What yoni steaming actually is
Yoni (vaginal) steaming means sitting over a bowl of warm, herb-infused steam so the warmth and aroma rise toward the vulva. It's an old ritual with roots across many cultures, often used as a postpartum comfort practice and a moment of self-care. The appeal is real and simple: warmth, herbal aroma, and a slow, intentional pause that's just for you.
What it can genuinely offer
Taken for what it is, steaming can be lovely: gentle warmth that feels soothing, the aromatherapy of the herbs, and a grounding little ritual that helps you slow down and feel cared for. Plenty of people build it into their cycle or their wind-down routine and love it for that. None of that requires it to be "medicine" to be worth it.
What it's traditionally valued for (and what to know)
Yoni steaming lives in a long lineage of traditional and holistic care, and it's honoured in those traditions for cleansing rituals, postpartum comfort, and connecting with your body. Hold that respect and a clear head: your body already self-cleans, so steaming is best enjoyed as comfort and ritual rather than a medical fix.
| Traditionally valued for… | Good to know |
|---|---|
| Cleansing or "resetting," especially postpartum or around your cycle | A cherished ritual across many cultures; your body also self-cleans, so enjoy it as care, not a medical detox |
| Easing tension and feeling grounded | The warmth, herbs, and ritual are genuinely relaxing — this is where steaming shines |
| Tightness / tone | For lasting tone, pelvic-floor work is the proven tool — enjoy steaming as ritual alongside it |
| Fertility or hormone support | Honoured this way in some traditions; if you're working on fertility or hormones, bring in a practitioner you trust (OB, midwife, or naturopath) too |
Safety — read this part
This is the section that actually matters, because the one real risk is burns — the vulva's skin is delicate, and second-degree burns from too-hot steam have been documented.
- Never hot — only gently warm. Let the water cool after boiling and test the steam with the inside of your wrist first. If it's too warm for your wrist, it's too warm for your vulva.
- Keep it short and at a safe distance. Around 10 minutes, seated so the steam is a soft warmth, not a blast.
- Skip it entirely if you're pregnant or trying to conceive, have an IUD, an active infection or irritation, open sores, or you're on your heaviest flow.
- Postpartum: wait until you're fully healed and a provider you trust (a doctor or midwife) has cleared you — that's exactly when tissue is most vulnerable.
- Watch your pH. Heat plus scented herbs can occasionally trigger irritation, BV, or a yeast flare in some people. Stop at any stinging, burning, or discomfort.
How to steam safely, step by step
- Steep your herbs in just-boiled water, then let it cool to a gentle, comfortable warmth.
- Wrist-test the steam. Adjust the distance so it's soft warmth only.
- Sit comfortably, wrapped, for about 10 minutes — no marathon sessions.
- Pat dry and moisturise the external skin after. Stop immediately if anything feels off.
How the LAFUHQE piece fits
Steam Her is our herbal steam blend for the ritual — the warm, aromatic, slow-down kind of self-care described above, used as intended and safely. Because heat can nudge your pH, some people like to follow up with PoosyPop'in for balance and PoosyButter to re-moisturise the external skin afterward.
This article is for education, not medical advice. Yoni steaming is a self-care ritual, not a treatment — LAFUHQE products are not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any condition, and steaming won't detox, tighten, or alter your anatomy. Loop in a health professional you trust — your doctor, midwife, naturopath, or another practitioner — about pregnancy, infections, fertility, or any symptoms.


