Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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The Complete Home Guide to Herbs, Natural Healing, and Nutrition  
The Roots of Herbalism  
Archaeological evidence tells us that during their time as hunter-  
gatherers, humans collected and consumed approximately one hundred to  
two hundred different plant species in any one year. The diverse chemical  
compounds in these plants would have greatly protected the immune  
system and stimulated digestion more efficiently than does our modern  
diet. Not only did humankind flourish on this diet, but so did the animals  
that people subsequently consumed. Sadly, the same cannot be said of the  
animal foods” of today.  
Modern people’s normal dietary range of plants is generally only  
between twenty and forty species. These include carrots, cabbages,  
potatoes, parsnips, onions, apples, bananas, strawberries, peaches, lettuce,  
tomatoes, peas, broccoli, beans, wheat, blackberries, zucchini and other  
squashes, oil made from sunflower seeds or olives, lemons, garlic, chiles,  
and rice. Supermarkets, on average, stock thirty to thirty-five species. It is  
an unfortunate fact that many of these plants are also genetically  
engineered. Their chemical composition today is far removed from that  
of the wild plants they once were, which is an important health  
consideration. Interestingly, a herbalist’s materia medica is normally in  
the range of one hundred to two hundred plants, some of which are used  
frequently, some less so, while others are used very rarelyvery much as  
the historical range of food species would have been used. Herbs give us  
back the diversity of plants in our lives, their complex chemistries mixing  
to form patterns as individual and necessary as those taking place in every  
human being.  
The Chinese, like many other peoples, spend a lot of time considering  
the correlation between our bodies and our entire existence, recognizing  
that we are in fact part of the sun, stars, moon, earth, and nature. Their  
diagnostic work also takes into consideration the effect of geography on  
our impressionable bodiesof heat, cold, damp, high or low altitude, and  
how they correspond to the temperatures of our own bodies, which consist  
mostly of water and minerals. Native Americans, Russians, and peoples of  
many other cultures have used these systems, which show a high degree  
of similarity in technique and wisdom. Tibetans have similar, yet unique,  
forms of understanding disease, which have stemmed from their  
experience of day-to-day life on their harsh, barren mountainsides. The  
monks of these Tibetan mountains were often the primary healers in the  
scattered villages. Among other things, they were excellent at reading the  
eye, its color, markings, and depths, with each area of the eye giving clues  
about particular parts of the body, genetic tendencies, emotional  
predispositions, and so on. A modern-day version of this therapy is now  
called iridology; it remains a brilliant tool for assessing constitutional and  


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