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Tarot Fellow

W.I.T.C.H Oracle — Woman in Total Control of Herself by Sullins & Toball

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W.I.T.C.H Oracle (Woman in Total Control of Herself) by Sullins & Toball — a U.S. Games Systems oracle deck celebrating feminine power, autonomy, and wild wisdom. Each card affirms a facet of the fully sovereign woman — intuitive, fierce, compassionate, and unapologetically herself. A perfect deck for self-love readings, empowerment rituals, and anyone on a journey of reclaiming their inner witch. Queer-inclusive imagery throughout.

Description:

Quick Specs

  • Brand: U.S. Games Systems
  • Type: Oracle deck with guidebook
  • Size/Quantity: 44 gilt-edged cards, 216-page guidebook, organza pouch, deluxe magnetic-hinged box
  • Best for: Women's empowerment work, self-trust, personal agency, secular intuitive practice

What W.I.T.C.H. Actually Stands For

W.I.T.C.H. is an acronym: Woman In Total Control of Herself. That definition is the entire philosophical engine of this deck. Angi Sullins and Silas Toball built the W.I.T.C.H. Oracle not around a spiritual tradition, a pantheon, or a magical practice, but around a single orienting idea: that every woman is born with sovereign authority over her own life, and that most of what gets labeled witchcraft in the empowerment context is actually the radical act of reclaiming that authority from the accumulated weight of others' expectations. The deck doesn't ask you to believe anything about the supernatural. It asks you to take your own inner knowing seriously.

The 44 archetype cards in this deck aren't drawn from mythology or goddess traditions. They're contemporary psychological and experiential states: The Trailblazer, The Sovereign, Failure's Muse, Keeper of Silence, The Predator, Sisterhood of Reciprocity. Each one names something a woman might be embodying, resisting, or being called toward at a given moment in her life. That's a meaningfully different framework from oracle decks organized around goddess archetypes or spiritual traditions, where the reference point is external to the reader. Browse more options in my oracle decks collection.

The Guidebook, the Poems, and the Production

The 216-page guidebook is one of the most substantive elements of this set. Sullins writes in a voice that reads like a combination of invocation and coaching: direct, lyrical, and aimed squarely at the reader's relationship with her own authority. Five original poems are woven through the text, and they carry real weight rather than serving as decorative inserts. The guidebook entries for each card include the archetype name, extended prose on what it represents, and guidance on how to work with its energy rather than just describing what the card depicts.

The production quality matches the content's ambition. The 44 cards have gilt edges, which gives them a tactile richness during shuffling and handling. Silas Toball's artwork runs across the full card face with a lush, painterly quality that rewards extended looking. The set comes in a magnetic-hinged box with teal and gold foil accents, and the organza pouch provides a practical storage option for the deck itself once you've removed it from the box. This is a deck that feels as considered in the hand as the text is on the page.

The Tarot Fellow Standard

I stock the W.I.T.C.H. Oracle because it fills a genuine gap in my oracle inventory. Most of the empowerment-themed decks I carry are spiritually rooted, drawing on goddess traditions, shadow work frameworks, or magical lineages. W.I.T.C.H. is different: it's a secular empowerment tool that happens to use the witch as its central metaphor, and it does that work with real craft. Sullins writes in a voice that's genuinely galvanizing rather than gently affirmational, and Toball's art has the visual authority to match. If you're looking for a deck that meets you where you actually are rather than where a tradition says you should be, this one belongs in your hands. Find related titles in my mind, body, and soul collection.

How to Use the W.I.T.C.H. Oracle

Use this oracle deck to access and act on your own sovereign authority and self-trust.

  1. Read the Introduction Before You Pull

    Before your first pull, read the introduction in the guidebook. Sullins frames W.I.T.C.H. not as a spiritual archetype but as a psychological stance: a woman who has stopped outsourcing her authority to others. That framing changes how cards land.

  2. Use Single-Card Morning Pulls

    Draw a single card each morning and read its full guidebook entry. Ask: where in my life is this archetype showing up, as something I'm embodying or a pressure I'm resisting? Write a brief journal entry before the day begins to anchor the insight.

  3. Pull for Targeted Decisions

    Use the deck for targeted inquiry alongside daily draws. When facing a decision or pattern you want to interrupt, shuffle with that situation in mind and draw three: what I'm currently embodying, what I'm avoiding, and what I'm being called toward.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does W.I.T.C.H. stand for?

W.I.T.C.H. stands for Woman in Total Control of Herself, reclaiming witch as a secular empowerment statement rather than a religious identity. The deck centers sovereignty and self-trust rather than spiritual practice or magical tradition.

What is included in the W.I.T.C.H. Oracle set?

The set includes 44 gilt-edged cards, an organza pouch, and a 216-page illustrated guidebook with five original poems by Angi Sullins. It comes in a deluxe magnetic-hinged box with teal and gold foil accents. Published by U.S. Games Systems, Inc.

How is the W.I.T.C.H. Oracle different from a goddess oracle deck?

The W.I.T.C.H. Oracle is psychologically oriented rather than spiritually rooted. Goddess oracle decks work with mythological archetypes and tradition. This deck's witch framing is secular: grounded in self-trust and agency, not devotional practice.

Are the W.I.T.C.H. card archetypes connected to mythology?

Yes. The archetype cards include psychological states like The Predator, Failure's Muse, and Sisterhood of Reciprocity rather than goddess figures. The deck feels grounded in lived experience rather than mythology or established spiritual tradition.

W.I.T.C.H Oracle deck card showing a woman in a flowing dress holding a glowing orb against a cosmic backdrop, celebrating feminine power and sovereignty.