Sometimes in the process of your hoodoo work - either as a conjurer or as a client - you're going to need to buy graveyard dirt.
The Best Dirt
Dirt,
like herbs, stones, colors and all the rest of the correspondences out
there modern occultists use, has associations. There is dirt that good
for peace-tricks (hoodoo sometimes calls a spell a "trick"), some that's
good for getting rid of people, some that's good for healing powder,
and some that are good for goofer dust (a type of cursing that is
supposed to result in the death of the one crossed).
How do you know what is what? It's simple: figure out who is buried in it. :)
The
fact is, graveyard dirt as an ingredient for hoodoo is based
extensively in ancestor reverence. According to folklore, a person
stores their knowledge in their bones. Or rather, in their blood, but it
accumulates in the bones.
So, knowledge and power is in the
blood. This means that you can call on any of your ancestors at any
time, and ask them for their help with something, because you share the
same blood. You call on your Auntie who was a nurse in a war for help
with healing, your Granddad who worked on the railroads for protection
in travel, and your dear old dad, the world's greatest fisherman, when
you need help getting something hooked on that line on your company
fishing trip. No problem. But what if you don't know of any ancestors
with the kind of know-how or mojo you need?
Well, the answer is simple. You use somebody else's ancestor.
According
to hoodoo lore, as a body decomposes in a grave, its knowledge and mojo
passes into the soil it is buried in. Thus, you can garner some of that
mojo along with the physical component of the soil itself. It is a
means of asking for the help of an ancestor that doesn't belong to you
by blood.
But you can't just scoop some up, and then expect to
get something good out of it. Like all things in magic, there is an
exchange, and it has to be done properly.
Buying Dirt
"Buying
Dirt" does not mean "going to a website or shop and purchasing little
packets of graveyard dirt," though you can find some places that sell
them. There's no mojo in those, I'm sorry to say - even if they did
properly buy it at the graveyard, the mojo that's in it is for the
person who did so, not you.
That said, buying graveyard dirt is pretty easy. You'll need a little container to store dirt in, something to dig with and two nice shiny (and clean!) silver coins
(if in the U.S., you're talking dimes - preferably Mercury's Head
dimes, because of associations with that psychopomp, or dimes minted on a Leap Year). If you want, bring
along a little bit of whiskey, wine, beer or some other good libation, particularly if you know they liked that drink.
At
this point, go to your grave. I was taught to pop the dimes in my mouth
(see why you want them to be clean?) while I dug, but that's not
ubiquitous to all of hoodoo. If you brought a libation, you take a swig
of that liquid, and then pop the dimes in your mouth.
Dig up an
amount of the dirt. Don't get greedy - no more than the amount that
would fill both cupped hands, at most. Put it in the container, then
lean over the hole you made and spit the dimes into the hole, then cover
them up with the soil that's left behind. Try and cover the hole up as
best you can - remember, the key is respect here, so don't leave the
source of your new mojo's grave looking like it's been chewed by moths.
If you brought libations, pour a little extra libation, drink a quick
toast, and put your gravedirt away.
A Word of Warning:
This can be considered defacement of a grave, which is illegal. Also,
people can ask some awkward questions of you if they see you just
digging up some dirt to take home with you. So, if you don't have the
option to do this in privacy (like at night), there is another way, but
it'll cost you a little bit.
Stop by a shop and pick up a nice
potted plant of flowers to take with you. Then, not only will you be
disguising the fact that you're digging up and keeping soil, but you'll
also be beautifying the grave, which is an excellent and respectful
thing to do. Just save the container the plant came in when you pull the
plant out, pile your dirt next to the hole, drop the coins in all
sneaky-like, then put the plant in after it, and scoop the dirt into the
now-empty pot it came in. Easy, and pretty.
Storing Dirt
Graveyard
dirt should be stored in an air-tight container. Make sure to label it,
though do so in a way that you know what you got it for. You now have
an excellent ingredient used in traditional hoodoo, ready for use in
making powders and mojo bags.
Hey Crossroads Joe - I saw your blog listed on Spanish Moss's blog and like this post and the one on money magicke and am going to reblog them if that is ok with you. Lee / Shawnus
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