Selenite Bracelet 8mm
It fits an approximate 7.25″ wrist
Selenite:
- Aligns with your highest consciousness
- Brings mental clarity and focus
- Helps detach from drama
- Balances emotions
Divine Connections
Affirmation: I am aligned with the Divine. I am a spiritual being of Divine love and Divine light. My spine, bones, tendons, and muscles are healthy, strong, and aligned. I have access to the ancient wisdom stored within me.
Color: reflective milky white
Chakra(s): crown
Astrological sign(s): Cancer
About the stone: Selenite is the form of the mineral gypsum that crystallizes in well-formed crystals. Selenite (gypsum) is a hydrous calcium sulphate that crystallizes in the monoclinic system with crystals being tabular in nature, often exhibiting twinning.
Astrological sign(s): Cancer
Planet(s): the Moon
Mohs scale: 1.5–2
Spiritual uses: Selenite aligns you with a higher consciousness: love. Associated with Selene, the Greek goddess of the moon, this gemstone is a heaven-sent tool that activates your connection with ancient wisdom and knowledge. Use it during meditation to align your awareness with spiritual master teachers, Ascended Masters, angels, and spirit guides. Many archangels are associated with this stone, including Auriel, Gabriel, Metatron, Sandalphon, Seraphiel, Tzaphkiel, and Uriel. It helps you tune into what your angels and guides want you to know.
Emotional uses: Selenite reminds you that you are spiritually, physically, and mentally aligned, so it is easy to keep your emotions in balance. This stone helps you detach from drama and better understand people and situations. Use this stone like a magic wand of love, light, and goodness to help dissipate feelings of inadequacy, jealousy, doubt, fear, or negativity.
Mental uses: Selenite brings mental clarity and helps you maintain focus.
Physical uses: Selenite is an excellent stone for massage therapists, chiropractors, and physical therapists, and it can amplify the benefits of their treatments.
Excerpted from The Essential Guide to Crystals, Minerals, and Stones. (Llewellyn. 2013) by Margaret Ann Lembo