Constantly repeating to myself “you are not broken you are young and learning how to live” during everything I do everywhere I go all the time
Pierce my heart 🖤
I see you unfollowing. Good. Don’t fucking stop. This blog is pro choice, pro gay, pro black, pro trans, pro sex work, pro go fuck yourself
Symbols of Yule:
Yule log or small Yule log with three candles
Evergreen boughs or wreaths, holly, mistletoe hung in the doorways
Gold pillar candles
Baskets of clove studded fruit
Simmering pot of wassail, poinsettias, Christmas cactus
Herbs of Yule:
Bayberry
Blessed thistle
Evergreen
Frankincense holly
Laurel
Mistletoe
Oak
Pine
Sage
Yellow cedar
Incense of Yule:
Pine
Cedar
Bayberry
Cinnamon
Colors of Yue:
Red
Green
Gold
White
Silver
Yellow
Orange
Stones of Yule:
Rubies
Bloodstones
Garnets
Emeralds
Spellworkings of Yule:
Peace
Harmony
Love
Increased happiness
**This list is not absolute and just my opinions**
****These are used as Suggestions****
Rosemary can be used in place of other herbs
Rose can be used in place of any other flower
Frankincense or Copal can replace gum resin
Sage in place of any mints
Tobacco in place of any poisonous herbs
Acacia substitute Gum Arabic
Aconitie substitute Tobacco
Arabic substitute gum ,gum mastic or frankincense
Allspice substitute cassia, cinnamon, cloves ,mace or nutmeg
Balm of gilded substitute rose buds or gum mastic
Belladonna substitute Tobacco
Benzoin substitute Gum Arabic or gum mastic
Camphor oil substitute Eucalyptus oil or lavender oil
Carnation substitute rose petals anointed with a few drops of cinnamon oil
Cassia substitute cinnamon
Castor beans substitute for a few drops of castor oil
Cedar substitute sandlewood
Cinquefoil substitute clover or trefoil
Citron substitute equal parts Orange & lemon peels
Clove substitute mace or nutmeg
Clover substitute cinquefoil
Copal substitute frankincense or cedar
Cowbane substitute tobacco
Cypress substitute juniper or pine needles
Deer tongue substitute tonka bean, woodruff or vanilla
Dittany substitute gum mastic
Dragons blood substitute equal parts frankincense and red sandlewood
Eucalyptus oil substitute camphor oil or lavender oil
Euphorbium substitute Tobacco
Frankincense substitute copal or pine resin
Grains of paradise substitute black pepper
Gum bumelia substitute copal, pine resin or dragons blood
Hellebore substitute tobacco or nettle
Hemlock substitute Tobacco
Hemp substitute nutmeg or damiana
Henbone substitute Tobacco
Hyssop substitute lavender
Ivy substitute cinquefoil
Jasmin substitute rose
Juniper substitute pine
Lavender substitute rose
Lemon Grass substitute lemon peel
Lemon verbena substitute Lemon grass or lemon peel
Mace substitute nutmeg
Mandrake substitute Tobacco
Mastic substitute gum, gum Arabic or Frankincense
Mint substitute sage
Mistletoe substitute mint or sage
Mugwort substitute wormwood
Neroli oil substitute orange oil
Nightshade substitute Tobacco
Nutmeg substitute mace or cinnamon
Oakmoss substitute patchouli
Orange substitute tangerine peel
Orange flower substitute orange peel
Patchouli substitute oakmoss
Peppermint substitute spearmint
Pepperwort substitute grain of paradise or black pepper
Pine substitute juniper
Pine resin substitute frankincense or copal
Red Sandlewood substitute sandlewood with a pinch of dragons blood
Rose substitute yarrow
Rose geranium substitute rose
Rue substitute rosemary with a pinch of black pepper
Saffron substitute orange peel
Sandalwood substitute cedar
Sarsaparilla substitute sassafras
Spearmint substitute peppermint
Star Anise substitute bay
Sulfur substitute tobacco, club moss or asafetida
Thyme substitute rosemary
Tobacco substitute bay
Tonka bean substitute deer tongue
Trefoil substitute cinquefoil
Valerian substitute asafetide
Vanilla substitute woodruff or deer tongue
Vetivert substitute calamus
Wolfsbane substitute tobacco
Wood aloe substitute sandalwood sprinkled with ambergris oil
Woodruff substitute deer tongue or vanilla
Wormwood substitute nutmeg
Yarrow substitute rose
Yew substitute Tobacco
five simmering pot recipes that will make your home smell like fall!
Instructions: Fill a small saucepan with water and bring to a boil. Add the ingredients from your favorite recipe, continue to boil for a few minutes, then turn the heat down to simmer. Add water as needed, usually every 30 minutes or so.
Recipe #1 Cinnamon sticks Apple peels Orange rinds Whole cloves
Recipe #2 Peel from 1 lemon Peel from 1 orange 2 bay leaves 3 cinnamon sticks 2 Tablespoons whole cloves
Recipe #3 A few drops vanilla Orange peels
Recipe #4 1 cup dried lavender 1 tsp anise 1 Tablespoon nutmeg 1 Tablespoon whole cloves 1 Cinnamon stick
Recipe #5 5 bay leaves 1 Tablespoon whole cloves 2 sticks cinnamon
Hello! I’ve recently seen a few good posts about the uses of blood magic in modern witchcraft and some also good posts about its uses in folklore, so I thought I might as well make a small compilation of sources!
Therefore, I’m not here to tell you how blood magic works! You already know and can find about the use of blood in rituals, spells, scrying and whatnot from all the posts that circulate on the subject. You also know that blood must be harvested with precautions if you don’t want to catch, or give someone a disease that could effectively kill them! Whee!
This is why I present to you a few sources about the use of blood in folklore and a commentary on these sources!
Here’s one like cuz it’s centered on a civilization I know well, the ancient greeks! I studied them in class and am familiar with most science men mentioned in the article. Truth be told, I don’t think it’s perfect. I don’t like the way it buries other ancient civilizations under the rug to focus on the greek while proclaiming most ancient civilizations were all fans of blood, but I appreciate researching work and the time the person put into quoting greek passages of ancient texts as proof of their arguments. It’s neat. Plus it goes on at length about the visions the greeks had of the role of blood in all types of life, which could be used in paralel with ancient religious texts about rituals and magics involving blood, if anyone has those!
I don’t know about the trustworthiness of this one, but I read it and it’s quick and understandable about the practices revolving around blood in the old days. I especially like the part about egyptian and german practices which are interesting. The author also took the time to quote names of ancient greek historians (as much as one could call Herodotus a historian in the strict meaning of the term) which I find nice! Added to the sources on medicinal cannibalsm quoted at the end, including this article which quotes its own sources, and this book, sadly too expensive for me at the moment (I saw the price and went *nope*).
This article on Britannia, the website, is about blood offerings in different cultures and could be paired with this one about the origines of sacrifice though religion and history, I think it can be fairly interesting to learn the bond between the action of sacrificing something coming from a being, be it life, flesh, bones or blood, and the desire of a result linked to the believed importance of the said parts. I’ll read them and maybe update the description as I go!
I also found a few other books too, including this book about Folk Hematology in the Appalachian South by Anthony Cavender in the Journal of Folklore Research (JSTOR), Mummies, cannibals and vampires by Richard Sugg about the history of corpse medicine through the ages, and The Spirit of Civilization: Blood Sacrifice and Monetary Debt on JSTOR too by William Pietz.
Honestly, I’d like to read them all to see if they’re good or full off bullshit like some books can be, but I advice to anyone who might find all these resources helpful to compare them with each other and make their own opinion. I’m not your dad, of course, but I’ve seen enough people believing everything they were told in my short life to wish everyone could like researching stuff as much as I do!
Therefore, I leave you with this absolutely unproductive post, hope it’ll be at least useful to someone, and on that note, for anyone interested in french and down for a good laugh, this video is about a practice of blood offering by dick-piercing. Yeah. You read that right. Enjoy.
Leslie Vigil on IG
The Wild Called Me Back.
278 posts