Digestive Distress
Step 1: Collect
Information
As the mix of hormones in your
blood changes during your premenopausal years, you may notice
the effects on your gastrointestinal tract both directly -
estrogen is a gastrointestinal stimulant and varying levels may
swing you from loose stools to dry ones - and indirectly, as
the hormonal load places ever heavier demands on the
liver.
Hormones have a strong effect
on the motility of the intestinal tract. When your levels of
estrogen and progesterone change (as they do throughout
menopause, during pregnancy, and before menstruation and
birth), your bowel patterns change, too.
Your liver is, among other
things, a recycling center. It breaks down hormones circulating
in the blood when they are no longer needed and makes their
"parts" available for the production of more hormones. During
the menopausal years some hormones (such as LH and FSH) are
produced in such enormous quantities that your liver may
struggle to keep up with its recycling work, and have little
energy left over for digestive duties. Help yourself with these
Wise Woman Ways.
Step 2: Engage the
Energy
- Bless your food
out loud before you eat; say grace; thank the plants
and animals who nourish you; breathe in and feel
grateful.
- My mother's favorite way
of preventing digestive distress and ensuring regularity is
to eat at regular times and go to the toilet at regular
times. You'd be surprised how effective this is. First
thing in the morning, get yourself a cup of hot water (or
herbal tea) and bring it back to bed. Sip it slowly, and
gnaw gently on your bottom lip. Then lie on your back and
bring your knees up, feet flat on the bed; place your palms
on your belly and breathe deeply. Gently begin to rub your
belly (in spirals): up on the right, across the middle, and
down on the left. Soon you will feel the movement gathering
momentum. Sit up slowly and head for the
toilet.
Step 3: Nourish &
Tonify
- Yellow dock root vinegar
or tincture is a wonderful ally for menopausal women with
digestive distress. Daily doses of 1 teaspoon/5 ml vinegar
or 5-10 drops of tincture eliminate constipation,
indigestion, and gas. Yellow dock is especially recommended
for the woman whose menopausal menses are getting
heavier.
- Dandelion is everyone's
favorite ally for a happy digestive system and a strong
liver. It relieves indigestion, constipation, gas, even
gallstone pain. How to use it? Have a glass of dandelion
blossom wine. Eat the omega-3-rich leaves in salads. Enjoy
the phytoestrogenic roots as a vinegar or tincture (a dose
is 1-2 teaspoons/5-10 ml vinegar or 10-20 drops tincture
taken with meals) or as a coffee substitute.
- Any rhythmical exercise,
especially walking, relieves digestive gas and improves
intestinal peristalsis (the movement of feces). Oriental
wisdom says the liver loves movement.
- Motherwort, fenugreek,
vitex, or black cohosh tinctures, taken daily, strengthen
digestion and ease menopausal digestive woes. Or try a cup
of garden sage tea.
- If constipation occurs
due to a lessening of the moistening, lubricating cells in
the colon, slippery foods such as slippery elm bark powder,
oats, seaweed, flax seed, and seeds from wild Plantago (or
cultivated psyllium) are wonderful allies. Adding a
teaspoon/5 ml of any, or better yet, all of them to a
cup/250 ml of rolled oats and cooking until thick in 3
cups/750 ml of water is a delicious way to prepare this
remedy.
- My favorite remedy to
relieve digestive and gas pain is plain yogurt. Sometimes
even a tiny mouthful will bring instant relief. Acidophilus
capsules work, too. I use both when dealing with chronic
constipation or severe diarrhea.
Step 4:
Stimulate/Sedate
- White flour products slow
the digestive tract; so does too much grain-fed meat. Whole
grain products, well-cooked beans, wild meats, and cooked
greens speed it up.
- Add more liquids and soft
foods to your diet - applesauce, yogurt, nourishing soups,
herbal infusions - to help relieve constipation. Chew your
food slowly and savor it. Drink lavishly between
meals.
- Menopausal women will
want to avoid the use of bran as a laxative, as it
interferes with calcium absorption. Instead try prunes,
prune juice, rhubarb with maple syrup, or figs.
- Ginger tea with honey is
a warming, easing drink when your tummy is upset. Ahhh. Try
the fresh root grated and steeped in boiling water, or put
a tablespoon of the powdered stuff from your spice cupboard
in a cup of hot water and enjoy.
- Crushed hemp seed
(Cannabis
sativa) tea - rich
in essential fatty acids - is a specific against menopausal
constipation.
- Herbal laxatives such as
aloes, cascara sagrada, rhubarb root, and senna are
addictive and destructive to normal peristalsis. Except in
rare cases (such as relief of constipation for a
ninety-year-old woman confined to a bed), I do not advise
their use.
Step 5a: Use
Supplements
Constipation and digestive
distress are common side effects from taking iron supplements.
A spoonful of molasses with 10-25 drops of yellow dock root
tincture in a glass of warm water is a better way to increase
iron, and improve elimination.
Step 6: Break &
Enter
Enemas and colonics are
last-resort techniques. They do not promote health and may
strip the guts of important flora. Regular use of enemas is
highly habit-forming. For the sake of your health, avoid
them.
Legal
Disclaimer: This
content is not intended to replace conventional medical
treatment. Any suggestions made and all herbs listed are not
intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease,
condition or symptom. Personal directions and use should be
provided by a clinical herbalist or other qualified healthcare
practitioner with a specific formula for
you
. All material contained herein is provided for general
information purposes only and should not be considered medical
advice or consultation. Contact a reputable healthcare
practitioner if you are in need of medical care. Exercise
self-empowerment by seeking a second opinion.
Susun Weed
PO Box 64
Woodstock, NY 12498
Vibrant, passionate,
and involved, Susun Weed has garnered
an international reputation for her
groundbreaking lectures, teachings, and
writings on health and nutrition. She
challenges conventional medical
approaches with humor, insight, and her
vast encyclopedic knowledge of herbal
medicine. Unabashedly pro-woman, her
animated and enthusiastic lectures are
engaging and often profoundly
provocative.
Susun
is one of America's best-known
authorities on herbal medicine and
natural approaches to women's health.
Her four best-selling books are
recommended by expert herbalists and
well-known physicians and are used and
cherished by millions of women around
the world. Learn more at
http://www.susunweed.com
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