Power in Ritual

moon water

Rituals

We are not what we think we are, what others think we are, a culmination of beliefs, or our career. We are what we do. We are what we practice.

Ritual is the practice of practice. It is humility through actionable veneration of the vast world around us.

☆ Rituals strengthen social ties, manage social tension, and support individuals through life crises or major transitions. 


☆ They serve as a mechanism for societies to preserve their history and cultural identity. 


☆ This collective memory is reinforced through habitual actions and physical, bodily practices.

Examples of Ritual

  • Let the cycle remind us of our breadth of capacity. Let each phases attach meaning to each increment of waxing and waning presence.

  • Earthing (or grounding) is the practice of making direct physical contact with the Earth’s surface—such as walking barefoot on grass, sand, or dirt—to transfer the planet’s natural energy into the body.

  • Relationships are two-way streets and can start with you any minute of any day. Choose a place, element, or characteristic of nature and start a relationship with it. Whisper to a tree, paint a rock, sing to the rain, thank sparrows. Do it often.

  • Doodling is a simple real-time witnessing of our ability to create with our hands. No one is watching, no grading is applied—put pen to paper simply because you can. An exercise and affirmation of your innate mason.

Would you like to received some ritual cards by mail?

  • “A ritual is the enactment of a myth. And, by participating in the ritual, you are participating in the myth. And since myth is a projection of the depth wisdom of the psyche, by participating in a ritual, participating in the myth, you are being, as it were, put in accord with that wisdom, which is the wisdom that is inherent within you anyhow.”

    Joseph Campbell