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Black Salt 7 oz
Black Salt 7 oz
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History of Black Salt in Witchcraft
Black salt isn’t a culinary thing in this context — it’s a witch’s tool, not table seasoning. Its exact origin is murky, but it’s deeply rooted in folk magic, Hoodoo, and various traditional witchcraft practices. It’s not “Wiccan” by default — it existed long before modern witchcraft got commercial.
It was (and still is) used for protection, banishing, and warding. Historically, witches made it from scrapings of cast iron cauldrons, ashes from ritual fires, salt, and sometimes grave dirt or charcoal — all chosen for their symbolic and energetic weight.
The black color? It’s not aesthetic — it represents power, void, destruction, and repulsion. Not for blessing. Not for love. This is defensive and aggressive magic.
How to Use Black Salt
Use it when you want something gone, blocked, or kept out. Here’s how:
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Warding: Sprinkle it across doorways, windowsills, or around your home to keep out bad energy, spirits, or unwanted people.
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Banishing: Use in spells, jars, or rituals to drive out toxic energy, entities, or people. Combine with burning herbs or bury the remains.
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Protection: Carry a pinch in a pouch, shoe, or pocket when entering hostile environments or dealing with psychic attacks.
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Hex Breaking: Mix it with other uncrossing herbs or oils. Dispose of it away from your property.
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Cursing (yes, some do): Blend into a curse mix to lock in negative intent or bury on someone’s property to “send it home.”
Important: Always dispose of used black salt away from your home — at a crossroads, in running water, or by burying far off. It holds what it pulls in.
7 oz glass jar
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