CALENDULA FLOWERS |
Okay: here is where the blog takes some graphic turns. Avert your reading if sensitive and/or squeamish. In early 2000, I was recovering from the ravages of my first pregnancy, labor and delivery. The pregnancy had involved some issues and, in particular, a big horrific battle with daily constipation. (stop reading here if you can't hang with this discussion.)
This battle worn site in my body did not fare well during the hour or so of pushing an almost 9 pound baby out. The end result was golf ball size hemorrhoids on the outside and anal fissures on the inside. The 'roids went down in time; the fissures did not. Hence, after every bowel movement, I was in excruciating pain unless I took a pain pill. A real pain pill---not just Tylenol. It went on for a couple of months and then I got lucky and found a holistic MD under my insurance plan.
She examined me and diagnosed the fissure (up until then i had just assumed it was something terminal and didn't really know what it was---aside from ungodly).
She sold me some calendula* oil made by a company called HerbPharm for under $10. I was then to apply it internally using my finger (if i could handle this) a couple of times a day. (I know----but I did warn you.)
Couple days of treatment and pain gone forever. Fissure fixed.
Round 2 of calendula oil came about a year and one half later. My now toddler son ended up with the most godawful diaper rash I had ever seen. I took him to the doctor and it had turned out to be a yeast rash. In retrospect, this was the worst rash I ever encountered throughout having three kids. Like horror film ugly. Nothing was working. It went on for a week. Finally I dug into my bag of tricks and pulled out my calendula oil. I applied straight calendula oil and the rash was fixed in one day. I also found a calendula oil diaper rash ointment made by Weleda that kept it from returning in the summer heat. It became my fave diaper cream. (Still keep the stuff around even though diaper changing is no longer in my job description.)
Round 3 of calendula oil involved second son: within a week or so after his birth, he developed baby acne which made him look like Elephant Man in baby version. The doctor said that it would probably last about a year. I was aghast and thought "no way is my kid going to look like this for a year". I went home and started working with calendula ointments and creams. It took some religious effort but within a week or so it was done.
Calendula oil is always in my house as the go-to skin problem fixer.
*Calendula (/kəˈlɛndjuːlə/ Ca-lén-du-la),[1] marigold, is a genus of about 15–20 species[2] of annual and perennial herbaceous plants in the daisy family Asteraceae. They are native to southwestern Asia, western Europe, Macaronesia, and the Mediterranean. Other plants are also known as marigolds, such as corn marigold, desert marigold, marsh marigold, and plants of the genus Tagetes.
The name calendula is a modern Latin diminutive of calendae, meaning "little calendar", "little clock" or possibly "little weather-glass".[3] The common name "marigold" [3] refers to the Virgin Mary.
The most commonly cultivated and used member of the genus is the pot marigold (Calendula officinalis). Popular herbal and cosmetic products named 'calendula' invariably derive from C. officinalis.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia