Aromatherapy &
You
by: Lisa Maliga
Aromas are inescapable! Think about how you encounter them on a
daily basis from roses in the garden, a cup of steaming mochacchino
or soothing jasmine tea, basil that permeates spaghetti sauce, and
fresh citrus juices. Noses detect hundreds of scents a day, and
of those, the aromas of plants, fruits, barks and roots are able
to do more than just feed us. Leaves from the tea tree plant not
only heal cuts and burns, but the essential oil is strong enough
to use as an all-purpose cleaner. The lavender flower yields an
oil that can ward off insects, reduce stress, scent linens and get
rid of bruises. Peppermint oil is a natural way to bid farewell
to unwanted houseguests like bugs and mice.
Did you know that the sodas and flavored bottled
waters you drink contain essential oils? That the common vanilla
flavor you find in ice cream is made from dark brown vanilla pods?
Perfumes and colognes contain numerous blends of essential oils.
High quality soaps, shampoos, bath oils, body powders and lotions
all include varied essences of flowers, plants and fruits.
I had many successful experiences using pure
essential oils, and I have read and heard of so many others enjoying
relief from pain, healing of skin problems, awakening of positive
spirits, etc. For example, a few years ago, before I had my own
bath & body products business, I had to find a full time job.
That prospect didn’t make me enthusiastic, yet after applying
a small dab of lemon essential oil, diluted in a jojoba oil carrier
base, I was feeling cheerful and positive. This in turn came through
in the interview and I was hired that afternoon.
What is Aromatherapy?
Aromatherapy is a therapeutic natural practice
that can be used to advance health, beauty and a sense of ease.
It involves using pure essential oils with various methods, including
bathing, inhalation and massage. Aromatherapy is derived from two
words: Aroma means scent and Therapy means treatment. This scent/treatment
has evolved over the centuries and across continents.
In his book “The Art of Aromatherapy”
Robert B. Tisserand examines what happened to mankind during the
twentieth century: “Our minds have run away with us, and as
we have become more obsessive, so we have become steadily more neurotic.
As doctors increase their knowledge of disease so disease becomes
more tenacious and widespread. As new drugs are formulated and marketed,
the harm done by those drugs increases proportionally.”
Aromatherapy works in harmony with your body. Side effects from
properly administered dosages are absent. Your body becomes stronger
as it’s fed the complex nutrients of purity from essential
oils, not something synthesized in a lab and deprived of all its
components. There are no new essential oils—only the same,
reliable plant life that has been used successfully for thousands
of years. Combining the rich and fragrant oils of rose, jasmine
and neroli, for example, may appear to be a new twist to you, but
guaranteed this expensive blend of floral oils have been utilized
for an individual with an overactive mind [stress!] some other time
and place.
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