Saturday, October 29, 2016

Move Free – For Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

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Move Free – For Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

The pain and numbness of carpal tunnel syndrome is the result of the median nerve, which runs down the arm to the hand, being pinched, compressed, or somehow pressured as it passes through the carpal tunnel. The tunnel itself is made up of ligaments and bone, seated at the base of the hand, that creates a space for the nerve and flex tendons of the hand to pass through. The median nerve rests on top of the tendons as it passes through to the hand. It then divides into two branches, one branch to the thumb, the other to the index and middle fingers and half of the ring finger. The pinky finger is usually unaffected by symptoms except in severe cases of the syndrome.
Pressure on the median nerve can cause numbness and tingling around the thumb and first two fingers. It is often accompanied by weakness in the hand, making simple tasks like picking up a coffee cup or gripping a pencil, difficult and painful. Pain is more often worse during the night and in the mornings. The reason for this is that most people sleep with their wrists flexed or sleeping on their lower arms and hands. This can be so painful as to awaken the person from sleep. Because the median nerve is what causes sensations in the palm and fingers it branches into, as well as relaying messages to the small muscles, particularly at the base of the thumb, it can result in atrophy to those muscles if left untreated. The less those muscles are able to be used, the more weak the hand will become and the less it will be able to do. The affected fingers may also lose their touch sensitivity to heat or cold.
Before doing my research for this blend, I was under the impression that carpal tunnel syndrome was primarily caused by excessive repetitive motion of the hands and wrist. While this does aggravate the problem, clinical studies don’t support it being a primary cause. More often it’s simply a matter of being born with a carpal tunnel that is smaller than normal. Trauma or injury to the wrist, by way of a sprain or fracture that causes inflammation and swelling is another leading cause of the syndrome. Rheumatoid arthritis, fluid retention, a cyst or tumor in the tunnel or wrist, mechanical problems with the wrist joint itself, repetitive use of vibrating hand tools, are all possible causes of carpal tunnel syndrome.
Women are more likely to have the condition because their bones and supporting structures are smaller than that of men. Carpal tunnel syndrome is only found in adults. Stresses and injuries to the hands and wrist take their toll over time. Being so vital to almost everything we do, the hands and wrist are probably the least likely to be able to truly rest and relax.
What does this blend do?
Aniseed essential oil is for pain relief and will reduce any swelling or tenderness in the area.
Known to speed up pain relief, German Chamomile essential oil acts as a cooling, relaxing tonic for the nerves. Because it helps reduce the swelling, pain, and tenderness, German chamomile oil is often used for inflamed joints, carpal tunnel, and tendonitis. It will help to promote good sleep to sufferers so much in need of sleep for rest and to aid the healing process.
Ginger’s health benefits have been used for thousands of years, around the globe, and in many different cultures. It’s used here for it’s assistance with the pain, swelling, inflammation, and support of weakness in the nerves.
Safety/Precautions
chamomile-blossoms-776851_640German Chamomile is considered non-irritating, non-toxic, with possible skin irritation if oxidized.
Aniseed should not be used if pregnant, breast-feeding; with estrogen related cancers or if conditions of diabetes, epilepsy, heart, or bleeding disorders are present or taking medications for same.
With this and with any blend you make, if you are under a doctor’s care, he should be consulted before employing alternative or complementary health protocols.
This blend is less than 1% dilution ration as recommended for blends using Aniseed and Ginger essential oils.
Usage Instructions
This lotion oil can be used daily as needed for pain, swelling, inflammation, and numbness in the wrist, hand, and fingers. Dab with cotton ball onto hand and wrist and gently massage in.
Ingredients and Tools
  • carrier: 1 oz. Carrier oil. Grapeseed oil was used in making this blend.
  • essential oils – 1 drops Ginger (Base note)
2 drops German Chamomile (Middle note)
3 drops Aniseed (Top note)
  • One-ounce bottle – tinted preferably to reduce exposure to light
Blending
  • Pour the carrier oil into the bottle.
  • Follow with the oils, starting with the Ginger, then German Chamomile, then Aniseed.
  • Cap and gently shake to mix.
Thoughts
  • If you’d like to stay away from the Aniseed because of the safety precautions, either Eucalyptus or Peppermint essential oils could be used in it’s place.
  • You can use this in a roll-on bottle instead of a simple capped bottle.
  • Any carrier oil that flows well can be used, even castor oil, despite it being a little thicker than some.

Dermal Absorption Rate and Administering Essential Oils Topically

healing touch massage

Dermal Absorption Rate and Administering Essential Oils Topically

Being a Massage Therapist for the past 16 years, I have seen first hand how the oils and crèmes I use are absorbed into my client’s skin. I have always had a deep interest about just how much Essential Oil is actually absorbed through the skin and into the bloodstream. During my studies with AromaHut: I am interested more than ever about this, plus concerned about what considerations should be taken when creating an Essential Oil blend for a client and administering this blend topically. It is important to know how quickly and to what extent Essential Oils penetrate the skin and find their way into the bloodstream. It is also pertinent to understand the factors that aid or hinder dermal absorption. Dermal absorption is the transport of a chemical from the outer surface of the skin both into the skin and into the body.

The question of absorption via the skin has been fairly mysterious and full of controversy for many years. Essential oils can and do affect the skin cells, but do they get into the body via lymph or bloodstream this way? Old research showing lavender in the bloodstream within a half hour after diluted skin application did not factor out inhalation, which is the quickest and most effective way of getting an essential oil into the bloodstream. Let’s dive deeper!

Skin’s Anatomy

First, we should revisit basic anatomy and the layers of the skin. The skin is the body’s largest organ and is essentially a water resistant barrier about 3 mm thick. The outermost layer of the skin is the epidermis, which is comprised of 4 to 5 layers (depending on the location in the body). The epidermis is broken down in layers: superficial to deep: stratum Corneum, stratum Lucidum (palms and soles only), stratum Granulosum, stratum Spinosum, and stratum Basale. As cells mature, they progress from the stratum basale, out toward the stratum corneum. By the time they reach the stratum corneum, they have become anucleated and highly keratinized. The highly keratinized nature of the stratum corneum renders it a highly effective protective barrier, especially from transepidermal water loss.
The innermost layer of the skin is called the dermis. It consists of connective tissue, nerve endings, blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, sweat glands, sebaceous glands, and hair follicles. For the purposes of transdermal absorption, the dermis provides minimal interference. The most significant barrier of transdermal absorption is the epidermis. By the time a transdermal agent has passed through the epidermis and reached the dermis, it has now gained easy access to blood vessels for systemic circulation.

Skin’s Permeability

For many years, biologists believed that the skin formed an impassable barrier to the outside world. We now know that this is not the case and that many substances are dermally absorbed to some degree. This knowledge has come at a great expense. For example, in the 1970s hexachlorophene was used as an antiseptic in baby soaps and talcs, causing brain damage and even death in some babies after it penetrated their skin. In fact, chemicals have been detected in human breath following dermal exposure. Nonetheless, the skin is still an important protective barrier. It limits the rate at which potential harmful substances enter the body, as well as preventing the loss of body fluids.
Since the cells of the stratum corneum are not living, they are incapable of registering a physiological response to toxic chemicals. Therefore, before an essential oil constituent can cause a toxic response in the skin or indeed anywhere else in the body, it must first cross the stratum corneum.

Considerations When Administering Essential Oils Topically

The aim of an Aromatherapist in administering essential oils is to elicit the maximum therapeutic benefits while keeping undesirable side effects to a minimum. One excellent way of administrating Essential Oils is topical applications. Essential Oils will absorb through the skin but there are other excellent benefits to consider.

Consider the route of administration

We have several choices of vehicles of administration when advising a client to use an essential oil topically.
Massage can increase dermal absorption by 34 to 158%! This may be due to the stimulating effect of massage on blood flow. In addition, when a client massages oils onto the skin, the skins overall temperature will increase due to friction and this also will increase absorption. Also, the client will inhale and thus getting the essential oil into the lungs.
Bath is another excellent way to administer essential oils. Hydration of the top layer, stratum corneum, such as occurs during a bath or shower, fosters essential oil absorption. The increase in temperature will benefit as well as inhalation.
Moisturizing lotion (an emulsion of liquid and oil) and carrier oils. When the Aromatherapist creates a lotion, butter or massage oil, not only will the Essential Oil absorb into the skin, the client will also inhale the Essential Oil as they apply the topical crème or oil, and they will receive the benefit of moisturizing the skin via the carrier oils.

Consider What Area of the Body

Medicinal products relying on skin absorption are frequently applied on areas of thinner epidermal layers, such as the axillary region. One might then assume that this would be true for essential oils, too. Some have suggested that fragrant molecules were more easily absorbed in openings in the skin, such as hair follicles and sweat glands. This gave rise to the idea that applying essential oils (often neat) to the feet, well known for their ability to sweat, was a potent way to deliver desired properties.
More recently, researchers studying absorption methods have conducted an experiment to study dermal penetration via the feet. This study was not about essential oils, but sought to investigate an urban myth claiming people could become drunk by submerging their feet in vodka. The conclusion proved that this was false and alcohol was not detected in the blood when samples were taken every 30 minutes for a total of 180 minutes. One would assume the same would hold true for essential oils. The feet’s skin layers are so much thicker than anywhere else on the body that is makes it very difficult for anything to break through.
Below is an image for absorption rates for different areas of the body.

Consider the Skin’s “health” and Age

Care must be taken if a client has irritated or injured skin. Essential oils will be able to penetrate much quicker and at a higher percentage with compromised skin. For example, in atopic dermatitis, the skin is likely to be broken so its function as a barrier to unfamiliar substances is compromised. This has obvious implications not only for the choice of an oil, but also the concentration for therapeutic effects and minimal toxicity.
Damaged skin can often benefit from using Essential Oils. This form of treatment may not be strictly ‘aromatherapy’, but it is closely allied. This is because the essential oils can have a direct pharmacological action on damaged tissues, as well as indirect beneficial effects on the mind if the aroma is perceived as pleasant.
Infant skin is much thinner than adult skin. The skin of pre-term infants is approximately 2.5 times more permeable than adult skin and before 30 weeks gestation it is 100-1000 times more permeable! Children up to three months are at increased risk of skin damage from topically applied agents. In the elderly, there is an overall thinning of the epidermis resulting in skin being more permeable. Also, recovery from skin injury is approximately three times slower in people over 80 than in those of 20 – 30 years of age.

Consider the EOs Constituents

Essential oils have a much smaller molecular weight than carrier oils and therefore pass through the skin quicker. When the molecular weight of an ingredient is under 500 Dalton (the standard measurement unit of atomic mass) then it is thought to be able to freely pass through the top layer of the skin, the stratum corneum. All essential oil constituents have molecular weights well under the 500 Dalton mark so they pass with relative ease. The thing is this: essential oil constituents, because they all have different molecular weights, will penetrate the stratum corneum at different speeds and percentages.
In 1940 a researcher called Straehli did some fascinating tests on essential oils. He found that all the oils tested appeared in his subjects’ breath following absorption through the skin. In other words, the essential oils penetrate into the skin, make it into the bloodstream, diffuse all around the body to various organs including the lungs and are then breathed out.
Further studies reveal that constituents absorb at different percentages. The “whole” essential oil does not permeate the skin at once. Terpinene and terpineol have shown no absorption through the skin, linalool (found in some 200 oils, including Rosewood, basil, clary sage, geranium) is at 2.8 to 3.6 %, geranial (ex: lemongrass, melissa, thyme, palmarosa) comes in as high as 7.3% and coumarin (found in cassia leaf, cassia bark and lavender absolute) is shown to be as high as 33%!
This study, and others that have been undertaken since then, show that essential oil constituents certainly do make it into the bloodstream – and much further than that.
Another important consideration of essential oil constituents is some also enhance dermal absorption of their own and that of other substances. Some, such as methyl salicylate, may do this in part by increasing local capillary blood flow. This could be a problem for someone who is taking prescription drugs through a dermal patch or applied to skin. Controlled dosage is important for safe and effective treatment, any enhancement from coincidental aromatherapy could have adverse effects. For example, eucalyptus oil and camphor enhanced nicotine absorption through drug patches.

Other Considerations

  • Increase in Temperature from the bath or even the friction from a massage will also increase absorption rates.
  • Covered skin will absorb Essential oils quicker than that of uncovered skin. This is due to the fact that essential oils will evaporate quicker on uncovered skin and covered skin will stay warmer.
  • There have even been studies done that show skin is more permeable in the evening than in the morning! Also, deeply pigmented skin has superior barrier integrity and function compared to less pigmented skin.

Dosage

Safety limits have been set by Robert Tisserand, an expert in the field of essential oil safety and author of Essential Oil Safety. He states that the maximum percentage for essential oil applied topically is 5%. This is assuming the adult client has no contraindications and has healthy skin. This means dilute in a carrier oil or another vehicle to carry the essential oil. We must limit dermal dosing for essential oils that contain carcinogens (cancer causing), neurotoxic (destructive to nerve tissue), or phototoxic (skin irritation with sun exposure) constituents. For children and elderly, great caution is necessary and the dosage is much smaller than that of an adult. Essential oils are extremely potent, wonderfully therapeutic gifts from nature, but misused they can cause much harm.

Conclusion

I have read and heard of way too many well meaning people putting essential oils on their skin without any reservations: and even worse, advising others to do the same. I have always read from professional Aromatherapy organizations to take careful consideration when using essential oils topically. It is my passion to educate myself and others in effective yet safe essential oil use.
When administering essential oils to a client you must consider obvious things such as: is the client on medications, the age of the client, is the client pregnant, epileptic, have allergies, and/or have low or high blood pressure. In addition, there are so many other things we should consider to make our treatments as effective as possible. These are things such as: how much surface area is to be treated, what vehicle is being used (crème, oil, gel), the health of the skin, the temperature and moisture content of the skin, will the skin be covered or washed soon after administering, what constituents are in the essential oils we are suggesting and are there any contraindications and even what area of the body are we administering to. These considerations can make treatments much more effective and reduce the amount of adverse reactions.



REFERENCES:


Rebecca Park Totilo (2015) Aromatherapy Certification Program
Robert Tisserand, Rodney Young (2014) Essential Oil Safety. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone
Lorraine Dallmeier, Formula Botanica
US National Library of Medicine
Naturopathic Doctor News & Review: http://ndnr.com/mindbody/dermal-absorption-of-essential-oils/
Maritn Watt, Aromatic Thymes, 1995, Volume 3, Number 2, 11-13
Sylla Sheppard Hanger & Martin Watt: Cutaneous Absorption (or the lack of) of Essential Oils
http://www.aromamedical.org/PDF/Skin%20absorption.pdf
Massage Today: http://www.massagetoday.com/mpacms/mt/article.php?id=14904

Aromatherapy Options for Child-Birthing by Brittany Wilhelm

Aromatherapy Options for Child-Birthing

Aromatherapy Options for Child-Birthing by Brittany Wilhelm

Life is a beautiful miracle. The most exhilarating experience of giving birth is mixed with both bittersweet pain and the most euphoric joy once the new little life is placed into the mother’s welcoming arms. Nine months of carrying this growing baby in her womb strengthens the immediate bond established between mother and her baby at the very moment of entrance from her womb. All hardship is forgotten, and now love and joy encompass this precious little baby as he or she begins a brand new life.
Every human being today has come into this world through the most spectacular of delivery processes from the mother’s intricate womb. The birthing of a child is a most natural course of life, and a very beautiful one. Many incredible activities are happening in the mother’s body in such a uniquely harmonious fashion, allowing her to bring forth a new generation from her own flesh. The mystery of proliferation has always been of the greatest enigmas of life.

The Birthing Process

A multitude of complex movements happening amongst the mother’s organs, hormones, bodily chemicals, and intelligent cellular communication are happening during this process. Her systems have to work conjunctively together in the most stressful of minutes and yet still in perfect communication. She is feeling sensations in areas she’s never felt before; her muscles are stretching like they’ve never stretched before, and the intruding thoughts she has to battle in order to make it through this long delivery moment. The end result is so much more fulfilling than she would have thought possible during the difficult progression.
All this accumulation of stress happening in the birthing mother’s body is collectively called a process of “labor”, where her internal muscles are working in capacities and intensities that they don’t normally work in. The physiology of this process involves three major hormones which initiate and further the progress of labor, and then help the mother through the recovery process as the baby begins life outside of the uterus. The three hormones are: catecholamines (stress hormones), oxytocin, and endorphins.
When the labor pains increase, the levels of oxytocin are rising in her body. The instinctive reaction is for her to change positions and try to ease the pain through slight movements. High oxytocin levels along with the increased pain send messages to the brain with more hormones, which causes the endorphins to be released. When these arrive, they help decrease the perception of the labor pain and moderate the amount of oxytocin, allowing the uterus and the woman to have a break. The endorphins come to relieve her of the pain experience until the rhythm starts again.1 For first time mothers, the labor process can last anywhere from six to twelve hours, on average. The cervix must be dilated to 10cm before the baby can begin its delivery.
During this labor process as the oxytocin is being released, the uterus surrounding the baby begins to push the baby downwards into the birth canal, shifting the surrounding organs into different positions. The cervix (the opening of the uterus) stretches to accommodate the size of the child preparing to make its grand debut. This causes sensitive skin to extend to new lengths, though they are created for and capable of this very process. Contractions begin to occur immediately before childbirth, which are a tightening of the muscles of the womb that occur at increasingly frequent intervals and eventually push the baby out of the womb.2 These happen each time the uterus muscles flex, producing pain sensations like a strong cramp. They last about 30-60 seconds each and allow for rest to happen in between.3

Pain-Relief

Because the labor pain is stronger and more frequent than any other type the woman has experienced in her life, over 50% of women in labor opt for a pain- reducing option. The most popular of which is an epidural anesthesia – a pain-relieving injection into the woman’s lower back – which numbs her body from the waist down, especially including the uterus which is the source of most of her child-birthing pain. On the positive side, this injection relieves the woman’s mind from feeling the pain from the lower half of her body.
This epidural injected in her lower back next to the spinal cord fundamentally cuts off the pain communication between the lower body and the brain. There is a common belief about labor pain – in general – that it is the most helpful ingredient to the progression of the baby’s arrival. When the pain is felt, the mother naturally shifts her body to accommodate it and momentarily relieve the pressure. This process of constantly changing her body position is actually benefiting the baby’s movement down the birth canal, which is argued against being interfered by pain-reducers such as epidurals.

Complications

An aspect of using an epidural which is commonly overlooked is the aspect that the lower half of the mother’s body is now without sensation; she no longer feels the pain accompanying the birth process, but unfortunately she is also unable to feel the muscles she needs to use to push the baby out. This may cause complications if the baby does not emerge from the birth canal within the necessary time frame.
Another issue that may occur during giving birth happens when the cervix has not dilated widely enough. Such a “labor stall” may occur where the labor does not progress and contractions are not strong enough to push the baby down the birth canal quickly enough. The mother’s body gets out of sync with itself and needs an outside influence in order to progress this delivery process.

Aromatherapy Use and Safety

Aromatherapy is becoming a more popular choice for women who are looking for healthier and more natural pain-relieving options during the birthing process. To define, aromatherapy is “the art and science of using essential oils to heal common ailments and/or complaints.”4 Instead of using the traditional epidural which eliminates both pain and necessary sensations, many women are turning to a more organic approach to reduce the unbearableness of the pain while still experience the miracles of her body giving birth to a beautiful new baby. Several different essential oils work well in conjunction with each other to accomplish this modus operandi and have shown much success in practice.
Much research and the assistance of a certified aromatherapist is imperative when choosing to go this route because of the sensitivity to the oils that the pregnant mother may have during this time in her life. Many oils may cause negative reactions in either the baby or in her own body, which is why specialized and only expert treatment is vital. When this happens, aromatherapy can offer positive and pleasant experiences for the mother, both during and after the delivery process.
As we begin looking at how to use essential oils for the well-being of the birthing mother through this process, the first issue of concern is always safety. The oils used must be recognized as the highest quality oils, 100% pure – even of therapeutic quality – with no added synthetics, pesticides, herbicides, or chemicals. Also, the supplier should report their oils as being organic (not necessarily certified) and from non-genetically modified (GMO) seeds. The quality of the oils is important so that the mother knows exactly what she is using through this intense and vulnerable delivery process when all her body’s organs – including the largest one being the skin – are under great duress and sensitive to everything that in the environment at this time. The oils are very concentrated so the highest quality needs to be administered to her.
Therapy with aroma in this sense of childbirth can be particularly helpful with the stress, emotionally-triggered delivery process, and physical needs such as: stretched or striated abdominal wall, high blood pressure, labor pain, xyphoid process pain, avoiding a tear, misalignment of baby, hemorrhaging, fear, retained placenta, and/or others.
To quote Bensouilah and Buck on safety, they say, “The use of essential oils in pregnancy is a contentious subject, especially during the vital first 3-month period. It is extremely unlikely that a nightly bath containing a few drops of essential oils will cause any problems for the unborn child,”5 and also that “there are no records of abnormal fetuses or aborted fetuses due to the ‘normal’ use of essential oils, either by inhalation or topical application.”6 This information is comforting and may reassure delivering mothers that the use of these oils most likely will not harm or injure the baby she is birthing.

Oils to Avoid During Pregnancy

The selection of oils is extremely important during this stage in a woman’s life, and research must be done to see which oils are safe for her use. According to the International Federation of Professional Aromatherapists (IFPA), “there are oils that should not be used in aromatherapy at all, regardless of whether the client is pregnant or not. These include: sassafras, wormwood, cassia, pennyroyal, mustard, and elecampane.”7 These oils should be avoided, and especially during pregnancy.
Other oils that have high levels of phenols, ethers and aromatic aldehydes can sometimes irritate the skin, which should require additional care and precaution. Oils that are high in these compositions, and should therefore be avoided during both pregnancy and also delivery include the following: Cassia, Wintergreen, Birch, Anise, Tarragon, and Clove Bud. The oils safe for the nine months are typically higher in alcohol content overall.8
To investigate into the use of aromatherapy in intrapartum midwifery practice, a study was done on 8,058 mothers giving birth between 1990-1998, all of which were subject to ten different essential oils were used among different intervention and control groups. Among the essential oils, these were used: Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia), Rose (Rosa damascena), and Frankincense (Boswellia carterii). The study found that 54% of the birthing mothers had a decrease in pain from the Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia), and fewer women (than normal) asked for epidural anesthesia.9

Essential Oils to Use Topically

Through the use of some specific essential oils, positive effects can be experienced during labor and delivery, and the use of even one of these oils will have more positive effects than not using any at all.
The following listed may help encourage feelings of connectedness, relaxation and wellness. The oils may be used at an 8% dilution per single-use when necessary, or in blends of a maximum of three oils together. Having the oils blended with one or more carrier oils is important for the effects of the essential oils to last longer and be gentler on the person under stress, which would apply in this situation with a mother giving birth.
The following oils may help the delivery process in the following ways:
Clary sage (Salvia sclarea)
This oil has shown to help a number of women in inducing labor and strengthen the contractions and aid cervical dilation. The chemistry is similar to estrogen, which may stimulate both uterine muscles and also encourage relaxation. Because the scent may be unfavorable to some, it is recommended in a diluted topical application.10
Marjoram (Origanum majorana)
This oil relaxes muscles, easing the pain of contractions while allowing them to work more efficiently. May be applied to wrists and ankles.
Geranium (Pelargonium graveolens)
Geranium may help stimulate circulation, ease breathing, and regulate the pulse and blood pressure. It is similar to both Clary Sage and Jasmine. May be applied topically.
Nutmeg (Myristica fragrans)
Nutmeg supports the adrenals and nervous system, and help with both fatigue and blood sugar levels.11
Frankincense (Boswellia carterii)
Frankincense grounds the mother and helps her focus on the birth. 12 It is also a calming oil that may help relieve pain and anxiety. Used along with Myrrh, this blend may help to heal the umbilical cord and help the pulsing to calm down. This may be applied topically to area of pain.13
Peppermint (Mentha piperita)
Peppermint should not be used topically during pregnancy; only through inhalation. However, it may be one of the most useful oils during delivery. It provides equilibrium support and digestive support to prevent vomiting. It has a calming effect and may help to relieve some delivery discomfort. 14 Apply to back of neck or wrists and ankles.
Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia)
Lavender is a relaxing oil which can be used through the entire pregnancy and delivery process. It helps relax the muscles and skeletal structure, helps takes the edge off pain and is good for topical application for premature contractions. In a blend with other oils, especially Jasmine, it may help to induce labor.
Chamomile, German (Matricaria recutita)
Chamomile has been shown to bring a relaxing effect, to uplift, and to calm those in stressful situations. This oil is very gentle and may be applied to back of neck or wrist and ankles. 15
Many doulas and midwives are using aromatherapy now for a more relieving experience. One doula named Hailey Aliff stated, “I have personally used Clary Sage at multiple births which were either stalled or moving slower than normal. After each dose of Clary Sage used at the proper time, the mothers would have a big contraction with a lot of progress following it.”16

Oils for Inhalation

During the period of delivery, the birth-giving mother is extremely sensitive to her smells and surroundings. A maximum of three oils should be mixed together for a diffusing blend. The following oils are helpful to either have the mother smell by inhaling or by topical 8% dilution:
Jasmine(Jasminum officinale)
Though Jasmine should not be used at any time during the pregnancy, it may be good for inducing labor at the time of delivery. It is helpful when there is a lack of progress during delivery, also stalling out of labor and with emotional support. It may be inhaled either individually or blended with Lavender oil, or applied to the wrist and ankles or back of neck.
Rose (Rosa damascena)
Though this oil is expensive, it has been found to be more effective than the lavender oil at releasing anxiety and calming women. It may be diffused or inhaled during delivery to improve everyone’s emotions, confidence and ability to focus.
Rosewood (Aniba rosaeodora)
This oil may be used for lack of delivery progress, fear or tension.17 It may also be applied to the wrist and ankles or back of neck.
Testimony after testimony from women who have used aromatherapy for their child-birthing needs are being found now, and in online studies and research projects. For the mother who is expecting a child and is precarious about the pain and how to deal with it in the hours of delivery, aromatherapy is a growing alternative to safe pain relief, as opposed to the traditional epidural route. Using essential oils for the process of birth does not guarantee a perfect birth, a quick 2-hour birth, or a pain-free one. However, these oils do help during the entire process to relieve, relax, support, ground, and balance the mother as she goes through one of the most memorable times of her life. Giving birth to a precious new baby is not a small endeavor and deserves the utmost attention in order to have the most rewarding experience. Aromatherapy is a growing practice helping to achieve this preferred result in almost every situation when administered.

Endnotes

1 Judith A. Lothian, Choices in Childbirth, (2008), (The Purpose and Power of Pain in Labor).
https://choicesinchildbirth.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/2008_LOTHIAN_Purpose-of-pain-in-Labor.pdf
2 Encarta® World English Dictionary [North American Edition] (1998-2007). Microsoft Word Edition.
3 Pain During Childbirth, (2011-2016), Women’s Specialists of New Mexico, LTD. http://wsnm.org/Forms/Pain.During.Childbirth.pdf
4 Totilo, R. (2013), Therapeutic Blending with Essential Oil, Rebecca at the Well Foundation.
5 Bensouilah J, and Buck P. (2006), Aromadermatology. Abindon, UK: Radcliffe Publishing Ltd.
6 Ibid.
7 Pregnancy Guidelines, (2013), International Federation of Professional Aromatherapists.
8 Totilo, R. (2013), Therapeutic Blending with Essential Oil, Rebecca at the Well Foundation.
9 Burns, E., Blamey, C., Ersser, S., Barnetson, L., Lloyd, A. (2000), Journal of Alternative & Complementary Therapies.
10 Karen Newell, Better Childbirth Outcomes, (2011-2012), (Natural Induction). http://www.better-childbirth-outcomes.com/natural-induction.html
11 MindBodyandSoleOnline, (2010), Essential Oils for Women, Pregnancy, Childbirth and Children of All Ages, Butterfly Miracles with Essential Oils.
12 Burns, E., Blamey, C., Ersser, S., Barnetson, L., Lloyd, A. (2000), Journal of Alternative & Complementary Therapies.
13 Crews, Hannah, DownLavenderLane, (2014), Essential Oils for Pregnancy and Childbirth: My Story, https://downlavenderlane.com/2014/07/02/essential-oils-for-pregnancy-and-childbirth-my-story/. 14 Ibid.
15 Kate, ModernAlternativePregnancy, (2013), Essential Solutions for Labor, http://www.modernalternativepregnancy.com/2013/06/10/essential-oils-for-labor/.
16 Ibid.
17 Ibid.

Are Essential Oils Intelligent Enough to Heal?

Depositphotos_27253757_l-2015

Are Essential Oils Intelligent Enough to Heal?

Depositphotos_3135549_l-2015Plant Cells, Human Cells – Plant Life, Human Life


Many years ago Bruce H. Lipton, Ph.D. wrote a book about human cells called the Biology of Belief. It was a huge success and got many people thinking about the possibility that our cells are completely intelligent and that we have the power as human beings to go within and speak with our cells for greater health.  He has recently published the 10th Anniversary Edition- Biology of Belief, Unleashing the Power of Consciousness, Matter & Miracles.  He stated that cells are similar to regimented marching soldiers in formation. Wherever one turns, they all turn. Our cells are much like this in that they will pick up information from the cell next to it and “talk” to it, spreading the information. This could be either in the form of health or ill-health.

This has become an interesting new practice that is being used by Health Coaches, Energy Facilitators and now Functional Medicine doctors as well.  His thoughts and views have brought together two totally opposite schools of thought.  Scientific vs Metaphysical.  If we can simply “go into” our bodies and speak to our cells lovingly and with our “vibrational light” to bring about better health, it would make a huge difference in our healing process.

As these “new thought” ideas have come to light through alternative measures in the past, recent scientific research now has come forward to call this PNIPsychoneuroimmunology.  It is a respected branch of research where brain cells can communicate with blood cells.  This is a communication that can be applied through relaxation and imagery.  Going within the body and talking to the cells, incorporating neuroscience, psychology and immunology. It shows the interaction between psychological processes and the nervous and immune systems.


Many people who have chronic illnesses such as cancer, diabetes, autoimmune and heart disease also tend to have several Nervous and Emotional Body System disorders as well.  Applying energy and vibrational frequencies has proven by Energetic/Reiki Facilitators that they are able and prompted to help their clients release from their cellular memory anything they are ready to let go of, from a physical, emotional, mental and spiritual level. What is put back in, is an abundance of light and love energy that fills the cells throughout their body and all the way out to the auric field.  The client then feels much lighter and relaxed and is more open to new healthy thought processes. What is taught in Energetic/Reiki classes is that most of our physical disorders begin in the emotional layer of our auric field.  What needs to be addressed first is that the healing will begin at the cellular level first.  This time is also used to speak to their client’s cells for healing and to teach the client to as well.

Many Alternative Health Practitioners practice many different forms of energetic modalities.  Different things work for different people.  There is a very large group of people nowadays who have turned to Essential Oils for their “go to” resource of natural healing.  It is used by not only Aromatherapists, but by mothers and fathers, health practitioners, people who are just curious, and lately on the internet a series of doctors who are also promoting the benefits of adding essential oils to our everyday use instead of traditional pharmacology.

So what is an Essential Oil?  “Essential oils are a fragrant, vital fluid distilled from flowers, shrubs, leaves, trees, roots and seeds.  Because they are necessary for the life of the plant and play a vital role in the biological processes of the vegetation, these substances are called “essential” because they carry the life-blood, intelligence, and vibrational energy that endow them with the healing power to sustain their own life—and help the people who use them”. (1)

In Aromatherapy classes it is mentioned that plants also have great intelligence and use defense systems of their own to grow and flourish.  Does that then mean that plant life and plant cells have their own intelligence? And what does this mean for the subject of essential oils and their interaction with human cells? Are they actually intelligent enough to heal at the cellular level?

Let’s first take a look at plant life and plant cells…

“Without green plants we would neither breathe nor eat. Plants engage in photosynthesis, producing oxygen and food for both humans and animals. They synthesize it out of air, water and sunlight.  All the food, drink, drugs and medicine that keep man alive and, if properly used radiantly healthy are out through the sweetness of photosynthesis. Instinctively aware of the aesthetic vibrations of plants, which are spiritually satisfying, human beings are happiest and most comfortable when living with flora. At birth, marriage, death, blossoms are prerequisites, as they are at mealtime or festivities.  We give plants and flowers as tokens of love, of friendship, or homage.  Our houses are adorned with gardens, our cities with parks our nations with national preserves.” (2)

From the days of Aristotle, through The Middle Ages and the 19th Century, it was believed that plants may have soul, but no sensation.  It wasn’t until the beginning of the 20th century that that a Viennese biologist whose name was Raoul Francé, put forth the idea that plants move more gracefully and skillfully than humans or animals, but at a much slower pace.  Plants instinctively know how to turn their roots to find moisture, how to protect against invaders, how to move toward the sun for growing and life, how to change with the seasons. “A climbing plant which needs a prop will creep toward the nearest support.  Should this be shifted, the vine, within a few hours, will change its course in the new direction. Can the plant see the pole? Does it sense it in some unfathomed way?” (3)  Can plants then have intent?

This is the short scientific version and viewpoint of plant history, but if you look at the history of essential oils, which we know come from plants, then the history and the viewpoint vary greatly.

Rebecca Totilo, in her book, Therapeutic Blending with Essential Oil states, “Historical records show that people’s use of scents, aromas, fragrances, and essential oils have been in almost every culture for millenniums and are considered man’s first medicine.  Essential oils and other forms of aromatics have been use in religious ceremonies, for treating various illnesses and for spiritual and emotional needs”.  She goes on to say that, “Ancient manuscripts record the use of medicinal herbs dating back to 2800 BC, documenting the use of plants with aromatic qualities for healing by the Chinese and the Egyptians.”  History documents essential oils being used by the Greeks and Romans as well.

It wasn’t until the beginning of the twentieth century that essential oils were rediscovered to have medicinal properties and this was in 1937 by a French chemist, Rene-Maurice Gattefosse.  He accidently burned his hand and thrust it in a vat of pure Lavender essential oil and found his wounds quickly healed.  Gattefosse went on to study and document the effects of essential oils on various parts of the human body.

There were other pioneers who followed that also made great contributions in the usage of essential oils. This is a very brief version of essential oil history, but gives us a reference of how long we have been using and healing from all parts of plant life.

There is a rather old book called The Secret Life of Plants, from the 1970’s that document the life and discoveries made by a man named Cleve Backster.  Backster, who was America’s foremost CIA lie-detector examiner decided to hook up his polygraph machine to one of his plants.  On a whim.  What happened then, changed history and how we view plants and their cells.  It has provided insight into being able to connect intelligence between all living creatures.

The electrodes of the machine, when hooked up with a human will show changes in that person’s electrical properties.  It will change when a human tells a lie.  The paper in the machine will trace lines in a downward motion.  Backster was wondering how long it would take his plant to soak up water from the root to the leaves, where he had attached an electrode when there was a noticeable upward trend in the tracing. The plant was showing a reaction!  He then decided to threaten the well-being of the plant to see if there would be a reaction.  He dunked a leaf in hot coffee and got no response, so he thought about getting a match from another room and burn the leaf.  As soon as he had that thought, the machine attached to the plant began a vigorous movement.  Backster had not even moved, was only thinking.  When he did get the matches, there was a second surge of movement.  A little less when he actually put the match to the leaf.

“The next morning when he showed his associate Robert Henson what had happened, his associate decided to burn the plant.  At that instant, a similar reaction occurred.  But Backster refused to let him actually harm the plant.  When either of them only pretended to harm the plant, there was not further reaction. Did the plants know their thoughts so sensitively as to differentiate between when they meant it and when they didn’t?

Recalls Backster, “Have you ever been alone in a room but had a feeling of a presence with you? I saw that plant now not as a mass of chemicals, chlorophyll and water, but as something more …a living thing with the capability of some primary type of perception.” (4)
The rest as they say is history. After his article came out, much research and experiments were replicated by others, all using what came to be known as “The Backster Effect”, but he continued his own research, still wondering about the perception abilities of the plants.  Did they have their own innate intelligence?  In one famous experiment, Backster decided to see if a plant had memory.  He devised a scheme to have the plant identify a secret killer of one of two plants.  Six student volunteers were blindfolded and pulled from a hat, folded pieces of paper which had instructions on them.  One volunteer was instructed to destroy one of the plants by stomping on it completely.  Backster, nor the other volunteers knew who got those instructions.  Only the killer.   They all left the room except for the remaining plant who was to be the only witness.  After the deed was done, Backster hooked the remaining plant up to the machine and paraded the student volunteers into the room.  The plant made no reaction when most of the students came into the room, but went crazy when the culprit paraded in front of it.  Did the plant recognize the killer and remember?

Backster also noted that each plant has a special affinity or bond between the plant and its keeper.  He noted in future experiments that the plant knew certain activities and showed response according to his own movements sometimes many miles away.  All of this was in the late 1960’s.  So much has happened since then.  Could this then be the start of what we now know as PNI? Cells, human and plant, communicating and sending information to each other?

Yes, it appears that plants can “know” our thoughts. Some plants better than others.  Some thoughts better than others.  But the simplest living cells appear to read our thoughts too.  Our thoughts or emotions can possibly be known by our liver cells, our heart cells, our kidney cells. Take our mouth cells.  Even when removed a distance from our body and monitored with electronic devices, they have been found in more recent research to react measurably to our thoughts or emotions.  There is strong evidence that points to our thoughts being known by cells, organisms, plants, animals and brain cell in other people.  There is evidence, too, that plants and animals know each other’s thoughts.”(5)

In other experiments done, scientists were able to actually hear noise emitting from plants that were in deep drought conditions.  Were they asking for help?

There is so much research on plant intelligence and human-like behavior that is enough as they say to make a vegetarian wonder if we should be eating plants at all!

Now let’s take a look at Human Cells… From the web: Dictionary.com
A storeroom, a chamber

Biology – a usually microscopic structure containing nuclear and cytoplasmic material enclosed by a semipermeable membrane and, in plants, a cell wall; the basic structural unit of all organisms. (6)

Our cells are our oldest living ancestors, shared by all of life since creation.  We all possess the same building blocks, molecules, and biochemical principles.  Written in the biography of the cell are the mysteries of life, growth, and transformation.  At every moment of every day, our cells orchestrate millions of molecular symphonies, guided by cellular intelligence. (7)

With the questions that have been raised, it is necessary to look at the Spiritual side of cells as well.  There are many books by Scientists as well as Aromatherapists, who are willing to bridge the two worlds; one of science and one of spirituality.  Many people who study and do research need to know why and how, but many who ask questions today are also willing to look at the other side.  The spiritual side.  It is stated that all was created with a definite “plan” in mind.  With new research being done, man and/or woman can begin to look at each single cell as being connected to a greater whole. In many circles today, we hear that, “we are all connected”, “we are all as one”.  We are now being taught to understand these concepts as a “whole”.

Sondra Barrett, Ph.D states in her book, Secrets of Your CELLS, “there are two dimensions in our human experience: scientific investigation and spiritual exploration—here we bridge science and the sacred.  When we mine for scientific facts, we are engaging our intellectual brain, the one that wants data, analysis, proofs, and measurements.  The scientist wants to know why and how.  The sacred and spiritual experience is said to have no place in science, yet to fully know and appreciate life and our place in it, I believe both dimensions need to be present. Our inner, intuitive, natural knowing, looks at the whole of experience rather than only its measurable components.” (8)
In her opinion and many current scientists as well as that of Robert Hooke, a scientist from three hundred years ago, “a cell is a place where life is captured and vital ingredients are stored and protected—it is a sanctuary for life.  Within each of us, therefore, are 100 trillion cells—100 trillion sanctuaries.” (9)

The Cellular Container – “The outside surface of each human and animal cellular sanctuary is called the plasma or cell membrane.  It is flexible, malleable.  The plasma membrane, constructed from self-organizing chains of hydrocarbon molecules (fat) and generously “seasoned” with protein, forms the boundary where the cell meets the world in which it lives. A cell’s plasma membrane becomes more flexible as the cell matures.  It also becomes better able to recognize other cells, respond to the environment, move and change shape.” (10)

If watching a cell under a microscope, you can see if there is an “invader” within their space or “sanctuary”, they will go on the attack to remove it.  Which brings us to

The Immune System –“Any invader that breaches the physical barrier of skin or mucosa is greeted by the innate immune system – our second line of defense.  Immunologists call this system “innate” because it is a defense that all animals just naturally seem to have.  Indeed, some of the weapons of the innate immune system have been around for more than 500 million years.” (11)

Lauren Sonpayrac, who wrote, “How The Immune System Works” says that “Our first line of defense against invaders consist of physical barriers, including viruses, bacteria, parasites and fungi that must penetrate our shields. An area as big as two tennis courts.  The main point is that we have a large perimeter which must be defended”.

Like the plant cells, our human cells also know instinctively when and how to move and defend themselves. Our tissues consists of white blood cells that defend against attack. As you can imagine, the process is very complicated scientifically.  We have macrophage which go after bacterium.  When it does it engulfs it in a pouch called a phagosome. There it fuses with another vesicle called a lysomome which have chemicals and enzymes which can destroy the bacterium.  All of this is a very simple version by far.  Within our macrophages and all the other blood cells in our body are made in the bone marrow, where they come from self-renewing cells called stem cells.  These are intelligent enough to regenerate and become mature blood cells. All will go to various parts of the body where they are needed for human life to survive.  Our stem cells must turn out more than two million new red blood cells each second to replace those lost due to normal wear and tear. White blood cells are called “white” because they lack hemoglobin and are not red. The advancements in cell biology have led to a greater understanding and knowledge that we have of the human body and the immune system and how it works. We have an understanding of how the cells grow, replicate, metabolize and how they die.  They are the building blocks of life and hold the keys to sickness, pain and disease.  The fact that these cells run our bodies so efficiently amazes me!

The science is what we see, we see, so therefore it is.  But again, it may just show a much greater plan.  As stated earlier, for many people who have chronic conditions which all seem to begin from an immune system that needs adjustment and which causes major inflammation in our bodies, now science is showing us that we can look at the human cell to begin the healing process.

When we go on to continue the research of Cleve Backster, he did not stop his experimentation with just plants.  He studied animals and then humans.  It was the human experiments in the 1980’s that finally gave him the concept that we are all connected. He upgraded his equipment with videos and charts.  One day he placed white blood cells from a man’s mouth into a test tube in his laboratory.  He then asked his “donor” to watch a war documentary on his home television.  The donor had been stationed at Pearl Harbor during the Japanese Attack. The chart shows tremendous dips and lines being drawn throughout the time the donor was watching the film.  He later commented that he was emotionally involved during certain scenes as he remembered his experiences.  Many experiments then followed, and all were the same.  Human white blood cells reacted to all and any emotional feelings that donors were experiencing from a distance.

Which brings us to: Are Essential Oils stemming from plants intelligent enough to heal?
Man today is very dependent in most cases on traditional and pharmaceutical therapy.  We as humans are sicker than ever.  The insurance and drug companies are making trillion of dollars each year and we get nowhere.  But…there are many who are open to change. Aromatherapy has come forward more strongly in recent years with so many books and major companies who are teaching more and more about essential oils and their ability to heal at a deep level.
We’ve learned that plants have an intelligence all their own and we know that essential oils made from plants have molecular structures with a very deep chemical makeup that possess healing abilities.  Science is now blending with Ancient Wisdom and Mother Nature.

“Essential Oils are natural aromatic compounds and volatile liquids extracted from the seeds, roots, bark, stems, leaves, flowers, resins, and other parts of plants.  These valuable liquids are most commonly obtained from plants through distillation-often by using steam or mechanically or cold pressed as is the case with citrus oils extracted from the peels. The chemical makeup of essential oils is highly complex and may consist of hundreds of distinct chemical compounds.” (12)

Essential oils are made up of compounds of Alcohols, Aldehydes, Alkanes, Alkenes, Carboxylic Acids, Coumarins, Esters, Ethers, Ketones, Lactones, Oxides, Phenols, Terpenes, Monoterpenes, Sesquiterpenes, and Diterpenes.
“Recent studies in medical research now confirm essential oils therapeutic and medicinal qualities to be: Analgesic, Anesthetic, Anti-allergenic, Antibacterial, Anti-coagulant, Anti-convulsant, Antidepressant, Antiodontalgic, Antiemetic, Antifungal, Antihistamine, Anti-infectious, Anti-inflammatory, Antimicrobial, Antineuralgic, Anti-rhuematic, anti-scorbutic, Antiseptic, Antispasmodic, Antisudorific, Anti-venomous, Antiviral, Aperitif, Aphrodisiac, Astringent, Bactercide, Balsamic, Bechic. Carminative, Cholagogue, Cicatrisant, Circulatory Stimulant, Cooling, Cordial, Cytophylactic, Decongestant, Depurative, Detoxification, Digestive Support, Disinfectant, Diuretic, Emmenagogue, Expectorant, Febrifuge, Immune Support, Immunostimulant, Laxative, Lymphatic Support, Mucolytic, Neuralgia, Nervine, Sedative, tonic, Vascular Cleansing, Vermifuge and Warming.” (13)

What a list of ways the oils can help and heal! For all those listed above, a traditional doctor would prescribe many pills and possibly many surgeries to “fix”.  When in most cases, it will only treat the symptom, not the actual disease or “root issue”.  It is very empowering to be able to open almost any Essential Oil reference book and be able to find a list of oils and carriers that will treat almost any condition that we can think of without having to run straight to our doctor’s office.  And to have choices on so many different oils that will exactly pinpoint a certain symptom or ailment.
Rebecca Park Totilo also states in her book, Therapeutic Blending, “that all of the major physical systems of the body including the circulatory, lymphatic, eliminative, reproductive, endocrine, muscular and skeletal have been responsive to aromatherapy in a positive manner”.

How to use? Essential oils are very effective if inhaled. This allows the oil to go right to the cell receptor site and are transmitted to the limbic system for deep healing on many levels. It can used as a diffuser in the room, placed on the hands and inhaled or used on the ailing body part. Essential Oils are used in cosmetics, body care products, salves, lotions, balms, compresses and there are some that may also be ingested. Many also find placing oils on the bottom of the feet to be just as effective.  If you think about it, reflexology shows all the parts of the human body can be reached by treating the feet.

“Because of the medicinal properties of the plant, essential oils have the ability to produce with a little bit from science, a synergistic reaction with each other, cells, genes, carrier oils and even drugs. Merging art and science. One of the most exciting realms of essential oils is the recent understanding of how they impact the body at the cellular level.  When you impact the cell, you impact life. As we further our knowledge of how essential oils affect cellular behavior and function, we increase the likelihood of achieving not only a longer but also a healthier lifespan.” (14)

As mentioned before, essential oils are made up of botanicals that are distilled into concentrated compounds.  These compounds are essential for health, wellness and the maintenance of the cell. “Essential oils are pure facilitative small molecules that impact the health of the cell to impact the health of the body.  These facilitative small molecules are able to influence the cell to more effectively overcome ailments, toxins, and inhibitory inefficiencies to more successfully balance one’s health.” (15)

Scientific studies have been conducted for many years by many companies, to prove that essential oils, stemming from plants, from Mother Nature work at a cellular level for health and healing. So much so that a company in Utah has “patented a process of labeling essential oil constituents through an unbreakable covalent bond with fluorescent fluorophores.  This means the company in visual science can show how essential oils impact the cell.  They can show the process to characterize the true physical relationship between essential oils and cells, a process they have termed “Cell Active & Permeable.” For each essential oil it will show where it is localized into the cell, meaning, while the cell is living, the technology has the ability to track and see the facilitative small molecules of essential oils penetrate the cell membrane, and which organelle they localize to within the cell.” (16)

“There has also been study that essential oils work to increase telomere length.  Telomeres are sequences of DNA that don’t code for gene but rather are protective ends to the chromosomes.  Telomeres are an area of research that show strong correlation to both aging and cancer.  As we age and our cells divide with each cellular division, the telomeres on the end of the chromosomes become more stressed creating an “aged” cell.  This has dramatic implications with respect to stem cells and their ability to continually generate a fresh stream of cells.” (17)

By showing through scientific means, the interaction between essential oils and the living human cells, we are better able to understand the synergistic properties of essential oils with cells. And the synergistic properties of the oils with each other.  How these compounds work will also show us how it effects our genetic makeup, our DNA.
In doing recent case studies, it has been found that many clients had disorders in their Emotional and Nervous Systems.  It has shown that in many cases a good way to start a client on a regimen of using essential oils is to begin to calm these body systems first so that healing will begin by calming the mind first. Or in scientific terms, “The Central Nervous System”.   There is a quote that is used in Reiki by Usui Sensei, the founder of Usui Reiki that says, “Heal the Mind, Heal the Body”.

Once the Emotional and Nervous System Bodies have been addressed, it might prove beneficial by blending Immunostimulant oils that help to build and strengthen the immune system and to also use blends for the Cytophylactic System, which according to Rebecca Park Totilo, in her book, Therpeutic Blending, “stimulate cellular regeneration and are also good in skin care and for the aging.  She goes on to say that this method is also believed by people who practice alternative medicine, that these oils can fight infection by increasing the production leucocytes in the body.”

With a thought and an idea and much research we know now that our cells are responsive to our environment.  This means that they will with react to whatever is placed in and around them, whether it be our loving thoughts, healthy lifestyle, energetic and vibrational energy or essential oils.

We know that plant cells with their innate intelligence are responsive to not only their own kind, but to human cells as well and with the extra gift of their chemical makeup, are a beautiful gift from Mother Nature – Essential Oils are believed by many to be intelligent enough to heal on all levels; Physical, Emotional, Mental and Spiritual.  We have at our disposal all that we need to maintain our health and possible longevity of life.

Research shows that brain neurons can contact the brain neurons of another human being. Our cells can communicate with plant cells very effectively and we can talk to our own cells and they will reply. This brings us back to the original theory from Bruce Lipton.  People have the ability to heal themselves and to care for their cells at the cellular level.  But with the addition of Essential Oils from the plant kingdom, we have the opportunity to do so much more.

References:
1. Totilo. R. (2013) Therapeutic Blending with Essential Oil.  St. Petersburg: Rebecca at the Well Foundation.
2. Thompkins and Bird (1973) The Secret Life of Plants. New York: Harper and Row
3. Thompkins and Bird (1973) The Secret Life of Plants. New York: Harper and Row
4. Stone, R. Ph.D (1989) The Secret of Your Cells. Atglen: Schiffer
5. Thompkins and Bird (1973) The Secret Life of Plants. New York: Harper and Row
6. www.Dictionary.com
7. Barrett, S. Ph.D (2013) Secrets of Your Cells. Boulder: Sounds True
8. Barrett, S. Ph.D (2013) Secrets of Your Cells. Boulder: Sounds True
9. Barrett, S. Ph.D (2013) Secrets of Your Cells. Boulder: Sounds True
10. Barrett, S. Ph.D (2013) Secrets of Your Cells. Boulder: Sounds True
11. Sompayrac, L. (2016) How The Immune System Works. West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons LTD
12. Johnson, S. (2015) Surviving When Modern Medicine Fails. Scott A, Johnson Professional Writing Services, LLC:
13. Totilo. R. (2013) Therapeutic Blending with Essential Oil.  St. Petersburg: Rebecca at the Well Foundation.
14. Johnson, A. and Plant, J. (2015) It’s an Essential Oil Thing – Revealing the Science of Essential Oil Synergy with Cells, Genes and Human Health. Scott A. Johnson Professional Writing Services, LLC:
15. Johnson, A. and Plant, J. (2015) It’s an Essential Oil Thing – Revealing the Science of Essential Oil Synergy with Cells, Genes and Human Health. Scott A. Johnson Professional Writing Services, LLC:
16. Johnson, A. and Plant, J. (2015) It’s an Essential Oil Thing – Revealing the Science of Essential Oil Synergy with Cells, Genes and Human Health. Scott A. Johnson Professional Writing Services, LLC:
17. Johnson, A. and Plant, J. (2015) It’s an Essential Oil Thing – Revealing the Science of Essential Oil Synergy with Cells, Genes and Human Health. Scott A. Johnson Professional Writing Services, LLC: