🕸 The Invisible Threads We Carry
Theme: Release & Letting Go | Weekly Focus: Cutting the Cords | Sanskrit Word: Moksha (मोक्ष) — Liberation
🌙 The Threads We Don’t See
Some cords are easy to spot — the ones that tie us to people, memories, or past versions of ourselves.
But some are more subtle.
They weave themselves into our thoughts, our bodies, our daily habits.
They hum beneath our skin when we say yes but mean no.
They whisper through our dreams, reminding us of promises made in other lives, other times.
These are the invisible threads.
The cords of expectation, guilt, identity, loyalty, and love that shape our world long after their time has passed.
They’re the invisible connections to parents who couldn’t love us properly.
To partners who taught us pain instead of passion.
To beliefs that were never really ours but became part of our DNA through repetition and survival.
🔮 How They Weigh on the Spirit
When I first began exploring cord-cutting, I thought it was about removing toxic people from my energy.
But I learned quickly — the heaviest cords weren’t tied to others. They were tied to the stories I told myself.
The story that I had to be strong all the time.
The story that healing meant never feeling angry.
The story that love and suffering were twins.
Each story is a thread — and every time we cling to one, it tightens around the soul.
Yoga and witchcraft both teach that energy flows where attention goes.
So if we keep feeding those threads with thought, fear, or guilt, we’re weaving the very net that traps us.
Moksha asks us to stop feeding what drains us.
To look at the tangle without judgment and begin, ever so gently, to unwind.
🌕 Seeing the Threads Clearly
Awareness is the first cut.
Before we reach for candles or scissors, we pause and look inward.
We ask:
“Where am I entangled?”
“What stories have I mistaken for truth?”
“Which cords are made of love — and which are made of obligation?”
Sometimes the thread you think you’re ready to release leads somewhere unexpected — an ancestor’s grief, a mother’s unspoken fear, an echo of your own younger self.
That’s when compassion becomes the blade.
Because cutting cords without understanding simply reattaches them somewhere else.
Moksha isn’t about severing. It’s about freeing.
You can’t free what you haven’t first seen.
🪶 A Ritual of Awareness
You don’t always need a knife to cut a cord. Sometimes awareness is enough.
Here’s a soft daily ritual for untangling the invisible threads:
Sit quietly and place a hand over your heart.
Feel for the pulse — the rhythm that connects you to everything.Ask your energy: “Where am I holding tension that isn’t mine?”
Wait for an image, a word, or a sensation. Trust what comes.Breathe in light. Visualize it flowing through your body, illuminating every thread.
Some will shimmer gold — keep those.
Some will appear gray, frayed, or heavy — these are ready to release.Exhale gently, imagining those heavy threads dissolving into the air.
Whisper:
“I bless what was. I release what no longer serves.”End by thanking yourself for the courage to see what’s hidden.
You don’t need to cut everything at once. The soul knows when it’s ready to let go.
🌬 The Freedom of Lightness
Each invisible thread released makes space for breath to move more freely through your body.
You might notice you stand taller, breathe deeper, or feel less reactive.
That’s what freedom feels like.
Liberation isn’t loud — it’s quiet.
It’s the deep, sacred sigh that says, finally.
Moksha is the realization that we were never bound by others.
We were bound by our own willingness to carry what was never ours.
And now, we can choose to set it down.
Affirmation:
“I see the threads that no longer serve me.
I release them with compassion and keep only what is love.”
With all my magick and heart,
🌙 Di the Yoga Witch
#Moksha #SacredSpiralFlow #ReleaseAndLetGo #CutTheCords #YogaWithDiLynn #DiTheYogaWitch


