It started with
the Tansy cakes. I had to ask myself 'Why would anyone eat anything
so utterly disgusting in taste'? Chrysanthemum Vulgare is a common
perennial in the British Isles and the name Tansy is said to be
derived from the Greek 'athansia', meaning 'immortal'. Reasons
suggested for this include the fact that the dried flower lasts
forever or that it has a medicinal quality contributing to long
life. Looking back to Greek literature, Tansy was given by the
Gods to Ganymede to make him immortal. In the language of flowers
the gift of Tansy means 'Rejected address' - " I am not interested
in you". Its strange taste, not unlike the smell of 'mothballs'
might have something to do with this.
Tansy certainly had a reputation as a vermicide
and vermifuge (killing and dispelling intestinal worms) in the
middle ages. John Gerard wrote in his 17th century Herball:
"In the Spring time are made with the leaves
here of newly sprung up, and with eggs, cakes of Tansies, which
be pleasant to taste, and good for the stomacke. For if any bad
humours cleave there unto, it doth perfectly concoct them and
scoure them downewards".
Tansy was a common kitchen garden herb for medicinal
and culinary use, in place of expensive foreign spices such as
nutmeg and cinnamon. It was used to flavour custard, cakes, milk
puddings, omlettes and freshwater fish. In Ireland it was included
in sausages called 'Drisheens'. Its use as a springtime 'cleanser'
became ritualised into a part of the Christian religious Easter
traditions;
"On Easter Sunday be the pudding seen, To
which the Tansy lends her sober green."
The consensus on this much written about herb
is that it was used at Easter to purify the blood after lent.
This consensus shows a problem though, in that in England the
plant does not show leaves until the end of May - well after Easter.
This is evidence of the assimilation of natural 'self-medicating'
herbalism into a controlling religious patriarchy.
Observation of wild and domesticated animals
shows that they regularly self-medicate with wild plants. Sick
chimpanzees chew bitter leaves from a bush not normally part of
their diet, and then recover. Research by Michael Hoffman shows
that a particular nematode worm is common in the monkey's gut
during the rainy season and that their chewing of the leaves coincided
with the prevalence of this parasite, which it destroyed. This
was the same bush that local tribes use to get rid of stomach
parasites.
Dogs and cats self medicate by eating couch grass
or cleavers. Parrots, chickens, camels, snow geese, starlings
- all have been observed consuming substances normally alien to
their diet to remedial effect. Bears particularly are venerated
by North American Indian culture because they symbolise the powers
of 'regeneration'. North American Indians discovered the use of
a root called Osha from bears. It is so effective as an all round
painkiller, antiviral, antipeptic that it is now on the endangered
species list.
The Woolly Bear caterpillar has also been observed
to change its diet according to whether it is infected by a particular
parasite. Normally a Lupin eater, the caterpillar increases its
chance of surviving a particular fly parasite by changing to a
diet of Poison Hemlock. Self-medication is not therefore a 'rational
choice' in other species, but a carefully integrated part of a
survival mechanism against an invisible predator - disease. Humans
seem to have lost this sense of their own health and are not usually
informed as to the uses of plants growing around them.
Humans often self-medicate though - alcohol indulgence
to deal with stress being an obvious example of this or the ready
availability of pharmaceutical or street drugs. We often consume
substances such as caffeine or sugar drinks for easy energy. The
natural trait towards self-medicating may well be at the basis
of many of our unconscious 'eating choices'. Potatoes contain
a form of opiate and all foods to some extent can act as 'alteratives'
to a unique physiology. We talk about comfort foods and rewarding
ourselves with treats to eat. Often we might have a favourite
food that can help if we feel too ill to eat, like scrambled egg.
This is a unique food because it contains all of the amino acids
we need to digest it. Chocolate is to many the ultimate comfort
food treat.
An extreme example of what we do is shown in
'Pica' where a person gets uncontrollable desires to eat certain
edible (and inedible) substances. This condition is occurs in
pregnant women and is thought to express the need for particular
minerals. Because our food sources are often limited to processed
food, and because of the destruction of herbal folk-lore and access
to wild medicine, many of us have lost touch with our 'health
sense' or ability to use food or wild plants as preventative or
curative self-medication.
But finally the wheel is turning and people want
access to this more holistic and gentle sense of health that is
prevalent in other medical philosophies such as Chinese or Tibetan.
If you like the taste of mothballs you could even try Tansy cakes.
Article with thanks to Roger Phillips and Michael
Hoffman
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