Writer of the weird, the dark, and the fantastic.

Tag: Writing (Page 1 of 2)

The Fall and Rise of an Earth Witch

When I was small, the tiny patch of woods behind our house was a safe haven. 

I did not grow up in a city. I didn’t even grow up in a town large enough for a traffic light or chain restaurant. We had one four way stop, one family-owned restaurant, and a million acres of forest surrounding us on all sides. In my own personal version of “walking barefoot uphill in a snowstorm”, the next closest town was a three-hour drive over dirt roads, with only the stretching forest in between.  

So when I say that the woods behind my house were a safe haven, I mean that they were mine

I picture it in absolute clarity – the moss strewn earth, the towering pines, the small burrow beneath protruding roots where little tea leaf-esque plants grew. I would spend hours immersed in my wood, making potions and magic and talking to trees. 


And then one day, I stopped. 


I was ten.


My friend and I were playing in the forest behind her house. We swung from birch limbs, watched the treeline for foxes, and I chatted away, both to my friend and to the trees. To me it was natural, they were both part of the conversation and it would be rude to exclude one or the other. My friend interrupted my chatter. She told me to stop talking to things that weren’t people. That our classmates would think I was weird. That she thought I was weird. And for the first time in my life, I felt a flush of shame for who I was. Fear for what others would say behind closed doors. 

That was the day I stopped talking to the forest. Stopped making potions, stopped making magic. Instead, I did what I was supposed to; paid attention to boys and clothes and everything but the nature that grounded and sustained me. 

I hid my magic to fit in.

But I could never truly let go of my hold on the fantastic. Potions and talking trees found their way into my writing, along with elves and magic and dragons. I started telling friends I was sick so I could stay home and write or read rather than going to parties. I yearned for that connection – it was reflected in the books that lined my shelves, the drawings doodled on every scrap of paper, the cartoons that I watched even as I edged into adulthood.

And then, suddenly, the things I had been hiding became coveted. It became cool to watch anime and dress up in costumes and gather with like minded people. It became cool to write fan fiction and stories about fantastical beings. Superheroes grew into fashion. I spent years allowing others to dictate which parts of myself were ok to reclaim, and when. 

And then one day, I took back my power.   

One year ago, I gave myself permission to embrace all the things that make me feel connected and whole. To reconnect with all that I’ve been yearning for since my ten-year-old self locked away this primal love for my own nature.

It’s still not widely accepted to talk to trees. But the people in my life love and support me for all that I am, and the many things that I am not. I am no longer ashamed of the things that set my heart on fire. I will continue to make my magic. And I will stay forever hopeful that the rest of humanity will do the same. 

How to Release Your Magic

To release your magic, follow these instructions exactly. 

Do not falter, do not hesitate. Do not look back from where you’ve come, or forward to where you’re going. Be here, in this moment, right now. 

Meghan Victoria - Writer

Pause. 

Breathe in, fill the lungs, the chest, the belly. 

Breathe out, let your shoulders release away from your ears. 

Breathe in, fill the lungs, the chest, the belly. 

Breathe out, clear your mind. 

Select your instruments. Parchment, paper, stationary. A quill, a pencil, a pen. The right surface, the perfect writing tool – these things are art in themselves. 

Write “MAGIC” at the top of your page. Take your time. Feel each letter as you etch its shape. Words have power; letters fuel the fire.  

Underline “MAGIC” twice, as deep or as shallow as feels right. 

Gift yourself five minutes. 

Write every word that seeps into your mind when you think MAGIC. Do not censor. Do not steer. Let yourself fall into stream of thought, far and deep. 

Heavy drapes. Incense. Whispered secrets. The feel of velvet. Old keys. Forest depths. The smell of old pine. Locked boxes. Curling wood smoke. Full moon howl. Dancing. Midnight. 

Pause. 

Breathe in, fill the lungs, the chest, the belly. 

Breathe out, let your shoulders release away from your ears. 

Breathe in, fill the lungs, the chest, the belly. 

Breathe out, clear your mind. 

Examine your list. Do not think too hard. Instead, breathe it, meditate upon it, muse and deliberate and reflect. These processes are profound in their nature. 

Magic has a feel, as unique to each of us as a fingerprint. It calls to the deepest, most secret parts of ourselves. A place of yearning, of forgotten pieces and half-remembered lifetimes, of beauty and darkness and longing. 

MEGHAN VICTORIA

To know your magic is to know yourself. 

Are the words that curl across your page part of your life? 

How often do you find yourself in the depths of the forest, howling at the full moon? Listening to the secrets of the universe? Dancing at midnight? 

How often do you wrap yourself in velvet and draw the drapes and burn the incense and unlock the box that contains your soul? 

How often do you set your magic free? 

This is a list that calls to your blood, to the secrets that lives deep in your bones. 

Take it. Live it. Set your magic free. 

Find Your People. Love Them Hard.

I USED TO THINK WRITING WAS A SOLO ENDEAVOR.

You sit down in your basement or bedroom or whatever hovel you’ve dedicated to grinding out your current project and you get on with it. And when you’re done, you celebrate with people who love you but who can never really understand the act of inking your soul onto a page. 

When I moved to Calgary nine years ago, I joined a writing class. I had been writing my whole life, had a minor in creative writing from the University of Dalhousie, but had never really committed myself to a writing community. In a city where I knew very few people (and honestly cried on the daily because I missed home), it was a way to get out of the house, to meet others who were doing something I loved. I never dreamed that this writing community would turn into an integral pillar of my life. But that’s exactly what it has become. 

The members of my writing circle – the people to whom I’ve showed the depths of my soul, and taken a look deep into theirs in return – are the people who I trust beyond measure to be honest, to pick me up and dust me off, to hold my feet to the fire and push me to be better – not only in writing, but in life. They are cheerleaders and grief counselors and editors and mentors. They are the reason that I hold my head high regardless the number of rejections crowding my inbox or number of chapters left to meet a deadline. 

If you are a writer or creative of any sort, find your people. 

Find those who understand the lows, the rejections, the long nights and crippling doubt. 

The people who know exactly when to build you up and when you need a hard kick in the pants. Because you know as well as I do that if you’ve chosen this creative path, there are a lot of downs. A lot of moments where it all feels pointless, where you’re not sure that you are or ever can make a difference, where it’s hard and lonely and tedious. Where sometimes the only motivation to finish is someone screaming in your ear that you are great, that your contribution is needed, and that no matter what you believe about yourself, they will always be in your corner. 

Find your people. Love them hard. And make sure they know exactly how much they mean to you. 

A Limited Number of Twilights

On Monday, a dear friend died. He was young, and vibrant, and full of kindness and love and light. He had been sick for a while, but as prepared as you think you can be, you’re never actually prepared to never see someone again. Never prepared for your time with them to be cut short. 

Time. A concept that’s been weighing on my mind lately. I’ve forever been obsessed with fantastical creatures – vampires and werewolves and warlocks – a collection of beings who do not age, or die, or sleep. And perhaps now, in light of my friend’s passing, I understand myself a little better. Our twilights are limited in number. Perhaps the true fantasy is having all the time in the world – an eternity to make my mark. 

My friend’s death has made me acutely aware of how quickly time slips through our fingers. How abruptly it can be stolen, snipped and tied by giant Fate wielded scissors. And I worry. What if I don’t have enough time to do all the wondrous and incredible things I was made to do in this life? What if I want lazy Thursday nights with my husband where we drink too much wine and watch dumb TV AND want to finish writing that novel AND read all those books AND teach yoga AND have a fulfilling career in business AND friends and travel and magic and astrology and dancing and Netflix and tarot and horses and parties and boats and fitness and meditation and cake and – there’s so much life to be lived. So much to be experienced. And we only have so much time. 

We lost Chadwick Boseman on Friday. Another snip of those scissors. A friend sent me something he once said: 

“You have to cherish things in a different way when you know the clock is ticking, you are under pressure.” 

The clock is ticking for each and every one of us. The only true constant, the single indisputable fact of the universe: we will all die. And perhaps that is the point. Perhaps, if we had all the time in the world, if our clocks were not ticking, we wouldn’t be so frantic to fill every minute to bursting with as much joy and friendship and love as we can. Maybe, without that reminder, we would forget the point. We would cease to make any kind of mark at all.  

We must cherish things in a different way when we know the clock is ticking. We are all under pressure. 

The time is now. 

Dear Men

Covid has me cleaning out closets and getting rid of old baggage. A cathartic reorganization of past memories that no longer serve me. Ass kicking my way down memory lane, cherry picking what to hold on to and what to let go. 

I highly recommend. 

To the only man to ever break my heart: I’m sorry I took scissors to your red soccer championship jacket. 

It was a nice jacket. 

I should have kept it. 

P.S. The rest of your athletic garments are in the hands of the less fortunate. I hope the hot stench of your deceit keeps them toasty at night.


To the man whose heart I left crushed in the kitchen of the house he bought to grow our family: I was twenty-one. Too young for a family. Too young for a house. 

I would like my parent’s brand new, king-sized mattress back. It was the offering of a guilty conscious, and we both know that guilt faded with the leather motorcycle suit you returned to the store rather than my closet. 

P.S. I still miss that old Victorian. 


To the man who left me crying on his couch in the middle of the night to go party with his friends: You owe me money. A dollar for every tear pried from my body through your judgement, your cruelty, your insecurities. The exact total  $3,564.  

P.S. You need therapy. 


To the man who sat next to me in first year English: Please stop haunting my memories. I apologize for flirting you into making me a Valentine’s Day present and then never speaking to you again. I no longer want to see the hope in your eyes as you hand me that gift bag, or imagine the amount of time it took to create and decorate thirty-seven miniature origami cranes. I want to forget the deeply personal words of the poem you wrote for my callous, selfish heart. 

Enough is enough.

P.S. I kept the cranes. 


To the man who ordered me to fold his laundry: I should have strewn your underwear across the front lawn of Fountain Hall. Pushed them through the garburator. Rewashed them in the toilet.  

I should not have folded the laundry. You should not have apologized, all those years later. 

P.S. It’s hard to despise a man who knows how to make an apology. 


To the man who will hold my heart: tiptoe carefully ‘round those rips and tears. Keep your scissors locked and your mattress soft. Addict me with kindness. 

I’m skittish about laundry. Love poems will forever make me cringe. Don’t ask about the origami cranes under my bed, and I won’t pry the skeletons from your closet. 

Remind me not to be selfish and callous. 

Remind yourself not to say things you don’t mean. 

Apologize early and often. Don’t let me pick fights. 

Tell me I’m pretty. 

Say “I love you” first. 

Don’t leave stale dish water in the sink. 

Tell me I’m pretty again. 

P.S. Tulips are my favourite. 

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