Intention

Protection

Protection is a practice before it is a feeling — the tradition gathers stones, smoke and scent around the work of holding boundaries and staying put.

Protection is one of the oldest intentions in the catalogue of human practice. Every culture has a word for it, and every culture has gathered objects around it. The word itself comes from the Latin protegere — to cover in front, to shield what is behind. It is a boundary word, a staying word.

The felt experience of protection is particular: not the absence of difficulty but the presence of a line you have decided not to cross. The tradition has spent centuries learning that this line requires maintenance — that boundaries need cues, and cues need objects.

In the stone tradition, the darker the stone the more central its place here. Black tourmaline, obsidian, smoky quartz, onyx, shungite — these are the companions the practice reaches for. Smoky quartz sits at the root chakra in the yogic map; black tourmaline has a centuries-long reputation in European lapidary for being the stone that holds the line. Onyx, with its banded black and white, carries a Roman history of signet rings and firm intention.

In scent, the tradition is older and wider. Rosemary for memory and boundary. Cedarwood for rootedness. Sage and frankincense for the ritual of clearing. Palo santo, used carefully, with respect for the wood's origins.

The tradition's honest advice: protection does not come from owning the object. It comes from the practice the object keeps in view. Choose one stone, one scent. Place it where you will see it through the day. When your eye finds it, let the finding be a breath and a return — I am here, this is my line. The repetition is the practice. The object holds the note.

Below: the catalogue's gathering for protection — stones, incenses, oils and objects for the boundary work that belongs to everyone.

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