First Law
Law of Rebound
Every force cast into the unseen meets the strength of what stands before it. A stronger current will overcome a lesser current, and an unfocused act will often return to its sender unresolved.
This law teaches that energy, will, prayer, spellcraft, curse, blessing, and intention all move through fields already occupied by other forces. Nothing travels through emptiness. If the force sent is weak, confused, careless, or poorly guarded, it may be turned aside, absorbed, reflected, or sent back.
The practitioner must therefore know the strength of what they send, the nature of what they approach, and the boundary they cross. Power without steadiness becomes scattered. Force without clarity becomes vulnerable.
The Law of Rebound reminds the seeker that every act carries weight, and every current must be strong enough to meet the world it enters.
Second Law
Law of Challenge
All workings must begin with clear intention. The unseen responds poorly to confusion, contradiction, and careless command.
Before any act of magic, ritual, prayer, invocation, offering, banishing, or manifestation, the practitioner must know what is being asked, why it is being asked, and what door is being opened. Vague intention creates vague movement. Divided intention creates divided results.
To challenge a force, a path, a spirit, a condition, or oneself, the seeker must stand plainly before the work. This means naming the purpose, holding the direction, and entering the act without falsehood.
The Law of Challenge teaches that intention is the key placed into the lock. Without it, the door may open wrongly, incompletely, or to something never intended.
Third Law
Law of Equalities
When equal forces meet, movement is created through resistance. One force will advance, while the other will remain, weaken, withdraw, or transform under the encounter.
This law governs opposition, contest, exchange, and magical pressure. Equal forces do not simply cancel one another. They test each other. They reveal which force has greater endurance, clearer purpose, deeper roots, or stronger command.
In occult work, this may appear when two wills meet, when protection resists intrusion, when a binding is challenged, when a blessing meets a curse, or when old patterns resist new rites. The meeting point becomes the place of decision.
The Law of Equalities teaches that strength is revealed through contact. What cannot hold its shape under pressure must either change or give way
Fourth Law
Law of Summons
No true progress is granted without practice. What is summoned must be earned through devotion, discipline, repetition, and respect.
The unseen does not open itself fully to the idle seeker. A person may be curious, inspired, or naturally sensitive, but skill is shaped through continual return. The altar must be tended. The words must be spoken. The symbols must be studied. The rite must be repeated until the practitioner becomes steady within it.
This law applies to divination, spirit work, meditation, energy work, spellcraft, ritual, dream work, protection, invocation, and inner development. The summons is made through effort as much as through words.
The Law of Summons teaches that mastery is an offering. Each act of practice becomes a knock upon the unseen door.
Fifth Law
Law of Polarities
All things move through opposing and complementary forces: positive and negative, masculine and feminine, active and passive, giving and receiving, expansion and withdrawal.
The practitioner must learn to recognise these currents and maintain their proper relationship. Too much force becomes domination. Too much passivity becomes stagnation. Too much light blinds. Too much shadow consumes. Each current has purpose when held in its rightful place.
In occult tradition, polarity is the sacred tension from which movement arises. It is present in ritual tools, elemental work, deity pairs, lunar and solar currents, sacred union, the pillar and the vessel, the blade and the cup.
The Law of Polarities teaches that power is born through the meeting of opposites. Balance is maintained by knowing when to act, when to receive, when to strengthen, and when to release.
Sixth Law
Law of Abundance
Like attracts like. What is fed grows. What is honoured gathers around itself more of its own nature.
Abundance is created through resonance of spirit, offering, attention, and repeated devotion. A person who continually feeds fear, envy, scarcity, or resentment builds a shrine to those forces. A person who feeds gratitude, courage, prosperity, beauty, and generosity becomes a vessel through which those forces may move.
This law does not mean desire alone is enough. Abundance must be invited, housed, respected, and circulated. Hoarded abundance becomes stagnant. Shared abundance becomes a living current.
The Law of Abundance teaches that every altar receives what is placed upon it. What you repeatedly honour begins to answer.
Seventh Law
Law of Balance
All things must be held in proper measure. Excess drains power. Waste weakens the vessel. Neglect fractures the path.
The practitioner must maintain balance between body, mind, and spirit, as each forms part of the temple through which the work is carried. A weakened body struggles to hold force. A scattered mind struggles to direct it. A neglected spirit struggles to receive it.
This law also applies to ritual and magical practice. Too much working without rest can thin the boundary. Too much seeking without grounding can loosen the centre. Too much austerity can harden the heart. Too much indulgence can dull the will.
The Law of Balance teaches that power must be contained wisely. The strongest flame is the one that is tended, sheltered, and fed with care.
Eighth Law
Law of Cause and Effect
Every action creates consequence. Every word, vow, offering, curse, blessing, ritual, and choice sends a thread into the web of existence.
Nothing done in the seen or unseen is without result. Some consequences return quickly. Others move slowly, gathering form across time, bloodline, place, spirit, or circumstance. The practitioner must therefore act with awareness, because every act joins a greater chain.
This law is especially important in spellcraft, spirit dealings, oath-making, and ritual exchange. A promise made before unseen witnesses is still a promise. A debt created in ritual remains a debt until answered. A door opened with force may require force to close.
The Law of Cause and Effect teaches that the universe keeps record through movement. What is done becomes part of what follows.
Ninth Law
Law of Three Requests
What is sent out returns threefold: through the spirit, through the world, and through the self.
This law teaches that every act of force carries a triple echo. A blessing may return as grace, opportunity, and inner expansion. A curse may return as obstruction, loss, and spiritual burden. A careless working may return as confusion, consequence, and entanglement.
The number three is sacred in many occult systems. It marks beginning, middle, and end. Birth, life, and death. Body, mind, and spirit. Maiden, Mother, and Crone. Heaven, Earth, and Underworld. To send something into the unseen is to release it into a threefold current.
The Law of Three Requests teaches responsibility. Ask clearly. Send wisely. Act only with the weight you are willing to carry when the current returns.