As Witches, our practice thrives when we honor and respect our connection to the earth, ourselves, and each other. The Gathering to Gaia Sigil helps us to protect the environment, support productive change, and build stronger, healthier relationships.
The Crafting of the Sigil
It was crafted during one of my Sigil Witchery online virtual workshops back in March. A integral part of the class is co-creating a sigil together. (We’ve created quite an array of notable sigils in the last three years that you can find using #sigil to search this blog.)
You’ll see that the original whiteboard sketch below is in black and white, while the finished design features an hombre blue to green variation. You can of course use just one color to draw this sigil if you’d like.
What’s Built Into This Sigil:
- compassion and love
- healing of trauma (earth and ourselves)
- foster openness in our communities and the greater world
- support unity and connection to each other and the earth
- strength to break away from harmful cycles and activities while developing better habits and behaviors
- protection
The Sigil:
Suggestions On How To Use This Sigil:
You are welcome to use this sigil however you see fit that is in alignment with the intent of the sigil.
Some suggestions for use:
This is an earth-focused sigil, so applications that involve the ground such as drawing in the dirt, working into your gardening efforts, painting on rocks, or using it to guard natural places are especially potent. Place this sigil upon your altar during festivals and sabbats that call to planting and harvesting, or when seeking to build community. It is also an excellent sigil to dance – either drawn upon the ground or consider how to move your body to match the rhythm and shape of the sigil.
The Gathering to Gaia Sigil by Laura Tempest Zakroff is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Please note: When sharing this sigil (or any other sigil you find on this blog), please be sure to include the link to the blog post. The sigil works best if people understand precisely what went into it, versus just sharing the image and telling people to use it.