Are you ready to cleanse, purify, change, and cure your body and spirit? Here are the tools to achieve your spiritual goals, right in your own home! This amazing book adapts the most effective rituals of the ages, from ancient yoga practices, Native American smudging and medicine wheels, and Balinese traditions, to Kabbalistic protection ceremonies, feng shui, candle magic, and more. Banish stress and attract love, soothe yourself, or give yourself energy. Cleanse and protect your home, free yourself from destructive or dependent relationships, and release negative thoughts. Using these rituals, give blessings to conceptions, births, marriages, funerals, bring your family closer together, and help it adjust to the healing seasonal rhythms of the years. All the rituals are complete with simple--and brief--step-by-step instructions. This intensely practical handbook is a distillation of some of the finest and most useful rituals ever devised, and an invaluable tool to refer to over a lifetime. Perform these sacred ceremonies, share them with loved ones, and become more in touch with the divine!
Jane Alexander is a UK-based journalist and author of over twenty non-fiction titles in the fields of wellbeing, natural health and Mind Body Spirit. She has monthly columns in several UK magazines, often appears on television and radio and is quoted in the press as an expert on natural health and alternative spirituality. She has also ghosted several books for celebrity authors.
Jane's blog, Diary of a Desperate Exmoor Woman (http://exmoorjane.blogspot.com) has a large and enthusiastic following and was shortlisted for the Author Blog Awards. She tweets as @exmoorjane and is active on social media platforms.
Jane grew up in a family which was fascinated by natural forms of wellbeing and the arcane. She learned tarot and yoga from the age of seven and went on to study Kabbalah, herbalism, homeopathy and flower remedies from her teens. She has also trained in past life therapy, shamanism and SHEN.
Jane has a very down-to-earth and pragmatic approach to spirituality and wellbeing. She insists she is no "guru" (despite often being given the label). 'I'm afraid I don't always practice what I preach,' she admits ruefully. 'We live in a busy, crazy world and few people have the time to devote their lives to perfection. So don't beat yourself up. I think making even small changes, little shifts, can make a huge difference. Do what you can and dump the guilt.'
Jane is married (to beer writer Adrian Tierney-Jones, editor of 1001 Beers you Must Taste Before you Die) with a young son and two ridiculous dogs.
They live on Exmoor, a wild and beautiful part of the UK, a place of myth, magic and brooding intensity - an inspiration for her work.
Jane is now turning her hand to writing teen fiction - calling on her knowledge of the arcane and a very clear memory of being sixteen. Her novels blend supernatural romance, horror and edgy realism.
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