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Aromatherapy offers you the chance to use your sense of smell to create a state of wellness. Aromatherapy isn't for everyone, but there is a good bit of new evidence showing that, like it or not, what you smell affects your state of mind. The Science of SmellSmell is determined by complex communications between the nose and the brain. Odorants bind to sensory cells in the nose, and those impulses are sent on to the olfactory bulb. From this point, "...in a way still unknown, higher parts of the brain, or the cortex, read the spatial map..." to invoke memories, thoughts, emotions, and very possibly the ability of the mind to heal the body. Science works because it builds on itself over time. In the meantime, follow what your body, mind and spirit reveal to you, and use your body to explore your world on your own terms. Aromas HealPeople around the world use aromatherapy to promote an active state of healing both as a preventative practice and as an antidote to certain diseases or uncomfortable symptoms of disease. For 5,000 years, people have known that aromatherapy is capable of treating and preventing disease and unease of the mind, body and spirit. Now, modern science is backing up the beliefs of our ancestors. Science Investigates AromatherapyYou know the science of aromatherapy is gaining 'real' scientific and medical interest when the 2004 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine goes to a project determining how our sense of smell works! This project is fascinating not only because it explains how 'smelling' works, but because the doctors involved know there is much left to discover about how scents are transferred from 'smells' to the higher brain and translated into emotions and thoughts. Dr. Axel, one of the shared Nobel Prize doctors, stated, "This ability of the higher cortex to read and translate a sensory map into appropriate thought and behavior is the central problem in neurobiology and even psychology." With that statement, Dr. Axel recognized the problem in understanding how smells affect biological and psychological behaviors. When a doctor of this caliber sees a problem, you can bet that others will jump on the chance to research it. This project's natural extension is to discover where the scent molecules go when they exit the olfactory receptors and head into the "higher regions of the brain."
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©2005 Bluelady Muse; All Rights Reserved |
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