Herb Resource Guide

This resource guide has been created to support you on your healing journey. May it serve as a companion while you come into relationship with plants, herbs, spices, food, and your own intuition. The herbs, spices, and oils listed here are ones that I use most often in the medicinal potions and teas that I create and share with you. My goal is to have any herb used in the products that I offer listed here to help you know why it might be in that specific product. The qualities of the herbs are explained singularly, each herb as its' own being. Using herbs on their own is a wonderful way to get to know them and figure out how your unique body-mind-spirit relates to them. However, anytime we combine substances, the qualities change. The end result is a new substance that now has qualities from multiple substances working together. 

You will see some specific references to vāta, pitta, and kapha. These are the three doshas referred to in āyurveda. If you are not familiar with these, and don't care to learn more about them at this time, that is okay. You are welcome to ignore those references and still find benefit from this resource guide. For those of you familiar with them, or wanting to learn more about them, I hope you find the references helpful.

Contraindication

Please remember that if you are experiencing any kind of health crises or chronic illness, it is your responsibility to consult a trained health professional or intentionally choose not to. This guide is meant to be informative, and is not meant to diagnose or suggest a specific method of treatment.
Guides List

Herbs by Alphabet

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A
B
C
E
F
G
L
M
N
O
P
R
S
T
W
ALL

Amalaki

(emblica officionalis)

Andrographis

(kalmegh,

andrographis paniculata)

Ashwagandha

(winter cherry,

withania somnifera)

Bala

(country mallow,

sida cordifolia)

Black Pepper

(piper nigrum)

Brahmī

(gotu kola,

centella asiatica)

Cardamom

(elettaria cardamomum)

Chamomile

(matricaria chamomilla)

Cinnamon

(cinnamomum zeylanicum)

Clove

(syzygium aromaticum)

Coriander

(coriandrum sativum)

Cumin

(cuminum cyminum))

Eucalyptus

(eucalyptus globulus)

Fennel

(foeniculum vulgare)

Ginger

(zingiber offcinale)

Guduchi

(tinospora cordifolia)

Lavender

(lavandula angustifolia, lavandula x intermedia)

Licorice

(yashti madhu,

glycerrhiza glarba)

Motherwort

(heartwort,

leonurus cardiaca)

Nutmeg
(myristica fragrans)

Oatstraw

(avena sativa)

Pippali

(indian long pepper,

piper longum)

Rose

(rosa centifolia)

Shatāvari

(asparagus root, asparagus racemosus)

Slippery Elm

(ulmus ruba)

Spearmint

(mentha spicata)

Tulsi

(holy basil,

ocimum sanctum)

Turmeric
(Curcuma longa)

Wild Yam

& Vidari

(dioscorea villosa & alligator yam,

ipomoea digitata)

A

Amalaki

(emblica officionalis)

Andrographis

(kalmegh,

andrographis paniculata)

Ashwagandha

(winter cherry,

withania somnifera)

B

Bala

(country mallow,

sida cordifolia)

Black Pepper

(piper nigrum)

Brahmī

(gotu kola,

centella asiatica)

C

Cardamom

(elettaria cardamomum)

Chamomile

(matricaria chamomilla)

Cinnamon

(cinnamomum zeylanicum)

Clove

(syzygium aromaticum)

Coriander

(coriandrum sativum)

Cumin

(Cuminum cyminum)

E

Eucalyptus

(eucalyptus globulus)

F

Fennel

(foeniculum vulgare)

G

Ginger

(zingiber officinale)

Guduchi

(tinospora cordifolia)

L

Lavender

(lavandula angustifolia, lavandula x intermedia)

Licorice

(yashti madhu,

glycerrhiza glarba)

M

Motherwort

(heartwort,

leonurus cardiaca)

O

Oatstraw

(avena sativa)

P

Pippali

(indian long pepper,

piper longum)

R

Rose

(rosa centifolia)

S

Shatāvari

(asparagus root, asparagus racemosus)

Slippery Elm

(ulmus ruba)

Spearmint

(mentha spicata)

T

Tulsi

(holy basil,

ocimum sanctum)

Turmeric

(curcuma longa)

W

Wild Yam

& Vidari

(dioscorea villosa & alligator yam,

ipomoea digitata)

N

Nutmeg

(myristica fragrans)

Carrier Oils & Other Substances

The substances listed here are used as a delivery system or a carrier for the herbs that are mixed with them. They have their own innate qualities, and just as the herbs themselves change based on what they are combined with, so too does the carrier. In addition, certain carriers or a specific method of intake are used to help support the medicine reach its' intended destination or serve its' intended purpose. The herbs themselves matter (including how they are combined), as well as how we take them.

Coconut Oil

Sesame Oil
Honey
Raw Cane Sugar
Coconut oil is a cooling oil. While it is moisturizing it also has a tonifying effect due to an astringent quality. It is a lighter, less viscous oil than some. Oils that harden when cold and melt when hot tend to be lighter, and have more of a cooling quality than heavier, more viscous oils. Likewise, when an oil is innately more cool or cold in nature it will have a higher heat tolerance when cooking, meaning it can handle more heat before burning or spoiling. Coconut oil is good for the summer and warmer weather seasons or for people experiencing excess heat. It is also good to sooth burned or inflamed skin.
Sesame oil is thick, heavy, and viscous. It has a warming, nourishing, and building nature. As it is warm/hot in nature, it has a low heat tolerance and will burn easily in cooking. It is good for nourishing dry skin, and the heaviness makes it good for calming the light, dry, and mobile qualities of the nervous system. On its' own it can be too heating of an oil for some, but when combined with herbs, as is done to make the massage and sense care oils, it gives up some of its' heat as it combines energy forces with the energy of the herbs.
While we think of honey as sweet, which it is in taste, the post digestive effect is astringent. Honey is also heating in nature, so it has the ability to liquify and clear out things like sticky toxins (āma), phlegm, and mucus. Honey can be a powerful carrier for herbs, directing them to the "right" location, especially in relation to the respiratory system. Because kapha dosha has an affinity for sweet, and it also heay, thick, and stick in nature (the same qualities as sticky toxins (āma), phlegm, and mucus), using honey as a carrier make them "attractive" to kapha and allows the herbs to act on the body in the way we want them to.
The same principle applies here as is described above in discussing honey. Sugar, however is not astringent and it is not heating like honey. Though it has received a bad name due to the way in which our culture abuses it, sugar can be quite nourishing when used in appropriate quantity for specific purposes.
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