Morgellons-Morgellons Disease - View Single Post - Aromatherapy for healing.
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Old February 17th, 2007, 04:42 PM
reddeputy reddeputy is offline
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Default Re: Aromatherapy for healing.


I hope this may help, I started using Body Cology/ coconut lime it sure up lifts my mood & spirit when I put it on!! So I thought this may fall under [AROMATHERAPY]

Bach Flower Remedy
Many experts in fibroids observe that they develop in women who suffer from stress-related anger and resentment. Progesterone receptors do not function in the presence of adrenaline, the main stress hormone, which we also make when our blood sugar is low; this can cause an imbalance of estrogen.

One of the most popular natural emotional rescues people are turning to in droves is what’s known as the Bach flower remedies. The Bach flower remedies comprise thirty-eight homeopathically prepared plant and flower liquid extracts. Each flower remedy is designed to treat a different emotion. Dr. Edward Bach invented this healing tradition in the 1930s (during a time of extreme economic and social misery). Bach classified emotions into seven major groups (e.g., fear, uncertainty, or loneliness), creating thirty-eight different emotional states and corresponding flower remedies. These remedies work through homeopathic principles, stimulating the body’s own capacity to heal itself. The flower remedies are made available as a liquid, which is preserved in brandy. Taking the remedy involves diluting two drops of the pure liquid into 30 ml of mineral water. You then take four drops of the dilution orally four times a day. You can also put two drops of the pure remedy into a glass of water and just sip it throughout the day.

The following is a complete list of the Bach flower remedies and the corresponding emotional states they help to calm or quell:

Agrimony: mental torture behind a cheerful face

Aspen: fear of unknown things

Beech: intolerance

Centaury: the inability to say “no”

Cerato: lack of trust in one’s own decisions

Cherry Plum: fear of the mind giving way

Chestnut Bud: failure to learn from mistakes

Chicory: selfish, possessive love

Clematis: dreaming of the future without working in the present

Crab Apple: the cleansing remedy, also for self-hatred

Elm: overwhelmed by responsibility

Gentian: discouragement after a setback

Gorse: hopelessness and despair

Heather: self-centeredness and self-concern

Holly: hatred, envy, and jealousy

Honeysuckle: living in the past

Hornbeam: procrastination, tiredness at the thought of doing something

Impatiens: impatience

Larch: lack of confidence

Mimulus: fear of known things

Mustard: deep gloom for no reason

Oak: the plodder who keeps going past the point of exhaustion

Olive: exhaustion following mental or physical effort

Pine: guilt

Red Chestnut: overconcern for the welfare of loved ones

Rock Rose: terror and fright

Rock Water: self-denial, rigidity, and self-repression

Scleranthus: inability to choose between alternatives

Star of Bethlehem: shock

Sweet Chestnut: extreme mental anguish, when everything has been tried and there is no light left

Vervain: overenthusiasm

Vine: dominance and inflexibility

Walnut: protection from change and unwanted influences

Water Violet: pride and aloofness

White Chestnut: unwanted thoughts and mental arguments

Wild Oat: uncertainty over one’s direction in life

Wild Rose: drifting, resignation, apathy

Willow: self-pity and resentment
How to Move

Stress-reducing exercises involve deep-breathing exercises and movements that work with the life force energy, or qi. In the presence of stress, progesterone receptors don’t work properly. The yoga postures recommended for endometriosis work well for fibroids, too.

Dr. Christiane Northrup, who writes about the emotional aspects of women’s illnesses, observes that fibroids often represent a block in creative energy for women. Creativity, referring to art in all its forms (words, fine arts, visual arts, healing arts, performing arts, hobbies, or sport), can dramatically lower stress levels. In particular, writing—in the form of journaling or writing poetry or letters—can be healing. A new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that people suffering from chronic ailments actually felt better when they wrote about their ailments.
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