Whether smoked, ingested, inserted or smeared all over the body, many cultures over thousands of years have used cannabis in conjunction with sex. While todayโs scientists (and, by extension, business owners) are eager to add โaphrodisiacโ to cannabisโs many health benefits, the resultsโwhile positiveโremain inconclusive. Vancouver Island-based sex therapist Kim Switnicki suggests the intentions set while using cannabis have a lot to do with whether it makes sex better, or not.
โIf it works, great! But is it really cause and effect? Is it any different from other intentions, such as looking into each otherโs eyes,โ she asks. โIf you vape to have better sex, youโre setting an intention already.โ
She says the same thing applied in ancient times, when drugs and herbs were used in ceremonial rituals that ultimately ended with sex. โAgain, maybe there was something in the substance, but the ritual aspect is similar to intention.โ
What we do know is humans the world over have been mixing cannabis with carnal activity for millennia. Here are just some examples of ancestral ceremony, sex, and euphoria:
Ancient Rome
Priapus, Greek god of the erect penis, โwas profoundly influential in Roman religionโ writes David Hillman in Seeking the Sacred with Psychoactive Substances (2014). To seek the prophetic words of a devoted Priapus priestess, men had to undergo a purification process with a drug concoction called satyrionโa mixture of snake venom, alcohol, ivy, and cannabis to bring on a hallucinogenic haze.
These young, postpubertal witches, who were themselves under the influence of drugs, were charged with the task of reciting oracles while using medicated dildos to manually bring psychotic, forcefully erect initiates to orgasm.
David Hillman, Seeking the Sacred with Psychoactive Substances
In the ritual, young priestesses of Priapus would tie up the hands and legs of prophetic seekersโHillman notes likely to avoid being rapedโbefore rectally inserting a satyrion-medicated dildo. The result was a forced erection (aka priapic erection) and mind-bending high. He writes: โThese young, postpubertal witches, who were themselves under the influence of drugs, were charged with the task of reciting oracles while using medicated dildos to manually bring psychotic, forcefully erect initiates to orgasm.โ
At the same time, cannabis was also used to suppress sex in Ancient Rome. Greek physician and Roman army doctor Pedanius Dioscorides noted in his text, De Materia Medica (On Medical Matters, circa AD 70) the cannabis used in the making of rope โalso produced a juice that was used to treat earache and suppress sexual longing.โ
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India
From about the second century onward, Tantrism entered both Hinduism and Buddhism, and included ritual use of cannabis to lift peopleโs planes of consciousness and find oneness with each other. Tantric sex is not focused on pleasure or orgasm, but instead on a sense of absolute unity with each other and the universe at large.
In The Great Book of Hemp (1996), Rowan Robinson references academic Ernest Abelโs modern-day observations: โthe cannabis prelude to yogic sex would begin ninety minutes before intercourse. With a bowl of bhang before them, the devotees would chant the mantra Om hrimโwhich invokes the image of the goddess Kali, to whom the sex is consecratedโand plead for occult power, or siddhi. Following several more mantras, the seekers would drink the mixture and engage in ritual love making.โ
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Scandinavia
Around 880 CE came the Viking Age and Norse deity Freya (also Freyja, Freyia and Freja), goddess of love and fertility who also protected flax and hemp fields. While there isnโt mention of getting high per se, the Encyclopedia of Aphrodisiacs (2013) says hemp fields were once a place for pagan and erotic rituals tied to sowing and reaping this valuable crop. One example takes place in Switzerland where, on the evening before midsummer (the summer solstice at the end of June), unmarried girls rolled naked in the community hemp field, weaving hemp leaves into wreaths before throwing them at the nearest tree: โthe number of times the wreath fell back to the ground would be the number of years the girl would remain unmarriedโ.
Hemp, I sow you; hemp, I reap you, and my heartโs love shall come behind me and harvest me.
Old Germanic love charm
Authors Rรคtsch and Mรผller-Ebeling note the local boys would certainly have known when and where this marriage oracle was taking place, and it can be assumed the young people found each other among the hemp. They also quote this telling Old Germanic love charm: โHemp, I sow you; hemp, I reap you, and my heartโs love shall come behind me and harvest me.โ
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Medieval Europe
Ah, ye olde Inquisition. Commencing in earnest in 1484, the mass persecutions quickly spread throughout Europe and lasted centuries. Herbalists and healers of the time used cannabis for an assortment of ailments, including low libido, until Pope Innocente VIII banned the use of hemp in ritual, classifying it as heretical.
Another fear of the day was the so-called satanic mass, or witchesโ sabbath: supposedly a nocturnal event where witches gathered, feasted, and had flagrant intercourse while high on a mixture of cannabis and available herbs such as opium, hemlock, and belladonna.
When not employed ritually, hemp seed oil was purportedly a major constituent of โflying ointmentโ that which witches used to โride their broomsticksโ.
While this sounds a little like Scandinaviaโs romp in the hemp noted above, in Cannabis, A History (2015), Martin Booth writes this cannabis mixture โsupposedly aided in driving the satanists into an ecstatic frenzy, making them hungry and acting as an aphrodisiac to ready them for their orgies. When not employed ritually, hemp seed oil was purportedly a major constituent of โflying ointmentโ that which witches used to โride their broomsticksโ.โ
On said flying ointment, researchers now believe it was a real thing, applied intravaginally via broomsticks for pleasure, pain management, or probably both. As the centuries wore on, Booth writes โthe continued use of [cannabis] as a medicine and for magical purposes was common knowledge, but few ever spoke about it openly for fear their words might reach the Inquisitorโs ear.โ
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19th century America
Sex on the first night of marriage is rife with ceremony, and often anxiety. In 1851, โdoctorโ Frederick C. Hollick published his long-winded text: The Marriage Guide; or, Natural History of Generation: A Private Instructor for Married Persons and Those about to Marry, both Male and Female.
Basically a sex book for first-timers, Hollickโs manual encouraged readers to write to him for his patent aphrodisiac: a mixture made from hash which was readily available at American pharmacies at the time. Hollick was later debunked as a medical authority, but heโd already made his fortune with over 200 reprints of his book with access to his sexy recipe, according to Booth.
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20th century Soviet Union
In spite of cannabis being outlawed by the Soviet Union, a centuries-old recipe to assist young brides on their wedding night was still being used in Uzbekistan as late as the 1930s, as noted by Polish anthropologist Sula Benet. In Ethan Russoโs Cannabis Treatments in Obstetrics and Gynecology (2002), he references Benetโs research from the capital city of Tashkent where cannabis, called nasha, was mixed with lamb fat and applied vaginally โto reduce the pain of deflorationโ (and, one would hope, to enhance pleasure). In the same area, Benet noted women also made a confection for themselves called guc-kand, a mixture of boiled cannabis with sugar and spices, to put them in a โhappy moodโ.
Weed and sex in the modern era
Whether you also want to commune with the gods of lust or simply enhance your mortal sex life, Switnicki says cannabis can be a great tool for todayโs couples. โThe bottom line for me is, if cannabis use helps you feel more comfortable engaging in fully consensual sexual activity on your own terms, then go for it.โ







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