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Calming Gifts from Local Plants
Release and relax with Suki Roth's
herbal friends.
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In our quest to hold herbalism up to the scientific eye, trying
to mold it into a clinical science, we have lost touch with the
very essence of herbal healing. It is not the clinically tested,
standardized medicinal constituents of the plants we need for
vitality and balance, but their more obscure, subtle properties.
They have an innate ability to offer us the soothing relaxation,
gladdening, quieting, emotional defrosting, and grounding our
overstimulated minds and tired spirits are so much in need of
right now.
We live in stressful times, far from the comfort and peace one
experiences when immersed in an intimate relationship with nature.
What is it exactly that is causing our modern ills? The question
here is a bit like the saying, “What came first, the chicken
or the egg?” Is it physiological disorders or disorders
of our spirit and emotions? Luckily we do not have to ponder this
question. In their molecular cell structures, medicinal plants
hold all the keys necessary to unlock our physical, emotional,
and spiritual vitality.
Through many hours of plant meditation, individually and in groups,
I have been introduced to the subtler benefits the plants offer.
Let me share some of my most profound plant meditation and clinical
experiences with you. This is a difficult task, as picking out
a few plants to highlight is like picking your favorite child.
You love them all and they all offer so much individually.
MEADOWSWEET FILIPENDULA ULMARIA
Collect Meadowsweet while it is in flower. Use its beautiful leaves
and sweet almond-scented flowers for your tea or to tincture.
Your first experience with either the tea or tincture will be
one of deep release and relaxation. Meadowsweet has a warming,
relaxing and soothing effect on the digestive tract. It contains
large amounts of salicin, one of the main ingredients in aspirin,
without the harmful effects to the stomach lining. It is specific
for gastric pain, abdominal cramps, colic, and irritable bowel.
Its pain-relieving qualities are indicated for tension headache,
muscular pain, and arthritic complaints.
Meadowsweet, a great facilitator for achieving a deep meditative
state, also has the ability to quiet the mind and guide the body
into a restful sleep. Considered the emotional “chill-pill,”
it defuses congested thoughts while putting one at ease. It eliminates
emotional pain that stems from living in a fast-paced overstimulating
world. Meadowsweet is able to rebalance electrical body charges,
making it an ally for opening up energy centers in the body. With
daily use for a month or so, it expands the body’s energy
field, creating a greater sense of self and a boost to self-expression.
It is a favorite herb of the Druids, who believed it made the
heart “merrier.” A must for mild depression.
Safe for children, elders and the overly-sensitive.
Dose: Make a tea using one to two teaspoons of
the dried herb to one cup boiled water steep for 15 minutes. Drink
three times a day. Tincture two or three mls (60-80 drops) three
times a day.
Contraindications: Should be used with caution
for folks who are allergic or sensitive to Salicylates (aspirin).
BETONY (WOOD BETONY) BETONICA OFFICINALIS
Collect the aerial parts (leaf, stem and budding flowers) of Wood
Betony just before the flowers bloom. Prepare yourself for a little
taste of heaven with a cup of tea or tincture.
Wood Betony is one of my favorite herbs for insomnia. It quiets
our restless minds and caps our frayed nerves. Its medicinal actions
are anti-spasmodic, nervine, and anodyne (pain relieving). Wood
Betony is specifically indicated for tension headaches caused
by stress, fibromyalgia pain, and sore, overworked muscles.
A tonic for the nervous system, it reduces fatigue and tension,
the symptoms of nervous exhaustion, by inducing a restful sleep.
Wood Betony, with its antispasmodic action, relaxes our bowels,
musculature, and our stifled sense of self-expression. Creating
the sensation of being nurtured and held, it fosters a feeling
of safety and protection. This opens up our emotional body and
allows us to express our creativity and stimulates self-expression.
Wood Betony has a stimulating opening effect on the solar plexus,
considered the center of “gut-level” instincts, groundedness,
and self-confidence.
A true anti-anxiety herb, it erases contracted life experiences.
Wood Betony, considered a brain tonic, will increase arterial
blood flow and cerebral circulation. Lose that frenzied burn-out
feeling with a cup of Wood Betony today.
Dose: Two teaspoons of dried herb to one cup
boiled water, steep twenty minutes, drink three to four times
a day. Tincture 20-60 drops three to four times a day.
No contraindications.
You now have two new calming friends to take along on life’s
journey. Do not forget the old stand-bys, Lavender, Chamomile
and Lemon Balm. Cheers to your health and well-being.
Suki Roth is a Community Herbalist and Educator in the Piedmont
of North Carolina. Growing, exploring, and communicating her love
for plants is her life passion. Suki will be a one of the main
speakers at the Southeast Women’s Herbal Conference in September
held in Black Mountain, NC. To Contact Suki: 919-932-7240 or bruki@peoplepc.com
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