To me there is nothing more fun and satisfying than reading a well-written and entertaining how-to-do-it autobiography — you know, the kind where the author takes you through her life story and, when she comes to a favorite recipe or a skill, stops and takes time to walk you through how-to-do-it that you can do it too.
When the author is a good story teller and can make her stories come to life, especially if they are stories from another culture so you can get a glimpse of how these people lived and though as well, it is even better still.
And, finally, it approaches greatness when she weaves lots of other facts, folklore, fairy tales and information, from a deep, diverse and rich academic and personal background, spanning Old and Modern worlds, into it as well.
That’s what you get in Mama’s Home Remedies, a keeper of a book that may just end up on your bookshelf next to your computer, like it has on mine, so that you can reach it quickly when you need a quick diversion from the daily regimen, or answers to specific health questions.
This is one book you will go back to time after time as a “comfort book” (like comfort food!)–one that will variously provide information, stimulate your thinking, give you peace, and entertain you. It is, for example.
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a great cure for stress. Turn to any page and be taken out of your life and transported into the fables and stories of life in the Russian culture, many of which emphasize an oneness with the natural world around you.
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a great healthy living reference, with a twist!If you have a health problem or want to know what a particular plant is good for, just go to the index. As you search for answers you will be transported into a world where common foods become effective medicines. Vegetables such as beets, potatoes, onions, grapes and radishes are used to whisk away ills, and plants we call “weeds” such as nettles, dandelions, burdock and coltsfoot, rather than synthetic medicines off Wal-Mart shelves, play an everyday role in the healthy stable life of normal families.
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an excellent source of natural history insights and lore with practical examples about how animals fit into their environment, including a great story about how a badger instinctively knew to bury its burned nose into a moldy tree trunk to alleviate the pain and heal the problem.
- a reminder of the value of our elders–our grandmothers and grandfathers–as founts of valuable knowledge and wisdom that should be lovingly mined lest it become lost.
After reading the prefatory and introductory chapters which set the stage, you can pick up the book and start reading just about from anywhere. For example, if you want to know how to make stress a positive force in your life, you can turn to Chapter 10 and find 18 pages of ideas. Or if allergies are a problem, check out Chapters 5 and 6 for over 42 pages of helpful insight and suggestions. A favorite of mine — Chapter 2: “Even the Badger Knows”–reminds us that our body really knows how to heal itself and will direct us to the cures, if we will listen to it and follow where it leads. But we can’t really do this very well without exposure to the natural world from whence most of the healing balms will come. As parents it is our opportunity to take our children into nature and expose them to her treasures. If we don’t already know them, it is great opportunity to learn them together. (more…)