, whether your sick journey has been a long one or you are new to the party. If you are a magickal practitioner, excellent! I hope this book inspires you to try something new in your practice that can assist you with all that comes with illness. If you are new to magick and just starting out, hopefully these instructions will give you guidance and confidence to take some steps into manifesting change within your own world for the better. If you are more experienced with your illness, you can skip over some of the sections of this book that look more familiar than for a newer person. On the other hand, it might be worth a once-over, as even someone like me, who has some years under her belt with being sick and such, can often use reminders.

PART ONE CARING FOR YOU

CHAPTER 1

Acquainting Yourself with Your New Reality

After a medical crisis or new diagnosis, you might feel a sense of detachment or even betrayal from your body. Your body is your lifelong partner, your closest companion. Finding out new information that something is not quite working as it should can be shocking to your system. Perhaps you’ve known something was off for a while without answers, and then suddenly you have one. You might know something is off now but don’t have any answers, which can be equally frustrating. However your emotions toward your body show up for you, it’s important to give your body the opportunity to share with you. I was desperately trying to convince myself that I was okay, that I was making up my illness and somehow all I had to do was try harder and I’d be fine. Maybe I was fine already. I was denying my body the chance to share its side of the story.

Spoon Theory

If you’re not brand new to chronic illness and fatigue, you’re likely familiar with the spoon theory. The spoon theory is a way to illustrate the energy limitations that can result from living with a chronic illness. Using spoons as a unit of energy, the theory estimates how many spoons individual tasks require. It also helps people coping with chronic illnesses visualize their limited amount of energy per day. Writer Christine Miserandino came up

with the idea explaining what it is like to have a chronic illness to a friend when she pulled out a bunch of spoons. The theory goes that each spoon represents a finite unit of energy.3 Healthy people may have an unlimited supply of spoons, but people with chronic illnesses have to ration them just to get through the day. The spoon theory has become an easy way for chronically ill people to explain how they’re feeling and coping day-to-day. It’s a simple way to share with able-bodied people what a chronically ill person has capacity for in their life.

For example, when I wake up, I usually have an indicator of how my day is going to go. If I’m not feeling well, my joints and back hurt, or I have a migraine, I know it’s going to be a low spoons day. I might have twelve spoons, ten, or, if it’s really bad, five spoons. That’s the amount of energy I have to spend. And on rough days, a task that usually might take one spoon now might take three, such as taking a shower. I would have to figure out the rationing of my spoons and what I am going to spend them on for the day. I recently had a terrible migraine day. I was hoping to write in my book, cook dinner, clean my living room and kitchen, and take the dogs for a walk. In the end, I only had enough spoons to take the dogs out to go to relieve themselves and go back to bed. My partner and family had to take over for me, as I just wasn’t functional. Luckily, those days where it is so bad are rare, but frequently I’m running on an amount of spoons that doesn’t cover my workload. Pacing is helpful here.

Listening to Your Body

Listening to your body is an act of self-love. It takes a bit of patience and sometimes perseverance to get its essence, because it can be easy to disassociate with how the body feels when you feel constantly unwell. It’s simpler not to tune in and ask what your body might require when you want to disown it.

An easy first step is to physically listen to your body. What is your body saying? Is it creaking or making noises? My joints often do this. If

3. Christine Miserandino, “The Spoon Theory,” But You Don’t Look Sick, accessed January 18, 2024, https://butyoudontlooksick.com/articles/written-by-christine /the-spoon-theory.

I’m looking to listen to them, I pause and see what comes to mind. Am I taking on too much or moving too much? Do I need rest? Recently my eye was twitching. I stopped and had a check-in with my body. Was this stress? Was I overly tired? Too much coffee? I finally realized I was stressed and my body was giving me the flag to do some deep breathing and listen to some calming chants to bring my amped-up self down a bit.

EXERCISE

Breathing into Blood, Body, and Bones

You may wish to record this exercise and play it back so you can experience it. You can alter what blood, body, and bones represent to you. This breath exercise expands my awareness and gives me a space to pause and listen to what it may be sharing.

Step 1: Listen and attune to your physical body.

Step 2: Take three deep, grounding breaths into your blood, body, and bones.

Step 3: Tune in to the blood that pumps through your veins, the life force energy. Notice how it feels flowing through your veins and arteries. See it as a snake slithering throughout.

Step 4: Tune in to your body, your flesh, your skin and muscles and tendons that you can touch and sense and connect you to you like a spider’s web.

Step 5: Take a grounding breath into your bones, your structure, that which roots you like a strong tree.

Taking Breaks and Avoiding Frying Yourself

Another area of readjustment when you have a chronic illness is figuring out how to reset. I used to be someone who could function with less sleep and keep chugging along. Now, I am not. One of my biggest struggles with chronic illness is not overdoing things. I used to be the queen of pushing myself to the limit and often with great success. I could pull all-nighters, work and play hard, and live my life to the absolute fullest. Now if I push too hard, I knock myself out of commission, sometimes for days. Pacing

myself has become something I need to be much more cognizant of to conserve energy and be able to accomplish my days. I wish I had a super-helpful trick here about realizing your limits, but for me it’s been a blend of self-care and body scanning I continue to do to check where my energy is at for the day.

Pacing

If you are new to pacing, it is essentially the art of breaking down challenging things into more easily managed chunks. As chronic illness blogger Natasha Lipman defines it, “Doing the thing might be exhausting but doing little bits of ‘the thing’ until it’s diminished is much easier.” 4 Occupational therapists as well as physiotherapists are more understanding of this concept and often promote it, so you may have bumped into this idea before. Sometimes it might look like doing less to outside eyes and other medical professionals. It’s truly not about doing less but breaking up the task so you can have more stamina. If you are someone like me, you might put your all into something and bang it out but at the cost of becoming a zombie for several days afterward. With pacing, taking your time and adding in things such as more frequent coffee or tea breaks allows you to get more done and not at your body’s expense. Pacing also includes time for fidgeting. I’m a fidgeter, so allowing myself to do so enhances my concentration and the likelihood I’ll finish something (she says while bouncing her restless leg).

Lisa Manary, my cofacilitator for the Temple of Witchcraft’s Living a Magickal Life with Chronic Illness Discussion Group, shared some of her ideas on pacing with me:

Focus on your goals but never above your well-being. It’s important to have goals in various areas of our lives. One thing I’ve learned from chronic illness is to take small steps as consistently as possible. And the most important thing I’ve learned from chronic illness is to

4. Natasha Lipman, “Q&A: Pacing & Chronic Illness,” Natasha Lipman, accessed on August 12, 2024, https://natashalipman.com/qa-pacing-chronic -lllness-resting-pain-fatigue/.

continually ask myself, What is the next step I need to take right now? It may be as simple as sitting outside or as complicated as doing an entire ritual.

EXERCISE

Dispelling Guilt

It is no fun feeling plagued with guilt about canceling plans at the last minute or not being able to accomplish something on time when you aren’t feeling your best. I have noticed that I tend to overrationalize and share too much information and repeatedly apologize in these types of scenarios. But you don’t owe anyone your life story or a big justification if plans need to change. I have been working in therapy on this for a long time and still need to remind myself to practice. Here is a little charm I’ve crafted to keep myself in check when these feelings come up.

I release the guilt of what is true for me, And I no longer need to say “I’m sorry.” I am who I am, showing up as I can, And when I cannot, I know I’m not less than.

Bless Your Pills

I went from being on zero medications to a lengthy list in a short amount of time. I had a lot of worries when it came to medications, and they had to do with some of the stigma I had seen around taking Western medicine from some of the herbalist communities I frequented. I felt like a failure because I couldn’t naturally manage my health conditions. Wasn’t that what herbalism was supposed to do? I was studying clinical herbalism and wanted to expand my practice when I started to get sick. I tried managing my symptoms with tinctures, teas, and supplements but still got worse. I personalized my health challenges as a failure, but when I looked at folks I knew going through cancer treatments, I didn’t see it as a failure for them. I had to recalibrate and look at the wholeness of my situation. It gave me a broader perspective on my new life and other people’s lives as well.

Herbalism has its place for health and wellness, but so do pharmaceuticals. For goddess’ sake, take your pills! If they help you and are making your quality of life and longevity improve, take them.

One way that I witch up taking my pills is to enchant my pillbox that I use for my weekly haul of medications. I encourage you to decorate your pillbox with sigils, signs, images, or anything that empowers this container for you. Mine has a promoting health sigil I created, a memory sigil to help me remember to take all my meds, and a sigil to reduce side effects. I also have a pretty and fancy pillbox that is much more attractive to me than the generic looking sterile ones often used in medical settings. There’s nothing wrong with those boxes, but I didn’t want to evoke that clinical feeling multiple times a day when I reached for the box.

Your pillbox can be a form of self-expression. Mine is a pretty sleek green (a color I associate with healing) with gold lettering. I purchased it online and have no regrets. I also think it’s a better quality than the generic pillboxes, which I found break often or at least spill my pills by not closing effectively. I also anoint my pillbox with Power and Attraction Oil (found on page 80) to empower and bless it. You can craft your own with essential oils, herbs, and a carrier oil or even use flower essences. I dot the corners and middle in a five quincunx pattern.

EXERCISE

Pill Blessing

Another thing I like to do for my pills is bless them. Now that you have them stored in a container of power, every time you reload your medication, take a moment, hold the container of pills in your hands, and state your intentions out loud. Here is the blessing I use:

In the name of the Goddess, God, and Spirit, under the watchful eyes of the ancestors, I ask for these pills to be blessed and consecrated in your good names. May these pills aid in my overall health and well-being without side effects so I am able to function at my fullest capacity. Help me remember to take my medications at the right times.

I am grateful for your assistance. May there always be peace between us. So mote it be.

The Power of Thoughtforms

We should not underestimate the ability that our mindset has over our body. One of the biggest struggles I’ve witnessed when it comes to self-healing is the hold the mind can have over us—for good or bad. A close acquaintance whom I love and adore has several autoimmune diseases that frequently affect her, and she has flare-ups that come and go. She is also a magickal practitioner. When I’ve asked her what type of magick she does for herself regarding healing, she’s told me she doesn’t think to do so. When I look at this person’s life, I see someone who has become their illness in many ways. If you were to meet this person, they would likely say, “Hi. I’m so-and-so, and I have these diseases”—if not out loud, the energy definitely emanates from them. It is her reason for not going out, for not pursuing her passions, for staying complacent. Her mind is firm that she is not getting better and that even the better days are not good. She struggles with depression and executive function challenges but doesn’t get help. Ironically, she thinks of the spirits of disease as monsters, like the illustrations covered in the spirit section. I wonder about that effect on her relationship to disease.

I mention this case as an example where getting the mind in order can greatly benefit the body. I don’t believe you can think positively into getting rid of a longterm diagnosis, but I do think working on mental health, working on self-limiting beliefs, and taking back some control starts with your thoughts, and that can influence how you feel.

What about magick? Does doing magick help heal? Yes, I believe it can. I believe miracles happen, and their sources vary. Working with magick and illness can be so much more than just curative. It presents an opportunity to focus on quality of life, finding the right health care team for you to thrive with, and finding the right jobs to support you financially while accommodating your needs. It’s about finding friends and a community to feel a connection with who accepts you as you are. It’s about finding ways

to make life easier on you. Most of all, magick is there to empower you and catalyze change.

Daily Life Changes

Being sick can wreak havoc on activities of daily living. Suddenly your life looks different and you need to figure out new ways to manage. In this section we’ll walk through some of those areas and pose some mundane and magickal solutions to help you adjust to the new normal.

Food

When dealing with chronic illness, food can be challenging. When it feels like aspects of your life are out of control, figuring out food is rough. It can also be an opportunity to gain some control. I love cooking, but there are times when I do not have the reserves to cook a full meal from scratch. Finding ways to hack meal creation for not just myself but my family is an ongoing quest I find myself on as I confront my new normal. Some things I have found helpful include modifying food prep. There are times when standing and chopping vegetables is not an option.

To work through the process, I’ve tried to meal plan and back my process up. I might chop one or two things in the morning and then after some time or a break, come back to finish. Grocery stores often sell chopped veggies to use in cooking. While they may cost more, they are potentially a good option for you to skip this step. And though I love to use fresh ingredients when I can, sometimes you can save money and effort by going with the frozen version and using those ingredients in your meals. Using frozen foods also solves the challenge of getting fresh food if you are not feeling well enough to go to the store.

Another incredibly helpful grocery store hack that came out of the pandemic was grocery delivery and to-go services. I use my local grocery store’s to-go option for most of my shopping. It costs less than five dollars to have someone pick out my groceries, and I just drive to pick it up and have them load it into my car. It’s amazing and was an incredible blessing when I just didn’t have it in me to physically enter the store. If you want to

skip the pickup, you can also now get groceries delivered to you. This does cost more, but it may be worth it to get through what you’re going through. Other things I try to do to keep my food fresher for longer so things don’t go bad as quickly is to put bread in the freezer. I can take out what I plan to use when I need and put it in the toaster. I do this with pita bread when I want hummus. I also keep some easy food options stocked so if I’m having a harder day, I can deviate from my meal plans and still be able to feed myself and my family. Even if the meals aren’t as healthy, they might on that day be healthier for me. Chronic illness is about finding balance and what works, and this is an area that certainly highlights this truth. Like most of my family, I’m neurodivergent, and sometimes it causes its own extra challenges. There may be only certain foods one person is willing to eat, and planning around that can put extra constraints on meals. I make a meal plan each week, and even though I think it’s a pain in the butt, it really helps my neurodivergent brain process what the plan is each day, and I can work through constraints and conveniences. I have a hard time making on-the-fly decisions, but if I plan ahead, choose things that meet the requirements of my family, grocery shop online, and pick it up, I tend to have good results. I don’t forget to buy the things I need from the grocery store because I got distracted or buy a bunch of extra stuff I don’t need. Having a plan also lets me choose coupons and shop the flyer deals so I end up saving more than I would if I just went to the store. This may seem mundane, but it frees up so much time and energy that energetically makes my home and self feel better.

ClothingYourself

Wearing clothes that feel good affects your energy and how you feel and view yourself. When you are well, you might have a signature style and even special ritual attire. When you become sick and don’t have energy to put into wearing these types of clothes, new solutions must be explored. Surely, everyone is wearing some clothes at home or in the hospital, but how many feel good about their outfits while they are sick? This was something I recognized when things got difficult, and now I’m better equipped. I used to have only a few pairs of pj’s. Some were cute and some were sexy,

but they were not the type of clothing you would want to wear if you were sick. If you are often sick, you need sick clothes.

I now have as many comfortable sick clothes as I do regular, ritual, and dress-up clothes, which was a huge shift for me. When I was homebound, I didn’t feel up for dressing up but didn’t want to be in just pajamas either. This is when things like loungewear can help. Finding comfy pants that I wasn’t afraid to wear in public if I had to became a quest. I was never one to really wear t-shirts unless I was out in the barn, but I needed to expand that part of my wardrobe. I began opting for graphic tees with witchy designs and band T-shirts I liked. They were not my true style, but they were passing. They connected me to parts of me that were still me, which helped me accept how things were. And what was nice was that I could sleep in them and wear them during the day without feeling like I looked like I slept in them. Try to have a supply of clean clothes to wear. Find ways to save your spoons but also maintain good hygiene. I’ll go over some of my tricks for laundry when discussing managing mess. The main takeaway here is to get your sick outfits in order and rock those bad boys around the house.

ComfortObjects

Comfort objects can be helpful at making you feel better when you are ill or during transitions. They could be a stuffed animal or a comfortable blanket. Children often have comfort objects, and adults can have them too. A few years back, I was in the throes of getting in touch with my inner child, which was surprisingly a challenge. I have never been one for keeping toys or stuffed animals, but perhaps that has to do with the amount of growing up I had to do at a young age.

When I was in the hospital, my friend Mat Auryn sent me what was essentially a room full of stuffed animals for all my farm animals I needed to be away from while I was sick. It was incredibly kind, and at first I felt silly with all the doctors and hospital staff commenting on the pile of stuffed animals I had rapidly acquired. But you know what? I really liked them! I even slept with the opossum on my bed. It helped the little kid inside me who was scared and afraid of what might happen. It’s funny

how adults can rationalize a situation to make it practical and logical. On the inside I was still afraid of all the chaos that was happening. In truth, I didn’t have control like I could pretend I did. At night when I was alone and couldn’t sleep in the hospital, I found holding my comfort opossum helped me feel much better. I slept better too!

I recommend giving comfort objects a try. If you can’t wrap your brain around hugging a stuffed animal (I recommend that too), try a comfy blanket that has a nice feel and pleasing color. Weighted stuffed animals and blankets can also be soothing. You might get in the habit of making yourself a cup of tea, making a simmer pot so the house smells good, burning a scented candle, or having some of your favorite snacks around for when you want to feel comforted.

Rest

Pacing or taking time to rest don’t have to look a particular way. Rest can be switching from the activity you’ve set out to do. For example, rest from writing this book can look like stretching and then checking on my cows. Or it could be taking a quick moment to cleanse myself with sacred smoke. It doesn’t always have to be silent and still or laying down in a dark room. I often find breaks of rest to be moments outside, getting some fresh air. Sometimes it’s putting my head down for ten minutes. Taking breaks how you see fit when you are pacing yourself or just need to switch things up can have significant beneficial results. You can also add in moments of ritual or magick to these restful moments. Light a candle, take some deep cleansing breaths, or align your cauldrons (see page 40). If you are not someone who normally tries these things, give it a shot. I was surprised at how well it has worked for me. It sounds easy and simple, and it is. With payoff!

Sleep

Let’s face it: sleep is important. Some of us with chronic illness love to sleep and could sleep all day. For others, sleep is elusive. Though we try, we don’t ever quite seem to get the restful sleep we desperately need. Doing your best to have a routine bedtime can benefit your body, because it will begin

to expect that you will lie down for bed at a certain time and eventually fall asleep. If you are having trouble sleeping, sometimes sleep aids can help. Use headphones and listen to sounds like binaural beats or white or green noise to help you relax into sleep. Aromatherapy has also been very helpful. I use lavender essential oils, sprays, and lotions to help calm me and prepare me for sleep. There are also teas with lavender in them that taste delicious and have a calming effect. I hang mugwort over my bed to help support my dreams. Find what works for you!

If you are sleeping a lot, it may be just what your body needs. It can also be side effects from medicines or part of your illness, so it’s always good to run it by your doctors. Sometimes you may have chronic illness with depression. If that’s the case, having a mental health professional evaluate you is also a helpful idea because sleeping more than usual can be an indicator.

EXERCISE

Comfort Object Talisman

Talismans are charms used to bring in energy or manifest something. You can add some magick to your mundane comfort items by creating a comfort object talisman. I used a weighted stuffed animal, but use what works best for you.

You will need

A comfort object such as a stuffed animal, blanket, or special mug Smoke to cleanse the comfort object; this could be incense, palo santo, or other sacred herbs

Power and Attraction Oil (recipe on page 80)

Step 1: Light your media to create sacred smoke. Take your comfort object and pass it through the smoke three times, saying aloud, I cleanse and clear this comfort object. May it be clear for me to program. So mote it be.

Step 2: Hold the comfort object in your hands. Speak aloud your intentions for the object. You could say,

“Chronically Magickal is a source of hope and fortitude, a balm in the journey towards spiritual health and empowerment.” —MAT AURYN , bestselling author of Psychic Witch

You Are More than Your Illness

MAGICKAL PRACTICES AND STORIES FROM A WITCH WHO KNOWS WHAT YOU’RE GOING THROUGH Your condition may always be with you, but so will your magick. This book is a beacon of hope for anyone grappling with chronic or invisible illness. Through personal stories and hands-on magick, Danielle Dionne guides your journey of self-discovery. She shows you how to incorporate spellcraft, healing, self-care, and confidence-building practices into your own unique process.

Chronically Magickal presents techniques that help boost your energy, mood, and vision for your future. While it can’t cure your illness, this book teaches you how to accept help from others, grow around grief, pace yourself according to the spoon theory, and more. You’ll also learn how to work with stone, plant, and animal allies. From energy clearing to spirit communication, Danielle covers every aspect of staying magickal and manifesting change for the better.

DANIELLE DIONNE is a professional psychic medium, witch, herbalist, and author of Magickal Mediumship. She is a high priestess in the Temple of Witchcraft Tradition, serving as Scorpio Ministerial Deputy for death and dying, sacred sexuality, and ancestral connections. She trained under internationally renowned mediums, including John Holland and Tony Stockwell, and under prominent magickal and occult teachers such as Christopher Penczak and Devin Hunter. Additionally, she studied at the Arthur Findlay College, a spiritualist college in Stansted, England. She has been teaching psychic development since 2009 and runs Seed and Sickle, an online space where she offers her services. Visit her at DanielleDionne.com and SeedandSickle.com.

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