Her Sensual-i-Tea Organic

$8.00

HERBAL TEA | CAFFEINE FREE | ORGANIC | WOMEN'S LIBIDO SUPPORT

Desire does not respond well to a to-do list. The fastest way to lose the mood is to carry the whole day into the evening with you. 

Lemon balm loosens the grip of a busy mind and has being studied in women for libido and desire, not just for calm. Then there is epimedium, the herb that earned the name horny goat weed honestly, used across traditional medicine for centuries to support women's libido and sexual desire*.

Sold in 1 oz quantities. Makes 6-10 cups of tea.

Ingredients

organic lemon balm, organic hibiscus, organic lavender, organic epimedium, organic saw palmetto

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Unlock the Full Benefit of this Tea

This is not a before-the-moment tea. The herbs work best when they build in your system over time. One cup a day for two to four weeks is the rhythm that gets results. Think of it as a daily tonic for your nervous system and your desire, not a one night experiment.

The best time is late afternoon or early evening. That window between the end of the workday and the beginning of your personal time is exactly where this tea belongs. It acts as a buffer, a signal to your body that the day is done and something else is beginning.

If you want to use it more intentionally, drink a cup 60 to 90 minutes before intimacy. That gives the herbs time to absorb and lets the act of brewing and sipping become its own cue to shift gears mentally.

Cycle it the way you would any tonic herb. Three to four weeks on, one week off. This keeps your body responsive rather than adapting to it.

Pair it thoughtfully. If you take magnesium, have it with dinner and follow it with this tea. Magnesium relaxes muscles and the nervous system, and this blend works alongside that beautifully. If you are going through a particularly stressful stretch, drink a stress tea in the morning or midday and save this one for the evening when you want to reconnect. Avoid pairing it with heavy sedative herbs like valerian or passionflower earlier in the evening or you may find yourself asleep before you meant to be.

* Health benefits have not been evaluated by the FDA. Consult your doctor if you are on medication, have a health condition, or are pregnant or nursing or having surgery.

  • Why does this tea work?

    Lemon balm: best known as a calming herb but studied in women specifically for desire and arousal. It settles the stress that gets in the way and supports desire directly. Rare to find an herb that does both.

    Epimedium: better known as horny goat weed, and the name is no accident. Centuries of use in Chinese herbalism for women's libido and desire. The warming blood flow herb in this blend.

    Lavender: here to quiet the mind and ease tension so you can actually be present. One of the most reliable herbs for exactly that.Hibiscus: tart, bright and rich in antioxidants. Gives the blend its color and a little lift.

    Saw palmetto: traditionally used to support androgen balance in women, which plays a direct role in libido and the body's response.

    These statements are based on traditional herbal use and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.

  • Is this the right one for me?

    If what is dampening your desire is stress and never fully switching off, this is a good fit. The lemon balm and lavender are built to unwind you first, and epimedium brings the desire side, so it works gently from both directions, and it is caffeine free, so an evening cup will not keep you up.

    If your situation is more about the hormonal shifts of menopause, hot flashes and night sweats and a libido that dipped along with them, a dedicated menopause blend aimed at that hormonal picture may serve you better. And if the herbs here are not enough on their own, low desire has a lot of causes worth talking through with a doctor, since a tea is a gentle nudge, not a treatment.

  • Who should skip this one?

    Not recommended if you are pregnant, nursing, have a medical condition or are on medications without checking with your healthcare provider first.

    This blend contains epimedium, which can affect blood flow and blood pressure and may interact with blood thinners, blood pressure medications and heart medications. Check with your doctor if any of those apply to you. It also contains saw palmetto, which acts on hormones and can interfere with hormonal birth control and blood thinners. Check with your doctor first if either of those applies.

    If you have surgery coming up, stop two weeks before your procedure and let your surgical team know you have been taking this tea.

What Customers Ask Us About This Tea

It can, and this one works on both the head and the body level. A lot of what gets in the way of desire is stress, a busy head and never quite unwinding. This blend starts there. Lemon balm and lavender quiet the mind first. Then epimedium, better known as horny goat weed, brings the warming blood flow side that has made it a go-to for women's libido for centuries. Lemon balm is the standout ingredient here. It has been studied in women for desire and arousal specifically, not just for calm. Most herbs in this category cannot say that. This is a relax-then-warm-up cup. Not a switch you flip.

This works in two opposite directions. Lemon balm is the calming one, and it has been studied in women for desire and arousal specifically, so it both lowers the stress that gets in the way and supports desire directly. Epimedium, or horny goat weed, is the traditional aphrodisiac, the warming herb used for centuries to get things moving. Lavender backs up the lemon balm on the relaxation side. Together they unwind you and warm you up at the same time, which is exactly what this blend was built to do.

For most people it is a gentle caffeine free cup, but a couple of the herbs deserve a check. Epimedium can affect blood flow and blood pressure and may not mix well with blood thinners, blood pressure or heart medications, and saw palmetto acts on hormones and can interfere with hormonal birth control and blood thinners. If you are on any of those, or you are pregnant or nursing, talk to your doctor before drinking it. Otherwise it is a mild herbal tea you can enjoy in the evening.

Set your expectations for gentle, not instant. As a tea the herbs here are milder than a concentrated extract or capsule, so this is more of a mood setter and a relaxer than a fast acting fix. It works best as part of an unhurried wind down rather than something you drink five minutes before and expect results from. Drink it daily for two to four weeks and treat it as setting the scene, calming you down and warming you up, and let it support the evening from there.