Love
Honour yourself with sacred care
The Love ritual is not romantic love. It is the deeper practice of self-love — the radical act of treating your own body and spirit with the same devotion you give to the people you love most. This is the ritual for those who have been giving too much and receiving too little. For those who have forgotten that they are worth caring for. The Rose Aura practice is a daily reminder.
How to perform the Love ritual
The Love ritual is best performed slowly. Do not rush it. Schedule it — put it in your calendar as an appointment with yourself, at least once a week. Prepare the space: soft light, your affirmation card visible, perhaps the Lavender incense if you have it. This is not maintenance. This is devotion.
- 01 Prepare the space before you begin — soft light, your affirmation card somewhere visible
- 02 Hold the Rose Aura Soap and breathe the rose and rosehip fragrance before lathering
- 03 Lather with both hands, slowly — this is not washing, this is anointing
- 04 Stay under the warm water for at least five minutes longer than usual
- 05 Read your affirmation card afterwards, while your skin is still warm from the water
Everything you need for the Love practice
“I am worthy of love, care, and sacred attention. I pour into myself so I may pour into the world. I am enough, exactly as I am.”
This affirmation card is hand-selected and included with every Love ritual product. It is chosen specifically for this practice — not randomly. Read it aloud before you begin, three times. Once to hear it. Twice to feel it. Three times to let it settle.
What makes this ritual work
Damask Rose
The universal symbol of love and self-devotion. Natural hyaluronic acid and vitamin C. Cooling, pacifying, and deeply feminine in Ayurvedic tradition.
Rosehip Seed Oil
The most bioavailable vitamin C and vitamin A in nature. Deep, nutritive, lasting nourishment — the quality of genuine self-care.
Pink Himalayan Clay
The clay of the heart chakra. Gentle, non-stripping, Pitta-pacifying. Absorbs excess without taking what should remain.