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My first emoji spell! In honor of Valentine’s Day coming up, here’s an emoji spell for “I will enter a committed relationship.”

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Not today Justin

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Cosimo Galluzzi

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@nightwix
🔮💋❤️💍❤️💋🔮
My first emoji spell! In honor of Valentine’s Day coming up, here’s an emoji spell for “I will enter a committed relationship.”
Is suicide considered bad? It's a sin in most religions, but in some there are circumstances in which its allowed. I've been feeling really hopeless lately and I've been devoting all of my energy to the Gods to try and show me a path, give me a light. I feel like there's nothing left for me and that I should be with the Chthonic deities I hold so dear to me. Part of me knows They want me to fight but I'm so, so tired and feel that being remade and given back to the earth is better than this.
Believe me I know exactly how you feel. Sometimes death does sound like the better option and I’m not going to sit here and lecture about how suicide is bad and all. I kbow many who took that route. I, myself have thought about that route. I wouldn’t call it a sin. That would be like calling losing a war a sin. Its not something many can truly control. Those who chose this path do so not because it’s what they want but because they lost all hope for anything better. Here’s a few things I remind myself when I’m losing that war and I pray it helps you.
First, the gods know best when it is our time. If they aren’t taking you life has much more in store for you. Try and hold on to hope that whatever it is is better. Thanatos and his kin want you to to come with them once you have experience all that is meant for you, not when you’ve broken and given up on those things.
The pain and tiredness may end for you if you go through this route but it doesn’t go away. It transfers. Those around you will be in endless pain and lose so much rest just wondering what they could had done to save you. I know someone who committed suicide over the guilt and depression left by their brother committing suicide. Think of all you love and ask if you’d want them to go through this pain. Would you transfer it to them?
Finally I always sit down with someone who knows me better than anyone, my husband, and I honestly tell him how I feel. How tired I am. How much I want it to end. Even how I am thinking of doing it sometimes. He helps pull me back. I know not everyone has someone like this but I know having this is very important to winning the fight. So if you dont have this please message me. I will listen to it all and do my best to aid you in your battle.
I know you’re tired. I know it’s too much. But I promise you there is something in this life that makes it worth it. The gods will bring you to rest when it is time, but until then please fight. Please find the strength to talk to others and seek aid and keep moving forward. Even if it’s dragging keep moving forward in life
When you get that random urge to research your gods, listen to it. You may feel like you’re well versed in the mythos (and maybe you are) but there’s always something to learn and, more often than not, that feeling is the gods wanting you to find out some new bit of info or look at a different perspective. What I love about the gods is their fluidity and how much they can change in your eyes.
Something I’ve noticed is that some people who have no knowledge of witchcraft whatsoever have their own small rituals (whether consciously or not) and I’m so in love with it.
- A young boy I know tells me he wears a necklace to help him run faster, and whenever he looks at it he gets a boost of self-assurance and luck. And I couldn’t help but smile when he told me this - it’s his self-created talisman, whether he knows it or not.
- A woman I met recently told me that writing a letter to someone and then burning it is extremely cathartic. It reminds me of spells performed to release negative emotions.
- My mother has a cup of tea around the same time daily, using her favourite mug and sitting in her favourite chair as a way to reduce stress. A calming self-care ritual.
- Even before I discovered witchcraft, I did things as a child like projecting my anger and negative emotions into a stone and throwing it into a body of water so it would leave me alone. I felt better after that, even without knowing it was basically a spell.
I see it everywhere, all kinds of people doing relatively mundane things to achieve better outcomes for themselves: strength, calmness, healing and more. They have their own, personally-developed rituals and magicks - not necessarily of huge proportion or complexity, but effective nonetheless - and I find it so beautiful.
Hellenic Texting:
LOL- Left Over Libations
JK-Just Khernips
BYOB- Bring Your Own Barley
TTYL- Theoi That You Love
HBIC- Hera’s (the) Bitch In Charge
BAMF- Bad Ass Oedipus
G2G- Got Two Goats
G2G4S- Got Two Goats 4 Sacrifice
If I Encounter One More Trade Name For A Gemstone Or Other Attractive Mineral I Will Puke
I’ve been making jewelry for a number of years now. Pretty early on I was directed to a company called Fire Mountain Gems as a potential supplier. They sent a copy of their catalog with my first order, which introduced me to a *lot* of stones I’d never heard of… more than a few of which had trade names.
Now, understand, humanity has only relatively recently become fussy about how accurately they name their stones. For a big stretch of history, if it was reasonably hard and red OR dark red OR black with red highlights when you tilted it right, they’d probably call it a ruby. (Example: the Black Prince’s Ruby in the state crown of England, which is a completely different gemstone called a spinel, but they named it before the 1780s which is when we started being able to actually identify rubies as rubies. So… yeah.) Some kinds of gem have had lots and lots of different names all historically referring to the same stone. It makes for interesting reading of historic accounts of this or that piece of jewelry. I can excuse it, it was the past, really formal gemology is only a moderately recent thing.
But these days I go to the store and I see yellow gemmy-looking beads hanging on the rack, and I look at the sticker, and it says ‘yellow jade’, only the price is way less than that much actual jade would cost online. Or I go to look for smaller beads to match a few pieces of actual turquoise that I have on hand, and I realize that I have no idea whether African turquoise is actually turquoise or not. It gets… irritating. I want to actually know what the hell I’m paying for and whether it’s hard enough to risk putting it in a bracelet or ring, or whether it’s a softer stone that should be kept in earrings and necklaces, away from possible scratching or impact. If you’re buying jewelry, or if you’re looking for stones for jewelry work, or if you’re someone who believes in the metaphysical properties of stones and crystals, you’re going to want an accurate understanding of whatever it is you’ve got in front of you, right? Right.
So, yeah. Here’s a few of the trade names I’ve been stumbling over since I got started in jewelry making.
New jade - This is serpentine. It’s a pretty rock but it’s not jadeite or nephrite; it’s not actually jade. Serpentine’s way common, since it’s basically a form of one of the most common minerals in the earth’s crust.
Mountain jade - A kind of dolomite marble. Also not jade.
Ching Hai jade - Dolomite plus a couple of other minerals. Pretty, but not jade. Let me put it like this: on the Mohs scale of mineral hardness, nephrite jade is 6 to 6.5 and jadeite is 6.5 to 7. Ching Hai jade is 3.5 to 4. This stuff is softer than the outer coating of human teeth (Mohs 5, same as a basic knife blade and most kinds of everyday glass). You want a stone you can put in a ring where it’ll get whacked or bounced off hard surfaces or otherwise stand a chance of impact, you’re gonna want real jade. Ching Hai jade will get scratched clear to kingdom come with a Mohs score like that.
Yellow jade - It’s quartz. Nephrite jade comes in a lot of colors including yellow, but if they’ve labeled it ‘yellow jade’ rather than saying ‘jade’ or ‘nephrite jade’ then it’s quartz. Same deal for ‘golden jade’.
Malaysia jade - Also quartz.
African jade - yep, still quartz.
Black jade - Both nephrite and jadeite come in black forms, but if a stone is being sold with the name ‘black jade’, it’s 90% likely to be serpentine. Actual jade gets labeled as jadeite or nephrite. I don’t do metaphysical stone foo, but man, if you’re buying a stone because you want to use its mojo, seems to me you’d want to get the actual stone associated with what you’re trying to do, not a stone that’s the same color and level of shiny.
Peace jade - Serpentine plus white quartz. I don’t even know where they came up with this name. It’s pretty but it’s jade the way a pommel horse is a horse.
Yellow turquoise - Serpentine again. Or rather, serpentine and quartz. At least this stuff comes from the same mines as turquoise.
African turquoise - Jasper. It’s turquoise colored, but it’s actually harder than real turquoise, for whatever that’s worth.
Italian onyx - They also call this one onyx marble. It’s a kind of calcite. Takes dye really well so they use it in different color forms.
African bloodstone / Indian bloodstone - Legit name for the actual stone, for once! These are both names for the same thing. They also call it heliotrope. So any of those names all refer to the same thing.
Tigerskin jasper - And we’re back to the malarkey; this is limestone. With pretty stripes, but seriously, it’s not even jasper and jasper gets used as a substitute for other stones so wtf.
Bumblebee jasper - Sometimes they call this bumblebee agate. It’s not jasper. It’s not agate. Bumblebee jasper is volcano lava and sediment that’s resulted in swirly yellow and black layers. I mean, it’s pretty, sell it as much as you want, but IT ISN’T EVEN CLOSE TO BEING JASPER.
Aqua terra jasper - Onyx marble. They also call it impression stone, but it’s marble, and it’s on the soft side as stones go. Marble’s around Mohs 3 on a good day. That’s another stone you can scratch with your teeth.
Green Earth jasper - NOPE. Serpentine. Sorry.
Peridot jasper - Serpentine. Seriously, do you have any idea how many stones with pretty pretty names are actually just pretty pretty names for different colors of serpentine?
Zebra jasper - onyx marble.
Chinese chrysoprase- Oh look it’s serpentine again
Lemon chrysoprase - This is magnesite. Not dyed, which is a little unusual. Magnesite takes dye really well and gets sold in a lot of colors as a substitute for other stones. Selling it as lemon chrysoprase means someone managed to get hold of a yellowish color of the stuff.
Mosaic turquoise - If it’s labeled mosaic anything, it’s almost always fragments of a stone bound together with resin, and probably not even the stone it claims to be. Mosaic turquoise is ittybitty chips of magnesite that’s been dyed to match turquoise color, then stabilized together as a single piece. It’s not even close to being turquoise.
Green opal - okay, quick lesson: there are different kinds of opal, and not all of them have the flashy color changing fire you get with precious stones like Welo opal or Australian opal. Mexican fire opal and Oregon fire opal are good examples of other forms. The actual stone we call opal is a specific kind of silica with a certain level of water content, not just the pretty flashiness. And opals of both the flashy kind and the non-flashy kind do come in green. But if they’re selling it as 'green opal’, they are selling you chalcedony. Chemically similar, but not as pretty, and a distinctly harder stone.
Red malachite - This is marble. They find marble with banding that resembles malachite banding and they cut it and polish it to look like malachite, just in a different color. Malachite is green; this isn’t even a thing like jade coming in different colors. There isn’t actual red malachite.
Opaline - this isn’t even a stone. This is glass. Same deal with 'sea opal’. Sorry. Sometimes they sell chalcedony as opaline but whatever it is you’ve found it’s not opal.
Fused quartz - Glass. This is glass. Fancypants glass, but it’s glass.
Goldstone, or blue goldstone: Also glass. With bits of copper in it to produce really nice sparkly effects, but it’s still a kind of glass.
Sand stone or blue sand stone: I only found out recently that some people sell goldstone as 'sandstone’, so… this one’s glass too. Actual sandstone is a sorta brown sedimentary rock.
Black moss quartz - This is glass. Worth noting, there’s a vaguely similar product out there called rutilated quartz. That’s actual quartz with spindly intrusions of a different mineral, rutile. Difference is, the quartz has a Mohs hardness of 7 and will scratch the 'black moss quartz's’ soft bitch ass six ways from Sunday as a result.
Fordite - This is paint. Fordite is automotive enamel that’s dripped onto the same spot on factory floors for so many years that it’s built up to the point where it can be cut and polished and made into jewelry elements. Unlike a lot of trade names, this one isn’t a form of bullshit to pass one thing off as another. People who go looking for fordite are specifically looking for gemstone quality layered automobile paint. Sometimes they call it Detroit agate or motor agate, but that’s more of a joke than an attempt to sell the stuff to people looking for actual agate. I can live with this trade name.
Rainbow calsilica: Apparently there’s just a huge amount of argument about this and some people say 'this is natural and we found it and it’s got pretty pretty stripes of all different colors just naturally and it’s a totally awesome metaphysical marvel of a totally natural gemstone’, but the Journal of the Gemological Institute of America says ’dude, you powdered carbonated rock and added paint and stabilized it with resin, wtf’. So yeah, be warned. I mean, it’s pretty and all, and you’ll probably pay way less for it than for chrysocolla (a natural stone with somewhat similar striping), but… be aware it’s probably something a guy in a factory or a lab put together, okay?
And citrine: Okay, this isn’t exactly a case of trade name bullshittery, but, uh. Natural citrine is stupid rare. Most citrine these days used to be amethyst. Take a crappy piece of amethyst with faint color or gray tones and heat the hell out of it long enough, and it turns yellow, and you can legally sell it as citrine. If you’ve got citrine crystals and the yellow color is most intense up in the tips, you’ve almost certainly got former amethyst there. Fair warning.
So… yeah. Lot of trade names out there. Some of them total bupkis. Some only partly so. Heads up, and if you’re in the market for a gem or a crystal or something like that, do yourself a favor and look up the name somewhere reliable first just so you know what you’re buying.
How can they sell the heated amethyst as citrine? Is that not false advertisement?
Thank you for taking the time to type this up, op.
Witchcraft isn’t always about “connecting with the earth” or those cliche things that some witches will tell you. Witchcraft is incredibly personal, and if your craft is about regaining lost power, taking control of your life, achieving balance, or anything else, really, then that’s your craft. Don’t let anyone tell you that you’re “practicing wrong” or whatever because you’re craft isn’t like theirs.
im in a really bad media diversity class where the professor was trying to make a point to us about stereotypes so he was like “when you think of frankenstein you probably think of a big green monster right?” and then when everyone in class was immediately like “no it’s the scientist” he pretended he didn’t hear us
Millennial culture is knowing Frankenstein is the scientist.
Woke Millennial Culture is, however, ALSO knowing Frankenstein was the monster.
oh SHIT
Iceland - forever: moss
I’m back ;))))))
Still ver.
Hellenic Prayer for Transgender Boys
May Hestia bless your home, creating a safehaven without ridicule or fear as you explore your true masculinity.
May Zeus guide you into manhood, even when nobody else acknowledges your journey.
May Hera support your natural body, giving aide if you choose to bear your own biological children.
May Demeter supplement your food, giving protein for muscle & nutrients for boosting natural testosterone.
May Poseidon heal your surgery scars, avoiding scrutinizing stares when your shirt is off.
May Artemis comfort your mind, helping you find peace & not self-hatred in the femininity you were forced to grow up with.
May Apollo help you bind safely to not damage yourself, or ease your dysphoria to remove the need.
May Athene teach you to navigate life as your real identity, surviving your own oppression while using newfound privilege to help others.
May Hermes deceive others’ perceptions, your curves appearing invisible and passing with ease.
May Aphrodite encourage you to use feminine tools to benefit yourself: contour, short hair styles, & other fashion techniques.
May Hephaestos insure your binders & STPs work & last long, giving you more time of relief before needing replacements.
May Ares push you to find mental & physical endurance, keeping you working to be stronger & bulk up on muscle.
May Hades kill your old image & way of presenting, so that people only see you as you are now.
May Dionysos nurture your identity, even if you continue to present feminine rather out of desire or coercion.
**Next I’ll be writing a hymn specifically for trans girls!!!
Who told you that goddesses were thin?
Brighid keeps the cows,
And cows are heavy work—
She’s all shoulders, hips, and thighs,
Strong for the lifting.
Her heart remembers the son she keened for,
And so does her belly.
-
Stretch marks strike across Hera’s skin,
Lightning tattoos,
Fitting symbols of eternal loyalty.
Forever marked a wife, a mother,
Not a marble statue.
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On the shores of her birthplace,
Aphrodite comes up dripping,
Breasts heavy, hips rolling like waves.
In Mauritania she overflows:
Fat (no hiding from that word,
No shame)
Cascades from her arms,
Rolls over her middle,
Puckers her thighs.
On every beach she has cellulite—
She is goddess of beauty,
Not goddess of the impossible.
Everywhere, she is adored.
-
Inanna, Queen of Heaven,
Feels no need to diminish herself
When the entire sky is hers to occupy.
The Witching Tree server
As we have posted before we are relaunching the witching tree server. The Witching Tree is a Discord server/group for traditional witches and folk practitioners. We also have practitioners of hoodoo, folk necromancy, Solomonic magic, granny magic, and many other paths.
This server is strictly for adults (those over the age of 18)
We have plans regular activities, such as optional research projects, book club, and discussions about magic! We also share a lot of research documents on the subject of traditional magic.
Here is a link to our FAQ, and feel free to send us an ask if you have more questions!
Our aim is to allow members to talk openly and freely with other like-minded people in order to grow as individuals and strengthen our own crafts. For that reason, we do allow people who are new to trad craft /folk magic and who are willing to learn and grow alongside others.
Click the link below to send in an application for review. Setting up an account on discord only takes a minute or two and all you need to do is register an email, password, and username. We look forward to seeing you!
You can learn more about discord here.
Apply for membership today!
Invite links will be shared through private messages on tumblr 1-5 days after we receive your application if it is accepted.
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Waning Moon emoji spell to banish bad energies from your life and make room for good
➡️🌠🍀🆗🌈✅ ➡️🌠🍀🆗🌈✅ ➡️🌠🍀🆗🌈✅
Likes charge
Reblogs cast
I know I shouldn't speak badly of the Theoi they r more than myths. I have realized that for all of them. But I am trying REALLY hard to avoid feeling dislike towards Zeus. I have always felt dislike since I learned the myths as a *child* which is why it's probably hard :\ I try to understand the ancient's marriages were different and genders were not equal , but Zeus just doesn't seem like a good husband, fatherly, or trustworthy, what can I do to try and fix this or learn better?
It is so important to remember that the myths don’t often reflect cultic practices and how the ancient Greeks actually viewed the Theoi. But even within the myths, there’s plenty of evidence for Zeus being a loving husband and father.
Pausanias, Description of Greece 2. 17. 4 (trans. Jones) (Greek travelogue C2nd A.D.) :“The presence of a cuckoo seated on the sceptre [of Hera] they explain by the story that when Zeus was in love with Hera in her maidenhood he changed himself into this bird, and she caught it to be her pet [in order to seduce her].”
Pausanias, Description of Greece 2. 36. 1 :“A mountain [near Halike in Argos], called in old days Thornax; but they say that the name was changed because, according to legend, it was here that the transformation of Zeus into a cuckoo took place. Even to the present day there are sanctuaries on the tops of the mountains : on Mount Kokkux (Cuckoo) one of Zeus, on Pron one of Hera.”
Zeus took the form of a bird in order to earn Hera’s trust. He acted as Her pet so She would come to trust Him and love Him. He willingly put himself into a harmless and subservient position to woo Her. And She did come to love Him.
Hesiod, Theogony 921 ff (trans. Evelyn-White) (Greek epic C8th or C7th B.C.) :“Lastly, he [Zeus] made Hera his blooming wife : and she was joined in love with the king of gods and men, and brought forth Hebe and Ares and Eileithyia.”
As He loved Her.
Callimachus, Aetia Fragment 2. 3 (from Scholiast on Homer’s Iliad 1. 609) (trans. Trypanis) (Greek poet C3rd B.C.) :“Zeus loved [Hera] passionately for three hundred years.” [N.B. This refers to the Hieros Gamos or secret marriage of Zeus and Hera.]
Their marriage wasn’t perfect, even the ancient Greeks admitted that, but within mythic evidence and cultic practices, we have a story of Zeus and Hera reconciling after They had fought.
Pausanias, Description of Greece 9. 3. 1 :“Hera, they say, was for some reason or other angry with Zeus, and had retreated to Euboia. Zeus, failing to make her change her mind, visited Kithaeron, at that time despot in Plataia [or the mountain-god], who surpassed all men for his cleverness. So he ordered Zeus to make an image of wood, and to carry it, wrapped up, in a bullock wagon, and to say that he was celebrating his marriage with Plataia, the daughter of Asopos. So Zeus followed the advice of Kithairon. Hera heard the news at once, and at once appeared on the scene. But when she came near the wagon and tore away the dress from the image, she was pleased at the deceit, on finding it a wooden image and not a bride, and was reconciled to Zeus. To commemorate this reconciliation they celebrate a festival called Daidala.”
It may not be easy to see, especially when looking at the more popular myths, but there are repeated instances of Zeus acting simply to please Hera, to win Her over, to show His love for Her. And while there are a lot of myths where She’s shown to be jealous of His other lovers, She’s always shown to still love Him and to accept Him (even if She’s not fond of the other women).
He is also a considerably caring father. Even if you look at the myths written in ancient Greece. For example, when Artemis says She never wants to marry, Zeus promises Her that She won’t have to.
Callimachus, Hymn 3 to Artemis 4 ff (trans. Mair) (Greek poet C3rd B.C.) :“[Artemis] sitting on her father’s knees–still a little maid–she spake these words to her sire [Zeus] : ‘Give me to keep my maidenhood, Father, forever …’ And her father smiled and bowed assent.”
But one of the most important things n my opinion, is looking for cultic evidence, rather than the myths. The myths are sometimes highly inaccurate portrayals of the Theoi in comparison to how They were viewed and treated in worship. If Zeus weren’t a good father and husband, then the ancient Greeks wouldn’t have worshiped Him as the epitome of fatherhood and the standard for being a husband; they wouldn’t have built rituals and holidays that used His and Hera’s marriage as the guideline for marriages.
When we talk about the Theoi being more than just Their myths, and being different from Their myths, it’s important to talk about what the myths actual do and what they actually bring to our faith.
Some myths stand to explain cultic rites and worship, as well as cultural rituals. The Abduction of Persephone follows the Hellenic tradition for a wedding. Some myths (arguably all) serve to convey a lesson or moral, but that lesson is inherently tied to the culture writing the myth. That’s why looking as deeply as possible into the context of any given myth is so important, because it can give context to the morals being conveyed by the myth and help us to understand this vastly different culture. Some myths are simply stories, meant to entertain and tell a story.
We need to keep in mind that the way the ancient Greeks wrote the Theoi is not necessarily an accurate portrayal of Their personalities and actions. These stories were written by mortals, who like modern mortals, wanted to see themselves in Their deities. We want our deities to reflect our own personal and cultural values, and authors writing stories can write Their deities in such a way that does reflect those values, regardless of what the actual actions of a deity may be.
Look also at what makes an interesting story. If you want to write something with a lot of drama, what sells more: healthy open relationships, or affairs with jealous spouses learning of your main character’s deceit? As annoying as it is, and as cliche as it is, throwing in an affair to a story line is a quick and easy way to add drama, and there’s a reason why it is a cliche. It moves a story forward, it provides conflict, and it designates an antagonist.
@sir-celestyn shared a wonderful bit the other day that really serves to remind all of us to evaluate how much stock we put into the myths, from“Battling the Gods: Atheism in the Ancient World” by Tim Whitmarsh:
“Homer’s epic poems of human striving, journeying, and passion were ancient Greece’s only ‘sacred texts,’ but no ancient Greek thought twice about questioning or mocking his stories of the gods.”
I reblogged this once before but I had a revelation today while I was feeding Reggie and listening to Robert Garland describing the truly bleak misogyny of Ancient Athens Greece. (This lecture came on the heels of Elizabeth Vandiver describing the same misogyny)
Context is important here… by those ancient standards, a wife existed to produce heirs. If the wife turned out to be really good at running the household, even better! If there’s marital bliss, super lucky! But her purpose was to produce suitable heirs, preferably a lot of them.
And Hera… didn’t.
She had only one son with Zeus, who everyone universally agreed* was useless and a terrible heir.
(*as you all know, I do not agree and I’ll shout from the mountaintops that Ares is And was worthy)
Hera produced one daughter (or possibly two), and had poor unhappy Hephaestus solo… so, no heirs but Ares.
By the standards of the day, this was grounds for divorce. It’s an ugly way of looking at it, but that’s how it was. And there’s even a precedent for divorce on Olympus; Hephaestus divorced Aphrodite. Between that and the grief she gave him, Zeus could have easily divorced her, and some might say he SHOULD have. She’s just barely subservient to him as a wife should be, and she’s failed in her duties as a wife besides. *By the standards of that culture,* he should not be putting up with this shit.
But he didn’t divorce her, ever, and as far as I remember, he never even threatened to.
They hurt each other badly. They fight bitterly. But they don’t leave each other.
I think that he truly loves her, and is so in love with her that in spite of her “failing” him, he still wants to stay with her. She’s his Queen and I think he considers her as more of an equal than the Ancient Greeks were maybe equipped to realize.
It’s still not to say that this is an idealized marriage by a long shot - but maybe that’s the lesson, and why Hera’s the goddess even when her own marriage looks like a disaster. They both still love each other and want to stay together, even when things are tough.
@scrollsandgay @stormywitch
Energy recharge
^^ For me I tend to use Selenite and clear quartz. They work well for cleansing and removing negative energy!