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Mugwort Cut, 2 oz (Artemisia vulgaris)

Mugwort Cut, 2 oz (Artemisia vulgaris)
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Primary Spiritual Use: Psychic
Secondary Spiritual Use: Protection
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Spiritualist-Approved Instructions & Product Info ✅

If the witch's cabinet kept a single herb for the dreaming side of the craft, it would be mugwort. Artemisia vulgaris carries the moon goddess in its botanical name and the dream work in its folk record: the herb of prophetic dreams, scrying, and the traveler's road since the old world. These two ounces of cut mugwort supply the dream pillow and the divination shelf.

Two ounces is the middle jar: a year of dream pillows and scrying washes, with divination incense to spare.

Key Features of This Mugwort Cut

True Artemisia vulgaris. Common mugwort, cut for easy portioning into pillows, sachets, washes, and loose incense blends, with the silvery underside that marks the genuine leaf.

The diviner's herb of the old books. Cunningham's entry lists psychic powers, prophetic dreams, protection, strength, and astral projection, and mugwort opens the Anglo-Saxon Nine Herbs Charm itself as "the oldest of herbs." Few plants carry deeper credentials.

The middle jar. Two ounces doubles the starter supply; begin smaller with the 1 oz size, or scale to the 1 Lb working supply when the dream practice becomes a habit.

Product Details

  • Botanical name: Artemisia vulgaris (common mugwort)
  • Form: cut dried leaf and stem
  • Weight: 2 oz
  • For spiritual use only; not packaged or sold as a food product
  • Store sealed, in a cool, dry place away from light

The Spiritual Significance

Mugwort's pedigree starts at the top: the Anglo-Saxon Nine Herbs Charm, recorded in the tenth-century Lacnunga, opens with mugwort and hails it as Una, the oldest of herbs. The genus name honors Artemis, the moon goddess and night huntress, a fitting patron for the night's own herb, and the traveler's lore runs nearly as deep: wayfarers tucked mugwort into shoes and bundles for protection and endurance on the road, a custom told since the days of Roman roads and passed along here as the lore it is.

Modern practice keeps the seat Cunningham recorded: psychic powers, prophetic dreams, protection, strength, and astral projection. Two living practices carry most of that weight. The first is the dream pillow, mugwort sewn with lavender into a small pouch kept near the bed, the classic companion to a dream journal. The second is the scryer's wash: practitioners brew mugwort and use the cooled infusion to wash crystal balls, scrying mirrors, and pendulums, the traditional consecration of the seeing tools, made for the tools and never the teacup. A pinch burned over charcoal before a reading rounds out the diviner's trio.

How To Use Mugwort Cut

  1. Sew the dream pillow. Blend mugwort with lavender in a small muslin pouch kept near the pillow, and leave the journal where the morning can reach it.
  2. Wash the seeing tools. Brew a strong infusion, cool it, and wash crystal balls, scrying mirrors, and pendulums, the traditional consecration. Made for the tools, not for drinking; pour out the remainder with thanks.
  3. Burn the reading incense. A pinch over charcoal in a fire-safe dish, in a ventilated space, before card readings or scrying sessions.
  4. Tuck the traveler's sprig. A pinch in the shoe, the glovebox, or the travel bag carries the old road-protection custom along.
  5. Store it sealed, cool and dark; the leaf holds its strength for a year or more.

Pairs Well With

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make mugwort tea with this?

No. This leaf is packaged for spiritual use in pillows, washes, and incense, and is not sold as a food product. Even the traditional scrying wash is brewed for the tools, never the teacup; food-grade mugwort exists elsewhere for those who want it.

What is the Nine Herbs Charm?

An Anglo-Saxon healing charm recorded in the tenth-century Lacnunga, and mugwort opens it, hailed as Una, the oldest of herbs. It is one of the deepest documented pedigrees any Western magical herb can claim.

Why is mugwort named for Artemis?

The genus Artemisia honors the Greek moon goddess, the night huntress, which suits the herb of dreams and night-sight perfectly. The old names rarely miss.

How do I make a dream pillow?

Sew a small muslin pouch, fill it with mugwort and lavender, and keep it near your pillow rather than under your face. Refresh the herbs when the scent fades, and keep a journal within morning's reach.

What is the scrying wash?

The traditional consecration of seeing tools: a strong mugwort infusion, cooled, used to wash crystal balls, scrying mirrors, and pendulums before serious work. Pour the remainder out with thanks when the washing is done.

How long will two ounces last?

A year or more for most dreamers: pillows take a handful, washes a spoonful, incense a pinch. The working pound serves the heavy-rotation divination shelf.

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