Are you feeling like the world has got you under its heel? Are you struggling to find a job or bring money into your life? Are you dealing with a run of bad luck? Do you feel crossed up, down and out, or at the end of your rope? Do you feel like you've lost your personal power? My name is Sister Jean of Deseret Conjure, based in sunny Salt Lake City, and I'm a rootworker in the African-American ma
gical tradition of hoodoo (aka rootwork and conjure). Through the power of prayer, God, scripture, the intercession of saints, and hoodoo's powerful materia magica, I can help you turn the tables and bring prosperity, happiness and good luck back into your life. The types of work I do for clients are protection, crossing, uncrossing, steady work, prosperity/money and spiritual cleansing/blessing. I don't do court case work, love work, break-up work or "death spells." If you need a type of work I don't do, I'll refer you to another rootworker who might take you case. Or you can always just get a reading to obtain an outside perspective on a tough situation. If you have any questions, please e-mail me at [email protected]. I'm available on Bookeo to book readings (bookeo.com/deseretconjure). I'm a graduate of Catherine Yronwode's Hoodoo Correspondence Course, student ID #1590. Deseret Conjure is named for the provisional Mormon-declared state of Deseret, which, when it was proposed in 1849, encompassed most of Utah and Nevada, as well as parts of California, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico and Idaho. This vast "state" was never recognized by the United States government, but it's a unique part of the history of Utah. The word "deseret" is also said to mean "honeybee," as defined in the Book of Mormon. The crossed railroad spikes in the Deseret Conjure logo is a reference to the joining of the Union and Central Pacific railroads at Promontory Summit, Utah Territory, in 1869, which completed the Transcontinental Railroad. After the railroad was finished, bringing economic growth to Utah, Salt Lake City earned the nickname "The Crossroads of the West." The crossroads is a powerful symbol in hoodoo, a place that's either "here nor there," where the physical and spirit worlds meet.