Status Updates From Rebel Witch
Rebel Witch by
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Berin Kinsman
is on page 132 of 224
As comparative theology, I find this fascinating. The whole book is, "you could do this, or you could do this that way, or you can skip this, whatever works for you, whatever you feel comfortable with." versus every organized religion I've ever worked for/with/within, which has been "You must do it this way," or, at bestm "you should do it this way."
— 2 hours, 54 min ago
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Berin Kinsman
is on page 46 of 224
"LInear time is a struggle for me." Me too, Kelly-Ann. Me too.
— 3 hours, 3 min ago
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Berin Kinsman
is on page 37 of 224
I need to binge this book, take notes, annotate, then go back and reread sections slowly. It's a reference book, and that's how I need to approach reference books going forward.
— 4 hours, 41 min ago
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Berin Kinsman
is on page 37 of 224
Here's what I'm taking from this so far: witchcraft is like vision boarding. You find symbols that have meaning for you, make you think about what you want. You get the crystal that means love or a photo of the vacation you want to take or the action figure that represents the person you want to be. And through magic, psychology, whatever, it's in front of you, you about it, you find the path to make it happen.
— Jan 05, 2026 09:35AM
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Berin Kinsman
is on page 28 of 224
I'm finding many parallels to my creative career in here, i.e., people will tell you there's a right way and a wrong way, judge you and give you grief, insist you're being foolish and wasting your time. Conformity is enforced by people who have power, so they can consolidate and keep that power, and in any context, religious, political, business, empowering yourself upsets them.
— Dec 31, 2025 01:31PM
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Berin Kinsman
is on page 19 of 224
TLDR (so far) Don't let other people tell you what to believe. If it doesn't feel right, it ain't right.
— Dec 31, 2025 06:12AM
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Berin Kinsman
is on page 8 of 224
So Tolkien thought machines were separating our connections to nature and community, way back when he was writing LOTR. He also had a lot to say about myths being real to the people who believed them, and the importance and power of ritual. He was a devout Catholic, but he had his own approach to that. Which brings me here, to what's basically a practical comparative religion book.
— Dec 30, 2025 06:40PM
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