Não procure não menina, se lhe rejeita tanto assim, do teu amor certamente não precisa.
Angelicalidade.

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Não procure não menina, se lhe rejeita tanto assim, do teu amor certamente não precisa.
Angelicalidade.
āYou have this one life. How do you wanna spend it? Apologizing? Regretting? Questioning? Hating yourself? Dieting? Running after people who donāt see you? Be brave. Believe in yourself. Do what feels good. Take risks. You have this one life. Make yourself proud.ā
ā (via anna-learns-to-love-herself)
If you know me based on who I was a year ago, you donāt know me at all. My growth game is strong. Allow me to reintroduce myself.
We are introducing a new series of Chakra Meditations - Miraculous Chakra Meditation Chants. Links to all the videos & playlist from this series is below We ...
Meditation and sound
I have found that there are sounds that connect to different chakra points. This is the first chakra energy portal our Root Chakra. As I am finding out there is no fast track. (Hey Iām human too you know) Once you get the feeling and practice it does get easier to clear and activate.
Mode: It deals with survival, money security and karma
Color: Red: This is the color to meditate on when opening/clearing this chakra
Location: Between the sexual organs and the anus. Place your thoughts at the base of your spine.
Mantra: Lam. I find it easier to use music during meditation. Helps with focus.
Affirmation: I am safe. I am wealthy. I am grounded.
Read more here http://www.chakra-colors.com/Root-Chakra/
Hear the full š» story + see photos of Fransisca:Ā It took a lifetime for this Queens grandma to open up about her experience being trafficked for sexĀ
A couple of months ago, a friend of mine reached out. It was about her grandmother, Frances. Grandma Frances is 85. And my friend told me her grandma says she has a story she needs to tell someone.
So, I headed to their house.
Grandma Frances is tiny and thin, with a shock of white hair and brown eyes that are always smiling, even when she isnāt. She talks with that loud, Queens accent that sounds like sheās chewing on the words before she speaks them.
But secrets have a language of their own. And Grandma Frances insists she will only tell me this story in her native tongue, Spanish.
She starts off by telling me that she was born Francisca Carmona Garcia, in Jalisco, Mexico.
And when she speaks about Jalisco, her eyes light up.
āThe men are handsome there,ā she gushes. They ride their horses with a gun on their side.
āYouāre blushing,ā I tell her. āYeah,ā she says with a laugh. āI know!ā
I ask her what her favorite childhood memory is and she says ā leaving. Garciaās family was poor.
āWe ate seeds and tortillas, with some chile. And it tasted good because we were hungry.ā
She tells me her little sister died of starvation. When Garcia was 14, she left home to go to Guadalajara. She got a job as a maid and started sending money home. But money was still tight. And Garcia had bigger dreams ā¦
āEl Norte,ā she says, with a hint of awe still in her voice.
She means āThe North.ā The United States.
It was the 1950s. The decade of prosperity and US cultural expansion. Rock ānā roll was born. Marilyn Monroe sang breathlessly about diamonds, her ābest friends.ā John Wayne was flying airplanes and Marlon Brando was riding A Streetcar Named Desire.
Garcia got her big break one day at work when she was 16. An older woman approached her and said, āweāre looking for waitresses. Right on the border with Texas. A tiny town called Villa AcuƱa. At a restaurant called La Perla ā The Pearl.ā
Garcia packed up and headed there, to her new job, waiting tables. It was about a dayās travel. But when she finally got to town, well, there was no restaurant. There werenāt even streets really, she says. The Pearl was a house in the dusty middle of nowhere.
It was a brothel.
āYou gotta do what you gotta do,ā she says, resigned. She never imagined this would happen to her, though. And she didnāt have a choice. āI was the breadwinner in my family,ā she explains.
This all happened when she was a teenager.
āThey gave us our room and told us to dress very pretty and go out to the salon because it was full of American soldiers.ā The brothel, she tells me, exclusively served the American military ā who came in from across the border in Texas. Mexican men didnāt set foot in The Pearl, but the Mexican police protected the place and watched over the girls.
Once a month, Garcia says, āthe doctors would come give us checkups.ā
Itās strange, hearing this sweet little grandma tell me the tale of how she was trafficked while she insists that I finish a giant plate of tamales she made for me. But none of this is unusual. Mexican border towns have always served as places of vice and exploitation. Sex tourism is a lucrative business even to this day. Between 2011 and 2012, authorities report that more than 9,000 women have gone missing throughout Mexico.
And thatās just the reported cases.
But Garcia doesnāt tell her story like other trafficking survivors Iāve spoken with. She talks about how lucky she was. A friend of hers, who got taken to another town ā she was killed. Garcia talks about a kind, gorgeous madam, who let her keep some of the money she earned. Important men in uniform, who were gentlemanly. I leave her house a bit perplexed. But her tone shifts the next time we talk, when she invites me over for lunch.
As she ladles a thick oxtail soup on my plate, she tells me, āYou know. This is a great shame in my life. I want you to understand, I was desperate.ā
āItās an ugly thing,ā She tells me. āYou have relations with a man you donāt want. You just close your eyes, and you let it happen. Itās false. You ⦠do it out of necessity, not desire. You know nothing about love. You know nothing of kissing with that passion.ā
I ask if sheās angry. And she pauses and responds, āYeah. At myself.ā
So I ask her. Why are you telling me this secret? Why now? Why ever?
āI donāt know,ā she says, then hesitates. āI donāt know why. I think there was something here,ā she says as she rubs her narrow chest. āSomething inside me.ā
Garcia does know how much she wanted to leave that place. She says she always told herself, āI gotta marry an American.ā
So one day, this customer came in. He was tall and handsome, a sergeant in the US Air Force.
His name was William.
āHe was so elegant,ā she gushes. āHe was wearing a blue shirt and a tie. He was almost 6 feet tall.ā
That night, they took a walk. The moon was beautiful.
āAnd he fell in love with me. And then he said ā I want you to get out of here,ā Garcia recalls.
Did they really fall in love? Does a teenager who is trapped and needs so much to get out of where she is ā truly love the one man who can rescue her? A customer at the brothel? Every time I asked, she replied the same.
āI fell in love with him. I loved that man.ā
They got married, and William brought her to New York. They came by bus. It was 1952. They arrived at the Port Authority Bus Terminal, Manhattanās hectic, congested central bus station that stands to this day.
I meet her there early on a Saturday.
Sheās eager to take me to her neighborhood in Queens and introduce me to all her friends.
After about an hour on the subway, we arrive. We walk along the busy boulevard and the quiet, lush suburban streets. Although today itās filled with people speaking Spanish and bumping reggaeton out of car windows, Grandma Frances was the first Latina to live here. Her new family advised her not to speak Spanish to her children. Back then, this was mostly an Italian neighborhood.
She says when she got here, āwe took a taxi, to the house. To my mother-in-lawās house.ā She remembers it was cold. She had never seen snow and was afraid of it.
āI was afraid I would freeze,ā she laughs. Ā It was 4 a.m. It was dark. She couldnāt see anything. Ā
She didnāt know back then that everything was going to be OK. That sheād be part of a big family who adored her.
As her new husband knocked on his familyās door, hereās what she did know: Something really bad had happened to her. And itās something that happens to women all the time, to this day. It was a secret she would think about sometimes, but would never tell anyone about, not for another 60 years or so ā as a widow, with grandchildren.
Back then, she knew sheād been able to survive it. Sheād been able to get out. Ā And she was going to build something else: a beautiful life.
Francisca Carmona Garcia, better known to the many people who love her as Frances, was finally home.
āAt the end of the day, it isnāt where I came from. Maybe home is somewhere Iām going and never have been before.ā
ā Warsan Shire
thatās all a nigga wants
š„ Candle Magic: A Spell for Reversing š
Shout-out to Kyle and James from the Cave of the Dark Mother coven for teaching me this awesome spell.
This is a variation on a simple candle manifestation spell. With candle magic, you charge your intention into a candle and light it. As the candle burns down, your intention is released and allowed to manifest.Ā
With this spell, you essentially flip the candle upside-down. By doing this, you are inverting the energy of your intention. You are reversing the flow of its energy.Ā
Letās say youāve been having a lot of bad luck today. You trip over your shoelaces, you misplace your car keys, and you spill your morning coffee. This spell would allow you to break that unlucky streak. You could charge a candle with that unlucky feeling, with those memories of misfortune, and then flip the candle upside-down and let it burn. By doing this, you are reversing your bad luck. You are changing it into good luck.
As another example, letās say you are feeling extremely unmotivated to finish a project or do some chores. To promote motivation, charge a candle with your lethargy and procrastination, then flip it upside-down and burn it. This will reverse that feeling of lethargy inside you and change it into a desire for activity.
In practice, this spell can be used to accomplish a lot of different things, such as cleansing a space of negative energy, removing obstacles from your life, or even reversing the effects of another spell.Ā
I keep coming up with new uses for it literally every day, some of which Iāve included at the end of this post. Feel fee to experiment and come up with your own uses, too!
To Reverse the Flow of an Energy
1) Obtain a candle.Ā If youāre into sympathetic magic, use a colored candle that matches the energy youāre reversing. (Side note: Normal tealight candles are perfect for this, but I find tall pillars work better for larger intentions).Ā
2) Flip the candle over, and free the wick from the wax by pulling gently on the metal disk on the bottom of the candle. (You may have to dig it out if itās not exposed).Ā
3) Gently pull the wick out through the bottom of the candle.Ā
4) Stick the wick back into the candle through the top.Ā
5) You now have a burnable candle that has been flipped upside down. (If the top of your original candle is curved like this one, make sure you prop it up with a dish or candle holder before you burn it).Ā
6) Charge the candle with your intention, then light it and allow it to burn down.Ā Treat it like any other candle spell. Pour your energy into this candle, and visualize the thing you are trying to reverse. Imagine the situation flowing the way you want it to instead. Believe that the circumstance is already being transformed.Ā
Some things Iāve used this spell for:Ā
Removing an obstacle (like financial troubles or delays)
Removing negative energy from yourself, another person, or a place
Removing a hex or curse
Undoing the effects of a backfired spell
Undoing someoneās power over you
Undoing a situation that has gotten out of hand
Reversing a string of bad luck
Reversing an undesirable outcome or occurrence in your life
Reversing a decision someone has made
Changing doubt into confidenceĀ
Changing an aggressive situation into a peaceful one
Changing bad days into good days
A lot of other things. Remember to get creative!
Brightest blessings, and best of luckĀ š
āWhatever you lost through fate, be certain that it saved you from pain. Rumiā
ā
āWhat we had⦠Whatever we had, surprised us both. It burned hotter, and went way farther than either of us had expected. What we had was real. What we had⦠Whatever we had, was hidden in secrets and lies. Not only did it break you and I, But it broke her too. What we had⦠Whatever we had, didnāt last long. Like a train coming to a quick stop, You were there and then you were gone. You were never mine to keep. What we had⦠Whatever we had, I think its safe to say weāll never have it back. But the lingering āwhat ifā remains in our thoughts. So well go about our lives loving other people⦠But thinking of each other.ā
ā
Green Book (2018)