⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Six organic roots. Three continents. One editorial posture: not a magic potion, a terrain that is built. Ashwagandha (India), Shatavari (India), Mucuna pruriens (India), Maca (Peru), Chaga (Siberia), Lucuma (Peru) — the systemic architecture of morning resilience, read through David Winston, Donald Yance, Alexander Panossian, James Hobbs. An alternative to coffee, yes — but above all an alternative to the spike-and-crash logic itself.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
For the Shipibo-Conibo of Peruvian Amazonia, she is semein — the heart-plant. Small riverside tree with pink-white pompom flowers. The water that returns long enough undoes the stone. Bobinsana reorganizes the heart without forcing it — patience, fluidity, post-trauma teaching.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
For the Chontal of Oaxaca, she is thle-pela-kano: leaf of God, leaf that clears the senses. The plant that gave Western science the word 'oneirogen' (Mayagoitia, 1986). Diagnostic dreams. Bitter as initiation. The leaf that does not deceive.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
A rare plant of the sun and of warm nights — one that does not light desire but keeps it company. Companion of the Guaycura of Baja California, Maya-Aztec ally of Cacao, and today part of INFUSE's Love Elixir and Euphoria Blend.
❦L'Apprentissage des Plantes-Maîtresses
In the high Peruvian Amazon, among the Shipibo-Conibo, the Asháninka, the Shawi, the Awajún, there is a discipline that no English translation fully renders: la dieta. Not a diet. A retreat with a master plant, for weeks or months, under strict conditions — no salt, no sugar, no meat, no sex, no alcohol. The plant teaches. The dieter listens. Don Solón Tello Lozano, Pablo Amaringo, the onaya curanderos passed on to us what it was permitted to pass on.
⧖Célébrer au Naturel
Fifteen hundred years of Kichwa wayusa upina — the morning circle where the night's dreams become the day's decisions. Caffeine + L-theanine + theobromine = a long wakefulness with no spike, no crash. Present in the INFUSE Love Elixir alongside Damiana, Blue Lotus, and Rose of Damascus.
⧖Célébrer au Naturel
For the Khoisan of South Africa — one of the oldest living human cultures, 100,000 years of continuous genetic lineage — she is kanna. Old mother still young. Empathic ambassador. SSRI + PDE4. The plant that does not amplify — she dissolves the walls.
❦L'Apprentissage des Plantes-Maîtresses
For the Zulu sangoma of KwaZulu-Natal, she is the white responder. The rarest and most powerful ubulawu of southern Africa. Synaptolepis kirkii. Kirkinines neurotrophic. The question formulated aloud, the plant carries the message, the answer arrives in white.
❦Le Trésor du Lotus Bleu
Most 'blue lotus' sold today is in fact a different, far weaker water lily, not the true caerulea. The flower Tutankhamun took into his tomb has nearly vanished — replaced by white water lilies with no pharmacology. Here is what tells the verified flower apart from the imposture.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Lorca said it: there is no living truth without the possibility of death. The duende rises from the ground through the feet, where the crack lies open. The Sacrament of Error is the one door modern grammar has no name for. The most duende-laden pillar of the INFUSE V3 cosmogony.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Thle-pela-kano — leaf of God. The first oneirogenic plant validated in a double-blind study (Mayagoitia, Díaz & Contreras, 1986). A plant of the Mazatec and Chontal of Oaxaca — not Aztec, not generically Mexican. The full protocol, the lineage honoured, the sourcing comparison, and everything the generalist web pages dilute.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
The most complete French-language pillar guide to INFUSE's 18 dream plants — Ubulawu sangoma (Silene capensis, Uvuma, Mukanya, Ubhubhubhu, Uqume), lotus and water lilies of the Nile and Asia, the Mesoamerican lineage (Calea, Sinicuichi, Yauhtli, Maconha Brava), the Eurasian companions (Mugwort, Wild Lettuce, Wild Poppy, Passiflora, Entada). Origins named, lineages named, protocols by profile, a head-on comparison with Zamnesia, Waking Herbs, Maya Herbs, Anima Mundi.
☥Ancient civilizations
Five civilisational fractures. Six accords for inhabiting those fractures with dignity. The complete cartography of the INFUSE cosmogony — not a grid to apply, a place you return to. Frankl, Akomolafe, Machado de Oliveira, Maté, Eisenstein, Van der Kolk, Strand, hooks, Glissant, Black Elk, Haraway, Kimmerer, Yunkaporta, Seth, Jung, Moss, Wangyal, Bachelard, Abram, Carson, Macy, Tsing, Mauss, Hyde, Eliade, Whorf, Basso, Chatwin, Buhner.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Mulungu — Erythrina mulungu, the river tree that holds humanity's anxious child against its chest. Amazonian heart plant, guardian of deep rest and inner calm. Unique non-GABAergic anxiolytic: erythrinian alkaloids act on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors — a pathway distinct from benzodiazepines, with no amnesia or massive tolerance. Brazilian trinity of sleep (Mulungu + Passionflower + Chamomile).
☥Ancestral trauma healing
If your myth doesn't hold up in the friction of a toe stubbed against a chair, your myth doesn't hold. A manifesto of bodily grounding. Van der Kolk, Levine, Strand, Merleau-Ponty, Bachelard, Odier. INFUSE refuses the decorative spirituality that never touches ground.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
The "sacred feminine" has become a product. Online courses, €3,000 retreats, powder-pink packaging. This article will not sell you a queen energy. It speaks of twelve plants that women — witches, midwives, grandmothers — loved and held for centuries, and what we honestly know of them today. Federici, Estés, Kimmerer as sources. Named lineages: Maya, Khoi-San, Chontal, Ayurveda, TCM, medieval European midwives.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Rosa damascena — the only rose with true therapeutic depth. Bulgarian Valley of the Roses, three thousand petals for a single drop of essential oil. Plant of grief that no longer crushes, of the heart that softens without breaking. INFUSE works the buds, the petal, the absolute — never synthetic rose oil. Sister of Tulsi in Ayurveda, of Hawthorn in European herbalism.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
The Buryats call it sagan-da-li — the white wing, because of the silvery underside of its leaves. Plant of altitude, of cold, of clarity. Tea of Tibetan monks for long meditations. A new adaptogen with chemistry distinct from rhodiola.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
« Saving the planet » is a colonized phrase. Vanessa Machado de Oliveira offers something else: to hospice modernity — to accompany its death with dignity, the way one accompanies a dying person. Not to euthanize. Not to put on a respirator. To hold the hand while what must die dies, so that what wants to be born can rise through the humus.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
We do not awaken by climbing. We awaken by falling apart. The fracture is not the enemy of awakening — it is the door. The first signature pillar of Cosmogony V3.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
The myth of the lone hero is dead. But the return to the weave is not a comfortable one. To become a Symbiont — to accept that we were never alone — is also to accept what could devour us. Haraway, Margulis, Sheldrake, Tsing, Strand. And Glissant, who keeps opacity as the lock against the fusion-trap.
☥Ancient civilizations
WIE — the graphic fusion of I and WE. The gesture that says: I am a fully unfolded individual AND I am the living fabric. AND, not OR. Act 3 of the I INFUSE Myth. Glissant, Haraway, Eisenstein, Black Elk, Margulis, Kimmerer.
❦La Voie des Plantes à Fumer
Wild Dagga is NOT cannabis. No THC, no CBD, no cannabinoid receptors. It is Leonotis leonurus, a South African mint with coral-orange flowers. The Khoikhoi called it dachab millennia before the word was transferred to hemp. A thousand-year-old respiratory and nervine medicine — a gentle bronchodilator, antispasmodic, mild sedative. If you are looking for cannabis, this is not the right plant.
☥Ancestral trauma healing
Something happens when healing becomes a new command. Vanessa Machado de Oliveira calls it Hospicing Modernity. Bayo Akomolafe speaks of slowing down in urgent times. Sophie Strand, of wild care. A whole generation has worn itself out trying to repair itself — stacking therapies, retreats, plants, ceremonies, self-help books — and arrives with the same fatigue it started with, plus the fatigue of having tried. This piece does not say you should stop tending to yourself. It says you may need to stop believing you must heal everything. And learn to compost instead of repair.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Silene capensis (Silene undulata) — Undlela Ziimhlophe, “the white paths” — the central root of the Ubulawu lineage of the Xhosa amagqirha and the Zulu sangoma. 2024 chemical discovery: β-carbolines acting as 5-HT2A agonists. Southern African origin, the traditional foamed protocol, ritual vomiting honestly named, absolute red lines in pregnancy, comparison with Calea, Mugwort, Entada, and the cardinal pair Silene + Synaptolepis kirkii. Not a psychedelic kit. An initiation into a living lineage.
❦Le Sentier du Cacao
The "cacao ceremony" as it circulates in 2026 across most Western retreats was invented in 2003 by a British man in Hawai'i. Before that date, the phrase cacao ceremony did not exist. Cacao itself, though, has been sacred in Mesoamerica for four thousand years — Olmec, Maya, Aztec. This article untangles the two, sources in hand, without breaking your practice: it makes it honest.
❦L'Apprentissage des Plantes-Maîtresses
Tabernanthe iboga, the sacred root of the Babongo and the Gabonese Bwiti, is one of the most potent master plants in the world. This article honours it: botany, chemistry (ibogaine, noribogaine, hERG cardiotoxicity), the living Bwiti lineage (Babongo, Mitsogo, Apindji, Massango, Fang), the initiation in the mbandja with the ngombi and the nima na kombo, and the Western debt to Gabon. INFUSE does not sell it — not as a warning, but out of respect. Sources: Schultes-Hofmann, Rätsch, Pendell, Fernandez, Alper, Mash, Glue, Lotsof.
❦Le Sentier du Cacao
Theobroma: food of the gods. Not a marketing compliment — an ethnographic observation. From the Olmec of 1500 BC to the Tzeltal Maya and modern ceremonial circles, cacao carries 5300 years of lineage. This is not the story of a superfood. It is the story of a sacred flesh crossing civilisations.
❦Le Trésor du Lotus Bleu
Most 'blue lotus' sold online is in fact a different, far weaker water lily — not the true caerulea. The EU market sells Nymphaea alba on a massive scale — a white European water lily with no pharmacology — under the label of the pharaonic lotus. This article takes the confusion apart, compares the sourcing, and names what separates Tutankhamun's flower from the smartshop copy.
☾Le Sentier du Rêve
Seven plants that peoples — Mazatec (Chontal of Oaxaca), Xhosa, ancient Egyptians, European midwives, Hmong herbalists — held for centuries to cross the night. Blue Lotus (Nymphaea caerulea), Calea Zacatechichi, Mugwort, Silene Capensis, Galantamine, Salvia divinorum, Entada Rheedii. With their named lineages, their real chemistry, their honest limits, and what INFUSE is not yet able to guarantee analytically. Sources: Schultes-Hofmann-Rätsch, Rätsch, Pendell, Sobiecki, Moss, LaBerge, Storl, Mayagoitia 1986, Sparrow 2018.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Seven dream companions sourced from the lineages that know them. Calea, Mugwort, Blue Lotus, Sinicuichi, Wild Poppy, Wild Lettuce, Silene capensis — ethnobotanical evidence, traditional preparations, named contraindications.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Nymphaea caerulea — not Nelumbo nucifera, not Nelumbo lutea. The blue flower of the Egyptian frescoes, of the ceremonies of Osiris, of the gardens of the Persian paradise. Nuciferine and apomorphine. An elixir of deep relaxation and oneiric opening. Sourcing identified by experienced eyes, a commitment in progress toward the true flower.
❦Le Trésor du Lotus Bleu
As much as 70% of the "Blue Lotus" sold in Europe and the United States in 2024 is not Nymphaea caerulea. It is Nelumbo nucifera (Indian lotus), Nymphaea alba (white water lily), or unknown blends. How to identify, source and use the true Egyptian Blue Lotus — and why the difference matters.
☥La Voie des Adaptogènes & Champignons
The mushroom of the mountain monk — from the Japanese Shugendō (Yamabushitake) to the Mori 2009 revolution (Phytotherapy Research). A Chinese imperial treasure for 2,000 years, with hippocampal neurogenesis via NGF/BDNF validated clinically today. A plant of the long, cumulative and reversible course — for those who want to build a quality of cognitive presence over 3 to 12 months.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Heimia salicifolia. Plant of Mexican shamans for at least 500 years, perhaps 2000+. Not a plant of visions — a plant that re-opens the old. Users report rediscovering the scent of a grandmother's kitchen, the texture of a blanket, the light of a window — details laid down thirty years earlier. And a unique auditory signature: voices resonate as if from the end of a long stone corridor.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Papaver rhoeas. Sister of wheat, daughter of Demeter, flower of Flanders. No morphine, no codeine, no addiction in two thousand years of use. Strict lexical separation from Papaver somniferum. A plant of the threshold between waking and sleep, of wounded hearts, of grief that needs to breathe through the night.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Entada rheedii. A seed that can drift in seawater for over two years before stranding on a beach and germinating. The same seed that Zulu sangoma use to dream of ancestors has colonized every tropical shore through the sea. What survives long voyages keeps the memory of every shore.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Canavalia rosea. The plant that settles where nothing else grows — bare sand, salt, intense wind. Found in Mazatec tombs from 300 BCE to 900 CE: twelve centuries of continuous funerary presence. Still smoked today on the Gulf coast as a gentle alternative to cannabis. A plant of thresholds, ocean currents, and quiet companions.
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Some dreams are qualitatively different. Kelly Bulkeley and Robert Moss explore Big Dreams — memorable, numinous, with measurable effects — and the ...
☥Les Plantes-Sorcières
Coyote, Loki, Anansi, Eshu, Hermes: what comparing the great trickster figures reveals about the archetype — and why each figure remains deeply...
☾Dream Arc
A creative impasse is not a block to force. It is a gestation. Hopcke, Jung, and Hillman shed light on why productive stillness precedes every tur…
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Grieving a loved one, grieving the self, grieving the living world: Francis Weller identifies five distinct territories of sorrow. Understanding each gate changes the way…
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Hypnagogia is the state of consciousness between waking and sleep. Edison and Dalí used it on purpose. Understanding this state and how to draw on it…
☥Ancient civilizations
Campbell and Eliade revealed deep structures shared by myths the world over. But their universalism has real limits. What you need...
⧖Ancestral trauma healing
Latanya Sweeney showed in 2002 that 'anonymised' data can re-identify the governor of a state in 20 minutes. What k-anonymity and differential privacy change for any community platform.
☾Dream Arc
Soul retrieval is a concept present across many shamanic traditions and taken up by Jungian psychology. Understanding soul loss, reintegr...
☥Les Plantes-Sorcières
Lewis Hyde showed that authentic creativity works like a gift in circulation — not like a property to be hoarded. What the figure of the trickst...
❦Le Sentier du Rêve
Lactuca virosa. The white latex that flows when the stem is cut was the opium of the poor in 19th-century Europe — when real opium became too expensive after the wars. Two thousand years of continuous use as a sedative and pain-reliever. Zero alkaloids of the opium type. Lactucarium: dried latex, called 'lettuce opium' since Dioscorides.
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