Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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52  
The Complete Home Guide todiHseerabsse, Nsatural Healing, and Nutrition  
252  
ones like carrot, parsnip, and sweet potato.Also eat plenty of cabbage,  
brussels sprouts, caulif ower, kale, mustard greens, and watercress to  
suppress excess thyroid hormone production.  
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Try eating six small meals rather than three large meals a day.  
Avoid dairy products and all stimulants, including tea, coffee, and  
alcohol.  
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Avoid seaweeds, particularly bladder wrack and kelp, as they contain  
iodine which will overprovoke the thyroid.  
f The nervous system needs to be treated with sedatives to calm and  
feed it. Use chamomile f ower, skullcap leaf, and even valerian root as  
a short-term measure. More specif c treatments may be needed ac-  
cording to the individual situation.  
f Immune-system and adrenal debility is often the cause (or an added  
problem), so echinacea root and Siberian ginseng root are useful.  
f Take hormonal tonic herbs: chaste tree berry for both women and  
men, or saw palmetto berry for men (or both for both sexes) with  
fenugreek seed and a little Chinese licorice root.  
~
The liver, colon, and entire endocrine system will need individual as-  
sistance and support for overall balance (see “The Thyroid” in chapter  
9).  
painful periods (dysmenorrhea)  
Dysmenorrhea can be initiated by an inadequate calcium and magnesium  
supply; these are needed to f ex and squeeze the uterine wall muscles in  
order for menstruation to begin. The womb can also be burdened with  
old toxic and stagnant discharge as a result of poor monthly f ow owing to  
poor circulation or because of inadequate womb peristalsis. The resulting  
congestion can cause tremendous pain. Often, once a womb has expanded  
to hold a baby and gone through the huge peristaltic waves needed for  
childbirth, this problem diminishes. Some women can experience  
dysmenorrhea for the f rst time after childbirth, however, because of the  
huge drop in magnesium and calcium levels associated with pregnancy  
and breast-feeding. These levels need to be replenished. Occasionally, a  
uterus is positioned in a way that makes menstruation diff cult. This  
possibility can be considered should all else fail, but the uterus is normally  
individually aligned and will change alignment throughout one’s life.  
Women age thirty to thirty-f ve years old may suddenly develop an  
aching abdomen, legs, and thighs, which may be caused by a congestive  
buildup. Symptoms include sweating, fever, nausea, fainting, and intense  
physical pain caused by muscle spasms. Fibroids, endometriosis,  


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