Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Essential Oils for first aid - part two

An essential oil first aid kit is one of the most important parts of your medicine cabinet. It is also helpful to create a second kit in small 5/8 dram or 1 dram sizes – cobalt or amber colored. You can fill five or six of these with your "can't live without blends" and carry in your purse in a small pouch. Don't forget to label them!

In our last blog, I provided the recipe for a Bruise Blend and a general First Aid Blend. Another useful oil to carry around is not a blend, but an individual essential oil – lavender.

Lavender has a multitude of uses, smells delightful, and can be used without diluting with carrier oils.

How to use lavender essential oil


Firstly, be sure you are purchasing an organically grown, low-steam distilled lavender essential oil, or you won't obtain the healing properties intended. Heating essential oils burns off their therapeutic qualities.

Again, Mountain Rose Herbs is the best place I've found for quality and efficacy in oils.

To apply: place a few drops of lavender essential oil on the affected area; diffuse with a cold diffuser/nebulizer, not heated; place several drops of lavender essential oil into the palm of your hand, rub your palms together and place your hands over your nose and inhale/exhale three times - deeply. You may also apply the oils to the soles of your feet.

Lavender's properties:

• Antiseptic
• Analgesic
• Anti-tumoral
• Anti-convulsant
• Sedative
• Anti-inflammatory
• Cleansing cuts and wounds
• Wonderful for skin care
• Soothing for burns and sunburn
• Relaxing

24 Uses for Lavender Essential Oil


• Rub lavender oils on the feet for an overall calming effect on the body.
• Add a drop or two of lavender oil to a tissue or cotton ball and place inside your pillow case to aid in sleep.
• Place 1-2 drops of lavender essential oil on a bee sting or insect bite to stop itching and reduce swelling. Note: lavender essential oil is NOT a substitute for counter-acting an insect sting if the person is allergic and needs medical care immediately.
• Place 2-3 drops of lavender essential oil on a minor burn to decrease pain. May be applied as often as needed.
• Mix several drops of lavender essential oil with cold pressed extra virgin olive oil and use topically on eczema and dermatitis.
• Place several drops of lavender essential oil on a minor cut to help stop the bleeding.
• To alleviate the symptoms of motion sickness, put a drop of lavender essential oil on the end of the tongue or around the navel or behind the ears.
• To stop a nosebleed, put a drop of lavender essential oil on a tissue and wrap it around a small chip of ice. Push the tissue-covered ice chip under the middle of the top lip to the base of the nose and hold as long as comfortable or until the bleeding stops. Be careful not to freeze the lip or gum.
• Rub a drop of lavender essential oil on chapped or sunburned lips.
• Rub a drop of lavender essential oil on the bridge of the nose to aid in blocking tear ducts.
• Rub lavender essential oil on dry or chapped skin.
• To reduce or minimize the formation of scar tissue, massage lavender essential oil on and around the affected area.
• Rub 2-4 drops of lavender essential oil on the armpit to act as a deodorant.
• Rub a drop of lavender essential oil between your palms and inhale deeply to alleviate the symptoms of hay fever.
• Rub several drops of lavender essential oil into the scalp to aid in eliminating dandruff.
• Place a few drops of lavender essential oil on a cotton ball and place in your linen closet to scent the linens, and repel moths and insects.
• Place a few drops of lavender essential oil in your water fountain to scent the air, kill bacteria, and prolong the time between cleanings.
• Rub a drop of lavender essential oil on a corn, callous or bunion mornings and evenings.
• Place a few drops of lavender essential oil on a wet cloth, such as a wash cloth, and toss into the dryer to deodorize and freshen your laundry – in place of a dryer sheet.
• Put a drop of lavender essential oil on a cold sore to soothe it.
Diffuse lavender essential oil to alleviate the symptoms of allergies.
• Spritz several drops of lavender essential oil, mixed with distilled water on a sunburn to decrease pain. You can also add a little aloe as well, instead of the distilled water. Note: Always use a glass spritzer bottle when working with essential oils. Plastic will only work when you have the oils diluted with something such as distilled water, vinegar or rubbing alcohol.
• Drop lavender essential oil on a cut to clean the wound, disinfect it and kill bacteria.
• Apply 2-3 drops of lavender essential oil to a rash to stop the itching, soothe and heal the skin.

Lavender works well with just about any essential oil


The best companion oils for lavender include: any citrus oil, such as lemon, tangerine, orange, grapefruit and lime; clary sage and geranium. However, lavender can be combined with any essential oil.

Tea Tree Oil and Lavender


Tea Tree oil (melaleuca alternifolia) comes from the myrtle botanical family, native to Australia. Tea tree is anti-infectious, anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, anti-viral, anti-parasitic, antiseptic, anti-inflammatory, neurotonic and analgesic – just to name a few of it's fabulous properties.

Tea tree oil works well to cleanse the home too. It's great to use to wipe down surfaces, but using 20-30 drops in a glass spritzer and adding distilled water to the container as well. Spray and wipe down door handles, counters, light switches, bathroom objects, etc.

Tea tree oil can be diffused with a nebulizer to help disinfect the home and eliminate odors.

But more on tea tree oil's individual uses in another blog.

Lavender essential oil and can blended with Tea Tree to enhance the use of lavender oil. The anti-microbial, anti-bacterial properties of tea tree oil are wonderful as a first aid blend.

You can clean a small cut with the blend, use it to soothe a rash, sunburn or skin affliction.

Tip of the Day


Essential oils are subtle in use, volatile and are distilled from shrubs, flowers, trees, roots, bushes and seeds. They oxygenate by helping to transport nutrients to the cells of the body. They are able to break through the cell receptor sites and, by doing so, help us to be healthier. Essential oils are highly concentrated, so a little goes a long way.

Always use therapeutic grade essential oils – that is – oils that come from plants organically grown and are carefully low temperature and long steam distilled.

Note: This information is intended for educational purposes only. These recipes are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. If you are allergy prone or sensitive to scents, test the oils in small amounts. The essential oils are not for internal use. Anyone suffering from any disease, illness or injury should consult with a physician.


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