Herbal Remedies For Healing With Home Remedies: 3 Books In 1 Boxed Set
77 pages
English

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77 pages
English

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As disease is on the rise despite the advances in pharmaceutical technologies, many people are turning to natural herbal remedies. The benefits of herbal remedies are bountiful and different for everyone, but just a few are affordability, fewer side effects, and can sometimes work much better than their chemical counterparts. Herbal remedies help those who are trying treat diseases the natural way.

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Publié par
Date de parution 22 novembre 2019
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781633832848
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0012€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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Table of Contents
Herbal Remedies: From Traditional Chinese Remedies To Modern Day Cures
Chapter 1- How Herbal Supplements Help with Health and Healing
Chapter 2- Is Hemp Hype Really a Miracle Plant?
Chapter 3- What to Know Before Buying Herbal Supplements
Chapter 4- The Advantages and Disadvantages of Consuming Pennyroyal
Chapter 5- Using Herbal Teas to Alleviate Common Ailments
Chapter 6- Healing Herbs: Medicinal Applications for Basil
Chapter 7- Ginkgo Biloba - The Many Uses
Chapter 8- How St. John's Wort Works
Chapter 9- How to Lose Weight Naturally
Chapter 10- How to Harvest, Dry and Store Herbs
Chapter 11- Lower High Blood Pressure with Hibiscus Tea
NaturalRemediesSimpleGuideForNaturalCuresdocx
Chapter 1- Olive Oil - Natural Extract with Many Uses
Chapter 2- The Health Benefits of Coconut
Chapter 3- Natural Urinary Tract Infection Treatments
Chapter 4- Natural Fibromyalgia Pain Relief Options
Chapter 5- Five Healthy High-Protein, Low-Fat Foods
Chapter 6- Long Term Health Considerations of Medical Marijuana
Chapter 7- Health Benefits of Inositol
Herbs for Health and Healing
Chapter 1- World's longest serving physician, author and educator!
Chapter 2- Nature's Premium Nutrient for Healthy Blood Sugar
Chapter 3- Cinnamon and Honey
Chapter 4- The Cure For All Cancers
Chapter 5- Late Dr Johanna Budwig's Recipe to Fight Cancer
Chapter 6- Hydrogen Peroxide and its common Uses
Chapter 7- Cure For Cold / Flu and More!
Chapter 8- Triphala wonderful herb-blend of 3 fruits
Chapter 9- These 6 Foods will Do the Weight-Loss Work for You
Chapter 10- Ashwagandha
Chapter 11- Ginger
Chapter 12- Turmeric
Chapter 13- Banaba Extract
Chapter 14- Garlic
Chapter 15- Ginseng
Chapter 16- Homemade recipe will unclog your arteries!
Herbal Remedies: From Traditional Chinese Remedies To Modern Day Cures
Using Herbal Cures To Help Common Ailments
By: Francis Woodburn
Chapter 1- How Herbal Supplements Help with Health and Healing
As most drugs are made from chemicals, the body can't handle the added chemicals to an already overloaded system of toxins and pollutants. Whilst standard medications address the effects of a disease, herbs, throughout history have been shown to cure disease. While unscrupulous manufacturers have sold tainted herbal formulations, most herbal supplements do not contain toxins and are not the cause for the approximate 100,000 deaths that occur every year from standard drug use.

Some 18% of Americans use herbal supplements. Many have become disenchanted with the poor results and side effects of prescription medications. However, whilst herbal supplements can work wonders, positive effects are hampered if you continue to maintain a poor lifestyle. A good diet, exercise, reduction of high stress levels and proper sleep habits promote health and healing. Supplements will not solve an obesity problem if the user continues to chow down fatty burgers and soda.
Several independent studies have shown that we all live in a significantly more toxic environment than 50 years ago. Using herbal supplements can help detoxify the body from harmful toxins. Vitamins, minerals and herbs help restore the alkaline balance the body requires to stay healthy.
Western medicine focuses primarily on treatment of disease rather than looking for a cure. Allopathic (mainstream) medicine has its place; after all if you break a leg you would rather go to the hospital and get a cast, who wouldn’t? But medicine today poses a number of disadvantages. In today's society, profits mean more than the health and well being of the consumer. The industry has become powerful by treating disease. So long as there is sickness, profits can be made. Herbs can treat disease and even affect a cure. Simply put, they get to the root cause and eliminate it.
Neutraceuticals is a relatively new term where the combination of drugs and natural formulations can work together to restore a healthy balance in the body. This realization is steadily gaining acceptance in the medical community. For example, the side effects of chemotherapy and radiation treatments are greatly reduced when vitamins, minerals and herbs are taken during the treatments.
Like drugs, there are dangers as some vitamins or minerals can create adverse effects if too much is taken. However, the consumer would have to take a large amount of natural supplements before experiencing severe reactions. This is still far safer than overdosing on standard medications.
The creation of herbal formulations is far safer than drugs brewed up in a pharmaceutical laboratory. Herbal formulations are often safe for children, pregnant mothers and the elderly to take. However, herbal supplements can create problems when used in conjunction with certain drugs. For example, warfarin, a blood thinner, should not be taken along with herbs such as garlic, fenugreek, St. Johns Wort or feverfew. Before anyone decides to take a supplement while on a blood thinner, he or she should consult with a qualified naturopath or herbalist who will be able to advise on what to take and how to take it.
The greatest benefit of taking herbal supplements lies in their ability to prevent disease from occurring. As they are natural, they enhance the body's ability to remain healthy. No drug has been invented yet that can claim to prevent disease or enhance the body's ability to detoxify itself.
Though natural methods of healing are largely debunked and attacked by today's medical establishment, there is a place for both to exist together to promote health and reduce the epidemics of the diseases so common in the world today.
Chapter 2- Is Hemp Hype Really a Miracle Plant?
Hemp is a plant with the botanical name Cannabis Sativa. It is not the same as the Cannabis or “pot” plant. Instead, it is a crop that can be raised for a wide variety of useful products. The hype about hemp has given it a reputation of being something of a miracle plant that can revolutionize the economy. A look at these claims gives us more rational expectations of what hemp products can do.
About Hemp
Hemp is a fibrous plant that was grown for many uses in China as far back as 2700 B.C. In the 1500s, Europeans used hemp to make both textiles and food. Hemp was brought to the New World with the Puritans, who grew it for their basic needs. Even George Washington grew hemp at Mount Vernon. Hemp grows in a shrub form to about 18-feet tall with different growing conditions and a different harvest time than marijuana.
The fiber of the plant is similar to flax. The plant is naturally resistant to insects and diseases, which means that fewer pesticides are needed during cultivation. It is also drought resistant, which helps to conserve water resources. Almost every part of the hemp plant can be utilized in some fashion. About 30 countries of the world currently grow hemp agriculturally, and it is used in a wide variety of products.
Legal Issues of Hemp
Hemp contains much less of the active ingredient delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, that produces the euphoria of marijuana. Marijuana generally consists of 3 to 20 percent of the THC component, while hemp consists of less than one percent. Because of its similarity to marijuana in chemical composition, hemp growing has been forbidden by law in the United States since early in the 20th century. The confusion of hemp with marijuana has kept it from being a widely grown crop despite its many obvious benefits.

Advantages of Hemp
As a farm crop, hemp can produce a higher yield of usable materials than cotton. One of its most beneficial features is that it is a “nitrogen sparing” plant. This means that instead of drawing nitrogen from the soil, it actually adds nitrogen to it. Nitrogen is a critical component for plant growth. Less chemical fertilizer is needed, which helps to preserve the environment. Hemp can be grown in a wide range of soil types and climate conditions. It can produce 2 to 3 times more crop than cotton per acre. Hemp can be used as a fuel, for paper, for clothing, for food products and for construction material.
As a fabric, hemp “breathes” like linen, which keeps the wearer cooler in summer. Hemp clothing can be produced without toxic chemicals, thus causing less pollution. Hemp is naturally hypoallergenic and will not irritate the skin of sensitive individuals. It is a long-lasting fabric that can even be recycled into paper products when no longer usable for clothing.
Hemp as fuel is not currently economically viable, but as methods advance, it can be expected to contribute to “energy independence,” that is, the long-term goal of the nation’s energy usage. It can be easily produced domestically, pollutes 30 percent less than petroleum products and is not dangerous to store or handle. A truly “renewable” source of energy, hemp crops can become an economic boom for farmers across the country.
Hemp seeds provide a nutritious source of protein, carbohydrate, essential fatty acids and fiber. Hemp seed oil can be made into a number of grades for food, body care products or for technical uses. Hemp meal, left over after the seed are crushed and the oil removed, can be make into a non-dairy milk product, flour or grain base for making beer.
Hemp fiber can be used to reinforce and add flexibility to concrete, or it can be used directly from the field as a building construction material. Hemp fiber can be used in plastics and in number of industrial processes instead of mineral fiber.
Disadvantages of Hemp
For clothing, hemp tends to wrinkle much like

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