Welcome to Autumn’s Season of Return—A living portal within The Conjuring Mystic Ltd. ecosystem.
Autumn's Season is preserved as a completed cycle—held as an archive rather than a beginning or an end. This sacred page honors remembrance as resurrection and celebrates the Revolution of Remembrance.
A cycle of ancestral veneration, historical reclamation, and creative sovereignty. This Autumn season is divinely aligned with three sacred observances...Hoodoo Heritage Month,
Indigenous Peoples’ Day,
and the Days of the Living Ancestors.
(OCTOBER 13TH - NOVEMBER 2ND)
Together they form a trinity of remembrance, sovereignty, and transformation. A time when the veil between worlds thins, and we remember that what was buried was never gone forever, only waiting to be called by name again. Through this alignment, the Season of Return becomes a ceremony of restoration. A call to honor the roots that shaped us, the land that sustains us, and the spirits that walk beside us. It is here that remembrance becomes revolution and resurrection becomes renewal.
A live ceremony of Ancestral Veneration—a ritual of return, rebirth, and Re-membering. It merges scholarship, methodology, and spirit into one sacred act: Remembrance as Resurrection. This ongoing ritual invites us to gather at the Crossroads to speak the names of those who came before us, to reclaim what false dominion attempted to erase, and to celebrate our continuum as the living embodiment of resilience, wisdom, and undeniable origin.
Through energy, vibration, invocation, frequency, and remembrance, we become both witness and offering —the living altar through which our ancestors rise again.
✨Featured Essays ✨
✦ Can’t Hold Us Down: A New Millennium of Heka 2.0
By: Autumn Marshall
Citation: Marshall, A. (2026). Can't Hold Us Down: A New Millennium of Heka (2.0 (Revised Edition 2026)). The Conjuring Mystic Ltd. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18653057
A revolutionary manifesto of remembrance, sovereignty, and ancestral resurrection. This work dismantles the colonial myth that African and Indigenous histories begin in chains, restoring a continuum of civilizations and knowledge buried by colonial empire. Through decolonial scholarship and ancestral methodology, remembrance becomes liberation—where archive and altar converge. Hoodoo, Vodou, Kemetic science, and diasporic memory emerge as living technologies of resistance. The message is clear: our ancestors built worlds long before colonization, and the knowledge in our bloodlines cannot be erased. They tried to bury the truth—but remembrance resurrects eternity and truth.
✦ Crazy Timelines Pt. 1: How "Black History" Unveils Continuity While Being Mocked as Chaos 2.0
By: Autumn Marshall
Citation: Marshall, A. (2026). Crazy Timelines Pt.1: How "Black History" Unveils Continuity While Being Mocked as Chaos (2.0 (Revised Edition 2026)). The Conjuring Mystic Ltd. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18824089
A structural-historical analysis that reframes Black American history not as a fragmented crisis, but as a continuous adaptive timeline. Through a decolonial interdisciplinary framework, this essay demonstrates how systems of domination—slavery, segregation, surveillance, incarceration, and medical exploitation—mutate across eras while cultural memory, resistance, and community infrastructure persist. By situating historical events along a single ancestral continuum, the work reveals that what dominant narratives dismiss as chaos is in fact patterned survival, collective intelligence, and historical continuity under constraint.
All essays are first archived on Zenodo to ensure scholarly preservation and to secure a DOI. These foundational works serve as precursors to The Sacred Texts of Autumn, Volume I: Manifesto of Knowing, Being, and Speaking Truth (forthcoming 2026), published through The Conjuring Mystic Ltd.
For scholarly updates, open access to study and discourse on expanded reflections, follow Autumn Marshall at academia.edu/theconjuringmystic
“They taught us history as if we began in chains—but we were dynasties before documentation. They call conquest 'discovery,' oppression 'order,' and our survival 'resilience.' Yet here we stand—unbroken, unburied, and undeniably alive.”
— Autumn Marshall, Revolution of Remembrance