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  • Herbalists' Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 5): Ginkgo, Guarana, Maca
    2025/05/15

    In our fifth installment in this series, we address the facts & fictions about ginkgo, guarana, and maca supplements in commerce! These were #13, 14, and 15 on the top-selling herbs list for 2023 (the most recent data).

    This series is all about sharing an herbalist’s understanding of herbs very popular as commercial supplements and other mass-market products. We want to share perspectives of both traditional and contemporary herbal practice, so people can understand these are “good for” more than just what’s on their labels.

    It’s too easy for herbs to be boxed in to smaller and smaller ranges of application when they’re commercialized. This is an antidote to that movement!

    For practicing herbalists & clinicians, it’s very important to know well those herbs which are most commonly consumed. Your clients will ask you about them, or be taking them before they even visit you – so you’ve got to know what they do! You might be able to give advice about a better remedy, or a compensation for some effect of the plant. This can help your clients just as much as a new recommendation, so don’t neglect it.

    If you’re new to herbalism, this can also serve as an inoculation against “herban legends” and misinformation – which is rampant on today’s internet.

    13. Ginkgo – Ginkgo biloba

    • HHP 139: Six Herbs for Cognitive Decline Prevention
    • HHP 047: Tinnitus & Headaches

    14. Guarana – Paullinia cupana

    • Guarana at Examine.com
    • Guarana in King’s American Dispensatory (1898)

    15. Maca – Lepidium meyenii

    • Maca at Examine.com
    • Maca at Herbal Reality

    Find the previous episode of this series here:

    • (Part 1): Psyllium, Elderberry, Turmeric, Ashwagandha
    • (Part 2): Apple Cider Vinegar, Cranberry
    • (Part 3): Wheatgrass, Beet Root, & Ginger
    • (Part 4): Green Tea, Fenugreek, Ivy Leaf

    Whether you’re a brand-new beginner or an herbalist with experience, it’s always helpful to study the herbs in depth! Our comprehensive presentation of herbal allies is in our Holistic Herbalism Materia Medica course. It includes detailed profiles of 100 medicinal herbs!

    This self-paced online video course comes with access to twice-weekly live Q&A sessions with us, lifetime access to current & future course material, open discussion threads integrated in each lesson, an active student community, study guides, quizzes & capstone assignments, and more!


    Our theme music is “Wings” by Nicolai Heidlas.

    Support the show

    You can find all of our online herbalism courses at online.commonwealthherbs.com!

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    47 分
  • Can Herbs "Heal"?
    2025/05/07

    What does it mean to heal? When are we “healed”? Are there some wounds that can’t be healed? If we can’t heal – in the sense of achieving “perfect health” – are we failures, as people or as herbalists? In this episode, Katja shares her thoughts on the words and ideas “healing” carries in our culture, offering a critique of their common (and commercialized!) semantic and emotional baggage.


    Transcript

    Lately, in conversations with several different people from different realms of my life, the word “heal” – healing, healer – has come up a lot, and specifically, what we mean when we talk about “healing”.

    I have some strong feelings about this word that might resonate with you. I think that it’s an important discussion about how we understand health and care, how we understand our bodies, and how we understand the journey of being a human.

    Lots of people call herbalists “healers” – but we’re not doing any healing, you, the people we help, are! I don’t like to call myself a healer because it means that i’m taking credit for work that the people i help are doing; it’s disempowering. Sure, i motivate, i educate, i use my education to build a plan together with my clients – but in the end, they’re the ones that are doing the real work!

    And what even is healing? If we’re talking about a topical wound, i suppose it means “the process of the skin growing back” – but what about scars? Is there such a thing as “healed”, even in the simple sense of a wound?

    What does it mean to “heal” internally – let’s say, cardiovascular damage? Maybe you do a lot of work on your cardiovascular health and get your blood pressure down – that’s really good! Herbs and holistic strategies are really good at this kind of work.

    But is that healing? The problem can always come back, if you have to deal with a lot of stress over a period of time, for example. If it comes back, is that a failure on your part? Did you “do a bad job at healing”?

    I don’t think so.

    I think that if you improve your health by working on it, that’s awesome, and if life gets stressful and you have a flareup, that’s just the reality of being a creature of fluctuation. We’re not permanent, we’re not static – we’re always reacting to our environment, and compensating for factors that are out of our control.

    What about things that can’t be healed? ...

    To read the rest of the transcript, click here!


    Support the show

    You can find all of our online herbalism courses at online.commonwealthherbs.com!

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    19 分
  • Herbalists' Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 4): Green Tea, Fenugreek, Ivy Leaf
    2025/04/08

    We discuss green tea, fenugreek, and ivy leaf in this, the fourth part of an episodic sequence about the best-selling herbs in the US.

    Our primary purpose for creating this series of episodes is to share an understanding of these herbs from the perspectives of traditional and contemporary herbal practice. Frequently, the high-volume sales of these herbs comes along with oversimplified or diminished ideas about what they can do. If we ask “what does this herb help with?” and answer it based only on what we see on store shelves and product websites, we’ll miss out on a lot of possibilities!

    Every herbalist practicing in the US today should be familiar with these herbs, because they are the ones your clients are most likely to be taking even before they show up for an appointment with you. Their use may have implications for your own herbal recommendations, or serve as a jumping-off point for a more involved protocol. You may also be able to advise your clients about alternatives which may serve them better, or even some supplements that aren’t really worth the price.

    So overall, this series is both an example of materia medica study and also a guide to ‘marketing literacy’ for supplements.

    10. Green Tea – Camellia sinensis

    • Green Tea at Herbal Reality

    11. Fenugreek – Trigonella foenum-graecum

    • Fenugreek at Herbal Reality

    12. Ivy Leaf – Hedera helix

    • “Hedera.-Ivy.” in King’s American Dispensatory, 1898

    Find the previous episode of this series here:

    • HHP 240: Herbalists’ Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 1): Psyllium, Elderberry, Turmeric, Ashwagandha
    • HHP 244: Herbalists’ Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 2): Apple Cider Vinegar, Cranberry
    • HHP 246: Herbalists’ Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 3): Wheatgrass, Beet Root, & Ginger


    Whether you’re a brand-new beginner or an herbalist with experience, it’s always helpful to study the herbs in depth! Our comprehensive presentation of herbal allies is in our Holistic Herbalism Materia Medica course. It includes detailed profiles of 100 medicinal herbs!

    Like all our offerings, this self-paced online video course comes with free access to twice-weekly live Q&A sessions with us, lifetime access to current & future course material, open discussion threads integrated in each lesson, an active student community, study guides, quizzes & capstone assignments, and more!


    If you have a moment, it would help us a lot if you could subscribe, rate, & review our podcast wherever you listen. This helps others find us more easily. Thank you!!

    Our theme music is “Wings” by Nicolai Heidlas.

    Support the show

    You can find all of our online herbalism courses at online.commonwealthherbs.com!

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    57 分
  • Herbalists' Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 3): Wheatgrass, Beet Root, & Ginger
    2025/03/15

    In part three of our series on the top-selling herbs in the United States, we cover wheatgrass, beet root, and ginger supplements.

    As we share our opinions about these popular herbal supplements, our primary goal is to help you understand these herbs in their breadth and depth. They’re too often pigeon-holed into limited ranges of application – the usual answers to “what is it good for?” are too small! There’s plenty more to say about them than their most common selling points.

    If you’re an herbalist, it’s good for you to be well-informed about herbal supplements which people take most often. You can learn what is popular, and why it is. You can understand how to answer questions about those plants, how to differentiate hype from health, how to help someone find a better alternative, and which supplements just aren’t worth the cost. This series is intended to help you do that!

    If you’re new to herbalism, we’re happy that we get the first chance to form your thoughts around these herbs. At the same time, this will act as a guide to developing ‘marketing literacy’ as applied to herbal supplements – and some good old-fashioned materia medica study, too.

    7. Wheatgrass / Barley grass – Triticum aestivum / Hordeum vulgare

    • What to Do When You’ve Been Glutened

    8. Beet root – Beta vulgaris

    • Beetroot profile at Herbal Reality

    9. Ginger – Zingiber off.

    • HHP 227: Herbs A-Z: Zingiber
    • Ginger: Herb of the Week

    Find the previous episode of this series here:

    • HHP 240: Herbalists’ Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 1): Psyllium, Elderberry, Turmeric, Ashwagandha
    • HHP 244: Herbalists’ Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 2): Apple Cider Vinegar, Cranberry


    Whether you’re a brand-new beginner or an herbalist with experience, it’s always helpful to study the herbs in depth! Our comprehensive presentation of herbal allies is in our Holistic Herbalism Materia Medica course. It includes detailed profiles of 100 medicinal herbs!

    Like all our offerings, this self-paced online video course comes with free access to twice-weekly live Q&A sessions with us, lifetime access to current & future course material, open discussion threads integrated in each lesson, an active student community, study guides, quizzes & capstone assignments, and more!

    If you have a moment, it would help us a lot if you could subscribe, rate, & review our podcast wherever you listen. This helps others find us more easily. Thank you!!

    Our theme music is “Wings” by Nicolai Heidlas.

    Support the show

    You can find all of our online herbalism courses at online.commonwealthherbs.com!

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    32 分
  • Adaptogens, or A Nap To Gen…erate Recovery?
    2025/03/08

    If you’re trying to decide whether you need adaptogens or a nap, well, the answer just might be both! But you can learn how to combine your adaptogens with other holistic interventions for better effects.

    In this episode we’re talking about choosing the best adaptogens to work with when what you really need is rest – a super common situation we all find ourselves in from time to time. We talk about ways to get rest – even if you don’t have time to nap! – as well as ways to rest that aren’t about sleep at all.

    How to start? Well, we can choose the least stimulating adaptogens necessary, first. That might mean going with tulsi before red ginseng, or jiaogulan before rhodiola. It might mean combining reishi and lion’s mane with burdock and dandelion root, to keep a grounding influence right there with our adaptogens. It might even mean formulating with digestives and nervines to subtly shift the influences of the adaptogenic herbs themselves.

    We can also be discerning about the type of activation we get – mental or physical at the fore. Tulsi & green tea is a very different combination than is eleuthero & coffee!

    Let’s also consider creating a support blend to go along with my adaptogens. This might include demulcents (marshmallow, fennel), nutritives (nettle), digestives (calendula, plantain, ginger, chamomile), or nervine relaxants & sedatives (skullcap, passionflower, betony, vervain). As always, herbal formulation is a great way to direct & enhance the effects of our primary herbs.

    ​Finally, here are three questions you should ask yourself whenever you’re thinking about adaptogens:

    • What’s going on for me right now?
    • Is there anything I could be doing differently?​
    • What’s the most important thing right now?​


    Interested in learning more about adaptogens, nervines, and related herbs for nerve & mood support? Check out our Neurological & Emotional Health course. This course is a user’s guide to your nerves & your emotions – including the difficult and dark ones. We discuss holistic herbalism strategies for addressing both neurological & psychological health issues. It includes a lengthy discussion of herbal pain management strategies, too!

    Like all our offerings, this self-paced online video course comes with free access to twice-weekly live Q&A sessions with us, lifetime access to current & future course material, open discussion threads integrated in each lesson, an active student community, study guides, quizzes & capstone assignments, and more!

    If you have a moment, it would help us a lot if you could subscribe, rate, & review our podcast wherever you listen. This helps others find us more easily. Thank you!!

    Our theme music is “Wings” by Nicolai Heidlas.

    Support the show

    You can find all of our online herbalism courses at online.commonwealthherbs.com!

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    1 時間 25 分
  • Herbalists’ Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 2): Apple Cider Vinegar, Cranberry
    2025/02/26

    This episode continues our series covering the top-selling herbs in the United States. As we give you our thoughts about these popular herbal supplements, we’re hoping to help you break out of the box. These herbs are frequently pigeon-holed into very narrow ranges of application – the answers to the question “what is it good for?” are usually very limited! There’s more to say about them than their most effective selling points or marketing campaigns.

    If you’re a practicing herbalist, you should be well-informed about the herbal supplements people take most frequently. You should know what’s popular, and why. You should know how to answer people’s questions about these herbs, how to sort hype from health, how to identify better alternatives, and which ones simply aren’t worth the money. This series is intended to help you do that!

    If you’re new to herbalism – we’re glad that we get to help you form your initial opinion of these herbs. More broadly, though, this will serve as an introduction to marketing literacy in the realm of herbal supplements, as well as some good materia medica study.

    In today’s episode we cover apple cider vinegar and cranberry supplements.

    5. Apple Cider Vinegar – Malus spp.

    • jim mcdonald’s Apple monograph
    • Katja’s recipe for Paleo Apple Fritters

    6. Cranberry – Vaccinium macrocarpon

    • HHP 224: Herbs A-Z: Urtica & Vaccinium
    • HHP 006: Dynamic Desk Work + Crazy for Cranberries (discussion of cranberry starts around 25:30)

    Find the first episode of this series here: HHP 240: Herbalists’ Views on the Top-Selling Herbs (Part 1): Psyllium, Elderberry, Turmeric, Ashwagandha


    Whether you’re a brand-new beginner or an herbalist with experience, it’s always helpful to study the herbs in depth! Our comprehensive presentation of herbal allies is in our Holistic Herbalism Materia Medica course. It includes detailed profiles of 100 medicinal herbs!

    Like all our offerings, this self-paced online video course comes with free access to twice-weekly live Q&A sessions with us, lifetime access to current & future course material, open discussion threads integrated in each lesson, an active student community, study guides, quizzes & capstone assignments, and more!

    If you have a moment, it would help us a lot if you could subscribe, rate, & review our podcast wherever you listen. This helps others find us more easily. Thank you!!

    Our theme music is “Wings” by Nicolai Heidlas.

    Support the show

    You can find all of our online herbalism courses at online.commonwealthherbs.com!

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    40 分
  • Can I Be A Plus-Sized Herbalist?
    2025/02/25

    Katja writes…

    Today a student sent me a question and it was so important, i asked her if i could (anonymously) share it, because i know other people are wondering this too.


    She wrote:

    "I wanted to ask for any advice or your thoughts on how to handle being a plus size herbalist.

    I am plus sized. Though I am currently in working on a healthier life style that includes using herbs, I feel like when people see me or see that Im plus sized that they may not want to work with me or any of my products.

    I feel like this is my calling I have fallen in love with herbs and how they naturally work with in the body. but I feel like this could possibly hinder me from even opening my own practice one day. I kinda feel alone in this due to most of the herbalist I see on social media are very fit and “healthy”.

    Am I wrong to want to be an herbalist even though I am also going through a battle and journey with my weight?"


    The bottom line is: we need you. We need plus-sized herbalists. We need everyone, no matter where you are in your journey, whether you’re small or big or short or tall or thin or fat or disabled or abled or sedentary or athletic or anything else.

    And the other bottom line is that weight and health are not the same thing. I know that society has all these ideas about what is “good” and “healthy” but that doesn’t mean they’re true. You can be healthy and big! You can be healthy and small! You can be unhealthy and be small or big too!

    We’re all just trying to get through our day, and we’re all in the body we’re in. You don’t have to get thin to get healthy, so let’s make our bodies healthy now, regardless of what size or shape they are. And let’s love them too because bodies are pretty amazing actually!


    If you have a moment, it would help us a lot if you could subscribe, rate, & review our podcast wherever you listen. This helps others find us more easily. Thank you!!

    Our theme music is “Wings” by Nicolai Heidlas.

    Support the show

    You can find all of our online herbalism courses at online.commonwealthherbs.com!

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    21 分
  • Herbal Detox? Heed the Don’t Ox! ❌🐂
    2025/02/14

    Talk of herbal detox comes up every spring – some years, earlier than others. We field a lot of questions from people asking our opinions on detox protocols, bowel cleanses, liver flushes, you name it. So, in this episode, we’re giving you our fundamental thoughts on the topic.

    Ryn wrote you a poem that sums up our perspective. Here it is:


    The Don’t Ox

    if you think you need a detox,
    hear & heed the Don’t Ox –
    listen well when he talks,
    when he says:
    Don’t.

    don’t you doubt your liver!,
    and the action it delivers
    in concert with your kidneys
    to clean your blood.

    if you feed your body rightly
    if you sleep you well a-nightly
    if you walk when sun shines brightly
    you’ll keep inner waters clear.

    you don’t need to haunt the potty –
    you just need to trust your body:
    give it nicely more than naughty
    without force and without fear.

    if you taste a bit of bitter
    eat some greens at every dinner
    then you’ll run that inner river
    in a flow, but not a flood!

    now every day’s a detox
    and our good old friend the Don’t Ox
    is sure when we hear “purge” talk
    we’ll remember:
    Don’t.


    Listen to the episode for the elucidation and explanation of everything that’s contained in this poem!

    Perhaps you will adopt the Don’t Ox as a personal mascot, too. 🙂

    For the full story, you’ll want to dig in to our course Elements of Detoxification. This course takes a fresh look at the concepts of “toxicity” and “detoxification”, a holistic perspective that goes beyond “cleanses” and products. Learn a memorable, practical model for understanding how the body’s detox functions work, along with the roles herbs can play in supporting them.


    Like all our offerings, this is a self-paced online video course, which comes with free access to twice-weekly live Q&A sessions with us, lifetime access to current & future course material, open discussion threads integrated in each lesson, an active student community, study guides, quizzes & capstone assignments, and more!

    If you enjoyed the episode, it helps us a lot if you subscribe, rate, & review our podcast wherever you listen. This helps others find us more easily. Thank you!

    Our theme music is “Wings” by Nicolai Heidlas.

    Support the show

    You can find all of our online herbalism courses at online.commonwealthherbs.com!

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    1 時間 1 分