Ingredient In
                  Breezey, Deeper, EZ Traveler, Magi, Paine
                  
                   Therapeutic Properties
                  anti-inflammatory, analgesic, antiseptic, antispasmodic, disinfectant
                  
                  Affinity For
                  muscles and joints, nerves urinary system lung meridian
                  nerves lymphatic system
                  
                  Resonance Plant Family Part Utilized
                  physical, emotional Betulaceae leaves
                  
                   Application
                  Birch should be applied, well diluted, to areas of pain or inflammation.
                  
                  Aromatic Considerations
                  Birch has a pleasant aroma. It awakens the senses, increasing awareness and alertness.
                  
                  Emotional/Spiritual Aspects
                  Sometimes we get into a frame of mind where  we are very much afraid of the truth. We are sure that we will not be  able to handle the truth if it is forced upon us. We spend a lot of  mental and emotional energy hiding from the truth. Birch essential oil  is very eye opening. It shatters our illusions and brings us up against  reality. This sounds harsh, but honesty in looking at oneself is a  compelling and liberating force. The most important truth we can learn  in this life is the truth about our own motivations and triggers. This  truth will truly set us free and birch essential oil can help us grasp  it and keep hold of it.
                  
                   Physical Aspects
                  Birch essential oil has analgesic and  anti-inflammatory properties. It is useful for arthritis, muscle and  bone pain, tendonitis, osteoporosis, and any inflammatory condition.   Birch is also a treatment for bladder infections, recurring cystitis,  gout, edema, and kidney stones. Birch helps with eczema and
                  other skin disorders. One of its outstanding uses is reducing fevers.
                  
                  General Information
                  One of the key compounds in birch (and  wintergreen) essential oil is methyl salicylate. In birch oil, this  compound makes up 85-90% of the oil. Methyl salicylate is an  aspirin-like compound which has much the same effect on muscles and  nerves as cortisone, but as a constituent of an essential oil it does
                  not have the side-effects of cortisone. Methyl  salicylate is easily and cheaply produced in laboratories, but the  man-made substitute has very toxic side effects. This is not true of  birch essential oil—in spite of what you may have heard or read. The  10-15% of other compounds that occur naturally in birch oil balances the  methyl salicylate and keep it from being toxic. This ‘balancing act’ of  naturally occurring compounds is common in the natural world. (The lack  of balancing components is why drugs have side effects and herbs do  not!!) Research done by aromatherapists of the British school of thought  was conducted using perfume grade essential oils (in other words,  synthetic laboratory produced oils diluted in carrier oil). This  research has been given extensive coverage in print. Of course, these  synthetic oils proved toxic—even when well-diluted. The research has no  relevance to the safety or efficacy of pure therapeutic grade essential  oils. Therapeutic grade birch essential oil is safe to use; synthetic  reproductions are not! Essential oils are concentrated. In most  applications they should be diluted. This is true of birch essential  oil.  I visited a web site where it was explained that birch oil  aggravated a toxic condition established by medications which contained  large amounts of methyl salicylate. This aggravation was sited as a  reason to not use birch essential oil at all. The fact that the reaction  was set up by the synthetic compound was totally ignored and brushed  aside as irrelevant. It was assumed that the the toxic reaction would  have been the same with pure birch oil. Although the natural and the  man-made compounds have the same name, they are not the same! A study of  simple chemistry shows this clearly. (See Dr. David Stewart’s book The  Chemistry of Essential Oils Made Simple, p221). The methyl salicylate in  the birch oil continued to aggravate the condition because the natural  compounds meant to balance it were insufficient for a battle against the  synthetic compound in the medications and the natural compound in the  birch oil at the same time. More simply put, the ‘balancing’ substances  in the birch were sufficient for the birch; they were wholly inadequate  to deal with the deliberate over-dose the drug created.
                  
                  Why do we use essential oils? Because they are  naturally occurring substances, balanced by nature and nature’s Creator.  They heal quickly, without the side effects of the clones we call  drugs. Never forget, all drugs have side effects!!
                  
                  Cautions
                  There are some people who are very sensitive  to even natural methyl salicylate. There is someone who is allergic to  everything, I suspect. Starting slowly with any essential oil is a good  thing.
                  
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