Radical Elphame
UPG is a term I find to be often misunderstood. Short for “unverified person gnosis,” this phrase is sometimes wielded as a criticism in the world of spirituality – pagan, polytheist, or otherwise. It’s the word “unverified” that stands out in this instance, that seems to be contextualizing someone's “personal gnosis” – about a spiritual path, or being, or myth – as dubious, or heterodox. When used disparagingly, UPG can feel like a corrective. In many ways it can feel like a tool within so-called “alternative spirituality” to reinforce the kind of strictures of the...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
What can change a goddess into a nature spirit? What can change a nature spirit into a witch? A hasty answer might simply be "colonization." This was the evolution of Fröja in Sweden. I don’t think we can have an intellectually honest discourse about folklore without confronting the forces of colonization head-on. What has this ongoing process done to the gods, the spirits, and the myths of a people? However, stopping there might miss the point. I think we also need to ask: what is the agency of a Goddess during a religious conversion? Does she merely recede into the past, or does she...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
There may be no clearer gateway drug to magic in 2026 than astrology. You don’t need psychic abilities, or a spirit court, or a wider mystical philosophy to dabble in astrology. Just a birthday. I’ve always been a proponent of practical magic – the kind that helps you get stuff – not as an end goal, but as a necessary step, for many, in re-enchanting their minds. Astrology can do something similar, though, with merely a natal chart reading. What do the planets have to do with who I am? It doesn’t really matter why astrology can tell you about yourself; the power is in simply...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
I sometimes wonder why, of all the occult and magical currents we have on offer, Witchcraft manages to still have such a powerful pull on our contemporary culture. We find ourselves on the other side of a century of occult revivals and magical trends, and yet Witchcraft somehow stil retains a timeless appeal. More recent spiritual trends, such as the “New Age” movement, which you would expect to be a better gateway for contemporary Western people to explore spirituality, have aesthetically aged far worse than Witchcraft generally, and what once appeared modern and enlightened would now be...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
When you look at the oldest and most intact spiritualities around the world, you will find that, at the center of their practice, is ancestral veneration. For many of us who were raised in less intact spiritualities and in cultures with a tendency to mold prevailing religions to the will of Empire, venerating our ancestors can feel complicated, to say the least. The same cultures that tend to mold religions to the will of Empire, also have a habit of tainting our ancestral line. It doesn’t take long tracing back the family trees of many of us to run into the stains and wounds of colonialism,...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
Folk magic has a powerful pull. It can express complex metaphysical ideas that, for most of us practicing today, had once felt like the purview of the “New Age.” Magical ideas that once seemed fantastical, through the lens of folk magic, can suddenly feel earthy and vital. Techniques that once felt silly can begin to feel ancestral. The source texts go from channeled writings, to myths and folktales, and academic papers. There’s an artistry and intelligence grouped in with modern-day practitioners of folk magic that give the disenchanted “Western” mind permission to think...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
They’re on bumper stickers, they’re on bags of jerky, they’re on bars of soap, and if you're not seeing an ancient alien on the History Channel, you’re almost certainly seeing someone searching for them in the woods. Big Foot, Sasquatch, Oh Mah, Sunk Ape – they go by many names, and are spotted throughout North America, and beyond. For some, they are a myth; for some, a monster; and for the rest, a mascot. The loudest amongst their fans will tell you they are a flesh and blood relic hominid, and describe their migration patterns, their use of infrasound to evade capture, and, of...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
What is it that draws occultists to horror films, when by in large, the history of horror cinema is essentially anti-occult propaganda? Despite what can seem like a counterintuitive interest on the part of practitioners, the fact remains that the horror genre is the last bastion of regular engagement with the spirit world left in contemporary media, and therefore a natural draw for people who see the spiritual as fundamental to everyday life. Another consideration is the cathartic embrace of the shadow on display in horror, and often staring death right in the face. Both things our culture in...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
I had to reschedule an interview for the first half of this month, but I didn't want to leave you hanging this week, so I recorded an essay I put out on our Substack recently for your listening pleasure. Nora Fornario has always been a deep fascination of mine, whom I find to be misunderstood and often explored in ways that ignore her most interesting aspects in favor of a more lurid true-crime bent. This essay is less focused on the infamous death of Nora Fornario, but rather a deep dive into what we can speculate about her own ideas and magical practice. The TL;DR is Witchcraft. ...
info_outlineRadical Elphame
When we think about the Otherworld, we tend to do so from the perspective of this world. What is this hidden world that seems to operate so differently from our own? Who are the beings who dwell there, and what do they want with us? In J. M. Hamade’s fascinating book, Procession of the Night Theater, they explore the “night side” of astrology, offering a poetic vision of the Lunar Stations, not to be defined or calculated so much as dreamed with. It’s this study of the nocturnal side of things, the hidden side of things, that not only eloquently elucidates the ancient art of...
info_outlineWhen we think about the Otherworld, we tend to do so from the perspective of this world. What is this hidden world that seems to operate so differently from our own? Who are the beings who dwell there, and what do they want with us? In J. M. Hamade’s fascinating book, Procession of the Night Theater, they explore the “night side” of astrology, offering a poetic vision of the Lunar Stations, not to be defined or calculated so much as dreamed with. It’s this study of the nocturnal side of things, the hidden side of things, that not only eloquently elucidates the ancient art of working with the Lunar Mansions but also weaves expertly into the tapestry of J’s many other occult and appropriately “otherworldly” interests.
The lunar stations – and working with them to divine or make talismans (or even just pair with horror movies) – opens the practitioner up to considering how understanding both “daytime” and “nighttime” approaches to magic and astrology can teach us about the visible and hidden (the exoteric and esoteric) aspects of ourselves, the world, and what is beyond.
As J points out in our conversation, the Muslim name for those who dwell in the Otherworld is Jinn, which translates to being hidden, and also in something of a state of change or flux. Furthermore, J mentions a fascinating hot take from the 13th century Sufi Mystic Ibn Arabi, who interpreted humans and Djinn as exoteric and esoteric counterparts to one another. When we take a cross cultural view of being like the Jinn – the Aos-Sidhe of the Gaels, the Elves of the Norse, the Víla of the Balkans, the Lamiak of the Basque (just to name a few) – it’s fascinating to notice how as these cultures transition to more structured monotheistic cosmologies, their perspective on these “esoteric” beings becomes increasingly antagonistic.
I would be remiss to try to whitewash or philosophically domesticate these beings of the Otherworld. I could hardly imagine a less morally delineated dimesion, similar to how nothing about ourselves is ever really “black or white.” But if doing this show has taught me anything, it’s that understanding this realm, if not working with it directly, is still a meaningful pursuit.
When you examine groups on the fringes of these monotheistic religions and cultures, that exist within this larger cosmology but navigate it differently, you often encounter spiritual relics from the dinstant past. Sects and like the Zār of North East Africa, the Šojmanka of Eastern Serbia, and religions such as Quimbanda in Brazil, all incorporate trance possession by beings that would be considered Jinn in the wider Middle East. What are we to make of this vastly different view both of these beings, and why and how one might engage with them?
J’s books and insights have had a deep impact on how I consider big questions like these, and helped to shape many of my own ideas about what we can really know about the Otherworld and its role in this world.
SHOW NOTES:
J's Patreon: astarnightdwell
J's Podcast: A Starnight Dwell
J's Book on the Lunar Stations: Procession of the Night Theatre