Magic in the Real World

Lately I’ve been exploring my potential connections to magic and how I can tap into them in ways that feel right for me. While I’m not too interested in going full Wicca, I like the idea of connecting more to the natural world and honoring the metaphysical. I’ve always been interested in magic (right now I say “magic” and not “magick” because the latter has connotations I’m not 100% aligned with) and witchcraft but never had the resources to explore it, so I’m doing it now that I’m an adult with autonomy and a disposable income.

A few weeks ago I went to the local witchcraft store and just walked the perimeter of it, exploring the different sections and seeing what resonated with me (I’m also trying to live more authentically by listening to my body and noticing what I respond to). The store had a bit of almost everything – candles, herbs, crystals, books, divination tools, shamanic tools – so I was able to spend some time in each section and really see how I felt about it.

The magics that most resonated with me were:

  • Stones/crystals
  • Candles
  • Aromas (herbs, oils, some incense, maybe cooking, etc)
  • Music

If it wasn’t obvious from my previous entry detailing my love for 90s-2000s electronic music, music in general is extremely important to me. It’s a mode of expression and connection vital to my very existence – if we can bond over music we may be friends for life, and almost nothing else helps me solidify the boundaries around who I am as a person. If you think “Bring It All Back” by S Club 7 is the most vapid song ever, I may not contradict you to your face but I will know that some part of you hates a tiny part of me.

I think it was in 2008 or 2009, when I was still trying to amass nerd cred and tried to shop regularly at my local comic shop (despite having very little money), that I picked up volume one of Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie’s Phonogram series. If you’re not familiar, it was a story about British 20-somethings who use music to work magic called phonomancy. If you’ve ever gotten deep into a style of music, so much that it fundamentally changed who you are as a person, or even if you’ve ever been moved to heightened emotion by a song, you know the power that phonomancy can have over you.

I wasn’t able to connect deeply to the first volume’s story about a guy reckoning with the death (and possible resurrection?) of Britpop. I wasn’t aware that Blur and Oasis had multiple songs, much less multiple albums. But the second volume of the series followed a variety of characters using and dealing with music and magic in different ways, and suddenly the whole idea snapped into focus. I could resurrect old loves by playing our songs. I could put on metaphysical armor by getting ready to a “Going Out” playlist. I could reconnect with my childhood self by singing along to 90s pop songs. And now that I have experience DJing for social dances, I can see what effect my music choices have on other people. This is the most tangible magic I’ve ever been able to access, and you better believe I’m going to get good at it.

I found this article this morning while exploring whether or not other people have been moved to try practicing phonomancy in their everyday lives, and I was inspired by the playlist the author set out to create. Respectfully, I want to continue their tradition and share my own magic with the world.

Track 1: A Song That Blew My Mind
A track symbolises my headfirst dive into loving music.

Track 2: A Song That Takes You Back In Time
A track that transports me back in time to a key memory.

Track 3: A Curse Song
A track that brings up sad or bad memories.

Track 4: A Song that Show Who I Was/A Song that Shows Who I Became (Medley)
A medley of tracks that show the evolution of my music tastes as I age.

Track 5: A Song That You Heard Long Ago, But Now Makes Sense
A track that you may have liked or heard in the past, that now resonates with renewed vigor.

Track 6: A Song that Makes You Dance for You
A track that makes you want to dance like no one is watching.

Track 7: A Song That Makes You Dance with Others
A track that makes you want to throw your arms around your friends and dance together.

Brendan Shanahan for Mic Drop Music, “Exploring My Life Through Phonomancy”

Lists of 2022

I don’t like “Best of” lists, especially ranked ones. In my house it’s kind of a pastime to look at these lists and comment all the ways they’re wrong (or we just don’t agree with the listmaker’s choices). But I experienced a lot of good media this year, and in my case I do want to rank them because – while all of them were worth my time and I would recommend everything here to just about anyone – there is a weighted order of how much they impacted me.

As to why there are 8 in each list and not 10? I didn’t really mean for it to come out that way, but 1) beyond eight picks I stopped having super strong gut reactions to them, 2) 8 is my lucky number and it’s generally an auspicious one, so embrace the power of 8 in your life!

Books

  1. The World We Make by N.K. Jemisin
  2. Tripping Arcadia by Kit Mayquist
  3. Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation by Kristin Kobes Du Mez
  4. Matrix by Lauren Groff
  5. Wahala by Nikki May
  6. You Made a Fool of Death With Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi
  7. Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler
  8. What Moves The Dead by T. Kingfisher

Albums

  1. AFTER DINNER WE TALK DREAMS by MICHELLE
  2. The Turning Wheel by Spellling
  3. Dance Fever by Florence and the Machine
  4. In The Green (Original Cast Recording) by Grace McLean
  5. And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow by Weyes Blood
  6. Expressions by Music Go Music
  7. Ved by Ritviz
  8. Under the New Light by Maia Friedman

Movies

  1. Everything Everywhere All At Once
  2. Maeve
  3. The Eyes of Tammy Faye
  4. The Woman King
  5. Summer Wars
  6. Sing a Bit of Harmony
  7. Lupin III: The First
  8. Good Luck To You, Leo Grande

If you’re reading this, have a happy and safe rest of 2022 and best wishes/vibes for 2023!

Cringe!

One of the good things about being in my late 30s is that I’ve been through enough trend cycles to see how things from my life have gone in and out of popularity. It helps you understand how what constitutes “cool” is arbitrary when you’ve experienced several periods where crop tops or Geo Metros or electronic music goes in and out of fashion. When you see something you like become “cool” then “cheugy” then “retro” or “camp,” you discover what you actually like about things you thought were cool when you were younger.

One story I like to tell is how I loved electronic music when I was a teenager. It started with the 90s euro dance on the radio when I was a kid (my favorites were Real McCoy, Ace of Base, and even Aqua), and I discovered more techno genres like happy hardcore, trance, drum & bass, jungle, and gabber when I was in high school. The only person I could reliably talk about this music with was my first boyfriend (who helped me get into those genres), and even once I got to college I met very few people who were even aware these types of music existed. Most people were very invested in converting me from a techno fan to liking indie rock, not in sharing music tastes equally. I used to wish that pop radio would have a new electronic music renaissance so I wouldn’t be alone in enjoying it.

Then when dubstep took over pop radio in the 2010s, I realized I made a monkey paw wish.

Maybe if I regularly spent IRL time with the LGBTQ community I would find kindred spirits, especially lovers of euro dance. That music has been the soundtrack of drag culture since the 90s as far as I’m aware, and I do believe there is a special genre of people around my age who feel especially queer when Be My Lover by La Bouche is playing.

And yet! Because I spend a lot of time in straight white spaces, I have yet to meet anyone who is sincerely moved by Another Night by Real McCoy, or Force of Gravity by BT, or You’re Shining by Styles & Breeze, or Halcyon and On and On by Orbital (I was thisclose to walking down the aisle to this song). Sometimes it feels like I temporarily experienced a parallel universe where people has strong positive associations with these types of music, and now I’m back on the main timeline with memories that conflict with others’.

All that is to set the stage for who I am today, a 37-year-old professional sitting at her desk on a workday with Total XTC by Styles & Breeze playing in the background. It feels like I’m putting my flag on territory, staking out my space where I unapologetically listen to music I like and no one understands why. It’s easier because I’m working from home and I don’t have to explain myself to any coworkers, and it does feel nice to reconnect with music I enjoy and that energizes me to get stuff done.

This is just one example of something I’ve been ridiculed for genuinely liking. Add to that list boy bands, Rocket Dog shoes, Baz Luhrmann movies, pink or glittery things, musicals…so many things that inspired genuine joy, excitement and wonder in me but were not cool or mainstream. It could be cool to like things that weren’t mainstream sometimes, but that always seemed to apply to random things or people, never to me. My things were just cringeworthy.

The best thing about getting older is that I feel like I have less and less to prove to society. I started dressing how I wanted no matter what anyone said, going out alone to see movies or try restaurants, and advocating for myself at work and at home. I started insisting to my husband more and more that the things I like are cool even though he may not always agree.

Knowing that things go in and out of style makes some people scramble to always be on top of every trend cycle. For me, it gives me the freedom to be myself apart from what’s in fashion: if I align with current trends I will always have people I can talk about them with, and if I don’t I will always stand out as someone who genuinely likes what they like. And that’s the sort of person I’ve always wanted to be.