Lavanda

Lavanda Gallery Image

Lavanda

La lavanda es una planta conocida por sus propiedades calmantes y su buen aroma. Las flores púrpuras de la planta de lavanda pueden ser secadas y guardadas para fomentar un sueño más reparador. Cuando el faraón del Antiguo Egipto Tutankamón fue enterrado, lo hicieron con lavanda por lo que su aroma perduraba cuando su sarcófago fue abierto en 1922, unos 3000 años después.

¿Hay alguna flor o aroma en particular que te guste y te ayuda a calmarte?

Comments from Cristina about the translation

This is one of my favorites scents and plants. It amazes me that it has been used from so long in history.

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Please choose Other from the list if you can't find your language.

    zay

    while I was translating in English , I had difficulty finding the for Purple in Somali and I had to research a lot to find it, I found few names.

    Jeffrey

    My memories of the lavender in Hungary stays with me from my visit to Tihany (pronounced Teahanny)
    At Tihany there is a Lavender laboratory that produces perfume and soaps. The fragrance is very heady.

    Tarteel

    This is a text in Arabic about the Garad , the sunut tree fruit, and its medicinal uses in Sudan.

    Image comment for Tarteel
    Tarteel Hassan

    Gradd
    Gradd is one of the forest fruits that is found in Sudan and many other African, Asian, and Australian areas.
    Gradd (Acacia family), is used locally as medicine for healing many infections. Also it was introduced in the pharmaceutical industry.
    Sudanese people had a good experience during the pandemic of Covid 19, they used Gradd as a chewing tablet in order to reduce throat pain. It is also can help to remove respiratory tracks block, through burning it and inhaling it in small amounts.
    That became very popular among Sudanese communities in particularly during Covid 19.

    Tarteel Hassan

    Federica Sebastiano

    Notes on Italian culture
    Thinking about scents and their significance reminded me of a poem by the famous Italian poet Eugenio Montale, which is one of my favourites. In this poem, entitled “I Limoni” (“The Lemons”), he describes the almost mystical experience that he has when he sees the lemon trees and is inebriated by their scent. He starts by distinguishing himself from other poets saying that while they prefer extravagant plants, he likes to talk about common trees, such as lemons, in their everyday environments: ditches, puddles, alleys, verges. Nonetheless, lemon trees for him are more than they appear. In their simplicity, they become a metaphysical symbol, a sign of some ‘divine’ presence in the everyday world. If we are patient enough to quietly sit to observe and smell the lemons, these become a secret passage to the deepest secrets of life.

    Ascoltami, i poeti laureati
    si muovono soltanto fra le piante
    dai nomi poco usati: bossi ligustri o acanti.
    lo, per me, amo le strade che riescono agli erbosi
    fossi dove in pozzanghere
    mezzo seccate agguantano i ragazzi
    qualche sparuta anguilla:
    le viuzze che seguono i ciglioni,
    discendono tra i ciuffi delle canne
    e mettono negli orti, tra gli alberi dei limoni.

    (…)

    Vedi, in questi silenzi in cui le cose
    s’abbandonano e sembrano vicine
    a tradire il loro ultimo segreto,
    talora ci si aspetta
    di scoprire uno sbaglio di Natura,
    il punto morto del mondo, l’anello che non tiene,
    il filo da disbrogliare che finalmente ci metta
    nel mezzo di una verità.
    Lo sguardo fruga d’intorno,
    la mente indaga accorda disunisce
    nel profumo che dilaga
    quando il giorno più languisce.
    Sono i silenzi in cui si vede
    in ogni ombra umana che si allontana
    qualche disturbata Divinità. Listen to me, laurel-wreathed poets
    move only among plants
    with noble names: boxwood acanthus or privets.
    I, for one, love roads that lead to grass covered
    ditches where in partly
    desiccated puddles children
    catch the occasional eel:
    the lanes that coast these banks
    descend through tufts of cane
    and open onto orchards thick with lemons.

    (…)

    You see, in this silence in which all things
    abandon themselves and seem close
    to betraying their ultimate secret,
    we sometimes expect
    to find a fault in Nature,
    the dead nub of the earth, the weak link,
    the thread that untangled finally places us
    within reach of a truth.
    Our eyes search all around,
    our mind probes accords partitions
    in the fragrance that sweeps over us
    when the day is most sluggish.
    It is the stillness in which we see
    in every human shadow that drifts away
    some disturbed Deity.

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