
Essential oils growing in popularity
Gather a group of women in almost any setting these days, and you will probably overhear their discussion about their struggles with health issues.
If they aren’t talking about their own chronic symptoms, they are talking about their children’s asthma and digestive issues. It is not surprising that women are taking their health into their own oily hands with essential oils.
Plants have been used in healing practices around the globe for thousands of years, but the essential oils derived from plants were “rediscovered” in Western countries around the 1980s.
“I carry some
of my favorite oils with me in my purse and pull them out to use as
needed. A drop of peppermint and a drop of wild orange together is
uplifting and enlivening when I am dragging or tired. I also diffuse
essential oils at home daily.”
–Mary Thoma
Essential oil therapy has since paralleled the alternative medicine movement for the past 30 years.
Some
popular oils used in aromatherapy include peppermint, citrus oils,
geranium, lavender, cedarwood and bergamot, but there are endless
choices to be found when you consider oil blends. Essential oils are
extremely concentrated, such as the 220 pounds of lavender flowers it
takes to make about one pound of essential oil.
Area
filmmaker Mary Thoma is also an independent wellness advocate for
doTERRA, a distributor of pure essential oils. Thoma was first
introduced to essential oils at a yoga class, where the yoga instructor
was offering them to her students. Now Thoma offers them to people she
sees struggling and leads support groups designed to teach people how to
reap the benefits of essential oils.
Thoma
said essential oils can be used by smelling or inhaling, applying to
skin, and less commonly, by drinking or adding them to food.
“I
carry some of my favorite oils with me in my purse and pull them out to
use as needed,” she said. “A drop of peppermint and a drop of wild
orange together is uplifting and enlivening when I am dragging or tired.
I also diffuse essential oils at home daily for respiratory support,
reducing environmental threats, support for sound sleep and mood
uplift.”
“Essential
oils do more than simply offer a pleasant fragrance,” Thoma said. “They
are high in antioxidants and have amazing therapeutic benefits, many of
which have been the subject of published scientific journals.”
And
it’s not a tough sell. Many Americans these days are searching for
something to relieve their autoimmune problems after mainstream medicine
has been unable to help. One visit to one of Thoma’s support groups
delivered the stories and perspectives of women of varying ages from
different backgrounds, all of whom have come together to form a bond
over essential oils.
These
oils definitely wake up the senses. First-time users talk about
experiencing an “opening-up” of the lungs and body as they inhale an EO
for the first time. They claim the antioxidants in essential oils offer a
detoxing and healing effect that improves over time. Converts speak of
more energy and a strengthened immune system, with nagging symptoms from
various ailments vastly improved or eliminated.
Cathlene
Myers credits oils with changing her life. “I have asthma and have
suffered for about 14 years, so I needed something to support healthy
respiratory function,” she said. “I’ve been using eucalyptus and Breathe
[a brand-name breathing blend] every day for the last six years. It has
helped tremendously. I haven’t actually had to seek medicine in about
four or five years. I’ve also wanted something to support weight-loss so
it has really helped to just get my hormonal balance in check.”
Patti
Carey is another fan of essential oils whose first interest stemmed
from her reaction to certain store-bought beauty products. “Every time I
bought eye crème it was way too expensive, and if it had any type of
firming ingredients at all, my eyes swelled,” Carey said. “I like
frankincense and geranium. Both are good for the aging process and skin
condition.”
Carey said
since joining the group she has experimented with other oils. “They
just make you feel better,” she said. “I now use oils to balance my
hormones, like geranium and ylang ylang. I use cedarwood for hip pain by
putting it on my feet at night. I was just using it for relaxing and I
stopped using it for a couple of weeks, and my hip pain was back. Now I
use it all the time.”
Carey hit on one of the key concepts of essential oils, which are all about how they make you feel. Using them is a journey that is different
for each person. “Listen to your body,” she said. “I have heard so many
testimonials about so many different things. It just empowers you to
try harder to figure things out and to learn more.”
Another
friend from the support group is Mara Alexander, who has been using
essential oils for about two years. “I was having major digestive
issues, and I also struggle with an autoimmune disease and was on
multiple medications for those,” she said. “I also have a women’s health
issue and was struggling with extreme pain. So I decided to get into
essential oils not to cure myself but to provide some relief. I use the
digestive blend daily and Clearly Calm [a brand-name blend] and
peppermint and lavender, but really there are about 20 more I love.”
“I
was on multiple medications every day for digestive issues and
autoimmune issues,” Alexander said. “When I started using essential oils
internally and incorporating them into my daily life, I got off all of
those medications.”
Brenda
Nelson is an area nurse who wasn’t new to essential oils before coming
to the group but is learning more about them each day. “I knew about
chamomile and lavender, and I just used them to relax,” she said. “But
now, I’ve been introduced to a larger variety of oils. I have a sister
with pancreatic cancer, and after chemo she feels really bad. I infuse
frankincense and OnGuard [another brand-name blend], and it seems to
relax her. Maybe it’s the oils, and maybe it’s that I’m there helping
her.”
Nelson’s
experience brings up another key consideration. None of the women at the
group meeting were claiming essential oils cure anything but rather
that they offer one way to attempt to reinvigorate and bring the body’s
systems back to life in order to work as they were intended. “I do not
believe essential oils heal but rather support normal healthy body
systems,” Thoma said.
Another
example of how people are using essential oils to support or as an
alternative to mainstream medicine can be seen in the large numbers of
people using oils to treat asthma. More than half of the people at the
meeting mentioned asthma. Nelson said, “My youngest grandson is
asthmatic, so I use Breathe with him and he doesn’t have to have as many
breathing treatments as he usually does,” she said. “And besides, he
loves for me to tickle his feet.”
That
soothing touch of which Nelson speaks, both with her sister and her
grandson, only enhances the use of oils. Other group members talked
about how much their children love to use the oils, from frankincense
rubbed on the feet to help autism sensory issues to digestive oils and
breathing blends rubbed on the abdomen.
Carline
Procell hosts the group meetings at the shop she co-owns, Bella Nonnas
Olive Oil and Vinegar Tasting Bar. Oils such as coconut and olive are
often used as “carrier oils” blended with essential oils for application
or in some cases, ingestion. “We meet here regularly,” she said. “I was
here one day while they were having one of their meetings, and I needed
some consolation,” Procell said. “Mary said, ‘Try this. Smell this,’
and I said, ‘This smells so good.’ Mary said, ‘That’s weird because it
smells terrible, but they say if you need it, it smells good to you.’
Now, I use them daily for sinus and allergy issues. I use peppermint oil
and eucalyptus oil on my temples when I have a headache, and I use
Breathe on a daily basis.”
Procell
even gives oils as gifts. “For Easter, for my grandkids and my
children, I made little carrier bags where they each got to pick their
own oils. My 8-year-old grandson suffers from asthma, and he uses
Breathe on a daily basis. And my children use a digestive blend on my
3-month-old grandson to regulate his bowel movements because he’s
nursed. The pediatrician was fine with that.”
Procell
said one drop of ginger at the base of the neck works well for acid
reflux. “My 8-year-old granddaughter loves the grapefruit and the wild
orange and lemon,” Procell added. “She puts them in her water every day.
All of those things support respiratory use and the immune system. When
the kids spend the night with me and they are coughing, I rub Deep Blue
(another brand-name blend) on their feet, but I’ve also used a roller
ball with olive oil and peppermint.”
Modern
medicine and essential oils can go hand in hand. “They aren’t mutually
exclusive,” Carey said. “I think there has got to be a lot of knowledge
present to go back to natural. If I am ever lying in the street and
someone takes me to the hospital, I hope they give me everything modern
medicine has to offer, but I also hope somebody comes in and rubs
frankincense on my feet.”
LEARN MORE:
For
more information on essential oils and aromatherapy, call or text Thoma
at 465- 5374 or by e-mail at [email protected]. Other resources
include http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ pubmedhealth/PMHT0025082/ and https://essentialoils.org.