Sunday, May 20, 2012

What's in season is your medicine, happy spring!

"Live each season as it passes; breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit, 

and resign yourself to the influences of each." 

Henry David Thoreau


What does it mean to eat seasonally?


To eat what is in season is to subscribe to a "localvore" mentality, where organically raised foods produced within a reasonably close radius of your home are the best choices for your family's nutrition and herbal medicines. The benefits of such a simple philosophy are numerous to say the least. 


When local plants are grown in their local environments, they deal with the same environmental stresses we do, and so make more appropriate constitutional medicine. When plants are grown in different climates, they grow to be a natural solution to that area's climate challenges. For example, a coconut grows in a hot, tropical climate; providing a cooling, electrolyte rich endosperm (coconut water) to feed the embryo of its seed, or to our benefit, soothe those being faced with the challenges of heat in the climate it grows. The plant itself contains its own innate intelligence, and has developed to be an antidote to the extremes of its climate.  We happen to live in the Northwest, a far more temperate, and at times, tremendously cold climate.  


What happens when we enjoy coconut water, or a banana, a papaya, a pineapple in the middle of winter in the northwest? A couple of things. First, the plant has traveled many miles, being harvested before the peak of its development, and stored for many days. With each passing moon, this plant becomes less and less nutrient dense, less full of life force. Inevitably, it becomes a waste of energy to eat. An apple this time of year, for example, has been in cold storage since last fall, or was shipped from the other end of the world. It completely lacks the flavor and complexity of an apple harvested in the season it grows.


What I believe to be even more detrimental, is the fact that these cooling plants when ingested, are telling your body that though it is cold and wintery,  your body needs to cool down. The consumer then, should not be surprised to wake up the next day with more mucus, if not a cold or flu over time and repeated consumption.


There's more.


Each season brings plants which are the antidote to the previous season...like it's spring now, so cleansing, anti allergy and tonic herbs are up: yellowdock, burdock, red clover, nettle, then antioxidant rich cherries, berries, etc. to cleanse accumulation of ama (toxins/undigested food) from the previous season. Another simple example, at the end of the summer, elderberries are in season, and they happen to be an incredible combatant for the flu season approaching. I always harvest them, and run out by spring...when I no longer need them. This is ayurvedic use of herbs, and they do it in India, with their local plants. Eating what's in season and using the herbs that are growing around us, when they are growing around us, we become in sync spiritually and immunologically with the earth. Ayurvedic principles when applied to the west should be looked at like this. An example I like is that just because we may be vata and need grounding foods doesn't mean we should eat yams in July. We should eat/use what's in season. For us to exclusively use Indian herbs is applying their herbal knowledge without embracing the macrocosm of what ayurveda truly teaches...be close to the earth! I have been living this way for years and I've never been healthier. Sure, there are spices and some ayurvedic herbs that just dont grow well here, so I order them.


What about herbs/spices that were brought here from other areas? Do you think if they survived they must be good medicine for their terrain?


These we would not call local, but "cultivated" or "naturalized" (a lot of them are european and mediterranean)

Sometimes, some plants don't grow well when you try to naturalize them, and it's better to order them from places they do grow well (if they grow well, they make good medicine). But so many plants do establish themselves well when you grow them. Even if they aren't "native" they still grow very well in the same environment as us! ;) Examples are your culinary herbs; basil, oregano, thyme, lavender, etc. So, though they may not be native, the fact that they are produced locally is just fine. 



How can we eat locally year round? 

The easiest way to eat locally is to stay away from the grocery store as much as possible. Enjoy the local farmer's markets in spring, summer, and fall seasons. Subscribe to an organic produce co-op, like Full Circle Farm, or PEACH, who will send a box of fresh, mostly local produce to your door once a week. Be okay with eating differently at each season, emphasizing nuts, dried fruits, grains, soups, stews, and meats (if you are omnivorous) in the winter. Enjoy harvesting and preserving foods when produce is at it's peak. Enjoy greens, nettles, burdock, antioxidant rich cherries, and berries in the spring. They will cleanse and purgate your system, removing accumulation from the prior season. In summer, enjoy all of the greens, and cooling fruits, broccoli, raw salads, cucumbers, and summer squash! This will keep your body from accumulating excess heat, which results in compromised liver function, skin disorders, and other inflammatory imbalances. Finally, the fruits of fall! Apples, apples, apples to cool your blood and digestive tract from the summer's heat so not to accumulate dryness from the prior season. Then grounding, mineral rich root vegetables and squash; immune boosting onions, garlic, and mushrooms!; preserving as much abundance as possible to enjoy through the winter seasons.

In my new Eastern Washington Home, my family is starting this abundant spring with a new challenge...

The localvore challenge! 80% local...a big step, but we'll see how we do!

Monday, February 27, 2012

Year of the baby dragon.

A loved one has approached me recently, newly pregnant, asking questions all things "new mommy." Why did you choose a midwife? What supplements did you take? What were your pregnancy symptoms like, and how did you treat them?

These interactions have caused me to reflect on my own experience as a newly expecting mother, and parent. One memory that came forward immediately was about the fateful day, when I discovered that I myself was expecting, and how immediately I consulted my ayurvedic community. As a student of Ayurveda, I searched high and low for resources from our great teachers past and present. I found very little pertaining to Ayurvedic Wisdom for Pregnancy and Childbirth. Resources I did come across were translated from Indian to English, and said things like,

"If you breathe out of your left nostril while you are making love you will have a boy." Most writings seemed to favor conceiving a boy over a girl.

"Sleeping in the open night air can bring in evil spirits which cause psychiatric disorders."

"Jump backwards on one foot before a full moon..."

I found all of these rituals to be quite interesting, but with little practical application.

It would have been so fantastic to find more information on Ayurvedic Pregnancy and Childbirth. Now that I am in the middle of raising my first child, my passion has shifted to the "Childbirth and babyhood" subjects, for I cannot seem to manage to grasp in detail what my life could possibly be like pre-motherhood. Additionally, it would take me a lifetime to write a book on pregnancy AND child-rearing, so I will start with one...which is nearest and dearest...

Ayurvedic Mommy and Baby care.

I would love to tell you about some of the wonderful ways to apply Ayurvedic principles to your family life. I would love to be a resource for tips, techniques, and reviews on ancient practices, popular products, herbal and homeopathic remedies, bonding and ritual, and how to make the most of this most pivotal, transitional, epic, rewarding time of our lives...those first moments we have from birth to childhood.

There are many texts out there about caring for infants. Month-by-month developmental time lines, doctors advice, etc. I do not wish to reinvent this wheel, or any. My wish is to provide you with tools to have your very own family practice in which you derive wisdom and experience and apply safe, effective remedies for yourself and your babies. I wish to bring to light practices which have been done so routinely for thousands of years in less-commercialized cultures, that they are written off as "common sense" there, yet forgotten here.

So...here I go.

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Holiday Sugar-induced Immune Suppression, & Seasonal Plant Allies.

HYPOTHESIS:
Every year I manage to go through these motions so meticulously that they result in such a perfect faiL.

Actually, I prefer to call it a "learning tool," and I'm likely one of millions who is fortunate to have this experience annually, which serves to help us to clearly know and understand Who We Really Are. Every year I choose to re-learn:



I am not baklava. Here's what happens...

EXPERIMENT:
We come off of the summer season full of delight and eagerness to greet the colder seasons healthfully and consciously. We may even do a cleanse to prepare our bodies for the changes in temperature, and available resources for food. Plants are growing with drooping, juicy abundance that must be harvested and saved for winter medicines. Fall festivals abound with copious stands of seasonal fruits and vegetables.

Soon, the holy days approach, and we celebrate. We celebrate with family...traditions...food and drink. We prepare ancestral dishes that steadfast our hearts desires, and we eat them until we are fulfilled, warm and fuzzy; and in my family, we hope no one gets appendicitis. Let me just say, we are a little too good at celebrating by eating.

In our home, Baklava, a Greek pastry of honey, nuts, spices, and thin phyllo dough is made in 4-6 hotel sized pans to be shared with friends and family. The production takes nearly a week. Baklava becomes a routine breakfast that soon after recovering from the first round, it sounds like a good idea for lunch...snacks...oh what the heck, I'll have another, until it's time for bed. Every family has a dish like this. What is yours?

RESULTS:
Every year. Every YEAR, 2-5 members of my family get a cold or flu between Christmas and New Years day. Do yours?

CONCLUSION:
Remember those seasonal plants which grow in drooping, juicy abundance in late summer and fall that must be harvested and saved for winter medicines?


Sambucus cerulea

This one will take care of that sugar induced immune suppression which causes the onset of a flu or cold. Elderberry. This is THE plant to have in your fall and winter arsenal for cold and flu. It works. 

This year we harvested over 40 lbs of berries, and have sold a whole lot of elderberry syrup. 

Elder berries are immune modulating and very antiviral allies which will prevent or shorten the length of cold and flu viruses. They are known to be active against eight strains of influenza. Dr. Madeleine Mumcuoglu, of Hadassah-Hebrew University in Isreal found that elderberry disarms the enzyme viruses use to penetrate healthy cells in the lining of the nose and throat. Taken before infection, it prevents infection. Taken after infection, it prevents spread of the virus through the respiratory tract.

I highly recommend checking out this Clinical Guide to Elderberry by Herbalgram to learn more about it.

Also, here is some information about how to use elderberry syrup. Stay Healthy This Winter! I would be happy to hook you up with some seasonal medicinal elderberry syrup. Get in touch.

Best, 
Michelle



Make sure to keep your syrup refrigerated for the longest shelf life. 

Dosage:

Adults & children 12 and older:  ½ Tbsp to 1Tbsp (1/2 Tbsp is preventative dose, 1 Tbsp if you are sick or on the verge).
Children under 12: 1 tsp-1/2 Tbsp, respectively

For cold & flu prevention, take appropriate dose once daily. If you are under threat of a cold or flu, or symptoms are coming on, take this dose 2-4 times a day until threat or symptoms subside. If you have a fever, take dose every 1 hour for 1 day, then reduce to 2-4 times per day until symptoms subside.

Syrup may be taken in a spoonful,  in tea, hot water, juice, yogurt, or oatmeal if you like.


For educational purposes only. This information has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration, and is not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any disease.
Source: moutainroseherbs.com/learn/elderberry.php