Blue Moon Ritual: Releasing Stagnation and Calling in Transformation
A Blue Moon carries weight.
Not because the moon itself changes color, but because of its rarity and symbolic timing. Traditionally, a Blue Moon refers to the second full moon occurring within a single calendar month, making it energetically associated with amplification, culmination, and uncommon opportunity.
Spiritually, Blue Moons are often viewed as moments of intensified reflection and transformation.
They are not subtle.
They illuminate what has been ignored, stagnant, unfinished, or ready to change.
This makes Blue Moon work especially powerful for:
Releasing emotional buildup
Breaking stagnant cycles
Reclaiming clarity
Reinforcing intentions
Resetting spiritual focus
This ritual is designed to help clear what no longer aligns while intentionally calling in movement and renewal.
Spiritual Cleansing: Why Surface-Level Work Isn’t Enough
Spiritual cleansing has become increasingly accessible, and increasingly simplified.
Baths, smoke cleansing, sprays, quick rituals designed to “clear everything” in a single step.
And while these practices absolutely have value, they are often treated as complete solutions when they are only one part of a much larger process.
Because real cleansing does not just remove what is present.
It addresses what is creating it.
Cleansing Your Space Without Overwhelm
Cleansing is often treated as constant.
As something that must be done repeatedly, intensely, and without pause. But when cleansing becomes excessive, it stops being supportive, and starts becoming stressful.
Because not everything requires removal.
And not every shift in energy is negative.
The History of Curanderas: Healing Traditions in Mexican Spirituality
Long before modern medicine reached many communities, there were curanderas.
Women, and sometimes men, who carried knowledge of herbs, spirit, prayer, and the body. Who understood that healing was not just physical, but emotional and spiritual.
The role of the curandera is deeply rooted in Mexican tradition, shaped by Indigenous knowledge, Spanish influence, and generations of lived experience.