Jade Gemstone
Jade is a special and historical stone that is believed to promote wisdom, peace, and balance. Jade is the symbol of love. It is a green mineral rock.
The green jade gemstone is derived from the silicate minerals nephrite and jadeite; both of them are rich in calcium, magnesium, sodium, and aluminum. Jade can be used to bring money into your life.
Healing Properties of Jade
Jade is a protective stone, It guards us against accident and misfortune.
It is very helpful for Heart, immune system, Nervous system, kidneys, and hair.
The lavender jade helps you to achieve self-control.
Problems with bones and joints are improved with jade stone.
When the person wear it as jewelry and when it touches the skin of the wearer it improves the heart chakra.
Unlike some other minerals, jade creates no strong rush of energy. This makes its energy very different from other popular feng shui stones, such as pyrite or hematite. The message of jade is "Love and Accept Yourself," and its powerful healing effects begin by helping you align yourself with balanced, harmonious energy. So, yet another meaning of jade is harmony and balance. Healing Properties of Jade
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Jade is a protective stone, It guards us against accident and misfortune.
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It is very helpful for Heart, immune system, Nervous system, kidneys, and hair.
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The lavender jade helps you to achieve self-control.
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Problems with bones and joints are improved with jade stone.
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When the person wear it as jewelry and when it touches the skin of the wearer it improves the heart chakra.
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Jade is very helpful for Healing emotional, physical and spiritual energy.
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Jade has the ability to absorb any negative energy from the surrounding space.
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The benefits of wearing jade stone are that it boosts confidence and encourage your self-sufficiency.
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Jade helps stitches to bind and heal properly.
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Green jade is used to resolve the blockages and to rebalance the heart chakra and also helps to understand our own emotions and needs clearly.
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ade is said to bless whatever it touches, serving mankind across the globe for nearly 6,000 years. For primitive peoples in the British Isles, its toughness, and ability to polish and sharpen made it a favored stone for axe heads, knives and weapons. Indigenous tribes of Mexico, Central and South America, and New Zealand carved it into deity masks and ritual artifacts, even cast it into wells as an offering to the water spirits for fresh and plentiful water. Jade has been the most highly esteemed stone in China throughout recorded history, and was valued for its beauty and powers of healing and protection. An endless variety of gems, vessels, incense burners, beads, burial items and statues have been wondrously carved from Jade, as well as musical instruments and pendants inscribed with poetry. [Simmons, 210][Eason, 266, 268]
Jade is most valued for its metaphysical properties. It is the ultimate "Dream Stone," revered in ancient cultures, as well as today, to access the spiritual world, gain insight into ritualistic knowledge, encourage creativity, and dream-solve. [Melody, 341][Raphaell, 161] It is cherished as a protective talisman, assuring long life and a peaceful death, and is considered a powerful healing stone. [Mella, 87] An amulet of good luck and friendship, Jade signifies wisdom gathered in tranquility, dispelling the negative and encouraging one to see oneself as they really are. [Hall, 152]
In scientific terms, Jade is the name shared by two distinctly different minerals - Nephrite, a calcium magnesium silicate, and Jadeite, a sodium aluminum silicate. Though they have different compositions, hardnesses, densities and crystal structures, both are exceptionally tough stones, similar in appearance, and equally valuable in metaphysical properties. Both occur in the beautiful olive shades we've come to recognize as jade green, but have some distinctions.
Nephrite generally occurs in creamy white, mid- to deep olive green, brown and black. It has a smooth surface polish with a waxy sheen and is more commonly found. Jadeite may be a white-gray green, leafy green, blue or blue-green, emerald green, lavender, pink, red, orange, greenish-black or black. It is hard and lustrous, rarer than Nephrite, and usually more expensive. Translucent, emerald green Jadeite, colored by traces of chromium, is called Imperial Jade and is the rarest and most valuable.
The name and character of Jade is associated with many cultures, all referring to its reputed medicinal property of curing calculus stones and disorders of the kidneys or bladder. Yu-Stone to the ancient Chinese, it was called "spleen-stone" by the Mesoamericans. Nephrite is from the Greek word nephros, the kidney. The Spanish named it Piedra de hijada when they conquered the New World (lapis nephrictus in Latin), meaning "Stone of the loin," or "Stone of the flank." In a later French translation, the term was misprinted and became "pierre le jade."