— Plantes qui accompagnent les transitions, nettoient le terrain, ouvrent le chemin sans imposer leur présence. —
— She smells like garlic — but she grows in the Amazon and has no genetic link to common garlic. The Shipibo-Conibo call her the Opener: the first dieta in the formation of a curandero, the plant that prepares the ground for all the others to truly enter.
— Read the full pillar →In Quechua, he is not named for his beauty, but for what he treats: Chuchuhuasi — the trembling back. In Shipibo-Conibo cosmology, he is the grandfather tree: vast, dark bark, unshakeable, silent. A 2000-year pharmacological record that modern biochemistry is only beginning to decode.
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.
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.
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.
This cluster belongs to the Living portal — INFUSE's grammar for speaking of the world as a territory rather than a machine.
Type to explore.