wounds ugg bailey bow comprar
Remember the days of old when Grandmother strapped a warm mustard pack to our
congested chests when we had a cold? Or used a warmed tea bag to rid pink
eye comprar
ugg bailey bow , a clove of garlic to stop an earache, or prepared
a mixture of chaparral and olive oil as a cure for itchy skin? I do.Distances
between townships, limited funds, and the lack of readily available medical
professionals and facilities all dictated that a woman be not only a wife,
mother, and housekeeper, but doctor as well. Folklore healing practices,
curative uses of herbs, and other medicinal "family secrets" were stealthily
guarded and passed down from one generation to the next.Of course, some of
yesteryear's touted cures were not truly cures at all. Superstition and myth
"remedies," without any practical application, crept into the mix. Little by
little and through the years, suspicion as to the validity of any natural,
herbal remedy began to take root.For instance, witch doctor type practices such
as hanging herbs that resembled tears around a child's neck to help him cut
teeth. "Reading" tea leaves to foretell future love interests, and assertions
like placing certain spices under the pillow would improve memory, prejudiced
many toward the genuine curative uses of herbs. That is why some modern day
practitioners regard the medicinal use of herbs as "quackery;" nothing more than
old-wives tales. There are, however, a growing number of otherwise conventional
medical professionals who acknowledge what Grandmother knew all along. Natural,
herbal remedies as a means to maintain good health and cure certain diseases are
valid. Nature's drug store is making a comeback.And why should that be
surprising? After all, we -- like plants -- are organic. It is the synthetic
drugs used today that were formulated to mimic their natural counterparts, and
not the other way around. In days of old, there was no other way to treat
illness and discomfort, help heal wounds ugg
bailey bow comprar , or cure bodily dysfunctions than with natural
means.It was while living in tune with nature and studying wildlife that early
man learned of the medicinal "powers" of herbs. Animals bitten by a poisonous
snake survived after chewing snakeroot, a wounded bear rolled in mud to better
heal and escape infection, and old, rheumatoid deer eased their misery and made
joints more limber by resting under the therapeutic rays of the sun. Nature's
well worked out plan for good health and freedom from disease is observed in
animals. It is people who have strayed from nature's medicine chest to create
man-made remedies -- some of which are less effective, costly, and riddled with
negative side-effects.By working with, and not against nature, we increase our
chance of a more healthy life, while decreasing our risk of disease and
premature bodily limitations and dysfunctions.
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