I had one in front yard and my neighbor had one . I didn't really see people cared about the trees. I seen some people eat the seed and collect only seed but never the flower. I was always curious why they only ate the seeds but i didn't really care to look it up until now after seeing a thumbnail of a tree in my old neighborhood😂
Mimosa trees are my favorite trees!! I’ve told my sons for years that I when I die I want to be cremated and for them to buy a mimosa tree from a nursery. I’d like for them to dump my ashes in the hole they’ll dig to plant the tree. My mamaw had a few mimosa trees in her backyard. I always thought they looked like the trees you’d see in Dr. Seuss books
I grew up in New Orleans. We had one in our front yard. We would eat the nectar out the center of the flower as a treat when we played outside. Maybe that's why my memories of childhood are so good!
We also ate the nectar. I was trying to remember.pulling on the stamen and a drop of nectar appearing. It tasted very sweet. Did you ever do this to honeysuckles flowers. It tasted very sweet also. This brought back childhood memories.
You and the other foraging and identification channels are God sends, i have this plant growing on my property of its own volition and wouldn't have know its value unless you videod it. Thanks now I'll integrate it as a medicine
The very first tree i climb in was a mimosa but it wasn't until in my early sixties until I realized the flower produces the most pleasant smell on earth. When in bloom leaving and returning I always stop to smell them.
No wonder it caught my eye at the nursery then! My dad always say the plants we crave are the plants we need most. Planted it in my backyard but it’s still getting adjusted. Thank you for sharing this, I had no idea of the medicinal benefits. Am grateful that RUclips recommended your channel to me.
Crazy but we just traveled to Texas down I-49 in north Louisiana I made husband pull over so scan these trees!! I absolutely must have one now. Thank you 🙏🏻
I’ve cut down so many of these trees over the years. The roots often run above soil level and create hell for mowing. They look great for a little while and smell heavenly, but I prefer them in my neighbor’s yard.
@@sigilfredogaleano6568 4 cups of fresher flowers (we pick the green of the bottoms and use just the pink filaments) boil it up add sugar and sure-gel. All sure-gel comes with guides
in malta we have one that looks similar, lead tree/Leucaena leucocephala. apparently a type of mimosoid tree. im not sure if it has any medicinal benefits, but even just looking at it somehow makes me happy. got a sapling in my room its just adorable
I've known about this lovely plant for a long time and have used it before when I was going through a hardship. To now to be reminded of it makes me think it's time to bring it back into my herbal regimen again. I think I could use it. I was just saying I need a little life pick-me-up. Thanks! 💗🌿
I’ve been searching for the name of this tree since I was a child, I am now 50. My grannie had one in her yard when I was small, Ive never forgotten the scent of those flowers, they had such a lovely sweet smell that wafted through the yard. Funny how I was just thinking about this tree lastnight and then I wake up and see this video on my phone after searching for it my whole life 😳. Very odd……but happy I now have the name of it! Thanks for posting!!!😊❤
Just subbed to your channel. Wow such great information. I hope you’re not upset about my Bigfoot comment. They’re real and people need to be aware of these entities. I know it may sound crazy but I’ve had two encounters in my life and if you knew how many people encounter them you’d be awestruck
I was talking with my husband yesterday about wanting to go harvest a bunch of flowers, leaves and twigs to make tinctures . . . and this showed up in my feed as I was settling in before bed. Yes, our phones are listening. Always.
I have several xl Mimosa trees on the property and I use the flowers and the bark for mimosa tea and it's such a soothing little tea for the hard days, but the bark is stronger than the flowers.
I had one of these trees growing in my neighbor's yard. Just looking at that tree and the abundance of hummingbirds and butterflies that seem to live off those beautiful pink truffles made me happy. It was a sad day when some disgustingly evasive beetle or worm or grub killed the tree.
Lol I'm confused whether or not you're referring to me as a kid, but this is my youtube channel. If you are, I guess I can't argue, I just turned 30 haha. Thanks for watching!!
There was a beautiful one in our front yard growing up. Bees and butterflies always showed up every spring to feed from it. It was a part of my childhood, climbing it and playing under it. I was sad decades later when my dad removed it because it was messy and he was tired of cleaning it.
Just wanted to note that grief is not an ailment or illness, and it cannot be cured. Grief is part of the human experience and the only way to get rid of it is go through it. If you are struggling with grief please consider therapy, drugs or plants won’t help you heal, only time can.
That is correct. It still stems from acute and chronic emotions. This doesn't cure grief, but even modern medical doctors will tell you that it eases the deepness and sickness producing aspect of grief to allow one to more sanely confront it. I can personally attest to its ability to do that.
Bro I took your word at face value that this would work. I live in Tennessee. This grows everywhere. I boiled a giant pot flowers and bark. Enough for probably five people. And drink it all myself thinking it would help me sleep. IT DID ABSOLUTELY NOTHING
I just recently discovered your channel and so appreciate what you are doing and sharing. I have a question in regard to when using the bark. I have a Mimosa tree and this year I decided to save some of the branch trimmings to use for tea. As I’ve seen in other videos when using bark (Sweet Gum) you remove the outer bark, it looks like you used all outer and inner bark in this Mimosa recipe. I started to shave the outer bark to make the tea, but thought is this indeed necessary or can I just use the small branch pieces as is?
You don't have to remove the outer bark. It doesn't add anything but it doesn't hurt anything either. On many trees it's so thin that it's not necessary to remove.
How do you get rid of the mimosa when it is in your flower bed coving your steps? I have tried pulling it out at the roots, poison on the open roots and cutting. It still comes back! Please help?
Me too! Who knew that when I was a child playing at cooking pretend food with various yard plants, including the Mimosa, that it was actually a beneficial botanical item! .....I guess I failed to "read the labels" of my imaginary food items back then. LOL
The smell of the Mimosa is THE BEST. But, a close second is also Holy Basil (Tulsi). It spreads like wildfire here where I am in TN. It would also be a good addition to this tea for the same reasons. Plant it once and you'll have it FOREVER.
I had no idea about Mimosa’s health benefits. Ironically, when my insomnia was at its worst when I was a child, I would stare longingly at this one gorgeous mimosa tree that used to grow a couple blocks from my house. It quickly became my favorite tree and has remained one of my favorites. Then many years later, one popped up in my yard and it’s getting bigger every week. I will cultivate it dearly.
Congratulations on your Mimosa volunteer. I just love them also ❤ when I moved to the south, I wanted a Mimosa but didn't have any money for landscaping. I was shopping at my neighborhood dollar general store and saw a sprout of a Mimosa about 6 inches tall. I went inside the store and asked the manager about it and she said go ahead and take it, our landscaper will just cut it down. Soooooo now I have a beautiful Mimosa tree. ❤😊
I'm a master herbalist. I live in Canada but grew up in Missouri and have family in Mississippi. So I am passing this on. This is so well done, the best of its kind that I have seen on YT. The one thing I would add is that bark should be harvested with great care. Unless it is a tree like birch or sycamore that naturally sheds bark, it's crucial to harvest lightly, avoiding as much as possible damage to the inner bark, and always in vertical strips. It's best to take bark from branches rather than the trunk. Girdling or substantial horizontal cuts on the trunk can kill a tree. Maybe this is not as critical with an invasive species like mimosa, but I believe it's good practice to harvest ethically and sustainably.
Thanks for adding this information. People will say mimosas are invasive but years ago they were almost wiped out in Louisiana by mimosa blight. If you want a tree in your yard find a small one and dig it up. They transplant well. Until this video I never knew the medicinal benefits. I just always loved this tree.
Thats interesting that the flowers help with depression, Mimosa Hostilis contains DMT which has also helped many people with depression. The plant that just keeps on giving 💕
When I was growing up, our next door neighbor had a mimosa tree in her front yard. I LOVED the smell and feel on my skin of those beautiful, delicate, silky flowers. One evening, I was sitting in that tree when 6 to 8 hummingbirds arrived and buzzed around the branches before flying away. It was like a dream.
If it’s within like 20 ft of your house I’d try to move it. These trees get HUGE! I mean you could trim it every year to keep it small but I’d definitely research the right way to do it with this type of tree. We have many of these pop up around our foundation where we don’t now and we have to pull them up every year. Some are about 2 ft tall now that just sprouted up this year! Crazy how fast they grow.
Absolutely, same here. I am looking to leave the mainstream medical and are just totally fed up with the doctors these days. They have turned into MONEY GRUBBIN whores in white lab coats for sure. They are working for the Feds to help them achieve population control. So sad that they would rather kill us off instead of help us. You use to be able to go-to your doctor for everything and trust them. Well, not anymore and I am fed up, ALOT of people are. So I am taking matters into my own hands and searching for natural medicine all the time. I love the way this guy explains everything!
Caring for my mother, I picked 10-20 flowers tied together with a wire bread tie and it made a beautiful cluster bulb. It gave off a nice scent I never knew about. It didn't last long, but a few days, but my Mom really enjoyed it. I had no idea it was edible. Thank you Sir.
It tastes great, actually. I have them in salads. They also make a good tea, if you like jasmin tea, but can't afford it, the dried flowers kind of come close but not as strong. Never noticed a medicinal value, but still like it.
With all the heartbreaks 8:21 we have had from so called experts pumping pills to our loved ones. This is the age for us to take control of our ourselves.
I watch a gal that shows medicinal plants who says the earth gives us what we need. In that particular video she was saying how mullein was growing everywhere, this was 2018. Mullein, for those of you who don't know, are a respiratory healing plant. When I first saw that video in 2024, I was sold! So whatever plant is in abundance...tincture, dry, etc....we gonna need it!!!!
I think it's really only invassive in the coastal Southern States. We had it in Texas and here in Missouri and though the dropped seeds do sprout, they don't often seem to take hold or live through the winter. I'm sure there are exceptions but I've never seen a wild or rampant grove anywhere I've lived.
@@brt5273 On the west coast they’re more cultivated for use as ornamentals and with so much lawn care the probably aren’t an excessive invasive but I’m guessing on that. I think the seeds are light enough they scatter in the wind and if left alone one can find one to three about ever 1/2 mile to one mile apart from each other in Oklahoma, but only on unattended land. If the land is kept at all, even if it’s brush hogged just once a year, or probably even 5 years then you are very likely not to see any. But I’m with you on that they don’t seem invasive. Even along 10 miles of road with uncorked land alongside it like I said they’re at least one but usually no more than three, every 1/2 mile or so if not farther. But if it were in large groves of them then yes they would be invasive. But I don’t know their definition for invasive either!!
Also known as signatures. Certain plants/trees/herbs/weeds will grow where we live as "nature knows" what we need. They often take on the very appearance of the malady or condition. We're so far removed from the natural world that we don't pay attention. I personally know of many instances where people were suffering or in need of the very thing that was growing under foot.
I used the flowers to start a camp fire, when I tell you that by burning the flowers is like smoking the best weed. I was so giggly and happy and light hearted. 10/10 recommend.
Yep. Always thought they were beautiful trees. I love Japanese honeysuckle although it gets a bad rap. Grew up in the country, and the smell of the flowers was a sure sign of spring and summer, my favorite time of the year. I definitely prefer it as an invasive vine, over native poison ivy.
As a child we would hang out sitting on the branches of a mimosa tree. I believe this tree is medicinal just by my childhood experience. Now I know why I was so happy!
My grandmother had these growing all in her yard, and I would climb the trees and watch the hummingbirds flit around them. Such happy memories and I've always loved mimosa trees since then but never knew they could be medicinal!
its the plant used to make DmT.. it blows my mind he just gave you instructions to make ayahuasca without knowing it and basically told everyone to take controlled drugs.
Instantaneous new sub! Great video! I was diagnosed with CPTSD a while back and since the doctors are in the pharmaceutical companies' pocket I have to take 3 different meds to "help" with that. 1 or all 3 make feel detached and kinda.... uncomfortably weird. I sure wish I had found this out a long time ago, but I know now. I'll be working on a plan to safely wean myself off the chems while taking actual medicine that won't make me feel off. Thank you, very much, for creating your videos. YOU are, quite literally, saving lives. You be proud of that. You're doing the Lord's work. Thanks again and take care.
I pull it off in long strips. Then using a pair of kitchen scissors I cut it up into about 2-3 inch pieces which I then put in the blender with 90% vodka. I then place it in mason jars. After a couple of months, I'll then strain it. It also helps with my back pain.
Our house in West Virginia had one in the front yard. I didn't know the name of it, but I called it the "strawberry tree" because the pink flowers when crushed smelled like strawberries to me. I didn't know they were edible! I was scared to eat it, because my godsisters always lied to me and told me things were poisonous. LOL!
It really works for anxiety/panic attacks. Way better than any benzo ever. At least for me it does. And it works almost immediately. And it doesn't get you high it doesn't make you feel woozy and it's not habit forming. It's actually kind of a miracle.
@schleig04 I got a mimosa tincture from an herbalist friend of mine. I've had anxiety and panic attacks for a couple of decades, ever since my early 20's. She said I should try it. I was skeptical. But one day right before work an anxiety attack hit me hard out of the blue, but I had that mimosa tincture with me. I really.didnt expect much but I was desperate. I took two dropper fulls. And 10 seconds later the anxiety attack was gone. I was amazed. It was just gone. Poof. I felt normal again. Not high, not overly calm, just normal. No anxiety at all. And it's worked for me since then. I keep it on me all the time. And I only use it when I need to.
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
Thank you. I have PTSD and so far nothing helps…but I have two mimosa trees that are blooming. I planted because they are beautiful …this new information is like icing on the cake! Thanks for sharing.
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
I’m in Paradise, CA - and these plants continue to thrive, even after the town has been destroyed, by CA’s most deadly wildfire, in 2018. I am staying on my grandmother’s property - and mimosas have begun to grow, again; I just so happened to notice their pink flowers blooming, the other day, too.
I am so glad to hear that things are growing again up there on her/your home. I'm an Oroville resident and came to the comments to say we have these out here in Northern California. Nice to see a neighbor on here. 🙂
I live in Tennessee now, but I'm from Shasta County (Shingletown.) One of the reasons I moved was due to the wildfires. They were getting too close. My friends and family have PTSD from the Carr Fire. :( It's so interesting to me to often come across others from the same area. I was just noticing the mimosas blooming here yesterday. How wonderful to know they are returning to Paradise. For you to have survived that fire and remain in the area is admirable. ❤ I commuted to Chico State from Redding for years. Please be safe there this summer. I'm afraid that this week may be tough for y'all with the high heat, high winds, and no moisture. I still know a lot of family and friends living in that area - from Anderson to Medford. This is the best aspect of RUclips and social media imho - videos and comments like these. ❤
I’m old, so when I tell you this tree caused several instances of the wind knocked out of me as a kid, it was from the 60’s & 70’s. I saw it as a magical tree. None other like it in north Alabama. Being a boy, climbing was the first thing to do. The branches seemed strong, but, they were not. It would be fine then, you were on your back with a headful of ants trying to breathe. lol. The one at my great-grandpa’s farmhouse along Big Bear Creek in Winston County was bigger around than most, about 12”, but was short. Only about 10’ tall. I suppose us boys breaking the limbs off had something to do with that. I can’t say it true of all or even most, but that one always had a very active colony of big black carpenter ants. But, they didn’t bite and neither did we. Good memories.
👋🏾 Hey fellow Alabama cousins. I read yr comments and immediately went home to the tree who's branches ironically engh stayed strong for years at my grandmas house. Or maybe we were just small enough. The largest one did eventually give way🥲. Good memories!😂
My Grandmother and 2 of my Great-Aunts would get together and wash one day a week. There was a big black wash pot they boiled the clothes in, homemade lye soap of course. There were two wash tubs with fresh well water they’d get rinsed in before being squeezed out in the most contemptible machine God ever allowed to be created, the washer ringer. I learned quickly to put mine on a little before they finished drying to keep from being cut to pieces. I bring that up because that infamous mimosa tree, the wash pot, and the coal pile were set in a triangle just off the side porch. These 3 women would sit on that big front porch, swinging and rocking, “brushing their teeth” with a fresh sweetgum twig and White Dove snuff, and laugh all day. I’ve never known how much I loved the world then. And them even more.
My husband grew up in Winston County ☺️ and I love mimosa! I love the Dr Seuss flowers. 🌸 Here in Birmingham the utility folks will literally cut your mimosa trees down without your permission, but they sure do spring right back up! 😂
I grew up in a home that had this tree in the middle of the circle driveway garden my gran had made. I have great memories of the smell of the tree and the tickly flowers I used to play with.
Wow! 😯 Universe sent me here!!! 😅 I have always had a LOVE for medicinal wild herbs/plants/trees. I am from the upper Midwest in MN and I am currently relocating to the South East and am eager to discover NEW wildlife!!! How beautiful i was brought to this channel!!! 🤩
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
GREAT INFORMATION AND I, AM LOOKING FORWARD TO MORE VIDEO'S FROM YOU YOUNG MAN- ! KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK- SPREADING OL' WORLD KNOWLEDGE- OF CURES = * WITHOUT THE PHARMACEUTICAL -COMPANY'S MAKING A PROFIT-!!!! I HAVE HEARD OF PEOPLE THAT ARE UP ROOTING TREES FOR ROOT SYSTEMS- TO MAKE DMT- SO BE CAREFUL FOLK'S AND MAKE SURE YOU DONT KILL TREES STRIPING BARK- AS IT CAN KILL ALL; TREES. AS WISE- YOUNG LADY [STATED] EARLIER IN THE COMENTS. 🎉BROVO YOUNG MAN -!!!! LOOKING FORWARD FOR YOUR EFFORTS AND TIME-! °~T~°
My lord I just saw these on my hike a few days ago and was smelling them and put some in my hair and meant to research when I got home and this suddenly popped up in my feed. Hell yeah🎉
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
Everyone has some type of perceived trauma. Different types of people are able to handle it differently and everyone’s experiences are unique to them. Someone somewhere cares about you more than you realize even if they don’t know how or are unable to connect and show it. Don’t give up.
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
I am not very religious but I’ve been praying and asked god to help me get off a certain anti depressant. Out of know where your video popped up😂❤ crazy thing is I’m 💯 for growing my own food and I’m surrounded by these trees and never once thought to research them🤦🏾♀️ WONT HE DO IT!!!!!
Yes he will! 🙌🏾 He is amazing. Also, try to spend quality time with him, worshipping and praying, when I do this, he always lifts me up out of whatever bad mood or depression I’m in. When I spend lots of time with God, I don’t get depressed at all Ive noticed.
Start taking less of the drug, little by little, "wean" yourself off of it. Use mimosa to help you. If you use 2 pills a day, take 1. Do that for a week, then every other day take 1. Then go to half of a pill. Every other day, then 2 days, then 3 days, then 4 days apart. Then just stop. You can do it! I did it. GOD bless PRAY, Pray, and Pray.
I have been tapering off an AD for 5 years now.I should be done in another year.Iuse chamomile tea and skullcap and valerian and passionflower and rose to help my anxiety and when I have insomnia.
@@danettebirch42305 year taper? I know they're SSRI's but 5 years seems alittle extensive. How long were you on the antidepressant before starting the taper btw?
You should have made a tea. The tree is high in DMT. It will eliminate your depression I promise you. That guy just didn’t know that it was that chemical that the tree makes naturally as well as your brain. Don’t think of it as a drug. It saved me from ending myself and I don’t ever say that lightly
@reesedaniel5835 oh I didn't realize they did that. I remember when I was a teenager a friends Mother had what they called a sensitive plant, it was a small plant with frond like leaves that if you rubbed your fingers over them they closed up. I never knew Mimosa tree leaves dud that too.
I'm in Alabama to in St Clair County and I have them here on acreage. I actually made a tincture out of the flowers the other day but I have not used it yet I look more forward to it now after hearing this
Yeppp same here in central Alabama tons of them things ... especially on my road lol I went a grab some. A couple hours ago lol when I seen this video just don't know about the flowers themselves though
@@NiiJiiLuv what gets me is in my Facebook gardening and plant groups... people get so mad at species like this because it's invasive! Apparently they have no idea all of the benefits in miraculous qualities plants like this possess!!!
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
We had one of these trees in the back, it was gorgeous! Everybody in our house needed the benefits of it! I grew up in a ‘walking on eggshells’ type of place with explosive stepmother. I would have tried it in a heartbeat, my dad probably not, and back then, unless you were a doctor with medical degrees, stepmom would have just laughed. Or got dangerous.. Armed with this knowledge, what a different WORLD it would have been! I knew this tree was a sacred blessing! So beautiful! My dad used to just look up at it and say it was a pain in the neck, and a messy tree! Nah! Just brushing the blossoms on my cheeks used to make me smile, I loved that tree. So glad I saw this video!
I know what you're talking about my friend. I lucked out in that my dad ran off with the wicked stepmother and left us kids with his parents (mom couldn't find her backside with both hands). Other than having to be shuttled around on holidays I avoided that drama. I know I would have ended up in jail at some point if things hadn't gone like they did. I truly wish you peace and happiness.
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
I've been battling depression my whole life and there's been a mimosa tree in my backyard this whole time.
That's how God works sometimes.
There is a belief that the answer is only ever a few feet away. I have experienced this. The plants are here to heal us.
I had one in front yard and my neighbor had one . I didn't really see people cared about the trees. I seen some people eat the seed and collect only seed but never the flower. I was always curious why they only ate the seeds but i didn't really care to look it up until now after seeing a thumbnail of a tree in my old neighborhood😂
@@kimrespess6580 cringe
@@kimrespess6580 no. It’s not.
Mimosa trees are my favorite trees!! I’ve told my sons for years that I when I die I want to be cremated and for them to buy a mimosa tree from a nursery. I’d like for them to dump my ashes in the hole they’ll dig to plant the tree. My mamaw had a few mimosa trees in her backyard. I always thought they looked like the trees you’d see in Dr. Seuss books
The scent is heavenly!
I grew up in New Orleans. We had one in our front yard. We would eat the nectar out the center of the flower as a treat when we played outside. Maybe that's why my memories of childhood are so good!
We also ate the nectar. I was trying to remember.pulling on the stamen and a drop of nectar appearing. It tasted very sweet. Did you ever do this to honeysuckles flowers. It tasted very sweet also. This brought back childhood memories.
im slam covered with these trees in my backyard in WV. Been here 10 years all the way from GA but I cant wait to move back home to GA
You and the other foraging and identification channels are God sends, i have this plant growing on my property of its own volition and wouldn't have know its value unless you videod it. Thanks now I'll integrate it as a medicine
Thank you for watching!
The very first tree i climb in was a mimosa but it wasn't until in my early sixties until I realized the flower produces the most pleasant smell on earth. When in bloom leaving and returning I always stop to smell them.
All I know is smelling those flowers is very uplifting. 😊
No wonder it caught my eye at the nursery then! My dad always say the plants we crave are the plants we need most.
Planted it in my backyard but it’s still getting adjusted. Thank you for sharing this, I had no idea of the medicinal benefits. Am grateful that RUclips recommended your channel to me.
Thanks a lot! I think there’s a tree like that down on the corner. I’ve always felt great sitting under that tree!
Crazy but we just traveled to Texas down I-49 in north Louisiana I made husband pull over so scan these trees!! I absolutely must have one now. Thank you 🙏🏻
I have a Mimosa tree down the street from my house in Albuquerque, New Mexico
The blossoms look just like the flowers of the Fairy Duster plant in Arizona.
I'm in New Zealand..we call those Wattles!
If I remember right..some Wattles have mescaline just under the top layer of bark
the fragrance is just heavenly I wish I could use a shower gel or perfume like this
Great information on the mimosa tree
Thank you for watching!
How do you harvest the bark?. The one thing needed to see done.
I am wondering the same thing
Also curious. Maybe they just chop of some branches and take the bark off those, like how cinnamon is harvested?
With a knife. In spring the bark slips easily, make a cut and peel downward.
Thank you for watching! I show how to harvest bark in this video at about 13 minutes 30 seconds: ruclips.net/video/637XtZHwOH8/видео.html
I’ve cut down so many of these trees over the years. The roots often run above soil level and create hell for mowing. They look great for a little while and smell heavenly, but I prefer them in my neighbor’s yard.
I've always loved this tree and recently found out the name when it blumed a few months ago. And I had no idea! I'm so mad I just missed it.
Just made jelly with the flowers a few weeks ago
How do you make the jelly? I would love to make it.
@@sigilfredogaleano6568 4 cups of fresher flowers (we pick the green of the bottoms and use just the pink filaments) boil it up add sugar and sure-gel. All sure-gel comes with guides
sounds awesome
DMT jelly. Sounds interesting
@@RandomCitizen-vl1wi wrong kind locally for me. Possible but just not feasible
Just stumbled upon this video and wow so cool on this flower 🌸
in malta we have one that looks similar, lead tree/Leucaena leucocephala. apparently a type of mimosoid tree. im not sure if it has any medicinal benefits, but even just looking at it somehow makes me happy. got a sapling in my room its just adorable
I've known about this lovely plant for a long time and have used it before when I was going through a hardship. To now to be reminded of it makes me think it's time to bring it back into my herbal regimen again. I think I could use it. I was just saying I need a little life pick-me-up. Thanks! 💗🌿
Nice! Thanks for the informative video!
They smell life heaven! 🌸💜🌸
I’ve been searching for the name of this tree since I was a child, I am now 50. My grannie had one in her yard when I was small, Ive never forgotten the scent of those flowers, they had such a lovely sweet smell that wafted through the yard. Funny how I was just thinking about this tree lastnight and then I wake up and see this video on my phone after searching for it my whole life 😳. Very odd……but happy I now have the name of it! Thanks for posting!!!😊❤
Just subbed to your channel. Wow such great information. I hope you’re not upset about my Bigfoot comment. They’re real and people need to be aware of these entities. I know it may sound crazy but I’ve had two encounters in my life and if you knew how many people encounter them you’d be awestruck
I was talking with my husband yesterday about wanting to go harvest a bunch of flowers, leaves and twigs to make tinctures . . . and this showed up in my feed as I was settling in before bed.
Yes, our phones are listening. Always.
I have several xl Mimosa trees on the property and I use the flowers and the bark for mimosa tea and it's such a soothing little tea for the hard days, but the bark is stronger than the flowers.
Interesting, thank you for the first hand information!
Thank you. I hope this works.
I had one of these trees growing in my neighbor's yard. Just looking at that tree and the abundance of hummingbirds and butterflies that seem to live off those beautiful pink truffles made me happy. It was a sad day when some disgustingly evasive beetle or worm or grub killed the tree.
THANK YOU ❤❤❤❤😊😊😊😊😊
Thank you!!!!!
How interesting and nice.
Amazing ❤❤❤❤
I had no clue these flowers were edible!!
I would like to know what you can do with the seeds in the little pods of the Mimosa! Are they edible? Do you plant them to grow new mimosas?😊
I’ve got a pink flower in mind that will definitely boost your mood 🐱
I’m in Boston! And need this! Does this kid have his own RUclips channel or is this his RUclips channel?
Lol I'm confused whether or not you're referring to me as a kid, but this is my youtube channel. If you are, I guess I can't argue, I just turned 30 haha. Thanks for watching!!
There was a beautiful one in our front yard growing up. Bees and butterflies always showed up every spring to feed from it. It was a part of my childhood, climbing it and playing under it. I was sad decades later when my dad removed it because it was messy and he was tired of cleaning it.
Just wanted to note that grief is not an ailment or illness, and it cannot be cured. Grief is part of the human experience and the only way to get rid of it is go through it. If you are struggling with grief please consider therapy, drugs or plants won’t help you heal, only time can.
That is correct. It still stems from acute and chronic emotions. This doesn't cure grief, but even modern medical doctors will tell you that it eases the deepness and sickness producing aspect of grief to allow one to more sanely confront it. I can personally attest to its ability to do that.
It would have been great if you had shown how to gather the bark.
Bro I took your word at face value that this would work. I live in Tennessee. This grows everywhere. I boiled a giant pot flowers and bark. Enough for probably five people. And drink it all myself thinking it would help me sleep. IT DID ABSOLUTELY NOTHING
Mon Aunt had a mimosa in her yard. Hey Matthew. , don't forget to tell folks you can unalcohol tincture.
We eat the flowers fresh, they are delightful, smoke the dried flowers make tea and extracted DmT from the roots in February 😂❤
I wonder if using this plant along with antidepressants like Escitalpram or zoloft would cause a bad interaction.
I just recently discovered your channel and so appreciate what you are doing and sharing. I have a question in regard to when using the bark. I have a Mimosa tree and this year I decided to save some of the branch trimmings to use for tea. As I’ve seen in other videos when using bark (Sweet Gum) you remove the outer bark, it looks like you used all outer and inner bark in this Mimosa recipe. I started to shave the outer bark to make the tea, but thought is this indeed necessary or can I just use the small branch pieces as is?
You don't have to remove the outer bark. It doesn't add anything but it doesn't hurt anything either. On many trees it's so thin that it's not necessary to remove.
@@LegacyWildernessAcademy Thank you so much.
Good stuff 👏 👍💯 I love this tree , now I love it more 👍❤️ I've bonsai styled many of these trees in the yard for years 🌿🪴🌴
✌️❤️ VANDAL OUT
The Monarch butterfly feeds on the flowers that my folks called Milkweed
Is the bark safe to use if blite is seen anywhere in the trunk?
We used to play with the pink flowers as kids like they were makeup puffs😊 never knew they were edible 🤷🏾♀️
How do you get rid of the mimosa when it is in your flower bed coving your steps? I have tried pulling it out at the roots, poison on the open roots and cutting. It still comes back! Please help?
I already have an herb that helps with tough days, even have a medical card to go with it 😶🌫️🫠😆
Man, I grew up surrounded by mimosas, but never had any idea about the medicinal properties
You should read about what people do with the root bark.
@@unclebud6958is that only mimosa hostilis or any mimosa?
Me too! Who knew that when I was a child playing at cooking pretend food with various yard plants, including the Mimosa, that it was actually a beneficial botanical item! .....I guess I failed to "read the labels" of my imaginary food items back then. LOL
@@unclebud6958I dont think this is memosa hostilas that people use to extract DMT.
Yea my neighbors has a BUNCH of flowers, less green n she said it's a constant mess to constantly clean after 😅
The scent of the flowers on a hot summer night is absolutely euphoric!
Wow!
Yes! They smell amazing!
Yes it is a most pleasant smell 👍🙏💯
The smell of the Mimosa is THE BEST. But, a close second is also Holy Basil (Tulsi). It spreads like wildfire here where I am in TN. It would also be a good addition to this tea for the same reasons. Plant it once and you'll have it FOREVER.
It's my favorite.
Second, is freshly mowed hay.
I had no idea about Mimosa’s health benefits. Ironically, when my insomnia was at its worst when I was a child, I would stare longingly at this one gorgeous mimosa tree that used to grow a couple blocks from my house. It quickly became my favorite tree and has remained one of my favorites. Then many years later, one popped up in my yard and it’s getting bigger every week. I will cultivate it dearly.
The mimosa tree was calling you! 🗻 🕊 🦅
Congratulations on your Mimosa volunteer. I just love them also ❤ when I moved to the south, I wanted a Mimosa but didn't have any money for landscaping. I was shopping at my neighborhood dollar general store and saw a sprout of a Mimosa about 6 inches tall. I went inside the store and asked the manager about it and she said go ahead and take it, our landscaper will just cut it down. Soooooo now I have a beautiful Mimosa tree. ❤😊
I'm a master herbalist. I live in Canada but grew up in Missouri and have family in Mississippi. So I am passing this on. This is so well done, the best of its kind that I have seen on YT. The one thing I would add is that bark should be harvested with great care. Unless it is a tree like birch or sycamore that naturally sheds bark, it's crucial to harvest lightly, avoiding as much as possible damage to the inner bark, and always in vertical strips. It's best to take bark from branches rather than the trunk. Girdling or substantial horizontal cuts on the trunk can kill a tree. Maybe this is not as critical with an invasive species like mimosa, but I believe it's good practice to harvest ethically and sustainably.
What is the best Rizzla's?
Ty for information
Thanks for adding this information. People will say mimosas are invasive but years ago they were almost wiped out in Louisiana by mimosa blight. If you want a tree in your yard find a small one and dig it up. They transplant well. Until this video I never knew the medicinal benefits. I just always loved this tree.
Much respect for mentioning those points.
Thank you for commenting.
Thats interesting that the flowers help with depression, Mimosa Hostilis contains DMT which has also helped many people with depression. The plant that just keeps on giving 💕
It's probably also responsible for the burning bush story in Bible which caused Moses to talk to God.
My favourite plant, the no 1
Wow! I didn't know they have DMT. We use their flower essence and we love it!
@@BlackandWhitecustomsit was acacia tho (which is still DMT).
@@mushedits o I didn't know exact name of plant in that area just know there was DMT plants there. Thanx for info
Butterflies, hummingbirds and bees love this tree.
Very nice. ❤️ 🌞
And Goats..they fight for leaves and flowers !
i had a pupper that loved laying under the silk thistle in our backyard
They also love native plants.
Who wouldnt want happy honey ?
When I was growing up, our next door neighbor had a mimosa tree in her front yard. I LOVED the smell and feel on my skin of those beautiful, delicate, silky flowers. One evening, I was sitting in that tree when 6 to 8 hummingbirds arrived and buzzed around the branches before flying away. It was like a dream.
One of these popped up on the side of my house... im gonna eat it lol
Extract from it's root bark and then smoke extraction to see true magic of this plant.
Did you do this? @@BlackandWhitecustoms
😂
Bon apetite!
If it’s within like 20 ft of your house I’d try to move it. These trees get HUGE! I mean you could trim it every year to keep it small but I’d definitely research the right way to do it with this type of tree.
We have many of these pop up around our foundation where we don’t now and we have to pull them up every year. Some are about 2 ft tall now that just sprouted up this year! Crazy how fast they grow.
It only took 4 minutes with my first video to decide I'm subbing for life
Awesome! Thank you so much for your support sir!!
Same lol
@@jodysales2362 Thank you Jody!
Absolutely, same here. I am looking to leave the mainstream medical and are just totally fed up with the doctors these days. They have turned into MONEY GRUBBIN whores in white lab coats for sure. They are working for the Feds to help them achieve population control. So sad that they would rather kill us off instead of help us. You use to be able to go-to your doctor for everything and trust them. Well, not anymore and I am fed up, ALOT of people are. So I am taking matters into my own hands and searching for natural medicine all the time. I love the way this guy explains everything!
Same
Caring for my mother, I picked 10-20 flowers tied together with a wire bread tie and it made a beautiful cluster bulb. It gave off a nice scent I never knew about. It didn't last long, but a few days, but my Mom really enjoyed it. I had no idea it was edible. Thank you Sir.
Your mom is in fact, also edible in multiple ways. The more you know!
It tastes great, actually. I have them in salads. They also make a good tea, if you like jasmin tea, but can't afford it, the dried flowers kind of come close but not as strong. Never noticed a medicinal value, but still like it.
✨💖💘💝
@@HollylivengoodGreat tip. Thanks!
@@HollylivengoodWow great to know!!! We make a flower essence with the flowers to lift our mood and it works!!!
With all the heartbreaks 8:21 we have had from so called experts pumping pills to our loved ones. This is the age for us to take control of our ourselves.
Just the scent of the blossoms lifts my mood and leaves me calm and happy.
Maybe it’s not invasive…maybe it just KNOWS how much we need it!!
💞
I watch a gal that shows medicinal plants who says the earth gives us what we need. In that particular video she was saying how mullein was growing everywhere, this was 2018. Mullein, for those of you who don't know, are a respiratory healing plant. When I first saw that video in 2024, I was sold! So whatever plant is in abundance...tincture, dry, etc....we gonna need it!!!!
I think it's really only invassive in the coastal Southern States. We had it in Texas and here in Missouri and though the dropped seeds do sprout, they don't often seem to take hold or live through the winter. I'm sure there are exceptions but I've never seen a wild or rampant grove anywhere I've lived.
@@brt5273
On the west coast they’re more cultivated for use as ornamentals and with so much lawn care the probably aren’t an excessive invasive but I’m guessing on that. I think the seeds are light enough they scatter in the wind and if left alone one can find one to three about ever 1/2 mile to one mile apart from each other in Oklahoma, but only on unattended land. If the land is kept at all, even if it’s brush hogged just once a year, or probably even 5 years then you are very likely not to see any. But I’m with you on that they don’t seem invasive. Even along 10 miles of road with uncorked land alongside it like I said they’re at least one but usually no more than three, every 1/2 mile or so if not farther. But if it were in large groves of them then yes they would be invasive. But I don’t know their definition for invasive either!!
@@MindfulMusings1I LOVE Mullein, so grateful that I found out about it on YT. If only I had discovered it in early 2020…
Also known as signatures. Certain plants/trees/herbs/weeds will grow where we live as "nature knows" what we need. They often take on the very appearance of the malady or condition. We're so far removed from the natural world that we don't pay attention. I personally know of many instances where people were suffering or in need of the very thing that was growing under foot.
Many people feel better after a few mimosas.
😂
Haha!!! 😅
😂🥂
😂
Yeah🎉🎉🎉🎉😂
I used the flowers to start a camp fire, when I tell you that by burning the flowers is like smoking the best weed. I was so giggly and happy and light hearted. 10/10 recommend.
Say you've never smoked weed without saying it .
You’ve never smoked weed buddy.
The flowers contain .01-1.5% dymetheltriptamine. Dmt. burn enough at once and you might get a buz for maybe 15 minutes.
Say what now?😮 🤔
Were the flowers dried or freshly plucked?
I always thought that the flowers of the Mimosa smelled like fresh Peaches. Loved these as a kid! 🩷
My favorite tree that I feel guilty for loving because of its invasiveness. Now I will never feel guilty again.
SAME!
Maybe they (Mimosa and other wild things)are only invasive because we are not consuming them often enough.😋
Yep. Always thought they were beautiful trees. I love Japanese honeysuckle although it gets a bad rap. Grew up in the country, and the smell of the flowers was a sure sign of spring and summer, my favorite time of the year.
I definitely prefer it as an invasive vine, over native poison ivy.
@@hog7203 i mean, there are native honeyesuckles
@@melikecomedy yes I know that, but they aren't near as fragrant as the Japanese honeysuckle.
As a child we would hang out sitting on the branches of a mimosa tree. I believe this tree is medicinal just by my childhood experience. Now I know why I was so happy!
My grandmother had these growing all in her yard, and I would climb the trees and watch the hummingbirds flit around them. Such happy memories and I've always loved mimosa trees since then but never knew they could be medicinal!
Same here had one growing next to my bedroom window when I was little
Same here we were always in that tree playing on the limbs and smelling it ❤❤❤❤a great memory
Oh me gersh! I just look at a picture of one, & I feel better for weeks!
this is ayahuasca.. he is wrong.. it is a psychoactive drug called dmt
Oh! I never even knew about this one! I know the tree, but didn't know it's an herb!
Me too!
Straight subscribed after seeing this one video...bout to watch em all now!
its the plant used to make DmT.. it blows my mind he just gave you instructions to make ayahuasca without knowing it and basically told everyone to take controlled drugs.
Instantaneous new sub! Great video!
I was diagnosed with CPTSD a while back and since the doctors are in the pharmaceutical companies' pocket I have to take 3 different meds to "help" with that. 1 or all 3 make feel detached and kinda.... uncomfortably weird. I sure wish I had found this out a long time ago, but I know now. I'll be working on a plan to safely wean myself off the chems while taking actual medicine that won't make me feel off.
Thank you, very much, for creating your videos. YOU are, quite literally, saving lives. You be proud of that. You're doing the Lord's work. Thanks again and take care.
Always loved them. My granny had one when I was a child. I never cared it was invasive it's just beautiful.
They remind me of my grandmother, too.
Grandmas are beautiful regardless how invasive they are
@@gamerk1625 You may be on to something there.🤣
I pull it off in long strips. Then using a pair of kitchen scissors I cut it up into about 2-3 inch pieces which I then put in the blender with 90% vodka. I then place it in mason jars. After a couple of months, I'll then strain it. It also helps with my back pain.
Wow
Great!
Thank you for commenting!
You pull leaves, bark or flowers off ?
Do you drink this?. And how much?
In years past, many many people insisted on a mamosa in the front yard and my mother was no exception 🥰👍🙏
Our house in West Virginia had one in the front yard. I didn't know the name of it, but I called it the "strawberry tree" because the pink flowers when crushed smelled like strawberries to me. I didn't know they were edible! I was scared to eat it, because my godsisters always lied to me and told me things were poisonous. LOL!
It really works for anxiety/panic attacks. Way better than any benzo ever. At least for me it does. And it works almost immediately. And it doesn't get you high it doesn't make you feel woozy and it's not habit forming. It's actually kind of a miracle.
It's literally better than a benzo? Tell me more I'm very intrigued now.
@schleig04 I got a mimosa tincture from an herbalist friend of mine. I've had anxiety and panic attacks for a couple of decades, ever since my early 20's. She said I should try it. I was skeptical. But one day right before work an anxiety attack hit me hard out of the blue, but I had that mimosa tincture with me. I really.didnt expect much but I was desperate. I took two dropper fulls. And 10 seconds later the anxiety attack was gone. I was amazed. It was just gone. Poof. I felt normal again. Not high, not overly calm, just normal. No anxiety at all. And it's worked for me since then. I keep it on me all the time. And I only use it when I need to.
@@Skeptic78that everclear calmed u down. this is why my gpa had a flask
Thanks, Mathew, it's people like you that will make the hard time easier.
Thank you for watching!
I have severe depression and have always felt drawn to this tree ❤
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
I discovered this decades ago,
pulverize fresh bark, let it dry , put it on a pipe and enjoy it.
Lot better than Cannabis !
Smoke it?
@@SurfahSistah
No. You just put it in a pipe.
It's got dmt in it.
Does it matter what part of the tree you take it from?
@@radialwavellite5310you'll want the root bark , dig it up and scrape the roots with a potatoe peeler . Let dry and do a a/b extraction
Thank you. I have PTSD and so far nothing helps…but I have two mimosa trees that are blooming. I planted because they are beautiful …this new information is like icing on the cake! Thanks for sharing.
How did you plant it, with rooting powder or dug a small one up?
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
I’m in Paradise, CA - and these plants continue to thrive, even after the town has been destroyed, by CA’s most deadly wildfire, in 2018.
I am staying on my grandmother’s property - and mimosas have begun to grow, again; I just so happened to notice their pink flowers blooming, the other day, too.
I am so glad to hear that things are growing again up there on her/your home.
I'm an Oroville resident and came to the comments to say we have these out here in Northern California. Nice to see a neighbor on here. 🙂
I lived in California when that fire hit. Very sad to see the devastation, but I am glad to see that things are better 5 years on.
0
K@@silentforest7147
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K@@silentforest7147
I live in Tennessee now, but I'm from Shasta County (Shingletown.) One of the reasons I moved was due to the wildfires. They were getting too close. My friends and family have PTSD from the Carr Fire. :( It's so interesting to me to often come across others from the same area.
I was just noticing the mimosas blooming here yesterday. How wonderful to know they are returning to Paradise. For you to have survived that fire and remain in the area is admirable. ❤ I commuted to Chico State from Redding for years. Please be safe there this summer. I'm afraid that this week may be tough for y'all with the high heat, high winds, and no moisture. I still know a lot of family and friends living in that area - from Anderson to Medford.
This is the best aspect of RUclips and social media imho - videos and comments like these. ❤
I’m old, so when I tell you this tree caused several instances of the wind knocked out of me as a kid, it was from the 60’s & 70’s. I saw it as a magical tree. None other like it in north Alabama. Being a boy, climbing was the first thing to do. The branches seemed strong, but, they were not. It would be fine then, you were on your back with a headful of ants trying to breathe. lol. The one at my great-grandpa’s farmhouse along Big Bear Creek in Winston County was bigger around than most, about 12”, but was short. Only about 10’ tall. I suppose us boys breaking the limbs off had something to do with that. I can’t say it true of all or even most, but that one always had a very active colony of big black carpenter ants. But, they didn’t bite and neither did we. Good memories.
I’m a girl, but also originally from north Alabama and from the same general time period and fell out of my share of mimosa trees.
👋🏾 Hey fellow Alabama cousins. I read yr comments and immediately went home to the tree who's branches ironically engh stayed strong for years at my grandmas house. Or maybe we were just small enough. The largest one did eventually give way🥲. Good memories!😂
@@kamjason9300 those were the best days in history as far as I’m concerned.
My Grandmother and 2 of my Great-Aunts would get together and wash one day a week. There was a big black wash pot they boiled the clothes in, homemade lye soap of course. There were two wash tubs with fresh well water they’d get rinsed in before being squeezed out in the most contemptible machine God ever allowed to be created, the washer ringer. I learned quickly to put mine on a little before they finished drying to keep from being cut to pieces.
I bring that up because that infamous mimosa tree, the wash pot, and the coal pile were set in a triangle just off the side porch.
These 3 women would sit on that big front porch, swinging and rocking, “brushing their teeth” with a fresh sweetgum twig and White Dove snuff, and laugh all day. I’ve never known how much I loved the world then. And them even more.
My husband grew up in Winston County ☺️ and I love mimosa! I love the Dr Seuss flowers. 🌸 Here in Birmingham the utility folks will literally cut your mimosa trees down without your permission, but they sure do spring right back up! 😂
I grew up in a home that had this tree in the middle of the circle driveway garden my gran had made. I have great memories of the smell of the tree and the tickly flowers I used to play with.
plants are nature's pharmaceutical factories. change my mind 😮
Wow! 😯 Universe sent me here!!! 😅 I have always had a LOVE for medicinal wild herbs/plants/trees. I am from the upper Midwest in MN and I am currently relocating to the South East and am eager to discover NEW wildlife!!! How beautiful i was brought to this channel!!! 🤩
That's exciting for you, I'm sure. I'm in the south east. What state will you be going to?
I have them in my yard, how to use it 🎉
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
GREAT INFORMATION AND I, AM LOOKING FORWARD TO MORE VIDEO'S FROM YOU YOUNG MAN- !
KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK- SPREADING OL' WORLD KNOWLEDGE- OF CURES =
* WITHOUT THE PHARMACEUTICAL -COMPANY'S MAKING A PROFIT-!!!!
I HAVE HEARD OF PEOPLE THAT ARE UP ROOTING TREES FOR ROOT SYSTEMS- TO MAKE DMT- SO BE CAREFUL FOLK'S AND MAKE SURE YOU DONT KILL TREES STRIPING BARK- AS IT CAN KILL ALL; TREES.
AS WISE-
YOUNG LADY
[STATED] EARLIER IN THE
COMENTS.
🎉BROVO YOUNG MAN -!!!!
LOOKING FORWARD FOR YOUR EFFORTS AND TIME-!
°~T~°
Welcome to the SE! These trees are everywhere and smell wonderful 😀
My lord I just saw these on my hike a few days ago and was smelling them and put some in my hair and meant to research when I got home and this suddenly popped up in my feed. Hell yeah🎉
Our phones are seriously spying on us!
Same here.....
@@shadowfax9177😄
Does anyone had luck with transplanting/planting a mimosa tree or will they only grow wild?
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
Thank you. I have anxiety & depression, due to trauma. I'm going to give this a try.
Wow, trauma shaming, what a jackass.
Thank you for watching and commenting Judith. I hope it helps!
@@walkawalkaway5517
You Are A Sad Specimen
@@walkawalkaway5517
You Must Be One Of Those CAUSING Trauma
Everyone has some type of perceived trauma. Different types of people are able to handle it differently and everyone’s experiences are unique to them.
Someone somewhere cares about you more than you realize even if they don’t know how or are unable to connect and show it.
Don’t give up.
Are you kidding me! This tree grows all over my city and I had no idea it could cure depression!!
I will never get mad at this tree for triggering my allergies again
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
I am not very religious but I’ve been praying and asked god to help me get off a certain anti depressant. Out of know where your video popped up😂❤ crazy thing is I’m 💯 for growing my own food and I’m surrounded by these trees and never once thought to research them🤦🏾♀️ WONT HE DO IT!!!!!
Yes he will! 🙌🏾 He is amazing. Also, try to spend quality time with him, worshipping and praying, when I do this, he always lifts me up out of whatever bad mood or depression I’m in. When I spend lots of time with God, I don’t get depressed at all Ive noticed.
Start taking less of the drug, little by little, "wean" yourself off of it. Use mimosa to help you. If you use 2 pills a day, take 1. Do that for a week, then every other day take 1. Then go to half of a pill. Every other day, then 2 days, then 3 days, then 4 days apart. Then just stop. You can do it! I did it. GOD bless PRAY, Pray, and Pray.
I have been tapering off an AD for 5 years now.I should be done in another year.Iuse chamomile tea and skullcap and valerian and passionflower and rose to help my anxiety and when I have insomnia.
I wish you guys luck. The cure is worse than the malady. But they both suck. Big hugs.
@@danettebirch42305 year taper? I know they're SSRI's but 5 years seems alittle extensive. How long were you on the antidepressant before starting the taper btw?
I was dealing with depression when i was in South Carolina...
I remember feeling good by staring and smelling it.
You should have made a tea. The tree is high in DMT. It will eliminate your depression I promise you. That guy just didn’t know that it was that chemical that the tree makes naturally as well as your brain. Don’t think of it as a drug. It saved me from ending myself and I don’t ever say that lightly
@@RandomCitizen-vl1wi how do you tea out of it ? Using what part?
@@dongdo7168 same as any other root tea. Steep in hot water. The metal tea screens work great
people use the root bark to make DmT.. this is the real reason for "Effects" hes teaching you to make ayahuasca and doesn't realize it somehow
Just the scent alone has a great uplifting effect on me. I love all Mimosa type species.
I found this tree in my neighborhood about three years ago and started making tea, tinctures, and putting it in my kombucha bottlings. I love it.
Mimosa trees are beautiful! The flowers smell heavenly, the flowers tickle your nose, I love them so much! Even their leaves are so pretty!
The leaves will fold together if you run your finger across them. As though it tickles them.
@reesedaniel5835 oh I didn't realize they did that. I remember when I was a teenager a friends Mother had what they called a sensitive plant, it was a small plant with frond like leaves that if you rubbed your fingers over them they closed up. I never knew Mimosa tree leaves dud that too.
They are blooming profusely here in Alabama, lots and lots of pink. Thanks for the info.
Thank you for watching!
I'm in Alabama to in St Clair County and I have them here on acreage. I actually made a tincture out of the flowers the other day but I have not used it yet I look more forward to it now after hearing this
Yeppp same here in central Alabama tons of them things ... especially on my road lol I went a grab some. A couple hours ago lol when I seen this video just don't know about the flowers themselves though
@@NiiJiiLuv what gets me is in my Facebook gardening and plant groups... people get so mad at species like this because it's invasive! Apparently they have no idea all of the benefits in miraculous qualities plants like this possess!!!
Please explain how to harvest bark from trees. I don't want to cut to deep or take to much that it would harm the tree.@@LegacyWildernessAcademy
This tree is growing right in front of my house. I'll be making me some tea tomorrow.
Great! Thank you for watching the video and commenting!
We have them popping up everywhere here I have a huge mature tree in my yard rn it makes a mess all summer but it's an cool tree 😊
So I don't have this tree in my area. Can I get this as a supplement?
Well how'd it go ??????
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
I like how it closes its leaves at night and when it rains
We had one of these trees in the back, it was gorgeous! Everybody in our house needed the benefits of it! I grew up in a ‘walking on eggshells’ type of place with explosive stepmother.
I would have tried it in a heartbeat, my dad probably not, and back then, unless you were a doctor with medical degrees, stepmom would have just laughed. Or got dangerous..
Armed with this knowledge, what a different WORLD it would have been! I knew this tree was a sacred blessing! So beautiful!
My dad used to just look up at it and say it was a pain in the neck, and a messy tree!
Nah! Just brushing the blossoms on my cheeks used to make me smile, I loved that tree. So glad I saw this video!
I hope you have found peace and happiness❤
I know what you're talking about my friend. I lucked out in that my dad ran off with the wicked stepmother and left us kids with his parents (mom couldn't find her backside with both hands). Other than having to be shuttled around on holidays I avoided that drama. I know I would have ended up in jail at some point if things hadn't gone like they did. I truly wish you peace and happiness.
❤John 3,16 ❤
what you were just shown is how to make ayahuasca and somehow he didn't realize the real "benefit" is this plant is high in a psychoactive called DmT.. be VERY careful
*me hearing it treats depression and anxiety* also me *sold*
Eat grass fed ghee butter or beef tallow 1 healing tablespoon. You will feel complete.