ALTAR
Coarse kosher sea salt crystals
Coarse Sea Salt (Bulk, for Cl…
Various · ~$12

For the threshold that needs a line of salt

Coarse Sea Salt (Bulk, for Cleansing)

Various · ~$12

"Kosher salt cleanses too. Folk Catholic kitchen tradition."

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Sinderella's note

Coarse sea salt is the cheapest spiritual technology after a candle, my creature. A small dish on the windowsill. A line across a doorway. A handful in the bath. Folk Catholic kitchen tradition since *forever.* Buy the cheap bulk bag — kosher salt works fine. Sinderella keeps a small wooden bowl of it on the kitchen counter at all times.

The long version

Coarse sea salt — kosher salt, Mediterranean sea salt, Maldon, any unrefined unbleached salt with visible crystals — is one of the oldest spiritual cleansing tools across nearly every folk tradition. Folk Catholic and Italian-American practice keeps it on the kitchen counter (a small wooden bowl, never plastic), in a small bowl by the front door (the threshold protection), and in the bath water (a small handful, dissolves slowly). The folk uses are dense and overlapping: sprinkle salt across a threshold to keep unwelcome energy out, leave a small bowl of salt in a corner of a bedroom that's been heavy, dissolve a handful in bathwater for a spiritual reset, throw a pinch over the left shoulder when you spill some (folk-Catholic absorption of the broken moment), keep a small dish near a saint candle to *catch* whatever the candle is processing. The *cheap bulk* version (a 5-lb bag at any Amazon Fresh or grocery delivery) is the right buy — folk practice does not want gourmet finishing salt; it wants *ordinary working salt* with intact crystal structure. Sinderella keeps a small wooden bowl of it on the kitchen counter at all times — refilled monthly, the old salt thrown into running water (the Atlantic, when she's at the boardwalk; cold tap water otherwise) with thanks. Saint Brigid (the salt-keeper) for the practice. Saint Joseph for the household it protects.

"Go on. Raise some hell. Come home in one piece."

— Sinderella · the folding table