Looking to bring abundance, wealth, and prosperity into your life? Considering making a crystal sachet for money!
What you’ll need:
Green Aventurine
Citrine
Blue Apatite
Coins (or bills)
Moon water (optional)
A small pouch or bag (even a ziploc bag will work)
Green Aventurine attracts luck, success, and abundance. It also helps you focus and find creative solutions, which could be useful for helping you find ways to spend less or to make more money.
Citrine is known as the Success Stone, and is wonderful for acquiring and maintaining wealth. It’s a great stone for sales people to have.
Blue Apatite is the stone of manifestation and results. It also brings harmony which can reduce any frustrations you have about your current financial situation.
After asking and thanking your crystals for their help, place them and your coins/bills in a small bag. The coins or bills are symbolic of what you want to come into your life. Keep the bag in your wallet, purse or pocket. Keeping it in your purse or wallet is very effective in helping you to refrain from spending money, as it reminds you of your goals each time you go to grab cash or your credit card to buy something (especially if it’s something silly you don’t really need).
If you feel the sachet isn’t working after a couple weeks, recharge it and really focus on your intention. It may not be that you win $1,000 on a lottery ticket, but perhaps you think of an idea to make money, or you work on creating a budget for yourself/your family, or you start clipping coupons, or a number of other ideas start to come to you on how to attract or keep money. The magic is inside of you, not just the crystals 😉
So right off the bat lets settle something. Flower water is Water (Or alcohol – we’ll get into that in a bit) that is infused with flower essence.Florida Water, Is the same thing. Aqua de Florida. Florida means Flower. Yes? Great.
What is the purpose of this water you ask. Well in (Mostly) Santeria, Hoodoo, Or other Spanish magic practices Flower Water is used for a number of things. Blessing, Consecrating, Cleansing, Banishing, even spiritual offerings. Practitioners also use it as an ingredient in ritual baths. You can switch it up depending on your flowers.
As we all know Flowers hold energies that we harvest and use in magic.We can preserve these energies by infusing them into water. Wahhhla. Flower Water. We do this with Rose Water, Lavender Water, Rue Water. Kananga Water. If there is a Flower, you can flower water it. You can choose to use water, Or alcohol for the carrier. Both have their own magical properties.
Personally I lean more towards alcohol because 1.) It’s harsh. Strong. It burns. It has that KICK. Ya know? And 2.) You can keep it for longer. Also. It’s traditional to use alcohol.
But hey, Water is also great its all about personal preference. What ever you choose to infuse your water with is your decision. The carrier does not influence the energy as much as YOUR intentions will.
Here’s a quick post of herbs used to summon, talk to, or celebrate with the dead. It was created to invoke ancestors specifically, but I hope this helps all of you guys!
Bay leaves promote communication with the dead, are used in funeral wreaths, and shared during ancestral feasts on Samhain.
Birch is associated with rebirth and reincarnation. Blessings for the deceased are written on birch bark and burned.
Cedar is used to summon the dead, and in ancestral feasts.
Elderberries are used to decorate altars during Samhain.
Frankincense is used for purification while communicating with the dead and spiritual transformation.
Holly is associated with resurrection and renewal, thus making it an appropriate decoration for Samhain altars as well.
Lavender is used to bring peace to the dead.
Rosemary is burned in Samhain ancestral feasts to communicate with deceased friends.
Rose represents love, healing, and purification, also making it a great Samhain altar decoration.
Tobacco is used as an offering during ancestral feasts.
Wormwood is used to summon spirits and help them manifest.
Sources:
“Wortcunning: Herbs of the Deceased.” Nafaeria. n.p. 7 August 2008. Web. 17 October 2015.
“Necromatic Herbs: Plants of the Dead.” WordPress. n.p. 8 December 2013. Web. 17 October 2015.
Happy ritual making, and happy Samhain!
Wild things—howling, abyssal.
They call you into their circle.