Lavender (Bulgaria) Essential Oil

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Pure Lavender Essential Oil (Essence) from Bulgaria
'I encourage you to explore your freedom'

Family: Lamiaceae
Latin name:Lavendula angustifolia
Origin: Bulgaria
Farming Method: Biodynamic
Plant Parts: Flowering Tops
Process: Steam Distilled

additional information: Bulgarian Lavender adds a soothing, harmonizing note... the calm center within the wildness, the quiet intelligence before the leap.

Medicinal Benefits: Bulgarian Lavender is celebrated for its soothing, restorative, and harmonizing influence on the body and nervous system. It is one of the most therapeutically versatile essential oils in the world, with benefits that span skin, mood, and respiratory support.  Provides relief for acne, sunburn, bruises, and superficial skin injuries, reflecting its long-standing use for wound care and tissue calming. Also, lavender offers support for pain relief, including headaches, muscle pain and pain from minor injuries, like bumps and bruises.

Emotional and Spiritual Properties: Lavender's profound influence on sleep, stress, and anxiety make it a cornerstone for emotional and nervous-system balance.  Its aroma — sweet, floral, herbaceous, and lightly balsamic — reflects a chemistry rich in linalool and linalyl acetate, compounds associated with calming and restorative effects. Lavender eases worry, soothes the Central Nervous System (CNS), and lightens unconscious tension held in the stomach or muscles, opening the door to a gentle return to rest, trust, and openness. Spiritually, lavender has long symbolized purification, serenity, and grace. It clears the energetic field without force, creating space for calm awareness and deeper presence.

Cultural & Historical Lineage: Bulgarian Lavender carries a lineage that spans ancient civilizations and modern therapeutic traditions. Lavender has been used since antiquity for medicinal, spiritual, and aromatic purposes, including cleaning cuts, soothing irritations, and scenting sacred spaces. Ancient Egyptians used lavender in mummification, and jars in Tutankhamun’s tomb still held its scent after 3,000 years.  Romans used lavender in baths and introduced it to England, where it became a staple of folk medicine and household care.