Almost
at mid August now, for two days running , the air in the morning has been cool,
the ground increasingly damp with the heavy late summer's dew.
Yesterday
while coming to work on our rental cottage, my daughter and her boyfriend once
again perused my herb gardens. She a budding acupuncturist and herbalist, he a
budding Naturopath and acupuncturist , and herbalist . Both of them
enthusiastically learning into the realm of possibilities, with natural and
complementary healing.
She told me they were posting one herb a day on Instagram, describing it's properties in both Western and traditional Chinese medicine terms. So I checked it out; doing a great job!
We walked by all the house plants that are happily sitting outside, getting rained on, cleansed by fresh air and night bathing and wind and storm. Many of which I'll repot nicely , and send off with her , come fall.
I showed them, in the shade garden, the delicate Wood Betony, wonderful for ongoing support of certain types of headache. Their intricate couple blossoms on a elongated stalk with delicate small leaves.
She asked for a Mullein plant in full bloom, that she could take a photo of, for their educational posting. But the time of Mullen is largely passed by, so I showed them the Blue Vervain, just exquisite - minute long spikes of blue flowers, A wonderful adaptogen nervous system herb, to calm people and support high blood pressure and the normal stresses of life. They most often grow in roadside ditches that have a good supply of water, but I have several volunteers in my garden, that surprise me each year, popping up here and there with their beautifully serrated leaves, growing to about 5 feet. Sprinkled through the herb garden.
I also showed them the remarkable elecampane that a wonderful client gave me several years ago, that returns every year with it's enormous soft leaves, it's 6 1/2 foot tall branches topped with lovely yellow flowers, reaching for the sky. Remarkable for acute or ongoing use of bronchial and other respiratory challenges. Paired nicely with bloodroot for wet coughs, or lobelia , in tiny bits, , for tight coughs.
And so it went, the wondering, they're excited faces, discovering those things that could be helpful for people, and exactly how.
I remember being 18, and some macrobiotic guy at college on Long Island introducing me to rice crackers, to the concept of brown rice. How horrible those rice crackers and the unyeasted bread seemed at first, until my understanding motivated me to get to know them, get to appreciate and finally enjoy them.
So it goes with herbs. So much of this realm of natural healing seems so odd to people. With the gradual institutionalization , we slowly have poor quality ginkgo and other things making their way into CVS aisles. Which for most part is a good thing. A lot is lost in the institutionalization of anything. Natural healing. Feminism. Political concerns. Assumptions are made, the precautions and dangers overlooked, the profit a primary focus.
But I spent 27 years studying and learning very carefully, judiciously sharing information with clients, and then palpating organs and systems as they took or did things, observing carefully what happened. Learning when and how and what the Contraindications were. It really was a remarkable path.
And now it is of the most supreme help in my private life, with my own health, and extraordinarily enough, the health of my beloved.
And here I have a daughter in law as a chiropractor, a daughter as an acupuncturist and her dear one as a naturopath.
Moving down the road in their own unique ways, proliferating this understanding until, now, of all things, naturopathic medicine is proving its own in a pivotal manner, for cancer care. The ultimate benefit for all.
She told me they were posting one herb a day on Instagram, describing it's properties in both Western and traditional Chinese medicine terms. So I checked it out; doing a great job!
We walked by all the house plants that are happily sitting outside, getting rained on, cleansed by fresh air and night bathing and wind and storm. Many of which I'll repot nicely , and send off with her , come fall.
I showed them, in the shade garden, the delicate Wood Betony, wonderful for ongoing support of certain types of headache. Their intricate couple blossoms on a elongated stalk with delicate small leaves.
She asked for a Mullein plant in full bloom, that she could take a photo of, for their educational posting. But the time of Mullen is largely passed by, so I showed them the Blue Vervain, just exquisite - minute long spikes of blue flowers, A wonderful adaptogen nervous system herb, to calm people and support high blood pressure and the normal stresses of life. They most often grow in roadside ditches that have a good supply of water, but I have several volunteers in my garden, that surprise me each year, popping up here and there with their beautifully serrated leaves, growing to about 5 feet. Sprinkled through the herb garden.
I also showed them the remarkable elecampane that a wonderful client gave me several years ago, that returns every year with it's enormous soft leaves, it's 6 1/2 foot tall branches topped with lovely yellow flowers, reaching for the sky. Remarkable for acute or ongoing use of bronchial and other respiratory challenges. Paired nicely with bloodroot for wet coughs, or lobelia , in tiny bits, , for tight coughs.
And so it went, the wondering, they're excited faces, discovering those things that could be helpful for people, and exactly how.
I remember being 18, and some macrobiotic guy at college on Long Island introducing me to rice crackers, to the concept of brown rice. How horrible those rice crackers and the unyeasted bread seemed at first, until my understanding motivated me to get to know them, get to appreciate and finally enjoy them.
So it goes with herbs. So much of this realm of natural healing seems so odd to people. With the gradual institutionalization , we slowly have poor quality ginkgo and other things making their way into CVS aisles. Which for most part is a good thing. A lot is lost in the institutionalization of anything. Natural healing. Feminism. Political concerns. Assumptions are made, the precautions and dangers overlooked, the profit a primary focus.
But I spent 27 years studying and learning very carefully, judiciously sharing information with clients, and then palpating organs and systems as they took or did things, observing carefully what happened. Learning when and how and what the Contraindications were. It really was a remarkable path.
And now it is of the most supreme help in my private life, with my own health, and extraordinarily enough, the health of my beloved.
And here I have a daughter in law as a chiropractor, a daughter as an acupuncturist and her dear one as a naturopath.
Moving down the road in their own unique ways, proliferating this understanding until, now, of all things, naturopathic medicine is proving its own in a pivotal manner, for cancer care. The ultimate benefit for all.
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