Archive for the ‘Healing’ Category

Grassroots Healthcare: a conversation with clinical herbalist Larken Bunce

Posted May 3rd, 2012 by Ann Armbrecht

Larken Bunce MS is a clinical herbalist, educator, gardener, writer, and photographer deeply inspired by a life-long love affair with plants

I’ve known Larken for many years, through her work creating the new herb school in town, while working together in the Health Arts and Sciences Program at Goddard College, and most importantly, while dancing! Larken is a leader in envisioning how we can create more sustainable and resilient community-based healthcare and in working toward that vision by co-founding the Vermont Center for Integrative Herbalism.  Some of Larken’s fantastic handouts on using medicinal herbs for common ailments can be found in our resource guide and her stunning photographs of plants can be found here and on our website. Thank you, Larken!

For up to date herb tips from Larken, follow her on Twitter @physicgardener.

Ann: What was your vision in creating the Vermont Center for Integrative Herbalism?

Celebrating the life of Kumu Raylene Kawaia’ea

Posted March 21st, 2012 by Ann Armbrecht

I have never met anyone like Raylene. She was so filled with kindness, so present and so clear. In honor of the gifts she offered us all,  I wanted to share some of her words from our conversation with her at the International Herb Symposium in 2007. I have kept her words as she said them, without making edits or changes, because as I read them, I can hear her speaking…

Ann: What role do plants have in your journey?

Raylene: As an Hawaiian, the plants are our ancestors. Our creation chant brings into the world everything that exists here in this world. What we learn by the chant is that we, as human beings, are the youngest. We’re the youngest, perhaps the favorite, and we were loved and cherished and pampered and given things sometimes perhaps that we would not cherish in the manner we should have, as we reveal ourselves today.

Rosemary Gladstar and the healing power of beauty

Posted January 29th, 2012 by Ann Armbrecht

I love this quotation from Rosemary Gladstar from the film and thought a little summertime beauty might be nice now in deep winter:

With people who are severely ill, deeply ill, I think you have to seduce them back to wellness. And you do that by making life appealing again. You make good tasting teas, you put beautiful flowers in their room: they can be medicinal plants in that bouquet, plants that have that healing energy. You plant gardens, you paint the rooms beautiful colors. You make life beautiful so that people want to live.  Beauty is what brings us back to wellness, what makes us want to be healthy and vital.

Resiliency and Health

Posted December 22nd, 2011 by Ann Armbrecht
mushrooms

photo Sandra Lory

Resilience is a word heard that is talked about more and more. David Orr, who says resilience is the chief characteristic of sustainability, defines it as “the capacity of the system to absorb disturbance; to undergo change and still retain essentially the same function, structure, and feedbacks”.

In terms of health and wellness, this means systems of healing and medicine that can endure a breakdown of day-to-day operation: i.e. transportation, power, communication and more are disrupted, and these clinics and hospitals can still keep people well. That’s a tall order and not one our current healthcare systems are capable of managing in an ongoing way.

So we thought we’d generate a list of characteristics of how resiliency looks in medicine. Below is a list suggested by Rosemary Gladstar at the Beaming Bioneers Vermont conference.

  • Availability of medicine
  • Backyard medicine
  • Diversity of practice