Let the eclipse show you what’s over.
A ritual for releasing the patterns that eclipse season already ended.
✨ SPELL
Even when the moon isn’t new or full, we don’t have to wait for a “special” sky to practice reclaiming ourselves.
Ritual isn’t about the calendar—it’s about interrupting the grind, reorienting to what matters, and reminding yourself you’re not just here to produce.
Here’s a ritual for this week, aligned with the current zodiacal season. Minimal supplies. Maximum reclamation.
Eclipses don’t ask permission. They end what’s finished, ready or not.
They pull the plug.
They flip the switch.
They clear the space you’ve been too tired or too loyal to clear yourself.
This week, something in you is ready to stop pretending it’s “fine.”
Let’s honor the ending instead of fighting it.
Shadow + Air for Eclipse Release
Supplies:
Paper
Scissors
A window or doorway
Steps:
Write the pattern, obligation, or self-story that finally snapped this week.
Cut the paper into three strips.
Stand near a window or doorway and hold the strips out in front of you, through the other side of that threshold.
Say:
What ends here ends fully.
What frees me frees my future.Drop the strips. Honor that moment of release.
Then put them into the recycling or compost.
Walk away without looking back.
Eclipses are abrupt because they’re honest.
Let this ritual be, too.
✊ HEX
You don’t need a rundown of the headlines. You’re living them. Whether you’re in the U.S. or just suffering under its ripple effects, the harm is real—and relentless.
This isn’t catharsis. It’s counter-spell.
Each HEX is a ritual of refusal—a channel for holy rage, spiritual disruption, and deliberate, directed dissent.
Here’s who we’re targeting. And what to do about it.
Against Caged Voting Rights
This week, we hex the kind of power that dresses disenfranchisement up as “security.”
The SAVE America Act, which is part of yet another campaign to tighten access to the ballot, would impose documentary proof of citizenship as a barrier to registering and voting in federal elections. Instead of trusting Americans to affirm the citizenship they already legally have, the bill forces everyday voters to produce documents like a valid passport or a birth certificate in person just to register. The only way around that? In most states, a cumbersome in-person process with additional hoops that overwhelmingly harm people who are already marginalized.
This functions like a poll tax by another name. Millions of dollars, time, travel, bureaucratic navigation, and rare documentation shouldn’t be the price of democracy. Money and access shouldn’t decide whose voice is heard by their own government. Constitutional amendments like the Twenty-Fourth outlaw economic barriers to voting because they are undemocratic by design.
Consider this:
Fewer than half of Americans even hold a valid passport. Between roughly 45% and 50% have one today.
Most states don’t allow same-day registration; in the majority of states, voters must register days or weeks before election day, and only about 22–23 states, plus DC, offer same-day voter registration that lets someone register and cast a ballot at the same time.
This isn’t accidental inefficiency. It’s a structural chokehold on participation, disproportionately harming:
People who can’t afford passports,
Women and trans folks whose legal names don’t match old records,
Elderly and disabled voters,
Black, Brown, and Indigenous voters already targeted by suppression tactics.
So today we hex:
🔥 Poll taxes by another name
🔥 Documentation gates that cost time and money
🔥 Barriers that treat civic participation as a privilege
🔥 Systems that shrink access to the ballot instead of expanding it
And we bless something else in its place:
💮 A democracy where access is frictionless, not filtered
💮 Where eligibility is freely given, not a hurdle to be overcome
💮 Where belonging precedes documentation
Because civil rights shouldn’t be suspended so paperwork can be verified.
📞 Action — Make It Count
Call your Senators today and demand they oppose the SAVE America Act and any voter suppression bills that make our right to vote contingent on access to expensive documents.
You can also:
Call or email the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division and demand enforcement of voter protections that ensure all eligible citizens can register and vote without undue burden.
Ask your senators why they think a fundamental right should depend on how much money you have or what county you live in.
You don’t need perfect words; you just need to say something like: “I oppose the SAVE America Act. Requiring documentary proof of citizenship to vote is discriminatory and disenfranchises eligible voters. Please vote NO.”
With clean endings and clearer beginnings,
Keli
PS: If March is the month you rebuild your business from truth instead of obligation, the ALIGN waitlist is open. Eclipse season is the perfect time to stop dragging what’s dead into the future.