July

    Goddess Support our Troops

    Sunday, March 30, 2008, 09:51 PM MST [General]

    Geminimoon.net

     

    The fact that our troops and their family's do not get near the recognition they deserve; inspired this painting by my husband, Jim. GeminiMoon did the beautiful job of adding the glitter's and the text to it.

    Please send her to everyone you know that is either serving or is here keeping the home fires going waiting on the return of their loved one. It is not much we know but our deepest wish is that it will show that what they do is treasured and appreciated. And it may bring a smile during this time when smiles are sometimes hard to come by.

    ~*~ Flutterbye Kisses and (Healing Air Hugs) from

     )O(~July the crone of the enchanted forrest



    My Goddess I call to thee
    Let our Troops your
    Blessings Receive

    With your abundance of
    Guidance and Love
    Keep them safe from all harm

    Using your Light so bright
    Guide them back to the
    Family's needing them so.

    I call now to my Elements Dear

    Earth, to bind this spell,

    Air, to speed its travels well.

    Fire, to give it spark from above,

    Water, to quench my spell with love.

    As this is my will ~ So will it be

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    New Moon in Pisces ~ Plant Your Desires

    Friday, March 7, 2008, 10:34 AM MST [General]

    Wiccan Myspace
    Free and Magickal Graphics by MyspaceMagick.com

    Prep for Upcoming New Moon Manifestation

    1. Check a moon phase calendar for the next upcoming new moon.

       

      Wiccan Myspace
      Free and Magickal Graphics by MyspaceMagick.com
    2. Set aside 20-30 minutes to do the ritual itself.

       

    3. Supply suggestions:
      • notebooks
      • pen and colored markers
      • scissors
      • scotch tape
      • candle
      • matches
      • incense
      • smudge sticks
      • meditation CDs

       

    4. Prepare yourself a sacred space where to perform the ceremony when the new moon arrives

    Setting your New Moon Intentions in Motion

    1. Cleanse your sacred area with an opening prayer, a sage smudging, and/or by burning some incense.

       

    2. Light one or more candles.

       

    3. Center your being and calm yourself in whatever way is appropriate for you. Take some deep cleansing breaths, slip in a meditation CD to listen to, and/or leisurely sip on a cup of relaxing herbal tea.

       

    4. Open your notebook, and date the first page. Write down these words "I accept these things into my life now or something better for my highest good and for the highest good of all concerned." or something similar. Below your affirmation statement, begin writing down your desires. Your list may consist of only one item or you may have several pages written down. Try not to limit yourself. If having many things in your life helps to fulfill you then don't deny yourself wanting these things.

       

    5. During the month when an item on your new moon list comes to you, don't merely cross it off of your list, take the time to rewrite the list in its entirety eliminating the manifested item from the listing. This is highly recommended. At the same time you may add whatever else that you have decided you would like. Feel free to reword any of the original phrases if they better fit your life now. It is natural that your desires will change as time advances.

       

    6. A second notebook will be used as a manifestation scrapbook where you paste in pictures or catalog clippings of items that you want to manifest. This is a fun project so enjoy yourself. You will soon be amazed how these things begin to find their way into your life once you start this process.

    Rededicating your New Moon Intentions

    Each month at the new moon rededicate your intentions by renewing your list at a repeated ritual. This is accomplished by rewriting your list out using a fresh sheet of paper. Don't get in the habit of simply scratching out the items you no longer desire and adding the new stuff to the bottom of your old list. You don't want clutter and sloppiness energies messing up your new stuff do you? Disregard any items that no longer feed your soul and add new things that do.

    It is helpful to salt and pepper your manifest list with smaller items that will manifest quickly, such as tickets to the ballet, lunch with a friend, or a day at the spa. You may think that smaller things are too trivial to put on your intention list... Wrong! Things that tend to manifest with little effort still deserve to be written down. Write down everything that you desire, no matter how little or simple. If it is something that makes you happy, write it down. Manifesting smaller items on our lists actually creates a steady flow of energy to the list. These smaller manifestations create movement, allowing an ebb and flow of the tides. We are dealing here with the moon cycles after all. Besides, sometimes we forget to appreciate the smaller pleasures in our lives while we are waiting for the BIG stuff to come in. If you only write statements like, "I want to win the lottery" in your notebook then you are limiting yourself by not allowing abundance to flow to you from other avenues.

     

     

     

  • A second notebook will be used as a manifestation scrapbook where you paste in pictures or catalog clippings of items that you want to manifest. This is a fun project so enjoy yourself. You will soon be amazed how these things begin to find their way into your life once you start this process.
    1. Wiccan Myspace
      Free and Magickal Graphics by MyspaceMagick.com

       

       

      Full Moon Purging Preparation

      1. Check a moon phase calendar for the next upcoming full moon.

         

      2. Create a sacred space and arrange a time to perform the ceremony (preferably at nighttime and outdoors under the moonlight).

         

      3. Write down on separate slips of paper the things you want to release or change.
        Supply suggestions: fire proof calderon or cooking pot to toss the burning paper inside, candle with matches or lighter, water (to put out the fire afterwards), and smudge sticks for cleansing.



      Full Moon Purging

      1. Cleanse your sacred area with an opening prayer, a sage smudging, and/or by burning some incense. Invite your guides, angels, masters, or teachers to be at your side throughout the ceremony.

         

      2. Light one or more candles. Look to the skies. Breathe in the night air.

         

      3. One by one, read out loud the words you have written on each slip of paper. Set your intention to release the item/addiction/attitude from your life. Set it to fire and place it in the calderon. If you have a campsite barbecue or bonfire going that's cool, just toss the slips of paper into the fire one by one. If you are doing this ritual with a group of others take turns reading your words. If these things are too personal to read out loud, read them silently to yourself. Just remember... our words have power. Saying - "Be Gone" audibly and loudly can be very freeing. Go ahead, howl at the moon if you've a mind to. Have some fun!

         

      4. Thank the spirits. Be safe. Put out the fire.

      Monthly Pagan Moon Rituals

      • January / Wolf Moon - Plan a ritual of protection around your home and family.

         

      • February / Storm Moon - Plan a ritual to ask the Old Ones for help in planning your future.

         

      • March / Chaste Moon - Plan a ritual to plant your desires.

         

      • April / Seed Moon - Plan a ritual to physically plant your seeds of desire in Mother Earth.

         

      • May / Hare Moon - Plan a ritual to reaffirm your goals.

         

      • June / Dyad Moon - Plan a ritual to balance your spiritual and physical desires

         

      • July / Mead Moon - Plan a ritual to decide what you will do once your goals have been met.

         

      • August / Wort Moon - Plan a ritual to preserve what you already have.

         

      • September / Barley Moon - Plan a ritual of Thanksgiving for all the Old

         

      • October / Blood Moon - Plan another ritual of Thanksgiving.

         

      • November / Snow Moon - Plan for a ritual to work on ridding yourself of negative thoughts and vibrations.

         

      • December / Oak Moon - Plan for a ritual to help you remain steadfast in your convictions
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      Faery Dust for the Kitchen

      Sunday, March 2, 2008, 12:34 PM MST [General]

      Every one needs faery dust available once in a while

      FAERY DUST:

       

      1/4 cup grated dried coconut

      1/4 cup your choice of

         Organic Raw sugar

         Organic Date sugar

         Organic Powdered Honey

       

       Mix the coconut and other sugar type in a mortar and pestle and grind into a fine powder.

      Excellent for sprinkling on top of Witchy Egg Toast.

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      Eostre

      Friday, February 29, 2008, 11:06 AM MST [General]

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      Ostara

      "o-star-uh"
      The dates of the Solstices and Equinoxes can change each year but are always between the 20th and the 23rd of the corresponding month.

      2008 Vernal Equinox Mar 20 2008 05:48 UT

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      © http://twopagans.com/graphics/index.html

      Ostara marks the first true day of spring. It is the vernal equinox. It is believed that the name Ostara comes from the Germanic Goddess Oestara. Oestara is the Goddess of Fertility. For this holiday we picture the goddess in her Maiden form. Ostara is the time when witches celebrate the balance of the seasons and the passage of nigh into day. The Goddess blankets the Earth with fertility, bursting forth from her sleep, as the God stretches and grows to maturity. He walks the greening fields and delights in the abundance of Nature. On Ostara the hours of day and night are equal. Light is overtaking darkness. This is a time for beginnings, of action, or planting spells for future gains, and of tending ritual gardens.

      As spring reaches its midpoint, night and day stand in perfect balance, with light on the increase. The young Sun God now celebrates a hierogamy (sacred marriage) with the young Maiden Goddess, who conceives. In nine months, she will again become the Great Mother. It is a time of great fertility, new growth, and newborn animals. The next full moon (a time of increased births) is called the Ostara and is sacred to Eostre the Saxon Lunar Goddess of fertility (from whence we get the word estrogen, whose two symbols were the egg and the rabbit. Although Ostara is a festival of fertility, however, unlike Beltaine, it is not a festival of human and animal fertility, but of the fertility of the earth.

      Other Names: Eostre (OHS-truh or EST-truh), spring equinox.

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      Correspondances

      Colors: Light green, lemon yellow, pale pink.
      Food: hard-boiled eggs, honey cakes, 1st fruit of the season, leafy greens, dairy foods, nuts, sunflower seeds, flower dishes.
      Deities: Diana, Artemis
      Symbols: eggs, rabbits, spring flowers, green and yellow jellybeans
      Incense: African Violet, Jasmine, Rose, Sage and Strawberry
      Candles: gold, green and yellow
      Gemstones: amethyst, aquamarine, bloodstone and red jasper.
      Herbs: Daffodil, jonquils, woodruff, violet, gorse, olive, peony, iris, narcissus, acorns, celadine, cinquefoil, dandelion, dogwood, jasmine, rose, tansy, honeysuckle and all spring flowers.

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      Activities and Traditions

      - Adults only or with adults help - may be dangerous

      - Ask permission from parents first

      • Color eggs and place on altar as magickal talismans
      • A visit from the Easter Bunny
      • Decorate home with baskets of flowers
      • Planting seeds or start an herb garden
      • Take a long walk in nature
      • Spring cleaning - Clear out old clothes, books, toys etc..
      • Have a sunrise observance
      • Bless some seeds with a wish. Plant them, and as they come up, the wish is fulfilled
      • Write and perform a mystery play about the God's resurrection. Write one about Ishtar and Tammuz or Isis and Osiris
      • Plant your live Yule tree if you bought one
      • Do something new. This is a great time to try something new, to renew our thoughts and dreams.
      • A good time for spells of love, healing and protection.

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      Poems and Invocations

      Eostre

      When the snow melts
      And winter breathes its last
      Then do we dream of you
      Eostre Lady of Springtime
      Bringer of new growth and freshness.
      The frozen Earth beneath your feet
      Becomes soft and yielding
      Now ready to burst forth with new life.
      Return to us, Eostre.
      Return to us, Sacred Hare.
      Melt the snow from the ground
      The ice from the streams
      The frost from our hearts.

      - GateWest Invocations (link no longer works, don't know if they've moved or not)

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      Native American Herbal Remedies

      Monday, February 25, 2008, 10:12 AM MST [General]

       

      Native American Herbal Remedies

      This is only a partial compilation. 

      Asthma

      Skunk Cabbage.

      Used by the Winnebago and Dakota tribes to stimulate the removal of phlegm in asthma. The rootstock was official in the U.S. Pharmacopoeia from 1820 to 1882 when it was used in respiratory and nervous disorders and in rheumatism and dropsy.

      Mullein.

      Introduced by Europeans. The Menominee's smoked the pulverized, dried root for respiratory complaints while the Forest Potawatomi's, the Mohegan's, and the Penobscot smoked the dried leaves to relieve asthma. The Catawba Indians used sweetened syrup from the boiled root, which they gave to their children for coughs.

       

      Backache

      Arnica.

      The Catawba Indians used a tea of arnica roots for treating back pains. The Dispensary of the United States (22nd edition) states this drug can be dangerous if taken internally and that it has caused severe and even fatal poisoning. Also used as a wash to treat sprains and bruises.

      Gentian.

      The Catawba Indians steeped the roots in hot water and applied the hot fluid on aching backs.

      Horsemint.

      The Catawba tribe crushed and steeped fresh horsemint leaves in cold water and drank the infusion to allay back pain. Other tribes used horsemint for fever, inflammation, and chills.

       

      Bronchitis

      Creosote Bush.

      A tea of the leaves was used for bronchial and other respiratory problems.

      Pleurisy Root.

      The Natchez drank a tea of the boiled roots as a remedy for pneumonia and was later used to promote the expulsion of phlegm,

      Wormwood.

      The Yokia Indians of Mendocino County used a tea of the boiled leaves of a local species of wormwood to cure bronchitis.

       

      Burns

      Yellow-Spine Thistle.

      The Kiowa Indians boiled yellow-spine thistle blossoms and applied the resulting liquid to burns and skin sores.

       

       Childbirth

      To Speed Childbirth:

      Partridge berry.

      The Cherokee used a tea of the boiled leaves. Frequent doses of the tea were taken in the few weeks preceding the expected date of delivery.

      Blue Cohosh.

      To promote a rapid delivery, an infusion of the root in warm water was drunk as a tea for several weeks prior to the expected delivery date.

      To Speed Delivery of the Placenta:

       American Licorice.

      A tea was made from the boiled roots.

      Broom Snakeweed.

      Navajo women drank a tea of the whole plant to promote the expulsion of the placenta.

       

      To Stop Post-Partum Hemorrhage:

      Buckwheat.

      Hopi women were given an infusion of the entire buckwheat plant to stop bleeding.

      Black Western Chokecherry.

      Arikara women were given a drink of the berry juice to stop bleeding.

      Smooth Upland Sumac.

      The Omaha's boiled the smooth upland sumac fruits and applied the liquid as an external wash to stop bleeding.

       

      To relieve the Pain of Childbirth:

      Wild Black Cherry.

      Cherokee women were given a tea of the inner bark to relieve pain in the early stages.

      Cotton.

      The Alabama and Koasati tribes made a tea of the roots of the plant to relieve the pains of labor.

       

      Colds

      Boneset.

      Boneset tea was one of the most frequently used home remedies during the last century. The Menominee used it to reduce fever; the Alabamans, to relive stomachache; the Creeks, for body pain; the Iroquois and the Mohegan's, for fever and colds.

       

      Colic

      Catnip.

      The Mohegan's made a tea of catnip leaves for infant colic.

       

       Contraceptives

      Rag leaf Bahia.

      The Navajos, who called the Rag leaf Bahia herb twisted medicine, drank a tea of the roots boiled in water for thirty minutes for contraception purposes.

      Indian paintbrush.

      Hopi women drank a tea of the whole Indian paintbrush to "Dry up the menstrual flow."

      Blue Cohosh.

      Chippewa women drank a strong decoction of the powdered blue cohosh root to promote parturition and menstruation.

      Dogbane.

      Generally used by many tribes, a tea from the boiled roots of the plant was drunk once a week.

      Milkweed.

      Navajo women drank a tea prepared of the whole plant after childbirth.

      American Mistletoe.

      Indians of Mendocino County drank a tea of the leaves to induce abortion or to prevent conception.

      Antelope Sage.

      To prevent conception, Navajo women drank one cup of a decoction of boiled antelope sage root during menstruation.

      Stone seed.

      Shoshoni women of Nevada reportedly drank a cold-water infusion of stone seed roots everyday for six months to ensure permanent sterility.

       

      Coughs

      Aspen.

      The Cree Indians used an infusion of the inner bark as a remedy for coughs.

      Wild Cherry.

      The Flambeau Ojibwa prepared a tea of the bark of wild cherry for coughs and colds, while other tribes used a bark for diarrhea or for lung troubles.

      White Pine.

      Indian people used the inner bark as a tea for colds and coughs.

      Sarsaparilla.

      The Penobscot pulverized dried sarsaparilla roots, combined them with sweet flag roots in warm water, and used the dark liquid as a cough remedy.

       

      Diabetes

      Wild Carrot.

      The Mohegan's steeped the blossoms of this wild species in warm water when they were in full bloom and took the drink for diabetes.

      Devil's Club.

      The Indians of British Columbia utilized a tea of the root bark to offset the effects of diabetes.

       

       Diarrhea

      Black cherry.

      A tea of blackberry roots was the most frequently used remedy for diarrhea among Indians of northern California.

      Wild Black Cherry.

      The Mohegan's allowed the ripe wild black cherry to ferment naturally in a jar about one year than then drank the juice to cure dysentery.

      Dogwood.

      The Menominee's boiled the inner bark of the dogwood and passed the warm solution into the rectum with a rectal syringe made from the bladder of a small mammal and the hollow bone of a bird.

      Geranium.

      Chippewa and Ottawa tribes boiled the entire geranium plant and drank the tea for diarrhea.

      White Oak.

      Iroquois and Penobscot boiled the bark of the white oak and drank the liquid for bleeding piles and diarrhea.

      Black Raspberry.

      The Pawnee, Omaha, and Dakota tribes boiled the root bark of black raspberry for dysentery.

      Star Grass.

      Catawba's drank a tea of star grass leaves for dysentery.

       

      Digestive Disorders

      Dandelion.

      The Pillager Ojibwas drank a tea of the roots for heartburn. Mohegan's drank a tea of the leaves for a tonic.

      Yellow Root.

      The Catawbas used a tea from the root and the Cherokee as a stomachache remedy.

       

      Fevers

      Dogwood.

      The Delaware Indians, who called the tree Hat-ta-wa-no-min-schi, boiled the inner bark in water, using the tea to reduce fevers.

      Willow.

      The Pomo tribe boiled the inner root bark, and then drank strong doses of the resulting tea to induce sweating in cases of chills and fever. In the south, the Natchez prepared their fever remedies from the bark of the red willow, while the Alabama and Creek Indians plunged into willow root baths for the same purpose.

      Feverwort.

      The Cherokees drank a decoction of the coarse, leafy, perennial herb to cure fevers.

       

       Headache

      Pennyroyal.

      The Onondagas steeped pennyroyal leaves and drank the tea to cure headaches.

      Heart and Circulatory Problems

      Green Hellebore.

      The Cherokee used the green hellebore to relive body pains.

      American Hemp and Dogbane.

      Used by the Prairie Potawatomi's as a heart medicine, the fruit was boiled when it was still green, and the resulting decoction drunk. It was also used for kidney problems and for dropsy.

       

      Hemorrhoids

      White Oak.

      The Menominee tribe treated piles by squirting an infusion of the scraped inner bark of oak into the rectum with a syringe made from an animal bladder and the hollow bone of a bird.

       

      Inflammations and Swellings

      Witch Hazel.

      The Menominee's of Wisconsin boiled the leaves and rubbed the liquid on the legs of tribesmen who were participating in sporting games. A decoction of the boiled twigs was used to cure aching backs, while steam derived by placing the twigs in water with hot rocks was a favorite Potawatomi treatment for muscle aches.

       

       Influenza

      Native Hemlock (as opposed Poison Hemlock of Socrates fame).

      The Menominee's prepared a tea of the inner bark and drank it to relieve cold symptoms. The Forest Potawatomi's used a similar tea to induce sweating and relieve colds and feverish conditions.

        

      Insect Bites and Stings

      Fender Bladder pod.

      The Navajos made a tea and used it to treat spider bites.

      Purple Coneflower.

      The Plains Indians used this as a universal application for the bites and stings of all crawling, flying, or leaping bugs. Between June and September, the bristly stemmed plant, which grows in dry, open woods and on prairies, bears a striking purplish flower.

      Stiff Goldenrod.

      The Meskwaki Indians of Minnesota ground the flowers into a lotion and applied it to bee stings.

      Trumpet Honeysuckle.

      The leaves were ground by chewing and then applied to bees stings.

      Wild Onion and Garlic.

      The Dakotas and Winnebago's applied the crushed bulbs of wild onions and garlic's.

      Saltbush.

      The Navajos chewed the stems and placed the pulpy mash on areas of swelling caused by ant, bee and wasp bites. The Zunis applied the dried, powdered roots and flowers mixed with saliva to ant bites.

      Broom Snakeweed.

      The Navajos chewed the stem and applied the resin to insect bites and stings of all kinds.

      Tobacco.

      A favorite remedy for bee stings was the application of wet tobacco leaves.

       

      Insect Repellents and Insecticides

      Goldenseal.

      The Cherokee pounded the large rootstock with bear fat and smeared it on their bodies as an insect repellent. It was also used as a tonic, stimulant, and astringent.

       

      Rheumatism

      Pokeweed.

      Indians of Virginia drank a tea of the boiled berries to cure rheumatism. The dried root was also used to allay inflammation.

      Bloodroot.

      A favorite rheumatism remedy among the Indians of the Mississippi region - the Rappahannock's of Virginia drank a tea of the root.

       

      Sedatives

      Wild Black Cherry.

      The Meskwaki tribe made a sedative tea of the root bark.

      Hops.

      The Mohegan has prepared a sedative medicine from the cone like strobilus and sometimes heated the blossoms and applied them for toothache. The Dakota tribe used a tea of the steeped strobilus to relieve pains of the digestive organs, and the Menominee tribe regarded a related species of hops as a panacea.

      Wild Lettuce. Indigenous to North American, it was used for sedative purposes, especially in nervous complaints.

       

      Thrush

      Geranium.

      The Cherokee boiled geranium root together with wild grape, and with the liquid, rinsed the mouths of children affected with thrush.

      Persimmon.

      The Catawba stripped the bark from the tree and boiled it in water, using the resulting dark liquid as a mouth rinse.

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