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Mimosa Medicine
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- Опубліковано 21 сер 2018
- The mimosa plant is used in Chinese medicine. It is called the Tree of Happiness. It is a good anti-depressant. The bark and flower are used in medicine making. The seed pods contain toxins that can decrease the availability of vitamin B6.
Doctor Mindy Curry is a naturopath in Portland, Oregon.
Call for your FREE 10-minute consultation. 503-995-8674. Or visit at passionforheali... for more information.
This is the tree that I learned how to climb trees back in the sixtys.
@@charleswilson577 what a lovely tree to learn upon!
I LOVE MIMOSA 🌳 TREES ! MY GRANNY HAD THEM WHEN I WAS YOUNG AND IT REMINDS ME OF HER. I HAVE ONE BIG ONE IN MY YARD AND IT SMELLS SO WONDERFUL
@@Pattim4762 what a beautiful memory!
Finally someone that shows the process!!! One Love!!! ❤💛💚
These grew in the back yard in NC and I have one here in Va growing and flowering as we speak I always grab a flower off and smell it and immediately start smiling!!!
Immediate action!
I'm in PA and I happened across a tiny mimosa plant for sale. I was drawn by it but learned it would take up more space than ideal. Bought it anyway then debated planting it. Debate officially over! Thanks! ☺️❤️
I live in Vancouver wa do u know where I can get a couple plants ?
@@dannyanen6145 no I don’t. I’ve been looking for a young tree of Happiness myself, for my new recreational land, but haven’t found a local source yet.
the mimosa pudica plant you found is different than the mimosa tree, medicinal use is not interchangeable. They are not the same plant
@@dannyanen6145 Hi! I live near Battle Ground and bought three from a local seller yesterday! I can give you contact info if you're still wanting to get trees :)
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 Same for you! I just replied to Danny's comment. Thank you -- I'm glad I found this video, and your channel! I love to learn about the plants growing around me, and have a lot on my property near BG Lake.
Appreciate you showing how to make the tincture !!!
Good use for an invasive species! At least here in the Southern third of the US
I don't call a plant invasive when it's so useful and beautiful .
@@PocketSandMan exactly. Humans are invasive. These plants have been walking around these continents since they were all lumped together into one supercontinent. They’ll be traveling around long after we’re gone and the continents drift together yet again.
Nice! I’m trying some Albizia tea right now. I really appreciated you mentioning the toxic seed pods. So many resources neglect to mention that and it’s a real hazard.
So simple and true! Many blessings to you!❤
@@mikemorano1457 bless you too!
thank you! I had put up a tincture a few minutes ago, but the flowers had seed pods. Now I'm separating them... So thanks
I woke up one day this summer, every flower was GONE, thank u for doing this. 🌻🌼
Ouch! Traumatic.
I know that feeling well. Sometimes I’ll get all prepped for making a UA-cam and go out to the herb I’m stalking just to find all the flowers or leaves or fruit have dropped and somehow spoiled seemingly overnight.
I’m learning to set yearly calendar alerts for those herbs that I really need to stock up on yearly.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 we have a Chinese man who is probably 50+, he's been so interested in this tree since it started blooming, in my front yard. You just don't see them here in Washington. Last year we let him take the flowers, leaves, & branches, for tea. This year I was going to keep my own flowers, we woke up one morning to find every single flower gone, they were just on the 4th flowerball. Last year we added one to the backyard, these are such beautiful trees, I usually collect all the seed pods, & put them with my gardening heritage seeds, so no animals get poisoned. Thank u for your videos, have an amazing new year, from Tacoma 💛 👍🏻🌻🎋
Wow crazy how I was drawn to this tree when I’m struggling with pain and trauma 💯👀🙏
Good choice!
Me too. I dug a few up I. The wild and potted. I have one still alive. Going to try to keep alive through the winter and plant it in my yard. I had no clue that it had medicinal properties
Thank you for this🙏im harvesting the blossoms today.
You were incredibly helpful.
New subscriber Francine 🦋
I really appreciate you showing this specially in the world today eith so many information spots out there and misleading thank you for helping people.
@@rayray2878 thank you. Just from reading the comments to this video I can see that there’s a lot of misinformation circulating around traditional herbs, and many people with an interest but without sufficient knowledge to use nature’s bounty effectively and safely.
thank you doctor. i adore you for you efforts.. go girl!!
Im in grief and 10 hours later my eyes still feel swollen & puffy, grief can be incredibly exhausting! Phew!!
@@Dawghome oh I am so sorry!
Thank you very much for the details of tincture making and the important advice in the end.
You’re welcome!
Some of this grows on my family's land there's also a catalpa tree which is also highly medicinal i've smoked the flowers from it and they are as good as med weed, and it has a nice flower aftertaste also they don't make you cough.
How do you know it's not just the Vodca making you happy?
Wow! Had no idea... been wanting to plant one on our property in Georgia for a while now! So beautiful. I was searching to find info on planting the seeds. I just harvested some dried seeds that a tree gifted me with the other day... Down here in Georgia the Happy Tree is everywhere, it seems to thrive on the sides of highways and around bodies of water. I lived in Milwaukee for a year or so myself. But, back down in the south where I grew up these days. Thanks again! I learned a great deal and you are easy to follow, great trainer 👍
If you find a small one somewhere you can dig it up and transplant. Right now (2022) they have been getting a disease. My big one by my house went through my roof. It is best to wild harvest because they are invasive here. But I really don't blame you! Maybe train bonsai style. No bigger than you can reach over?
I have seedlings already started if you want one. I’m in nw ga
^^^ forgot to tag you...
Nicely pitched voice. Nice to listen to.
Oh thank you! I’ve never thought my voice was nice enough.
Magnolia is good too to add
My acupuncturist recommended this tincture for me. I bought the 'Herb Pharm' brand (bark only) and so far it's nice. I would like to find a brand that has flower + bark. Thank you for the video!
Excited to learn this. 🙏🙏🏼🙏🏿🙏🏾
What's up with the hands are you a changeling or are you a cookie in an oven?
Question: what training would you recommend starting with for someone interested in becoming an herbalist?
I’m retired and want to start a new hobby / career in medicinal herbalism.
Thanks
We need many happy barks in our world today
Exactly!
Thank you will be trying in the future. Received my seeds and have started them. Only 2 have come in so-far. I wonder if you’ve ever seen mimosa grow successfully in a large container for medicinal use? My back yard is solid rock at the bottom of a lava mountain.
I haven’t seen it potted, but perhaps if it’s a large enough container it will be happy?
I have trees that have that fungus on them and i kill that fungus with mineral oil. I have a pump spray bottle. Add mineral oil. Usually about 1/4 but add as much as you need for your tree of a normal size bottle. I😅 use that much because its usually just a rose bush(yes great for those deaseasetoo). Then add extremely hot water. Shake shake shake the whole time your spraying to keep the oil mixed with water. We all know oil and water doesn't mix. But it is the best way to spray the mineral oil. Then just watch your tree become healthy again. You may need to reapply after a couple months if you still see the fungus. ❤❤❤❤. Saving out trees.❤❤❤❤
Good tip! My plum tree is very fungus invaded this year. I’m using a copper based spray, but mineral oil sounds like a pretty good solution too!
The Mimosa doesn’t do anything for you, it’s the Vodka that alters your mood 🤣
Unless you use it in a tea or eat the flowers or chew the bark.
@@craigcook1571 if you’re taking enough mimosa tincture to get an altered mood from the vodka, then you’re probably taking your tinctures wrong, or you’re a very very cheap date.
2017 i had a breakthrough on dmt. Mimosa was one of the plants used. Currently trying to learn how to extract my own dmt. A shaman iam
This is not the dmt Mimosa plant. Totally different tree, different species altogether.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 I was wondering about that!
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 bullshit
The pink one is the one with DMT. In Brazil it is used as the dmt portion of the ayahuasca mixtures... THE BARK IS LOADED WITH POWERFUL DMT.
@@brienegan Mimosa hostilis has a flower that looks more like a shaggy yellow caterpillar. This is the plant whose roots are used to illegally make the controlled substance DMT.
Mimosa julibrissin has little pink puff flowers, but roots are not used to illegally make the controlled substance DMT.
Online there are many, if not most, pics confusing these very different plants, either out of poor understanding or due to dishonesty by scammers trying to sell Mimosa julibrissin roots to people who want Mimosa hostilis roots for purposes besides using as a dye.
This page shows the differences:
hostilisroot.medium.com/3-foolproof-ways-to-identify-mimosa-hostilis-tenuiflora-77204b3770bb
You are awesome!
Amazing video as usual amazing plant 🤍
Hi Doc, For the Alcoholics out there,, is there another way/recipe to do this without alcohol?
No problem, just dry the bark shavings and use them in tea instead. Make sure you simmer on low for ~15+ minutes to extract as much medicine from the bark as possible. Flavor with your favorite tea or other complementary herbs.
If you add the drops to water, wont the alcohol dissapate?
If using for tea, can the bark be dehydrated to save for later?
Thank you so much. It’s also nice your so close. I’m just across the River in woodland. I may be getting in touch soon. Oh how long before it’s ready to consume? I missed that part.
Dreamer tinctures should sit a few weeks before straining. It’s OK just to leave it in indefinitely until you plan on using it, but it may get more bitter and discolored over longer times.
I just saw this video what do you consider a dose a tea spoon or the hole jar
Dosing herbs is a very personal thing. It’s best to work with an herbalist or ND to get the dose you need, probably in a holistic formula helping more than one organ system.
Never drink the whole jar, unless your jar is very very small.
Most people will find benefits between teaspoons and drop dosing. If you try a teaspoon and then you think you feel weird, then cut that in half, or go down to 15 drops and work your way up as tolerated.
Very sensitive people sometimes get paradoxical reactions to “normal” doses of herbs.
Thanks I am cautious but I no longer trust big pharm over God given. You are needed keep teaching
Tough times ahead. Why is our enemy China producing our meds with lead and carcinogen? They could decide to stop sending us medicines
What do you do with the tincture? Oraly or topical or what?
@@brucepoole8552 oral use, usually as part of a comprehensive formulation made specifically for each individual.
The Earth provides the true remedies for ailments.
Oh, how true. That's because earth was created for mankind to live forever without sickness and death.
I believe that also.
I get bigger blessing thinking God Almighty and go to work . Heals all .
I am wondering what is the recommended dosage for this tincture??
@@carlastork3091 I recommend that you see a Naturopath or herbalist who can make you a more effective synergistic combination formulation for your specific situation. A teaspoon or less would be a very general dose to try.
Yes mimosa's are good in the morning.... With pancakes.😊
@@michaelmcneely6143 do you syrup the flowers, or how?
These volunteer prolifically around Athens GA.
Never knew it was herbal.
I used to have a brown leaved Mimosa Tree called a Chocolate Mimosa.
I was thinking of getting another one, they're quite striking.
Do you know if the Chocolate variety has the same medicinal properties?
If it doesn't, then I'd rather have the green one!
I just love the form of that tree!
I don’t see any difference mentioned online. It’s just a darker colored cultivar of Mimosa julibrissin, so probably has much the same medicinal compounds. Usually I think of darker variants as having even more pigment compounds which tend to be very nutritious and medicinal. I haven’t ever seen a chocolate mimosa personally, but now I really want one to plant on my new SW Washington land!
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 oh THANK YOU SOOO MUCH for replying!!
I didn't realize this video was 3 years old until after I posted the question.
I wasn't sure you would see it!
I'm extremely happy with your thoughts on the Chocolate Mimosa!!
We all need some good chocolate in our lives, right?!!
I haven't been getting around to the nurseries much lately, but if I ever spy some good chocolate leaves for sale, and the nursery ships plants, I'll let you know!
I'm in Central Texas, so it might be a bit of a drive for you to pop on over to the nursery yourself!
It was approximately 20 years ago when I had the chocolate mimosa, it was in a pot, and ended up dying from shock after an unruly day of kids and soccer balls! Poor thing!
I never knew mimosas had medicinal properties until I watched your video!
That's so cool!!
I know every single plant has a purpose, yet somehow I'm always amazed at what nature provides!
I really enjoy your videos!
They're very informative, and I especially like watching the process of making the tinctures each time.
You seem to answer all my questions in each video about the plant, and the medicine it makes! Thank You for that!
I love learning about medicinal plants 💚💚💚
And if you're ever fed up with all the rain you're getting, feel free to send some down my way!! We're dryer than usual this Winter & Spring, Summer has just started and we're already dry & thirsty!!
I often envy how y'all have so much rain & mushrooms!!
Thanks Again for the info here, and in all your videos!!
I really appreciate the education!!
After you have made it. What is the dose? What’s too much? Or not enough? What do you recommend?
Doses can be rather individual. Some people are very sensitive to herbs, others not so much. I recommend that you go to a Naturopath or an herbalist to figure out a good dose and formula for your specific needs. Usually I use this as part of a more holistic formula. For tea a few cups a day, for tincture somewhere between drops and a teaspoon 1-3 times a day depending on the person’s constitution and support needs.
Do you think steam distillation would be a good method for this?
I have an alembic🧙♂️
I’m curious, is it Amygdalin that’s the toxic compound? I do consume the pods, only in small amounts. Great video, thank you!🙏🏼 💪🏻
@@sheldon740 please don’t eat the seed pods.
“The seeds of mimosa trees contain chemicals called alkaloids. The alkaloids present in these seeds counteract the actions of vitamin B6 in the body. Vitamin B6 is essential for producing neurotransmitters, which send signals between nerve cells. Consuming mimosa seed pods can result in muscle tremors, muscle spasms and convulsions due to the antagonistic effect that the alkaloids have on vitamin B6. Affected animals may present with locomotion problems and display abnormal movements when turning or backing up. Exaggerated responses to stimuli, salivation and difficulty breathing have also been observed. Symptoms typically manifest 12 to 24 hours after eating the seeds. Animals poisoned by mimosa seeds are treated with injections of vitamin B6.”
sciencing.com/toxicity-mimosa-tree-5961861.html
Does this affect fertility at all? I know you shouldn’t take DURING pregnancy but will it hurt your chances of actually conceiving?
How's the best way to take the tincture? Dosage?
@@jonclemons1421 that’s something that you should discuss with your herbalist or naturopath. Doses are individual, and the best way to take this is in a formula with other synergistic herbs chosen for your specific needs. Generally it’s probably a teaspoon or less.
It's also a hardwood so you can use it to make handles
@@PocketSandMan oh! Is it beautiful?
Thank you
You’re welcome!
There is no such thing as an invasive species...enioy them without reservation... and let them spread! If they are needed in the ecosystem, they will thrive. (I'm aware of the ecological nativist's arguments- I taught invasion biology for many years and was a staunch nativist for more years than that)
Thank you for this helpful video! They have surrounded my Mom in the last decade as she grieved the death of her husband and figured out how to really live on her own for the first time in her life. The medicine finds us.
Humans are rapidly changing the climate and ecosystems that these distinctions between invaders and natives were invented within. Plants have been moving around the planet long before we crawled out of the sea and will be moving around the globe long after we finally learned that you cannot eat money.
Find Happiness where you can! Spread it as you wish.
Thank you Dr. Mindy!! Love your videos! : )
You are very welcome. Please let me know what other herbs you'd like me to cover :)
Thank you : ) I appreciate that!! What comes to my mind right now are Black Walnut and Wild Lettuce. Thanks again!! Happy Labor Day Weekend!
Did you put the flower stems into or did you cut them off
@@DisneyUpBoilerUp left them on.
Do you have a dosing recommendation?
@@barbaragoulet2690 I recommend that you see a Naturopath or herbalist who can make you a more effective synergistic combination formulation for your specific situation. A teaspoon or less would be a very general dose to try.
Awesome video! Can you plant these in any zone? Or is it more of a tropical tree?
The beautiful silk tree is hardy in USDA Zones 6-9.
Good info!! Be better if 50% was cut out, and if you would have noted if Apple cider vinegar could be used instead for us nonalcohol users.
@@markpennella thanks! You should make your own shorts herbal videos! So far I’ve preferred to cater to folks who want to spend some time with these plants. Maybe in the future I will try to make a slew of short herb cameos, but those won’t include any medicine making. That’s not something I want to rush.
Can you combine the tea from a mimosa tree with pine or sweet gum sap? Thanks great vid.
caleb prodtoins sounds OK. Start small, check if the combination caused any unwanted changed to the fluid.
Will it work in a tee?
Yes, just simmer on low for ~15+ minutes to fully extract the medicine.
How would you use this??? Do you ingest it
Yes! Usually by the drop or teaspoonful added to water or juice.
What can you tell us about the similar benefits of Mimosa pudica?
@@unicornjennie personally I’ve only met the sensitive plant in the wild once whilst looking at some steam vents on the Big Island of Hawaii on holiday.
The internet says that the most common traditional medicine way to use pudica is a blood purifier for menstrual problems, diabeties, specific for piles and diarrhea, skin diseases, heart and respiratory tract diseases. So traditionally a rather different plant.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 that's where I first saw the sensitive plant too but I've been growing my own for a few months now so I wanted to know more about it's medicinal properties.
How do ypu make bark tea without the flowers?
Just low simmer the bark shavings for about a half an hour.
The Mimosa Hostilis is the most sacred plant! Very powerful.
It’s just so wonderful and beautiful!
Isso não é mimosa hostilis
Shalom , could you tell me if the leaves have any medicinal value. Thank you
Young leaves can be cooked as an edible food. They provide an aromatic flavor and can be as a potherb. The dried leaves have been used as a tea substitute.
The bark and flowers are the medicinal portions traditionally.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 it's funny you mention the young leaves are edible. This brought back a young memory of mine where I would climb mimosa trees in Eastern NC as a kid and pick the green seed pods and eat them, thinking they resembled pea pods. Not sure I'd do that today, but I do remember they had a fresh funky flavor.
Could i dry the bark and flowers then use it in a tea later? Thank you
lindsey Loo Sure! Teas tend to be a bit weaker than tinctures, and dried herbs go bad faster than an alcohol extraction, but the advantage is no alcohol!
Dosage please
Does anyone know if i can use the green part on the new branches?
I haven’t heard of that part being used.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 thank you I will just use the bark
I discovered some flowers in my back yard next to a huge pond that I live on,but the flowers are small.They are growing more from a bush had not grown into a matute tree.Are the baby flowers ok to use or shall I wait until they bloom from a branch/tree?
First, make sure that you have identified your tree correctly. There are other species of mimosas that are different from the Tree of Happiness. The sensitive plant could have flowers that look similar, but small and on a bush. Do the leaves fold up when you tickle them? If so, it’s not the Silk Tree. Once you’ve determined that you have the correct Mimosa tree, harvesting the flowers should be fine. Maybe leave the bark alone and let the baby just grow though.
Is the related to mimosa pudica?
They are both members of the Fabaceae (legume family), which includes beans and peas. Mimosa pudica, however, is in a different genera than Albizua julibrissin. The name "Mimosa" has been applied to several somewhat related species with similar pinnate or bipinnate leaves, which are classified in other genera.
Mimosa pudica can be distinguished from the large related genera, Acacia and Albizia, since its flowers have ten or fewer stamens. Botanically, what appears to be a single globular flower is actually a cluster of many individual ones.
So, what do you do next? How to take it? How to store it? How long does it last?
Store tinctures in a cool dark place, should last a long time, maybe indefinitely if you don’t let the lids decay into the jar. Industry expires them after 5 years I think. Dried herbs should ideally be used within 3 months for maximum benefit. They’re still useful within a year, but after that potency can really taper off. Vacuum sealing helps a lot. Also freezing dried vacuum sealed herbs can extend their usefulness potentially a few seasons.
How much you take varies depending upon your needs and how you respond to herbs. Think drops to teaspoons for tincture. Maybe a cup or two tea. Go to a naturopathic doctor or herbalist to get individualized guidance.
Oh thank you so much for this video. I was wondering if it’s OK if I take it I got Addison’s disease and I’m not taking no medication whatsoever. It would be good to have a happy tonic to make me feel better with energy.
Tree of Happiness is generally considered safe and well tolerated. There are no strong indications of contraindications (outside of pregnancy) in the literature. It could potentially potentiate sedative herbs or drugs.
Can we use organic olive oil instead of the vodka?
Minor covered with bugs what am I supposed to do
Yikes!
You could try spraying it with watered down dish soap and see if the bugs leave.
Sometimes I just have to leave it for the nature, find another place to harvest. Those bugs are the snacks of your ecosystem for everything from spiders to birds to bats!
Do you need to put a salve over where you cut the branch off so it doesn’t hurt the tree
It takes care of itself. I imagine that the tree feels painful loss. Send good vibes during harvest. Let it know what you want it for, that it will join you personally. Don’t take too much, waste the pain.
New Follower ...Thanks! Can I use the Bark in the Spring or dried Bark for the tincture ?...No flowers yet
Sure! Make both each according to the season and availability.
Sorry keep up the good work
Has anyone ever made capers from the buds ??
I used a brush killer speciticide for a bed of wild blackberry, used spray bottle to hose it got on the grass accidentally thought I was being careful……in same area was my older beautiful Mimosa…..it’s dying ….could that have my Specticide ? Didn’t seem that much…..wonder if utter come back just lost all spring bloom
Oh I’m so sorry to hear that! I hope it survives!
Hi! I'm in Hillsboro
Do I need to use bark for a tincture? Or can I just use the flowers? My trees are huge and got LICHEN all over them
You can certainly use just the flowers. The medicinal compounds will be slightly different. Let your body tell you if the flowers alone are working for you. It will be a glorious beautiful tincture! Use a fancy jar.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 Thank you sooooo much....How much of the tincture should I take as a beginner?
@@NaeNay. tincture dosing can be very individual. Some people find sufficient effects with drop doses. Others may need a few teaspoons to feel the same. Dosing also changes if you add this into a synergistic formula. In that case you may need less of each component herb. A teaspoon seems like a good starting point, then move down or up depending on how you feel.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 Thank you so much for that information💚💚💚
Can i use the flowers as hydrosol?
Sure, that would be lovely!
What about when they turn brown
@@user-zm3dg3pu8y well, the bark is still fine when brown.
Pick the flowers when they’re pink and tincture or dry them quickly. Otherwise you are just using a flower that’s already rotting mid air (or fallen) and you really don’t want to use the toxic pods that come forth from those blossoms.
So what’s the recommendation for use?
I recommend consulting with an herbalist or naturopath to develop a formula incorporating mimosa for your individual issues. This goes well in stress or mood formulas. Dosage will depend on how you tolerate herbs and if this is used alone or synergistically in a formula, from drops to teaspoons of tincture, or by the cup for tea.
Does it get people high?
@@luckspell no
Is there one that had flowers that you can barely see? I like how the leaves look and don’t like the flowers blocking them
Not that I’ve met in suburbia. It doesn’t flower very long, but they do make a big mess.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 Some of them are still blooming in my area
Do you sell the seeds? I would love one of those trees in my yard. Those flowers are so beautiful.
jrodz44 no I don’t, but I’m sure you can find them online or at tree nurseries. Good luck!
Come to the south.they are literally everywhere.
If the seeds are in the pods then i have some now
You could order seeds from( happy garden)2807 us highway 31N Marbury Alabama 36051 ,,, 101281 RebeccaWallace@ gmail.com,didnt mean to but in
What do you mean avoid the seeds. If the flower is there and looks healthy and I pick it. It's good. But if there is another seed that hasn't evolved to a flower don't pick it?
The seeds are toxic to ingest.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 I made my tea and it hurt my stomach and a slight breathing difficulty I could barely notice.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 it hurt all night long to a degree like when your intestine is moving waste. I had 3 dreams that night from it and I never have 3 dreams in one night.
Is this the same plant which the bark of its roots contains dimethyltryptamine.
I thought the plant that I'm speaking of could only grow in climate zones 1 and 2
No, it’s a totally different plant. M. julibrissin is not the DMT mimosa.
When this tree blooms, it's feathery like pink flowers over weeks. I am miserable. It is invasive, so it's pretty much everywhere.
Are there any natural remedies for my minosa allergies?
Oh! I’m so sorry to hear this. There are natural things that can help. Quercetin, N-Acetyl cysteine and stinging nettles can all help make your symptoms more manageable, but avoidance is best.
it's nigh to impossible to separate the outer bark from the inner white bark. I have flowers tincturing, young, green bark infusing, flowers essencing, bark, flowers and leaves drying. The leaves are used as a tea as well.
Don’t stress too much about separating the barks. You’ll get the medicinal compounds either way…
Sounds like you’re making some good stuff!
These grow like weeds in Texas. I'll have to take my clippers for a stroll 😁
@@ardymoore694 free medicine!!!
Would you have seeds? Awe it's so beautiful
I don’t. I haven’t had luck germinating seeds from the tree on my street. My mother in Sacramento California says here tree produces lots of seed babies every year.
Here’s a site for buying live Tree of Happiness and seeds:
strictlymedicinalseeds.com/?s=Mimosa+&post_type=product&title=1&excerpt=1&content=1&categories=1&attributes=1&tags=1&sku=1&ixwps=1
once made, how much to you take and how?? by the spoon or in tea??
I do not give specific dosing recommendations over the internet. Dosing can be individual-specific and this is often used as part of a bigger formula containing several complimentary herbs.
Two questions, please!
1. My understanding is to make separate tinctures using bark for one and flowers for the other, add they each have slightly different medicinal properties. Is that true?
2. I've seen the bark harvested and used 2 different ways, one as you did using the outer and green bark, the other way using the white inner bark. Which is correct?
Love your informative videos!
I am currently testing green bark from smaller branches in oil for pain relief. I have the inner white bark with outer bark attached, drying, will use for tea. I'll see if the green inner bark has any properties. No one seems to say about the different bark types, but I've seen the white inner bark on most website.
Also, the root is psychedelic
@@JanineMJoi yes, I'm having that same issue with the differentiation between the white and green bark. I might just have to try making two separate tinctures and see if I notice a difference. I haven't heard about using the root - do you tincture it? I have several small trees on my property I need to pull up.
@@JanineMJoi this is not the DMT plant. That’s a very different mimosa.
If you have the time to spend separating the barks, then go for it. That’s going to take much extra effort. I’ve heard herbalists say “the best herbal medicine is too expensive to produce”. In other words you might get a better product by obsessing over harvesting the exact bits with the highest concentration of medicinal compounds, but you’ll take so long that it’s not really “cost effective”. You’ll get the same results with a less pure product, but it will be a little less concentrated. That’s all.
The flowers and bark do have some differences, but both are traditionally used as a mild sedative, specifically for calming and lifting one's spirit, with a few useful differences. Current research has validated the traditional Chinese remedy of mimosa bark, showing that it relieves anxiety and has an antidepressant-like effect. Other studies have found that mimosa foliage and flowers contain antioxidants which inhibit the oxidation of the bad LDL cholesterol, decreasing the danger associated with high LDL cholesterol.
The bark is boiled or steeped in water or tinctured. For a milder effect, one can also use the flowers and leaves.The main medicinal portions are the flowers (huan hua) and the tree bark (he juan pi). While the flowers tend to have more uplifting and mood enhancing properties, the bark is more sedative and “anchors” the heart and the spirit when there is grief, sorrow, insomnia and anxiety. In traditional Chinese medicine, it is also known for gently moving qi and blood, which is deeply helpful for those who feel stagnant, tense and have “liver qi stagnation.”
Mimosa flower is more uplifting, energizing. anti-depressant. Mimosa bark anchors the heart, helps stabilize emotions, calming the spirit in those with anxiety, insomnia, symptoms of post traumatic stress and panic.
So basically the flowers are more light and fluffy, uplifting, just like they look and smell! They’re effect is more subtle, a bit weaker than the bark for noticeable effects. The bark is more strongly grounding.
@@dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590 thank you for the explanationon on the bark, it makes sense.
Your description of applications of the flower and bark tinctures reminds me of what people say about treating human ailments with plants that look similar in nature to how they perform (mimosa flowers fluffy and uplifting, bark more grounding) of that makes sense. It makes it easier to remember how to use these medicines also.
Thank you for your expertise!
What plant to eat for weight gain?
I think we know the answer to that. 😅 It gives you the munchies
That really depends on the reasons for weight loss. Most people find eating lots of carbs and sugar and fried foods will certainly cause weight gain. If you’ve tried that and it doesn’t work, then it’s time to look for a cause. Is it more of a choice/goal, as in body building?
Thanks for the video,I just order on eBay the orange Mimosa and the yellow one,and I'm searching for the blue or purple one
Glad I could help.
Have one as bonsai
Wow! That sounds cool!
I prefer to chew the bark when it is fresh, haven't died yet.
I just cut a small branch off ours… Fixing to try what you did and see if differences are better for pain… Thank you
@@markgamble7699
hi, how is your diy tincture compared to chewing the fresh bark??
@@qt5160 tincture better
It's an maoi inhibitor which is basically Zoloft right?
Lol, hardly. A. julibrissin exerts antidepressant-like effects through various underlying mechanisms by acting on multiple pathological factors across divergent biological systems. Reducing an entire herb to a single herbal molecule and its receptor target cannot adequately reflect the actions of an herb, which contains numerous bioactive constituents that are proposed to act on multiple systems or targets.
Here’s a fun research article about the many constituents in the Silk Tree that have demonstrated antidepressant effects:
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10230641/
How much would you take of this tincture? Where would you start?
Doses can be rather individual. Some people are very sensitive to herbs, others not so much. I recommend that you go to a Naturopath or an herbalist to figure out a good dose and formula for your specific needs. Usually I use this as part of a more holistic formula. For tea a few cups a day, for tincture somewhere between drops and a teaspoon 1-3 times a day depending on the person’s constitution and support needs.