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Here Comes the Flu Season - Protect Yourself the Wise Woman Way

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Here Comes the Flu Season - Protect Yourself the Wise Woman Way

 

2004, Susun S Weed

 

Along with the beauty of fall days comes the need to get ready for

winter. Time to get out my long underwear and my warm wooly socks. Time

to nourish my immune system so cold days won't be days of colds - and flu.

 

I don't rely on modern medicine to keep me healthy, but if you usually

rely on a flu shot to protect you, you may feel frightened by your

inability to get one this year. You may be wondering what you can do

instead. Or you may have discovered that flu shots don't give protection

from all types of flu, just the ones the makers guess will be active

this winter. And you may wonder if there isn't some other way to prevent

the flu. Or maybe, like me, you prefer not to use shots or drugs unless

absolutely necessary. You may wonder what herbs and remedies are the

best to have on hand to help your family deal with the flu.

 

No matter what your situation, now is a good time to give yourself the

benefit of Wise Woman Ways to prevent - and deal with - the flu. These

flu presenters and flu remedies are simple. They are quite safe. And you

don't have to be rich to use them. Wise Woman herbal medicine is

people's medicine. Mama Medicine. You can buy most of the things I

discuss in this article - and you can find them growing freely, too. You

can buy the herbal preparations I mention already made - and you can

easily make you own for pennies, too.

 

These Wise Woman Ways are supported by both tradition and science. Wise

women through the centuries have kept themselves and their families safe

from contagious diseases. And science has found good reasons for their

effectiveness. I hope these tips will help you face winter's ills with

confidence, and good health.

 

Beat the Flu

 

The best way to prevent the flu is to build a powerful immune system.

While this can't guarantee that you won't get the flu, neither can the

flu shot. Here are my favorite ways to keep my immune system strong:

 

* Eat more garlic.

* Drink nourishing herbal infusions daily.

* Make immune-strengthening soups; or add immune-strengthening herbs

to canned soup.

* Use anti-viral herbs as needed.

 

Eat More Garlic

 

One of the best immune-system helpers is garlic. Dr. James Duke says it

contains at least 17 different factors that nourish and support powerful

immune system functioning. Herbalists in the middle ages relied on it to

prevent infection from the plague, so it might keep us safe from the

flu. Garlic is anti-bacterial, too. If you don't like fresh raw garlic,

powdered garlic is just as good. The dose is 1 or more cloves of raw

garlic per day, or up to a teaspoon of garlic powder. Here are a few of

my favorite ways to eat raw garlic:

 

* Top scrambled eggs with minced raw garlic.

* Put chopped raw garlic on pasta and cover with tomato sauce.

* Try minced raw garlic on a piece of hot buttered toast. Delicious!

* Add minced raw garlic to your baked potato.

* Mix chopped raw garlic and olive oil with hot cooked greens like

kale or spinach.

 

Drink Nourishing Herbal Infusions

 

Nourishing herbal infusions are the basis of great nourishment for the

immune system and the entire body. They are full of antioxidant

vitamins, minerals, proteins, phytoestrogens, and hundreds of protective

phytochemicals that work to help you ward off the flu and colds too.

Here's how I make a nourishing herbal infusion:

 

* Choose one herb: nettle, oatstraw, red clover, comfrey leaf,

linden flowers, or violet leaf.

* Place one full ounce, by weight, of any one herb in a quart jar. A

canning jar is best.

* Fill the jar to the top with boiling water.

* Screw on a tight lid

* Let it steep for four hours, or overnight.

* Strain the liquid out, squeezing the herb.

* Refrigerate the infusion, where it will be good for 24-36 hours.

 

I drink two to four cups nourishing herbal infusions daily - over ice,

heated up with honey and milk, or mixed with other beverages.

 

Make Immune Strengthening Soups

 

Cooking herbs and vegetables together for a long time extracts minerals,

activates immune-strengthening phytochemicals, and increases the levels

of available antioxidants. Raw foods weaken and stress the immune

system. To make an immune strengthening soup:

 

* Chop at least half an onion per person and sauté in olive oil

until translucent.

* Add at least two cloves of garlic, sliced or chopped, per person

and sauté for a minute.

* Add two or more cups of water or vegetable broth per person.

* Add one cup per person of chopped seasonal vegetables such as:

 

carrots, cabbage, celery, corn, burdock, turnips, potatoes, tomatoes,

parsnips

 

(If using canned soup, begin here.)

 

* Add one small handful of seaweed per person.

* Add one ounce fresh, or one-half ounce dried mushrooms - any kind

- per person.

* Add one-quarter ounce dried tonic roots per person.

* Add generous amounts of antioxidant seasoning herbs and some sea salt.

* Bring to a boil; simmer for an hour.

* Turn off fire and let your soup mellow in a cool place overnight.

* Serve it the next day, heated up, with freshly-baked bread and

organic raw milk cheese.

 

Seaweeds build powerful immunity. Kombu and wakame are excellent in

soups. Cut them small; they swell to 5-7 times their dried size when cooked.

 

All mushrooms strengthen the immune system. Dried shitake are available

and inexpensive at Chinese grocery stores. Reishii, maitake, and other

medicinal mushrooms are delicious, as are the more common button

mushrooms, portobellos, and dried porcinni.

 

Tonic roots help our livers, lymph, and kidneys work well, protecting us

from infection. I often put these tough roots into a jelly bag and drop

that into the soup so I can fish it out before serving. I use one or

more of these, fresh or dried, depending on what I have available:

 

* Siberian ginseng

* Astragalus

* Burdock

* Dandelion

* Chicory

* Yellow dock

* American ginseng.

 

Seasoning herbs from the mint family - rosemary, thyme, oregano, basil,

marjoram, and sage - are loaded with antioxidants. I don't just season

the soup with them; I add them by the handful for the greatest impact on

my immune strength.

 

Anti-Viral Herbs

 

Anti-infective herbs can help us prevent the flu - and assist us if we

do get sick. Colds and the flu are caused by viruses, making them more

difficult to treat than bacterial infections. Viruses are more vital

than bacteria and harder to kill. There are many anti-bacterial herbs -

including yarrow, echinacea, elecampane, and poke - but few that are

anti-viral. Of these, my favorite is St. Joan's/John's wort. If any herb

can prevent the flu, St.J's can.

 

Of course, even flu shots don't prevent all types of flu, and they don't

prevent colds, so even if you do get a shot, it's a good idea to have

some anti-viral and anti-bacterial herbs on hand. The distinction

between them is not so important once you are sick. Both types of herbs

will alert the immune system to the infection and help it gather the

resources needed to counter it. Did you know that the achy muscles and

headachy feeling we get with the flu is not caused by the flu itself but

results from the immune system gobbling up all available resources so it

can clobber the flu virus?

 

St. Joan's/John's wort (Hypericum perforatum)

 

This beautiful yellow flower yields a blood-red tincture that I take by

the dropperful to prevent viral infections such as the flu. A dropperful

in the morning throughout the cold months is adequate for prevention. I

increase that to 2-3 dropperfuls a day if I have been exposed at home or

at work to the flu. If I do get sick, I will use other herbs to counter

the infection. Capsules of St. J's are ineffective; I only use the tincture.

 

Echinacea (Echinacea augustifolia)

 

The tincture of echinacea root is a well-known anti-infective. When I

feel an infection brewing, I use large doses of echinacea to build white

blood cells and encourage T-helper cells. The dose of echinacea root

tincture is 1 drop for every 2 pounds of body weight, as frequently as

every hour or two in the acute phase of an infection, 2-4 times a day

otherwise. I have seen echinacea relieve terrible flu infections.

 

Important: I do not use echinacea as a preventative; it doesn't seem to

work that way. I do not use any part of this plant except the root. I do

not combine it with goldenseal, which I believe hinders the immune

system. I do not take echinacea in capsules.

 

I make a quart of echinacea tincture each fall as my winter insurance.

Here's how I do it: Put 4 ounces of dried Echinacea augustifolia root in

a quart jar. Fill to the top with 100 proof vodka. Cap tightly and

label. Shake daily for the first week. Then weekly for at least eight weeks.

 

Poke (Phytolacca americana)

 

The tincture of this root is so powerful some authors consider it

poisonous. You may have a hard time finding it for sale. But poke is an

important helper when flu " bugs " have taken over. I would not take poke

as a preventative; it is far too strong. I use poke root tincture to

kick my immune system into high gear. The dose is one drop - yes, only

one drop - once or twice a day for no more than a month, although in

serious cases I may use up to 8 doses a day. Poke root tincture can harm

the kidneys if it is taken continuously. I never take capsules of poke root.

 

Elecampane (Inula helenium)

 

The tincture of this root is a favorite for clearing lung infections and

countering the flu. The usual dose is 10-15 drops 2-3 times a day, but I

would increase the dose to 6 times a day in an acute situation. I expect

to see results within a day or less. I would only take elecampane if I

had an active infection; it has little protective value. I never use

elecampane capsules.

 

Elder (Sambucus canadensis)

 

Elder flowers are a nice remedy for those with a feverish cold, but for

those with the flu, I prefer elder berries. The most common way to take

them is in the form of a syrup. The immune enhancing properties of elder

berries are renowned in Europe and slowly gaining popularity in the

United States. Elder berry syrup also eases coughs and lung congestion.

 

Winter is Coming

 

Herbs may not seem strong enough to prevent or counter the flu, but they

are. When we use herbs to maintain and regain health, we not only take a

big step toward health independence but a small step toward peace on our

planet. Instead of making war on weeds, I use them. Instead of making

war on nature, I let Her guide me. Instead of making war on myself when

I'm sick, I nourish myself toward greater health, greater peace.

 

Green blessings surround us. Herbs not only protect us from the flu,

they can uplift our hearts and bring us joy in trying and uncertain times.

 

Tips to Avoid the Flu

 

* 1. Wash your hands; this is the single best way to avoid the flu.

* Cough or sneeze into your elbow, not your hand. Viral particles

are easily passed from hands to eyes and nose even if you use a tissue.

* If the flu is active in your area, avoid public places.

 

Susun Weed

PO Box 64

Woodstock, NY 12498

Fax: 1-845-246-8081

 

Visit Susun Weed at: www.susunweed.com and www.ash-tree-publishing.com

For permission to reprint this article, contact us at: susunweed

 

Vibrant, passionate, and involved, Susun Weed has garnered an

international reputation for her groundbreaking lectures, teachings, and

writings on health and nutrition. She challenges conventional medical

approaches with humor, insight, and her vast encyclopedic knowledge of

herbal medicine. Unabashedly pro-woman, her animated and enthusiastic

lectures are engaging and often profoundly provocative.

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