Six months after settling into her new home in northeast Minneapolis, Susan Snyder finally finished the move a couple of weekends ago. No, she didn't just get around to unpacking the last box. She completed the task of making the place her own by having it blessed.
"The house feels complete now," she said. "It feels settled. It feels the way it's supposed to."
Home blessings are "the biggest shelter trend since feng shui," said Donna Henes, a shaman based in New York City who has been blessing homes for 35 years. "That was back in the days when eyebrows were raised [at the mention of a blessing]. But times change. Now people are embracing alternate spiritualities."
The blessings are conducted by a wide range of practitioners, from ceremonial artists to ordained clergy. Snyder's was done by the Rev. Katherine Engel, a Twin Cities interfaith minister who has been conducting such ceremonies for six years and insists that they are not a challenge to mainstream religious practices.
"It's not 'instead of' but 'in addition to,'" she said. "It's the 21st century, and churches are changing. The traditional ways are still there, but people aren't afraid to look at new ways."
Still, misunderstandings arise. "It's not a house exorcism," said the Rev. Shelley Dugan, a Unitarian Universalist who has been doing blessings in the Twin Cities for 12 years. "It's a way to deal with both the physical and emotional aspects of transition."
There are almost as many different reasons for home blessings as there are different styles of homes. Some people get them when they move into a house where something negative has happened -- a death, for instance. Other people do it to give their new home a fresh start.
And it doesn't even have to be a new home; more people are having their homes blessed every year or two, cleaning out the old energy the same way they clean out the garage.