The Vulgar Witch Jun 2026
The Vulgar Witch is not for everyone. She is not for the Instagram grid. She is not for the pagan festival that requires a vendor’s license. She is not for the coven that demands a dress code.
[ Mundane Life / Raw Emotion ] │ ┌──────────────────────┴──────────────────────┐ ▼ ▼ [ Kitchen Witchcraft ] [ Baneful Magic ] • Coffee intentions • Hot foot powder • Cooking with scraps • Mirror boxes • House cleaning wards • Cord-cutting │ │ └──────────────────────┬──────────────────────┘ ▼ [ Empowered, Authentic Self ] Kitchen and Household Magic
In the vulgar tradition, the broom is not for "sweeping negative energy." It is a phallic symbol of fertility and a tool for spiritual trespass . You ride a broom not to fly to a mountain (a hallucinogenic flight of fancy), but to scramble the trail of evil spirits. Setting a broom across the threshold of a cottage door (bristles up) was a vulgar act of war: it told the devil and his imps that they could not enter.
Vulgarity here functions as both an insult (from patriarchal or ecclesiastical authorities) and a badge of rebellious power (in feminist or countercultural reclamations). The Vulgar Witch
However, a raw, unapologetic movement is gaining traction online and in local covens. It rejects the sanitized, consumer-driven version of modern spirituality. This movement is known as .
The human body is the ultimate magical tool. Vulgar witchcraft heavily incorporates physical mechanics. Spitting to seal a banishment, using footprint dust for tracking or binding, and utilizing breath work are foundational techniques that require zero financial investment. How to Practice Vulgar Witchcraft
Use a clean piece of broken glass or a heavy stone found at a crossroads. The Vulgar Witch is not for everyone
The truth is that the sanitization of witchcraft is a form of patriarchal control. When magic is required to be beautiful, quiet, pleasing, and clean, it loses its teeth. The witches who were burned were not gentle. They were accused of being vulgar —loud, sexual, poor, and ungovernable.
The Vulgar Witch is almost always a figure of the lower class. She could not afford a lawyer. She could not write a letter of complaint. Her only weapon against the squire who raped her daughter or the bailiff who burned her hut was the malocchio (the evil eye) or the sending (a curse projected into the body of an enemy via a knotted cord).
The Vulgar Witch doesn't need a $200 obsidian bowl to cast a spell. They use a chipped coffee mug. They don't wait for a rare planetary alignment to fix a problem; they use what they have, where they are, right now. This is "kitchen table" magic taken to its most raw extreme—using spice packets, tap water, and sheer force of will. 2. The Power of the Taboo She is not for the coven that demands a dress code
But lurking in the shadow of this #WitchTok revolution is a figure who refuses to be sanitized. She is the muddy-footed hedge-rider. She is the crone who spits into her cauldron. She is the folk healer whose remedies involve bodily fluids, grave dirt, and the kinds of herbs you don’t display on an open shelf. This is .
The vulgar aesthetic is a deliberate rebellion against the commodification of magic. In an economy where a "spell kit" costs $150 and a single crystal wand can break the bank, The Vulgar Witch operates on scavenger energy. She knows that intent, not budget, powers the craft. If you can piss on a rock and call it a talisman, you are practicing vulgar magic.
If you want to explore how to integrate these concepts into your own life, tell me: What or stagnant energies are you currently facing? I can share a specific, no-nonsense ritual tailored to your situation. Share public link
