As above, so below; As within, so beyond.

Kael staged his first sit-down strike in the third grade. It took place in the elementary school library, where he was scandalized to discover they had neither The Iliad nor Theogony. The situation escalated until the librarian contacted his mother, who—despite her surprise—simply laughed it off. From that moment forward, Kael was recognized as something of a handful. Eventually, the librarian gave in—not by procuring Homer or Hesiod, but by adding D’Aulaires’ Book of Greek Myths to the shelves. For Kael, that book was a spark. It ignited a lifelong journey into mythology, religion, ritual, and the layered stories that form the foundation of identity—what we call the “self.”

At the time, Kael didn’t yet identify as pagan. He was a cradle Catholic, raised among saints and sacraments. But even then, he wondered: were saints truly so different from gods? For him, they formed a conceptual bridge—from the faith he was born into, to the spirituality he would eventually embrace.

Years later, his cousin Roen moved nearby. To Kael, she was a force of nature—vivid, enigmatic, and electric with intuition. They quickly became inseparable. Though they used different terms—he spoke of gods, she spoke of fairies—they shared a deep sense that the world was alive with spirits, and that they themselves were different. He, an Aries; she, a Gemini—an astrologically fitting pair. She was a waning Taurus moon, he was waxing – so another compliment in nature. The two would walk for miles to reach the hidden occult bookstore tucked beside a market strip. It was shaded, quiet, and magical. Inside, Kael found rows of books affirming the things he had sensed but never seen acknowledged. They spent countless afternoons reading, often without buying, and talking with the witches who ran the shop. Dissatisfied, his journey led him to texts such as Lewis Spence’s An Encyclopaedia of Occultism, the infamous Malleus Maleficarum, and other comprehensive works that offered entry points into older traditions. The library became his mentor, teaching him how to research, how to question, how to explore.

Ironically, it was in the military—surrounded again by evangelical pressure—that Kael found temporary refuge in the Catholic Church. Sunday services allowed soldiers to avoid certain duties, and Kael, still fond of the figure of Immaculate Mary (a goddess in all but name), opted to return to Mass. Though it didn’t fulfill him spiritually, it did stimulate him intellectually. After army training, he enrolled in Catholic institutions, studying for four years with nuns and eight with the Jesuits.

During this time, Kael’s intellectual and spiritual paths began to intertwine. He spent six months studying under a Gandhian guru, absorbing the principles of Ahimsa, Satyagraha, Sarvodaya, and Swadeshi. Politics became a spiritual calling. With the nuns, he immersed himself in Celtic Studies and Gaelic language. He was particularly drawn to the poetry and mysticism of W.B. Yeats, which led him to explore the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, the Theosophical Society, and the Order of Celtic Mysteries. Here, Kael found a confluence of history, myth, and epistemology—worldviews that resonated with his own.

He encountered many who practiced magic and ritual during this time and was introduced to Dianic witchcraft. From there, he explored Gardnerian* and Alexandrian traditions before ultimately adopting a more eclectic path, one that some might call “hedge.”

Kael earned a degree in Celtic Studies and continued on to study Classical History at a Jesuit university eventually graduating with another higher degree. There, he dove into Greek and Latin classics, studied philosophy and archival methods, and deepened his understanding of ancient texts. These tools allowed him to better grasp his inner nature and the structure of the universe—or at least, how it might be perceived. Through all of this, he found himself increasingly drawn to the gods of his youth—those old mythic figures who had walked with him since childhood. He became, in his own words, a pagan—more precisely, a neo-pagan. He followed no single pantheon, instead honoring a constellation of gods drawn from various cultures and times, layered with the understanding that names change, but spirit endures.

His academic life also afforded him opportunities to travel. Among his most formative journeys was his time in Ireland, where he researched holy wells. There, myth and land fused—mounds untouched, raths and ringforts left in peace, springs that whispered, and caves that resisted entry. Though he had long known the stories, experiencing them respected in the land of their origin was revelatory. Folklore, he realized, was where myth put down roots.

Kael believes in the Sidhe. He believes in spirits, fairies, gods—and in the many unnamed presences he has encountered. Not all were kind. Some were malevolent. Most were indifferent. A few were ghosts. He has suffered profound loss, including death itself. Having crossed that veil and returned, he no longer doubts the spirit realm. It confirmed for him that we are far more than flesh and bone.

To Kael, there is no singular path to truth. The universe is vast, layered, and filled with mystery. Righteousness is not itself a virtue; curiosity is. And reverence—for the living and the unseen—is essential.

*“The Big Blue Book” (aka Buckland’s Complete Book of Witchcraft) mostly draws from this practice, but adds elements of ceremonial and folk magic. Buckland is considered the founder of American style wicca and Saex-Wica. This is the most common practice in use today and to many considered essential.

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