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Ingredients- E

 

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Epsom Salts

Epsom Salts

Botanical Name    Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
Origin  
 USA- natural mined rock mineral
Benefits    Softens skin and relaxes sore muscles. Epsom salt is one of the most effective means of making the magnesium your body needs readily available. It can improve heart and circulatory health, flush toxins and heavy metals from the cells, ease muscle pain and help the body eliminate harmful substances. Improves nerve function by regulating electrolytes. It relieves stress by increasing magnesium.
Notes    
Excess adrenaline and stress are believed to drain magnesium, a natural stress reliever, from the body. Magnesium is necessary for the body to bind adequate amounts of serotonin, a mood-elevating chemical within the brain that creates a feeling of well being and relaxation. Magnesium is necessary to maintain proper calcium levels in the blood. Calcium is the main conductor for electrical current in the body. While increasing your magnesium levels, Epsom salt also delivers sulfates, which are extremely difficult to get through food but which readily absorb through the skin. Medical research indicates sulfates are needed for the formation of brain tissue, joint proteins and the mucin proteins that line the walls of the digestive tract. Sulfates also stimulate the pancreas to generate digestive enzymes and help to detoxify the body's residue of medicines and environmental contaminants.
History
Constituents    chloride, boron, magnesium sulfate, iron.

Eucalyptus

Eucalyptus Essential Oil

Certified Organic by Oregon Tilth
Botanical Name    Eucalyptus citriodora
Origin    Australia
Benefits    Eucalyptus has strong antiseptic and healing properties. It has been used for centuries to disinfect wounds and surgical equipment, and to treat parasitic skin infections. It has also been used as an inhalant for asthma, diphtheria, sore throats.
Notes    Eucalyptus oil is obtained from glands on the fresh leaves that contain a fragrant volatile oil.  The trees are native to Australia and Tasmania, but are now grown in warmer climates all over the world. Most of the cultivation is still in Australia.
History
Constituents    Eucalyptol (consisting chiefly of a terpene and a cymene).

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