BLOG · Moon Ritual Guide · Blue Moon May 31, 2026
Here's the first thing nobody tells you about Blue Moon rituals: you don't need an altar. You don't need incense. You don't need to know what house the moon is transiting or whether it's void-of-course or in retrograde shadow or whatever word you half-remember reading in someone's Instagram story.
You need a window. You need ten minutes. You need a pen.
That's it. That's the ritual.
This is the guide for the rest of us — the ones who find Blue Moon content a little beautiful and a little much all at once, the ones who want to do something but don't want to cosplay someone they're not. No gatekeeping here. Just the actual practice, stripped down to what works.
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Jump to:
- What a Blue Moon actually is
- Why it's worth paying attention to
- The non-intimidating ritual (five steps)
- What to wear — the stones that carry it
- What to write down (and what to skip)
- The morning after
- Blue Moon FAQ
What a Blue Moon actually is
A Blue Moon is the second full moon in the same calendar month. That's the one most people mean when they say "Blue Moon." There's also a rarer astronomical definition — the third full moon in a season that has four — but you can file that away. The calendar-month version is the one worth marking.
It's not blue. Sorry. The name comes from old English folk tradition, likely a corruption of the word "belewe," meaning betray — this moon betrayed the usual once-a-month pattern by showing up twice. No actual color change. (The moon can occasionally look blue-ish during massive wildfire smoke or volcanic events, but that's a separate thing and generally not a sign of anything spiritual so much as very bad air quality.)
Blue Moons happen roughly every two to three years. Which is why the expression "once in a blue moon" exists and why the event is worth marking even if you don't normally track lunar phases.
Why it's worth paying attention to
If a regular full moon is a checkpoint — a monthly chance to notice what's built up, what's peaking, what needs releasing — a Blue Moon is the same energy with a little extra credit. Two full moons in thirty days means you already had a release moment earlier in the month. This one is the follow-up. The actually, there's more. The second ask.
I don't believe lunar events cause anything. I do believe they're useful bookmarks — reliable moments in a year that would otherwise just blur past. A Blue Moon is a particularly good bookmark because it's rare enough to feel special and common enough to not feel cultish. It's the once-in-a-while moment to pause and check in.
That's the whole theory. Now the practice.

The non-intimidating ritual (five steps)
Ten minutes. No special tools. Can be done in your kitchen.
Step 1: Find the moon (or where it would be)
Walk to a window. If the sky's clear, find the moon. If it's cloudy or you're indoors facing the wrong way, don't worry about it — just face the general direction. The ritual isn't being graded.
Step 2: Put the piece on
One piece of jewelry. A bracelet, a pendant, whatever you've got that feels lunar. Moonstone, labradorite, clear quartz, and selenite are the classic four, but anything that feels like it belongs under moonlight works. (More on stones in the next section.) Let it rest against your skin.
Step 3: Breathe for one minute
Set a timer if you have to. One minute. In through your nose, out through your mouth. Don't try to empty your mind. Don't try to receive a download. Just breathe. This part is non-negotiable — it's the only actual ritual mechanism in the whole practice.
Step 4: Write down two things
Pen and paper, or the notes app — doesn't matter. Write:
- One thing from the last six months you're ready to put down. Not release, not banish, not cut cord from — just put down. Like a bag you've been carrying that you didn't realize was heavy until right now.
- One thing you'd like the next six months to look like. Not a goal. Not a manifesto. A feeling. One sentence.
Step 5: Close it
Read both sentences out loud once. Fold the paper. Put it somewhere you won't think about it — a book you won't finish for a while, the back of a drawer, a jewelry box. Take the piece off if you want. Or leave it on. Go eat something.
That's the ritual. That's the whole thing.

What to wear — the stones that carry it
The piece is the anchor. You don't need to meditate with it for an hour — you need to put it on and let it sit on your skin while you breathe and write. These are the four that work best for lunar rituals, in plain English:
Moonstone
The literal moon stone. Cycles, intuition, the cyclical part of being alive. If you're new to moon rituals, start here. It's also June's birthstone, if you're a June baby — the whole month is already yours.
Labradorite
The transformation stone. If the Blue Moon is asking you to move, labradorite is the piece to wear. It catches light from angles you don't expect, which is basically the entire metaphor. This is one of my hero stones — I stock it heavily because it's one of the few stones that feels different every time you put it on.
Clear quartz
The amplifier. If you already have a piece you love and it doesn't happen to be "lunar" in the traditional sense, pair it with clear quartz. Clear quartz boosts whatever you set an intention around. It's the universal wingman of crystal jewelry.
Selenite
The cleanse stone. Named for Selene, the Greek moon goddess. If you're using this ritual as a reset, selenite is the right call. (Quick care note: selenite doesn't love water. Keep it dry.)
Browse the full Celestial Jewelry collection (moon, star and sun crystal jewelry) for moon-forward pieces, or the full Gemstone Jewelry collection (shop by stone and meaning) if you want to pick by stone.
Not sure which stone is actually yours for this moon? The free personalized Mystic Soul Chakra Quiz sorts it in about two minutes. Useful if you're about to stand at a window and don't want to overthink the jewelry part.
What to write down (and what to skip)
What to write
Keep it specific. Keep it short. One thing to put down, one thing to move toward. That's the whole structure.
Good examples:
- "I'm putting down the guilt I've been carrying about not calling my sister enough. I want the next six months to feel less self-critical."
- "I'm putting down the job I've been staying in out of fear. I want the next six months to feel like I'm building toward something."
- "I'm putting down the habit of reading the news at bedtime. I want the next six months to feel more rested."
Notice the pattern: concrete thing, concrete feeling. Not "I release all negativity." Not "I call in abundance." Specific sentences about your actual life.
What to skip
No incantations. No chanting things you read online and don't really mean. No calling in ancestors you don't actually know. No burning anything you'll regret burning. No specifying timelines the universe has to meet. The Blue Moon is not a Genie. It's a bookmark.
Also: don't make a list of twelve things. One of each. That's the point.
The morning after
Don't reread what you wrote. Leave it folded. The act of writing it was the ritual — the paper is a receipt, not a contract you have to audit.
If you wore a piece for the ritual, wear it through the next day. Not ceremonially. Just wear it. Let the intention sit next to your skin while you go to work, make coffee, answer emails. A lot of the work happens in the ordinary hours after the ritual, not during it.
Six months from now, if you remember the folded piece of paper, you can unfold it. You'll probably be surprised. Something on that list usually got handled. Most of the time, I don't remember writing it.
If moon content is your thing, I've got a few other ritual posts that pair well with this one: New Moon Rituals for Beginners (intention setting with crystals) for the intention-setting side, and Blue Moon 2026: The Meaning Guide (what happens when the universe gives you extra credit) for the meaning deep-dive.
And if you'd rather not DIY the ritual at all, Self-Worth Rituals for Women (everyday no-moon version) is the everyday version — no moon required.
Want the next moon before it sneaks up on you?
I send one email a week — Sunday morning, my voice, no fluff. Upcoming moons, ritual reminders, and the stones I'm wearing that week. Join the Mystic Soul Jewelry newsletter here.
Blue Moon FAQ
When is the next Blue Moon?
The next Blue Moon is May 31, 2026 — the second full moon of May, following the Flower Moon on May 1. After 2026, the next calendar-month Blue Moon falls in 2028. They typically happen every two to three years, which is the reason behind the phrase "once in a blue moon."
Is a Blue Moon actually blue?
No. A Blue Moon is any second full moon in a single calendar month — the color doesn't change. The name likely comes from old English "belewe," meaning betray, referencing the moon's betrayal of the usual once-a-month pattern. (The moon can rarely look blue-tinted during extreme wildfire smoke or volcanic ash events, but that's atmospheric, not lunar.)
Do I need crystals to do a Blue Moon ritual?
No — you can do the ritual with just a window, a pen, and ten minutes. But wearing a piece of crystal jewelry during the ritual gives you a physical anchor for the intention, and keeps the reminder with you through the days after. Moonstone, labradorite, clear quartz, and selenite are the four most lunar-aligned stones.
What's the best crystal for a Blue Moon ritual?
Moonstone is the most traditional — it's literally named for the moon and works with cycles and intuition. Labradorite is the pick if the Blue Moon is asking you to move or transform. Clear quartz amplifies whatever intention you set. Selenite is best for cleansing and reset. Any of the four is a strong choice.
What should I write during a Blue Moon ritual?
One thing you're putting down from the last six months, and one thing you'd like the next six months to feel like. Keep it specific. Keep it short. One concrete sentence for each. Avoid generic "I release all negativity" language — name the actual thing.
Do I need to do the ritual exactly at the moment of the full moon?
No. The full moon's energetic window is usually considered to run about 24–48 hours on either side of the exact peak. Anytime in that range works. If you miss the window entirely, you haven't missed anything — the moon comes back in a month.
Is Blue Moon energy different from a regular full moon?
Traditionally, yes — a Blue Moon is considered a second chance, a reinforcement, or an "extra credit" full moon. Because it's the second full moon in a month, it's often framed as a follow-up moment to whatever energy the first one brought. Practically, the ritual is the same. The significance is in the rarity.
Keep exploring: Celestial Jewelry · Gemstone Jewelry · Ritual Jewelry · New Moon Rituals for Beginners (intention setting with crystals) · Blue Moon 2026: The Meaning Guide
Handmade in Calgary. Worn under every moon.





