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Lady Pixie Moondrip's Guide to Craft Names
Intro
In the Olde Days, when our pagan ancestors were going through the persecutions we now
invoke to justify various kinds of current silliness, witches took craft names to conceal
their identities and avoid those annoying visits by the Inquisition. In the course of
years, it was noticed that these aliases could also be used as a foundation for building
up a magical personality, carrying out various kinds of transformative work on the self,
and the like. Its clear, though, that these were mere distractions from the real
purpose lying hidden within the craft name tradition. It took contact with other sources
of ancient, mystic lore - mostly the SCA, role-playing games, and assorted fantasy
trilogies - to awaken the Craft to the innermost secret of craft names: they make really
cool fashion statements.
Its in this spirit that Lady Pixie Moondrip offers the following guidelines to
choosing your own craft name. Such a guide is long overdue; the point of fashion, after
all, is that it allows you to express your own utterly unique individuality by doing
exactly the same thing as everyone else. (Those who are particularly drawn to this element
of the craft name tradition will find the Random Craft Name Generator near the end of this
guide especially useful.)
The approaches given here can be used separately, or combined in a single name to
produce any number of interesting effects. Given enough cleverness (and lack of taste),
the possibilities are endless!
Starting Off Right
Whatever else you do, you should certainly begin your craft name with Lord
or Lady. First of all, its pretentious, and thats always a
good way to start. Secondly, it makes an interesting statement about a religion that
supposedly has its roots in the traditions of peasants and rural tribespeople. Thirdly,
since most Craft groups use exactly these same words for the God and the Goddess, this
creates a (by no means inappropriate) confusion about just who it is that we worship.
Divine Names
Along the same lines, you can always take the name of a god, a goddess, a mythological
being or a legendary hero as your craft name, thus putting yourself on the same level as
the powers you invoke.
Having once watched two fifteen-year-old boys get into a fistfight over which had the
right to call himself Lord Merlin, Lady Pixie has a high opinion of the
possibilities of this approach. She notes, however, that there seems to be an unwritten
law among those who have made use of this type of name already, and its no doubt
wisest to follow suit: the more grandiose the name that you choose, the more of a complete
nebbish you should be. Nearly anyone can carry off, say, Lady Niwalen, but it
takes a special kind of person to handle a name like Lord Jehovah God
Almighty. Fortunately, there are those among us who are equal to the task.
Nonhumans
A related approach involves taking a name that implies (or, better yet, states openly)
that you are an elf or some other kind of nonhuman, magical being. This works best
if you are willing to act the part obsessively, and to get really petulant when anyone
fails to respond accordingly. Subtlety should be avoided; nobody will catch something like
Lord Elrandir unless they know Tolkien inside and out. Try something more like
Lord Celeborn Pointears the Real Live Elf.
Fantasy Fiction
The burgeoning field of fantasy fiction offers another source for fashionable craft
names, and in many cases, for interesting complications as well. One popular approach is
to choose the name of your favorite character; as with nonhumans, this works best if you
play the part, and throw a tantrum unless everyone else plays along. Given luck and a
sense of the popular, you may be able to choose everyone elses favorite character,
too, and end up tussling over a name with a dozen other people. (Mercedes Lackey is a good
author to try if this is your goal.) Both this and the last category have the added
advantage of making it clear that, as far as you are concerned, the Craft is simply a
setting for make-believe games; this can help spare you the annoyance of actually having
to learn something about it.
Inventing A Name From Scratch
The best way to do this is to come up with something that sounds, say, vaguely Celtic,
perhaps by mangling a couple of existing names together, and then resolutely avoid looking
it up in a Welsh or Gaelic dictionary. Luck is an important factor here, but there is
always the chance that youll manage something striking. It took one person of Lady
Pixies acquaintance only a few minutes to blur together Gwydion son of Don and
Girion, Lord of Dale, into the craft name Lord Gwyrionin, and several months
to find out that the name he had invented, and used throughout the local pagan scene, was
also the Welsh word for idiot.
Following a Grand Tradition
Though the ink is barely dry on most of our modern pagan traditions,
theres at least one ancient European tradition that many people in the Craft follow:
the tradition of stealing things from non-Western peoples. Fake Indian craft names are
always chic, especially if the closest thing to contact with Native American spirituality
youve ever had is watching Dances With Wolves at a beer party. Better still, mix
whatever Craft teachings youve absorbed with a few ideas you picked up from a
Michael Harner book, break out the buckskins and the medicine pouches, and proclaim
yourself a shaman. Mind you, there are people out there who have received real Native
American medicine teachings, and they may just turn you into hamburger if you piss them
off; still, thats the risk you run if you want to be really trendy.
The Random Craft Name Generator
On the other hand, if you are individualistic like everybody else, you may be looking
for a name that expresses the uniqueness of your personality but still sounds like all the
other craft names youve ever heard. Fortunately, this isnt too hard. Several
years back, a gentleman of Lady Pixies acquaintance told her that the best way to
get laid at a pagan gathering was to have the PA system announce, Will Morgan and
Raven please come to the information booth? Since the resulting crowd would include
at least a third of the female attendees, he went on, it wouldnt be too hard to meet
someone interesting. While Lady Pixie has not tried this out herself, she has tested the
principle behind it in a series of controlled double-blinded experiments, and discovered a
rule that she has modestly named Moondrips Law: 80% of all craft names are made up
of the same thirty words combined in various not particularly imaginative ways.
The discovery of this principle has allowed her to make the once difficult task of
creating craft names easy, by means of the Random Craft Name Generator, release 1.0.
To use the RCNG, take either two or three of the following words (using any convenient
randomizing method, including personal preference). If you take two, simply run them
together; if you take three, one of the words becomes the first part of the name, and the
other two are combined to form the second.
Wolf Raven Silver Moon Star Water Snow Sea Tree Wind Cloud Witch Thorn Leaf White Black
Green Fire Rowan Swan Night Red Mist Hawk Feather Eagle Song Sky Storm Sun
Try it out: Rowan Moonstar. Raven Blackthorn. Silver
Ravenw.. - uh, never mind.
For the expanded version (RCNG 1.01), come up with a name by any of the methods covered
elsewhere in this guide, or take some ordinary American name, and add a two-word name
produced on the RCNG to the end: Gwydion Silvertree. Sybil
Moonwitch. Squatting Buffalo Firewater. The possibilities are endless!
(Note that this list will change with shifts in fashion; Lady Pixie expects to bring
out an upgrade to RCNG 2.0 in a year or two.)
Outro
It may be objected by the narrow-minded (who are probably all covert Christians,
anyway) that members of the Craft have better things to do with their time than the above
guidelines would suggest. This shows a complete lack of insight. First of all, in an
increasingly blase and tolerant culture, its becoming hard for white middle-class
Americans to get that rush of self-righteous gratification that comes from pretending to
be members of a persecuted minority; we may not be able to get burned at the stake by
calling ourselves silly names, but at least we can get laughed at, and thats
something. Secondly, if we keep on treating craft names (and the Craft as a whole) as
fashion statements, that spares us the unpleasant drudgery of actually learning magic and
making it part of our lives. Finally, if were pretentious enough, those people who
actually know enough to magic their way out of a wet paper bag will roll their eyes and go
somewhere else, and we can keep on fighting our witch wars, casting vast astral whammies
and invoking powers we dont have a clue how to control, all in the serene certainty
that no one is actually going to get hurt.
On the other hand, we could take the Craft seriously...but who wants to do that?
Lady Pixie Moondrip
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