Bright Blessings Potion
Tag: Potion
PASSION POTION FOR LOVERS
PASSION POTION FOR LOVERS
your lover. –not very tasty, but very effective– By the light of a red candle, bring one quart
of water to a boil in your cauldron. Remove from heat and add two cups of coarsely
chopped fresh parsley herb. Cover the cauldron and allow the potion to steep for an hour.
Drink two cups of the passion potion at least twenty minutes before making love with your
partner. Be certain this brew is very warm when you drink it.
LUST POTION
LUST POTION
6 drops of Patchouli oil
6 drops of Sandalwood oil
6 drops of Rose oil
6 drops of Clove oil
6 drops of Nutmeg oil
6 drops of Olive oil
Wear as a perfume whenever you’ll be in the presence of the person you’re trying to attract.
Be careful, this stuff is really potent. And don’t be surprised if you find others eyeing you as well.
I find it’s pretty effective for getting a man’s attention. I would probably suggest substituting amber oil for the rose oil in order to attract a woman.
PROTECTION POTION
PROTECTION POTION
* 2-4 Cups of Spring Water, as a base
* 1 Tble. Powdered Iron or Iron Shavings
* 1 tsp. Vervain
* 2 Tble. Sea Salt
* 2 Tble. of each frankincense & Myrrh
* A pinch of Wolf’s hair from a live, shedding Wolf (ask a local Zoo keeper)
Fast Money Wash
1 teaspoon cinnamon
5 cloves
1 tablespoon orange zest
1 teaspoon ginger
1 teaspoon nutmeg
3 drops pine essential oil
Combine all ingredients, empowering them one by one by stating aloud the specific function each will perform. For example, if you were to use rosemary as an ingredients in a memory potion, you would need to say, “the rosemary will serve as a memory enhancer, ” or something of that nature. Then bless the ingredients on your altar. Let the mixture rest in a dark area for a week. Take it out once a day, shake it, bless it and then return it If possible, change this potion under a full moon during its week of rest, to magnify the magickal properties it contains. The power of a full moon is present for three days before and three days after the actual of the full moon. After a week, add the mixture to a bucket of warm, clear water for washing. Important note:This wash seems to have the side effect of making those that come into contact with it hungry. It smells wonderful.
The Cauldron
The Cauldron has a mythological based on the Celtic traditions, and another on popular beliefs. It has been associated with witches from the begining, as the place where the infamous potions were boiled. The symbology takes it both as a tool of transformation (elements enter it in one state and leave it in another) and as an image of the mother’s womb.
Celtic mythology tells us about the Goddess Cerridwen, who cooked in her cauldron the potion for wisdom for a year and a day, curiosly the same time one needs to serve as an acolite before being formally initiated. There are many mentions to the witches’ cauldron, and among the most famour we can name the one featured in a scene in Shakespeare’s Macbeth, when they make a potion as Macbeth decides his future as a traitor. Another legend taken from the Mabinogion tells us of a cauldron that has the virtue of bringing dead warriors back to life.
The cauldron we’re talking about here doesn’t need to be enourmous like we see in the movies. It’s still somewhat easy to find cooking pots very much like we need, even though they’re not the average nowadays. During rituals, depending on the size, we can either put it on the altar, or on the floor, to our left.
The uses of the cauldron varies. As representing the Primal Womb, is obviously feminin, belonging to the element of water. But as it’s solidly built, and usually isolated from the floor by three legs, we can use it, for instance, for every ritual that requires a small fire, or the burning of an element (paper or candles), without worries about security risks. It’ll be usefull in every case we need to symbolise a transformation or rebirth. Also, when full of water it can symbolise the element, though we’ll generally use the chalice. Another of it’s ritual uses can be as a place to discard every material used along the ritual, for instance matches or ashes, to keep them off the altar.
As with all tools, but with this in particular due to it’s possible uses, we must remember to scrupulously clean it after it’s use.
If necesary, it can be replaced by a small metal bowl if we need to burn something, or with the chalice if we just need it to contain water.