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Aromatherapy
uses healing essential oils, natures versatile fragrances painstakingly
extracted from plants, to bring deep and far-reaching changes in our physical,
mental, emotional and spiritual well-being. It is poised to be a key complementary
therapy of the 21st century
Sleepless nights, six weeks of a hacking cough, the mandatory course of antibiotics,
changing bottle of fat, sweet globules of homeopathic medicine, experimenting
with what seemed like everybody's grandmother's remediesI went through it
all. Nothing much helped. Aromatherapy, someone finally suggested. Now what could
a smell-to-get-well therapy do for a person with a blocked nasal passage, I wondered,
even as I set off in search of the smell pharmacy.
I returned from the
aromatherapist's clinic armed with made-to-order aromatic massage oil, a blend
of inhalation oils and essentials oils which I could dab on a tissue and sniff
or sprinkle on my pillow? I balked at the idea of oily stains on the linen. That
of course, was before I knew much about essential oils, the base of aromatherapy.
Essential oils, present as tiny droplets between plant cells, are aromatic substances
which are extracted from flowers, grass, herbs, peel of citrus fruits, seeds,
leaves, bark, rootsvirtually every part of the plant, generally by a process
of expression' (cold-pressure squeezing of fruit peel) or distillation.
This process is slow, laborious and expensive.
For instance, eight million
hand-picked jasmine blossoms yield a mere kilo of steeply-priced jasmine oil.
Or 30 roses produce a single drop of rose oil. A liter of rose oil could cost
up to Rs 4-5 lakh. These essential oils contain the plant's vital essence, its
most valuable and concentrated therapeutic and nutritional properties. In nature,
these oils, which are released slowly, protect the plant from climatic changes,
pests, diseases and other imbalances. Amazingly, research is demonstrating the
minute doses of these essential oils can work similar wonders within our bodies,
stimulating, rejuvenating and balancing our delicate life-support systems.
Fifty percent of the world's essential oils lend their aromatic flavors and
preservative qualities to the food industry, perfumery accounts for a substantial
percentage, while five per cent is for aromatherapy, a small but significant figure
which is growing. If these oils are used carefully, aromatherapy can be one of
the gentlest, universally-applicable, natural healing therapies.
'More
is better' doesn't work here, as I realized when I sprinkled a liberal amount
of the recommended oil in the overly-hot inhalation water and flinched as the
strong, vaporizing oil stung my eyes and the overwhelming aroma brought loud protests
from others in the room. Six drops would be enough, reaffirmed the therapist,
and keep your eyes closed when you inhale the aromatic oil added to tepid water.
Worked better, through I felt far more comfortable when I sprinkled a couple of
drops on my pillow and finally slept through the night. There were no oily stains
next morning because essential oils are non-oily in nature, and, when pure, evaporate.
As I found myself bounding back to health, amazement at the efficacy
of aromatherapy led me to read everything on the subject I could lay my hands
on. Slowly, little brown bottles, double-sealed to protect the volatile oil from
light and air, started lining my medicine cabinet. The oils, I discovered, were
versatile, the possibilities of usage limitless. You could as easily use them
to beat back insomnia, insects, indigestion, anxiety, acne or aches, as you could
to sharpen memory, expand your consciousness or arouse erotic sensuality. Aromatherapy
is poised to be one of the key alternative therapies of the 21st century.
People are realizing that they can get rid of their physical, mental, emotional
and even spiritual ills through a judicious use of aromatic essential oils. Innumerable
universities and hospitals are studying the use of aromatherapy oils. Innumerable
universities and hospitals are studying the use of aromatherapy oils. Some hospitals
in Oxford, England, for instance, have replaced chemical sedatives with essential
oil blends which include lavender, marjoram, geranium and cardamom oil. The University
of Cincinnati, USA conclusively demonstrated that the use of lily-of-the valley
and peppermint oils increased, by 15-25 per cent, the subjects' performance in
any task needing concentration.
Firms in Japan are pumping aromatherapy
oils such as lemon and rosemary through the air-cooling systems to improve employee
efficiency, especially in the less productive hours of the afternoon. An entire
new field of health care, making use of aromatherapy oils with their sedative,
calming, pain-reducing effects, is growing around the care of the terminally ill.
Aromatherapy oils, with their air-purifying, anti-viral, antibacterial, antiseptic
abilities, are ideal for vaporizing in hospitals and crowded public places to
prevent airborne infections. Mass aromatherapy is also suggested to influence
social behavior and increase work efficiency.
This, of course, is vehemently opposed by the advocates of holistic aromatherapy,
who believe in individual prescriptions. Aromatherapy is essentially old
wine in new (little brown) bottles. Aromatic essences were popularly used
centuries ago in India, Egypt China and Greece. We've all heard the story
of Cleopatra's amorous adventures aided by aromatic essences, of ayurvedic
use of essential oils for medicine and massage, the use of sandalwood
to enhance meditation,
and the use of aromatic resins by Egyptian embalmers to preserve mummies.
Modern aromatherapy, coming into vogue in the past 30 years, has given
a new and focused impetus to the art.
Widely practiced in Europe and the UK, aromatherapy
is also finding converts in Australia, Canada, the USA and Japan. A decade ago,
you could hardly come across an English book on the subject, or find it mentioned
in the periodicals. Today, the western media pans in on any new development or
research in the field. Entire journals are now devoted to the subject, what with
researchers, industries, medical practitioners, alternative health therapists,
and amateurs jumping on to the aromatherapy bandwagon. In India, many homes unaware
of the fashionable term aromatherapy', have nonetheless a tradition of using
essential oils.
Take eucalyptus oil: in south India, a drop or two is
commonly added to the bathwater of babies or put on their bed linen to prevent
coughs or bronchial problems. Traditional perfume concentrates like ittars
and commonly-used incense sticks also make use of essential oils. Further, the
close link between aromatherapy and ayurveda is part of our living culture. But
urban India, with its looser links with heritage, remains largely ignorant of
the uses of these oils.
Now,
with the resurgence of New Age therapies and the urgent need to take individual
responsibility for health, aromatherapy is slowly gaining ground here. Talking
to some aromatherapists, the first impression one gets about this system is that
whether it is used for cosmetic purposes or as a natural holistic health remedy,
there can be no sharp or dividing lines in its practice. Even as you are being
treated for specific physical or psychological problems through other modes, therapists
believes that the essential oils can supplement the treatment, intelligently balancing
and harmonizing your physical, emotional mental and spiritual nature, leading
to overall well-being.
Delhi-based
aromatherapist Sunita Agarwal, who has an MD, talks with palpable excitement about
the therapy and how she discovered it. What began as a home remedy for her perpetually
sniffling toddler soon spread to her circle of friends, and finally crept into
her regular practice as a successful add-on relief measure for children who visited
her clinic, with even chronic cases responding well to aromatherapy. "I would
treat the children for respiratory problems, accompanying coughs, colds and sore
throats. But because of urban pollution, these problems would keep recurring.
How often can one prescribe antibiotics?" she wondered.
With a steady
stream of patients walking into her clinic asking for treatment with aromatic
oils, she gravitated full-time into the study, research and practice of aromatherapy.
Typically, a consultation with her entails a detailed medical history, queries
about diet and lifestyle. Then, she blends the required essential oils in a carrier
oil for massage. You are asked to sniff the oil blend to ensure that you like
the fragrance, your body's signals being an important guide to the correct choice.
If massage oils are given for home use, basic massage techniques are demonstrated.
Supplementary essential oils for inhalation and baths may be included.
Agarwal's
patients include women with postpartum blues, lower-back aches, cosmetic
queries, gynecological problems, and the middle-aged and elderly coming
with stress related problems, insomnia, spondylitis and arthritis. There
are hundreds of essential oils available but aromatherapists generally
use only 30 to 40.
Agarwal,
who avoids using very expensive essential oils, would ideally like to import all
essential oils, but the costs are prohibitive. So she largely relies on indigenous
products. A trained nose, she says, is the best guide to detect purity. Essential
oils, she elaborates, are chemically complex and very versatile.
Juniper
oil, for instance, can be used to treat skin problems, dandruff, diarrhea or joint
pain. The natural plant essences with their hormone-like properties and vitamins,
minerals, and natural antiseptics, are easily absorbed into the bloodstream through
the skin or nose. Different fragrances, with varied vital electromagnetic properties
and vibrational energies, serve to stimulate our immune system, circulatory system
and neurological functions.
Essential oils can be put in three categories:
those that invigorate the body and rev up the spirit, those that tone, balance
and regulate our bodily functions and life-supporting systems, and those which
have a calm, sedative and tranquilizing effect.
We know that some fragrances
can evoke strong emotional or psychological responses. They
affect the cells of our nose, which send messages to the brain, which is then
stimulated to release hormones and neuro-chemicals that bring healing changes
in the body, and our psychological and emotional reactions. In Aromatherapy:
Scent and Psyche, authors Peter and Kate Damian point out: "Olfactory research
is still in its infancywe are now gaining rudimentary knowledge of how and
why essential oil fragrance affect human psychology and physiology."
In India, awareness about how aromatherapy works is poor. Even people who have
used it and got well are unsure about it. Take Ritu Singh, 42. A recurring yeast
infection, unsuccessfully treated by leading gynecologists, finally yielded completely
to tea tree oil.
"But," she says, "I hardly know anything about this
therapy and would probably end up visiting my homeopath first for any future problem."
Anand Sen, 68, after two months of discomfort and regular visits to doctors, reluctantly
let his family persuade him to get aromatherapy for a frozen shoulder. "Aromatherapy
is all right for women who are more sensitive to smells. What can it do for me?"
he asked, a prejudice echoed in many quarters.
Two weeks later, he sheepishly
admitted substantial pain relief and ease in mobility, but still talks of going
to his physiotherapist. Says Usha Kapoor, manager at Pivot Point India, an institute
for hair and beauty in Delhi which also runs aromatherapy courses: " I know all
about the refreshing, rejuvenating qualities of these essential oils, and how
even a few drops in bath water has a therapeutic or mood-enhancing effect. But
somehow I don't end up using them."
Putting things in perspective, says
Blossom Kochhar, author of Health and Beauty through Aromatherapy, whose
aromatherapy cosmetic range is available in select outlets in Delhi, Bangalore
and Mumbai: "Three years ago, if I mentioned aromatherapy, people would go 'Huh?',
I wouldn't have dared launch my Aroma Magic cosmetic range then. But things are
looking up now."
The world over, aromatherapy is becoming big business
in beauty and health spas, fragrance and cosmetic industries. Some use pure essential
oils, others sneak in the cheaper, synthetic copies. "Only pure essential oils,"
emphasizes Kochhar, "can produce genuine results. There is nothing like nature
for anti-aging help and rejuvenation. Essential oils advance cellular renewal
by better circulation, hydration and removal of toxins from the body."
A serious campaigner, Kochhar often conducts workshops and lecture seminars on
aromatherapy in India and abroad. She says that her route to aromatherapy was
probably a natural progression from her early years in the Nilgiris where some
herbs or crushed seed from trees held the answer to every childhood ailment.
She is
working extensively with environment fragrancing and using her shop in Qutab Colonnade
in New Delhi, India, to make people awarein a fun wayof the creative,
experimental and explosively rich potential of aromatherapy. At her shop, you
find huge jars of colored aromatic waxes to create your own aromatic candles,
essential oils to fashion your own perfume or cosmetics, ceramic aromatic diffusers
which spread aromas of your choice in the room, serving as air-freshners and mood
enhancers, corked miniature earthen pots in which you can put essential oils to
perfume your cupboard, keep away the silverfish, or fill with basil oil and hang
inside your car to keep you alert when you drive.
Says Kochhar: "We educate people back to natural, healing aromas. Given a choice,
people often choose a synthetic aroma." This is hardly surprising with the modern
penchant for the dramatic in fragrances. With nearly 10,000 synthetic substances
available to fashion fragrances, many people don't have a nose for the real thing.
Less expensive, superficially synthetic fragrances certainly do not
have the healing power of natural essences with their ability to ensure profound
and real changes. Pure rose oil, for instance has as many as 2,000 complex components,
each working holistically, safely and in wide-ranging ways, whether for cosmetic
or therapeutic use, while a synthetic copy, which may be superficially stimulating,
may have about 50 components. Nature can never be duplicated.
Take pure
lavender oil: among the most versatile oils available, by virtue of its complexity,
it heals burns, counters stress and depression, eases heart palpitation, soothes
nerves, is anti-inflammatory, works to get rid of insects and headaches disinfects
babies' nappies, combats the hot flushes of menopause, cures insomnia, lowers
blood pressure, overrides impatience, irritability and hysteria, relieves aches
and pains, and even smells good! Anyone for synthetic lavender?
Even
as she widens her product range and works out new promotional schemes, Kochhar
comments: "This is not a therapy for the masses. You need to be educated and informed
about its uses to incorporate it into your lifestyle."
Agrees Mumbai-based
aromatherapy consultant Deepa Bhatia, who markets her products under the brand
name Breathe: "Aromatherapy, which people here still believe has come from Europe,
is attracting the well-traveled, educated peoplesome probably for the wrong
reasons like snob appeal. I guess when Indians start associating it with incense
sticks and other Indian applications is when they will feel a little closer home
to aromatherapy."
Rattan
says:"The main problem most aromatherapists is the sourcing of essential oils,
more so because their requirement for individual essential oils is to small for
the extractor to entertain, and what you get in the market cannot be trusted for
quality or price. FM's meets this need by supplying small packs of quality essential
oils at reasonable prices."
His FM's Handbook of Aromatherapy
serves as a guide for his aromatherapy workshops, which, says Rattan, "stress
on the therapeutic aspects and give information about essential and carrier oils,
formulation methods, applications and massage techniques.
Participants include medical practitioners (allopaths, homeopaths, and gynecologist),
housewives and beauticians.
In the offing is also an advanced aromatherapy
course based on the core curriculum of based on the core curriculum of International
Aromatherapy Organizations Council."
Ayurveda has unique and diverse
ways of identifying the essential oils best suited to you, depending on factors
such as your particular mind-body type.
If you are a vata
type (typically susceptible to headaches, dry skin, constipation, nervous
anxiety, hypersensitivity, insomnia), avoid sharp or strongly perfumed
essential oils.
You would benefit from warm, energizing oils such as camphor, cinnamon
and cypress, combined with the stabilizing, calming oils such as sandalwood, jasmine
or rose, blended in sesame oil, a carrier oil generally regarded as incomparable
in its ability to penetrate the skin.
A pitta
type (typically prone to ulcers, fevers, inflammatory skin diseases, acidity,
agitation, anger) would benefit from cooling, calming oils, flowery fragrances
such as gardenia, jasmine, mint, rose, sandalwood blended in a cooling
carrier like coconut oil.
A kapha type (predisposed to respiratory ailments) will benefit
from the use of warm, light, stimulating oils such as sage, basil, cedar,
pine, myrrh in very light carrier oils. The use of sharp, stimulating
fragrances is beneficial for the kapha
type.
Aromatic ayurvedic massages, whether for rejuvenation or health,
are big business the world over. An entire tourism industry is booming around
it in Kerala, with tax and other incentives given to entrepreneurs to set up quality
ayurvedic resorts offering genuine ayurvedic treatment.
Aromatherapy,
an integral part of ayurveda, will obviously receive a fillip with such incentives.
Over centuries and across cultures, the belief holds that essential oils have
the ability to advance mystical ecstasy and heightened awarenessbe it in
places of worship, religious gatherings or in the meditation room.
Beneficial
oils include frankincense, sandalwood, lavender, rose, jasmine, rosemary and angelica.
An ancient recommendation of essential oils to balance, strengthen and energizes
your seven chakras: jasmine and ylang-ylang for the base or root chakra,
vertivert for the hara, rose-mary and lemon for the solar plexus chakra,
neroli for the heart chakra, benzoin for the throat chakra, sandalwood
for the third eye chakra and rose for the crown chakra.
For instance, sandalwood oil, blended in a carrier oil and rubbed between the
brows, the third chakra, holds the promise of psychic enfoldment. So what
in essence, doe one have here? An alternative remedy which has crossed barriers,
got the tacit nod of approval from orthodox medical researchers, scientists and
doctors. Their research has demonstrated that medicinal properties are actually
present in aromatherapy oils, that aromatherapy is an immensely versatile system
which is accessible to both scientific examination and individual experimentation.
SMELL
PHARMACY AT HOME
Massage: Aromatherapy massage is a comprehensive body therapy which rejuvenates, nourishes
and heals. More so when combined with acupressure, polarity therapy, shiatsu and
reflexology.
For optimum results: thoroughly mix chosen essential oil
or oil blends in the carrier oil just before use (10 drops to 15 ml or three tea
spoons of carrier oil, less for children, asthmatic and elderly people).
Any good odorless, colorless oil from the kitchen cabinet will work as a carrier
oil. But never use baby oil. If you take a massage after a bath or steam, the
dry, open pores will aid absorption of oils which takes from 20-90 minutes. Use
room temperature oil, follow normal massage techniques, drape cloth over skin
as soon as massage is over. Avoid bathing for a few hours afterwards.
Bath: Particularly effective for fluid retention, insomnia, menstrual
problems, depression, stress, aching muscles, poor blood circulation. Swish eight
drops of oils in warm bathwater, stir vigorously and soak for 15-20 minutes.
If your skin is dry,mix the aromatic oils in a tablespoon of carrier oil
before pouring into bath water. Rub the skin gently with towel to aid absorption.
To get relief for tired, aching, swollen feet, try a foot bath with lemon and
peppermint oil.
Mouth Wash: This is useful for mouth ulcers
and bleeding gums. Add five drops to a glass of water, rinse mouth and spit out.
Inhalation and Steaming: Effective for respiratory problems
and congestion. Sprinkle 6-8 drops of essential oil in tepid water. Close the
eyes, bend over the bowl, cover the head with a towel and inhale deeply for a
few minutes. This will deep-cleanse and rehydrate skin.
For direct inhalation,
sprinkle a couple of drops on your pillow or tissue and inhale: peppermint for
a headache, eucalyptus for congestion, lavender and marjoram for insomnia.
Compresses: S Use cold compresses for headaches, bruises, aches,
sprains, fevers; and hot ones for boils or menstrual pains. Stir 6-8 drops of
oil in half a cup of water. Soak a thin tower or handkerchief, wring and place
over affected area.
Vaporization: Ideal as safe and natural
air-freshners, mood enhancers. Also of germicidal value. Place a few drops on
a heat source: a light bulb, a small bowl of warm water, an aromatic diffuser.
Replenish oil after an hour or two. Vaporizing lemongrass oil keeps away mosquitoes,
camomile eases hyperactivity and cranky feelings in a child.
Perfume: The fragrance of essential oils, though less dramatic, actually suppresses
any foul body odor by a physiochemical action that destroys, hinders or neutralizes
germs. Blend oils of your choice. 10 drops to 100 ml of light carrier oil such
as sweet almond and use on body. Use 10 drops to 100 ml of carrier.