Bach Flower Medicine
I am a Bach Flower Therapist, using Bach Flowers, a safe and natural method of healing with flower essences. It has the power to resolve the negative spiritual states that are the root cause of disease. They gently restore the balance between mind and body by casting out negative emotions such as fear, worry, jealousy, hatred, anger, anxiety and indecision which interfere with the equilibrium of the being as a whole.
Bach flower remedies allow peace and happiness to return to the sufferer so that the body is free to heal itself.
I personally believe that a human must be able to balance his emotions if he needs to live healthy and happy in life.
How it can Help You
For children: focus and concentration issues, fear of exams, forgetfulness, bored and not able to sit for studying, overwhelmed with work, etc
For adults: helps to bring equilibrium and clarity with anger issues, depression, fear and panic attacks, obsessions, indecisiveness, trauma, lack of confidence and tiredness.
Bach was satisfied with the method, because of its simplicity, and because it involved a process of combination of the four elements:
The earth to nurture the plant, the air from which it feeds, the sun or fire to enable it to impart its power, and water to collect and be enriched with its beneficent magnetic healing.
Bach believed that illness was the result of a conflict between the purposes of the soul and the personality's actions and outlook. This internal war, according to Bach, leads to negative moods and to "energy blocking", thought to cause a lack of "harmony", thus leading to physical diseases.
A combination called ‘Rescue Remedy’ also called SOS or an Emergency Essence was used when I was called out by an anxious mother to treat her son whose wife had had a caesarean section in hospital, and she and the baby were fine.
When I reached their home, the man was in a complete panic, hunched up on the sofa, crying, “She’s going to die, it’s all going to be awful, what’s going to happen to me?” repeatedly.
His mother was there already, so my entrance had no great calming effect.
Into a glass of water I placed several drops of Rescue, and asked him to sip. He did this every minute, and kept repeating his distressed thoughts out loud.
After five minutes, the words stayed the same, but the emotion seemed to evaporate.
By the end of ten minutes, he was walking the room and said, “I don’t know why I’m crying like this, I’ll ring the hospital, find out how she is, and visit her later.” Next day, he bought six bottles of Rescue, one for each room in the house including the loo.