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Herbs: The Ancient Wise
Woman Tradition
Explore the simple wisdom of traditional
healers with herbalist Corinna Wood.
Sidebar:
Winter Root Stew
"Mommy, plantain poultice!" My two-year
old has fallen and hurt his knee, and he's pointing to the
plantain plants that grow at our doorstep, one of the most
common weeds around. He wants me to make another fresh compress
because it has helped him so much in the past.
For children and adults alike, it is
easy to learn about the edible and medicinal uses of plants.
This ancestral knowledge comes naturally to us; it is our
birthright. The ancient practice of using common, local plants
to heal is at the core of the Wise Woman tradition. This lineage
includes village healers, community midwives, and family herbalists.
The Wise Woman tradition is based on nourishment and self-love,
rather than seeing disease as our enemy or the body as dirty
and in need of cleansing. As Susun Weed, a prominent voice
for the Wise Woman tradition today, writes in Healing Wise:
We are all healers in the Wise Woman
tradition. Self-healing and self-loving, we co-create healing
with our allies. Our allies are our problems; they bring us
gifts of wholeness. Our allies are wise women; they support
us in our transformation. Our allies are green allies, wild
plants; they supply us with optimum nourishment.
Although doctors, shamans, and medicine
men have more prominence in our cultural history, the common
healers, especially for women's health concerns, were women.
It was women, as it is today in tribal cultures, who attended
pregnant women and sick children, and who nurtured the beginning
and the ending of life. Part of the reason that wise woman
ways are so often overlooked is that much of this work is
invisible. A wise woman prevents illness by cooking nourishing
meals for her family, or building stamina with daily herbal
teas. The wise woman cooks a root stew for her family in the
depth of winter, makes salads with wild spring greens, garnishes
the summer festival platters with edible flowers, and harvests
berries to feast on in fall and to dry for the long winter.
How did this ancient tradition get broken?
In Europe, it ended with mass "witch burnings." Almost everyone
knows of the Holocaust of World War II, but few people know
of the extent of the witch burnings, which spanned the 1300's
to the 1600's. As Jeanne Achterberg writes in Woman as
Healer, "Witches, also known as wise women (femina saga),
were accused of the 'crimes' of aiding the sick, birthing
babies, and caring for the dying." Under the influence of
the Church and the newly formed male-dominated medical establishment,
the word "witch," which originally meant "wise one," became
a term of scorn. It took a reign of terror lasting several
hundred years to radically alter a way of life thousands of
years old. Millions of women who carried the healing lineage
were systematically killed (see The Church and the Second
Sex by Mary Daly).
The ancient cloak of women's wisdom is
being re-woven as we take back responsibility for our healthcare.
Some say we have a cellular memory of the ancient ways; we
did them for so long, they are practically instinctual.
Do you remember the Wise Woman? She brings
a bag of herbs for the young woman beginning her mooncycles
to ease the cramping. She is the midwife who visits the expectant
mother and speaks to her of transformation into motherhood,
of surrendering to the process of birth. She is the one who
strokes the arm of the laboring woman and says, "I know it
hurts." She is the one on whom that mother calls as she becomes
a crone herself, for teas to ease the hot flashes. And it
is she who sits on the bed of the aging elder and speaks of
death, offers porridge to ease the belly and herbal spirits
to calm the mind.
We can each reclaim the wise woman inside
of us, as we heal ourselves and our loved ones with compassion.
As we learn the plants that grow where we live and raise our
children and grandchildren in that way of life.
Corinna Wood is director of Red Moon
Herbs in Black Mt, NC, and has been teaching herbal medicine
and women's health for ten years. She can be reached at (828)
669-1310 or at www.redmoonherbs.com.
Winter Root
Stew
1 cup onion, chopped
2 Tbs olive oil
1 cup fresh burdock root
1/2 cup fresh dandelion root and/or leaf
1 cup carrot, sliced
3 cup potatoes, cubed
2 qt water or stock salt to taste
1 Tbs miso
Saute onion in oil in soup pot until golden. Add burdock slices.
Chop fresh dandelion leaves and/or roots and add them. Add
all remaining ingredients. Bring to a boil; reduce heat and
cook covered at least an hour. Just before serving, dilute
miso in some of the broth and add to soup.
Adapted from Healing Wise by Susun Weed
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