To know a witch is to walk with someone who sees the world in colors most people never notice. It is to be invited into a realm where the wind whispers secrets, the moon listens to wishes, and the stars are not just distant lights but ancient guides.
A witch will remind you of your own power—the kind that isn’t found in titles or class but in your voice, your presence, your free will.
She will teach you to honor your intuition, to trust the pull of your spirit, and to see synchronicities as the universe speaking directly to you.
She will show you the beauty of the unseen, the energy humming beneath your skin, the way your emotions shape your reality. She will help you unearth the magic within your own soul, dusting off the doubts and fears that have buried it for too long.
A witch will help you see the sacred in the mundane.
You will learn that a candle is not just wax and wick but a beacon of intention, that herbs are not just plants but healers whispering ancient wisdom, that water is not just for drinking but for cleansing, blessing, and carrying dreams into the flow of the universe.
She will remind you to dance barefoot on the earth, to speak your desires under the full moon, to let go with the waning tide, and to rise with the fiery dawn of your own becoming.
If you know a witch, consider yourself blessed, for she will open your eyes to a world alive with energy, meaning, and wonder.
And in her presence, you will remember that you, too, are made of stardust, love and divine possibility – not separate from Source, but an extension of it.
To know a witch is to witness a woman who has walked through fire and emerged not burned, but alight with her own power.
She has faced whispers in the dark, judgment in the light, and the weight of centuries that tried to silence women like her—women who dared to know, to heal, to speak, to be free.
Yet, she stands. Not in defiance, but in truth.
Not in fear, but in knowing.
She will show you what it means to hold your ground when the world tells you to shrink. She will teach you that courage is not the absence of fear, but the refusal to let it dim your light.
That grace is not submission, but the quiet strength to meet adversity with wisdom, patience, and unshakable self-respect.
If you know a witch, she will show you what it means to stand in your power with both strength and grace. She has learned to wear her truth like armor and her softness like silk—both a shield and a gift.
She does not beg for acceptance; she knows her worth.
She does not fight to be understood; she simply is. And in her presence, you will learn that standing in your power is not about proving anything to the world—it’s about knowing who you are and refusing to be anything less.
She will remind you that courage is not about never feeling fear but about refusing to let it define you.
And if you walk beside her long enough, you will see those same qualities reflected in yourself. Because the magic of a witch is not just in what she knows—it’s in what she awakens in you.