(CMR) Transwoman Billie Bryan (40), founder of Colours Caribbean, has been featured by Irish Independent after moving from the Cayman Islands to Ireland to pursue her passion as a witch practicing “sex magic.”
According to the article, Bryan praises witchcraft for turning her life around after being “flat broke” in 2020 and now wants to “normalize” witchcraft in Ireland.
“In 2020, I was flat broke, in a bad place, and I didn’t know what was happening with my life, so I threw everything I have into my craft and became devoted to it. A few months later, it turned my life around – I had an opportunity for me to get out of the Cayman Islands and finally move to Ireland,” she said.
Bryan, who got into witchcraft in 2019 after becoming “captivated” by “stories of mysticism and the occult,” is living in Galway with one of her partners, chef Jay Logan (21), Irish Independent reported.
Bryan is a witch who practices “sex magic” to give herself and her partners “maximum pleasure.”
According to the Irish Independent, Bryan has given many tarot readings professionally. She claims she often gets messages from the Mother Goddess, a composite of various feminine deities from past and present world cultures and religions, and has recently had a “one-on-one conversation” with her.
She is hoping to “normalize witchcraft” in Galway and open a witch-themed cafe for local witches to meet.

“There’s a variety of ways to do sex magic, but for me, it’s not sex in the traditional sense – there’s no penetration involved. It’s being really in touch with your senses and being really central about your physicality and your spirit and combining all those things,” she told the Irish Independent.
Bryan, who is polyamorous, claimed: “The last time I did sex magic, I literally lost control of my body, and let’s just say, a few times, it wasn’t just me involved – there were others in the room whose bodies were experiencing the same thing simultaneously. So we were being essentially controlled like marionette puppets through sex magic.”
Since moving to Galway in June, Bryan has struggled to find a witch community, so is opening a themed cafe for local witches to gather.
She said: “I’ve spoken to many witches locally, but they’re just really underground or sidelined, somehow.”
Bryan said she hoped to help to normalize witchcraft and mysticism as a whole and detach all negative associations people have with witches in general.
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