
By Lucille Alabaster
They say you catch more flies with honey.
But witches know: you catch kings with it, too.
The Honey Trap isn’t just a seduction trick. It’s an ancient, sticky spell—used to lure, bind, influence, and intoxicate. Sweetness, when used correctly, is not submission. It’s strategy. It’s alchemy.
And when you understand how to work with it, your sugar turns into sovereignty.
What Is the Honey Trap Ritual?
It’s a magical working where you use sweetness—literal or symbolic—to attract, bind, or control a desired person or outcome.
It’s soft on the surface.
But beneath the glaze lies a coil of intention and domination.
Used for:
- Attraction and seduction
- Favor and persuasion
- Soft domination
- Glamour and emotional influence
This is spellwork disguised as sweetness. And that’s why it works.
Ritual Ingredients:
- A small glass jar of honey
- Your written petition (a name, desire, or command)
- Red thread or hair
- A drop of your saliva (to imprint your essence)
- Optional: rose petals, sugar, cinnamon, licorice root
The Spell:
- Write the person’s name or your desire on a small piece of paper. Fold it toward you (to draw).
- Anoint it with your saliva and place it in the honey jar.
- Add the herbs or personal items as needed.
- Stir clockwise with your finger or wand, saying:
“I sweeten your thoughts, I wrap your will.
You crave what I say, you bend to my thrill.” - Seal the jar and place it under your bed or near your mirror. Shake it gently when you want to activate the energy.
Warning: This Is Not a Love Spell
The Honey Trap is about control, not connection.
Use it ethically, or be prepared for karmic stickiness.
This is for witches who are ready to take responsibility for the influence they wield.
Want to Make It Stronger?
- Add a photograph or signature
- Use honey from a local or ancestral source
- Perform during the waxing moon or on a Friday (Venus day)
- Whisper their name sweetly into the jar daily for 7 days
“They thought I was sweet.
But I was the sorceress behind the sugar.”
—Lucille Alabaster