As you all know, the way that it works with medicine is: you get sick, you go to the medical doctor, he/she gives you a prescription, you buy that, take it and hopefully make a full recovery. In a way, it has always been like that. Individuals went to the most skilled person in the village for advice on how to cure an ailment, a couple of herbs were prescribed and a donation was given.
The only real difference in the method nowadays is that then, there was a far higher general awareness of the power of herbs. These days, in the Developed World at least, the medical profession and the pharmaceuticals have managed to wean us off herbs by one manner or another – usually fear.
The fact is that most drugs are manufactured from herbs or plants or from synthesized chemicals found in herbs and plants. In a way, all we have done is substituted buying for picking.
OK, I know that it is more complicated than that. Drugs are often combinations that work well together and being told to take one tablet a day saves you having to worry about overdosing, but there are still often side-effects. Just read the leaflet inside the box of your next box of pills.
Mine says: anxiety, fainting, erectile dysfunction, low blood pressure, diarrheoa and heart failure. Enchanting, isn’t it? They are pills for high blood pressure (beta-blockers). I live in a small village in northern Thailand, where high blood pressure is not a difficulty, but I know one old lady who has it and high cholesterol and her nurse showed her which tree to choose leaves from to make a tea. She does not take tablets, but I still do.
There is also a woman who began coming into our garden four months ago to select purple flowers off a kind of wisteria that we grow (dork anchan). ‘It is for my son’s very bad cough’, she said. Asthma, I think she meant.
Anyway, she plucks a handful a week and her son is fine. I had a cough at Christmas and tried it myself. I drank two cups of tea before retiring to bed and I drank the cold dregs in the morning, but my cough had already gone.
The hottest time of the year here is March – May, after which it is still hot but the monsoons come and cool it down. Last year, for the first time in my life I suffered from prickly heat in the hot snap. This year it began again, but someone suggested Aloe Vera.
‘Naturally’, said my wife and went into the garden to cut some. She cut two small ‘leaves’ and I spent three days smearing the sap onto the affected parts. It had almost gone on the second day, but it vanished on the third day and has not returned in spite of the fact that it has become hotter since then.
A great deal of people are taking another look at traditional medicines and I am going to be one of them. The difficulty in our village is that my Thai is not fluent, just my wife speaks some English and individuals are frightened to talk of the old methods in case I think that they are backward.
Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a number of topics, but is now concerned with the macular degeneration test. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Macular Degenerative Disease