RSS - Log in

Welcome on your first visit

We have hundreds of posts on Natural Approaches to Pain Relief, Analysis of Current Research and Breaking News. You can get our posts sent to you by RSS Please Subscribe. You can get hold of us by phone at 1-800-589-1509 or contact us through the About Us page. We have several great authors, if you find one you particularly like there are links in the sidebar that will take you to all of their writings. Check out our new Natural Approaches to Pain Relief Forum and introduce your self or our delightful Natural Heat Therapy Products

Herbal overgrown garden from header

Herbal Remedies for Headaches

A new world opened up to me when I patronized an herb shop the first time. It was inside a lovely cottage near Dallas, Texas. I had come there as part of a girls-only, antique-shop hop. My friend was there for the candle-making supplies, but I was mesmerized by the clean, neat rows of pretty bottles of dried leaves, roots, and seeds.

On an eye-level shelf was a bottle labeled "PMS Tea." When I inquired about the tea and told the owner about my cramps, she put an emphatic hand on my arm as she said, "It really works."

 

The tea had cramp bark, feverfew, and peppermint in it. The tea was soothing, tasted great, and worked wonders, just as the owner of the herb shop attested. I discovered it also worked for headaches and other body pains. I do not know the proportions of each herb in the tea, but it seemed to be a perfect blend for my usual maladies.

This list is by no means comprehensive but includes the more common herbs used for pain relief for headaches and migraines.

 

Herbs for Headache Pain Relief:

  • Cramp Bark (Virburnum opulus)–used for cramps and various painful muscle spasms. Use it in teas, capsules, or as an extract.
  • Feverfew (Chrysanthemum parthenium)–used to reduce pain associated with migraines, muscle cramping, and toothaches. Take feverfew as a tea or use as a topical tincture.
  • Peppermint (Mentha piperita)–often used to mask the taste of herbs, peppermint is most commonly used for its warming qualities and for stomach ailments. To soothe headaches, drink peppermint in tea, or use the extract or essential oil internally (sparingly) or externally with a compress.
  • Wood Betony (Stachys Betonica)–used to reduce facial and headache pain. Use the herb in a tea.

 

Much of this information was gleaned from A Modern Herbal by Mrs. Maude Grieve.

Please remember these herbs are not regulated by the FDA, and many may have significant side effects. I recommend you buy a tea already mixed, as opposed to mixing the herbs yourself.

The little Texas herb shop doesn’t exist anymore, but my search for pain relief remedies is still on.

 

 

If you Enjoyed this post - Please Subscribe so you don't miss a post.
No time to comment, Nothing in particular to say?

3 Comments

Write a Comment»
  1. Jennifer
    Posted May 17, 2008 at 12:08 am | Permalink

    I get a lot of headaches and I’d like to try something other than medications. Thanks, I might give some of these a try.

  2. Musashi
    Posted May 22, 2008 at 8:56 pm | Permalink

    A friend of mine has a lot of problems with migraine.
    I am going to sent a link of your page to him.

  3. Tarannette
    Posted May 22, 2008 at 9:02 pm | Permalink

    Thanks Jennifer and Musashi. Let me know if anything helps you or your friends.–Tarannette

2 Trackbacks

  1. By Natural Pain Relief for Headaches III on May 17, 2008 at 6:25 pm

    [...] « Natural Pain Relief for Headaches II OGM 20 Plugins being used » May 15 [...]

  2. By Relieve Toothaches Naturally on May 26, 2008 at 1:45 am

    [...] tea.  I have used this for a variety of maladies.  My coworker claimed that the infusion I made him helped to dull the [...]

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*
  •  

    October 2008
    M T W T F S S
    « Sep    
     12345
    6789101112
    13141516171819
    20212223242526
    2728293031  

Warning: stristr() [function.stristr]: Empty delimiter in /home/relax/public_html/painrelief101/wp-content/plugins/wassup/wassup.php on line 2093