Grief isn’t dramatic; it’s persistent, nudging you during laundry like, “Hey, remember that person you’d trade anything to see again?”
#griefnotes
Posts by Heather Honold
Some memories hit so hard your body stops mid-task, as if grief unplugged you just to make its presence known.
#griefnotes
Grief has terrible timing, showing up during errands, meetings, or when you’re finally pretending to be a functioning adult.
#griefnotes
Grief shifts the atmosphere inside you, turning small memories into entire constellations that still glow with meaning.
#griefnotes
Light has long been used in folk practice for comfort and protection. Micropractice: light a candle (or turn on a small lamp), look at it for 10 seconds, and say, “I am still here.” Let your shoulders drop. Close with one quiet thank you to yourself. Ordinary courage is magic. Carry that with you.
You carry their story in your body, woven through breath, heartbeat, and the soft places you rarely show.
#griefnotes
Endings draw a line for beginnings to step over. The last page makes room for the first sentence. Thank yourself for making it here, again.
A receipt book was an old household book of remedies and practical secrets. Micropractice: write one “For the days I forget” note for yourself today. One thing that helps when you spiral. Put it where you’ll find it later. Future-you deserves a handrail. That’s folk magic. Keep it kind. #witchsky
Love carves itself into your spirit, and grief traces those lines slowly, reminding you what mattered most.
#griefnotes
Renewal lands in ordinary moments. Sometimes a clean mug or made bed is a portal. Let the simple things be gateways to new energy.
Repetition is an old folk magic technique: same words, same gesture, same tiny ritual until the body believes it. Micropractice: choose one daily action (kettle, teeth, car) and add one sentence: “May I move through today with steadiness.” Repeat for a week if you want. Doable magic is real magic.
Your grief becomes a kind of compass, pointing you toward the parts of life that still want your presence.
#griefnotes
Permission to rest is always within reach. You get to take up space by pausing. The world will wait.
Folk magic includes anti-witch protections too. People who feared witches still used charms: iron, salt, prayers, hidden objects. Micropractice: place a tiny pinch of salt at your doorstep and say, “This home is protected.” Then add, “May fear not make me cruel.” Ethics are part of the spell.
There’s a quiet rebellion in grieving honestly, choosing truth over the pressure to be composed before you’re ready.
#griefnotes
Forgiveness is a gift you give yourself in layers. Let softening be a daily experiment, not a final destination.
Food storage shows up in folk lore because scarcity was real. Micropractice: touch your fridge or pantry and say, “May what we have be enough. May what we need arrive.” Then take one practical step: check one item, add one thing to your list, drink water. Intention + action. Your body loves enough.
Grief murmurs through your ribcage, carrying echoes of every moment you once shared, inviting you to remember tenderly.
#griefnotes
Sensuality wakes up slowly. Notice the first taste, first touch, first smell of the day and let it linger a moment longer than usual.
Folk magic often stayed quiet for practical reasons: sacredness, safety, avoiding mockery. Micropractice: do one tiny ritual today that you tell no one about. One minute of candlelight, one line in your journal, one hand on your forehead saying, “I’m with you.” Private magic counts. #witchsky
Some memories feel like lanterns in the dark, small lights guiding you through nights your heart still struggles to endure.
#griefnotes
Stories change shape when you act differently. Each choice rewrites what you thought was fixed.
Many folk wards were mundane: a broom by the door, shoes lined up, a charm in a pocket. Micropractice: tidy one threshold area for 2 minutes (entryway, desk edge, car). Then pause and say, “This space is tended.” Order teaches the body safety. Two minutes is enough to change the vibe. #witchsky
Grief often feels like a haunting, not from them, but from the version of you who loved without hesitation.
#griefnotes
Movement stirs the old energy and makes room for something new. Stillness lets you notice what wants to rise. Both belong.
Steam is underrated folk magic. Micropractice: simmer a small pot of water w/citrus peel or rosemary (or plain water). Let the steam rise for a few minutes and say, “This home gets to feel safe.” Then turn it off. Scent is a fast nervous-system cue. Keep it simple. No one is grading you. #witchsky
You meet yourself again and again inside grief, discovering pieces you didn’t know survived the loss.
#griefnotes
It really is. There are so many horrible things going on around us that make it easy to forget joy. We have to find the happy moments and share them loudly. Otherwise what are we fighting for? There’s no way we can sustain without a little laughter when we find it. 💜
Laughter invites more light into the day. Joy multiplies quietly when given space to echo.
Folk magic often treated sleep as tender time. Micropractice: put your phone face down, hand on chest, and say, “Night is for rest.” Take three slow breaths. If you want an ally, place a key or a glass of water on the nightstand as a quiet guard. You’re building a boundary between you and the world.