long time no see, Freyja đđ
Yesterday I learned my backyard is home to purple ground ivy and its place within herbal witchcraft and herbal medicine was fascinating so I want to continue this journey. Obviously I know a few herbs and plants that are good for certain things but I really want to educate myself deeply!
I was looking into the Green Witch but really all and any suggestions are welcome for a beginner such as myself.
I find this technique to be extremely comforting. It may be adapted to many models of magic, including psychological ones.
I find that this shield is better performed alone or when you can focus on it. It is more of an event than a practical utility.
TL;DR: Put yourself in a headspace where your favorite natural biome is all around you. Call a guardian animal. Spend time with the animal and thank it when you are done.
TIPS & TRICKS: Build a folder of gifs, video clips, photos, audio tracks, etc. that just take you to your favorite biome (perfect chance to create mood boards really).
You can perform this technique as a meditation, but also you can employ it as energetic shielding.
SHIELDING: Choose what biome you want to spend time in. You can be very specific (like choosing to be near a body of water, the time of day, the weather patterns, or the types of flora and fauna present) or you can be very general. Decide if you would like to call on a specific animal from that biome, or if you will call for any animal in general.
Draw energy up a shield around you in whatever method you prefer. I generally find it to be much easier to pattern the shield while you make it, instead of creating a white bubble and modifying it after the fact (e.g. if you create your shields by exhaling energy, exhale the biome itself).
Once your biome shield has been created to your satisfaction, consider spending time within it to feel it. This is a good opportunity to practice psychic senses. Try feeling, smelling, seeing, tasting, and hearing what is within the shield.
When you are ready, speak, think, sign, or indicate that you want an animal to join you in the biome. If you use words, they might be, "otter, come join me. I need a friend and a protector. Come sit with me in my shield." Or, "Mother Earth, I've called you to be around me. Now I ask you send an animal to protect me and be my companion at this time."
If you do not want to use words, you can pattern an animal into your shield using energy work techniques or any technique you prefer.
Try spending time feeling, smelling, seeing, (maybe not tasting), and hearing the animal. Try talking to it and watching its behavior.
You can go about your day and this biome and animal will travel with you. Reinforce it by adding more energy to it using whatever technique you prefer. When you are done, if you remember to do so, thank the animal for its company and ask it to return home.
MODIFICATIONS: If short on time, create the shield to include the animal automatically, instead of having to invite it.
You can invite the same animal over and over again, or invite a new one each time.
The guardian does not need to be an animal and the environment doesn't need to be a biome. Consider a heavenly shield and pearly gates with an angelic guardian, for example.
Especially if you call out for a general guardian, your actual guardians and guides may appear, even if they are unknown to you at this time. Especially watch out for specific beings that show up time and time again. (this technique was how I first met my primary spirit guardian, although I didn't know it at the time!)
This technique can be a form of divination and self-reflection. Let everything be very general, including the biome. Pattern your energy work to "bring forth the environment I need the most." Call for "the guardian I need the most." Observe what is created around you.
As stated above, this technique in general is excellent for practicing psychic sensing.
Once you have a protection amulet or two in hand, try this in a natural area. Pattern your shield to be the energy of that area. Call for a local benevolent spirit. See what happens.
1.)Â CLEANSING AIR SPRAY
 Your first and most simple way to cleanse without smoke would be to make a salt water solution (Fresh Salt Water from a Beach is a big Plus! Or reuse that snow/ Rain Water)
Simply mix the salt to your water until it dissolves fully.
Essential Oils are completely optional, Make your solution your own this is nearly a âbaseâ Recipe but also very effective on its own.
Spray all around your Home, Altar, Car, Body to clear the congested energy.
  2.) STEAM CLEANSING AND FLOOR WASH
 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ OPTION ONE ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~
Boil water, And Add herbs that work with the intention of your cleanse.
Sage- Clears ALL energys
Sweet Grass- Think âSweetâ promotes love
Rosemary- Love, Cleansing, Protection, Money Your all purpose herb
Cinnamon: Protection, Love
Lavender: Peace, Tranquility, Happiness
Cloves: Exorcizing, Banishing negativity
Rue: Exorcizing, Expelling, Hex Breaking
Chamomile: Keeping, And Promoting peace, Happiness
Basil: Luck
Angelica Root: Protection against Malevolent spirits
(Research different herbs, Mix and Match to make YOUR Perfect blend)
Boil all of of your herbs together, Until you get a rich, Dark Color. Use this time to âaddâ Your intentions and energyâs into your mixture. Make your magic Happen! Take the pot and âSmudgeâ with the steam. All nooks, All crannyâs, All corners, All Rooms.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Now here is your âSecond Optionâ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
ONCE THE MIXTURE HAS REACHED ROOM TEMPERATURE use your decoction as a Floor Wash. You can add any detergents, Or Fragrances at this time
Clean all your floors, Base boards, Window Sills, What ever feels right, Although I would always start with the Floor.
(You may want to dilute in clean water, As some herbal mixes can stain)
This gives your Home Cleansing some extra OOMPH
You can dispose of your mixture Naturally, Outside, Or down the drain, Its up to you. This is an eco friendly solution.
I ask myself this a lot lately: is everything exactly what it seems?
The mind and the senses kind of naturally rail against those spirits we engage with that can't be categorized or rationalized easily - not the unknown, but rather the can't-be-known.
Some things have no name, others have no form. On a very surface level, we work to let go of expectations so we can see what's really there. In a deeper sense, I believe we have to continue to cast aside these constraints we put on the spirits we engage with, and our way of perceiving them.
Spirit work involves a lot of fighting against our own apophenia - a need to distort by forcing into form and creating connections that aren't there. It's really easy to want to assign name and nature to something that can't fit neatly into a box.
It's a fact that we will make mistakes, be mistaken about the nature of, or identity of, a spirit at some point in the journey. The trick is to keep peeling away the layers, until pretty wrappings and trappings fall away and we can see what's really in front of us.
Don't blink. Don't be afraid to take yourself apart. Let yourself, and the spirits around you, become complicated.
My new plant-love of this Spring season is the unassuming (and yet striking beautiful) Lamium purpureum, aka Purple Dead Nettle.  This wild forageable is considered a âweedâ in many yards and gardens and yet has great medicinal, edible, and magical properties. What more is there to love? I first noticed purple dead nettle after seeing it on a Youtube channel - it turns out, it was growing in my neighborhood all along and I had been oblivious! Purple Dead Nettles (Also sometimes called Purple Archangel) is found around the world. In warmer areas, it is a annual Winter weed that provides much needed ground cover - here in Southern New England it is a early Spring flower that blooms for about six weeks starting in mid April.  It is highly distinguishable by its square stem (proving its membership to the mint family) and distinct red/purple leaves. It can grow up to 8-10 inches tall but generally prefers to stick close to the ground. It is a super food - all parts of the plant are edible though its leaves are fuzzy so it can be a strange experience to eat it on its own. It can be added to salads, used as an edible garnish, made into pesto, or added as a green to smoothies.  Itâs flavor is green and reminiscent of grass or clover. Medicinally, it is an astringent, diaphoretic, and purgative.  It has anti-inflammatory, anti-bacterial, and anti-fungal properties. Itâs leaves can be made into a salve or applied directly for on-the-go wound care.  Consumption slows the production of histamines so it has a claim to fame as a plant used to treat seasonal allergies.  It can be dried and drunk as a tea but can have a laxative effect if consumed in quantity.  It is also listed as unsafe for pregnant and breast feeding humans. On of the best quality of this wonder-plant, in my opinion, is that it is one of the earliest bee friendly flowers that blooms in the colder climates. Bees and other native pollinators seem to prefer Purple Dead Nettle to other plants. Yet another reason not the mow this lovely plant down and let it thrive!
Magically it is associated with happiness and cheerfulness and considered useful for grounding when combined with yarrow.  Like all hearty plants that will grow âanywhereâ it also has an association with strength and resiliency. For magical purposes, dead nettle is most often dried and turned into an incense blend or tea (see the above mentioned warning about drinking too much of it.) Last but not least, I wanted to share a fun fact. The Latin name for Purple Dead Nettle (lamium purpurium) means âdiminutive purple monsterâ - a nickname given to the plant that spread out of control.  Laugh all you want but be careful where you plant it if you donât want a yard FULL of dead nettle. But for real - who wouldnât want a yard full of dead nettle? Certainly not me⊠Like my work? Please consider supporting me by Buying Me of Ko-Fi.
May has been a long and winding month. As always happens when everything blooms at once, I ran out of time to do all of the things and, moreover, to write about all of the things. Iâm feeling very behind (that may just be Mercury retrograde talking). I did manage to carve out some time for violets, my absolute favorite early spring edible. Iâve been working with violets for two years now â Iâve written in the past about my violet syrup experiments (which were relatively successful) and I also made a violet cordial, violet drinking vinegar, and violet sugar cookies (which were less successful â not inedible but not really what I wanted.)
As fate would have it, my perfect violet picking day was May Day proper. I had a number of helpers â friends who were all helping to collect dandelions for our May Day feast and a little bit extra (violets for me). My friends have all willingly signed up on my journey to eat all of the edible flowers so the promise of future violet edibles was all the encouragement they needed. With extra hands, picking enough to make violet syrup and then some was easy and so I set out to make violet jelly as well.
Both the violet jelly (featured here in the front) and the violet syrup (back pouring bottle) have been a smashing success. Violet jelly is what I have been missing in my life â the flavor is so deep and purple. (I know, descriptive, right?) The jelly has been great with a charcuterie plate (really good on salted meats and cheeses) and it makes a pretty great addition to a cheese danish, too! Truth be told, I like it BETTER than the violet syrup which I have found to be a bit finicky.
If youâve been following along for a while, youâll know that I have a serious thing for cocktail syrups. My go-to is to make them into a gin sour with a good solid juniper-forward gin and some freshly squeezed lemon juice. That is one of my staple cocktails so I know my recipe isnât the problem but honestly, I havenât particularly liked the violet syrup in that application. A lot of my others have so Iâve kept making the cocktail but up until last week, I wouldnât have skipped the cocktail syrup for that jelly any day.
That all changed in a moment. I was staying at a hotel on the beach in Cape Cod with my partner, my coven mate, and her partner. We didnât know what to make for a drink â it was hot. We knew that a tiki drink was in order. But what?
We surveyed our assets: aged rum with pineapple and lime juice sounds like a tiki drink, right? My partner used some Google magic and came up with an absolutely perfect summer cocktail. It called for aged rum, those two juices, Aperol (which I had thrown in our bags on a complete lark), and simple syrup. We happened to have our violet syrup so in it went.
Meet the Violet Bird of Paradise
The bird of paradise is already a riff on the more classic Jungle Bird cocktail and we put our own twist on the drink by using violet simple syrup rather than plain cocktail syrup. The results were spectacular. The violet flavor grounded this drink (as I mentioned before, violet has a surprising amount of depth of flavor for such a tiny flower) and the color-changing properties of the syrup were on full display when combined with the citrus elements of the drink. This is the perfect cool you down on a hot day kind of drink.
1 oz. overproof rum (I used aged rum for this purpose 1 oz. Aperol 1 oz. Pineapple Juice 1/2 oz. Fresh Lime Juice 1/4 oz. Violet Simply Syrup
Mix in a Boston shaker and then serve over crushed ice.
This drink is sweet and needs to be served very cold â donât skimp on the ice. Fill the entire glass. With rum, pineapple, the orange from Aperol, and sweet violet â this drink can be easily enchanted for good times and happiness. Please drink and enchant responsibly!
Minx
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Both Talismans and Amulets are magickal objects that are small in nature, therefore making them conspicuous and able to be worn or carried without arousing suspicion. Often, they will be pieces of jewellery suitable for everyday wear or objects that can be discreetly carried on your person.
1. Amulet:Â provides protection from danger and harm.
2. Talisman: attracts a particular benefit to the wearer/carrier.Â
The general consensus is that Amulets provide protection against bad luck, illness, and evil. They may do this in a general sense, or serve a more specific protective purpose.
The most common form of Amulet to be found, are necklaces and pendants as they can be worn daily without raising alarm, and it is believed by some that the closer to the body an Amulet is worn, the more powerful its effects will be.
Some potential Amulets include: gems and crystals, stones, figurines (people, deities, animals, mythological creatures); diagrams; bones; plants, and words.
Talismans are, like Amulets, items that hold magickal power.Â
There is debate over what the exact differences between Amulets and Talismans are, and it will vary between sources as to what you read or see.Â
In general, Talismans are said to draw things to the wearer/carrier, instead of have a passive protective effect and their magick is specific and not generalised; by this, I mean that unlike Amulets that can just serve general protective purposes, Talismans are used to attract specific benefits tat are determined by their design. They can also be charged to increase their power.
Talismans are more complicated than Amulets in appearance; Amulets can simply be a crystal hung on a leather throng that you wear around your neck, whereas Talismans tend to have symbols, figures or incantations carved or engraved onto them in colours that correspond to the intended benefit you wish to bring upon yourself.Â
When it comes to having your Talisman on your person, it is much more common for the item to be something you can carry in your purse, pockets or bad than something youâd wear. They can also be placed near the item or person you wish to bestow the benefits upon. For example, you may place the item above a childâs bed if you want to give them good dreams, or put it into your purse if you wish to draw wealth and prosperity to yourself.Â
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Updated: November 12th, 2017
[Have I Been Cursed?]
[How to Tell if Youâve Been Cursed]
[Iâm Afraid That Iâve Been Hexed]
[Knowing if You Are Under a Curse/Have Been Cursed]
[So You Think Youâve Been Cursed]
[So You Think Youâve Been Cursed?]
[Curse Removal / Protection]
[A Hearth Witchâs Defense, Part Two - Protecting Yourself & Your Hearth From Curses]
[Protection and Return to Sender Jar]
[Protection from Curses]
[Protection Jar Against Binding and Hexes]
[Protective Measures Against Common Hexes or Curses]
[Three Little Empresses: Curse Protection Poppets]
[To Ward Off Curses]
(a decoy acts as a âsubstituteâ for you, which the curse will be redirected to instead of harming you; the decoy can then be cleansed or destroyed to remove the curse from it; sometimes you donât get a choice and the decoy gets destroyed, and you have to make a new one if you still desire its protection)
[Anti-Curse Poppet]
[Black Hole Decoy]
[Creating a Decoy for Protection Purposes]
[Curse Decoy]
[Decoy Poppet]
[Diversion Jar]
[Negativity / Bad Luck / Curse Absorbing Decoy Poppet]
[Sea Witchâs Scapegoat]
[Spell: Witch Bottle]
[The Spookâs Decoy]
[Substitute Spell]
[Witch Bottle]
[Antidote: Hexed Objects; Removal Powder]
[âBlack as Nightâ Curse Removal Body Scrub]
[Blackthorn Reversing Spell]
[Break a Curse Candle Spell]
[Break a Curse Spell]
[Break a Spell Cast Against You]
[Breaking a Curse]
[For Breaking a Curse]
[Burning Bridges Spell]
[Buster Poultice Recipe]
[Curse Breaker Cleansing] (cw: sigil)
[Curse Breaking Hand Washing/Bath]
[A Curse-Breaking, Purifying, and Protective Witch Jar] (tw: music autoplay)
[Curse Removal & Reversal]
[Curse Removing Wash]
[To Destroy a Curse]
[The Healing Pool: A Cursebreaker]
[Hex and Curse Breaking]
[Hex-Breaker Candle]
[Hexbreaker Powder]
[Lemon Uncrossing]
[Lift a Curse]
[Mild & Spicy Cursebreaker Powders]
[Multipurpose âCurse Removingâ Wash]
[To Remove a Curse]
[Remove a Hex, Reverse a Jinx]
[Removing Hexes and Curses]
[Rid Yourself of a Curse]
[Smoke Out the Curse]
[Thu'um Magix: Disarm]
[Unbinding Spell]
[Anti-Curse Powder]
[Calciferâs Bargain - A Spell to Reverse a Curse/Hex Placed on You]
[Charm - Curse/Spell Breaking]
[To Counter a Curse]
[Curse Breaking Shampoo]
[Curse-Reverse]
[Curseturner Powder]
[âDrown the Witchâ Reversing Spell]
[Engraved Hourglass Nebula Curse Return Spell]
[Flame Wheel]
[Lemon Curse Breaker]
[Major Arcana Spells - Lady Justice - Return to Sender]
[Mirror Counter-Curse]
[Mirror, Mirror (Reversal)]
[Reflect Away Harm (Curse Reversal)]
[Return to Sender]
[Return to Sender / Banish Negativity Spell]
[Return to Sender Candle Spell]
[Return to Sender Spell]Â
[Reverse a Curse]
[Sealed with a C(urse)]
[Simple Hex/Curse Reversal]
[A Simple âReverse the Curseâ Spell]
[Spell: Return to Sender]
[A Spell to Counter Anotherâs Magick]
Note: I called this a green witch spell because it calls for caring for a living plant. That means providing it with the correct levels of light and water for its care. You do not have to call yourself a Green Witch to use this spell. You do, on the other hand, need to be able to care for a plant. Be advised. Note: There are a lot of parts to this spell. This isnât the kind of thing that should be undertaken lightly or can be accomplished, in most cases, in a single weekend. This is by design. Be aware that in assembling the items to complete this spell, you have begun the action of casting it. You are creating a living ward that could live for upwards of ten or twenty years or more â treat it with the reverence it deserves.
This spell is designed to create a living plant ward tl protect you and your environment. It uses a combination of candle magic (as an initial charge for the spell) and green magic to power the spell. I also suggest the use of additional elements such as bindrunes, sigils, or intention papers but they are not necessary. As always with my spells, I expect you to bring your own magic to the table here â how you empower this spell should be determined by how you cast magic.
I will also include some sections on how to interact with your plant ward â they are just that, suggestions. Take what resonates with you and leave the rest.
1 Jar Candle appropriate in size to use as a cachepot (3âł, 4âł, 5âł or more)
Oils or herbs to anoint your candle (optional)
A paint pen or other permanent marker (optional but recommended)
A plant (I suggest one that you associate with protection magic)
A pot with drainage holes that will fit into your cachepot
Soil, Water, and Sunlight to care for your Plant Ward
The goal of this spell is to prepare a vessel and imbue it with protective energy and then to permanently home a plant in it to create a living ward that you feed with water regularly. Steps 1 and 2 of this spell can be performed congruently or separately. They are interrelated â the size of your plant will dictate the size of your cachepot/candle, so keep this in mind during your choosing process. If you choose a cachepot that is too small for your plant, you will need to transplant it out quickly, defeating this process. If you choose a cachepot that is too large for your plant, you risk root rot. As you might imagine, a dead plant is not an effective ward.
Ultimately, your plant choice is up to you. There are, however, some things that I think it is important to keep in mind when choosing a plant for a spell like this. The first is that we need to keep this plant alive so choosing a relatively âeasyâ plant is a good starting place. You know how much time and care you like to put into your plants, now think about this also as the time and care that you want to put into your wards. If you want to maintain your wards more often, you may wish to choose a plant that is more thirsty or time-consuming. If you are more of a set-it-and-forget-it type of magic user, something more low-key may be more your style.
The second thing is that your plant needs to be able to grow effectively in your environment. I would lean towards choosing a plant that you have grown before in your current living space as you will know, for sure, that it is a good fit and will thrive in your home.
Things like rose bushes and herbs have a lot of protective properties but can be difficult to grow in a home environment. I suggest thinking about what protection means to you â there are many ways that plants can be protective (bark, thorns, poisonous leaves, vines that strangleâŠ) besides the obvious protection associations in That Big Green Book.
Keep in mind that the size of the plant in its mature form will come into play here. Some plants can be continually divided to remain in the same pot for a long time while others will outgrow their homes in 1-2 years. A plant that can stay in its cachepot for at least a couple of years â either through the slowness of its growth, division, or because it prefers to be a bit snug in its home â is preferred for this type of spell.
Plants can be expensive but this step doesnât have to be! Check your local plant groups for free plants or propagate an existing plant you already own. I would suggest that the plant become fully acclimated to your environment before you actually use it in this spell.
Once you know what type of plant you want to grow as a ward, it is time to find yourself a vessel to house your ward. Here we are looking for a candle in a pretty jar* that you like enough to keep as a decoration. You may have one in your house already! The one condition is that whatever sized plant you have chosen should be able to fit inside your candle jar as a cachepot. It doesnât have to fit exactly (thereâs a possibility here of choosing a large cachepot to give your plant ward space to be repotted and grow!) but you should be able to comfortably sit your plant into the candle jar.
From there, the choices are very much up to you and virtually endless. You can choose based on a color association that you have with protection magic, or maybe it is the scent of the candle that makes you think of protection here. I suggest choosing a scent that you enjoy (or scentless altogether) as you are going to burn this candle out before we use it as a home for your new plant.
If you make your own candles, there is some amazing room here to further your own magic by choosing an appropriate vessel and then making a protection candle to go inside of it.
Candles, especially bigger jar candles, can be quite expensive. This isnât about going out and spending a lot of money here (though you can, of course, if you wish). You can often find unburned candles in thrift shops or at discount stores of all kinds.
*If ascetics arenât important to you, you can skip this step.
Now that you have chosen a vessel, we want to imbue it with the energy of protection. This is basic candle magic 101 and can be done in many different ways. Many people will start by cleansing the candle with their preferred methods. Many people like to write their intentions or sigils/bindrunes/magic symbols onto the candle â you can write all around the outside of the candle to create your own art effect or stick to the bottom of the candle to be more discreet. You want to use a permanent marker that wonât wash off if at all possible.
Some people will meditate with the candle, send their power into it, or imbue it with another energy source such as the sun, moon, or Reiki. Many people dress their candles with magical oils, protective powders, or gemstones.
Do what works for you and your practice. If you need a very basic protective spell, you can draw the Algiz rune on the bottom of your candle, anoint it with olive oil, and add a couple of pieces of finely ground rosemary to the edge of the candle (away from the wick). Please practice fire safety here.
Ultimately, I feel that the goal of this candle burn should be to burn your candle out as efficiently as possible to minimize soot stains on the jar and to burn as much of the wax as possible. To do this requires some candle tending. Generally, to burn a jar candle down completely you need to wait until the top layer of wax has melted before you extinguish it on each burn. The amount of time that will take is determined by a ton of factors: the temperature, the type of wax, the number of wicks, the type of wicks, airflow, and other things as well. You may not be able to let your candle burn for that long with every lighting, but I suggest at least attempting to.
Thereâs a lot of additional magic that you could add to this step. You could speak words of protection over your candle as you light it. You could light it once a week on a Tuesday in the hour of Mars. You could light it every day for a number of days that is magically significant to you. You could dedicate the candle to a protective force that you work with. Or burn it on a protection altar. You could write a petition paper and place it under the candle while it is burning.
I personally think that including your plant in the spell here is very useful for creating a connection â I would keep my plant near the burning candle as the spell progressed to strengthen the connection between the plant and the energy of the candle burn that fuels the spell.
Continue with this step until your candle has completely burned out. From here you want to clean out your vessel of any remaining wax, soot, or other leftovers from your candle burn. Take care to try not to remove any protection symbols on the jar, but things happen. Itâs okay to go back over and redraw your protection sigils if you have to here.
Note that I do not say PLANT your plant into its new home. We are using the candle jar here as a CACHE POT, not the direct home of your houseplant. This is because your houseplant likes to have drainage holes and the candle jar has none.
As you do this, you might wish to talk with your plant about how and why you are putting it into its new home. This is when, in my practice, I would Name the plant if I had not discovered its name prior. Giving a plant a name creates a connection between the spirit of that exact plant and you; it also gives you a nice way of addressing the spirit of the plant! (if you donât do spirit work, feel free to skip this step) I like to tell my plants that I am enlisting them in the protection spell that I have cast and asking their permission.
Place your plant in a place where it will get its needs met and watch it grow! Congratulations, you have just made yourself a living ward.
Properly caring for your plant wards is an important part of this spell and is a type of repetitive magical focus. The goal is to focus on your plant as it grows and check up on its needs. This allows you to feed your spell as you water your plant and the growth of the plant feeds the ward itself. Forge a connection to your plant as you care for it â think about its growth, think about the magic that you imbued into the creation of the ward, and think about the candle burning that fueled the spell! Depending on your sensitivities, you may be able to âfeelâ the ward.
Over time, you may want to burn additional candles to add power to your living ward. You can do so by anointing the candles in the same way that you did your original (with the same symbols, oils, and herbs) and burning it close by to your plant. Depending on your practice, you may also be able to change the ward with sunlight, moonlight, or words of power. Use what you are good at here!
It is wise to remember that this is still warding/protection magic so I would refrain from telling people about your ward or sharing photos of it on social media.
Eventually, depending on your plant ward, your plant may outgrow the container that this spell was built for. Consider this to be a great success! You choose to continue to work with this plant by transplanting the plant into a larger pot, finding a new vessel, and casting the spell again â or -by finding a new plant sized small enough to fit into your current vessel. You may be able to divide your plant and keep a part of it for your spell while âretiringâ the rest. (think about the power of continually dividing a pothos and each time creating ANOTHER living plant ward that you put in a different space in your houseâŠ) What to do if your plant ward dies or is not doing well: This happens to the best of us. Some people might consider a plant ward dying to be a sign that something magically is amis in your environment. You need to decide for yourself if that makes sense to you. I would consider what is going wrong with your plant â have you been under or over-watering it? Is it dying because itâs too rootbound and needs to be repotted? Does it have a plant pest? Did it scorch in direct sunlight?
You not caring for your plant properly is almost never going to be a sign that somebody else is messing with you. But if your plant ward is suddenly dying for no reason (and youâve thoroughly checked the reasons) â do some divination on it, please. Also, unpot your plant and check the roots because thatâs always the best practice.
If you need to move house, you will need to decide what to do with your plant ward. If the ward is more designed around protecting you as a person, it may be able to move to your new place. If it is designed around protecting your space, it should probably be recast in the new location. In that case, I would choose a new jar candle and cast the spell anew. When in doubt, I suggest casting a new spell.
Though this spell is written to create a protective ward, it can be altered easily to fit most other long-term goals. You could use a plant associated with tranquility to make your space more peaceful, as an example. I suggest sticking to magical goals that affect your environment or your person here. The reason for this is that I believe that this spell works because you and your plants share the air in your house â you breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide and your plants âbreatheâ in carbon dioxide and âbreatheâ out air. If your belief system of how magic works differently, your experience may vary.
There are always ways to vary this spell to suit your needs - if you come up with a cool one and feel like sharing, I'd love to hear about it!
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use this as a conduit to connect you to the local spirits and nature
get a pot
fill it with local dirt/sand/clay
keep it on your porch/inside/near your house. somewhere you can visit it.
put cool natural items in it, like local shells, bones, branches, etc. that youâve foundâŠ
watch it come to life. if i just leave a pot of dirt around, something will spring up in it. usually those considered âweedsâ. if nothing grows, plant a low-maintenance native plant in it. but there should be something after a time.
make offerings like water and more natural items as you desire.Â
connect to it, talk to it, introduce yourself.
Rinse and repeat over time. Thatâs really it! and then you just⊠build a relationship as time goes on.