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Essential Oils

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New Essential Oil Label Guidelines. The American Herbal Products Association (AHPA) announced on August 2nd that it has created a new guidance policy for the labeling of essential oils sold for topical use and offered for retail trade. The AHPA board of trustees adopted the guidance at its recent July meeting. The AHPA board had adopted in July 2009 and amended in July 2011 a trade requirement for the labeling of essential oils.

But it believes that additional labeling may address other issues that do not rise to the same level of a requirement, but that nonetheless represent good labeling practice. The new essential oils guidance outlines several recommended inclusions for labels and labeling, including: Common or usual name of the source plantAn expiration date or date of manufactureThe extraction processStorage cautionsUsage instructionsUsage cautions For clarity and to facilitate easy referencing, both the AHPA trade requirement and the new guidance policy are displayed together on the AHPA website. Essential oils: Use spiritual discernment - Samaritan Ministries International. Part 3 of a series. The first two part are here and here.

By Michael Miller Mahlon Zehr likes essential oils. Really. His family uses peppermint oil for colds, for instance. But when Zehr, a pastor in Oregon, recently encountered an email making the rounds in his denomination that promoted a certain “vitalist” use of essential oils, he felt he needed to respond. It’s not an isolated concern. Zehr and other essential oils users urge Christians to use spiritual discernment when encountering certain applications or explanations of the oils. “The thing that is dangerous is where we get into the idea of trying to manipulate some kind of ‘vital energy’ or ‘universal energy,’” Zehr says. Common ones, he says, are: “Chi” or “qi,” a Buddhist term for energy. Donal O’Mathuna, co-author with Dr. “The problem is not with the volatile oils, but with the way these can be used to subtly or deceptively involve people in other spiritual practices,” he says. “Herbs and oils are gifts from God,” she says.

Which Essential Oil Companies Should YOU Buy From? My surprising findings on my quest to find the best - TheHippyHomemaker | TheHippyHomemaker. I am most likely going to piss off some people with this post, but the information that I found was too good to keep to myself and keep you guys in the dark. As always, you should do your own research and question everything (even me!!). I ALMOST fell for the ploy. I got really excited, because I felt like I was about to embark on a journey into the world of “top quality essential oils”. I thought that the lines I was being fed about these oils being “Certified Pure Therapeutic Grade” (or “CPTG”), “100% pure therapeutic grade”, and “therapeutic quality” meant that these essential oils HAD TO BE THE BEST.

In my ever growing quest to find the healthiest options in my life, I began to wonder what about my essential oils? What is in a smell? You may be asking yourself, “so, which brand would you recommend I buy, Christina?” Lavender is by far my favorite herb and essential oil to play with! Why I will NOT buy my oils from any of the MLM companies… So which essential oils should I buy?

Robert Tisserand - Essential Oil Aromatherapy Author Educator Speaker. Atlantic Institute of Aromatherapy. 150 Uses for the Family Physician Kit - Mama Z Oils. Selah Essential Oils | Pure Organic Aromatherapy Essential Oils.