⧖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 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.
⧖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.
☥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.
☥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
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.
☥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.
❦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.
❦La Voie des Plantes à Fumer
Mugwort, Damiana, Wild Dagga, Coltsfoot, Mullein, Imphepho, Sagan Dalya, Lavender, Rose, Marshmallow — ten smoking plants documented through their lineages, free of nicotine, each with its own effects and its own cautions.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Spagyrics — from the Greek spaō (to separate) and ageirō (to reunite) — the alchemical art of drawing from a plant its three Philosophical Principles (Mercury, Sulphur, Salt), purifying each apart, then recombining them. Paracelsus (1493-1541) names and codifies it. Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) carries its cosmology upstream. A pillar of editorial authority sourced in the work of Junius, Bartlett, Burckhardt, Jung, Hildegard. No spagyric elixir is sold — but here is the house that understands it. The Mercury of the spagyrists is not metallic mercury. The distinction is vital.
❦La Voie des Adaptogènes & Champignons
Ashwagandha, Shatavari, Rhodiola, Maca, Reishi, Cordyceps, Schisandra. Seven foundational plants, sourced from the lineages that named them, with chemistry, traditional dose, contraindications and synergies.
⧖Célébrer au Naturel
Guayusa, Yerba Mate, Tulsi, Ceremonial Cacao, Adaptogenic Blend, Lion's Mane, Cordyceps, Reishi — eight plants that hold up energy without coffee's chase, lineage by lineage.
⧖Célébrer au Naturel
Mucuna pruriens carries the highest known natural concentration of plant L-Dopa (4–6%, up to 9% on HPLC-tested lots). A double-target pillar — CEO biohackers reaching for dopamine, focus and libido without dubious standardized extracts, and Ayurveda practitioners who have known Atmagupta in the Charaka Samhita for 4,000 years. Full timing/dose/cycle protocol. Whole-plant vs. standardized-extract table (8 criteria). The living Konda Reddi lineage of Andhra Pradesh, credited. Red lines laid down — MAOIs, SSRIs, Parkinson's, pregnancy. A clear refusal of Sensoril/KSM-66/Withanex. Not a substitute for pharmaceutical levodopa.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
The one with a hundred husbands. The one with a hundred roots. Healer of a hundred ailments. Three readings of the same Sanskrit name. Asparagus racemosus — more than 3,500 years in the Vedic texts. The most revered plant of Ayurveda for women, across every season of their life.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
The shaman of Junín says : she is your food, not your medicine. 60-70% of the Andean harvest. Daily food of families for 2,000 years. The phenotype best studied in clinical trials. The Maca of the everyday, not of the laboratory.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
The seven great medicinal mushrooms of the world's pharmacopoeia — Reishi (the Taoist immortal), Lion's Mane (the sage's mane), Cordyceps (the Tibetan worm-herb), Chaga (the birch's black gold), Maitake (the dancing king), Turkey Tail (the peacock's tail), Shiitake (the root of Asian immunity). Chemistry, traditions, the non-negotiable double extraction, synergies, red lines.
⧖Célébrer au Naturel
Kapikacchu — she who itches like a monkey — for the urticating fuzz of the pod. Plant of Ayurvedic Vajikarana (to make horse-like) and of Kampavata (parkinsonian trembling, treated a millennium before L-DOPA). 4 to 6% raw L-DOPA in the seed. Modernity copies ; tradition knew.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Bobinsana (Calliandra angustifolia) — the Shipibo tree of the open heart. A master plant of the Amazonian riverbanks, taken in initiatory dieta to cultivate compassion and emotional clarity. A single-origin elixir, craft maceration, sourced in the Peruvian Amazon.
☥La Voie des Adaptogènes & Champignons
Reishi, Chaga, Lion's Mane: their most active compounds are either water-soluble (beta-glucans) or fat-soluble (triterpenes). A simple decoction or a simple alcohol tincture captures only one half. Double extraction — hot water then alcohol, brought back together — is the only method that honors the whole organism.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Rubus idaeus — named after Mount Ida, the birthplace of Zeus in Greek mythology. The herb of the second trimester of pregnancy par excellence in traditional European herbalism. Raspberry leaf as a uterine tonic, a regulator of the cycles, a gentle hormonal support. 2000 years of documented feminine tradition.
☥Ancestral history
Eleventh-century Rhineland. A Cistercian abbess receives visions and translates them into a living pharmacopoeia: the Physica, 230 plants classified by their temperament. At the center of it all, viriditas — vital greenness, the green force that binds body, soul and cosmos. The first European medical system to refuse to cut the plant from its mystery.
☥Ancestral trauma healing
Titration, pendulation, the window of tolerance — three concepts from somatic psychology that transform how we design spaces, programmes, and pr…
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Turnera diffusa — an arid shrub of Mexico and Central America. Turned to since the Maya for sexual vitality, the body-mind connection, desire without urgency. Flavonoids, damianin, arbutin. Neither a chemical aphrodisiac nor a placebo — a plant that works on the quality of presence.
☾Dream Arc
Discover the 12 thresholds that structure every authentic oracular practice — dream, synchronicity, contemplation. A slow pedagogy, radically anti-ga...
☥Alchemy & spagyric
Sixteenth century, Basel. Paracelsus burns the works of Galen before his students and declares: nature is the only book. He invents spagyrics — the alchemical extraction of Salt, Sulphur and Mercury — and lays the foundations of a medicine of signatures. A forerunner of modern pharmacology and of systems thinking, he remains one of the most misunderstood figures in the history of plants.
☥La Voie des Adaptogènes & Champignons
In 1947, the Soviet pharmacologist Lazarev coined the word "adaptogen". Around 1000 BCE, the Charaka Samhita codified the Rasayanas — substances that restore the vital essence and lengthen life. Two traditions, two vocabularies, one and the same finding: certain plants raise the body's non-specific resistance to stress. What that means — and what it does not.
☾Dream Arc
'Inner journey', 'spirit guide', 'death and rebirth' — these terms circulate freely. But shamanism, mysticism and contemplation are three modes…
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
A macerated-oil recipe for respectful tantric massage — drawn from the Shiva-Shakti lineage, not from Western performance tantra. Three carrier oils (jojoba, almond, sesame), five activating plants (damiana, rose, ylang-ylang, sandalwood, jasmine), three essential oils (sparingly), and above all the ritual intention that sets tantra apart from sexological mechanics.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
The yoni steam (vaginal steam bath) is a practice documented among the Maya (bajos), the Koreans (chai-yok), West Africans, and Indonesians. Medicinal plants infused, steam brought to the perineum. This guide traces the traditions, examines modern science (few studies, limited methodology), offers a respectful protocol, and lists the absolute warnings (pregnancy, IUD, active infection — never).
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Documenting the ancestral knowledge of plant contraception without recommending it. From the extinct silphium of Cyrene to the Queen Anne's Lace of Appalachia, from Ayurvedic neem to Quechua practices, this historical and anthropological guide traces what women knew for millennia — and why, today, self-medicating with these plants is dangerous. For real contraception: a midwife or a doctor. This content is documentary.
❦La Voie des Plantes à Fumer
Cotton-soft leaves like rabbit ears, a straight spike like Aaron's rod, a Presence 2,000 years old in European lungs. Mullein is the great Companion — the one who carries without shining, who receives without judging, who has lit the witches' torches since antiquity.
❦La Voie des Plantes à Fumer
Verbascum thapsus lays a velvet blanket on the burnt chest. Roman soldiers carried it as a torch and a talisman. Witches burned it at Samhain. The Cherokee rubbed it under the armpits. Here is the matriarchal grandmother of the lungs.
☥Ancient civilizations
Chamaemelum nobile is the plant that responds to pressure by giving more — trampled, it releases more fragrance. From the Ebers Papyrus to Beatrix Potter, 3500 years of teaching the body to set down without resistance.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
10-15% of harvests. The rarest. The most sacred. The one Andean tradition reserves for acute needs. Inca warriors before battle. Competing athletes. Men in loss of vitality. The Maca that grows where nothing else lives — and transmits what it learned in order to survive.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
In the villages of the Junín high plateau, grandmothers pass down to young women: 'at the moment of transition, take the Red one.' 20% of harvests, sacred, reserved. The Maca that nourishes from within — women in perimenopause, postpartum, irregular cycles. And, astonishing paradox, the best Maca for the male prostate.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Nelumbo nucifera — the flower the Buddha made bloom at every step. Grows in the mud, blooms immaculate. Sanskrit Padma, padmasana of the gods, thousand petals of the crown of the skull. Plant of slow meditation and noble sleep, to be distinguished from the Egyptian Lotus Nymphaea.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Rubus idaeus is named after the goddess Ida who hid the infant Zeus. Since antiquity, midwives have transmitted it as a bidirectional uterine tonic. Fragarine, isolated in 1941, confirms it. Here is the plant that accompanies an entire feminine life.
☥La Voie des Adaptogènes & Champignons
Shila (rock) + jit (conqueror) — conqueror of mountains. Shilajit is not peaceful: it pushes back what has yielded to fatigue and age. A mineral resin formed over millions of years in the high ranges of the Altai, Himalayas, and Caucasus. Ayurveda's deepest adaptogen.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Lavandula angustifolia -- named from the Latin lavare, to wash. Roman legions bathed wounds with it. Medieval monks grew it in every cloister garden. Hildegard of Bingen called it pure, sharp, and joyful. Linalool and linalyl acetate: the two compounds that explain 2000 years of sedative, antiseptic, and emotional tradition.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
Lavandula angustifolia takes its name from the Latin verb lavare, to wash. The Romans perfumed their thermae with it, Hildegard prescribed it against evil spirits, and the Virgin Mary is said to have dried the swaddling clothes of Jesus on its bushes. Here is the plant of the threshold of sleep.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
10–15% of harvests. The rarest. The most sacred. The one Andean tradition reserves for acute needs. Inca warriors before battle. Athletes in competition. Men losing vitality. The Maca who grows where nothing else lives — and transmits what she learned about surviving.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
In the villages of the Junín highlands, grandmothers transmit to young women: 'at the moment of transition, take the Red.' 20% of harvests, sacred, reserved. The Maca that nourishes from within — women in perimenopause, post-partum, irregular cycles. And, a remarkable paradox, the best Maca for the male prostate.
⧖Le Cercle du Féminin Sacré
A shaman from Junín says: 'She wants you to eat the yellow Maca root every day, that is why she makes herself abundant — she is your food. Red and Black Maca are rare and sacred, kept for medicinal use.' 5,800 years of daily consumption by Andean peoples. The world's most humble adaptogen: the one you eat every morning without thinking about it.
❦Le Sentier du Cacao
Theobroma cacao -- the name means "food of the gods" in Greek. Cacao has been used ceremonially for at least 5300 years, from the Olmec to the Maya to the Aztec. Theobromine, PEA, anandamide. And a clarification: the modern "cacao ceremony" as taught in wellness spaces was reconstructed in 2003 -- not a direct continuity with Mesoamerican tradition.
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