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Tarot Fellow

Consorting with Spirits by Jason Miller — Spirit Work Practitioner Guide

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Consorting with Spirits by Jason Miller — a rigorous and practical guide to building relationships with spirits, ancestors, demons, gods, and other non-physical intelligences. Miller draws on his decades of ceremonial and folk magic practice to give step-by-step methods that work across multiple traditions. Essential reading for the Spiritual Explorer ready to move beyond solo practice into authentic spirit work.

Description:

Quick Specs


  • Author: Jason Miller
  • Publisher: Weiser Books
  • Pages: 256
  • Best for: Intermediate and advanced practitioners working with spirits


A Practical Manual for Working with Invisible Allies


Jason Miller is a sorcerer, teacher, and author who has studied magic across multiple traditions, from Italian folk magic and Haitian Vodou to Tibetan Buddhism and ceremonial magic. His previous works, including The Sorcerer's Secrets and Financial Sorcery, have established him as a practitioner who prioritizes results over theory. Consorting with Spirits is his most direct statement on how to build working relationships with spiritual entities.


The book opens by defining what spirits are and how they exist across six different manifestations, from subtle resonance to full possession. From there, Miller teaches the four primary methods of engagement: prayer, conjuring, compelling, and evocation. He is clear about when each method is appropriate, what to expect, and how to evaluate whether communication is genuine or self-generated. This is the focus that most spirit-work books skip entirely.


Miller also covers local spirits, ancestors, elemental powers, and beings from specific grimoire traditions. The final chapters address deepening long-term relationships with spirit allies, including the ethics of compelling versus petitioning. Reviewers consistently note that it takes material found scattered across dozens of harder texts and makes it workable for the 21st-century practitioner.


How to Use Consorting with Spirits


Consorting with Spirits requires active engagement, not passive reading. Here is how to work through it.

  1. Build the Foundation First

    Before engaging spirits, Miller recommends a daily practice including prayer and divination. Even 10 minutes daily matters more than elaborate occasional rituals. This foundation separates effective contact from unreliable hit-or-miss results.

  2. Learn the Four Methods of Contact

    Miller covers four methods: prayer, conjuring, compelling, and evocation. Start with offerings before conjuration. The book explains when each approach fits and how to read a spirit's response to your initial overtures and contact attempts.

  3. Document Every Working

    Record every working: what you offered, asked, perceived, and what followed. Patterns over time sharpen discernment. Miller stresses that lasting relationships with spirits require the same consistency as any long-term human relationship does.


The Tarot Fellow Standard


I stock this book because it fills a gap that most spirit-work texts leave open. Miller does not romanticize the subject or oversimplify it. He gives you a clear framework for perception, engagement, and relationship-building that works regardless of your tradition. Browse the rest of my occult book selection for related titles.


Frequently Asked Questions


Is Consorting with Spirits for beginners?

No. Miller calls it intermediate to advanced, for practitioners with a basic magical foundation. It assumes familiarity with the subtle body, offerings, and divination before it addresses spirit-specific techniques and contact methods in any depth.

What are the six spirit manifestations Miller describes?

He covers six: resonance, inhabitation, controlled appearance, true appearance, possession, and mediumship. Each has different uses, benefits, and risks that the book addresses in practical terms, going beyond theory into actual working methods.

Does the book draw from multiple magical traditions?

Yes. Miller draws from ceremonial magic, folk magic, Tantric, and Afro-Caribbean traditions. His approach is non-dogmatic, focusing on what works across lineages rather than locking the reader into any single tradition or paradigm of practice.

Where should I start in the book?

Start with the early exercises that build perceptual capacity. Miller is clear that developing your ability to perceive and evaluate spirit contact is the prerequisite for everything else. Build that foundation before tackling the advanced material.

Consorting with Spirits book cover by Jason Miller — mystical illustration featuring a bird-figure surrounded by esoteric symbols on the practitioner guide paperback.