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$25.18 Add to Cart

Hippie Go Lucky --- A Mind Mellowing Patchouli Aromatherapy Spray/Perfume/Cologne

Hippie Go Lucky --- A Mind Mellowing Patchouli Aromatherapy Spray/Perfume/Cologne

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  • Description
Hippie Go Lucky ... smells like forest, pot, sunshine, and snuggling.


A great light cologne/perfume with a purpose. Patchouli is a great mood lifter, so it's not just the marijuana keeping Hippies happy, it's the Patchouli too! It acts as a stimulant, and is a long used aphrodisiac. The Grapefruit in the blend adds a slight top note and helps to brighten your mood and relieves stress as well.

Hippe Go Lucky is a freshwater perfume with no chemicals/synthetic. A spritz or two really freshens you up with being overpowering like synthetics. Overpowering is not what you want with patchouli. You want it light and airy like Hippie Go Lucky.

May be used as an after-shower body mist or as a deodorant spray under clothing. Works great as a car freshener, room freshener, or linen spray. The spray also has a hand santizing effect. Even helps to repel insects in the short term.

Make sure to breathe in aroma. Spray into air, walk into spray and inhale. Repeat for more scent and aromatherapy effect. For best aromatherapy results:-- Spray several times into cupped hands, place hands over nose and mouth----then inhale deeply for 30 seconds.

Ingredients: Distilled Water, Alcohol, Essential Oils of Patchouli (Pogostemon cablin) and Grapefruit (Citrus paradisi)

2.0 fl oz spray in a glass bottle.

**Please consult your doctor before use, if you are pregnant or have any medical condition. Avoid getting product in eyes. This product has not been evaluated by the FDA and is not intended to diagnose, cure, treat, or prevent disease. Individual results may vary.



☆¸.✿¸.•°*”˜ƸӜƷ˜”*°•.•.¸ღ¸☆´ ¸.✿´´¯`•.¸¸. ི♥ྀ



FYI From the Wikipedia:



The hippie subculture was originally a youth movement that arose in the United States during the mid-1960s and spread to other countries around the world. The word 'hippie' came from hipster, and was initially used to describe beatniks who had moved into New York City's Greenwich Village and San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district. The origins of the terms hip and hep are uncertain, though by the 1940s both had become part of African American jive slang and meant "sophisticated; currently fashionable; fully up-to-date".[1][2][3][4] The Beats adopted the term hip, and early hippies inherited the language and countercultural values of the Beat Generation. Hippies created their own communities, listened to psychedelic rock, embraced the sexual revolution, and some used drugs such as cannabis, LSD, and magic mushrooms to explore altered states of consciousness.

Patchouli (Pogostemon cablin (Blanco) Benth; also patchouly or pachouli) is a species of plant from the genus Pogostemon. It is a bushy herb of the mint family, with erect stems, reaching two or three feet (about 0.75 metre) in height and bearing small, pale pink-white flowers. The plant is native to tropical regions of Asia, and is now extensively cultivated in China, Indonesia, India, Malaysia, Mauritius, Taiwan, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam, as well as West Africa.

The grapefruit (Citrus × paradisi) is a subtropical citrus tree known for its bitter to semi-sweet fruit, an 18th-century hybrid first bred in Barbados.[1] When found, it was named the "forbidden fruit";[2] and it has also been misidentified with the pomelo or shaddock (C. maxima), one of the parents of this hybrid, the other being sweet orange (C. × sinensis).[3] Grapefruit is, also, known as "Chakotra" in Hindi.

These evergreen trees usually grow to around 5–6 meters (16–20 ft) tall, although they can reach 13–15 meters (43–49 ft). The leaves are dark green, long (up to 150 mm, 6 inches) and thin. It produces 5 cm (2 in) white four-petaled flowers. The fruit is yellow-orange skinned and largely an oblate spheroid; it ranges in diameter from 10–15 cm. The flesh is segmented and acidic, varying in color depending on the cultivars, which include white, pink and red pulps of varying sweetness (generally, the redder varieties are sweeter). The 1929 US Ruby Red (of the Redblush variety) has the first grapefruit patent.[4]

The heavy and strong scent of patchouli has been used for centuries in perfumes, and more recently in incense, insect repellents, and alternative medicines. The word derives from the Tamil patchai (Tamil: பச்சை) (green), ellai (Tamil: இலை) (leaf). In Assamese it is known as xukloti.

Pogostemon cablin, P. commosum, P. hortensis, P. heyneasus and P. plectranthoides are all cultivated for their oils and all are known as patchouli oil.

Patchouli is used widely in modern perfumery[ and modern scented industrial products such as paper towels, laundry detergents, and air fresheners. Two important components of its essential oil are patchoulol and norpatchoulenol.

One study suggests patchouli oil may serve as an all-purpose insect repellent.[9] More specifically, the patchouli plant is claimed to be a potent repellent against the Formosan subterranean termite.[4]

During the 18th and 19th century, silk traders from China traveling to the Middle East packed their silk cloth with dried patchouli leaves to prevent moths from laying their eggs on the cloth.[citation needed] It has also been proven to effectively prevent female moths from adhering to males, and vice versa. Many historians speculate that this association with opulent Eastern goods is why patchouli was considered by Europeans of that era to be a luxurious scent. It is said that patchouli was used in the linen chests of Queen Victoria in this way.

Patchouli is an important ingredient in East Asian incense. Both patchouli oil and incense underwent a surge in popularity in the 1960s and 1970s in the US and Europe, mainly due to the hippie movement of those decades.[10]

In 1985 Mattel used patchouli oil in the plastic used to make the action figure Stinkor in the Masters of the Universe line of toys.
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