Blog: Plant Your Dream!
by YourEnchantedGardener

Mugwort for dreaming

Mugwort is one of the most common plants
used in TCM. Moxa...

Date:   10/28/2006 7:28:40 PM   ( 18 y ) ... viewed 4849 times

5:26 PM
October 28, 06


Reviewing the uses of Mugwort
for a sign for the Pac Symposium...

Can you name this mystery
plant commonly used in TCM?

Hint; is was used instead before
Hops to brew beer!

Get the seeds here....
Join the EG Club. Wise Up.

__

http://home.teleport.com/~howieb/treats/mugwort.html

Compositae Herbaceous Artemisia sp.
Mugwort
definitely ethnocentric notes:

Common Names: Mugwort, Sagewort, Wormwood

http://www.uni-graz.at/~katzer/engl/Arte_vul.html

Identification: A composite with a light colored fuzzy pubescence that sticks out among other plants. If you compare small plants, you might confuse a fuzzy Antennaria or Oregon Sunshine, Eriophyllum, for the Artemisia, but the Artemisia will grow much taller. If you're in an area where one species of Mugwort grows, it's easy to identify Mugworts. If you're in an area like the Northwest, there are many species of Mugwort that are difficult at best to correctly identify. The leaf shapes are highly variable, and in any given stand you can find a stem that will key out to a completely wrong Artemisia. If you do try to key these plants out, look at the whole stand of plants when they are in full bloom and take the average characteristics. Do not use new growth or fall vegetative growth, as these will be atypical. You will need to use certain ecological characteristics, like growing below the high water mark. Many times a chromosome count is the only way to be sure of the exact species.

Habitat: Most Mugworts grow in riparian areas throughout the Northwest, at varied elevations. They are usually a sign of water. I have seen Mugworts in dry waterless hills in Southern California, and followed them up to a secret spring full of archeological treasures.

Associated Plants: On rivers, the usual riparian species.

Tending the Stand: If you harvest perennial Mugworts with rhizomes, no tending should be necessary.

Harvesting: Harvest aboveground parts. The oil content drops drastically when flowering, but it will still smell strongly, so use your own judgment. Harvest aboveground parts. If you are using the herb for aroma only, notice the brown, dried up leaves on the lower stem still smells fine, and can be used. If you are planning to use the Mugwort internally, you may wish to discard these.

Processing: For dreams or smudging, just bundle and hang near your usual dreaming location. The dried leaves can be hand rubbed to a nice "owl pellet" consistency for dream pillows. Tincture fresh, or dry for oil and tea.

Uses: Mugwort is used to promote lucid dreaming. It may cause nightmares or restless dreams. Some say it causes a specific type of dream, but I believe it depends on the stage of dreaming the dreamer is capable of at the time. It may require completely inundating yourself with its essence for a prolonged period. If you do use it as a smudge, remember that its smoke smells more like Marijuana than most other plants. It is inadvisable to smudge your car with it.

Mugwort smells good and has a volatile oil, making it a useful aromatic bitter for general stomach upset, flatulence, indigestion, etc.

Mugwort, the mug plant, was used for brewing beer before the use of hops. We tried a good dark stout Mugwort beer on some of our trips.

It is possible to use Mugwort for worms, but I feel it would be better to stick with the true Wormwood, Artemisia absinthium, or other effective antiparasitics.

Wormwood has been used as an emmenagogue. It is used in as a warming tonic to increase uterine circulation, with a clearing effect on many clogged uterine conditions. This makes it more than a simple emmenagogue. This plant should not be used during pregnancy.

Related Plants: Artemisia tridentata and other shrubby Artemisias are the ubiquitous Sagebrushes of the desert regions. Artemisia absinthium is Wormwood, used for worms and the illegal narcotic alcoholic beverage, Absinthe. Artemisia dranunculus is Dragon Sagewort, commonly known as the spice Tarragon. It has a a green leaf with no shine or pubescence. There is a threatened Artemisia that grows on the Deschutes River (that's in Oregon).

From the Herbal Smoking Mixtures book

Mugwort is a very interesting plant deep in historical references. It is often said to promote prophetic dreams. I don't find this to be true all the time. It seems to me that Mugwort intensifies the dreaming process. It all depends on where you are in this process.

If you don't dream, Mugwort will help you to dream, but you may not remember them. If you don't remember your dreams Mugwort will help you to remember them. If you remember your dreams, Mugwort will help you to have conscious dreams. Conscious dreams are dreams where you are aware that you are dreaming and in full control of the situation. If you are consciously dreaming already, the plant will increase the frequency and control.

None of this implies that the dreams will be pleasant. Some people don't remember their dreams for a reason. Mugwort can cause nightmares and restless dreams leading to lack of sleep or poor quality of sleep. I know of an essential oil company that puts a warning on their Artemisia oil: Caution, may cause nightmares.

Certainly, Mugwort can lead to prophetic dreams if that is what you are into. I do not prefer that course of dream work. It is all up to you. One of my long term students feels that Mugwort is the most reality altering of all the psychotropics he's tried.


Yet there is another connection between mugwort and “burning” which might account for the Slavonic names derived from the root PAL: The Shamanistic moxa practice (also spelt moksha), which originated in Central Asia, but is today also part of East Asian medicine. In that ritual, a Shaman combusts dried herbs for healing purposes. In Chinese medicine, the method is often employed as following: A thin slice of ginger is placed on a suitable acupuncture point, a small portion of the dried herb is layered on top and slowly combusted. Both the heat and the constituents of the herb are supposed to contribute to the healing power. The Japanese term yomogi [蓬, よもぎ] represents mugwort and related Artemisia species; it can also be written 艾, but the latter kanji more often means the moxa method proper (Japanese mogusa [艾, もぐさ]). Specific names for particular artemisias are usually formed with the former kanji logograph, e.g., niga-yomogi [苦蓬, にがよもぎ] “bitter yomogi” (wormwood) or oo-yomogi [大蓬, おおよもぎ] “large yomogi” (A. montana). Mugwort also has the more specific name ōshū-yomogi [おうしゅうよもぎ] “European yomogi”.

For the derivation of the botanical genus name Artemisia, see southernwood.

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