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Buy Xhosa Dream Root(Silene capensis)

xhosa silene capensis plant silene unduilata plant

Xhosa Dream Root For Sale


#oneirogens #ethnobotanicals #ethnobotany
#phytochemistry #phytochemicals #benefits #pharmacology
#ethnopharmacology #pharmacognosy #properties #uses

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Ezekiel 47:12 "And by the river upon the bank thereof, on this side and on that side, shall grow all trees for meat, whose leaf shall not fade, neither shall the fruit thereof be consumed: it shall bring forth new fruit according to his months, because their waters they issued out of the sanctuary: and the fruit thereof shall be for meat, and the leaf thereof for medicine."


Nicknames: Ubulawu;[7] Xhosa Dream Root;[7] By the way, the name "Xhosa", is from an ethnic group that resides in Africa called the Xhosa people.


Ethnobotany: Xhosa Dream Root, also known as Silene capensis, or by the Synonym of Silene undulata, is an African ethnobotanical that has oneirogenic properties.[3] Oneirogens are substances(including plants), that stimulate the dreaming mind, and they can be broken down in two categories according to researcher Claud Rifat, true-oneirogens, and pre-oneirogens.[4] This Xhosa Dream Root Herb specifically, is used in African shamanism.[5] Keep in mind that shamanism and witchcraft are the same thing, being that they are the occult version of being the difference between being a methodist vs being a baptist, shamanism being the methodist, and witchcraft being the baptist. Make sense? I hope so. However, I believe anyone can benefit from this plant, and how it and others can be used is something that is versitile(able to adapt or be adapted to many different functions or activities.) The Xhosa people of Africa, use it for divination(fortune-telling), necromancy, and other occult practices(remember Deuteronomy 18).[6][7] It's also used in initiation rituals of Southerm Bantu diviners, native to Africa.[7] They also turn it into an idol(a dangerous practice), by believing that it can "bring them luck"(which is not true, as idols only bring a curse upon a Jew).[7] It's also used in Africa as a medicine to treat mental disturbances, due to its pharmacology.[7] They actually use it in an initiation process where the initiates learn how to use it to bring awareness to psycho-spiritual phenomena, like enhanced intuition and dreams, and even how to find and use other medicinal plants..[7] The plant has a reputation of inducing vivid and even lucid and or prophetic/divinatory dreams.[2]


Classification: Perennial;[x] I've consumed it many times as a supplement for dreams, and despite the fact that it produces Ibogaine[19], I've never experienced a high from it, which tells me the ibogaine content must be very low, perhaps micro-dose levels are present. It makes a great oneirogen though.


Plant Family: Caryophyllaceae;[16] Genus: Silene;[16] Species: S. undulata(syn: capensis);[16]


What is Phytochemistry? What are Phytochemicals?

Phytochemistry is a field of study in school that isolates medicines from plants like Silene undulata(silene capensis), and studies them for their pharmacology(medicinal properties).[8][17][18] This is how we know about drugs and medicines like Ibogaine, Morphine, Harmala, etc, that and ethnobotany(the two fields are directly related to one another).[8][17][18] You could say that Ethnobotany is a pre-requisite for phytochemistry. In the past, the Pensacola FBI, DEA, and SRCSO made false defamatory claims that "ethnobotanicals were designer drugs", based on zero evidence while failing to investigate and fact check and use common sense. A lot of folks don't know the difference between and ethnobotanical and "k2", and can't tell the difference, thus it drives them to slander.


Phytochemicals:

Believe it or not, according to academic sources, Silene undulata(Silene capensis), produces Ibogaine[19], as well as norharman, harmalol, and harmaline, and harmine and related constituents![1][2] O.G. Observation: This is very exciting because it is yet another example of constituents being reoccuring across different ethnobotanical sources, like how these harmala, and harmaline and related components also exist in Banisteriopsis caapi, Bobinsana(Calliandra angustifolia)(another Amazonian plant), and Passion flower, to name a few![11][12][13] This also reminds me of Epena(Virola snuff), a South American DMT preparation that the plant actually produces both the DMT and the MAOI harmaline and related constituents together!, which is rare![14] Most of the time, one has to find another plant source that produces the MAOI's, but in this case, the plant produces both the psychoactive, and the MAOI's to allow it to absorb into the blood stream![8][9][10] Finally, Ibogaine exist in the highest levels found in nature in a plant called Tabernanthe Iboga(or "Iboga" for short), which is where the name Ibogaine came from.[15] Silene capensis(undulata) also produces something called phytoecdysteroids[20].


More phytochemicals produced by Silene undulata(s. capensis): Please keep in mind that this is not a full list. If you pull up my sources, you'll find tons more information, and remember you can hit the academic electronic databases yourself, or if you're old school, a library. Phytochemist have discovered the following phytochemicals in the silene genus: Sileneoside A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H(all different variations of basically the same chemical), Taxisterone, Tomentesterone A, B, Vitocosterone E, Vitocosterone benzoate, Makisterone A, Nusilsterone, Turkesterone, Poststerone, Rubrosterone, Makisterone diacetonide.[20] Silene also produces: triterpene glycosides, terpenoids, benzenoids, flavonoids, anthocyanins, fatty acids, amino acids, polysaccharides, sugars, sterols, vitamins, organic acids, and microelements.[20] It's important to know that I could do academic digging for facts on each one of these chemicals for a month, and still have barely scratched the surface on all the data, and research that's been conducted on this plant alone. These natural ethnobotanical medicines are extremely complex, and far more complex than any drug/medicine that man can make. Unfortunately Christians and Jews have been duped into taking pharmakeia versions of these substances due to being seduced and brainwashed by the serpent on the side of the ambulance, the W.H.O. idol, and the U.N. idol as well. FYI: You can pull each one of these chemicals up on PubMed, PubChem, and other academic sources and learn far more about them.


The Silene undulata(s. capensis) plant is legal, and well tolerated by the government too! It's sold on ETSY and all over the place, all across the U.S., so the government can't single anyone out because that's discrimination, plus the plants theirselves are not illegal, as we can see, only drug extractions and manufacturing operations that revolve around isolating them out of ethnobotanicals is illegal. Synthetic drugs are far more dangerous than natural ones anyway.


Pharmacological / Medicinal Properties:
According to yet another scholarly source that confirms that Silene capensis(undulata) produces Ibogaine(and I have a lot), the plant has been proven to induce agonistic activity at serotonin 5-HT2A receptor.[2] Yet another academic source confirms for us that Silene unduulata(silene capensis)["Xhosa dream root"] is highly bioactive, as over 400 compounds have been isolated from the genus alone!, and among the major ones, are components known as phytoecdysteroids.[20] The silene genus of plants has been studied by scientist for their: anti-tumor, anti-bacterial, and antioxidant activities, with positive results, which is no surprise to anyone who has studied these plants enough.[20] To be thorough in my work, and offer more than one source, I cite another scholarly source which confirms for us that the plant offers significant anti-inflammatory, anti-tumor, anti-bacterial, and antioxidant activities.[21]


I wanted to discuss the pharmacology of specific phytochemical components of the silene capensis(s. undulata) plant here. Anthocyanins: Anthocyanins are powerful antioxidants that protect the body from oxidative stress.[22] They also demonstrate antiproliferative properties.[23] Fatty acids: Amino acids: Polysaccharides: [This section will be updated as I complete the page]


Mixes well with: This segment is based on both my own observations over many years of personal experimentation and observation, coupled with modern phytochemical analysis. Xhosa dream root(S. capensis/undulata) synergizes with other oneirogens like Damiana, Calea zacatechichi, etc. and with MAOI's like Passion flower, Banisteriopsis caapi and Bobinsana, and any others that produces harmala related components.


Related Ethnobotanicals: Voacanga thouarsii, Voacanga africana; Yohimbe;


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Statements and items are not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure, any ailments, conditions, or diseases. That would be terrible right? Not evaluated or approved by the tryants at the FDA. Consult your healthcare provider first. I hope your healthcare provider is the Lord.

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Academic citations:

[1] Alhawarri MB, Olimat S (2025). "Potential Serotonin 5-HT2A Receptor Agonist of Psychoactive Components of Silene undulata Aiton: LC-MS/MS, ADMET, and Molecular Docking Studies". Curr Pharm Biotechnol. 26 (2): 260–275. doi:10.2174/0113892010299804240324140017. PMID 38561607

[2] Alhawarri, Maram B., and Suleiman Olimat. "Potential Serotonin 5-HT2A Receptor Agonist of Psychoactive Components of Silene undulata Aiton: LC-MS/MS, ADMET, and Molecular Docking Studies." Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology 26.2 (2025): 260-275.

[3] Cooke, Justin. "Oneirogens: Substances That Make You Dream (Natural & Synthetic)."

[5] Sobiecki, J. F. "A review of plants used in divination in southern Africa and their psychoactive effects." Southern African Humanities 20.2 (2008): 333-351.

[6] Pasquali, Luca. "Leshoma, the visionary plant of southern Africa." Antrocom: Online Journal of Anthropology 17.1 (2021).

[7] Sobiecki, Jean-Francois. "Psychoactive ubulawu spiritual medicines and healing dynamics in the initiation process of Southern Bantu diviners." Journal of Psychoactive drugs 44.3 (2012): 216-223.

[11] Frye, Abigail, and Catherine Haustein. "Extraction, identification, and quantification of harmala alkaloids in three species of Passiflora." American journal of undergraduate research 6.3 (2007): 19-26.

[12] Rumlerová, Tereza, et al. "Participant experiences on a medicinal plant diet at Takiwasi center: an in‐depth small‐scale survey." Anthropology of Consciousness 33.1 (2022): 38-62.

[13] Rodd, Robin. "Reassessing the cultural and psychopharmacological significance of Banisteriopsis caapi: preparation, classification and use among the Piaroa of Southern Venezuela." Journal of psychoactive drugs 40.3 (2008): 301-307.

[14] Ott, Jonathan. "Pharmepena-psychonautics: human intranasal, sublingual and oral pharmacology of 5-methoxy-N, N-dimethyl-tryptamine." Journal of psychoactive drugs 33.4 (2001): 403-407.

[15] Bouso, José Carlos, et al. "An analytical study of iboga alkaloids contained in Tabernanthe iboga-derived products offered by ibogaine treatment providers." Archives of Clinical Psychiatry (São Paulo) 47 (2020): 51-54.

[18] Burrell, R. C. "Phytochemistry. What it is and how it has developed." Journal of Chemical Education 14.11 (1937): 520.

[19] Papadodima, Stavroula A., et al. "Ibogaine related sudden death: a case report." Journal of forensic and legal medicine 20.7 (2013): 809-811.

[20] Mamadalieva, Nilufar Z. "Phytoecdysteroids from Silene plants: distribution, diversity and biological (antitumour, antibacterial and antioxidant) activities." Boletín Latinoamericano y del Caribe de Plantas Medicinales y Aromáticas 11.6 (2012): 474-497.

[21] Zhang, Huawei, Yuzhu Tan, and Xiaoping Dong. "Two new ecdysteroid glycosides from the rhizomes of Silene tatarinowii Regel." Rec. Nat. Prod 15 (2021): 46-52.

[22] Garcia, Chelsea, and Christopher N. Blesso. "Antioxidant properties of anthocyanins and their mechanism of action in atherosclerosis." Free Radical Biology and Medicine 172 (2021): 152-166.

[23] Fernandes, Iva, et al. "Antioxidant and antiproliferative properties of methylated metabolites of anthocyanins." Food Chemistry 141.3 (2013): 2923-2933.

Book Citations:

[4] Toro, G., & Thomas, B. (2007). Drugs of the dreaming: oneirogens: Salvia divinorum and other dream-enhancing plants. Rochester, VT: Park Street Press.

[8] Balick, Michael J., and Paul Alan Cox. Plants, People, and Culture: The Science Of Ethnobotany. Garland Science, 2020.

[17] Swerdlow, Joel L. Nature's Medicine : Plants That Heal. Washington, D.C., National Geographic Society, 2000.

Encyclopedia Sources:

[16] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silene_undulata

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