Gives concentration and clarity to any activity. Improves learning skills in study and work by allowing the development of new ideas and information.
Facilitates contact with one's self in which all the knowledge and experiences of the past are contained and helps to balance intuitive and cognitive mechanisms, integrating ideas and information.
Negative conditions :
- Inattentive
- Confusion
- Tendency to get away from the real world
- Difficulty to fulfill to your school commitments at any age
Benefits:
- Concentration
- Clarity
- Ease of study and school activities
We recommend 7 drops in the morning and 7 drops in the evening. Hold one minute under the tongue before swallowing.
Main Essences: Bush Fuchsia, Isopongon, Jacaranda, Paw Paw, Sundew.
INCI: Purified water, Alcohol (12.5 %), Epacris longiflora, Isopongon anethifolius, Jacaranda momosaefolia, Carica papaya, sundew sapathulata.
Australian flowers have no interaction with drugs or other foods and can be taken at any age.
They are also recommended for small children, for whom they can also be diluted in water, chamomile, tea or other drinks
The use of flowers as hydroalcoholic preparations belongs to the Bio-Disciplines, with the aim of pursuing the well-being of the person.
The aforementioned preparations, unlike allopathic preparations, do not act through chemical mechanisms inside the body, but provide an energetic information that the organism can receive without the interaction with other treatments in progress. The advice of the floral element does not constitute a medical act, but is aimed at the energy balance of the individual and the indications of use do not constitute therapy or replace the opinion of the doctor.
Since 1976, Traditional and Complementary Medicines (MT&C) have entered the development programs of the World Health Organization (WHO). In 1983 the WHO published a first fundamental text ("The role of Traditional Medicines in the Health System. Scientific and Anthropological Evaluations" 1986 for the Italian edition. Editions of Red./Studio Redazionale) in which it officially expresses the intention of to spread the knowledge of traditional and complementary medical systems, and to assign the description to experts of international level. After that first publication, other official documents are followed by the WHO in favor of T&CM, including the WHO Traditional Medicine strategy 2002-2005. The most recent document was written by the WHO in 2013: WHO Strategy for Traditional Medicine 2014-2023 (Italian translation published by Edizioni Paracelso).
The Green Remedies website - www.bushflower.it - reports and translates specific information that is part of the Australian cultural tradition, which still boasts the presence of an ancient population, the Aborigines and their ancestral knowledge. The oldest continent in the world has the largest number of native floral species, whose particular characteristics constitute the starting point for these preparations.