Cinematic Magic

Poppy blossoms attract good luck and fortune. Poppy seeds are said to grant the ability to become invisible.

Poppy blossoms attract good luck and fortune. Poppy seeds are said to grant the ability to become invisible.

Do you have a favorite actor or actress? How about a favorite movie or director? Want to give your favorite some help at the Academy Awards? What magical ways might influence the Academy’s choices on Sunday night?

One way is to carve your wish (that is, the name of the actor/actress, director, or movie) on a shard of bamboo and then bury it.

There are many herbs associated with obtaining good luck or success. Allspice or nutmeg can be burnt as incense to send luck to your movie favorites. Roses bring luck to those to whom they are sent, as can a blooming poppy. (You can also soak the poppy seeds in wine for fifteen days and drink the wine once a day for five days. If you eat nothing else during those five days, you will then have the ability to make yourself invisible!)

If the weather cooperates, you can pluck the first violet of the season to win the fulfillment of your wish.

Strawberry leaves attract luck to those who carry them in a pocket. Maybe you can send a message to your Oscar choices and suggest they put a handful of strawberry leaves in their pocket before walking down the red carpet on Sunday.

 

Love is in the air!

It was a Norse custom to give a newlywed couple enough mead (i.e. honey wine) to last for a month. Hence, our term "honeymoon" ti describe the first weeks of marriage.

It was a Norse custom to give a newlywed couple enough mead (i.e. honey wine) to last for a month. Hence, our term “honeymoon” ti describe the first weeks of marriage.


Collecting the honey to make mead or use to preserve/sweeten food. Collecting the honey to make mead or use to preserve/sweeten food.[/caption

With the modern celebration of Valentine’s Day nearly upon us, can thoughts of love magic be far behind? A number of traditional ways to win another’s heart have been used over the years. One way a woman could win a man’s heart was by feeding him food into which she had mixed some of her own blood (menstrual blood was especially effective). Catching the reflection of mating birds in a mirror on Thursday was the first step in a more complicated love spell. After catching the reflection, a person would give the mirror to his or her chosen and once the receiver looked into the mirror, they would be irresistibly infatuated with the mirror-giver. Or a woman might resort to the much more simple use of caraway seeds, cloves, or coriander to win the affection of the man she had chosen. One English love potion included the kidney of a rabbit, the womb of a swallow, and the heart of a dove while an ancient Greek love potion used a stallion’s semen or a mare’s vaginal discharge.

Garlic, saffron, ginger, or even vanilla(!) were more likely to be used in erotic magic, which was less concerned with affection, and more likely to be aimed by men at women. Wax images could be pierced by pins to incite lust. Striking the intended with hazel or willow branches was also thought to inspire lust. Or you could obtain a few hairs from your intended’s head, tie them in a knot with twine, and then keep the amulet on your thigh or around your genitals to draw your intended’s attentions.

Of course, there were ways to deflect this sort of magic as well. Lily or lettuce could break love spells or decrease lust and thwart unwanted attentions. Just be sure not to confuse which herbs you feed to which guest at your table!

“Parsley, sage, rosemary, and ….”

Thyme in bloom

Thyme in bloom

A “feminine” herb, ruled by Venus and associated with the element Water, thyme (named by the Greeks from the word “fumigate” or “smoke”) is burned to attract health and promote psychic powers. It is also burned to purify an area prior to performing a magical ritual. A bath of thyme (combined with marjoram) cleanses a person of sorrows and ills, even those of long-standing. Roman soldiers would sometimes wash in thyme before a battle to increase their courage and strength. (It was probably the loss of the soldiers’ sorrows and ills which allowed their courage and strength to come to the fore.)

Thyme can also be used to bring a restful, undisturbed sleep and keeps nightmares at bay. To do this, it should be placed beneath your pillow. (I should have used this the other night when I was awakened at 3 a.m. by a nightmare in which I was buried alive by the 30 Rock character Tracy Jordan. Seriously — Tracy Jordan?!?!)

Thyme was also reportedly used in Egypt during the mummification process. “To sleep, perchance to dream….” A well-rested sleep, with good dreams that are pure and undefiled. These are the gifts of thyme, to both the living and the dead.