There’s just something so appealing about fresh herbs grown right in your kitchen. You know exactly where they came from so you can feel good about feeding them to your family, you don’t have to travel very far to harvest them or worry about waste from cut herbs you don’t use, and you get to enjoy all the health benefits of indoor plants. Plus, you can harvest from these herbs all year long. Here are just a few herbs that deserve a place in your kitchen garden and how to use them to bring your cooking to a whole new level.
5 Containers You Can Recycle And Turn Into Gardening Pots
Your garden is the perfect place to express your creativity! Backyard gardening is also healthy for the mind, body and soul. It gets you outdoors and gives you the satisfaction of growing your own food. What’s better is that you can control what goes into your plants and you know exactly what you’re consuming. I encourage you to add an eco-friendly touch to your garden when you can and consider these five ideas for recycling containers for planting pots. [Read more…]
18 Easy Survival Ingredient Swaps When You’ve Run Out
On March 11th, the World Health Organization declared the novel coronavirus a pandemic. Shortly following this alarming announcement, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that Americans keep a 14 day supply of food and other essentials. Not surprisingly, this ignited a mass rush to supermarkets, with people hoarding groceries, sanitary items, and cleaning products. Many stores have been left struggling to keep up with the surge in demand. In one poignant example, sales of dried beans surged by 400 percent as compared to the same week in the previous year.
5 Simple and Powerful Remedies From Your Garden
The garden has a lot more to offer than pretty flowers and yummy produce. In fact, it is easy to grow a veritable pharmacy right out your backdoor by planting these incredible herbs that are loaded with health benefits. Here are a few of our favorite simple and powerful herbal remedies straight from the garden.
8 Ways to Make Water Taste Better
Chronic dehydration is prevalent across America today. With this precious substance that comprises 60% of our bodies playing second fiddle to soda, juice, and other unhealthy beverages. Water keeps your entire body functioning smoothly and efficiently, and when dehydration settles in, other health problems and complications begin to arise.
11 Houseplants You Can Eat
Growing an extensive outdoor garden is often impossible for those living in urban areas or harsh environments with short growing seasons. However, not all hope is lost, and there is still a way that you can contribute to a green, sustainable lifestyle by growing these edible plants indoors. You will be able to enjoy a bountiful harvest along with all the health benefits of indoor plants, plus they will add flair and interest to any decor.
5 Herbs That Kick Hot Flashes to the Curb
Many women experience difficult transitions through perimenopause and into the menopause stage. During this period, which can last anywhere from 4-10 years, women frequently suffer from increased levels of anxiety, hot flashes, night sweats, and weight changes. Thankfully, herbal remedies often prove beneficial in relieving the intensity of many menopause symptoms.
8 Healing Herbs You Can Grow Inside All Winter Long
Winter can often be a rough time for the avid gardener. The temperature cools, flowers begin to wither, the green fades from your garden, and snow blankets the sleeping plants. But thankfully, just because the Jack Frost has made his appearance, doesn’t mean you have to stop enjoying fresh herbs for the winter season. Take advantage of your home’s natural warmth and light, and grow fresh herbs for health and healing even in the midst of a raging blizzard.
Save Cash With These 5 Basic Medicinal Herbs For Your Garden
Since the dawn of time, humans have sought healing from plants, and many of today’s modern medicines are made using ingredients that are derived from shrubs, herbs and trees. Wouldn’t it be nice to have your very own medicinal garden where you can pick what you need when you need it? Here’s how to do it. [Read more…]
5 Ancient Health Practices That Really Work
Compared to ancient health practices, pharmaceutical medications have only been around for a relatively short amount of time. While there is little doubt that prescription medications have saved lives, many have been misused, abused, and/or come with a long list of side effects that are sometimes worse than the original problem.
For thousands of years, before those pharmaceuticals were created, all ancient cultures utilized natural healing practices, from 5,000-year-old Ayurvedic practices to herbal tinctures and well beyond. Those early cultures didn’t have access those highly-marketed drugs we have today, relying instead on the knowledge that was passed through generations.
While much of that information has been lost today with the introduction of new technology – or declared ineffective (including by some who don’t have our best interests in mind), some of the ancient practices traditionally used throughout millennia really do work, and come without all of those nasty side effects and/or the potential for addiction.
Acupuncture
Acupuncture is one of the world’s oldest healing practices. Part of traditional Chinese medicine, it’s been scientifically found to relieve pain by affecting multiple pathways and healing responses at the same time.
This ancient practice has the ability to:
- Increase endorphin levels by activating the body’s natural opioid system
- Diminish the pain response in the nervous system
- Positively alter brain chemistry by changing the release of neurotransmitters and neurohormones
- Reducing inflammation and swelling
- Relaxing the muscles and stopping muscle spasms
- Boosting blood circulation to an injured area
- Promote tissue healing
A 2012 study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine that involved nearly 18,000 patients from four different countries, demonstrated that acupuncture was significantly more effective for decreasing chronic pain, such as back, neck and shoulder pain as well as migraines, as compared to standard pain treatment alone.
Acupuncture is effective for many health problems in addition to easing the pain. It’s also be found to relieve anxiety, and even eliminate phobias or fears.
Acupuncture is also known to help ease anxiety as well as to eliminate or relieve fears and phobias. Research published in 2010 in the journal Acupuncture in Medicine, found that just five minutes of acupuncture was able to diminish dental phobia. During previous dental visits, three of the 20 patients who participated as study volunteers had to be knocked out with a general anaesthetic in order to cope with their fears; six who suffered from dental phobia required strong sedatives, and in 14 cases, treatment had to be cancelled because the patient was unable to go through with it. After treating them with needles, placed at specific acupuncture points on the top of the head, all 20 participants were able to conquer their fears.
Reflexology
Reflexology, or at least some form of it, has been used to promote healing for thousands of years. While you might think it’s simply a type of massage, it’s actually closer to acupuncture as both practices rely on the concept of “qi” or “chi.” This refers to the theoretical life force that flows through every living thing. While acupuncturist inserts needles into certain areas of the body to unblock stagnant qi in other parts of the body, reflexology is typically applied to areas like the hands or feet or hands in order to affect another part of the body.
There is evidence that reflexology was practiced in China as far back as 4,000 BC as well as in Egypt, as depicted in Ankmahor’s tomb. North American Indian tribes are known to have practiced a similar form for centuries. Today’s version was developed about 100 years ago but is still based on the ancient practice, with the belief that certain areas of the hands and feet are connected to other areas and organs of the body.
Reflexology is effective for:
- Relieving pain
- Reducing stress and inducing relaxation
- Boosting the immune system
- Improving circulation
- Healing digestive disorders
Hydrotherapy
Hydrotherapy is just what it sounds like, as “hydro” refers to water. Basically, it utilizes water to relieve pain, as well as to treat illnesses. Originally used by ancient civilizations, including the Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, and Japanese, it was referred to as the “water cure.” Many records have been discovered, reporting how soaking in hot or cold water had the ability to cure ailments. In fact, that’s why the Romans built their public bathhouses – eventually giving birth to our modern day spas.
Hydrotherapy is known to:
- Relieve pain and muscle tension by triggering the release of endorphins and easing movement
- Help heal injured muscles faster by increasing body temperature when using hot water, and improving blood flow
- Strengthen the immune system due to increased blood flow that allows the lymph system to eliminate toxins and other unwanted materials
- Encouraging detoxification by inducing sweating that helps to flush out impurities
- Relieve stress and anxiety through the release of endorphins
Hypnosis
Hypnotherapy has been used by ancient people in religious ceremonies and rituals throughout history, but the hypnosis we know today, which has become much more mainstream in recent years, was first associated with an 18th-century Austrian physician, Franz Anton Mesmer who used a variety of hypnotic techniques like magnets to treat his patients. Mesmer was initially called a fraud, as the University of Maryland Medical Center reports, but it regained popularity in the mid-20th-century. It’s best known for helping one to cope with fear, anxiety, and phobias.
The term “hypnosis” comes from the Greek word hypnos, which means “sleep.” Hypnotherapists bring deep relaxation to patients, putting them into an altered state of consciousness that can help one learn how to master their own state of awareness. This allows them to affect their own bodily functions and psychological responses.
Herbs
Using herbs to cure ailments dates back thousands of years as well. In fact, roughly 25 percent of the pharmaceutical medications prescribed today are derived from plants, and 11 percent of the 250 drugs on the World Health Organization’s essential medicine list is exclusively made from plants.
Herbs can be used to treat all sorts of acute and chronic conditions from depression and anxiety, to heart disease, inflammation-related conditions and just about everything in between. For example, peppermint leaves are famous for not only their taste and variety of culinary applications but for their medicinal benefits such as treating digestive disorders and soothing stomach discomforts.
Kava root has been recognized as one of the most effective herbal treatments for moderate to severe anxiety. Research in 2013 from the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Melbourne in Australia was the first clinical trial supporting the use of the medicinal South Pacific plant. The experts found that kava may be as effective as current drugs aimed to treat anxiety, noting that unlike but with less potential for side effects or dependency.
-Susan Patterson