Hi everyone,
I frequently see a trend—especially among beginners in the occult—where people are terrified that they might have angered a spirit, deity, demon, or other entity through a minor mistake in ritual or an accidental slight.
Usually, experienced practitioners reassure them that 99.9% of the time, these entities do not get petty or angry, and they aren't going to smite or curse us over trivial things. I generally agree with this sentiment and practice with this mindset, but when I look for the actual "why" behind it, I realize the foundation isn't always clear. Why do we trust this so firmly?
- We have countless myths, folklore, and old grimoire texts where spirits and deities are depicted as highly capricious, easily offended, or demanding of strict appeasement. While I know we shouldn't take ancient mythology or religious dogma completely literally, these stories are deeply ingrained in our collective subconscious.
- These entities are vastly more powerful, ancient, and knowledgeable than we are. Technically speaking, there is nothing stopping them from acting out or doing whatever they want to a practitioner. There is no cosmic "police force" to bind them, other than perhaps the practitioner's own wards and banishings (which may or may not hold up against something truly massive).
- Unlike the mainstream Abrahamic view of God, most occultists do not view spirits as inherently "benevolent" or "all-loving." It’s widely accepted that non-physical entities do not operate on human morality. We know that humans sometimes act ethically just because of societal rules; but if spirits don't share our human ethics or societal bounds, we can't assume they operate on a human sense of "fairness."
So, if these entities aren't bound by human morality, aren't strictly benevolent by default, and possess the power to do as they please—what exactly stops them from lashing out?
I would love to hear your personal thoughts, magical paradigms, or philosophical takes on this. Thank you for your time!
I frequently see a trend—especially among beginners in the occult—where people are terrified that they might have angered a spirit, deity, demon, or other entity through a minor mistake in ritual or an accidental slight.
Usually, experienced practitioners reassure them that 99.9% of the time, these entities do not get petty or angry, and they aren't going to smite or curse us over trivial things. I generally agree with this sentiment and practice with this mindset, but when I look for the actual "why" behind it, I realize the foundation isn't always clear. Why do we trust this so firmly?
- We have countless myths, folklore, and old grimoire texts where spirits and deities are depicted as highly capricious, easily offended, or demanding of strict appeasement. While I know we shouldn't take ancient mythology or religious dogma completely literally, these stories are deeply ingrained in our collective subconscious.
- These entities are vastly more powerful, ancient, and knowledgeable than we are. Technically speaking, there is nothing stopping them from acting out or doing whatever they want to a practitioner. There is no cosmic "police force" to bind them, other than perhaps the practitioner's own wards and banishings (which may or may not hold up against something truly massive).
- Unlike the mainstream Abrahamic view of God, most occultists do not view spirits as inherently "benevolent" or "all-loving." It’s widely accepted that non-physical entities do not operate on human morality. We know that humans sometimes act ethically just because of societal rules; but if spirits don't share our human ethics or societal bounds, we can't assume they operate on a human sense of "fairness."
So, if these entities aren't bound by human morality, aren't strictly benevolent by default, and possess the power to do as they please—what exactly stops them from lashing out?
I would love to hear your personal thoughts, magical paradigms, or philosophical takes on this. Thank you for your time!