› Forums › Herb-Talk | Archive › Botanical Medicine › Medicinal Herbs › Talking to Teasel
- This topic has 5 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 9 years, 10 months ago by
cmsnackdaddy.
-
AuthorPosts
-
-
September 24, 2012 at 2:21 PM #33201
Dr. Patrick Jones
Homestead InstructorI’ve had some interesting experiences lately.
Not long ago I was driving down a country road. I saw a plant growing on a ditch bank and had a most intense interest and attraction to it…Really intense. I asked a guy I was with what it was. He didn’t know. A week or so later I was on Steven’s place and saw the plant again and again I had the same intense feeling about it. I asked him if he knew what it was. He said it was Teasel. I asked him what it was good for. He said he didn’t know that it was good for anything.
I said, “No, It’s really good for something.”
So we started snooping around the web and reading books etc and it turns out that teasel is a wonderful herb with some very unique properties. It’s useful in cases of severe, chronic muscle and nerve pain and has been used with good success in cases of Lyme disease, fibromyalgia etc…
“Hmmm, so why is that so important?” I wondered.
A couple of days later a lady came to my office for an herb consult. Guess what her problem was, severe chronic nerve and muscle pain. Within the past month I’ve had several other ladies come in with similar issues.
Apparently, God and the teasel wanted to get together with those folks and help them.
The other day, I was out wildcrafting with Steven and our wives and managed to get stung really good by some stinging nettle. I immediately started looking for some plantain to take away the pain…no luck, too dry. As I was scouring the ground looking for plantain, I saw a little first-year teasel plant. The little guy started jumping up and down and waving his arms shouting “Pick me, pick me!“. OK, not literally but that’s how it felt. So, I grabbed a little pice of the leaf and ground it up and put it on the sting. Instant relief. The pain was completely gone. I had never read or heard of teasel being useful for this application or any other external use.
The “Take Home Message” is to listen to that little voice in your head. These plants were created by God to bless us and they have no greater joy than to fulfill the measure of their creation and do so. Learn to listen them. Learn to listen to the God that created them and learn to listen to your body which was made to use them.
If there is an herb for which you have an unusually strong affinity follow those feelings. If there is one for which you have an inexplicably strong aversion, follow those feelings too.
Listen to the weeds. You might be surprised what you learn.
Patrick
Don't use herbs or combine herbs with medications or use them during lactation or pregnancy without talking with your healthcare provider.
-
December 6, 2012 at 5:30 AM #33232
KiltedHerbalist
This is interesting. I find myself in this type of situation more and more, maybe I need to be listening more to my intuition than my head. Thanks for the post.
-
August 10, 2014 at 2:47 AM #33728
-
August 11, 2014 at 12:27 AM #33731
IdahoHerbalist
Can you get a picture of the “weed” and post it in a thread here? Post it in the Wildcrafting forum and we will see what we can do to help you ID it.
-
August 11, 2014 at 2:08 AM #33732
mamabear
I wish I could. It was last year died during the winter and has not come back. 🙁
-
May 20, 2015 at 2:42 PM #34607
-
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘Medicinal Herbs’ is closed to new topics and replies.