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Research
has shown that Siberian Ginseng may produce significant improvements in
individuals’ adaptogenic response to such
stresses as heat, cold, excessive noise and vibration, physical exhaustion,
viruses and bacteria, chemicals and pollution. In fact, the positive effects identified have
been so many that it almost seems as though eleuthero
may enhance the human organism’s ability to cope with the stresses of
21sr century life itself. And the power
of its tonic and stimulant effects quickly made it a favourite with millions of
ordinary Russians.
But the
power of this remarkable plant (an unprepossessing spiny shrub growing to a
maximum of nine feet tall) has been known in China for at least 2,000 years and
it is still widely used there as a general tonic and stimulant in keeping with
Chinese medicine’s focus on prevention rather than cure, and for
promoting improved vigour and general health and increasing resistance to
disease and longevity.
More
specifically, eleuthero is also a traditional Chinese
folk remedy for heart and circulatory problems, bronchitis, rheumatism, male
infertility and a host of other common ailments. And more recent Russian
studies have also highlighted Siberian Ginseng’s potential role in
tackling diabetes, blood pressure problems and even cancer.
It’s
important, of course, to stress that eleuthero is not
claimed as a cure for these conditions, but rather that the tonic and stimulant
properties of the adaptogen give a major boost to the
entire system, helping the body’s natural healing processes restore it to
health and vitality.
But your
doctor, in line with orthodox medical opinion in the West, may well still
nevertheless insist that you don’t need Siberian Ginseng, or indeed any
of the other herbal adaptogens such as Black Cohosh and Dong Quai which are now becoming readily
available.
And if you
get a regular eight hours of quality sleep a night; always eat a well balanced
nutritious diet, consume alcohol only in strict moderation and tobacco not at
all; have a mutually satisfying intimate relationship with a loving partner and
enjoy freedom from work and financial pressure but nevertheless take plenty of
relaxing breaks and vacations, your doctor may just be right.
And if this
sounds like your life then I must congratulate you, because it’s clear
that you already have it organised for optimal mental and physical performance,
giving your mind and body the best possible chance of resisting the stresses
that are systematically breaking down the health of so many millions in the affluent
Western world.
But if
you’re like most of us your life is a long way from this ideal. Likely
you find that our culture’s obsession with work and the gadgets that keep
us always in touch with the office, not to mention the demands of family life
and the ready availability of 24/7 electronic entertainment, all militate
against your getting anywhere close to enough sleep. Likewise, you eat on the run; a snatched
breakfast or none at all followed by lunch on a sandwich at your desk; and in
the evening “enjoy” a highly processed, nutrition-stripped ready
“meal” for dinner. Still, you can always disguise the taste with
the drink or two that by now you really need to help you relax.
Now,
you’re not exactly ill, or not yet anyway. There
may not be any specific physical symptoms you can point to. But at best
you’re conscious of a vague feeling that you lack the energy to get all
that you could and should out of life. At worst you feel like you’re
clinging to a sheer cliff face, maybe even sliding towards depression.
Not that doctors aren’t sympathetic; why wouldn’t
they be when they’re often in this condition too? But the problem they
have is that their training simply doesn’t equip them to tackle this kind
of general lifestyle problem. In fact
the more traditionally minded amongst them might even argue that it is no part
of their business to do so.
You see,
conventional western medicine is very effective at producing specific treatments for the specific illnesses
with which it’s commonly confronted.
But it’s not nearly so good at preventing you from becoming ill in
the first place, or at optimising every aspect of your physical and mental
performance.
That’s where Siberian Ginseng and other adaptogens can be of tremendous value, as the many elite athletes, military personnel, deep sea divers, cosmonauts and others making extreme demands on their bodies who have used it for enhanced performance can attest.
Steve Smith
November 2007
Find out more about Siberian Ginseng
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