This stone has been valued for millennia. Ancient warriors carried it into battle for courage and to staunch wounds. Medieval magicians believed it could make the bearer invisible or grant the power to control weather. Its red inclusions—iron oxide within green chalcedony—gave rise to legends linking it with sacrifice, martyrdom, and the blood of the earth itself. It has been called heliotrope, meaning “sun-turner,” for the belief that it could reflect the sun’s light.
In practice, bloodstone grounds excess energy and focuses the mind during challenging work. Carry it when you need physical stamina or emotional fortitude. Place it on your altar during protection spells or when working magic that requires deep reserves of strength. Hold it during meditation to connect with your root chakra and anchor yourself in the present moment.
Use bloodstone when you need to stand firm, when fear threatens to overwhelm, or when your body needs reminding of its own resilience. Cleanse it in earth or salt, charge it under the waning moon, and let it teach you the strength that comes from being rooted deep.