Join Adam Barralet, Kyle Perez , Ashley Leavy and Nicholas Pearson in Episode #13 of the Crystal Confab Podcast as they do a deep dive into Bumblebee Stone meaning, including:
Harnessing joy with Bumblebee Stone
Bumblebee Stone for hearth blessings
The complex make-up of Bumblebee Stone and how this is reflected in its energy
Tune in now for a deeper look at Bumblebee Stone meaning!
Podcast Transcript:
Crystal Confab Podcast Introduction: Are you just starting with crystals? Or maybe you have a whole collection, but aren't sure how to use them? Join 4 crystal nerds, healers, workers, and lovers for crystal confab, a casual chat about all things crystals.
Nicholas Pearson: Hello, and welcome to the crystal confab. I'm Nicholas, and I'm joined today by 3 of my favorite human beings, especially in this crystal world, Adam, Ashley, and Kyle. And every week, we get together in confab about a new crystal. And this week, we've got kind of a fun stone coming out of the toolbox, and I think it'll be a great conversation. We get to unpack a whole lot about it, and that stone is bumblebee jasper.
So I'd love to pass it off to Kyle to get us started to talk about the makeup and nature of this stone.
Kyle Perez: I am so excited to talk about what I like to refer to and I think we all are more inclined to refer to it as bumblebee stone than bumblebee jasper, and this is an important differentiation. Let me get my mouth around that. It's important to know that a jasper has quartz as its base. Its micro crystalline quartz is what makes a Jasper a Jasper. They throw Jasper on anything that is opaque.
We have talked about this in our red Jasper podcast. Jump back to it if you haven't. Listen, this is a stone because a stone is a makeup or an amalgamation of multiple minerals. At least 2, sometimes more. Lapis lazuli is a great example of a stone or a rock because it has lazuli, it has calcite, it has pyrite together.
This bumblebee stone, if you are watching, as you can see, is beautiful layers of orange, gray, black, and yellow. Now I'm gonna read my notes because I don't wanna stuff up the pronunciation. Mount Sirumai or Chirumai in Indonesia, West Java. It is a volcanic area and it has up to or over at least half a dozen minerals within it. It has sulfur.
It has aurement. It has aragonite. It has calcite and it has pyrite within it. So it has all of these really interesting things going on inside it.
And what's really important is if you can find pieces that have actually been, this is something we've talked about as well, been sealed, coated, or reinforced with some form of lacquer because it has toxic minerals within it. It has arsenic. It has sulfur. It has them within the ultimate and the rialga especially. What's really important is especially if you're gonna wear it, hold it, and connect with it in that way because you don't wanna be absorbing the literal toxic levels of these minerals that are contained.
If you have these sorts of pieces, which I do have a couple of, these aren't properly lacquered. I don't touch them too much. I will wash my hands afterwards, and I will always make sure that I'm cleaning after working with them. Otherwise, if they have been coded, they're going to be fine. It's important to ask when you purchase, I think, when you're getting them. Yes, Ashley.
Ashley Leavy: Kyle, is there any other way that we can know if they're coated? And does it have to necessarily be, like, coated and stabilized? Or what about just a really, you know, like a high polish like you would find on most tumbled stones? Because I know if you think about something like a fibrous malachite. Right?
A little bit more problematic when it's just that powdery sort of malachite compared to when it's been polished. It's sort of fine. Same with, you know, potentially, maybe something like a tiger's eye. Right?