Spilling the Tea: Superstitions, Sisterhood, and Sacred Gossip
This afternoon I decided to get a tea set out and make myself a brew.
As I poured my first cup from the teapot to the cup, bubbles started to form and I heard my mothers voice.
“There’s wealth in your cup when it bubbles like that. Get a spoon, gather them and drink them down.”
A spoon in my home always represented the feminine and created room to receive.
This got me thinking about all the superstitions and stories I heard around a cup of tea. I could listen for hours.
And that’s the thing about tea, it’s ancient and alchemical.
Steam curls upward like a whispered spell, herbs steeping into something that soothes, awakens, or divines. Across centuries and cultures, tea has been more than a beverage. It’s been a ritual, a symbol, and a container for secrets, for connection, and for mystery. Its something I miss most about connecting with the women in my family, and I am most grateful I get to hold this tradition with my sister and friends when we gather.
Tea is part of my culture. It’s part of my ancestors’ stories, both good and bad. And along with tea rituals’s it also has it own superstitions that come with it.
Here are some common superstitions surrounding tea time:
If you spill your tea, it could mean someone is talking about you.
Two teaspoons in one cup? Expect a visit from someone with a romantic heart (or drama on the horizon).
Two teaspoons in a saucer, an affair, or if someone is trying to get pregnant, they could become pregnant with twins.
If two women are at tea together, only one woman should pour the tea, or they could get into a bad argument. And if one woman is trying to get pregnant, she would play the roll of “mother”, the one who prepares and pours the tea. It is said if a woman does this, she should be pregnant within the year.
Bubbles gathering in your cup? Scoop them up to your lips with a spoon and drink. It's said to bring wealth. A ring of bubbles of the outside of the cup, a romance is blossoming.
And of course, reading the leaves. An ancient form of divination that transforms the everyday into magic.
But let’s talk about the one we all know: Spilling the tea = sharing the gossip. What is it about a fresh brewed pot that just allows people to sit back and open up?
And isn’t that, in its truest form, a sacred feminine art? Creating space for women to been seen so they can share?
Not the toxic kind born from insecurity, but the powerful, truth-telling kind. The kind women have passed from mouth to mouth in kitchens, covens, and quiet corners for centuries. Sharing stories. Naming injustices. Celebrating wins. Calling out betrayals. Laughing at the absurdity of it all.
Gossip, when used with intention, is holy. It’s information. It’s intuition spoken aloud. It’s the cauldron where we stir our collective wisdom.
And in spaces like Rooted in Sisterhood, we reclaim it.
We gather in our softness and our strength. We pour the tea and speak what’s been unspoken. We laugh until our cheeks hurt. We cry without shame. We alchemize rage and make art from the ache.
And inside my personal 1:1 coaching sessions like Become the Witch, we take it even further.
This isn’t about learning spells from a dusty book. This is about becoming the spell. About learning to trust your knowing, to weave your wisdom with intention, and to walk through life so rooted in your magic that nothing can shake you.
Because being a witch isn’t about labels. It’s about liberation.
So the next time you spill your tea, remember: something sacred is trying to speak.
Come spill the tea with us.
Join the coven. Root into sisterhood.
Become the Witch.
With a teacup in one hand and power in the other,
That Witch Karena