DIY healing wand

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Everyone, everywhere, who suffers from chronic pain would love to have a magic wand that they could abracadabra their pain away. At least, I assume so, which is possibly overreach… but I doubt it.

Anyway – the idea of making myself a magic wand has been simmering in the backburners of my brain for some time now. A lovely friend of ours recently gifted the family farm two handmade walking sticks and holding the timber in my hands made the wand take a forward leap out of my memory-shadows and into my To Do List.

Moreover, the Universe was obviously keen for me to have a go, because, while I was doing my reading rounds late last year through Blog-Land, I came across a post that gave me some extra incentives and ideas:

Mindfulness is key to calmness presently. | Gray Summers

Gray, the author, uses a ‘staff’ made of timber (and decorated with beads and clay creations) as a focal point during meditation time. As Gray writes, such a staff “is a good focal piece to simply study while in Mindful thought. You can move the pieces and string, leather braids, etc. into various shape forms and patterns. Tactile (touch), alongside smell and a piece of music to listen to are my favorite senses to use when being Mindful.”

OK, OK, Universe – I get it – it’s time for me to get crafty and make that Magical Healing Wand that’s been lingering in my peripheral vision.

I did a brief bit of research about what to do and then got started – enjoying the process without concerning myself too much about the outcome.

Here’s what I did:

  • I lit a fragrant candle and spent a few minutes sitting in the living room looking into the garden, imagining myself healing, slowing my breath and sending love into the back yard.
  • With intentionality and care, I walked through the garden, searching for a stick that felt right in my hands and strong enough to handle my creative interventions (the one that I liked had a gentle curve in it, and when I picked it up and turned it over, it had a torn patch in the bark – a scar – that seemed fitting).
  • Following intuition rather than rules, I looked to my craft supplies for items that felt calming and healing, greens and browns felt right in the moment… fabric leaves, which sounds unnatural but reminded me of healing, as did a toy butterfly ring, and a broken floral brooch.
  • I used brown twine to tie my objects into place, and some ombre-green wool to decorate one end.
  • I tucked a found feather into the wool, it’s green and gold color a perfect fit.
  • Going a bit further afield, I found some blobs of kids’ clay, and although they were very dry, I coxed them into a circle and a heart and air-dried them into amulets (the heart broke – read into that what you will)… they were too heavy and fragile though, and didn’t make it onto the wand but it was a nice tactile excursion.
  • Throughout the process, I imagined healing words floating around me and listened to my Healing Music for Migraines playlist on Spotify (here).

Here’s what my “magic wand” looks like:

a picture of the wand with it's fake leaves, buttons and beads, laid on a black table

*

OK, so if you’re a Harry Potter fan, then even a plain stick has more Hermoine Granger vibes than what I’ve got going… my approach has some slight ‘Shaman’ vibes… but is mostly saying “kiddy-art” to me (see more here)… and yet – I’m loving it anyway… it gives me the impression that I can boppity-boop my troubles away with some good-witch Glinda moves… or that it might fly off on its own, with its butterfly-leaf-wings, and hover nearby, waiting for when I need it.

I’ve also recently discovered there is such a thing as a ‘smudging feather fan’ which is used to push cleansing sage-smoke around a room… something I have never done, but am curious to try. I like the idea of combining the elements of fire and air into a single event… hmmm… something to think about.

[Oh… and I there was a wonderful feather fan carried by the Buddhist monks on their Walk for Peace that was created from feathers found along the roadside – read more here]

Apologies if my craft project accidentally steps on indigenous toes, it’s absolutely not my intention to misappropriate your centuries old healing methods… I merely hope to heal… and I’m prepared to experiment, gently and respectfully, with any ways that might work for me.

If this all feels a bit ‘pagan’ to you – apologies too – but I guess I feel that if I’m not doing anything harmful to others, and I don’t start venerating my stick, or use it to put bad ju-ju on others, then it’s ok to use the object as a means of literally “handling” my pain…

And now that I’ve apologized profusely for a craft project, I’m off to meditate and journal what it is about “Good Girl” me that feels the need to always over-apologize for being my authentic, curious, creative, self…!

Take care taking care, mindfully, Linda x

*

PS – the Pexels picture that I chose from the image database to headline this post, perfectly contains the sense of green-garden-freshness, care-free-youthfulness, and upright-active-wellness that healing looks like to me, especially in the moment I was making “my stick”… and if you zoom in, the kid is wearing a t-shirt that says “don’t ask me” – which seems super quirky and cool – and a lot like how I feel when I wonder about what the answer to healing is!!


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25 responses to “DIY healing wand”

  1. ghostmmnc Avatar

    I like that you crafted a healing wand. I like the things with meaning you added to it, too. With your positive thoughts I’m sure there was a bit of healing occurring already. πŸ™‚

    Like

  2. Edward Ortiz Avatar

    It looks pretty good, Linda.

    Like

  3. festo_sanjo Avatar

    The need to apologize is in itself a self sabotaging behavior, which implies the nervous system was once programmed to be observant of how people are gonna criticize what we bring to the table. I think we can heal by our minds.

    Like

  4. mitchteemley Avatar

    Hi Linda. I sincerely appreciate your blog. Just wanted to let you know why I recently took you out of the notification loop. My email inbox fills up with nearly 1,000 notices every day, so I have to limit it to notifications from those who regularly visit my blog. Good to see you back again, and thank you for being understanding!

    Like

  5. The Oceanside Animals Avatar

    Java Bean: “Ayyy, a healing wand! I think our Dada’s cleric character in Baldur’s Gate 3 has one of those …”

    Like

  6. Spark of Inspiration Avatar
    Spark of Inspiration

    Fabulous idea. Everything is visual in our minds, right. In fact, you’ll laugh at this, it’s gone viral, people making a star wand, putting credit card in it, then when they go to purchase things, using this wand as if they are a Fairy!! LOL… the things people come up with. It is funny. Look it up.

    Like

  7. Sambuca (βœΏβ— β€Ώβ— ) Avatar

    Adore Harry Potter, and even though I side with the Weaseleys the Sorting mHat put me in Slytherin, to back then me, this was awesome, but now I think it’s hilarious!! And I consider myself to be more Ravenclaw bc I’m quite brill. I love your wand!!! πŸ˜€

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I could never make up my mind which house I wanted to belong to, but online quizzes said I was Ravenclaw… now if I could just be brill enough to get my wand to work… 🀣

      Like

      1. Experience Film Avatar

        Ravenclawβ˜”οΈπŸ©΅

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          YES! πŸ‘πŸ₯³

          Liked by 1 person

  8. daylerogers Avatar

    There’s nothing pagan about this–it’s a craft that brings peace to your heart and mind. Your brilliance comes from making the time to craft an object that appeals to you in a healing way–something you put together, making not only the time to do it, but the energy to choose what mattered. I think we limit ourselves when we ignore nature and how it soothes us. This actually reminds me a bit of Aaron’s staff that budded in Numbers 17.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      ohhh I love the idea of a budding staff… Nature is the source of so much wonder in my life, so it makes sense to me to turn there for healing help! xox

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Dana at Regular Girl Devos Avatar

    I enjoy your creativity, Linda! (and I am thankful you are not putting bad ju-ju on anyone!)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I’m too busy shielding myself from life’s crazy-@$$ ju-ju at the moment, I don’t have the time or inclination to put it on anyone else! 🀣

      Liked by 1 person

  10. richardbist Avatar

    This is a wonderful idea, Linda. I like the implication of natural magic, natural healing. As you noted in a previous post, the mind is a powerful tool and can help us on our path to healing…physically, mentally, and emotionally.

    Your healing wand is lovely and looks like it belongs in fairy-land! I hope it brings you the magic you need, my friend.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      so far so good! I’ve been migraine free the last few days, so perhaps there’s power in my gnarly branch… or in my mindset… I’ll take it either way! 🌟✨⭐

      Liked by 1 person

  11. Ephemeral Encounters Avatar

    Great idea Linda!
    Your wand looks fab πŸ€—

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      thank you – ⭐✨🌟 – it’s kept the migraines away so far this week!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Ephemeral Encounters Avatar

        So glad to hear that πŸ€—πŸ€—πŸ€—

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          Hope the rest of your week is wonderful too – I’ll wave my wand in your direction to help you out! πŸ€£πŸ’•

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Ephemeral Encounters Avatar

            Linda πŸ’– thank you !

            Like

  12. Info-Man Avatar

    Wow! Your healing band is so cool and being a HP fan makes me want to make one , I will definitely try to make one πŸ˜‰.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yay! I hope it works it’s magic for you πŸͺ„βœ¨

      Liked by 1 person

  13. Mary K. Doyle Avatar

    It could work, Linda. We have the power within to heal ourselves. Calm, deep breathing, positivity, intention. Nothing to lose.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      That’s what I have come to believe – it’s not a cure, but it all helps calm your nervous system down and put you in the best place with the best chance to heal βœ¨πŸ’›

      Liked by 1 person

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