If you’ve noticed your desire for intimacy declining and assumed it’s just hormones, age, or “the way things are now,” I want to show you something different. Your libido didn’t disappear because something is broken in you. It disappeared because your body is responding exactly as it should to what’s actually happening inside you: chronic stress, poor circulation to your pelvis, a nervous system stuck in survival mode, and stagnation in the very tissues that need to be alive and responsive for pleasure. When the Sacred Embodied Human Animal is in captivity and distanced from its natural way of being.
I am going to share with you what’s really happening in your body when desire fades, and how these wildcrafted plants address the root causes.
What Actually Creates Desire and Arousal
Women’s sexuality is not simple. It’s not a switch that flips on. It’s a complex interplay of nervous system state, blood flow, hormonal signals, emotional safety, and being present in your body instead of stuck in your head. When any of these systems are compromised, desire fades.
Before we go further, let’s acknowledge something important: women are the only humans whose sexuality exists completely independent of fertility. Men’s libido is tied to their capacity for reproduction throughout their lives. But women’s desire, women’s capacity for pleasure, continues and often intensifies after menopause when reproduction is no longer possible. This tells us something crucial: women’s libido is not about reproduction. It never was. It’s about pleasure, sensation, aliveness, connection to your own body.
This is why the conversation about women’s libido needs to move beyond hormones and reproduction. Your desire isn’t a biological trick to get you to reproduce. It’s an expression of vitality, of being alive in your body, of your capacity for pleasure as a fundamental aspect of being human.
Here’s what needs to be working for arousal and libido to be alive:
Your body demands adequate blood flow to genital tissues. Arousal requires blood. Your clitoris, labia, and vaginal walls need to engorge with blood for sensation, lubrication, and pleasure. This is no different from how male arousal works. If circulation to your pelvis is poor, if blood is stagnant, if vessels are constricted, arousal becomes difficult or impossible regardless of how you feel mentally or emotionally. This has nothing to do with fertility. This is about the physical capacity for sensation and pleasure.
Your body requires a calm nervous system. Your body cannot be in arousal and stress at the same time. When your sympathetic nervous system is activated (fight, flight, freeze), blood flow is directed away from your digestive organs and your pelvic region toward your muscles and brain. This is survival physiology. Your body is saying “this is not the time for pleasure or sensation, we need to survive.” For arousal to happen, you need to be in your parasympathetic nervous system, the rest and digest state where your body feels safe enough for pleasure.
Many women carry chronic tension in their pelvis from stress, trauma, sitting too much, or simply from living in a culture that teaches women to constrict and hold rather than relax and open. This tension creates stagnation. Blood flow and lymph flow slow down. Tissues become less responsive. Sensation decreases. Your pelvis needs to be alive, flowing, responsive.
Allowing for hormonal support without hormonal dominance. Yes, hormones matter. But libido isn’t just about estrogen or testosterone levels. It’s about the entire hormonal cascade working together: stress hormones being managed, insulin balanced, thyroid functioning, and sex hormones in proper ratios. And here’s what’s important: many women report their strongest, most embodied desire after menopause, when estrogen is lower but they’re finally free from the hormonal fluctuations of monthly cycles. This tells us that desire isn’t about high hormone levels. It’s about hormonal balance and the freedom to experience sexuality on your own terms.
Pleasure needs an embodied presence. You cannot be aroused when you’re dissociated from your body. If you’re in your head, analyzing, performing, worrying, judging, you’re not in your body feeling. Arousal requires being present in sensation, which requires a nervous system calm enough to allow presence.
This is why “just relax” doesn’t work. You can’t think your way into relaxation. You need to address the actual physiological states that prevent your body from accessing arousal.
All of these are addressed in the Women’s Aphrodisiac Potion available on my website.
Why Stress Kills Libido More Than Hormones Do
Let’s talk about what stress actually does to your ability to feel desire.
When you’re stressed, chronically or acutely, your body releases cortisol and adrenaline. These hormones do several things that directly impact libido:
In stress response, blood moves away from your digestive system, your pelvic organs, and your skin, toward your large muscles and your brain. This is why your hands and feet get cold when you’re anxious. This is also why your pelvis gets less blood flow when you’re chronically stressed. Less blood flow means less capacity for arousal, less sensation, less lubrication.
From your body’s perspective, stress means threat. When there’s a threat, pleasure of any kind is not a priority. Your body is in survival mode. The capacity for pleasure, sensation, desire, all of these require a nervous system state that says “we are safe enough to feel good.” Stress actively suppresses this capacity. This happens even when the “danger” is just your overloaded schedule, your financial worries, or your emotional exhaustion.
Chronically elevated cortisol interferes with the production and function of estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone. Your body prioritizes making cortisol over making sex hormones because survival takes precedence over everything else.
When you’re in sympathetic activation most of the time, your body forgets how to drop into parasympathetic. You lose the ability to feel safe, to relax, to be present. And arousal requires all of those.
This is why women with demanding jobs, young children, financial stress, or chronic anxiety often have no libido regardless of their hormone levels. It’s not a hormone problem. It’s a nervous system and stress problem.
The Pelvic Congestion Problem No One Talks About
Many women have stagnant, congested pelvises without knowing it. This isn’t a medical diagnosis. It’s a functional reality.
Your pelvis has extensive networks of blood vessels and lymphatic vessels. When these flow well, tissues are nourished, waste is removed, and everything is responsive and alive. When flow slows down or stops, tissues become congested. This looks like:
Chronic pelvic tension or discomfort. Heavy, dragging sensations in the pelvis. Decreased sensation during sex. Difficulty with arousal even when you want to be aroused. Longer times to orgasm or inability to orgasm. Vaginal dryness even with adequate estrogen.
Pelvic congestion happens from sitting too much, from chronic stress and tension, from holding patterns in your pelvic floor, from scar tissue, from inflammation, from previous infections or surgeries. It creates a pelvis that is physically not capable of the blood flow changes needed for arousal.
Moving this stagnation is essential for restoring sensation and desire.
The Plants That Restore Blood Flow and Circulation
These plants don’t just “increase libido” through some vague mechanism. They physically increase blood flow to genital tissues, which is required for arousal.
Ginseng is one of the most researched plants for sexual function in both men and women. It works by increasing nitric oxide production. Nitric oxide is the molecule that signals blood vessels to dilate. More nitric oxide means more blood flow. Research consistently shows that Ginseng improves arousal, lubrication, and satisfaction in women. But Ginseng also works as an adaptogen, helping your body manage stress, which means it’s addressing the nervous system component at the same time it’s improving circulation.
Puncture Vine (Tribulus terrestris) has been used traditionally across multiple cultures for sexual vitality. Modern research shows it increases blood flow to genital tissues and may increase sensitivity to touch. The saponins in Puncture Vine appear to support nitric oxide pathways similar to Ginseng, creating vasodilation in pelvic tissues.
Goji Berry (Wolfberry) improves circulation throughout the body, including to reproductive organs. It’s been used in Traditional Chinese Medicine for centuries to support sexual vitality and “essence.” Modern research shows it increases antioxidant capacity and may improve hormonal signaling related to sexual function.
Rosemary is a powerful vasodilator. It improves circulation to extremities and to the pelvic region. The volatile oils in Rosemary stimulate blood flow while also providing antioxidant protection to vascular tissue. Better circulation means better capacity for engorgement and sensation.
Horse Nettle, a member of the Solanaceae family, acts as a circulatory stimulant. It increases blood flow particularly to areas that are stagnant or congested.
Moving Pelvic Stagnation
This is where this formula does something most aphrodisiacs don’t address.
Ocotillo is extraordinary for pelvic congestion. This desert plant moves stagnation like nothing else I’ve encountered. It’s traditionally used for stuck blood and lymph in the pelvis and abdomen. When you have stagnant tissues that aren’t responsive, that don’t engorge easily, that feel dull or numb, Ocotillo starts moving that fluid. It’s like opening a drain on a backed-up system. As flow restores, sensation returns.
Bindweed, from the Morning Glory family, supports circulation and has traditional use for moving stagnant conditions. It helps break up the congestion that prevents responsive tissue.
These plants aren’t stimulating arousal artificially. They’re removing the physical blockages that prevent your body from responding naturally.
Calming the Nervous System: Creating Safety for Desire
You cannot will yourself to feel safe. Safety is a physiological state, not a mental decision. These plants help your nervous system shift from sympathetic activation to parasympathetic receptivity.
California Poppy is a nervine that reduces anxiety without sedation. This is crucial. You don’t want to be sleepy. You want to be calm and present. California Poppy helps quiet the mental chatter, the performance anxiety, the hypervigilance that keeps you in your head instead of your body. It allows for embodied presence.
May Pop (Passionflower) works similarly. It calms anxiety and helps you drop into your body. Passionflower has been used traditionally to help people be present with sensation rather than caught in thought loops or worry.
Pineapple Weed gently calms the nervous system and digestive tract. It helps release the chronic tension that many women hold in their solar plexus and belly, tension that prevents full relaxation into pleasure.
Blue Phlox and Bluets are both gentle nervines that support nervous system regulation without causing drowsiness. They help create the calm, receptive state that allows arousal.
Maidenhair Fern is traditionally used as a calming plant that helps with presence and embodiment. It’s gentle, not forcing, allowing your system to soften.
Hormonal Support Without Hormonal Intervention
This formula isn’t about flooding your system with hormones or hormone precursors. It’s about supporting the hormonal signals that create desire while managing the stress hormones that suppress it.
And let’s be clear about something: the narrative that women’s sexuality declines with age because of declining hormones is incomplete at best. Many women experience their most powerful, most embodied sexuality after menopause. Why? Because women’s desire was never primarily about reproduction. When the hormonal fluctuations of monthly cycles stop, when the possibility of pregnancy ends, many women finally access their sexuality on their own terms, for their own pleasure, without the underlying biological agenda that reproduction creates.
This is uniquely human and uniquely female. Women are the only humans whose libido exists completely independent of fertility. Your desire after menopause, your capacity for pleasure when reproduction is impossible, reveals the truth: your sexuality is about you, about being alive in your body, about pleasure as a fundamental aspect of vitality.
Wild Yam contains diosgenin, a compound that supports progesterone production and balance. While Wild Yam doesn’t directly convert to progesterone in the body (that’s a myth), it does support your body’s own progesterone production. Progesterone is often overlooked in discussions of libido, but adequate progesterone is necessary for balancing estrogen and creating the hormonal environment where desire can flourish, at any age.
Goat’s Rue has traditional use for hormonal support. It’s known primarily as a galactagogue (promoting milk production), but its effects on hormonal signaling appear broader. It supports the complex hormonal communications that regulate reproductive function.
Ginseng works adaptogenically on your stress hormone cascade. By helping your body manage cortisol more efficiently, it indirectly supports sex hormone production and function. When cortisol is managed, your body has more resources to make estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone.
Arousal requires being in your body, in the present moment, in sensation rather than thought. The aromatic plants in this formula help create that state.
Desert Sage is intensely aromatic and grounding. Its scent and energetic properties help you drop into your body and into present moment awareness. There’s a reason Sage has been used in ceremony and ritual for millennia. It shifts consciousness, helping you move from ordinary awareness to embodied presence.
Rosemary is both circulatory and aromatic. Its scent is clarifying and enlivening. It helps clear mental fog and brings you into your senses.
These plants aren’t just working biochemically. They’re working on your consciousness, your presence, your ability to be here now in your body.
Why This Is Different From Hormonal Balance Support
This formula is different from a hormonal balance potion. Hormonal balance support is about regulating menstrual cycles, easing menopause symptoms, stabilizing mood swings, and creating overall hormonal equilibrium. That’s addressing the foundation of how your endocrine system functions throughout different life phases.
This formula is about arousal and desire specifically. It’s working on the immediate physiological requirements for sexual function: blood flow, nervous system state, pelvic responsiveness, and embodied presence. These are supported by hormones but not dependent on reproductive hormones.
This is why this formula works across all ages and life phases. Whether you’re 25 or 65, whether you’re cycling or post-menopausal, whether you can get pregnant or not, your capacity for desire and pleasure exists. It requires circulation, nervous system calm, pelvic aliveness, and presence. That’s what these plants address.
Think of it this way: hormonal balance creates the foundation for health throughout your cycles and transitions. This formula creates the conditions for pleasure and desire that exist independent of where you are in your reproductive life. They work beautifully together, but they’re addressing different aspects of your experience.
Using The Women’s Aphrodisiac Potion
For immediate effects before intimacy: Take 7 to 12 drops under the tongue, hold for 20 seconds to allow absorption through the mucous membranes, then swallow. Take this 20 to 30 minutes before you anticipate wanting to be intimate. You’re giving the plants time to increase circulation, calm your nervous system, and create the physiological state for arousal.
For longer-term restoration of libido: Take 7 to 12 drops under the tongue, two times daily, for five days, then take two days off. This cycling allows your body to restore its own capacity for desire. You’re not creating dependence on the plants. You’re supporting your body as it remembers how to access arousal naturally.
Many women notice immediate effects with acute dosing, particularly increased sensation and easier arousal. Long-term use tends to create more sustained improvements: more spontaneous desire, more responsiveness, more pleasure, more ease in becoming aroused.
Women’s sexuality has been suppressed, shamed, controlled, and misunderstood for centuries. We’ve been taught that desire is something that happens to us, not something we own. We’ve been taught to perform pleasure rather than experience it. We’ve been taught that our sexuality exists for someone else’s benefit.
This conditioning lives in your body. It shows up as tension, as dissociation, as the inability to relax into pleasure, as the constant mental chatter during intimacy. Healing libido isn’t just about blood flow and hormones. It’s also about reclaiming your body as your own, recognizing your pleasure as legitimate, and learning to be present in sensation without judgment or performance.
These plants can’t undo cultural conditioning. But they can create the physiological conditions where you’re capable of presence, sensation, and pleasure. They can give you the embodied experience of what arousal feels like when your nervous system is calm, your circulation is flowing, and your body is responsive. That experience itself can be healing.
Sacred Embodied Human Animals
We are, at our most essential, animals. Not broken animals waiting to be fixed by the right supplement or the right mindset shift or the right cultural permission. Whole animals, with bodies designed by millions of years of evolution to feel, to sense, to desire, to experience pleasure as a natural expression of being alive. The Sacred Embodied Human Animal knows that her sexuality isn’t a problem to be managed or a function to be optimized. It’s an aspect of her aliveness, as natural as hunger, as legitimate as thirst, as fundamental as breath. Somewhere in the long project of civilization, we were taught to live above our bodies, to distrust our animal nature, to treat pleasure as indulgence and desire as weakness. That teaching is the wound. Your body never forgot what it was made for. It never stopped being an animal body, responsive to the world, wired for sensation, capable of deep pleasure when the conditions of safety and flow are present. Reclaiming your desire is not about adding something that was missing. It’s about returning to what you already are.
Your body is designed for pleasure. Not as a luxury, not as a reward, but as a fundamental aspect of being a healthy, embodied human animal. Pleasure is how your body tells you that something is good, that you’re safe, that life is flowing through you.
When pleasure disappears, when desire fades, your body is telling you something. It’s telling you about stress, about stagnation, about disconnection. It’s not punishing you. It’s communicating.
These plants help restore the conditions where pleasure is possible again. Where your pelvis is alive and flowing. Where your nervous system can relax. Where you can be present in your body, in sensation, in the moment. Where desire isn’t something you have to chase or manufacture but something that arises naturally when the conditions are right.
You’re not broken. Your body is responding exactly as it should to the conditions it’s experiencing. Change the conditions, and your body’s response changes too.
Research and Traditional Use
Ginseng and Sexual Function: Multiple studies, including research published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine, show that Ginseng improves arousal, desire, and satisfaction in women. A 2015 study showed significant improvements in sexual function scores compared to placebo.
Tribulus terrestris (Puncture Vine): Research published in Phytotherapy Research demonstrates that Tribulus improves sexual desire and satisfaction in women, particularly in premenopausal women with low libido.
Nitric Oxide and Female Arousal: Studies published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine confirm that nitric oxide is essential for genital blood flow and arousal in women, just as it is in men.
Stress and Libido: Research published in Psychoneuroendocrinology details how chronic cortisol elevation suppresses sex hormone production and directly reduces sexual desire.
Passionflower for Anxiety: Clinical trials published in Phytotherapy Research show that Passionflower effectively reduces anxiety without causing sedation or cognitive impairment.
Traditional Use of Aphrodisiac Plants: Ethnobotanical research across cultures consistently identifies many of these plants (Ginseng, Tribulus, Goji Berry) as traditional remedies for sexual vitality, with uses spanning centuries or millennia.
Pelvic Congestion and Sexual Function: While research on herbal approaches is limited, medical literature confirms that pelvic congestion syndrome contributes to sexual dysfunction and decreased sensation.
Additional research on the relationship between nervous system state, circulation, and female sexual function can be found through medical databases including PubMed, botanical medicine journals, and sexual medicine research.
Ready to reclaim your desire? https://stephaniebacquetmathews.com/product/hormonal-balance-potion/
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