Читать книгу Moon Spell Magic For Love - Cerridwen Greenleaf - Страница 13
ОглавлениеWhen your guests arrive, invite them each to light a candle of their choice and carve their secret Beltane wish into the wax. Ask them now to make an offering to the altar, which your invitation will have instructed them to bring: pink crystals, an apple for love, or perhaps stone-smooth sea glass from a beach walk. Sit everyone down to eat, drink, and make merry. Later, hand out colored ribbons and flowers to braid into other people’s hair, or around wrists, fingers, and toes. It will start getting markedly more pagan now. Turn the volume up on the music, though live guitars and drums are better. If your group is open-minded or of like mind, call a circle and invoke the randy May spirits.
Mending Hearts: Olde World Spell
•
Sol and Luna,
the sun needs the moon like the cock needs the hen.
The sun and the moon have both hatched from the same egg
and represent the eternal attraction of opposites.
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Calming Oil Cure after a Breakup
To help heal yourself or a brokenhearted friend, add five drops of each of the following essential oils to a scentless base oil or almond oil:
•Wisteria
•Clove
•Jojoba
•Neroli
Shake and add a few small rose quartz crystals into the vial. Offer to give your heartbroken friend a neck and head rub. Dab the oil on his or her temples, neck, and shoulders, and gently rub in circular motions. Silently call upon Venus to assist. Offer the calming oil as a gift to your friend to use anytime he or she wants to feel more tranquil.
Heart Healing Charm
The Friday before the new moon—Venus’ Day—is the perfect time to create a new opportunity and clear away relationship “baggage.” Place a bowl of water on your altar. Light two rose-scented pink candles and a gardenia or vanilla-scented white candle. Burn amber incense in between the candles. Sprinkle salt on your altar cloth and ring a bell, then recite aloud:
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Hurt and pain are banished this night;
fill this heart and home with light.
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Ring the bell again. Toss the bowl of water out your front door, and love troubles should drain away.
Monday Morning Spell for New Beginnings
This spell can be used to meet someone new or to bring on a new phase in an existing relationship. On a Monday morning before dawn, light one pink and one blue candle. Touch each candle with lily, freesia, or jasmine oil. Lay a lily on your altar with some catnip. Place a lapis lazuli stone in front of the lily, and a glass of water atop a mirror. Chant:
•
Healing starts with new beginnings.
My heart is open, I’m ready now.
Today, a new Love I will meet.
Goddess, you will show me how.
So mote it be.
•
Drink a cup of hot honeyed cinnamon tea that you stirred counterclockwise with a cinnamon stick. Sprinkle the powdered version of this charismatic spice on the threshold of your front door and along your entry path. When the cinnamon powder is crushed underfoot, its regenerative powers will help you start a fresh chapter in your love life.
Waning Moon Moving On Spell
Most of us have had problems giving up on a relationship. This ritual will help you let go. Perform this ritual during the waning moon, when things can best be put to rest. Gather:
•Black string
•A symbol of your ex
•Scissors
Tie the black string around your waist and attach it to the symbol of your ex: a photo, a memento, or a lock of hair. Take the pair of scissors in your hand, and prepare to use them by saying:
•
Bygones be and lovers part,
I’m asking you to leave my heart.
Go in peace, harm to none.
My new life is begun.
•
Cut the string and toss away the memento. You will feel freer and lighter immediately and will begin to attract many new potential paramours.
A Witch’s Calendar
•January 6: Feast of Sirona, the blessing of the waters.
•January 11: Carmentalia, a woman’s festival celebrating midwifery and birth.
•February 2: Candlemas, when new witches are initiated with the waxing of winter light.
•February 14: Aphrodite’s Week, a festival of love (now Valentine’s Day).
•March 20: Vernal Equinox, when the mythological maiden returns from underground with spring.
•March 30: Feast of Fertility, a rite of spring for planting and sowing.
•April 28: Festival of Flora, rituals of abundance for new flowers and vegetables.
•May 1: Beltane, pagan feasting and mating ceremonies to mark the approach of summer.
•June 1: Festival of Epipi, an explanation of the Full Moon and her mysteries.
•June 7: Vestalia, the Feast of Vesta, the Greek goddess of home and hearth.
•June 21: Summer Solstice, when fire circles honor Midsummer—the longest day.
•July 7: Nonae Carpotinae, an ancient Roman custom celebrating women with feasts under the fig tree.
•July 17: Isis Day, when the Egyptian goddess queen is honored and embodied.
•August 2: Lammas Day, a ritual of remembrance for Earth Mother and Fortuna.
•August 13: Festival for Diana, the huntress moon goddess, who is worshipped with fires and pilgrimages.
•August 21: Consualia, greeting the coming harvest with dances, feasting, song, and contests of speed and strength.
•September 23: Autumnal Equinox, the pagan time for giving thanks.
•October 31: Hallowmas, the witch’s New Year, when the veil between worlds is thinnest.
•December 19: Opalia observes Ops, the ancient goddess of farmers and fertility.
•December 21: Winter Solstice, the shortest day.