
The MCC Symbol
In our coven we understand the MCC symbol not merely as a mark of identity, but as a living glyph that expresses the core of our work: navigating thresholds, honoring the unseen, and cultivating the union of intuition, intellect, and will. Its structure is rooted in ancient Hermetic and crossroads traditions, yet the emblem itself is a modern creation—born from the spirit of our coven and shaped by the deities who walk beside us. It stands as a reminder that we are witches of the liminal: travelers, listeners, and keepers of the spaces between.
At the top of the symbol, the curling horns echo the ancient images of guides, guardians, and teachers—those who lead wanderers through mystery rather than away from it. This is the domain of the god of pathways, communication between realms, and inspiration: the one who opens doors, dissolves boundaries, and teaches that every road is alive with meaning. The horns represent insight that curves inward and outward at once, a reminder that wisdom spirals through the world and the self in equal measure.
The outstretched wings at the center embody movement, freedom, and ascent. They mark us as seekers—witches who rise above rigid systems, who travel between worlds, and who trust the currents of both spirit and thought. Wings are the signature of the messenger, the whisperer, the intermediary. They remind us that knowledge is carried, not claimed; that every spell, every omen, every flicker of intuition is part of a greater conversation that stretches across realms.
Below the wings sits the great circle: whole, unbroken, encompassing. This is the heart of the symbol and the heart of our work. It represents unity, completion, and the merging of intuition with reason. It is also the place where we inscribe our letters—MCC—the initials of My Cousin’s Coven, but also a sigil of belonging, intention, and shared purpose. In our tradition, circles are both boundaries and portals: they hold, protect, contain, and invite. The circle of the MCC emblem honors all who gather within it, and acts as the covenant space where imagination and practice entwine.
The downward-pointing triangle at the base, split into two lines, speaks to grounding, manifestation, and the descent of inspiration into form. It is a symbol of the earth, of spell-craft, of work made real. Where the wings point to the heights of imagination, the triangle anchors us in the physical world where our magic must live, breathe, and take shape. Its dual prongs represent the forked path—the choice inherent in all workings—and the understanding that creation requires both surrender and direction.
Together, the horns, wings, circle, and triangle form a glyph of movement between worlds: ascent and descent, inward and outward, the cosmic and the earthly. The emblem is a map of the witch’s journey—one that is never linear, but spirals through learning, reflection, connection, and revelation.
To wear, draw, or meditate upon the MCC symbol is to align oneself with the values of our coven: curiosity, openness, courage, and reverence for the liminal. It is a reminder that we are at our strongest when we follow the road that calls to us; when we honor both the mystery and the mundane; when we act as bridges between knowledge and intuition, the seen and the unseen, the inner voice and the outer world.
Here in My Cousin’s Coven, the symbol stands as both anchor and invitation:
A sign of who we are.
A promise of who we are becoming.
And a beacon to all who walk the winding path with us, beneath the Veiled Moon.

