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TICKETY-BOO HERBAL

🔥 SEX CAPSULES 🔥

🔥 SEX CAPSULES 🔥

Regular price $99.90 AUD
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💥 SEX CAPSULES NOW IN PRODUCTION 💥 

Unleash your wild side with botanical ecstasy

Want to have a good night? Get loose? Feel like unleashing some sexual fire? Or just elevate cerebral celestial desire? This is the herbal blend for you

Blue Lotus in a 200:1 extract is going to kick you back and ease the worries from your mind, combined with freshly ground premium Valerian Root, which sinks you deeper into a euphoric state and then add Damiana to get your base chakra thumping

VALERIAN

Valerian as an Ecstatic and Euphoric Herb — A Forgotten History

  • Pre-modern Europe (medieval to early modern)
    Valerian (Valeriana officinalis) was commonly used not just for sedation, but for nervous excitement, sexual overstimulation, and even “hysteria” — which in coded historical language often referred to heightened erotic energy. It was given to women to soften tension in the womb and heart — a way to relax control and allow desire to surface.
  • Old English and Germanic traditions
    Valerian was a ritual herb burned in love spells and sometimes added to wine. Its musky, earthy root — so similar in scent to pheromones — was associated with attraction, erotic heat, and grounding during ecstatic rites. In fact, some texts refer to it as a “voluptuous root.”
  • Ancient Greek name origin
    The name Valerian comes from the Latin valere, meaning “to be strong, healthy, or to thrive.” It wasn’t originally about sedation — it was about vitality and sensual flourishing. A strengthener of the nerves, a stabilizer of excess — but not a blunter. It helped people feel more like themselves, less burdened by inhibition or nervous restraint.
  • 18th–19th century aphrodisiac use
    In Victorian times, some bohemians and counterculture types added Valerian tincture to brandy or port before social events — not to sleep, but to chill out and enjoy themselves. The effect was described as “loose, unbothered, and warm.” Others wrote that it softened the critical mind and allowed for “laughter, poetry, and games of the flesh.”

 The Energetic Signature

Valerian’s true nature is rooty, musky, grounding, and sensual. It sinks energy downward — out of the head, into the body — which is exactly what’s needed for ecstatic states, orgasmic potential, and creative flow. It helps shake off the nervous tension that blocks pleasure

Used in small doses and paired with uplifting herbs like Blue Lotus and Damiana, Valerian doesn’t sedate — it deepens. It’s the herb of sacral descent

DAMIANA

Damiana — The Sun-Warmed Leaf of Desire

Damiana (Turnera diffusa) is not a subtle herb. It’s bold, bright, and unmistakably alive. While modern herbalists often relegate it to the “libido support” shelf, its true history runs much deeper — through sacred rites, poetic intoxication, and ecstatic states of consciousness.

Indigenous and Pre-Colonial Use

  • The Maya and Aztec peoples of Mesoamerica revered Damiana as a sacred sexual tonic, using it to enhance lovemaking, fertility rituals, and visionary trance. It was often brewed into honeyed elixirs or cacao drinks before union — both physical and spiritual.
  • Traditionally it was said to “open the gates of the heart and womb,” making it especially beloved by women and priestesses. The leaves were sometimes smoked before ceremonies to invite connection, intuition, and pleasure.
  • For men, it was used as a nervine aphrodisiac — not a stimulant, but an energetic unblocker. It brought warmth and flow to the lower chakras, easing performance anxiety and returning the body to its natural rhythm.

18th–19th Century European Herbalists

  • Damiana entered Western herbal texts as a tonic for melancholia, sexual neurasthenia, and “frigidity” — again coded language pointing toward repression, grief, and trauma lodged in the erotic body.
  • It was also used for depression, especially of the kind that coexisted with sexual withdrawal, disconnection, or creative stagnation.
  • One 19th-century physician called it “an herb for the discouraged and the desireless.”

Sensory and Energetic Profile

  • Taste & scent: sweet, spicy, slightly bitter, with a sunny dryness that leaves the tongue tingling. Often likened to sipping on warm air in the late afternoon, when everything slows and opens.
  • Energetics: It warms the pelvic basin, moves stuck blood, and relaxes the diaphragm — making breath deeper and fuller. This alone is enough to shift someone from stress into sensual presence.
  • Spirit of the plant: Damiana is cheeky, radiant, and loving. It doesn’t push or seduce — it invites. And it reminds you that joy, pleasure, and connection are medicinal 

 Damiana in the Ecstatic Blend

In this formula, Damiana serves as the solar core. It lifts the spirit, awakens the sacral fire, and restores the sacredness of pleasure. When paired with Blue Lotus (the lucid dreamer) and Valerian (the downward anchor), it keeps the whole experience light enough to fly — yet rooted enough to surrender 

BLUE LOTUS

Blue Lotus – The Flower of Divine Ecstasy and Dream

Blue Lotus (Nymphaea caerulea) is not a modern herb. It’s an ancient sacrament, one of the most mystical and erotic plants ever recorded — treasured for thousands of years in Egypt, India, and beyond. This is not just a relaxant. It is a psychoactive heart-opener, a flower of vision, surrender, and sacred union

Sacred in Ancient Egypt

  • Found scattered over the tomb of Tutankhamun, painted into the walls of temples, and carved into chalices, Blue Lotus was beloved by pharaohs and priestesses alike.
  • The Egyptians infused wine with the flower before orgiastic rituals, trance ceremonies, and divine communion. It was said to bring a state of euphoria and heightened sensuality — where the gods could touch the skin.
  • It was associated with rebirth, sexual potency, and immortality. Some scholars believe it was used in rites of resurrection and soul retrieval.

“When the Blue Lotus opens, the soul awakens.”

 Tantra, Lucid Dreaming, and Esoteric Use

  • In Indian tantric traditions, Blue Lotus was used as a meditation and pleasure ally, supporting kundalini rising, heart expansion, and third eye activation.
  • It softens the body’s armor and allows for deep breath, slow movement, sensual awareness. This makes it ideal for extended states of sexual or spiritual union — where climax is replaced by waves.
  • Blue Lotus is also a known oneirogen — a dream-inducing plant. When taken in the right dose and setting, it fosters vivid, symbolic dreams, often with erotic or mystical themes.

Energetic and Emotional Profile

  • Taste & scent: light, floral, bittersweet, with a haunting aquatic perfume that lingers.
  • Energetics: Euphoric, sedating, heart-centering. It doesn’t knock you out — it opens you up. It creates a floaty, lucid veil over the mind and draws awareness into the body.
  • Spirit of the plant: Blue Lotus is gentle but not innocent. It teaches you to feel deeply without collapsing, to receive without fear, to merge without losing yourself. It’s the temple veil between worlds 

Blue Lotus in the Ecstatic Blend

In this sex powder, Blue Lotus is the feminine mystic — the one who slips between dimensions, guiding breath, touch, and surrender. She’s what makes the experience dreamy, lush, and ceremonial. Together with Damiana’s warmth and Valerian’s rooty grounding, she completes the triad — body, heart and soul 

YOUR SUPPORT IS APPRECIATED 

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