Tag

divination

Divination takes many forms, but few paths are as ancient, visceral, or legally complicated as reading the future through animal entrails. This collection of posts tagged divination brings together practical guidance for the modern haruspex — covering everything from interpreting spleenfold mechanics to navigating the surprisingly intricate world of permits, insurance, butcher contracts, and public communications. Whether you are just beginning your journey into this overlooked art or are an established practitioner trying to stay on the right side of various regulatory bodies, these articles offer grounded, honest advice. Explore the full divination archive to find the guidance you need for both the ritual and the paperwork that surrounds it.

Three women in a store perform haruspicy, examining organs in glass bowls.

Misreading the Gall: When Things Go Wrong

Gall bladder misreadings affect practitioners at every level of experience. This article examines the most common causes — from specimen condition to practitioner bias — and sets out a methodical approach to reducing interpretive error and handling uncertainty professionally.

Five women examine haruspicy materials: animal organs and divination cards.

Legal Obligations During Public Demonstrations

Public haruspicy demonstrations involve licensing, street trading rules, animal by-product regulations, and a higher risk of complaints than private practice. This guide covers the legal framework UK practitioners need to understand before working in public. Preparation is the most effective form of protection.

Two women in a clothing store examine a liver and a handwritten note.

What the Intestines Show Us About Karma

The intestines are among the most information-rich organs available for karmic interpretation, yet they remain underused in general haruspicy practice. This guide covers layout technique, key diagnostic indicators, and how to communicate karmic findings to clients in a way that is useful rather than fatalistic.

Two women examine divination tools: a bone and cards, with a coiled organ on a shelf.

Disciples of Blavotnik: In Their Own Words

A small but committed community of haruspices draws on Theosophical thought to inform their interpretive practice. We spoke with three such practitioners about how the Blavatsky-influenced framework shapes their work, and what it demands of those who use it.

Several women examine reddish strips of animal organs, suggesting a haruspicy divination lesson.

Interview with a Disgraced Haruspex

A practitioner who experienced significant professional fallout following a high-profile failed reading speaks candidly about what went wrong, the silence that followed, and the slow process of returning to practice. An honest account that raises broader questions about how the haruspicy community handles failure.