For those with a desperate attitude. A long-time resident of European forests, the chestnut tree has survived the millennia. The first traces of its appearance date back eight million years, a testament to its resilience. Its creamy flowers, which capture the light well, display exuberance and vigor in their profusion. A robust burr protects its fruits with their shiny, leathery skin, while its solid wood is used to make stakes or frameworks. Its entire structure embodies strength and endurance. This is the last flower to have been chosen by Bach, exhausted after the frantic search for his last remedies, which he discovered at a rate of one per week. It is useful when one feels at rock bottom or on the verge of major changes (breakup, divorce, etc.), with no more resources to mobilize. It helps to get through a situation or ordeal that is experienced as crucial or even insurmountable, and with a feeling of great solitude. "For periods of anguish so great that they seem unbearable to the person going through them. When all that remains is destruction and annihilation." Extract from the 1936 edition of "The Twelve Healers", translated into French by C. Lévi and G. Wolf.
Adults: 2 drops in a glass of water or on the tongue 4 times a day.
Non-medicinal ingredients: Grape alcohol 27% v/v, aqueous solution of Castanea sativa flowers (dilution 1/500).