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INFUSE
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Love Elixir INFUSE — the drop that opens the heart without forcing it

Damask Rose, Hawthorn, ceremonial Cacao, Damiana. An elixir built around a question: what does opening the heart really mean? Not idealized romantic love. The capacity to feel, to stay present, to be touched without being swept away.

Opening the heart — it is a metaphor. What does it mean, concretely? In traditional herbalism, the plants called 'cardiotonic' or 'heart-opening' are spoken of along two axes: the physical (the cardiovascular system, blood pressure, rhythm) and the emotional (the capacity to feel, to receive, to stay present to experience without flight and without rigidity). The Love Elixir INFUSE is built from this twofold reading.

Composition

Damask Rose (Rosa damascena) — the queen. Turned to for millennia in perfumery, in Ayurvedic medicine, and in European herbalism, for the heart and for grief. The fresh petals contain phenylethanolamines and anthocyanins. Rose hydrosol is, emotionally, the most documented of the floral waters — a gentle action on the limbic axis, according to some researchers. INFUSE uses dried organic petals from Bulgaria (the Valley of the Roses, Kazanlak).

Hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna) — the heart plant par excellence in European herbalism. Proanthocyanidins and flavonoids. Long held in European herbalism as a heart ally and studied for its cardiovascular affinity. Traditionally given for the 'broken heart' — not metaphorically, but as a steady background tonic for periods of grief or intense emotional strain.

Ceremonial Cacao (Theobroma cacao, Criollo variety) — theobromine, phenylethylamine (PEA), anandamide. 'Ceremonial cacao' is not a recent invention — the Maya and the Aztecs used it in precise ritual contexts. INFUSE works with a non-Dutched Criollo cacao, processed at low temperature, which preserves its active constituents. A caveat: ceremonial cacao as it has been reconstituted in New Age practice dates from 2003 — INFUSE makes no claim to a direct continuity with the Mesoamerican tradition.

Damiana (Turnera diffusa) — the wild one of the desert. Flavonoids (apigenin, luteolin), alkaloids (damianine). A historical affinity with sacred sexuality and bodily connection. The Mexican curanderos use it to 'abrir el corazón' — to open the heart to sensation, not to sentiment. An important distinction.

Use

Love Elixir is used within a context of presence — not as an automatic daily supplement. Before an important conversation. Before a moment of intimacy. After a loss, to support the capacity to stay open within grief.

A few ml in warm water or in cacao. Or placed directly under the tongue. Take a moment before going on — let perception adjust.

No prescribed dose. The elixir does not act by chemical accumulation — it acts by recalling a quality of presence that the body already knows.

Red lines

Contains alcohol. Damiana is not advised during pregnancy. Rose and Hawthorn are generally well tolerated, but Hawthorn can interact with cardiac medications (digoxin, beta-blockers) — medical advice is recommended if you are under treatment. Do not use as a substitute for psychological care in a context of grief or trauma.

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Rose de Damas, Hawthorn, Cacao ceremoniel, Damiana. Un elixir construit autour d'une question : qu'est-ce qu'ouvrir le coeur signifie, vraiment ? Pas l'amour romantique idealise. La capacite de sentir, de rester present, d'etre touche sans etre emporte.

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INFUSE
5 min de lecture · 1500 mots