it means to make something more painfull
People did that because it helped stop the wound rotting. Now people talk about it because it stings mightily.
The phrase "adding insult to injury " (making a bad situation worse) can be intentional or coincidental. However, the idiom "rubbing salt in the wound" usually means deliberately making something painful even more painful (as salt would be to broken skin).
Do you mean wand instead of wound? If you mean wand, then you can use it to cast a circle, or use it in rituals and spells. If you mean wound, I do not know what you would use it for, but I suggest a band-aid and some rubbing alcohol.
during the ealier centuries, when England WA developing their navy, most sailors where pressganged into service. while at sea, punishment was often lashes with a cat'o'nine tails. These whippings would usually break open the skin, and salt was rubbed into the wound to help stave of infection. Of course, rubbing salt into an open wound would sting like crazy. So in modern times, rubbing salt in your wound, generally means just adding more pain and suffering.
Using table salt on a wound is not recommended as it can be too harsh on the skin and may cause further irritation or damage. It is better to clean the wound with mild soap and water, or a saline solution recommended by a healthcare professional, to prevent infection and promote healing.
Salt the Wound was created in 2001.
Salt the Wound ended in 2010.
If someone is in a bad situation, "rubbing salt into the wound" means to aggravate that situation: make it worse. This is an idiomatic extension of the actual physical pain one experiences if an open wound is exposed to salt.
You should pour rubbing alcohol on the wound and then wrap it in plastic wrap to avoid bacteria. If you are out of rubbing alcohol use vinegar and salt to clean the wound.
The duration of Salt in the Wound is 1.63 hours.
Salt in the Wound was created on 1969-08-10.
Abrasion