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Dream Balm White Sage, Tulsi, Mugwort & Rose Balm
Dream Balm White Sage, Tulsi, Mugwort & Rose Balm
Dream Balm White Sage, Tulsi, Mugwort & Rose Balm
Dream Balm White Sage, Tulsi, Mugwort & Rose Balm
Dream Balm White Sage, Tulsi, Mugwort & Rose Balm
Dream Balm White Sage, Tulsi, Mugwort & Rose Balm
Dream Balm White Sage, Tulsi, Mugwort & Rose Balm

Dream Balm White Sage, Tulsi, Mugwort & Rose Balm

Regular price $0.00 $10.00 Sale

My dreamiest creation from the apothecary. 

Soothing and relaxing Dream Balm 

Promotes restful sleep and lucid dreaming while nourishing skin from head to toe. 

This balm is made from 100% freshly harvested herbs and flowers from my own garden. Blended with organic, unfiltered, cold pressed coconut, chamomile & oat oils. A generous amount of whipped Shea butter makes it’s creamy texture and a tiny pinch of rose mica makes it’s dreamy pink hue.  

This balm, though more of a whipped body butter, is just as medicinal as it is moisturizing. It can can be used from face to feet. Soothing and relaxing for sore muscles, anti inflammatory and packed with nourishment for your skin. 

Rub a small amount on pulse points before bed to promote lucid dreaming. Use head to toe as a medicinal skin moisturizer. 

ingredients:

California Giant Mugwort (Artemisia Douglasiana) 

White Sage (Salvia Apiana)

Tulsi (Holy Basil) 

Chamomile 

Wild Rose 

Lavender 

organic virgin camelina seed oil, chamomile oil, oat oil, shea butter, Cocoa Butter, Mango Butter & Rose mica 

Special Attention

The botanical materia medics, wares and recipes of this website are NOT INTENDED TO REPLACE THE SERVICES OF PHYSICIANS.

   By all means see a physician when a condition requires his services.

   There is ample proof that that botanical medicines have been used for thousands of years, and it is reasonable to believe that they were also used by primitive man to survive diseases, and the rigors of aging.

    None of these products have been evaluated by the FDA.

   Many botanicals offered at Starfish Honey are recognized in the United States and foreign pharmacopias. Many of them have been discarded for stronger, more certain, synthetic drugs, or other reasons.

   Modern science is now reevaluating many of the old time botanicals, and searching jungles and distant places to seek remedies from aboriginal races.

  The future of human medicine may very well rest in the methods of our ancient ancestors.