Category Archives: household hacks

Front Doors are for Warding

Come along for the party and check out the rest of the posts!!

I’ve written a little bit about greener cleaning from time to time, and I’ve talked about blessing and cleansing the home as well, and creating magical surroundings (I especially love the evolution of my favorite all-purpose cleaner that I can follow in my blog posts). But for today’s blog party theme, I thought I’d talk about the correspondences of our homes themselves, and how that carries over into a home-based magical practice.

Now, not every home will have all of these specific locations as rooms, or maybe even at all….or perhaps your family calls it something else, or you don’t use what the room was designed for as its actual purpose.  That is perfectly acceptable, instead of getting hung up on the name of the space or the item, consider the purpose of that place.  When figuring out what to do with it, what one is actually using it for is more important than what it is labeled as on the blueprints!

  • Doors–The door functions as the gatekeeper of your home.  Its purpose is to let in whom we want, and anchor protection for whom we want to keep out of our home.  The front door, in particular, acts as our formal warning or invitation to the world, while the back door acts as a place of retreat or escape, and the gateway to our outdoor sanctuaries (and often the work we need to do there).
  • Entry way/Foyer–The entryway of your home is the welcome mat for you, your family and friends.  Its purpose is to make those that enter feel safe and soothed.
  • Living Room–The living room (or family room, if your home has a more formal living room) is primarily a place for unwinding relaxation and entertainment…but its a bit of a multipurpose space, which can play a number of roles for a family.  Its purpose is to make those that are in the space feel comfortable, relaxed, and engaged with one another.
  • Kitchen & Dining Room/Area–The kitchen’s role is to sustain and nourish the home, and its inhabitants.  It is a place where the mood and the tone for the day to day routine can be set (or reset) for everyone in the home.  This role is contiguous with that of the dining area.  This space is one of communication and communion (which, in the non-religious sense, just means sharing).
  • Study/Office–The study or office space (whether it be a room, or just a corner desk, or the occasional overtaking of the kitchen table) is the place for the business of those in the home.  In a home with children, that business might be school work, for an adult it might be paying the bills and sending e-mails to the family.
  • Bedrooms–The bedroom is a place of rejuvenating relaxation, healing, and turning in towards our inner selves.  Ideally, it should act as a sanctum of ourselves where we can feel safe and whole.
  • Bathrooms–The bathroom is a place of purification and cleansing.  It is a retreat from the world, and a place where we can be alone in comfort and luxury or reflection and relaxation.
  • Hallways–While an oft forgotten portion of the home, the hallway (if you have one) is a place of connection and separation.  The hallway can be a space that allows us to disengage ourselves from one space and sort of reset our minds as we transit to another area, and another task in the home.
  • Floor–The floor is probably one of the most sacred places in our home–it is the place were we meet and touch the earth.  The floors of our home are what grounds us to the rest of the world, and their textures and colors aren’t just a matter of functionality, but also of  the feeling and the tone of a space.
  • Windows–Windows are for watchful protection–they are the eyes of the home.  They act as both protection and invitation.  Windows can be opened to let in a refreshing breeze, and closed to keep out a winter chill, or they can be covered to keep out prying eyes, and uncovered to allow us to be part of the world.
  • Ceiling–The ceiling (and this includes the airspace between our heads and the ceiling) is a place of expansion.  How much space we perceive exists “up there” (whether that is mathematically accurate or not) can be a reflection of how much space we have mentally and spiritually to expand in to.
  • Porch/Patio/Balcony–These areas of the home act as an extension of the home into the outside, and a space of the home to invite the outside in.  They can be a place of natural rejuvenation and communion with the elements as they appear in nature, and they can be a place of entertainment and communication and play.

When choosing how to decorate our homes as a reflection of ourselves and the business and pleasure we plan to engage in while in our home, the purpose of each space and the mood we want it to impart is an important long-term consideration to maximizing the spiritual potential of our homes. We can match the use of each space to the correspondences for the qualities we desire, and use them to help choose colors, textures, patterns, and objects that will give a greater depth to our experiences in each space.  Most importantly, we can look at our individual homes, and add (or subtract) and rearrange what feelings we think the spaces of our homes should evoke…which means you can take my list and make your own if you you disagree!  The most important thing to remember…

If you sleep on it, make it up
If you wear it, hang it up
If you drop it, pick it up
If you eat out of it, put it in the sink
If you step in it, wipe it off
If you open it, close it
If you empty it, fill it back up
If it rings, answer it
If it howls, feed it
If it cries, love it

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Wordless Wednesday: Vesta Making

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7 Practical Things I’ve Learned From Social Media

1.  How to DIY Fruit Water (via Facebook, originally posted @ The Yummy Life) 

This is probably my favorite discovery via social media.  I love water, but sometimes…it gets boring.  Add some fruit, maybe even some veggies or herbs, infuse in the fridge, and voila! Some of my favorite variations so far, strawberry with chamomile, orange with mint, and orange with hibiscus and ginger.  For me, this is a great way to get the kids to eat oranges–for some reason they aren’t fans of the fruit itself, and since I’m not a fan of store-bought juices, this is a great way to sneak some of the fruits and veggies into their diet that I couldn’t otherwise get them to consume.

And I’ve found quite a few great recipe ideas this way–Overnight Oatmeal, Spicy Guinness Mustard, P.F. Chang-style Lettuce Wraps, and this delicious looking little 4 ingredient recipe for Meyer Lemon Sorbet that I found on my pinterest today.  Anything you could possibly want to eat is probably posted online already.  Maybe just a Facebook update or Pinterest pin away.

2.  (Almost) Perpetual Green Onions…and other veggies from kitchen scraps (Facebook and assorted blogs)

Most of us probably know that you can grow a carrot top by placing it in a cup of water.  But how many of us would have thought to regrow our green onions that way?  Or to root and replant celery?  How about a pineapple?  Or an avocado (though it can take 7-15 years to fruit, assuming you are even in the right climate)? There’s also ginger, garlic, potatoes and sweet potatoes, that awesome hydroponic lettuce with the roots attached (this is my favorite lettuce of all time, when I can justify the expense…being able to grow it again in my window sill is *squee!!*), and beets and turnips and radishes, etc.  Plus, if you shop at the farmers market, you have a better chance at getting non-hybrid varieties (just ask, they’ll be happy to tell you!) and can save the seeds to plant in your own garden.

3.  The Secret Produce Code (Facebook)

The premise is that the little sticker on your produce can tell you how your fruits and veggies were grown.  The PLU code (Price Look Up–its official name) is a defined list of codes for produce by the International Federation of Produce Standards, and numbering convention goes like this:

4 numbers=conventionally grown
5 numbers starting with an 8=GMO
5 numbers starting with a 9=organic

This one is actually a bit of a mixed bag. These codes are a matter of convenience for the store, not the consumer.  In all technicality, its true.  But in practice, its not…at least with regard to identifying GMOs.

4. Underwater Viewfinder=beach fun for kids (pinterest)

Egg Carton Mancala

I originally came across the idea for this on pinterest, though I’m not entirely sure if I pinned the original or not.  Either way, the kids and I made our own, and much fun ensued.  And there are zillions of other ideas for cheap or low-tech crafts and toys for kids to be found in blogs, on pinterest, etc.  Like this list of kid friendly experiments.  One of my favorite finds (that I still haven’t tried yet) was one that I first ran across from the TED videos…Squishy Circuits–a way to teach circuits to preschoolers, and its made from homemade play dough recipes!

5.  Rediscovering Lost Crafts (youtube, ravelry, pinterest, assorted blogs)

Ever hear of a Dorset Button?  How about chicken-scratch?  Victorian-era hair jewelry?  Pine Burr quilt pattern?  The web has become a treasure trove for reclaiming and rediscovering lost and obscure crafts.  And even the not-so-lost-and-obscure crafts.  I can’t even begin to tell you how many times my grandmother tried to teach me to crochet while I was growing up…but after watching a tutorial on Tunisian Crochet on youtube a couple years ago and checking out a couple of tutorials (including this one) and I’ve been crocheting up a storm ever since (interesting fact: during the Victorian era, what is now called Tunisian crochet was used in winter clothing).

6.  Just Say No to Commercial Cleansers! (pinterest, facebook, assorted blogs)

This is a topic I’ve written about on occasion, though its been a while.  But I continuously run across  some great ideas for greener (environmentally and pocket-book wise) cleaning or some twists on an old favorite.  From laundry soap, to dishwasher detergent, to orange vinegar cleaning spray, there is an environmentally and economically friendlier replacement just a Google search away!

Along with commercial cleansers around the home come tons of ways to replace commercial cleansers of your body.  From going No ‘Poo to DIY facials, the web seems to breed DIY beauty tips like Tribbles on Star Trek (yes, I am that much of a nerd)…even on my own blog.

7. You can reuse, DIY, upcycle…just about anything (all over the web)

Crochet hooks from sticks?  Play kitchen from an old TV cabinet?  Innovative storage for board games AND wall art, simultaneously?  Turning cans into an adorable organizer? Make a yarn political statement on reproductive rights for your congressman?  I’ve run across all these and more in my social media feeds…from the adorably whimsical to the practical to the outright bizarre.  Some of them I’d love to do, if I had the need and the stuff to do it with, and some of it, I just kind of stare in awed wonder of creative superiority.  Every once in a while, I just stare.


Household Hacks: Coffee Cans

If you’ve been reading my blog for a while, you might know that we try to avoid disposable plastics in our home. This, of course, means that we end up with lots and lots of glass bottles, jars, milk cartons (from Daddy-Man’s creamer) and cans… particularly coffee cans (Daddy-Man is addicted). Rather than see them go into the waste stream (or even the recycling stream), we often try to find ways to re-use them.

Now, just take it to the beach!

Here are some things you can do with coffee cans:

Make an underwater viewfinder!
Vintage cooking: Make bread in a coffee can
Coffee Can Ice Cream
A Toad House for the Garden (and pest control!)
Punched Lanterns
Storage Containers (because you can never have too many!)
Coffee Can Bird Feeder
Coffee Can Bank (or a reward jar)
Bumblebee Birdhouse from a Coffee Can
Make your own (really) old-school Pinhole Camera
Decorate and combine with a few packs of bamboo skewers from the dollar store for a knife storage container
Storage Cubby–I totally want this for my yarn stash!
Coffee Can Drum
Coffee Can Stilts (anyone else remember doing this as a kid?!?!)

Other Can Crafts & Activities:
Tuna Can Pincushion
Family Totem Pole (I love this!)
Wishing Well


Couch Revolution

Do we really need a couch?

Intellectually, I know the answer to this…

…I just don’t actually know anyone that doesn’t have a couch.

Sure, I know that there are people on the internet that have living rooms without couches (like this one, or this one, or this one, or this one, or this one), and even this designer says that a couch can be unnecessary.  Sure, I even know that there are quite a few cultures where couches aren’t the norm.  But, for this culture, where we are already not the norm, it seems in this every-house-a-couch society that we might actually be pushing it with this one.

Plus, I have yet to mention to the hubby the idea of “Maybe we don’t really need a couch, babe.”

Somehow, I see that going over like a lead balloon.

When we moved out of our apartment last year (11 months ago, to be exact), we got rid of all of our furniture (too expensive to move and cheaper to pick up at thrift stores, yard sales, craigslist, freecycle, etc) and embarked on a year of staying with relatives, in corporate housing, in hotels and with friends.  Finally, the hubby got a permanent position instead of a contractor job, and we have now moved into our own place (part of the reason for my absence).

So, here we are, in our own place again, but with almost no furniture (and no appliances…I’m considering going microwave free too, but that doesn’t seem as unusual–even people without microwaves seem to have couches).

Granted, we’ve only been here couchless for a few  days…but I think I like it.  There is a ton of floor space for the kids to play, and no couch for all sorts of things to roll under (if you’ve ever found a  two week-old half-eaten apple under a couch, you know its not pretty).  And no couch doesn’t mean no comfy loungy soul-sucking relaxing seating (WTB)…

…maybe that will sell the hubby on going couchless.


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