Hazakake

It was historically used by traveling mystics ( yamabushi or miko ) and in some rural Shinto shrines to answer yes/no questions or to assess the outcome of an endeavor (health, travel, love, business).

Unlike ichimonji kigan (直書き), which uses a single line, Hazakake uses multiple sticks – usually – each with a symbolic meaning. 2. Core Philosophy The belief: The way sticks fall is not random but reflects the invisible order of koto (言霊 – spirit of words) and kannagara (随神 – way of the gods). When you ask a sincere question, your breath ( iki ) and intent ( kokorozashi ) enter the wood, and the sticks answer by forming patterns. hazakake

1. What is Hazakake? Hazakake (literally “tooth/notch hanging” or “divining rod placing”) is a form of cleromancy – divination by casting lots. The practitioner uses a set of thin, wooden sticks (originally chopsticks or skewers) and drops them onto a surface, interpreting the way they cross, align, or fall relative to a central line or marker. It was historically used by traveling mystics (

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