Archive for the ‘Essential Oils’ Category

Sage Oil and Its Traditional Use for Controlling Excessive Perspiration

Monday, June 6th, 2011

Sage Essential OilIt’s hard to identify the age of nature’s medicine chest. Plants and trees have been healing aches and pains as well as wounds and scratches for centuries. Oils from the plant kingdom have balanced the central nervous system, healed the intestinal system, and stimulated the circulatory and respiratory systems long before people wrote about those accomplishments. Sage oil is one of those ancient oils that have helped humans function in every time-space reality.

The miraculous properties of sage oil, along with other essential oils, were verbally passed down from generation to generation around the Mediterranean region. Through the years Dioscorides, Galen, and Pliny all recommended sage as a diuretic, and for its hemostatic emmenagogue, and tonic properties.

Before the centuries were marked with double digits, monks kept sage in their medicine cabinets. The Greeks called it “sphakos,” and Romans called it “salvia.” Charlemagne recommended it for cultivation in France decades later, and the British started using it in food recipes before there was a Britain.

Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist, was the first to describe sage in 1753. Salvia officinalis was the official name in those days, but it has been classified under many names since then. The new world woke up in that century, and discovered this powerful herb that could ward off evil spirits, cure snakebites, and increase women’s fertility. That’s what the Romans used the oil for, and the Egyptians used it as a local anesthetic.

During the Middle Ages, sage and three other herbs were combined and used to fight symptoms of the plague, but now sage is grown and harvested all over Europe and other continents. Sage oil and leaves are used for culinary recipes as well as for healing a variety of ailments, which includes controlling excess perspiration.

The National Institute of Herbalists sent out a survey to its members in the UK and asked them to comment on their experiences with sage oil. Forty-nine people responded and forty-seven of them used sage oil in their practice for hot flashes, night sweats as well as for its effect on memory and brain functions

Sage relieved excessive perspiration by over 50% in an unpublished German study. The study was based on a group of people suffering from bouts of heavy sweating, which was brought on by nervous tension and excitement.

Mouth and throat as well as gastrointestinal issues like mouth ulcers, infected gums, dental abscesses, and throat infections are also treated with sage oil. The essential oil of sage is used in aromatherapy to treat salmonella and escherichia coli as well as yeasts infections like Candida albicans and filamentous fungi.

Modern 21st century folks call sage oil ‘the ancient remedy with modern day effectiveness.”

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Mandarin Oil as a Particular for Supporting Liver Functions

Monday, June 6th, 2011

Mandarin Essential OilMandarin fruit was a traditional gift to the Mandarins of China who were the scholar-bureaucrats that ran the imperial government. Mandarin trees were introduced to Europe in the 18th century, and the French were the first group to use mandarin oil to treat the elderly as well as children who were experiencing digestive issues.

Americans began cultivating mandarin trees shortly after the Europeans so the term tangerine became popular in several societies. The tangerine trees in the US and Europe produced fruit than was rounder and more yellow in color than the Asian mandarin, but tangerine oil and mandarin oil have the same therapeutic uses in aromatherapy.

The principle use of mandarin oil is to treat liver and digestive disorders as well as to treat indigestion and intestinal issues. The oil is also used in aromatherapy to treat insomnia, mood swings, stress, oily skin, acne, and stretch marks. Mandarin can be used during pregnancy, and it is often used on children who have the hiccups or an upset stomach.

Mandarin oil is especially effective when it is combined with sunflower oil for skin issues, and it can also be used with lavender, neroli, almond, and wheat germ oil to help prevent stretch marks. When mandarin essential oil is combined with other citrus oils it helps calm the intestines and thanks to the antiseptic, carminative, digestive, anti-spasmodic diuretic, laxative, sedative, and stimulant properties of the oil the major application for the oil is treating liver and stomach idiosyncrasies.

The fresh sweet orange aroma of this essential oil also blends well with cinnamon, nutmeg, clove, lemon, lime, and grapefruit. Mandarin oil contains myrcene, limonene, linalool, alpha-pinene, ß-pinene, y-terpinolene, camphene, sabinene citronellal, terpineol-4-ol, geranial and nerol, and those constituents help promote a finer textured skin by encouraging the growth of new skin cells. The oil may cause a phototoxic reaction if the skin is exposed to the sun for an extended period of time.

The chemical compounds found in limonene increase the amount liver enzymes that detoxify free radicals, and the carcinogens that invaded the liver. Some studies indicate that limonene reduce mammary tumor growth. Linalool can also have a positive impact on liver functions by decreasing the viability of HepG2 cell line, which creates liver cancer. Linalool actually stops these cells from replicating.

Those two constituents as well as the others play a significant role in preventing liver abnormalities, which means the digestive and intestinal systems as well as all the other systems can function effectively. Mandarin oil may not be the first essential oil on anyone’s list, but those thoughts should be reconsidered, especially if the internal system needs extra care.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Spruce Oil Has Adrenal and Respiratory Support Properties

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

Spruce Essential OilMany wise men have said that nature is our classroom; it’s filled with metaphors and anomalies that exist within our own inner world. Nature surrounds us so we can reconnect with the world that some call the foundation for all the probabilities that manifest on this physical platform. Spruce oil is a good example of how nature can interact with the cells in the body and normalize hormone secretion. It does it work by uplifting the spirit when it is inhaled in aromatherapy.

Native Americans used spruce for centuries not because someone told them it had qualities that could enhance well being; they use the oil because their innate sense of knowing guided them to it. There were no prescriptions written or expensive doctor visits to deal with; there was just this inner self knowing that gave them the ability to use nature the way it was designed.

Nature is our medicine chest and it’s filled with chemical compounds that interact with out internal system. The Indians used spruce oil to balance their respiratory and nervous system back in those days, plus the oil was inhaled before meditation so a connection could be made with another aspect of the self.

The fact that spruce oil could sooth aching muscles, improve breathing, and get rid of lingering coughs that made the body weak, and the mind irritable, was passed from one generation to the next. No had to tell them that aromatherapy oils could be mixed with pine, florals, and cedarwood oil to strengthen the body; they did it naturally.

They didn’t know that spruce oil was mainly made up of chemicals like bornyl acetate or that smaller amounts of limonene, borneol, camphor a- and ß-pinene, camphene, 3-carene, myrcene, a- and ß-phellandrene, p-cymene, 1:8-cineole, linalool, terpinen-4-ol, a-terpineol, piperitone, citronellyl and geranyl acetate, bisabolene and d-cadinene were in the oil as well. They use it because they sensed healing.

The fact that isothujone, santene, tricyclenethujone, terpinenes, and isoborneol are also in the oil didn’t faze them a bit because they never questioned their innate awareness. It was natural instinct.

American natives knew that the white, black, and red spruce trees were in the forest to take care of them. They developed their own traditional methods to take advantage of what surrounded them. That kind of knowing is still present in the human psyche, but it has been shrouded by preconceived beliefs and controlled behavior. Spruce essential oil is still available to expand those limited beliefs about healing with pure essential oils.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Rosewood Oil Acts As a General Tonic for the Nervous System

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

Rosewood Essential OilThe natives living in the Amazon jungle have been using rosewood for centuries. The French call it ‘bois de rose‘ and found that it helps relieve stress, sexual issues, and respiratory problems. There’s no written account, but the Brazilians say they combined rosewood oil with other oils and use the blend for various skin conditions, and the oil itself was used to treat impotence. The global demand for rosewood oil didn’t really kick in until the 1900s, but in Brazil rosewood trees and rosewood oil have been a big part of their rich culture for decades. Abuses of rosewood forests have been brought to the forefront in the last twenty years.

This interesting essential oil has some powerful chemical components, which are found in a variety of other essential oils that treat a number of physical and mental ailments. The myrcene, limonene, linalool, and 1,8-cineole found in rosewood oil are common chemical compounds found in other evergreen species.

The camphene, geraniol, neral, geranial, a-pinene, benzaldehyde, and a-terpineol in Brazilian rosewood trees are also found in other species. Benzaldehyde is not always found in evergreens, but it is found in almonds, apples, apricots, and cherry kernels. It’s the compound that gives those essences a slight almond aroma.

The oil is extracted from the wood chips of the tree by steam distillation. The therapeutic properties of the oil are tonic, anti septic, stimulant, and anti-bacterial. That means minor cuts, wounds, and insect bites can heal faster when essential rosewood oil is applied to the area. When the oil is used in aromatherapy, depression, sadness, and disappointment seem to lift and lessen.

Rosewood oil interacts with several hormones and functions as a stimulant that gets the internal systems running properly, which means indigestion, acid and bile build-ups, and poor circulation issues vanish as the chemicals in the oil rejuvenates damaged cells and tissue. In vapor therapy, rosewood oil helps relieve coughs, headaches, nausea, and nervous tension as well as infections. When rosewood oil is added to floral oils to make skin lotions, wrinkles begin to fade, and the skin has a healthy glow after a few treatments.

One of the most important uses for rosewood oil is as a tonic to treat nervous tension. It lowers the anxiety level, clear confusion, strengthen focus, and balances PMS mood swings. Stress related allergies diminish, and in some cases disappear altogether when the oil is used in aromatherapy products.

Rosewood oil blends well with bergamot, orange, neroli, rose, grapefruit, lime, lemon, jasmine, and lavender oil, so it’s found in lotions, tonics, and creams designed to treat skin cell degeneration as well as muscle and joint pain.

The rest of the world use to wonder why Brazilians had smooth skin, easy dispositions, and a carefree lifestyle. The answer is obvious now. It’s not the water; it’s the rosewood oil… maybe. :)

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Wintergreen Oil Is a Natural Pain Relief Alternative

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

Wintergreen Essential OilNative Americans knew how to take care of their bodies using the natural remedies that surrounded them. The plants and trees that grew around them offered their services and the natives instinctively used them. They learned what plants had the power to heal using the trial and error method.

That method was fine tuned through the centuries, and the learned knowledge was passed from one generation to another. Native Americans understood what the body needed to maintain the energy to hunt as well as to build and procreate. They relied on the plant kingdom to support their natural body functions.

Wintergreen was one of those natural allies that could help them increase their lung capacity as well as help respiratory conditions when they chewed the leaves. The natives learned that the oil could never be swallowed on its own; it was toxic when ingested. But that didn’t stop them from chewing the leaves or mixing the oil they extracted by steaming the leaves for joint and muscle pain as well as for slowing down a mucous discharge brought on by a respiratory illness.

The wintergreen oil contains methyl salicylate and a little gaultherilene, which makes it a precursor to common aspirin. The salicylates enter the cells and tissues to inhibit the formation of prostaglandins, and that action reduces inflammation and pain, but the oil must be diluted to limit transdermal absorption. Most oil blends contain less than 25% wintergreen oil so the body can tolerate it.

Wintergreen essential oil has anti-rheumatic, anti-inflammatory, astringent, diuretic, antitussive, carminative, emmenagogue, stimulant and galactagogue properties. The essential oil is often included in formulas that open breathing passages. When the vapor of blended oil is inhaled in aromatherapy, the unmistakable aroma can stimulate the mind and clear the sinuses. Wintergreen blends nicely with eucalyptus and ravensara to achieve sinus relief.

The main purpose of blended wintergreen oil is to relieve conditions like gout, neuralgia, lumbago, fibromyalgia, and sciatica. Arthritis sufferers can also get relief when wintergreen oil is blended with other essential oils in dilution such as thyme, peppermint, oregano, and ylang-ylang. A warm wintergreen oil massage helps weak muscles and joints and when wintergreen oil is added to facial massage ingredients, it helps relieve headaches. Some users consider the oil a liquid bottle of aspirin, but it should be used with care. The oil should be used in modest amounts because it can thin the blood just like aspirin. When it is used appropriately it produces excellent results.

The old practice of chewing wintergreen leaves to relieve pain has disappeared, but wintergreen oil is an excellent alternative to that old way of getting the body ready for a day of life experiences.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Nutmeg Oil and Its Mild Hypnotic and Aphrodisiac Properties

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

Nutmeg Essential OilNutmeg powder has been a valued commodity for centuries. The Chinese were the first to recognize nutmeg’s medicinal abilities, and the Indonesians were the first to sniff it and expand their awareness. The natives used it to hallucinate, but when they used it in extreme quantities they found it could be fatal.

The scent as well as the taste made nutmeg a popular spice during the 15th and 16th centuries. Byzantine traders sold it to the Arabs, and those folks actually named it “mesk.” The French called it “noix muguette” and the English transliterated the name to “nut meg.”

The Europeans fell in love with this tantalizing spice. Middle Eastern food was filled with it so the Portuguese set out to find the Spice Islands in Indonesia and cultivate it themselves. Thanks to their due diligence and Dutch intervention, Grenada and Indonesia now produce a large amount of the world’s nutmeg, but Sri Lanka, Papua New Guinea, and St. Vincent in the Caribbean produce large amounts of nutmeg as well.

The ingredients in nutmeg oil are myristicin, limonene, l-terpineol, d-pinene, d-borneol geraniol and safrol, which make the oil colorless, but it smells and tastes like nutmeg powder. The cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries use the oil in toothpaste and in cough syrup, and in traditional medicine it’s used to treat nervous disorders as well as digestive issues.

The New England Journal of Medicine published an article on the narcotic effects of nutmeg oil in 1964 and once again in 1971. The psychoactive powers of the oil are well documented. Students, prisoners, sailors, alcoholics, and marijuana users switch to nutmeg oil from time to time to experience out of body experiences as well as to “get high,” but the impact of nutmeg on the internal system can be debilitating if it is not controlled.

Other reports list nutmeg essential oil as an aphrodisiac since low doses can increase the libido, which increases sexual activity. The sexual stimulating properties of the oil can be traced back to the chemical compound myristicin. Traditional medicine has been using nutmeg oil to treat male sexual disorders for years, and aromatherapy also uses it to stimulate the libido.

The recreational qualities of nutmeg may take about four hours to manifest. Large doses can produce uncontrollable sleep as well as dehydration. Nutmeg oil does help some people reach a state of bliss, which some call a hypnotic state. The experience seems like another reality, but that reality can help increase the sex drive in some men. The oil stimulates the libido, plus it has a pleasing aroma and great taste among essential oils, and those qualities alone make nutmeg renowned in the natural world.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Rosemary Oil and Its Ability to Enhance Memory

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

Rosemary Essential OilRosemary or Rosmarinus, which means “sea dew” in Latin, developed a reputation for being a sacred plant that wards off evil spirits. The oil was also used as protection from the plague. The Romans and the Greeks used it for all sorts of things. Rosemary was always around during wedding ceremonies, religious rituals, and family gatherings. The Egyptians liked it and burned it as incense, and the French burnt it in hospitals during the Middle Ages.

Paracelsus said that rosemary oil strengthened the entire body back in the 16th century. He believes the oil had the ability to heal the liver, heart, and brain, and modern medicine agrees with him. Rosemary is used for flatulence, stomach cramps, and other digestive issues, plus it stimulates hair follicles, and prevents premature hair loss.

Rosemary oil is great for boosting mental awareness and brain activity. Students use it to concentrate during exams, and when used as an aromatherapy oil it helps with depression, mental fatigue, and short term memory loss. When rosemary oil is inhaled it lifts the spirits, and removes that feeling of boredom. A surge of energy quietly infiltrates the innate senses as the vapor is inhaled.

A diluted rosemary oil bath or massage can alleviate headaches as well as the agony and pain of arthritis and rheumatism. A regular rosemary massage will remove dryness and tone the skin. The oil is also a great disinfectant and can be used as a mouthwash.

The chemical constituents of rosemary oil give it the ability to boost mental alertness as well as act as a hormone stabilizer. Those constituents are limonene, 1,8-cineole, borneol, a-pinene, b-pinene, bornyl acetate, camphene, and camphor.

The therapeutic properties are: nervine, digestive, analgesic, astringent, carminative, cephalic, diuretic, cholagogue, antidepressant, cordial, tonic, emmenagogue, and hepatic, as well as hypertensive, rubefacient, sudorific, and stimulant. The diuretic properties of the oil also help reduce water retention and cellulite, plus it’s used to treat certain obesity cases.

The oil also helps ease congestion, swelling and puffiness, and it is effective on bronchitis, sinus, and sagging skin. One of the main things that rosemary does is increase circulation throughout the body. More oxygen gets to the organs, especially the brain, and that helps increase mental functions.

Paracelsus believed that rosemary oil could help heal the gall bladder and liver as well as the heart, and modern medicine has confirmed his beliefs. Rosemary oil is one of the most important essential oils in aromatherapy because it continues to produce results in terms of physical and mental well being.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Clove Bud Oil and Its Anti-Tumor Potential

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

Clove Essential OilAnyone who has tried Mexican, Indian, or Vietnamese cuisine has tasted dried cloves mixed with cinnamon and cumin but may not have recognized the flavor unless it’s mentioned on the menu. Cloves have been used for centuries to accentuate the taste of ethnic foods. The locals in Indonesia use cloves to make cigarettes called kreteks, which are smoked throughout Europe, Asia, and the US, and cloves are an important incense ingredient in China and Japan as well as in Jewish ceremonies.

Clove bud oil has been used for thousands of years in Ayurvedic medicine as well as in Chinese medicine. The oil helps relieve stomach, kidney, and spleen issues. The Western world adopted the use of clove bud oil in dentistry as well as in aromatherapy due to its natural anthelmintic ability, and its ability to warm the digestive tract. The oil is also used as a topical remedy for hypotonic muscles and it helps with symptoms of multiple sclerosis. West Africans and Tibetans use clove bud oil to calm upset stomachs, vomiting, and diarrhea.

When all the uses for clove bud oil are listed, there are not too many physical disturbances that have not been treated at one time or another with cloves and the essential oil extracted from cloves. Clove bud oil blends well with other essential oils like cinnamon bark, peppermint, rosemary, citronella, grapefruit, lemon, orange, and nutmeg.

Eugenol is the main constituent in clove oil. Over seventy percent of the essential oil extracted from cloves contains eugenol, which is well known for its anesthetic, anti-inflammatory, and antiseptic properties. The clove oil actually has an impact on contaminants like tetrachloromethane, and cancer related to the digestive tract. Joint inflammation is another aliment that’s relieved when clove bud oil is used in massage therapy.

New studies show that clove bud oil has the potential to prevent cancerous growth since it contains an abundance of flavonoids as well as calcium, magnesium, vitamin C, and omega-3 fatty acids as well as other phytonutrients.

Other studies show that when clove bud oil is combined with cod liver oil it makes a huge difference in inflammatory disease treatments. Clove oil is already a proven pain reliever and germicidal, and an excellent topical agent, especially when it is combined with coconut and almond oil. The antispasmodic properties of the oil also alleviate muscle aches and pains when it is combined with other ingredients.

The positive aromatherapy results from using clove bud oil continue to register high on the wellness chart because of its ability to remove harmful toxins from the body, and to stimulate the excretory system.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Labdanum Oil Enhances Neural Activity

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Labdanum Essential OilLabdanum is one of those shrubs that makes ancient history an interesting as well as intriguing tale. Mediterranean sheep and goat herders were the first group to figure out what to do with the sticky resin from the bushes. They collected the resin by combing the thighs and beards of goats that grazed on the cistus shrubs. They developed wooden rakes with a double row of wooden thongs to sweep the shrubs so the resin could be collected and then extracted.

The pharaohs were the first group to use labdanum on the body. Most of them wore goat hair beards, which were attached to the face with labdanum. The resin was also used to treat rheumatism, colds, and menstrual problems. Some biblical scholars believe that the holy incense mentioned in the bible (Ketoret) was actually labdanum.

The labdanum oil used in aromatherapy is actually a product of steam distilling the leaves and branches of the shrubs. Labdanum’s aroma is described as sweet, woody, and leathery with a dry musk as well as amber scent. The perfume industry uses labdanum because it displays a variety of scents that can be enhanced in the perfume making process.

Most essential oils have antiseptic, antimicrobial, astringent, expectorant, balsamic, antitussive, emmenagogue, and tonic properties and labdanum is no different. The oil is used to treat diarrhea, dysentery, skin conditions, tumors, and arthritis because it blends well with clary sage, pine, juniper berry, cyprus, lavender, bergamot, sandalwood, and chamomile oil. The oil can be massaged into the skin or diluted in a bath to relieve coughs, colds, and scrofulous skin issues.

The main use for Labdanum is to relax the nerves, ease stress, and promote a calm presence. When the thick labdanum oil is warm it is reputed to have the ability to change thoughts, which move emotions back from the brink of negativity, and into the light of connected control.

The oil will loosen tight muscles, and improve circulation; it carries more oxygen to the organs and the brain. When stress stretches the nervous system to the point of depression or when the emotions titter on the brink of a hormonal overload, labdanum will interact with the adrenal glands and begin to balance hormone secretion.

Loyal labdanum users like to combine meditation with a few drops of the oil in order to reach a state of relaxation, often with other essential oils such as frankincense to deepen the breath or patchouli for its cherished grounding effects. That process helps neural impulses return to their normal state, and emotions flow in a stream of positive thoughts.

Labdanum oil is considered a mood enhancer that will bring the body and the mind together so the nervous as well as the circulatory, respiratory, and intestinal systems work efficiently. The ancients knew it was the oil fit for kings, and aromatherapy is bringing that thought back in focus.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Cedarwood Oil and Deep Tissue Massage to Breakdown Cellulite

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Cedarwood Essential OilCedarwood has been used for over 5,000 years and for several good reasons. The ancient Sumerians as well as the Egyptians believed cedarwood could connect the body with the mind in rituals ceremonies. The Egyptians also believed that the body should be embalmed in cedarwood so the journey to the other side was a smooth transition.

Scripture writers tell stories about Solomon and his love for cedarwood. He built his temple and palace from the Cedars of Lebanon, which made him the wisest man on the planet. Cedar was a symbol for strength, connection, and protection in those ancient days. Cedarwood oil continues to attract people who want to connect with their soul consciousness in this physical plane, but it is also used as insect repellant as well as a bacteria preventive.

Cedarwood essential oil is fantastic for breaking down cellulite and it’s one of the main oils used for deep massages. But, the therapeutic qualities of cedarwood oil don’t stop there. This aromatherapy oil is effective for hair loss, acne, psoriasis, urinary tract infections, and bronchitis. Attention deficient disorder and compulsive behavior can be treated with cedarwood oil, and it reduces the risk of hardening of the arteries.

Cedarwood stimulates the pineal gland so melatonin is released to promote deep sleep. The pineal gland not only releases melatonin it also open channels to innate senses that are buried under beliefs about separation. The Sumerians were the first to discover this awakening, but it has been an interesting as well as beneficial side effect experienced by ancient cultures around the world. The real benefit of using this essential oil on a regular basis is the emotional and spiritual transformation that develops when the oil is used in an aromatherapy session.

The therapeutic properties of this amazing oil are astringent, antiseborrhoeic, diuretic, antiseptic, antispasmodic, tonic, fungicide, insecticide, sedative, emmenagogue, and expectorant. The oil has the ability to sedate the skin, which relieves itching, and it acts as a general tonic, which helps control acne, dandruff, and oily skin.

In vapor therapy this essential oil can be used to relieve arthritis, rheumatism, and respiratory issues. The oil can be massaged into the skin or diluted in a bath to relieve painful joints, cystitis, and catarrh.

When cedarwood is blended with other essential oils such as cinnamon, bergamot, frankincense, juniper, benzoin, cypress, rosemary, jasmine, lavender, neroli, rose and lemon the results are better than expected, especially when cellulite and muscle pain cause unnecessary stress on the body.

Ancient civilizations knew the importance of using cedarwood especially when the body was in a state of distress. The physical and mental connection that humans have with cedarwood oil is so special that it can’t be taken for granted. The old remedies are new again and cedarwood oil tops the list when it comes to bringing the body and mind together in an innate as well as objective way.

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)