Do you have any healing spells or peace spells i can use for crystals and charms?
I use clear Quartz for healing illnesses. I rinse my quartz in distilled water, dry it off and then go outside in the sun with it. I hold it in my hands and let the sun beam down on it. After about 5-10 minutes I place the crystal on the area that is affecting me for as long as I feel I need. My grandmother used to tell me to put it under my pillow but I find that after extended periods of time exposed to quartz I get a huge migraine.
To be honest, I would need to know what kind of healing you need to be able to answer this question properly, but quartz is an all round healer.
For emotional issues I would recommend wearing a piece of Rose Quartz. This will help balance the heart chakra. It gives you a sense of inner peace.
How to program a crystal
Step One - Clear your crystal. I like to clear my crystals with salt, but if you haven’t got the time to do that simply rinsing them under the cold water tap will do the same job.
Step Two - Hold the crystal in the hand that you write with. This is usually called your dominant hand.Then place your other hand over the top. Say out loud your intentions for this crystal. For example “This crystals will be used to heal”
Step Three - Then repeat the word “Healing” until you feel the healing energy has taken hold of your crystal.
Your crystals will eventually feel different. Trust your intuition when doing this. You will know when your crystal is fully charged and programmed.
There are many different ways to program crystals. This is the way that I personally prefer.
I hope this helps
Brightest Blessing
Rachael-Elizabeth
Persian Love Cookies | Buttermilk by Sam
I’ve always found it interesting how witches are portrayed in Hollywood throwing actual animal parts into their cauldrons. So I looked it up since I’ve never seen a spell that truly called for animal parts, “Eye of Newt” and such, though I’m sure there are a few out there....
[Originally posted at my blog, A Sense of Natural Wonder.]
Last night I finished looking over the proofs for my next book,Nature Spirituality From the Ground Up, which will be coming out in January 2016. One of the things that struck me was how much of the book is spent simply showing readers how to connect with the land they live with. Most books on totemism and nature spirits give a bit of context, and then leap into the “how to find your guide” exercises. It’s not until the very last bit of the second chapter that we even start trying to contact totems. Even after that point, many of the exercises are intimately linked to the physical land, getting people outside and in direct contact where possible (though the material is still accessible to those who may be housebound).
Here in the U.S., most people are critically detached from the rest of nature, at least in their perception. This book is meant to help them reconnect, not just for self-help, but because we live in such an acutely anthropocentric world that we rarely consider the effects of our actions on the other beings in the world (to include other human beings). The problem seems immense: few of us give any thought to our environmental impact, either in part or in whole. When we are unwillingly confronted with it, it’s often in the most catastrophic manners–global climate change, mass deforestation, entire species disappearing overnight. We’ve learned to simply shut off the part that cares about nature any further than maybe sorting the recycling every week.
We’re afraid to care, because caring hurts. It’s hard to find hope in a world where the environmental news is largely bad. As far as I’m concerned, though, where there’s life, there’s hope. And I want to help people find that hope as a motivator to making the world–not just themselves–healthier and better. But because we’re used to seeing “THE ENVIRONMENT” as one big global problem, I reintroduce people to their local land–their bioregion–first in small steps, and then greater ones.
Some of that may be old hat to my nature pagan compatriots. After all, we’ve been hiking and wildcrafting and paying attention to the rest of nature for years. But this book isn’t only meant for the proverbial choir. There are plenty of people interested in non-indigenous totemism who wouldn’t describe themselves as “pagan”. Some of them are looking for self-improvement; others have some inkling that a being is trying to contact them, but they aren’t sure how to proceed. Still others want to feel connected to the greater world around them, but are too used to heavily structured spiritual paths that allow little room for personal experience.
That personal experience is absolutely crucial to my writing and the exercises I offer readers. If we’re going to reconnect with the rest of nature, we have to make it relevant to our own lives. Most of us in this country are used to being preached at, something the dominant religion is good at. But we quickly learn to tune it out, the same way we often tune out the messages about how horrible we are in our environmental practices.
If there’s one thing I’ve learned about human psychology, it’s that most of us don’t do well when we’re being yelled at. There really is something to that whole “you’ll catch more flies with honey than vinegar” adage. Environmental scare headlines try to terrify people into reconnecting enough to take responsibility, but that approach can be counterproductive. By making reconnection a positive, constructive and appealing concept, I hope to get people interested not just in their own personal spirituality, but how that spirituality is set in a greater world context.
From the beginning, Nature Spirituality From the Ground Up talks about the importance of totemism in relation to entire ecosystems, not just “me, me, me, what can I get out of having a totem?” Most of the books I’ve read on the topic are mostly about how the reader can connect with individual totems; there’s very little about the context all that happens in. And that goes right back into the anthropocentrism I’m trying to counteract,.
I’ve had the occasional reviewer complain that the material in my books isn’t “hardcore” enough because I rely primarily on guided meditations and accessible excursions into open areas, that I’m not telling people how to take hallucinogenic plants and soar off into the spirit world, or spend twenty days fasting in the wilderness. Well, of course not! That’s not the kind of thing that I think can be appropriately–or safely–conveyed through a book. Most people simply aren’t cut out for that much hardship and risk, and I don’t think they should be denied this sort of spirituality simply because their bodies or minds may not be able to handle ordeals, or because they lack the money to travel to remote locations in South America for entheogenic training.
As an author (and by extension a teacher) it’s my job to meet people where they’re at and help them explore someplace new. I am a product of my culture, and so is my writing. I am not part of a culture that lives close to the land and its harsh realities; mine is conveniently cushioned through technology and the idea that we are superior animals to the rest of the world. We don’t have a culture-wide system for intense rites of passage or life-changing altered states of consciousness. And I don’t have the qualifications to single-handedly create such a system, beyond what help with personal rites I can give as a Masters-level mental health counselor.
So are my practices gentler than traditional indigenous practices worldwide? Absolutely. That’s what most people in my culture can reasonably handle at this point. Trying to force them into something more intense would go over about as well as Captain Howdy’s rantings about “being awakened” in Strangeland. Sure, sudden and seemingly catastrophic experiences can cause a person to reach higher levels of inner strength and ability–but they can also cause severe physical and psychological trauma, or even kill. And, again, since we don’t have a culture in which everyone goes through an intense rite of passage at a certain age (such as adulthood), we can’t expect everyone to accept such a thing immediately.
Maybe that’s not what we need, anyway. Plenty of people engage in outdoor, nature-loving activities like backpacking, kayaking and rock climbing without the foremost notion being that they’re going into some intensely scary and dangerous place that could kill them in a moment. Most experienced outdoors people are fully aware of the risks and take necessary precautions, but their primary intent is connecting in a positive way with the rest of nature.
I think it’s okay for our nature spirituality to be the same way. I don’t think we always have to work things up as “BEWARE NATURE WILL KILL YOU AND YOU HAVE TO DO THINGS THAT COULD POSSIBLY KILL YOU IN ORDER TO FIND GUIDANCE”. I’ve spent almost twenty years gradually rediscovering my childhood love of the outdoors and its denizens, as well as developing a deeper appreciation for it. I’ve had plenty of transformative experiences without fasts or hallucinogens, and they’ve served to both improve myself as a person AND make me feel even more connected to and responsible for the rest of nature.
Does that mean there’s no place for ordeals? No; they have their place for the people who respond well to them. But they shouldn’t be held up as the one and only way to do nature spirit work. Again: meet people where they’re at, whether that’s on the couch or on the trail. You’ll reach more people, and create change on a broader scale as more people participate in the ways they’re able. And isn’t that change ultimately what we’re after, those of us who want to save the world?
Like this post? Please consider pre-ordering a copy of Nature Spirituality From the Ground Up: Connect With Totems In Your Ecosystem!
The Easiest Way To Grow Tomato Seedlings
I love cooking hearty dishes, and warm treats in the Fall and Winter, which is why I also love slow cooker recipes. So here is massive list of recipes that are great for this time of year!
Creamy Wild Rice and Turkey Soup
Loaded Baked Potato Soup
Red Lentil, Chickpea, and Tomato Soup with Smoked Paprika
Parmesan and Tomato Soup with Gnocchi and Chicken
Meatball Stew
Simplest Chicken and Dumplings
French Onion Soup
Cream Cheese Chicken Chili
Cheesy Vegetable Chowder
So Easy Coq au Vin
Sugar-Spiced Pork with Squash and Potatoes
Pasta with Eggplant Sauce
Pesto Chicken Sandwiches
Meatball Sandwiches
Chunky Pot Roast-Portobello Soup
Garlic & Herb Cheesy Chicken Dumplings
Creamy Tortellini Soup
Macaroni and Cheese
Swedish Meatballs
Chicken Fajitas
Stuffed Green Pepper Soup
Creamy Portobella Mushroom Chicken
Spinach Lasagna
Cabbage Rolls
Butter Chicken
Tomato Basil Parmesan Soup
Pizza Stew and Biscuits
German Potato Soup
Creamed Chicken and Corn Soup
Pot Roast Stew
Stuffed Bell Peppers
Fall Harvest Chowder
Chicken Cacciatore
Beef Tenderloin
Tomato Basil Ravioli Soup
Apple Cider Pork Roast
Goulash
Creamy Italian Chicken and Rice
Apple Sage Pork Tenderloin
Green Beans, Sausage, Potatoes
French Dip Sandwiches
Minestrone Soup
Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes
Chicken Gnocchi Soup
Broccoli Cheese Soup
Creamy Sun Dried Tomato Chicken
Baked Spaghetti
Zuppa Toscana
Beer Mac and Cheese
Sweet Potato Casserole
Italian Red Wine Roast Beef
Brown Sugar Balsamic Glazed Pork Tenderloin
Gingerbread Pudding Cake
Pumpkin Pudding
Chocolate Lava Cake
Rocky Road Cake
Apple Dumplings
Turtle Monkey Bread
Rice Pudding
Almond Bark
Cinnamon Fudge
Pecan Pie Cobbler
Pumpkin Angel Food Cake with Caramel Sauce
Apple and Date Crunch
Tequila Pears
Candied Almonds
Chocolate Peanut Butter Cake
Spiced Applesauce
Cinnamon Roll Pull Apart Bread
Cherry Dump Cake
Berry Cobbler
Turtle Brownie
Caramel Peanut Butter Hot Fudge Cake
Peppermint Hot Chocolate
Chocolate Coffee
Vanilla Crème Brulee Latte
Caramel Apple Spice
Pumpkin Chai Tea
Autumn Brew
Spiced Pomegranate Tea
Hot Mint Malt
Buttered Apple Cider
Snow White Cocoa
Pumpkin Latte
Salted Caramel Hot Chocolate
Hot Cranberry Apple Punch
Aztec Hot Chocolate
Bourbon Citrus Sipper
Horchata Latte
Chamomile Toddies
Cranberry Apple Cider
Spiced White Hot Chocolate
Gingerbread Latte
Mulled Wine
Spinach and Cheese Frittata
Breakfast Stuffed Peppers
Creamy Banana French Toast
Peanut Butter Banana Oatmeal
Hot Cocoa Oatmeal
Cheesy Breakfast Souffle
Breakfast Casserole
Blueberry Breakfast Casserole
German Pancakes
Sausage White Gravy
Cheesy Hash Browns
Cream of Wheat
Egg and Broccoli Casserole
Eggnog Cranberry Steel-Cut Oatmeal
Ham and Egg Casserole
Pumpkin Oatmeal
Pumpkin Bread
Cinnamon Rolls
French Toast
Pecan Pie Oatmeal
Bacon, Egg, and Hash Brown Casserole
Apple Pie Steel Cut Oatmeal
Love it
Modular Kayaks by Point 65
Source: jebiga.com
Blueberry Lavender Rolls