Ma Balm: A Loving Hug for Mamas
Ma Balm is a nurturing, deeply supportive balm crafted with the unique needs of pregnant and postpartum mamas in mind. Embracing the incredible changes that come with new motherhood—whether it’s your first baby or your fifth—is always a call for care, compassion, and self-love. This balm is designed to provide both inner strength and outer support, helping you honor the beautiful transformations your body is undergoing.
Unlike products that promise to prevent stretch marks, Ma Balm is formulated to support your body’s natural elasticity—fostering the ability to stretch, expand, and adapt without causing damage to your skin. It enhances your skin’s resilience, nurturing the delicate balance of strength and flexibility that pregnancy and postpartum bring.
Packed with plant wisdom and animal medicine, this balm features a powerful blend of jojoba, rosehip, tamanu oil, and tallow to nurture your skin and support its regenerative processes.
Additionally, the inclusion of honey and beeswax brings a luxurious touch of natural moisture, creating a protective barrier that nourishes and shields the skin. Together, these ingredients work harmoniously to support the stretching and healing processes that happen during and after pregnancy.
Ma Balm isn’t just a skincare product—it’s a ritual of connection. Beginning to use this balm for belly massages early in your pregnancy is a beautiful way to bond with your growing baby, connecting with your body and embracing its incredible changes.
Whether you’re navigating the growing belly, the postpartum healing process, or simply need a bit of tender loving care, Ma Balm is here to provide the support you need on your motherhood journey.
Key Benefits:
How to Use: Massage a small amount of Ma Balm gently onto your belly, thighs, or any areas that are experiencing changes during pregnancy or postpartum. The balm is safe for regular use and can be a soothing ritual of self-care throughout your motherhood journey.
Ingredients:
Ma Balm is here to honor the beautiful changes your body is going through, offering loving support and nourishing care at every stage of your motherhood journey.
And why do I call it 'ancestral?
No, it isn't just a buzzword. Tallow, and fats of animal origin were used as skin care and medicine for generations before the industrial revolution. In Sally Fallon's book 'Nourishing Fats' she outlines the rise of seed oils which were made to look appealing to the then modern housewife.
In this greater move away from the wild, the village and nature's way, animal fats were easily replaced by these mechanically derived oils (previously only used as machinery lubricants). The effects have made themselves known over the past decades as disease, digestive issues and obesity have spiked dangerously and the demonised animal fat consumption is at an all-time low.
Now, this may be particularly true for nourishment, ie what we choose to consume...but what if we viewed anything we put in, on or near our bodies as consumption?
In reality we are very closely linked to our environment, and our skin, the largest organ of absorption and boundary between inside and outside on the physical layer of things, needs the same kind of care and attention to what goes into our stomach.
This is why I strive to find the best quality suppliers for the suet I use to make Freya's Kitchen Tallow Balm! I source only from high-welfare, organic and free range pastures for life cattle.
It is so important to me that the animals providing us with their medicine for our nourishment and thrival be honoured and get to live the best lives they can-as close to how nature intends as possible.
Fiona Sears
Animal and Plant medicine maker
Hello, I'm Fiona, one of your friendly neighbourhood medicine makers!
I work with both plant and animal medicine in the native American sense of the inner gift or essence that a particular being holds and has to offer to those who need it.
I started making Tallow after my very first lesson in compassionate butchery where I identified the suet in the beautiful doe our friend harvested in the mountains of Scotland. I had read about it and of course watched a million YouTube videos about how to best make tallow, what parts of the animal should be used and what precise process needed to be carried out.
This deer, and a very special plant guide-mugwort made up the very first venison tallow balm. I have learned so much since then! There have been challenges and incredible rewards, and I continue to hone this craft today!
What a gift to be able to use parts of the animal.that would normally be thrown away and wasted, to create something with such goodness, nourishing power and healing ability.
Grateful to mother nature for her abundance, skillful means and creative force, I am inspired by her (and as her) daily.