I found this on Facebook at Wicca Teachings, I wanted to hang onto it ...
Witches Bottle.
A Witches bottle is something all Witches should have, it keeps curses, hexes, ill-will, negativity and jealousy away from us.
A witches bottle is an ancient and well-tested method of deflecting all kinds of malice and bad
will that a good witch can attract, Witch bottles are strangely
neglected these days but for hundreds of years they were very popular
across rural Europe, particularly two or three centuries ago. In England
particularly, most country households had at least one buried somewhere
and they still regularly turn up during the demolition or renovation of
old buildings. Over two hundred are in known museum collections and
these probably represent just a tiny fraction of those that have been
found over the years and tossed away as rubbish; and an even smaller
fraction of those that still lie waiting to be discovered.
The
most popular places to hide witch bottles used to be under the
hearthstone or doorstep. Not only were these spots the least likely to
be disturbed in a peasant cottage, but they were also the main openings
by which a hostile spell might enter. Bottles were also often plastered
into the walls, hidden in attics and buried in gardens or lonely places.
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries witch jars often had faces
stamped in the glass or stoneware. In Germany and the Low Countries they
were called Bellarmine jars after the unpopular 16th century Cardinal
who first appeared on them in the Netherlands, but equivalents were made
all over Europe. The attraction of having a face on the bottle was that
it would help trick a hostile spell or wish into thinking it has found
its target and then getting trapped inside as in a rat-trap. These
bottles were also popularly used for burying money, with spells cast on
them to deflect treasure-hunters.
The idea of a witch bottle is
that it will attract and trap hostile enchantments by tricking them
into believing they have found their target i.e. you. The principle is
almost the same as with voodoo dolls, but with the reverse intent. The
bottle is meant to represent you so some of your personal fluids have to
go into it. Most commonly in the old days this was urine, with which
the bottle is half filled. Next add some hair and maybe nail-clippings
or even blood if you feel seriously threatened. Blood is of course the
most potent substance of all that you could use for this kind of magic
(which is why vampires are so keen on it!) but, judging by the old witch
bottles that have been chemically analyzed, our forbears do not seem to
have considered it necessary. However, if you happen to cut yourself
while preparing your bottle, well, it would be silly not to take
advantage of it for some added potency.
Between them your
ingredients will create a potent decoy or simulacrum of you on the
magical plane. These days you are unlikely to find a jar with a face on
it, but you could maybe draw a simple face on a piece of wood and add it
to the mix. Opinions are divided over whether you should include a
photograph of yourself. Some say it adds strength to the spell, others
that it makes no difference and a few warn that it is positively
dangerous in case the bottle falls into the wrong hands. You'll have to
make up your own mind on this.
The next ingredients you need
are some snares to trap the hostility being directed against you. These
can be thorns, bent pins or nails, barbed wire, fishhooks, anything
sharp and snagging in fact. Plus you can add a tangled ball of sewing
thread, which is apparently very effective too.
This is all you
need to make your self-protecting witch bottle. Some witches also add
Deadly Nightshade and other potentially lethal herbs, and these are
supposed to help if you know how to handle them safely, but are not
essential.
No comments:
Post a Comment