The Oil Pulling Miracle: Detoxify Simply and Effectively
By Birgit Frohn
4/5
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About this ebook
• Details the process of oil pulling, including when to do it, how long to swish the oil in your mouth, and other oral care techniques that complement it
• Explains the health benefits of 10 different cold-pressed oils, including sesame, coconut, and pumpkin seed, allowing you to choose the best oil for your needs
• Includes a step-by-step 7-day detox plan and information on additional detox techniques that enhance the benefits of oil pulling
Oil pulling is much more than an oral cleansing method. Originating in the ancient healing systems of Ayurveda and traditional Chinese medicine, where it is well known that “disease begins in the mouth,” this simple health practice triggers detoxification and healing throughout the entire body. The mouth and tongue are home to bacteria, fungus, and many toxins from the rest of the body. Oil pulling not only cleanses the mouth and tongue, preventing harmful bacteria and toxins from entering the bloodstream, it also triggers enzyme production in the digestive tract, which in turn activates cleansing processes throughout the entire body. Practiced daily, oil pulling leads to better dental and gum health, a stronger immune system, detoxification of major organs including the intestines, lungs, and liver, and healing from many conditions caused by internal toxins and chronic inflammation.
In this practical guide, Birgit Frohn details the simple process of oil pulling, including when to do it, how long to swish the oil in your mouth, and other oral care techniques that complement it, such as tongue scraping. She explains the specific health benefits of 10 different cold-pressed oils that can be used in oil pulling, from traditional sesame oil to vitamin-packed pumpkin seed oil to highly popular coconut oil, allowing you to choose the best oil for your needs. She also reveals the vast number of ailments that can be healed and prevented by regular oil pulling practice, including:
• Acne
• Allergies
• Canker sores
• Arthritis
• Eczema
• Flu and Colds
• Sinus infections and Bronchitis
• Cavities and Gingivitis
• Headaches and Migraines
• Constipation
• And many more . . .
Frohn also explores additional detox techniques that enhance the benefits of oil pulling and concludes with a step-by-step 7-day detox plan for those who want to maximize the effects of oil pulling and accelerate their return to better health.
Birgit Frohn
Birgit Frohn has a degree in biology with an emphasis on human genetics and pharmacology from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in Germany. A scientific journalist and medical writer, she has published many articles in medical journals and authored more than 50 books in German. She lives in Hamburg and Munich, Germany.
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Reviews for The Oil Pulling Miracle
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- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The book is gut in theory of oil pulling and also give a complementary information, very important detox methodes to clean our body.
Between theory and practise of oil pulling can be improved a little bit more.
Book preview
The Oil Pulling Miracle - Birgit Frohn
The Long Tradition of Oil Pulling
The practice of oil pulling can be traced back for over a thousand years. That this practice has such a long tradition should come as no surprise, for the insight that our body must be regularly cleansed of waste products and toxins to maintain our health is not new. Certainly, various methods of purifying and detoxifying the body have played an enduring role in the treatment regimens of many branches of the healing arts, in many cultures, since the beginning of medicine.
The purpose of this book is to introduce you to the practice of oil pulling and to provide tips and guidelines for its use. As well, there are a variety of other detoxification techniques that beautifully complement oil pulling that we shall touch on later in this book. To stay healthy, our body requires cleansing from the inside as well as the outside. As already noted, this is not a modern insight. Long ago, the physicians of ancient Egypt prescribed special therapies designed to purify the body of toxins. Some of these involved laxatives, while others consisted of herbal preparations for internal consumption to bring about specific cleansing effects in the organs. Oil pulling, too, found a way into the repertoire of the great ancient medical traditions. Because oil pulling was regarded as a comprehensively effective method for purifying and detoxifying, it was only natural that it would be incorporated into the materia medica of those classical systems of healing.
It may surprise a few people to know that the roots of our modern Western medical system reach all the way back to India, China, and the ancient cultures of the Mediterranean region. The founding fathers of these ancient systems of medicine include the scholar Charaka and the surgeon Sushruta, both of whom helped establish the ayurvedic tradition of India; the Yellow Emperor, Huangdi, the legendary founder of traditional Chinese medicine; and Hippocrates, who along with his students established the healing traditions of the ancient Greeks, on which much of our current medical model in the West is based.
Ayurveda—the Mother of Medicine and Oil Pulling
An ideal medicine not only heals illness; it provides effective, long-lasting prevention of getting sick in the first place. On this point, all of the Asian medical traditions agree. This is the reason why these ancient healing traditions continue to advocate the use of detoxifying and purifying regimens for maintaining health and well-being. Many of these resemble the practices of ayurveda, the traditional medicine of India, in which oil pulling plays a central role in both the prevention and the treatment of illness.
Ayurveda dates back to prehistoric times, to as early as 3000 BC. The word itself is a combination of ayus, life,
and veda, knowledge.
Thus the ayurvedic system is based on the knowledge of life,
a perspective that well agrees with the principles of traditional Indian medicine: that the medical arts and the art of living are one and the same. Because the concepts of ayurveda encompass all aspects of daily life, they can be applied equally on both healthy and sick days.
Ayurveda formed the basis of many healing systems outside of India, including traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). Our Western medicine has also been decisively influenced by ayurvedic insights, for it has been said that the treatment methods of the Hippocratic physicians were closely based on many of the principles of classical Indian medicine. Ayurveda’s reputation as the Mother of Medicine
is still acknowledged in our time. Although the traditional medicine of the Indian subcontinent was suppressed from 1858 to 1947 under the British Raj, ayurveda has reemerged today as an essential part of the Indian system of health care. And with our growing interest in all types of natural healing methods in the West, the Mother of Medicine has come to play an important role here as well. This has led to many scientific investigations of the efficacy of various ayurvedic therapies. The results of these investigations demonstrate that ayurveda has enormous potential as a modern system of holistic medicine that can be used to successfully treat a number of illnesses for which Western medicine has not yet found a cure.
Dr. Fedor Karach
Many people who have searched the Internet to learn more about oil pulling have repeatedly encountered one name: Dr. Fedor Karach, a physician from the Ukraine. Dr. Karach claimed to have learned a simple and very effective health practice from Siberian shamans: each morning for at least four weeks in a row, one spoonful of sunflower oil should be thoroughly chewed
and swished and sucked through the teeth and around the mouth for at least ten minutes, after which you spit the liquid out (being careful not to swallow any) and brush the teeth as usual. This practice could draw out and remove all kinds of harmful toxins, including even heavy metals, from the body. This corresponded to a similar ayurvedic technique, except that sesame oil is used in ayurveda, and the oil is swished for only about two minutes.
Dr. Karach gave a lecture about this practice of oil pulling during a late 1980s meeting of a group known as the All Ukrainian Association,
which was attended by a number of oncologists and bacteriologists who were members of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. The title of his presentation was One of the Many Possibilities to Provide Assistance to an Ill or No Longer So Healthy Body.
At the time, the practice of oil pulling was not well known in the West. The reaction to this presentation by those in attendance was overwhelmingly positive. Of course, there were also critics, but the main message did not go unheard.
It should be underscored that this time tested health practice described by Dr. Karach to his colleagues did not originate in Russian or Ukrainian folk medicine, although oil pulling goes back centuries in the traditional medicine of those countries. All Dr. Karach did was remind those of us in the West about something that has been known and practiced in India and China for a long, long time.
The Five Elements and the Three Types
The basic assumption of ayurveda is that all of nature is composed of one or a combination of the five elements of ether, air, fire, water, and earth, and that all five of these elements are found within the human body. As well, from the perspective of traditional Indian medicine, everything that exists is in interrelationship with everything else. As a result, the diagnostic methods of ayurveda are complex and not based solely on the examination of a person’s physical body; they also consider a number of other factors, such as the person’s psychological state, lifestyle, and nutritional status, and even the climate in which the person lives.
The second principle of ayurveda is the doctrine of the three doshas: vata, pitta, and kapha. The Sanskrit term dosha can be translated as support,
a term that indicates its function; the doshas can be understood as the biological principles or bioenergies that support and control all of an organism’s processes. Because the relationship between the doshas is established for each person at the time of birth, the ayurvedic system assumes that people have different constitutional types. These types make it possible to identify and address a person’s health weaknesses and strengths.
The Five Treatments for Maintaining Health
All of the treatment methods used in ayurveda aim at maintaining or restoring the balance of the three doshas, the three supports. One of the methods involves the use of plant medicines—phytotherapy, in fact, plays a central role in the ayurvedic healing canon. Ayurvedic plant medicines are manufactured in a traditional manner and are based on recipes that have been passed down for centuries.
Ayurveda also makes use of purifying therapies intended to maintain or restore a person’s health. The most important of these are the panchakarma, the five treatments.
These techniques, which are now recognized and practiced in the West, consist of a finely tuned system of purifying treatments and oil massages. One of these is gandusha, the ayurvedic practice of oil pulling.
Herbs and oils play an important