Remedy & Rhyme - by Joyful Roots

Kimberly Kling of Joyful Roots

Remedy & Rhyme is a space where poetry meets the power of plants. Each episode begins with a poem — a soul offering inspired by a single herb — and follows the thread of its deeper herbal wisdom. We explore what the plant stirs in the heart, the ways it invites us into greater wellness, and how we might carry its gifts into our own lives. With each unfolding episode, you'll find gentle reflections, grounded holistic practices, and simple ways to welcome herbalism into your daily rhythms. A podcast for lovers of Earth, language, and the liminal — where the sacred and the everyday meet, one plant at a time.

  1. Jun 10

    #17: Marshmallow – A Soft Place To Land

    There is a plant that grows at the water's edge — pale-flowered, quiet, unassuming — that has been tending to human bodies and human hearts for thousands of years. She chooses the margins, the soft ground, the places where land meets water and the world slows down. Her name, Althaea officinalis, comes from the Greek word althainein — to heal. And she has been doing exactly that since ancient Egypt pressed her roots into honey as one of the first medicinal preparations we have documented and ancient Greeks planted her above their beloved dead as an act of continuing love. This episode is an invitation to learn from her as a teacher of a different way of moving through the world. Marshmallow root is a plant of softness, moisture, rootedness, and devotion. She coats what is raw, feeds what is depleted, and shows up quietly at the hardest thresholds. In a culture that often mistakes hardness for strength, she offers a different proposition entirely: that softness is medicine and tending is love. ✨ Support the Podcast Your support is a gift that keeps this podcast running! If you’d like to support the ongoing creation of this podcast and get access to exclusive content like articles, herbal recipes, plant monographs, and behind-the-scenes musings, join the community over on Patreon: 🌱 www.patreon.com/joyfulroots You can also support the podcast by trying my favorite matcha: Posana Matcha. 🌿 Certified Organic 🌿 Third-party tested for heavy metals 🌿 Single origin from Shizuoka, Japan 🌿 Smooth, pure, and powerful—perfect for daily rituals. 🛒 Use code JOYFULROOTS for 15% off at posana.net. Using this code helps keep the podcast thriving through a small affiliate commission—thank you for your support! 📩 Want to share a poem? I’d love to include voices from the community! If you have a nature-inspired or herbal poem you’d like to share in a future episode, send it my way at: kim@joyfulroots.com. For more information and a list of plants, click here. 🌀 Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a medical doctor or licensed health professional, and nothing shared here is intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided has not been evaluated by the FDA. Always check with a qualified healthcare provider about any potential herb-drug interactions or health concerns. If you experience an allergic reaction to any herb, discontinue use and consult a professional. You are the steward of your own body—listen with curiosity, and honor your intuition. 💚 Let’s connect! Sign up for my email newsletter – Botanical Bulletin. 🌿 Sources & Further Reading Botanical & Historical Chevallier, A. (2016). Encyclopedia of Herbal Medicine (3rd ed.). DK Publishing. HerbRally — Marshmallow Monograph — herbrally.com/monographs/marshmallow Grieve, M. (1931). A Modern Herbal. Dover Publications. Available at: botanical.com Felter, H.W. & Lloyd, J.U. (1898). King's American Dispensatory. Available at: henriettes-herb.com The Naturopathic Herbalist — Althaea officinalis — thenaturopathicherbalist.com University of Michigan Medicine. Marshmallow (Althaea officinalis). uofmhealth.org Constituent Science & Clinical Research Deters, A., et al. (2010). Aqueous extracts and polysaccharides from marshmallow roots inhibit the adhesion of microorganisms to epithelial cells. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 132(3), 700–706. Dawid-Pać, R. (2013). Medicinal plants used in treatment of inflammatory skin diseases. Postepy Dermatologii i Alergologii, 30(3), 170–177. PubMed — Marshmallow (Althaea officinalis) Monograph — pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15277059/ — the peer-reviewed monograph, good for credibility with more clinically-minded listeners Wikipedia Wichtl, M. (Ed.). (2004). Herbal Drugs and Phytopharmaceuticals (3rd ed.). Medpharm Scientific Publishers. Prebiotic & Gut Research Kiefer, D. & Pantuso, T. (2003). Panax ginseng and marshmallow: Clinical evidence. American Family Physician. Blumenthal, M., et al. (Eds.). (2000). Herbal Medicine: Expanded Commission E Monographs. American Botanical Council. Mythology & Cultural History Graves, R. (1955). The Greek Myths. Penguin Books. Burkert, W. (1985). Greek Religion. Harvard University Press. Dioscorides, P. (1st century CE). De Materia Medica. (T.A. Osbaldeston, Trans., 2000). IBIDIS Press. Energetics & Traditional Use Wood, M. (2008). The Earthwise Herbal: A Complete Guide to Old World Medicinal Plants. North Atlantic Books. Hoffmann, D. (2003). Medical Herbalism: The Science and Practice of Herbal Medicine. Healing Arts Press. McIntyre, A. (2010). The Complete Herbal Tutor. Octopus Publishing.

    22 min
  2. May 13

    #16: Onion – Peeling Back The Layers

    This episode is an invitation to be peeled. We begin with a poem about shedding the false skins we wear for the world — the polished, acceptable versions of ourselves — and descending into the dark long enough to let only what is true remain. From there we turn to the plant that knows this process better than almost any other: the onion. Humble, pungent, layered, and ancient, the onion has lived in human hands and human healing traditions for five thousand years. We also explore the onion as an herbal ally, diving into the traditional and contemporary understanding of what this extraordinary plant supports in the body — from the lungs and the immune system to the heart and the gut. We talk about quercetin, mast cells, histamine, and why you should never throw away your red onion skins. Journal questions are offered at the end to help you take the episode inward. ✨ Support the Podcast Your support is a gift that keeps this podcast running! If you’d like to support the ongoing creation of this podcast and get access to exclusive content like articles, herbal recipes, plant monographs, and behind-the-scenes musings, join the community over on Patreon: 🌱 www.patreon.com/joyfulroots You can also support the podcast by trying my favorite matcha: Posana Matcha. 🌿 Certified Organic 🌿 Third-party tested for heavy metals 🌿 Single origin from Shizuoka, Japan 🌿 Smooth, pure, and powerful—perfect for daily rituals. 🛒 Use code JOYFULROOTS for 15% off at posana.net. Using this code helps keep the podcast thriving through a small affiliate commission—thank you for your support! 📩 Want to share a poem? I’d love to include voices from the community! If you have a nature-inspired or herbal poem you’d like to share in a future episode, send it my way at: kim@joyfulroots.com. For more information and a list of plants, click here. 🌀 Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a medical doctor or licensed health professional, and nothing shared here is intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided has not been evaluated by the FDA. Always check with a qualified healthcare provider about any potential herb-drug interactions or health concerns. If you experience an allergic reaction to any herb, discontinue use and consult a professional. You are the steward of your own body—listen with curiosity, and honor your intuition. 💚 Let’s connect! Sign up for my email newsletter – Botanical Bulletin. 🌿 Sources & Further Reading Herbal History & Traditional Use Allium cepa: Organosulfur Compounds — From Traditional Use to Modern Pharmacological Insights (PMC, 2026) — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12876048/ nih An Ethnopharmacological, Phytochemical & Pharmacological Overview of Onion — PubMed (2024) — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38262524/ PubMed Henriette's Herbal Homepage (Onion Juice) — https://www.henriettes-herb.com/preparations/onion-juice.html Traditional and Modern Uses of Onion Bulb: A Systematic Review — Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30040448/ Book: Rosemary Gladstar's Medicinal Herbs: A Beginner's Guide Book: The Herbal Medicine-Maker's Handbook by James Green Quercetin & Mast Cell Stabilization Quercetin Is More Effective than Cromolyn in Blocking Human Mast Cell Cytokine Release — PMC (peer-reviewed) — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3314669/ PubMed Central Quercetin & Allergic Disease — Inhibition of Mast Cell Degranulation, Histamine & Pro-inflammatory Cytokines (PMC, 2025) — https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12073759/ Quercetin & Cardiovascular Support Therapeutic Potential of Quercetin to Decrease Blood Pressure — PubMed — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22332099/ PubMed Effects of Quercetin on Blood Pressure: A Systematic Review & Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials — PMC — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5015358/ Onion as Prebiotic & Gut Support The Prebiotic Potential of Dietary Onion Extracts: Shaping Gut Microbial Structures & Promoting Beneficial Metabolites — PMC (2025) — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11748487/ nih Inulin-Fructooligosaccharides from Red Onion as a Prebiotic — PMC — https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8624415/ Rumi & the Persian Sufi Poetic Tradition Rumi — Britannica Biography — https://www.britannica.com/biography/RumiEncyclopedia Britannica Rumi: The Mystical Poet — World History Encyclopedia — https://www.worldhistory.org/Rumi/

    22 min
  3. Apr 7

    #15: Creosote Bush – Faithful Guardianship

    In this episode, we enter the wide open heat of the Sonoran Desert with one of its most ancient and sovereign presences: Creosote Bush, Larrea tridentata — known in the desert borderlands as La Gobernadora, the Governess. She is the most common shrub across three North American deserts, the most drought-tolerant plant on the continent, and by some estimates, one of the oldest living organisms on Earth. And yet most people drive past her without a second glance. This episode is an invitation to stop the car and meet her. Together, we explore Creosote as a teacher of guardianship, resilience, and faithful presence — a plant who governs not through dominance, but through an unwavering commitment to life in desolate places. We sit with the Tohono O'odham creation story in which she is the first plant to rise from the newly made earth, and we honor the living Indigenous peoples whose deep relationship with this land and this plant long precedes our own. From the psycho-spiritual to the deeply practical, we move through Creosote's remarkable gifts to the body — her antioxidant, antimicrobial, and anti-inflammatory support, her affinity for the respiratory system, and her role as an indispensable desert first-aid ally. Journal questions, preparation methods, and an honest conversation about safety and contraindications are woven throughout. 🌿 ✨ Support the Podcast Your support is a gift that keeps this podcast running! If you’d like to support the ongoing creation of this podcast and get access to exclusive content like articles, herbal recipes, plant monographs, and behind-the-scenes musings, join the community over on Patreon: 🌱 www.patreon.com/joyfulroots You can also support the podcast by trying my favorite matcha: Posana Matcha. 🌿 Certified Organic 🌿 Third-party tested for heavy metals 🌿 Single origin from Shizuoka, Japan 🌿 Smooth, pure, and powerful—perfect for daily rituals. 🛒 Use code JOYFULROOTS for 15% off at posana.net. Using this code helps keep the podcast thriving through a small affiliate commission—thank you for your support! 📩 Want to share a poem? I’d love to include voices from the community! If you have a nature-inspired or herbal poem you’d like to share in a future episode, send it my way at: kim@joyfulroots.com. For more information and a list of plants, click here. 🌀 Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a medical doctor or licensed health professional, and nothing shared here is intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided has not been evaluated by the FDA. Always check with a qualified healthcare provider about any potential herb-drug interactions or health concerns. If you experience an allergic reaction to any herb, discontinue use and consult a professional. You are the steward of your own body—listen with curiosity, and honor your intuition. 💚 Let’s connect! Sign up for my email newsletter – Botanical Bulletin. 🌿 Sources & Further Reading Chaparral / Creosote Bush Monograph — Sophia Rose, Garden Party Creosote Bush: A Plant Profile — Of Sedge & Salt Chaparral (Larrea tridentata) Benefits, Uses, and How to Make Infused Oil by Heidi Villegas — YouTube PLANTA LA GOBERNADORA O CHAPARRAL: Para Qué Sirve — YouTube Desert Plants: Creosote by AZPM — YouTube Southwest Medicinal Plants: Identify, Harvest, and Use 112 Wild Herbs for Health and Wellness — John J. Slattery (Timber Press, 2020) Medicinal Plants of the American Southwest — Charles W. Kane (Lincoln Town Press, 2011) Tohono O'odham Nation — Official website, including cultural resources and history Tohono O'odham Cultural Center & Museum — Topawa, AZ Chiricahua Apache Nation — Official website Native Land Digital — Interactive map of Indigenous territories and treaties Creosote Bush Lignans for Human Disease Treatment and Prevention — National Institutes of Health / PMC

    29 min
  4. Mar 4

    #14: Nettle – Awakening

    In this episode, we step into the threshold between winter and spring with nettle as our guide. One of the first greens to rise from cold soil, nettle teaches us about awakening before we feel fully ready — about rebuilding after long seasons of rest, grief, illness, or creative dormancy. Mineral-rich and deeply nourishing, this fierce plant reminds us that true vitality doesn’t come from forcing energy, but from restoring our foundations. Awakening, like early spring, is steady and intentional — a quiet reanimation of blood, bone, and spirit. We’ll explore nettle’s prickly wisdom around boundaries and containment, drawing from Celtic sovereignty myth and the powerful image of the guarded well. What does it mean to approach life — and ourselves — with clarity instead of hesitation? How do we protect what is still becoming? From poetic reflection to practical ways of working with nettle as infusion, food, and seasonal ally, this episode invites you to rise slowly, nourish deeply, and cultivate a sustainable aliveness as we move into spring. 🌿 ✨ Support the Podcast Your support is a gift that keeps this podcast running! If you’d like to support the ongoing creation of this podcast and get access to exclusive content like articles, herbal recipes, plant monographs, and behind-the-scenes musings, join the community over on Patreon: 🌱 www.patreon.com/joyfulroots You can also support the podcast by trying my favorite matcha: Posana Matcha. 🌿 Certified Organic 🌿 Third-party tested for heavy metals 🌿 Single origin from Shizuoka, Japan 🌿 Smooth, pure, and powerful—perfect for daily rituals. 🛒 Use code JOYFULROOTS for 15% off at posana.net. Using this code helps keep the podcast thriving through a small affiliate commission—thank you for your support! 📩 Want to share a poem? I’d love to include voices from the community! If you have a nature-inspired or herbal poem you’d like to share in a future episode, send it my way at: kim@joyfulroots.com. For more information and a list of plants, click here. 🌀 Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a medical doctor or licensed health professional, and nothing shared here is intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided has not been evaluated by the FDA. Always check with a qualified healthcare provider about any potential herb-drug interactions or health concerns. If you experience an allergic reaction to any herb, discontinue use and consult a professional. You are the steward of your own body—listen with curiosity, and honor your intuition. 💚 Let’s connect! Sign up for my email newsletter – Botanical Bulletin. 🌿 Sources & Further Reading Hoffmann, David. Medical Herbalism: The Science and Practice of Herbal Medicine. Healing Arts Press, 2003. (Comprehensive monograph on Urtica dioica.) Tilgner, Sharol. Herbal Medicine From the Heart of the Earth. Wise Acres Press, 2009. (Detailed clinical insights on nettle leaf and root.) Gladstar, Rosemary. Medicinal Herbs: A Beginner’s Guide. Storey Publishing, 2012. (Accessible overview of nettle as a nourishing herb.) Wood, Matthew. The Earthwise Herbal, Vol. I. North Atlantic Books, 2008. (Energetics and traditional uses of nettle.) Mills, Simon & Bone, Kerry. Principles and Practice of Phytotherapy, 2nd ed. Churchill Livingstone, 2013. (Clinical perspective on nettle leaf and root.) Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. “Urtica dioica L.” Plants of the World Online. https://powo.science.kew.org/ American Botanical Council. HerbalGram Monograph: Stinging Nettle. https://www.herbalgram.org/ https://theherbalacademy.com/nettle-plant-walk-video/ Bone, Kerry & Mills, Simon. “Urtica dioica.” Principles and Practice of Phytotherapy (for research summaries on allergies and urinary support). Irish sovereignty myth (Niall and the Loathly Lady): Cross, Tom Peete & Slover, Clark Harris (eds.). Ancient Irish Tales. Dover Publications, 1996. Mac Cana, Proinsias. Celtic Mythology. Hamlyn, 1970. (Overview of sovereignty goddess traditions.) Ó hÓgáin, Dáithí. The Sacred Isle: Belief and Religion in Pre-Christian Ireland. Boydell Press, 1999. (Context on sovereignty and land traditions.)

    27 min
  5. Feb 5

    #13: Dandelion – Well-Worn Love

    TW: I briefly mention violence and death in the myth section of the episode. In this episode, we sit with Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale), one of the most familiar—and most misunderstood—plants we know. Labeled a weed, sprayed, pulled, and dismissed, Dandelion carries a story that feels deeply human: of being overlooked, relied upon quietly, and punished for refusing to conform. And yet, season after season, it returns—golden, generous, and unapologetically present. Together, we explore Dandelion as a teacher of resilience, discernment, and nourishment. We talk about bitterness as a language the body understands, the plant’s long relationship with digestive and liver pathways, and the subtle ways Dandelion supports movement—both in the soil and within us. This episode also invites you into practical, everyday relationship with the plant: working with root, leaf, and flower, tending a home apothecary, and noticing where well-worn love already exists in your life. ✨ Support the Podcast Your support is a gift that keeps this podcast running! If you’d like to support the ongoing creation of this podcast and get access to exclusive content like articles, herbal recipes, plant monographs, and behind-the-scenes musings, join the community over on Patreon: 🌱 www.patreon.com/joyfulroots You can also support the podcast by trying my favorite matcha: Posana Matcha. 🌿 Certified Organic 🌿 Third-party tested for heavy metals 🌿 Single origin from Shizuoka, Japan 🌿 Smooth, pure, and powerful—perfect for daily rituals. 🛒 Use code JOYFULROOTS for 15% off at posana.net. Using this code helps keep the podcast thriving through a small affiliate commission—thank you for your support! 📩 Want to share a poem? I’d love to include voices from the community! If you have a nature-inspired or herbal poem you’d like to share in a future episode, send it my way at: kim@joyfulroots.com. For more information and a list of plants, click here. 🌀 Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a medical doctor or licensed health professional, and nothing shared here is intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided has not been evaluated by the FDA. Always check with a qualified healthcare provider about any potential herb-drug interactions or health concerns. If you experience an allergic reaction to any herb, discontinue use and consult a professional. You are the steward of your own body—listen with curiosity, and honor your intuition. 💚 Let’s connect! Sign up for my email newsletter – Botanical Bulletin.

    27 min
  6. Jan 7

    #12: Calendula – Light in the Dark

    It’s the heart of winter here in the northern hemisphere. The holiday decorations are being taken down, the celebrations have passed, and yet the days are still long and shadowed. Even as the sunlight slowly begins to return, it can feel distant—something we long for more than something we can fully feel. This is the season that teaches us contrast: how darkness sharpens our awareness of light, how quiet invites reflection, and how life on this planet moves in cycles of retreat and return. In this month's episode of Remedy & Rhyme, we’re spending time with Calendula—a humble sun-keeper of the plant world. Across cultures, there are figures who don’t defeat the dark but walk within it carrying light: Persephone, Brigid, Hecate, Amaterasu. They remind us that illumination isn’t always blazing or obvious. Sometimes it’s stored, tended, protected. Calendula belongs to that lineage, offering warmth, resilience, and gentle support through the long night. Together, we’ll explore this golden flower as both a physical ally and a spiritual guide, and what it means to tend our inner hearth when the world feels cold. ✨ Support the Podcast Your support is a gift that keeps this podcast running! If you’d like to support the ongoing creation of this podcast and get access to exclusive content like articles, herbal recipes, plant monographs, and behind-the-scenes musings, join the community over on Patreon: 🌱 www.patreon.com/joyfulroots You can also support the podcast by trying my favorite matcha: Posana Matcha. 🌿 Certified Organic 🌿 Third-party tested for heavy metals 🌿 Single origin from Shizuoka, Japan 🌿 Smooth, pure, and powerful—perfect for daily rituals. 🛒 Use code JOYFULROOTS for 15% off at posana.net. Using this code helps keep the podcast thriving through a small affiliate commission—thank you for your support! 📩 Want to share a poem? I’d love to include voices from the community! If you have a nature-inspired or herbal poem you’d like to share in a future episode, send it my way at: kim@joyfulroots.com. For more information and a list of plants, click here. 🌀 Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a medical doctor or licensed health professional, and nothing shared here is intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided has not been evaluated by the FDA. Always check with a qualified healthcare provider about any potential herb-drug interactions or health concerns. If you experience an allergic reaction to any herb, discontinue use and consult a professional. You are the steward of your own body—listen with curiosity, and honor your intuition. 💚 Let’s connect! Sign up for my email newsletter - Botanical Bulletin. Sources/References: WiseEarthBotanicals — Calendula’s lymphatic, digestive, and antimicrobial profile Calendula Actions & Herbal Support Herbal Reality — Traditional actions and tissue support descriptors Calendula Herb Profile (Traditional Actions) HerbRally — Calendula Monograph https://www.herbrally.com/monographs/calendula Botanical Medicine for Women’s Health — Clinical context on calendula and vulnerary uses (Romm & Winston – ScienceDirect) ScienceDirect The Herbal Medicine-Maker’s Handbook — (James Green) — Practical methods for making oils, salves, teas (not directly pulled but widely respected) Herbal Constituents — (Types of compounds like flavonoids, triterpenoids, etc.) The Book of Celtic Magic or Celtic Mythology (various writers) — Context for Brigid and hearth fire symbolism Wikipedia: Calendula – History & Folklore — historic names (Mary’s Gold, pot marigold), rituals, and lore Calendula History & Folk Uses (Wikipedia) Verywell Health — Overview of Calendula’s benefits, wound healing, skin support & uses (topical + internal context) Calendula Health Benefits and Uses (Verywell Health) ScienceDirect — Calendula’s anti-inflammatory, antibacterial, wound-healing actions (academic overview) Calendula Overview (ScienceDirect) Journal of Plant Medicines — Summary of clinical research on skin healing & inflammation Calendula Skin & Wound Healing Studies MDPI — Recent review on anti-inflammatory and wound healing potential Updated Review of Calendula Therapeutic Potential

    25 min
  7. 12/03/2025

    #11: Bee Balm – You Are Multifaceted

    Bee Balm is fiery, fragrant, and wildly alive! It is one of those plants that feels like it’s mid-dance the moment you meet it. With blossoms that unfurl like tiny galaxies or bursts of flame, Monarda carries the unmistakable energy of movement and transformation. In this episode of Remedy & Rhyme, we explore Bee Balm’s personality, its psycho-spiritual gifts, and the way its spiral-like structure invites us into our own expansion. We’ll also explore Bee Balm’s more body-centered offerings—its warming aromatics, its comforting presence for the breath, and its long-standing use by Indigenous peoples across these lands. From teas and steams to simple daily rituals, Bee Balm shows us how to embrace the multifaceted aspects of our being. Join me as we sit with this exuberant plant, listen for what she stirs in our bodies and hearts, and connect her spiraling shape with the ways we navigate our own cycles of expression, release, and renewal. ✨ Support the Podcast Your support is a gift that keeps this podcast running! If you’d like to support the ongoing creation of this podcast and get access to exclusive content like articles, herbal recipes, plant monographs, and behind-the-scenes musings, join the community over on Patreon: 🌱 www.patreon.com/joyfulroots You can also support the podcast by trying my favorite matcha: Posana Matcha. 🌿 Certified Organic 🌿 Third-party tested for heavy metals 🌿 Single origin from Shizuoka, Japan 🌿 Smooth, pure, and powerful—perfect for daily rituals. 🛒 Use code JOYFULROOTS for 15% off at posana.net. Using this code helps keep the podcast thriving through a small affiliate commission—thank you for your support! 📩 Want to share a poem? I’d love to include voices from the community! If you have a nature-inspired or herbal poem you’d like to share in a future episode, send it my way at: kim@joyfulroots.com. For more information and a list of plants, click here. 🌀 Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a medical doctor or licensed health professional, and nothing shared here is intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided has not been evaluated by the FDA. Always check with a qualified healthcare provider about any potential herb-drug interactions or health concerns. If you experience an allergic reaction to any herb, discontinue use and consult a professional. You are the steward of your own body—listen with curiosity, and honor your intuition. 💚 Let’s connect! Follow me on Instagram at @joyfulroots or sign up for my email Botanical Bulletin. Sources/References: Medicinal Plants of the Southwest – Michael Moore ACORN School of Herbal Medicine – Bee Balm (Monarda) Monograph https://www.acornherbschool.com/plants/bee-balm-monarda Washington College – Scarlet Beebalm (Monarda didyma) https://www.washcoll.edu/learn-by-doing/lifelong-learning/plants/lamiaceae/monarda-didyma.php Monarda – General Overview (Botany, Uses, Constituents) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monarda Grow Native! – Bee Balm Plant Page https://grownative.org/native_plants/bee-balm/ Missouri Integrated Pest Management – “Monarda: The Tea Plant” https://ipm.missouri.edu/meg/2021/4/monarda-DT/index.cfm Spiro Mounds Archaeological Center — the official site for the Spiro Mounds site in eastern Oklahoma. https://www.okhistory.org/sites/spiromounds Petroglyph National Monument (New Mexico, NPS) — one of the largest protected petroglyph sites in North America; includes many spiral/abstract motifs carved into volcanic rock. National Park Service Saguaro National Park (Arizona, NPS) — Rock Art / Petroglyphs Page — describes how spirals and other abstract glyphs appear in rock art sites in the Southwest, giving insight into ancient visual/spiritual languages. National Park Service National Geographic- Spiro Mounds https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/spiro-and-the-art-of-the-mississippian-world-in-oklahoma Bee Balm for the Home Landscape https://extension.illinois.edu/blogs/garden-scoop/2022-07-16-bee-balm-home-landscape

    23 min
  8. 11/05/2025

    #10: Rue – Clear Sight

    In this episode, we’ll explore Rue (Ruta graveolens) and what it means to see clearly in an age clouded by noise — where media, politics, and consumerism all compete for our attention, and clarity becomes a form of rebellion. Rue reminds us that to see clearly is also to live truthfully, even when that truth makes us a heretic in the eyes of others. Together, we’ll explore Rue’s mythic threads, her modern uses, and her call to reclaim our own holy land — the sacred ground of body, mind, and heart that belongs only to us. ✨ Support the Podcast Your support is a gift that keeps this podcast running! If you’d like to support the ongoing creation of this podcast and get access to exclusive content like articles, herbal recipes, plant monographs, and behind-the-scenes musings, join the community over on Patreon: 🌱 www.patreon.com/joyfulroots You can also support the podcast by trying my favorite matcha: Posana Matcha. 🌿 Certified Organic 🌿 Third-party tested for heavy metals 🌿 Single origin from Shizuoka, Japan 🌿 Smooth, pure, and powerful—perfect for daily rituals. 🛒 Use code JOYFULROOTS for 15% off at posana.net. Using this code helps keep the podcast thriving through a small affiliate commission—thank you for your support! 📩 Want to share a poem? I’d love to include voices from the community! If you have a nature-inspired or herbal poem you’d like to share in a future episode, send it my way at: kim@joyfulroots.com. For more information and a list of plants, click here. 🌀 Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a medical doctor or licensed health professional, and nothing shared here is intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided has not been evaluated by the FDA. Always check with a qualified healthcare provider about any potential herb-drug interactions or health concerns. If you experience an allergic reaction to any herb, discontinue use and consult a professional. You are the steward of your own body—listen with curiosity, and honor your intuition. 💚 Let’s connect! Follow me on Instagram at @joyfulroots or sign up for my email Botanical Bulletin. Sources/References: The Herbarium at the Herbal Academy – Plant Monograph Archives: https://theherbalacademy.com/blog/tag/monograph/ Herbal Academy+1 Matthew Wood Institute of Herbalism – Herbs A to Z course overview: https://www.matthewwoodinstituteofherbalism.com/course/herbs-a-to-z-materia-medica Matthew Wood Institute of Herbalism+1 Ruta graveolens (Common Rue) plant profile, NC State: https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/ruta-graveolens/ Plant Toolbox Ruta graveolens review / scholarly article: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7340976/ pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov The Purpose of Rue: Unveiling the Mysteries of this Ancient Herb Herb Rue: A Thorough Guide to Uses and Benefits

    29 min
5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Remedy & Rhyme is a space where poetry meets the power of plants. Each episode begins with a poem — a soul offering inspired by a single herb — and follows the thread of its deeper herbal wisdom. We explore what the plant stirs in the heart, the ways it invites us into greater wellness, and how we might carry its gifts into our own lives. With each unfolding episode, you'll find gentle reflections, grounded holistic practices, and simple ways to welcome herbalism into your daily rhythms. A podcast for lovers of Earth, language, and the liminal — where the sacred and the everyday meet, one plant at a time.