191 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
191 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
The Nervous System: Healing with Medicinal Plants.
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Herbalism is sometimes maligned as a collection of home-made
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remedies to be applied in a placebo fashion to one symptom or
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another.. provided the ailment is not too serious and provided
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there is a powerful chemical wonder-drug at the ready to suppress
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any "real" symptoms.
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We often forget, however, that botanical medicine provides a
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complete system of healing and prevention of disease. It is the
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oldest and most natural form of medicine. Its history of efficacy
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and safety spans centuries and covers every country on the planet.
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Because herbal medicine is holistic medicine, it is, in fact, able
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to look beyond the symptoms to the underlying systemic imbalance;
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when skilfully applied by the trained practitioner, herbal medicine
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offers very real and permanent solutions to very real problems,
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many of them seemingly intractable to pharmaceutical intervention.
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Nowhere is the efficacy of herbalism more evident than in problems
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related to the nervous system. Stress, anxiety, tension and
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depression are intimately connected with most illness. And the
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herbalist finds his success accelerated by including in his
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treatment, medicine to free the body from the vicious cycle of
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interference from worry and nervousness that so often takes its
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toll on otherwise healthy systems.
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Few health practitioners would argue with the influence of nervous
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anxiety in pathology. We know that the Xth Cranial Nerve, the
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Vagus, travels down from the medulla oblongata at the brain stem
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to innervate the pharynx, heart, bronchi, lungs and gastro-
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intestinal tract, including the small intestine, caecum, appendix
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and colon, supplying both motor and sensory fibres. It is not
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surprising that nervous stress can interfere directly in digestion.
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Nervous tension is generally acknowledged by pathologists to
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contribute to duodenal and gastric ulceration, ulcerative colitis,
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irritable bowel syndrome and many other gut-related pathologies.
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We know also from physiology that when a patient is depressed, the
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secretion of hydrochloric acid...one of the main digestive
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juices... is also reduced so that digestion and absorption are
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rendered less efficient. Anxiety, on the other hand, can lead to
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the release of adrenalin and stimulate the over-production of HCL
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and result in a state of acidity which may exacerbate the pain of
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an inflamed ulcer. In fact, whenever the voluntary nervous system
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(our conscious anxiety) interferes with the autonomic processes,
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(the automatic nervous regulation that in health is never made
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conscious), pathology is the result.
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But few other health professionals have access to the scope of
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botanical remedies with their fine subtlety in rectifying this type
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of human malfunction. The medical herbalist knows, for example,
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that a stubborn dermatological problem can best be treated by using
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alteratives specific to the skin problem, circulatory stimulants
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to aid in the removal of toxins from the area, with re-enforcement
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of the other organs of elimination (liver and kidney); but above
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all he will achieve the excellent results for which phytotherapy
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is famous, by using herbs which obviate nervous interference in the
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situation and allow the patient to relax... perhaps for the first
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time in many months.
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Curiously this is an approach which has never been taken up by
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orthodox medicine. There, the usual treatment of skin problems
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involves suppression of symptoms with steroids. Our subtle, non-
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invasive botanical nervines are not available in synthesized form.
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And the use of anti-histamines or benzodiazepines by the orthodox
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profession often achieves less lasting benefit to the patient than
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an additional burden of "impairment of intellectual function",[1]
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drowsiness, further toxicity for an already compromised metabolism,
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and often life-long drug dependence.
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Botanical nervines, on the other hand, are free from toxicity and
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habituation. Because they are organic substances and not man-made
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synthetic molecules, they possess a natural affinity for the human
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organism. They are extremely efficient in balancing the nervous
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system. Restoring a sense of well-being and relaxation is necessary
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for optimum health and for the process of self-healing.
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Herbal medicine can justifiably boast of Valeriana officinalis
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(Valerian), the ideal "tranquillizer". The rhizomes of this plant
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contain a volatile oil (which includes valerianic acid), volatile
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alkaloids (including chatinine), and iridoids (valepotriates) which
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have been shown to reduce anxiety and aggression and even to
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counteract the effects of ethanol [2]. So effective is Valeriana
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in cutting out the interference of anxiety while maintaining normal
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mental awareness, that it enables the patient to continue the most
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complicated mental exercise without drowsiness, loss of
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consciousness or depression. Valerian has been usefully taken even
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before an examination or a driving test!
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Verbena officinalis (Vervain) on the other hand, is not only
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effective against depression, but also strongly supports the
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detoxifying function of the liver. Its French name is still "Herbe
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Sacre"; an old English name is "Holy Wort"; for Vervain was one of
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the seven sacred herbs of the Druids. (Significantly Druidic
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medicine worked very much upon the psychological background to the
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disease, attempting to revitalize the psyche before healing the
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body). To-day we know that the antispasmodic qualities of Verbena
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are largely due to the glycoside verbenalin. Recent Chinese
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research has linked the plant with dilation of arteries in the
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brain: a likely explanation of its usefulness in treating migraine,
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especially when this problem is accompanied by liver congestion.
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It is certainly indicated for hysterical, exhausted, or depressive
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states.
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Hypericum perforatum (St. John's Wort) is an analgesic and anti-
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inflammatory with an important local application to neuralgia and
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sciatica. Systemically, its sedative properties based on the
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glycoside hypericin, (a red pigment), make it applicable to
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neurosis and irritability. Many English herbalists use it
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extensively as a background remedy.
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Melissa officinalis (Lemon Balm) being both carminative and
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antispasmodic, is active specifically on that part of the vagus
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nerve which may interfere with the harmonious functioning of the
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heart and the stomach. Recent experiments at the University of
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Heidelberg have confirmed that the action of the volatile oil
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begins within the limbic system of the brain and subsequently
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operates directly upon the vagus nerve and all of the organs that
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are innervated by it. Accordingly, neurasthenia (complete nervous
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prostration), migraine, and nervous gastropathy are amenable to
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its healing power.
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The great herbal restoratives of the nervous system are Avena
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sativa (Oats), Scutellaria lateriflora (Scullcap) and Turnera
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diffusa (Damiana). Oats contains a nervine alkaloid which also
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helps to restore the heart... (again the vagus connection).
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According to Canadian research, Avena is helpful in angina and in
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cardiac insufficiency. Moreover in an article in Nature in 1971,
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Gonon outlined its usefulness in the treatment of addiction to
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morphine, narcotics, tobacco and alcohol... a use which is still
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current in British hospitals.
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But the list does not stop here. Rosmarinus officinalis (Rosemary)
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helps the circulation to the brain and is therefore useful in
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geriatric senility; Lavandula officinalis (Lavender) exerts a
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cardio-tonic and anti-migraine action; Tilia europea (Linden or
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Lime Flowers) is an antispasmodic particularly suited to problems
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of venous congestion and arteriosclerotic states, but gentle enough
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for an anxious child.
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There is great scope for the development of herbal medicine in the
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area of nervous diseases and of its application in so-called
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"mental illness" where pharmaceuticals seem at best to be applied
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for their "management" effect. And this is an area where the
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benefits of a wholefood diet and holistic life-style are badly
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neglected.
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Among the more outstanding serious problems that have been recorded
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at the Clinic of Herbal Medicine in Balham, London, England, (the
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teaching clinic of the National Institute of Medical Herbalists),
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are: the control of Parkinson's disease in a 59-year old man; the
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elimination of epileptic seizures in a 14-year old girl; the
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removal of clinical depression in a 46-year old woman; the
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eradication of frequent migraine attacks in many patients; and the
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regulation of the wide mood swings and other distressing symptoms
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that accompany both menopause and premenstrual stress in countless
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women patients. (These are just cases which I myself have witnessed
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over a period of 10 months).
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Understandably, the choice of a nervine most suitable to an
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individual patient must be based upon a thorough health assessment
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and the experience and training of a qualified herbal practitioner.
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But even the layman can do much to alleviate stress and sooth
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frayed nerves. Drinking Chamomile, Lemon Balm or Linden tea (long
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the custom in Europe). is the prudent choice instead of coffee for
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anyone having sleeping difficulties or anyone who wishes to achieve
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a greater sense of inner calm. Twenty minutes out-of-breath
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exercise (walking, swimming, or cycling) will go a long way as a
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natural antidote to the pent-up tension that results from a
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stressful day at the office. And it will have the unexpected bonus
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of improving circulation, increasing metabolic rate and enhancing
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heart and lung function. The B-vitamins as found in whole-wheat
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bread, wheat germ, torula or brewer's yeast and liver (organically
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produced) provide ideal nourishment for the nervous system and can
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be wisely substituted for the stimulant foods such as white flour,
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sugar, junk foods and their myriad harmful chemical additives.
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Keith Stelling. M.A; Dip Phyt; M.N.I.M.H.
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THIS ARTICLE IS COPYWRITE. IT MAY BE COPIED AND DISTRIBUTED
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PROVIDED THIS NOTICE IS NOT REMOVED.
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BOTANIC MEDICINE SOCIETY, BOX 82, STN. A, WILLOWDALE, ONTARIO,
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CANADA. M2N 5S7.
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Membership in the Botanic Medicine Society is available. Mail
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$25.00 to the above address and receive the quarterly magazine The
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Herbalist for one year. An essential reference for all those with
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an interest in herbs and herbalism.
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