T. Thorn Coyle
T. Thorn Coyle
Magic and the Creative Flow
The world needs creativity, now more than ever. If you feel overwhelmed, stuck, blocked, or just want even more creativity in your life, join us! In the first portion of this workshop will invoke a few simple practices to connect to our creativity, quiet our inner critics, and fan our magical spark. For the second portion of the workshop, please bring a creative project you may want to work on! Writing, knitting, drawing, movement, or creative brainstorming are welcome!
Ancestor Healing and Atonement Ritual (With Crystal Blanton)
We all have ancestors of blood and of spirit. Some ancestors are helpful guides, some are reminders of what needs to change. Some ancestors need healing, others need to offer atonement through our own words and actions. Some ancestors offer strength.
We can call upon intergenerational experience and timeless wisdom. Join us for a ritualistic honoring of the ancestors of justice and strength and offer atonement for our ancestors who enacted harm. Let us reflect on the past and invoke the future, together. May the way be clear.
T. Thorn Coyle has worked in many strange and diverse occupations before settling in to write novels. A queer, nonbinary mystic, Thorn has been a student of the magical arts for forty years and taught in nine countries, on four continents, and in twenty-five states.Author of the Seashell Cove Paranormal Mystery series, the Pride Street Paranormal Cozy Mysteries, The Steel Clan Saga, The Witches of Portland, and The Panther Chronicles, Thorn’s multiple non-fiction books include Sigil Magic for Writers, Artists & Other Creatives, Kissing the Limitless, Make Magic of Your Life, and Evolutionary Witchcraft. Thorn's work also appears in many anthologies, magazines, and collections.
An active creative, Thorn has written and co-produced four music albums, is a former professional dancer, and an avid amateur photographer. An interloper to the Pacific Northwest U.S., Thorn drinks a lot of tea, pays proper tribute to the neighborhood cats, and talks to crows, squirrels, and trees.
Learn more about T. Thorn Coyle at www.thorncoyle.com