Tag: blue moon

  • Blue Moon Magic: What This Rare Moon Is Best For.

    Blue Moon Magic: What This Rare Moon Is Best For.

    A Blue Moon has always carried a certain feeling around it. Even people who do not follow moon phases closely tend to pause when they hear the phrase. Part of that is rarity. A Blue Moon does not happen every month, and throughout history, unusual celestial events were often treated as spiritually significant. People noticed them. They watched the sky more carefully. They paid attention to dreams, emotions, and strange turns of fate during those nights.

    Despite the name, a Blue Moon is not usually blue in color. The term most commonly refers to the second full moon occurring within a single calendar month. Because the lunar cycle does not line up perfectly with our modern calendar, this occasionally creates what feels like an “extra” moon. In folk traditions and spiritual practices, extra or unusual timing has often been associated with heightened energy, crossroads moments, and opportunities for change.

    Many people believe Blue Moons carry a stronger emotional atmosphere than an ordinary full moon. There is often a sense of culmination around them, as though something unfinished has finally risen fully into view. Old feelings may resurface. Memories can feel vivid. Situations that have been dragging on for months sometimes suddenly reach a turning point.

    Spiritually, Blue Moons are often considered especially powerful for breaking stagnant cycles. If you have felt stuck in the same emotional pattern, repeating the same arguments, struggling with the same fears, or circling the same unresolved situation, this moon is traditionally seen as a strong time to begin shifting that energy. In folk magic, repetition builds power, but unhealthy repetition can also create spiritual heaviness. A Blue Moon is often viewed as a chance to interrupt those patterns and move in a new direction.

    This is also considered a good moon for releasing emotional clutter that has quietly accumulated over time. Full moons already carry associations with release and completion, but the Blue Moon’s rarity adds an extra layer of intensity. Many people use this moon to finally let go of lingering resentment, unhealthy attachments, self-defeating habits, or situations that have drained their peace for too long.

    That does not always mean dramatic endings. Sometimes release happens quietly. It may look like deciding not to answer a message that would normally pull you into conflict. It may look like finally cleaning out a room that has carried stagnant memories. It may simply mean recognizing that your energy deserves to move toward something healthier.

    Blue Moons are also associated with second chances and unfinished goals. In some traditions, they are viewed almost like a spiritual “extra page” in the cycle. If there is something meaningful you abandoned earlier in the year, this moon may feel like an invitation to revisit it with fresh eyes. Creative projects, spiritual practices, personal goals, and even relationships sometimes reappear under Blue Moon energy in unexpected ways.

    However, folk traditions generally caution against treating a Blue Moon like a magical shortcut. Rare moons were respected precisely because they were believed to amplify what already existed beneath the surface. If a situation is unstable, emotional, or unhealthy, the energy surrounding a Blue Moon may intensify those feelings rather than magically erase them. In many old traditions, powerful moon nights were approached thoughtfully and with emotional honesty.

    For spiritual cleansing work, the Blue Moon is often considered especially favorable. Cleansing baths, floor washes, house blessings, candle work, prayer, meditation, and spiritual uncrossing practices are all commonly associated with this kind of moon energy. Many people feel drawn to physically clean their environment during this time because the emotional symbolism feels so strong. Washing the floors, opening the windows, changing linens, or clearing clutter can become part of the spiritual process itself.

    There is also a deeply emotional side to Blue Moon energy that should not be ignored. Some people feel unusually nostalgic during these moons. Others experience vivid dreams, restless sleep, heightened intuition, or sudden emotional clarity. Old relationships may briefly drift back into awareness, either through memory or actual contact. This does not always mean reconciliation is meant to happen. Sometimes it simply means the mind and spirit are sorting through unfinished emotional material before finally setting it down.

    In Southern folk traditions especially, unusual moons were often treated as nights to pay close attention. People watched weather patterns, animal behavior, dreams, and emotional tension within the household. Rare celestial events were considered spiritually “loud,” meaning they could bring hidden matters closer to the surface.

    Perhaps that is part of why Blue Moons still fascinate people now. Even in a modern world filled with constant noise and distraction, a rare moon still has the power to make people stop for a moment and look upward. It creates a feeling that time itself has briefly shifted sideways.

    Whether you approach the Blue Moon through spirituality, folklore, prayer, reflection, or simple curiosity, it can serve as a meaningful pause point. A moment to ask yourself what has become too heavy to carry forward. A moment to reconsider what deserves another chance. A moment to clear space for the next chapter before it quietly begins unfolding beneath the next ordinary moon.

    In Service,

    Sister Bridget

  • Southern Superstitions about the Moon.

    Southern Superstitions about the Moon.

    Long before moon phases became social media graphics and phone app notifications, people across the South watched the moon closely because they believed it mattered. Farmers, fishermen, rootworkers, midwives, grandmothers, and front porch storytellers all paid attention to the night sky. The moon was treated as part calendar, part warning sign, part spiritual clock.

    Some of these beliefs came from European folklore carried into the South generations ago. Others blended with African, Caribbean, and Indigenous traditions over time. In many families, moon superstitions were simply accepted as common sense. You might not even be told where the belief came from. You just grew up hearing things like, “Don’t start that under a dark moon,” or “That full moon’s making folks act strange again.”

    Whether taken literally or symbolically, moon folklore became deeply woven into Southern life.

    One of the oldest Southern moon beliefs involves planting by the signs. Many farmers believed the moon affected growth much like tides and water movement. Crops that produced above the ground were often planted during a waxing moon, when the moon appeared to be growing brighter. Root crops were commonly planted during a waning moon, when the moon was shrinking.

    Even people who were not especially spiritual often followed moon planting traditions because they believed generations of observation backed them up. Old almanacs printed moon charts for this very reason, and many Southern gardeners still quietly follow them today.

    Another common superstition warned against beginning important work during the dark moon. The dark moon, the few nights before the new moon when the sky is at its blackest, was often associated with endings, uncertainty, hidden matters, and spiritual vulnerability. In some traditions, people avoided making major decisions, beginning relationships, or signing agreements during this phase.

    At the same time, the dark moon was also considered powerful for cleansing and banishing work in folk magic traditions. Just because a moon phase was feared did not mean it was considered useless. Southern folk practices often viewed difficult energies as something to work with carefully rather than avoid entirely.

    Full moons carried their own reputation for strange behavior and heightened emotions. Throughout the South, people long joked that hospitals, jails, bars, and emergency rooms became more chaotic during the full moon. Nurses, law enforcement officers, and night workers still swap full moon stories today with absolute conviction.

    Whether scientifically measurable or not, many people genuinely feel that full moons intensify emotions. Old Southern sayings often linked the full moon to arguments, restless sleep, vivid dreams, impulsive decisions, and emotional tension rising to the surface.

    Animals were also believed to behave differently during certain moon phases. Dogs howling, livestock acting nervous, owls calling repeatedly, or unusual nighttime activity sometimes carried spiritual meaning in folk belief. In rural areas especially, people paid close attention to animal behavior during unusual moons, eclipses, or major weather changes.

    Weather folklore itself was deeply tied to the moon. One old Southern belief claimed that a ring around the moon meant rain or storms were coming soon. Another held that a clear, sharp winter moon predicted colder weather ahead. Some fishermen believed certain moon phases affected fish activity and tides strongly enough to determine whether a trip would succeed or fail.

    Moon eclipses often carried especially uneasy reputations. In many traditions, eclipses were considered spiritually disruptive times when normal energies became unsettled. Some people avoided spellwork during eclipses altogether, while others believed eclipses amplified spiritual work dramatically and should be approached with caution and respect.

    Blue moons and harvest moons developed their own folklore as well. Because they were rarer or visually dramatic, they became associated with omens, crossroads, and important turning points. A blue moon in particular often carried the feeling that something unusual was about to happen, which is part of why the phrase “once in a blue moon” became so tied to rarity and significance.

    In Southern folk magic traditions, moon phases were often worked directly into candle practices and spiritual routines. People timed cleansing work, blessing candles, money spells, uncrossing rituals, and road opening prayers around lunar cycles. The moon was not viewed as separate from spiritual work. It was part of the rhythm of it.

    A waxing moon was commonly associated with drawing things in: prosperity, love, opportunity, success, healing, or growth. A waning moon was more often linked to banishing negativity, ending unhealthy attachments, breaking bad habits, or removing crossed conditions. Full moons amplified energy. Dark moons quieted it.

    Even today, many people who do not consider themselves especially superstitious still feel the emotional pull of certain moon nights. A bright full moon changes the atmosphere of a place. The world looks different under it. Sleep feels lighter. Thoughts drift differently. Old memories seem closer somehow.

    That may be part of why moon folklore survives so stubbornly in the South. These beliefs were never only about superstition. They were also about observation, rhythm, memory, and the feeling that human life is connected to larger natural cycles moving quietly overhead.

    In old Southern homes, people often lived closer to darkness, weather, animals, and the night sky than most modern life allows now. The moon was not hidden behind streetlights and screens. It was something people actually saw. Something they watched rise over fields, rivers, porches, and pine trees night after night.

    And when something becomes part of daily life for generations, stories begin to gather around it like moths around a lantern.

    In Service,

    Sister Bridget

  • Once in a Blue Moon!

    Hello everyone,

    I am sure that most of you have seen that tonight we are having a blue moon! :-)  While there are some variations on the definition of a blue moon, this one is categorized as such due to the fact that it is the second full moon in the same month. 

    So what does this mean for us magickally?  According to moon magick beliefs, this is a great time to decide on setting new goals.  This is a time of creativity and starting new projects.  If you have going through something and want to have a fresh start, tonight is great time to put some energy towards that thought process.

    Light yourself a nice candle, put on some mood music, and write in your journal about any new projects that you would like to plan. Put some energy towards the idea that you are wanting a clean start on an old problem. Set goals for upcoming events and projects.  This is an awesome time to thing magickally, creatively, and with thoughts of letting go of past failures and looking forward to new successes.

    This is also a good time to charge up ritual objects that you might have – put them out in the moonlight! 

    If the weather holds out, charge yourself out in the moonlight, too!  Visualize the enriching rays filling you with promises of success, letting go of past failures, and sticking to new goals.

    Since we won't get another blue moon of this type until January 31, 2018, I think I will make some blue moon oil!  It's pretty easy! 

    What you need:  1 lodestone, 1 piece of iron pyrite, some blue violet leaves and whatever carrier oil you prefer.  Throw them into a mason jar, shake them up, and leave them out in the moonlight overnight. Voila! Blue moon oil charged up under the light of the blue moon.  This is an oil that can be used to consecrate objects, work with new projects, goal setting, creativity, etc.

    Have fun!

    Best regards,

    Mambo Samantha Corfield

    www.spellmaker.com

    Bluemoon