Guest guest Posted December 13, 2006 Report Share Posted December 13, 2006 What is the baking soda a borax doing? it seems counter-intuitive to me to soak in borax. kath Chinese Medicine , " crisbearak " <crisbearak wrote: > > I always suggest using herbs in whole form rather than e-oils as > first line treatment as the oils are the most concentrated form of > the herb and much harder on the body and some are quite toxic such > as pennyroyal for example. I get a little upset that companies send > out people often with no training in herbs other than what they tell > them to hawk their wares. Unless you've had good training with e- > oils you could end up hurting your patient rather than helping > them. I also try to use herbs that are much easier to get than > something exotic someone else has used. If it is the heat removing > part of the herb that is helping her maybe yin chao instead. I've > been amazed at some of my clients I give it to them for their cold > and they share with a friend(something I don't encourage but it > happens) and wow the friend with migraines suddenly gets rid of > headaches they've had for years. I make some great bath salts you > can put your e-oil into and see if it works that way too a little > safer way to administer. You take a bag of epsom salts, a cup of > sea salt or big kosher salt, a cup of baking soda and a 1/2 cup of > borax mix together and add the e-oils you want either mix into the > mixture itself or drop the oils into the bath midway during the > filling(more powerful). > > Feverfew is a great headache herb and easy to get. You have to use > it for a couple of weeks before you get good benefits sometimes and > the fresh leaf works better. I would try that first. > > We have great tools in chinese herbs and I get nervous trying odd > things because I'm not getting my diagnosis right and not helping my > client. I have sent someone to a more experienced practitioner in > town rather than try stuff I'm not familiar with or push the limits > of what I know. Even medical docs get second opinions if regular > stuff doesn't work. I'm a 5element person and tend to try to figure > out why normal stuff is not working for me before jumping to > something out of my experience. There is always room for something > new but I would rather learn a new TCM herb or points than try to be > an expert at everything. I'd rather refer to the practitioner who > using that form of herb and has training in it than handle it myself > and get into trouble. First rule in medicine is do no harm and > thats why I don't give my clients internal e-oils. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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