Sometimes it can
be hard to escape that shivery feeling that happens when you get
too cold. A good immediate remedy for this is to wrap yourself
up in a douvet and stick a hairdryer up it, (making sure the air
flow is not restricted) until you feel warmed up.
Colds are the body's escape mechanism. When the
whole system is overloaded it crashes. The body stresses out and
the immune system drops its threshold. The nose releases toxic
wastes in the form of mucous and the body often aches and feels
exhausted. Pay attention to what your body is saying because an
unchecked cold can become far more serious if you keep it buried.
If you are one of those people who can tell when
you have a cold coming on, then it can be stopped, or at least
minimised, in several ways. Firstly, rest is essential. There
is no way your body will self-heal in a stressful situation. If
you have to work, take it easy or delegate a bit more. Lemon juice,
rose hips, parsley (not if you're pregnant) and fresh orange all
contain vitamin C, so take them.
Some colds can actually be completely stopped
dead by gently sniffing a mixture of lemon juice and warm water
up your nose, if you are brave enough. Pumpkin seeds or sunflower
seeds contain zinc which is important in cold prevention so take
some of those. Otherwise its time to sweat those built up toxins
right out through the skin. Start with a peppermint tea and take
some garlic or garlic capsules. Then boil a large onion in milk
for an hour, eat it, and drink the milk. Follow on with a steaming
cup of lemon juice, honey, cinnamon and grated ginger which will
stimulate circulation and sweating. Enjoy it in a mustard footbath
which will also warm up the blood - use multiple and layered remedies
and take them as an opportunity to treat yourself.
For a mustard footbath, take 1 tsp. yellow powder
mustard and one of household soda (if you have hard water) and
put them in a deep basin with some water as hot as you can stand.
Keep your feet and lower legs in for about ten minutes, topping
the bath up with fresh hot (not boling) water. Dry off, put on
thick socks and climb into a freshly warmed bed, the earlier the
better.
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