Kimberly Steele (
kimberlysteele) wrote2020-11-29 09:47 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Ogham Readings on Mondays
Submit your question or request for a general "what's up this week" reading and I will be happy to oblige!

I am happy to read your Ogham free of charge -- that's how I hone my divination skills -- but if you want to donate for it, I'll happily buy myself a book, a snack, or a cup of tea while on the town. Please only donate if you can absolutely afford it. I've been there. Your prayers for my continued success are welcome whether you donate or not!

I am happy to read your Ogham free of charge -- that's how I hone my divination skills -- but if you want to donate for it, I'll happily buy myself a book, a snack, or a cup of tea while on the town. Please only donate if you can absolutely afford it. I've been there. Your prayers for my continued success are welcome whether you donate or not!
This week
(Anonymous) 2020-11-30 06:08 am (UTC)(link)Re: This week
For your general state, they give me Coll, which means you'll either have too much or too little "Wisdom" energy. Too little means you won't feel wise enough to handle issues that come up OR that you'll overestimate your abilities. For the middle position, which is the Situation, we have Beith or Birch, and that means you'll either want to go in too many directions that won't help you OR that your get up and go got up and went. I drew this one last week when I had to soldier through a low-energy day. It was a good day anyway, I just had a bit of fatigue. The final Ogham, the Lesson or Outcome of this week, is Eadha which is Aspen. This is Limits and it means that you'll either not feel up to the limit OR you'll be tempted towards limitlessness, which is equally harmful. Fodder for meditation for sure!
Re: This week
(Anonymous) 2020-12-01 03:45 am (UTC)(link)Re: This week
When I draw Coll, it usually means I'm in danger of talking too much. Recently when I drew it, I was messaging back and forth with a rather difficult client who was one of those trigger-temper types, ready to warp anything I said completely out of proportion. Usually when I draw Coll ill-dignified, I take a polite, less is more approach -- the fewer words said, the better. It certainly worked with the difficult client, who couldn't get a reaction out of me and disappeared. (His disappearance was also likely assisted by my daily banishing ritual) Combative types often are unintentional psychic vampires who feed off of a defensive/angry response from others. If you give them nothing but a polite wall to respond to, they go away.