By Mary Jo DiLonardo — 2021
An overview of flower remedies, discovered and popularized by Dr. Edward Bach.
Read on www.webmd.com
CLEAR ALL
With the COVID-19 pandemic forcing many to stay home, a lot of “normal” life went online. From work to fitness to social life, much of the world now relies on online platforms to stay connected. It’s no surprise that there’s been a rise in virtual well-being services, too.
Bach flower remedies were introduced in the 1930s by Edward Bach, M.D., (1886-1936) a British physician, who developed what he called a “theory of types” by which he divided people into seven groups based on their reactions to illness.
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The practice is purported to beat inflammation, pain, stress and more.
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For a long time, I never really took Bach flower remedies very seriously as a healing option. They seemed too delicate to really make any difference. And from what I’d read, you needed to repeat the doses a lot … and that just seemed like too much work.
Determining which of the flower remedies to utilize depends mostly on the specific depression symptoms a person experiences.
Bach Flower Remedies are thought to help balance emotional state and are commonly recommended by practitioners for psychological problems and pain. We assessed whether Bach Flower Remedies (BFRs) are safe and efficacious for these indications by performing a systematic review of the literature.
If you’re like me, then you know that seeing and smelling beautiful flowers can make you feel amazing, not to mention how a beautiful bouquet can transform any space. Then it’s probably no surprise to you that the use of healing flower essences is taking root more firmly around the world.
Flower therapy, or essence therapy, is a form of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). It’s based on the idea that flowers have a healing vibrational energy.