Monday Evening: A Time For Smudging And Cleansing

(6:00pm est – promoted by Nightprowlkitty)

cross-posted from The Dream Antilles

Monday evening, January 19, 2009, is the last night of the Bush Administration. This could be a time to exhale and to celebrate having survived eight long, lawless, disgraceful years, a period that will go down in history as the US’s worst administration. But the big party won’t begin until after the Inauguration. We will want to celebrate a hopeful New Beginning rather than the final moments of Bush. So it makes sense, then, that Monday evening should be used to prepare for the New Beginning.

This brief essay is about a traditional way to prepare through cleansing and smudging.

Many North American indigenous traditions purify and set the stage for ceremonies by smudging. Smudging is the simple practice of burning particular plants and of allowing the smoke to purify and clear. You can purify and clear people, places, buildings, and in my view, entire nations and planets. This is mostly a matter of your intentions and having the right kind of smoke.

For example, you might remember when Guatemalan Mayans burned incense to cleanse sacred space after Bush visited a pyramid in their country. And many of you might have personally experienced how the Original Americans burn sage, cedar, and/or sweet grass to cleanse participants before and during ceremonies. These same sacred plants are also used to prepare the Sweat Lodge. Mayans have for many years burned copal so that its smoke might carry prayers to heaven. And the Q’ero, descendants of the Inca, burn palo santo both to cleanse and sanctify. These kinds of smoke have special qualities, and they have been used for centuries especially to purify and cleanse.

Some people have said that the White House should be smudged with sage. This is a good idea. But it’s too limited. After the past eight years, the entire nation deserves to be cleared, cleansed, purified, and sanctified before the new administration begins. Monday night would be a perfect time to do just that.

How do you do it? First you need to make special, sacred smoke. You can light a smudge stick (white sage, sweet grass, cedar and/or lavender) and then, after it catches, blow it out. You don’t want a fire, you want the smoke. Or you can light in a sand filled container or seashell (do not use glass) sage, sweet grass, cedar and/or lavender, and after it flames a bit, blow out the flames, making a nice, dense plume of smoke. Or you can light a charcoal disc (be sure this is in something that is well insulated so you don’t burn yourself) and then drop copal or sage or cedar on top of the burning coal, making a beautiful, thick, continuous cloud of smoke. Or you can light a piece of palo santo (it’s a stick), let it get hot and red, and then blow out its flame to make an aromatic, sweet smelling smoke. Be sure to be safe with this. You want to purify with smoke, you don’t want to burn yourself or destroy your home or start a forest fire.

Then, lift the smoking object high over your head, and let the smoke spread. If you’re in the house, be sure to open the doors and to walk the smoke throughout the house. If you’re outside, hold the smoke up and let the wind carry the smoke. If you want to purify yourself, cup the smoke with your hands and bring it over and around you.

Once you’ve got the smoke, focus on your intention for the smoke to cleanse and clear and purify and offer your thoughts or prayers. These thoughts, your intentions, are also an essential part of smudging. You don’t have to say them aloud. Thinking them is often enough.

What I plan to say goes something like this (it always changes on the spot):

Father Sky, Star Brothers and Sisters, Pachamama, Sweet Mother Earth, thank you for this day and for this wonderful smoke and for cleansing and purifying me, my home, this land, and this country, thank you for teaching us to walk in beauty and in harmony on the earth and in peace with other people and nations, show us the beauty way, and help us as a nation to be compassionate, understanding, courageous, and just. Let it be.

Please join me on Monday evening. Our nation deserves nothing less.

22 comments

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  1. The next one involves trials and imprisonment.

    Thanks for reading.

  2. …I’ll have to do something like this, I think.

    I try not to…wall things off as exceptions, or feel too connected to things that I can’t really…touch.  So it will have to be about my own sense of being oppressed, I think.  And…eh…what do I want in that?  I don’t know yet.

    Neat essay.

  3. I can’t exactly join you, my smoke detector is electronic, not battery-operated, & screeches too easily, but I have some nice Tibetan incense I can burn…also some nice tea candles and a truly lovely alabaster candle holder (it’s shaped sort of like a brandy snifter w/o the stem) that just glows when you put a tea candle inside…just looking at it makes me feel happier.

    My feeling about smudging is, it’s the person’s intent moreso than the actual item being burned, although it would be nice to follow the ancient Native traditions.

    • kj on January 18, 2009 at 18:36

    absolutely there with you, brother.

    • kj on January 18, 2009 at 18:47

    we find ourselves- now- in the space and time of the liminal (threshold).  between what was and what will be.  ‘the space between the space’ as Tom Cowan might say.  

    in my world, this is sacred space and time. a place to breath, to discard no longer useful, binding and/or limiting thoughts and habits and welcome whatever is yet to come/become.

    “live the liminal, babee!”   @;-)

  4. …and so will I.

    • LoE on January 19, 2009 at 01:04

    I’ve got some Alaska red cedar around.  Gift from a visiting delegation of natives.  This is the right time for that.  It’s gonna take awhile to even realize all the ways we’ve been cramped (and what? contaminated? tainted? warped?) by these last 8 years.  (Or more, but that’s a question for another time.)

    This kind of ceremony is very much in order.  Thanks for the reminder.

  5. visited an African nation and danced on stage for a photo-op? After he left they got out the smudge sticks and the shamans and purified the space. I saw on Rachael Maddow where a group is smudging the White House. Since they cannot do it inside they are having a ceramony nearby and burning the sage with shamans helping to drive out the evil. Hope it helps.

    I have smudged my house several times after having bad spiritual guests or even my own demons visiting. It seems to help clear the air on a personal level if nothing else. I am not to superstitious but their is something about a good ritual. Especially one that drives away the bad vibes or spirits. smells great too. So I think Tuesday I’ll get my sticks out and smudge. We could all use a purification after this much negative.    

  6. As youffraita says above:

    My feeling about smudging is, it’s the person’s intent moreso than the actual item being burned

    Intent is the key. The smudging, and associated ritual is  but a means of concentrating attention, both of the shamman, and of the participants. In my personal philosopy, the material world is crystalized from the all pervasive spiritual energies by the application of mental visualization.

    Very important, imo, in that visualization, is the moral intent. I don’t feel that being against something is as important, or effective, as being for some thing. And in that respect davidseth, I applaud you for your intended vocalization.

    Father Sky, Star Brothers and Sisters, Pachamama, Sweet Mother Earth, thank you for this day and for this wonderful smoke and for cleansing and purifying me, my home, this land, and this country, thank you for teaching us to walk in beauty and in harmony on the earth and in peace with other people and nations, show us the beauty way, and help us as a nation to be compassionate, understanding, courageous, and just. Let it be.

    It bears repeating.

    • Metta on January 19, 2009 at 20:30

    this evening. I will eat the treats with intention of honoring the sweetness of life enriched with the idea that we need to redo our efforts to be positive active citizens. I almost feel like I have to forgive myself for letting my spirit become so dark and heavy during the last eight years.  It will be a letting go and looking toward the future celebration.  I have incense but no dried sage or cedar but what I really wish I could find is sweet grass,  Mmmmm…..

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