Blue Lotus Oil is a powerful exotic oil extracted from the Sacred Narcotic Lily of the Nile, Nymphaea Caerulea , used since ancient Egypt as an aphrodisiac. It is highly praised for its tranquilizing, calming, and euphoric effects, as well as its ability to increase sexual desire.
The Nymphaea Caerulea was considered a symbol of life and immortality in ancient Egypt, which used its entheogenic qualities to communicate with the divine. Entheogens are mind-altering substances that alter perception, behavior, and cognition of an individual. They are used often by spiritual and religious groups across the world, across cultures, to connect with a higher divinity.
Nymphaea Caerulea is known for it’s spiritual and psychoactive properties, and is often used to enhance meditation, aid lucid dreaming, promotes invigoration and euphoria, and stimulates the senses.
Ingredients: 100% Pure Blue Lotus Absolute Oil.
Size: 3 ml
"Every time is like the first time"
Also known as Egyptian Lotus, Blue Lotus was traditionally used in aromatherapy by many ancient cultures as a sacred aphrodisiac to promote feelings of well-being, tranquility, euphoria, sexual desire, and ecstasy. It was considered an efficacious antispasmodic that increases circulation and produces a “divine” feeling of calm. The Blue Lotus was revered in Ancient Egypt as both a sacrament and an aromatic boon, symbolizing fertility, purity, sexuality, rebirth, and the rising sun in art, cultural ceremonies, and astrology. Recent studies have found Blue Lotus to be mildly psycho-active with relaxing sedative effects that recall the fabled food of the lotus-eaters in ancient Homeric Greek myth.
"It's like walking into the sweetest warm dream, use this to experience bliss"
Ancient Indian mythology’s blue deity Krishna, the Supreme Person, is strongly associated with the Blue Lotus, having a cheerful, lotus-like countenance with ruddy eyes like the interior of a lotus and a swarthy body like the petals of a blue lotus; he holds a lotus in one of his four hands. In Buddhist teaching, the Blue Lotus, is a symbol of the victory of the spirit over the senses, and the preferred flower of Manjushri, the bodhisattva of wisdom. The life-cycle of the lotus represents the soul’s progress from the mud of materialism, through the waters of experience, and into the sunshine of enlightenment.