
Lion's Heart
Courage, Bravery, Confidence
What would change if you stopped waiting to feel ready and just began?
Infused with Real Herbs
Scent: Bold and warming with spice-forward notes. Ginger heat, cinnamon warmth, savory thyme, aromatic bay undertones.
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You know what you need to do. You've known for a while. But something keeps you frozen—fear of failure, fear of judgment, fear of the unknown on the other side of action.
Lion's Heart is the candle that says: enough waiting.
We've combined the most courage-building herbs in our collection. Fiery ginger to ignite your will. Ancient thyme, carried by soldiers and knights for bravery. Cinnamon to speed your success. Bay for the victory that awaits those who dare.
Light this when you need to make the call, have the conversation, send the application, or take the leap.
The Blend
- Ginger — Fire herb that ignites will, motivation, and personal power
- Thyme — Ancient courage herb, carried into battle for bravery
- Cinnamon — Speeds success and adds heat to your intentions
- Bay — Victory laurel, the reward of those who take action
When to Light
- Before job interviews or important meetings
- When preparing for a difficult conversation
- Starting a new business or project
- When fear is louder than your dreams
- Morning rituals for days requiring bravery
Pure beeswax infused with real organic herbs. No synthetic fragrances. Each herb infused separately, then blended.
Aromatherapy Notes
Warm and empowering. A spicy, confident blend that energizes without agitating. The scent of someone ready to take action.
- Before job interviews or presentations
- When facing difficult conversations
- Starting new projects or ventures
- When fear is holding you back
- Morning motivation rituals
- Before asking for what you want
- When you need to stand up for yourself
Ritual Instructions
1. Light the candle and stand (or sit) tall
2. Take three deep breaths, feeling your feet on the ground
3. Place your hand on your heart and feel it beating
4. Name the thing you've been avoiding: "I am afraid of ___"
5. Now name what you'll do anyway: "And I will ___"
6. Speak the incantation or prayer with conviction
7. Feel the warmth of the flame as your own inner fire
8. When ready, go do the thing. The candle will hold your courage.
Lord, grant me courage when I am afraid. Strengthen my heart for what lies ahead. Help me remember that I am capable of hard things, and that You walk beside me into every challenge. Let me move forward in faith, not fear. Amen.
Ginger fire, thyme so bold, / Cinnamon quick and bay of gold. / Fear dissolves, courage grows, / Lion's heart within me glows.
📜 Sacred & Spiritual References
The herbs in this candle have been revered across many spiritual traditions throughout history:
GREEK SACRED TRADITION: Bay laurel (Daphne) was sacred to Apollo, god of prophecy, music, and healing. According to Pausanias: "They say that the most ancient temple of Apollo was made of laurel." The Pythia (Oracle of Delphi) chewed bay leaves and held laurel branches while delivering prophecies. Laurel wreaths crowned victors at the Pythian Games.
ROMAN TRADITION: Romans considered laurel a symbol of victory, immortality, and purification. Emperors and poets wore laurel wreaths. The term "laureate" derives from this tradition.
BIBLICAL CONNECTION: While not directly named, aromatic leaves for wisdom and prophecy appear throughout scripture. The concept of "leaves for healing" in Revelation 22:2 has been associated with medicinal plants like bay.
BIBLE - EXODUS 30:23-25: "Take the following fine spices: 500 shekels of liquid myrrh, half as much of fragrant cinnamon, 250 shekels of fragrant calamus... Make these into a sacred anointing oil." Cinnamon was a key ingredient in the holy anointing oil used to consecrate the Tabernacle and priests.
SONG OF SOLOMON 4:14: "Nard and saffron, calamus and cinnamon, with every kind of incense tree, with myrrh and aloes and all the finest spices."
PROVERBS 7:17: "I have perfumed my bed with myrrh, aloes and cinnamon."
REVELATION 18:13: Lists cinnamon among the precious merchandise of Babylon.
QURAN & ISLAMIC TRADITION: Surah Al-Insan (76:17): "And they will be given to drink a cup whose mixture is of ginger." Ginger is mentioned as a drink given to the righteous in Paradise.
AYURVEDIC TEXTS: The Charaka Samhita calls ginger "vishwabhesaj" (universal medicine). It is considered sattvic (spiritually pure) and is used in religious offerings.
CHINESE TRADITION: Confucius reportedly ate ginger with every meal. It appears in traditional texts as promoting longevity and spiritual clarity.
ANCIENT GREEK RELIGION: Thyme was burned as incense in Greek temples. Its name derives from "thymos" meaning courage/spirit, or possibly "thymiama" meaning incense. Warriors bathed in thyme-infused water before battle.
EGYPTIAN TRADITION: Used in embalming, representing the soul's journey to the afterlife.
CHRISTIAN TRADITION: Medieval Christians believed thyme grew from Virgin Mary's tears shed during Christ's crucifixion. It was placed in coffins to ensure passage to the next world. Associated with the Holy Spirit due to honey-loving bees' attraction to thyme (bees symbolize the soul).
