November 2023 on The Hoodoo's Calendar features: City of the Dead
11/1 All Saints Day
11/2 All Souls Day
11/7 The Creole Ship Revolt
11/8 Father Charles Randolph Uncles' B-Day
11/25 First Nations National Day of Mourning
11/26 Sojourner Truth D-Day
đWaning Moon on Sunday, November 5th đNew Moon on Monday, November 13th đWaxing Moon on Monday, November 20th đFull Moon on Monday, November 27th
đąRoot(s) of the Month: Angelica Root
Love asteroids in astrology ( You can use this in synastry )
Credits to : plutonicdesire.net
Aphrodite (1388)Â : Rules many similar domains as Venus: sex, love, beauty, romance, connection, friendships, femininity, beauty, home, art, assets.
Aura (1488)Â : i can totally feel you, you delve under my skin and i donât know why.. i ask that question everyday but still canât understand, but in your presence iâm complete.
Angel (11911)Â : youâre my light. I will always help you, because i canât do otherwise. Iâll always be there for you. Itâs not an obligation, itâs my own intention and wish.
Akashi (5881)Â :Â i remember you. You did something back then that i cannot forget. do you feel that too?
Alma (390)Â : your soul is united with mine, no matter what we do here on earth, itâs just a lesson, our connection is deep and sacred from above. Asteroid of the soul. If Alma touches a personal planet it signifies someone who sees their other half in you, wanting to know you on a deeper level, into your soul.
Amor (1221) :Â Expresses a loving kindnesss that is given without judgment or expectation of return.
Agapenor (5023)Â : i love you just for who you are, you donât need to change, it doesnât matter. We share that bond that will last forever even if we part..
Ceres- (1)Â : Asteroid of nurture and care. It also shows unconditional love, parenting-like love.
Companion (8490) :Â They want to be around you 24/7
Cupido (763)Â : Radiates love, the look of love, infatuated with you, struck by cupidâs arrow.
Child (4580) :Â Asteroid of the inner child. Pure, untouched, unfiltered, raw, and innocent love.
DNA (55555): something very similar, i know who you are, we are alike. You cannot do anything to make me question that.
Destinn (6583)Â : itâs like weâre meant to be together. We part, we go our own ways, but somehow destiny always puts us on the one road again. Feeling a strong connection to you, fate or destiny like.
Devine (3561): there is a bond between us â something of a higher purpose or something. Itâs not describable in earthly themes, anyway.
Eureka (Greek) (5261)Â : i finally found you! Youâre the answer to my prayers!
Eros(433)Â :Â Asteroid of erotic feelings, indication of sexual attraction at first sight of touching your rising.
Hypnos (Greek) (14827): something mysterious between you two, a mystical and psychic link which as i believe, also does not begin in this lifetime, but way longer time ago.
Hehe(harmony) (200002): is the name of Suzhou Hehe Culture Foundation. âHeheâ is a traditional Chinese symbol representing good marriage and loving family. It symbolizes the goodwill of ordinary people to live peacefully and healthy.â
Juno (3)Â : Asteroid of marriage, seeing the other person as their spouse, their closest lover. A spouse as in staying with the person through thick and thin.
Knight (29391)Â : Will defend you and wonât betray you, shows complete, submissive loyalty.
Karma (3811) : thereâs a meaning for this relationship, rooted in the past, but it could just show the natural understanding of that, that it feels karmic, but not necessarily shows anything particular, like other asteroids would indicate. Destined to meet due to karmic dues in a past-life, unfinished business.
Loving (432971) :Â Kinda self explanatory. Great for synastry and composite charts.
Lust (4386) :Â Similar to Eros, but a stronger âwantâ for you. A great sexual awakening.
Lyubimets (10761)Â : means âdarlingâ in Russian. Look up this one in synastries with people, who are dear to you.
Psyche (16)Â : Unconscious attraction to the other person, feeling like youâve known them from somewhere.
Pholus (5145) :Â Asteroid of changing events, life changing, a relationship that changed them, the turning point.
Priapus (h22) :Â Physical attraction, wanting to be physical.
Reiki (5239)Â : your presence alone is able to heal my wounds, you helped me in the past, you continue doing it now..
Spirit (37452)Â : you raise me up. i can do pretty much anything when youâre around. I believe in myself more, and thatâs why i like you. For what you make me feel when weâre together.
Svyaztie (37556)Â : âtieâ in English and âSvyazâ in Russian mean âConnectionâ
Valentine- (447)Â : Asteroid of pure love. Valentine is the kind of sacrificial love in which the lover will throw himself in front of the bus to protect his beloved.
Union (1585)Â : Marriage, wanting to marry, wanting a connection.
Good astrology asteroids pair :
Psyche (16) + Eros (433)
Isis (42) + Osiris (1923)
Eva (164) + Adam (6461)
Hera (103) + Zeus (5731)
Queen (5457) + King (2305)
Ask (4894) + Embla (4895)
Tristan (1966) + Isolda (211)
Akhenaten (326290) + Echnaton (4415)
Pluto + (399) Persephone / Persephone (26)
Saturn + Rhea (577)
Uranus + Gaea (1184)
Neptune + Salacia (120347)
Bad asteroids pair ( this could be abusive and challenging) :
Adams (1996) + Lilith (1181)
Epimetheus (1810) + Pandora (55)
Hephaistos (2212) +Venus/Aphrodite (1388)
Ixion (28978) + Nephlele (431)
Jason (6063) + Medea (212)
Narcissus (37117) + Echo (60)
Nessus (7066) + Dejanira (157)
Philomela (196) + Thereus (32532)
Thereus (32532) + Ariadne (43)
Source: The Washington Post / Getty
One eerie evening in St. Louis a young Black woman was driving home after a long double shift. While on the interstate the woman looked out of her peripheral to see a very tall man in a top hat dressed in a black 1800s style suit. His face had no visible features except a long beard that stretched down past his chest. The young woman turned her head to look at the shadowy man directly, but he was gone. She would spend the rest of her drive home shaken by the manâs ghostly presence. After a few minutes of convincing herself that her mind was playing tricks on her, the woman finally pulled into her neighborhood. Relieved that she had lost her ghostly stalker, the woman took one last peek down her street, and there he was.
MORE: The Antebellum Tale Of Black Slave Girl Molly And The Haunting Of Sorrel-Weed House
The mysterious man was back, but this time he wasnât there to just observe. Terrified, the woman quickly pulled into her driveway, sprinting up the stairs to her front door. When she entered her home a sudden urge to vomit swept over her body. When she turned to close the door behind her there he was, standing at the bottom of the stairs staring into the womanâs soul. Scared out of her mind, the woman let out a frightened yelp before slamming the door and checking the locks. After her ghostly encounter, the woman engaged in every superstition known to man. She switched the porch light off and on seven times, sprinkled salt at her doorway, hung a blue stained glass wind chime from her porch, and prayed herself to sleep. But her haunting experience wasnât over.
The man would later return in her dreams, pulling her into the darkness of his cloak, wrapping her up until she was awakened from her slumber after feeling suffocated. The next morning when the woman turned on the news she learned there was a fatal accident on the same highway where she first saw the shadowy man. Â
She was being haunted by a haint; a shape-shifting, witch-like evil spirit capable of stealing your energy, suffocating, or even drowning you.
Sadly, Black history has all the ingredients for fascinating ghost stories. Pain, trauma, mysteries, restless souls, and black folklore.
In the south, particularly on the coastal shores of Georgia and South Carolina, there are houses painted with an odd shade of blue. But the color is just as much for protection as it is for dĂŠcor.Â
Haint blue is a collection of pale shades of blue-green that are traditionally used to paint porch ceilings in the southern United States to protect homes from ghosts and evil spirits. The folklore can be traced back to Hoodoo spiritual practices and the Gullah Geechee people.Â
The Gullah Geechee are the descendants of West and Central Africans who were enslaved and bought to the lower Atlantic states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, and Georgia to work on the coastal rice, Sea Island cotton, and indigo plantations.
Their expertise in farming and agriculture made them invaluable to slave masters in the south. Their expertise also came in other forms. The Gullah Geechee have strong spiritual beliefs and developed the necessary skills to ward off evil spirits called haints or boo hags.Â
Also known as rootwork, conjuring, or Lowcountry voodoo, the spiritual practice of warding off evil spirits was the main way the Gullah people protected themselves and their families from these menacing ghosts. One of the most popular hoodoo practices is to carry a mojo or a small bag of herbs wrapped by a traditional root worker. Boo hags were spirits known for stealing a personâs skin, then wearing it to blend in among the living during the day. After it depletes the human of all its energy, the boo hag will shed its stolen skin and go hunting for another victim. At night the boo hag would get rid of its stolen skin after it depletes the human of all their energy.
Roger Pinckney, the author of âGot My Mojo Workin, A Voodoo Memoir,â tells History.comof a few important tactics used to ward off boo hags.
âHags are only active at night. They have an obsessive-compulsive disorder that compels them to count. A strainer on a doorknob or a broom cross the doorway, rice or sesame seed (benne seed) thrown on the floor. The hag will stop and count, over and over âtill day-clean run em.â Salt on the floor helps as it dehydrates the shed skin and makes it impossible for the boo hag to put it back on.â
The plat-eye is another form of a haint, only way more dangerous than a boo hag. Plat-eye haints are shape-shifting spirits that can take on any form to entice you into their clutches. Not only are they dangerous, but very hard to get rid of.Â
âNothing much you can do about the plat-eye,â said Pinckney. âIf you have committed some gross spiritual offense, all you can do is try to make it right. Some (people) carry whiskey. If a plat-eye gets after you, pour a little on the ground and run like hell. The plat-eye will likely stop to lick it up.â
But According to Pinckney the most powerful defense of haints, boo hags, and plat-eyes is the color blue; haint blue from the indigo plant to be exact.Â
The Gullah Geechee were master farmers and their knowledge of cultivating indigo plants was far superior when compared to white plantation owners. The Geechee people were enslaved and forced to work the indigo fields which by the mid-18th century became one of Americaâs most valuable exports. The Geechee people were able to create a new color by mixing the dregs, or leftover remnants, in a pit with lime, milk, and other pigments until they formed a shade of robinâs egg blue paint that would become known as âhaint blue.â
The Geechee believed that the color mimicked blue water and blue sky which tricked the spirits. Haints can not cross water or travel the skies, therefore painting a porch, window, or door âhaint blueâ meant spirits couldnât make their way into your home.
As Black Americans spread throughout the country after slavery, so did some of their traditions. Haint Blue has become so popular a color, it is now mixed by Sherwin-Williams, one of the most known paint companies in the world.
The next time you are in an old southern home and you see the color haint blue painted anywhere on the exterior, there is a good chance that spirits are lurking about. But have no fear because the blue is there to protect you.
SEE ALSO:
The Haunting Of Lake Lanier And The Black City Buried Underneath
The Ghost Of Willie Earle And The Haunting Of Pickens County Museum
133 photos
My wifeđ
expectations - hayley kiyoko (2018)
[insp.]
Taemin imitating Minho during Dynamite (SWC IV)
 âWherever there are Africans, or people of African descent, there is magic.â- Faith Mitchell
 My calling to rootwork is ancestral. However, I unfortunately I have yet to encounter elders in my life to apprentice under on this plane of existence. Coming up, I didnât know other people who identified themselves as rootworkers/hoodoos/conjurers etc. Being a scholar (among other identities), my entry point into hoodoo began with books, archives, and scholarly journals. As a result, I was able to garner a wealth of information as to what hoodoo is and isnât, which recipes (old school hoodoos donât cast âspellsâ) to use for what, to be able to engage in an intangible mentorship with the elders that came before me. All of these things have informed how I move through the world and grow stronger in my practice.
   As a result of a White spiritual hijacking of African Traditional Religions and Africana Magico-Spiritual practices (i.e. hoodoo), the vast majority of the information about hoodoo on and offline has been authored by white people, so much so that they have become the face of hoodoo (similar to white women and yoga).Â
  For those of us who are looking to grow and learn from other Black practitioners, here is a working list of books. This list consists solely of non-fiction texts, however, there is a lot to learn from novels as well, perhaps Iâll create a part two some other time.Â
Please hit me up if I am missing anything or if you have a personal connection with these texts, Iâd love to be in conversation.Â
Many of these mentioned texts can be found online for Free.99.Â
Also, sorry this is a long ass post.Â
My Personal Favorites:
  1. Jambalaya: The Natural Womanâs Book of Personal Charms & Practical Rituals - Luisah Teish
 2. Of Mules & Men- Zora Neale Hurston
3. Working the Roots: Over 400 Years of Traditional African American Healing
4. Mojo Workin: The Old African American Hoodoo System- Katrina Hazzard-Donald
5. Black Magic: Religion and the African American Conjuring Tradition- Yvonne P. Chireau
6. Secret Doctors: Ethnomedicine of African Americans by Wonda L. Fontenot ( I think this one might be out of print but much of it can be found online via Google Books)Â
Honorable Mention: Tell My Horse- Zora Neale Hurston
 Ok, so this is one of my absolute favorite texts though it doesnt discuss American hoodoo. It focuses on Haitian Voodoo and Jamaican Obeah. However, there is a lot that can be learned from this text and how African magico-spiritual practices are indeed âscientificâ as opposed to mere superstition.Â
Additional texts that I havenât gotten to reading yet or are simply not in my favorites (no shade, no tea):
7. Hoodoo Medicine: Gullah Herbal Remedies - Faith Mitchell
8. 365 Days of Hoodoo: Daily Rootwork, Mojo and Conjuration- Stephanie Rose Bird
9. Sticks, Stones, Roots & Bones: Hoodoo, Mojo and Conjuring with Herbs- Stephanie Rose Bird
10. A Healing Grove: African Tree Remedies and Rituals for Body and Spirit - Stephanie Rose Bird
11. African American Folk Healing- Stephanie Mitchem
12. Faith, Health, and Healing in African American Life (Religion, Health, and Healing) - Stephanie Mitchem ED.Â
13.  God, Dr. Buzzard, and the Bolito Man: A Saltwater Geechee Talks About Life on Sapelo Island, Georgia - Cornelia Walker Bailey
14. Rootwork: Using the Folk Magick of Black America for Love, Money and Success- Tayannah Lee McQuillar
15. Voodoo & Hoodoo: The Craft as Revealed by Traditional Practitioners- Jim Haskins
SEE YâALL IN HEAVEN
cr:Â pandawithnojams
160928 (:
Note: magick is used as an umbrella term here, it can be sigils, easy spells with little materials, candle spells, crystal spells, essential oil magick, moon magick, divination, tips, etc. as long as it is related to what Iâm looking for. ***Also, I am looking to keep the magick white and not aimed at a specific person*** (I donât hate those who do the other kind of magick as long as itâs within reason, itâs just not for me)
wlw astrology compatibility type-stuff
wlw magick (**sigils mainly** but Iâm also looking for magick like simple candle spells, crystal spells, moon magick, tips, etc.)
Sexuality (bisexuality) confidence magick
Anti-homophobia magick, acceptance from others
Other queer witch blogs
Blogs open to (lgbt) sigil requests
Self-confidence wlw magick
General romantic confidence magick
etc.
No hate allowed. Thanks in advance! đłď¸âđ
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