Intention

Healing & Wellbeing

The catalogue's shelf for tending to yourself — stones, scents and slow objects tradition gathers around the work of healing and returning to wholeness.

Healing is a word the old languages understood differently. The Old English hǣlan meant to make whole — not the same as to cure, which concerns itself with illness. To heal was to restore something to its proper shape. The distinction matters.

This page is about that work: tending, returning, putting back together. The tradition holds that certain objects mark territory for it — not because they do the work, but because they give the work a place to live.

Green stones have spent the longest time in this company. The heart chakra's palette — malachite, chrysocolla, amazonite, lepidolite — tradition links with gentleness, release, the slow unfurling that follows a hard season. Rose quartz belongs here too: the stone of the tender thing, of self-regard without apology.

In the scent register, the tradition turns toward clarity and warmth together. Eucalyptus and bergamot open the air. Sweet orange and frankincense soften it. Chamomile and rose are the evening half of the shelf — the ones that ask the body to exhale before sleep.

The tradition's quiet advice for this work: begin with one object, one scent, one small repeated act. Let it be a cue rather than a cure. A stone on the bedside table that holds the intention I am worth tending. A candle lit at the same hour as a gesture toward yourself. The practice is yours. The object keeps it in view.

Below: the catalogue's gathering for healing and wellbeing — stones, oils, candles and ritual objects, each chosen to mark the quiet work of returning to whole.

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