FAQs
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What is smudging and why do people do it?
Smudging is the practice of burning dried herbs or wood — most commonly white sage, palo santo, cedar, or sweetgrass — to cleanse a space, object, or person of stagnant or negative energy. It originates in Indigenous ceremonial traditions across the Americas. Modern use focuses on intention, mindfulness, and atmospheric cleansing. Research has shown that sage smoke contains antimicrobial compounds that may also reduce airborne bacteria. -
How do I smudge my home with sage?
(1) Open windows for ventilation and to give negative energy an exit. (2) Light the tip of the sage bundle with a match or lighter, let it flame for 5–10 seconds, then blow it out so it's producing steady smoke (not flame). (3) Start at your front door and move clockwise through every room, waving the smoke into corners, across doorways, around windows. (4) Set an intention aloud or silently as you move. (5) Extinguish in sand, soil, or a fireproof dish — never water. -
What's the difference between white sage and palo santo?
White sage is stronger and more deeply cleansing — used for clearing heavy, stagnant, or negative energy after arguments, illness, emotional events, or when moving into a new space. Smells earthy and herbaceous. Palo santo ("holy wood") is gentler, grounding, and uplifting — used to invite positive energy and create a calm, focused atmosphere rather than deep cleansing. Smells sweet and woody with citrus undertones. Many people use sage first (clear), then palo santo (invite). -
How do I light palo santo wood correctly?
Palo santo is harder to light than sage. Angle the stick downward at 45° and hold a flame to the tip for 15–30 seconds until an ember catches. Blow gently to encourage the ember, then let the flame go out so it's smoldering. Palo santo typically self-extinguishes after 30–60 seconds of smoke — this is normal. Relight as needed. Store the stick in a fireproof dish between uses. -
Is it safe to smudge around kids and pets?
Smudge smoke is denser than incense smoke and can irritate sensitive lungs. Move pets and small children to another well-ventilated area during smudging, and air out the room for 30+ minutes after before they return. Birds are extremely sensitive — never smudge in the same part of the house as a bird. Avoid smudging near anyone with asthma or respiratory conditions. Smoke-free alternatives include essential-oil sage sprays and diffusing sage-profile oils.
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How often should I smudge my home?
Depends on intent. Regular maintenance: once a month, or at the new moon or full moon for ritual alignment. Situational: after arguments, illness, a breakup, visits from difficult people, or when moving into a new space. Daily practice: brief palo santo smudge for morning intention-setting or evening wind-down. Trust your intuition — if a space feels heavy or off, that's usually the signal. -
Is your sage ethically sourced?
Yes. Aroma Paradise sources white sage from ethical farms that cultivate rather than wild-harvest, which matters because wild white sage has been over-harvested in California and is protected in many indigenous territories. We also partner with palo santo suppliers who use naturally-fallen wood (never cut from live trees) from certified sustainable Peruvian and Ecuadorian forests — palo santo takes 40+ years to mature and sustainability is critical to the tree's future. -
Can I smudge without smoke? Are there alternatives?
Yes — smoke-free energetic cleansing has grown in popularity for households with asthma, pets, or fire-safety concerns. Options: sage or palo santo essential-oil sprays (we sell cleansing water sprays), sound cleansing with bells or singing bowls, selenite wands passed through the space, or salt-bowl cleansing (sea salt in corners absorbs energy). The intention matters more than the specific medium. -
How do I extinguish and store sage and palo santo safely?
Press the burning tip into dry sand, soil, or a fireproof abalone shell until the ember is fully out — no glow, no smoke. Never use water (ruins the stick) and never blow it out (can scatter embers). Wait 1 minute, confirm no glow remains. Store in a cool dry place away from humidity and heat — ideally in a sealed glass jar or the original packaging. Dried herbs and wood stay potent for 3–5+ years when stored properly. -
What should I do with the ash after smudging?
Traditionally, the ash is considered to hold the energy you've cleared and should be returned to the earth — bury it outside, scatter it in a garden, or pour it into a potted plant. Some practitioners keep the ash in a dedicated jar for ritual use. At minimum, dispose of cold ash in an outdoor trash bin — not indoors. Confirm the ash is fully cold before disposal (several hours after extinguishment).