The
Spirit of Simples
WHAT IS A
SIMPLE?
A "simple" is one herb used at a time. A
"simpler" is an herbalist who generally uses herbs one at a
time, rather than in combinations.
WHY USE SIMPLES?
Most herbalists I have met - whether from
China or Japan, Eastern or Western Europe, Australia or North
America - use herbs in combinations. Simplers, like myself,
don't. Why?
Because I believe that herbal medicine is
people's medicine, I seek to make herbal medicine simple: as
simple as one herb at a time. Because people worry about
interactions between the drugs they take and herbs, I keep it
simple: with simples, interactions are simple to observe, and
simpler to avoid. Because empowerment in healthcare is
difficult, I want to offer others easy, safe herbal remedies:
and what could be easier, or safer, than a
simple?
SIMPLES MAKE ME
THINK
When I was just getting started with herbs,
one thing that confounded me was the many choices I had when I
began to match symptoms to the herbs that relieved them. If
someone had a cough should I use garden sage or wild cherry
bark or pine sap or mullein or coltsfoot (to name only a few of
the many choices)? One way out of this dilemma was to use them
all. I made many cough syrups that contained every anti-cough
herb that I could collect. And they all
worked.
As I got more sophisticated in my herbal
usage, and especially after I completed a course on homeopathy,
I began to see that each herb had a specific personality, a
specific way of acting. I realized I couldn't notice the
individual actions of the herbs when they were
combined.
It felt daring at first to use just one herb.
Would wild cherry bark tincture all by itself be enough to
quell that child's cough? Yes! Would mullein infusion alone
really reduce a person's asthmatic and allergic reactions? Yes!
Would sage soaked in honey for six weeks ease a sore throat?
Yes! Each herb that I tried as a simple was successful. They
all worked, not just together, but by
themselves.
The more I used individual herbs the more I
came to know them as individuals. The more I used simples, the
simpler and more successful my remedies became. The more I used
one herb at a time, the more I learned about how that herb
worked, and didn't work.
SIMPLES ARE
INTIMATE
When we use one herb at a time, we come to
know that herb, we become intimate with that herb. Just as we
become intimate with each other by spending time one-on-one,
tête-à-tête, simply together, we become closer to the herbs
when we use them as simples.
Becoming intimate with an herb or a person
helps us build trust. How reliable is the effect of this herb?
When? How? Where does it fail? Using simples helps us build a
web of green allies that we trust deeply. Simples help us feel
more powerful. They help abate our fears, simply,
safely.
SIMPLES ARE
SUBTLE
Using one herb at a time gives us
unparalleled opportunities to observe and make use of the
subtle differences that are at the heart of herbal medicine.
When we use simples we are more likely to notice the many
variables that affect each herb: including where it grows, the
years' weather, how we harvest it, our preparation, and the
dosage.(1) The many variables within one plant insure that our
simple remedy nonetheless touches many aspects of a person and
heals deeply.
One apprentice tinctured motherwort flowering
tops weekly through its blooming period. She reported that the
tinctures made from the younger flower stalks had a stronger
effect on the uterus; while those made from the older flower
stalks, when the plant was going to seed, had a stronger effect
on the heart.
SIMPLES GIVE ME
POWER
Using one herb at a time helps me feel more
certain that my remedy has an active value, not just a placebo
value. Using one plant at a time, and local ones at that,
reassures me that my herbal medicine cannot be legislated away.
Using one plant at a time allows me to build trust in my
remedies. Using one plant at a time is a subversive act, a
reclaiming of simple healthcare.
Combinations erode my power, activate my
"victim persona", and lead me to believe that herbal medicine
is best left to the experts.
FROM COMPLEX TO
SIMPLE
Take the challenge! Use simples instead of
complex formulae. Let's rework some herbal remedies and get a
sense of how simple it can be.
The anti-cancer formula Essiac
contains Arctium lappa (burdock), Rheum palmatum (rhubarb), Ulmus fulva (slippery elm),
and
Rumex acetosella (sheep sorrel). Rhubarb root has no
possible use against cancer; it is a purgative whose repeated
use can "aggravate constipation". Slippery elm bark also has no
possible anti-cancer properties and has no doubt been added to
counter some of the detrimental effects of the rhubarb. Sheep
sorrel juice is so caustic that it has been used to burn off
skin cancers, but it would likely do more harm to the kidneys
than to any cancer if ingested regularly. Leaving us with a
great anti-cancer simple: burdock root. One that I have found
superbly effective in reversing dysplasias and pre-cancerous
conditions.
A John Lust formula for relief of coughs(2)
contains Agropyron repens (witch grass), Pimpinella
anisum (aniseed),
Glycyrrhiza
glabra (licorice), Inula helenium (elecampane root), Pulmonaria
officinalis
(lungwort), Thymus species (thyme herb), (murillo
bark)(3), Chondrus crispus (irish moss), Lobelia inflata (lobelia herb). Witch grass has little
or no effect on coughs; it is an emollient diuretic whose
dismissal from this group would leave no hole. Anise seeds are
also not known to have an anti-pertussive effect; although they
do taste good, we can do without them. Lobelia can bring more
oxygen to the blood, but is certainly not an herb I would ever
add to a cough mixture, so I will leave it out here. Licorice
is a demulcent expectorant that can be most helpful for those
with a dry cough; however, I do use it for a variety of
reasons, among them its exotic origins and its cloyingly sweet
taste. Lungwort is, as its name implies, a pectoral, but its
effect is rather mild, and its place in
the
Boraginaceae family gives me pause. How much
pyrrolizidine alkaloid might it contain? Thyme, and its more
common anti-cough cousin garden sage, contains essential oils
that could both quiet a cough and counter infection in the
throat. A strong tea or a tincture of either could be our
simple. Irish moss is, a specific to soothe coughs and a
nutritive in addition, would also make an excellent simple. But
it is elecampane that I would crown. It is not only a specific
to curb coughing, it counters infection well, and tonifies lung
tissues. Several small doses of a tincture of elecampane root
should quiet a cough in a few hours.
Simples are fun. Give them a
try.
Footnotes:
- Among the many variables, I have
especially noticed that the tinctures that I make with
fresh plants are many times more effective than tinctures
made from dried plants. My elders tell me that preparations
of common plants growing in uncommon places will be
stronger as well. Many herbalists are aware of certain
areas of their land that nurture plants that are
particularly potent
medicines.
- John Lust. The Herb Book.
1974. Bantam.
- Note that this formula,
as is frequently the case, contains an "exotic" herb which
Mr. Lust does not include in the 500+ herbs in his book,
nor does he give us a botanical name for the plant, leaving
us literally unable to prepare his formula as
presented.
Susun Weed
PO Box 64
Woodstock, NY
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