What are Essential Oils?
They are subtle, therapeutic-grade oils
distilled from plants, shrubs, flowers, trees, roots, bushes and seeds. They
are oxygenating and help transport nutrients to the cells of our body.
Without oxygen, nutrients cannot be assimilated; therefore, the oxygenating
essential oils can help us maintain our health.
Benefits of Essential
Oils
One of the most popular
applications for essential oils
is in the field of aromatherapy. This highly skilled art uses essential oils
to assist in the healing of physical, psychological and aesthetic ailments.
It is the only therapy that utilizes the most neglected of the senses,
smell.
There are many ways to incorporate the
benefits of aromatherapy into our daily lives. They may used to stimulate
and invigorate us in the morning, and then to calm and restore our peace of
mind at the end of the day. Essential oils may
soothe inflammation, act as an antiseptic,
help dull pain and stimulate digestion. We encourage you to
experiment with our full line of essential oil products so that you may
discover which uses and fragrances work best for you in any given situation
or state of mind. Once you've learned a little about the uses and benefits
of essential oils, you'll be amazed at how you can take control of your
health, the air you breathe and the food you eat-all in a safe, chemical
free manner.
Essential
oils have cytophylactic (cell regeneration), antiseptic, and wound healing
effects as well as anti-fungal and anti-inflammative properties making them
the ultimate active principles for holistic natural skin-care.
How do Essential Oils
work?
Essential oils are composed of tiny
molecules which are easily dissolved in alcohol, emulsifiers and fats. This
allows them to penetrate the skin easily and work into the body by mixing
with the fatty tissue.
As these highly volatile essences
evaporate they are also inhaled, thus entering the body via the millions of
sensitive cells that line the nasal passages. These send messages straight
to the brain, and affect the emotions by working on the limbic system, which
also controls the major functions of the body. Thus in an aromatherapy
treatment the essential oils are able to enhance both your physical and
psychological well-being at the same time.
Each oil has a distinct chemical
composition which determines its fragrance, color, volatility and the ways
in which it affects the system, giving each oil its unique set of beneficial
properties.
What are
the effects of using Essential Oils?
Oils
can directly or indirectly affect the
body's physiological systems.
For instance, a couple of drops of peppermint taken orally can aid digestion
and inhalations of mucolytic oils can relieve respiratory symptoms.
Used topically for their antiseptic and
soothing effects, essential oils can successfully treat
minor skin conditions. It has been demonstrated that the application of
certain essential oils to the skin can produce vaso-dilation which in turn
causes warming of underlying muscles, however this is an indirect effect of
the oil acting on the superficial tissues, it is not a pharmacological
effect produced as a result of the oil entering the systemic circulation via
the skin. In addition, because of the
effect of relaxation on the brain
and the subsequent sedating or stimulating of the nervous system, essential
oils can also indirectly raise and lower blood pressure and possibly aid in
normalization of hormonal secretion.
Because of olfaction's direct connection
to the brain, sending electrical messages directly into the limbic system,
essential oils can have effects on emotions and mental states. Perception of
odors can have a major impact on
memory, learning, emotions, thinking and feeling. As
therapeutic agents, essential oils work similarly to tranquilizers but in a
subtle organic way. Most scents uplift spirits and calm the nervous system.
For example, lavender is calming and sedative; basil, rosemary and
peppermint are uplifting and stimulating; and jasmine and ylang-ylang are
exciting or euphoric.