Life Hack: Pantry Remedies using Caster Oil & Baking Soda

Maintaining wellness naturally

I was introduced to Caster Oil the day I gave birth to my youngest child. It was a midwife’s strategy to induce labour. It worked. I don’t recommend it based on my experience.

However, Caster Oil is in my wellness pantry and a staple with so many uses. Recently I began to use Caster Oil and Baking Soda together as a skin exfoliant on my hands, lower arms, neck and face. During the time I combined these two ingredients and rubbed them into my skin, I noticed that they had more benefits than exfoliation. It supported reducing inflammation in the soft tissue. As a Feldenkrais Practitioner, I use my hands daily and this is an important tool to reduce any inflammation in my hands to increase the felt sense when using empathy touch with students.

Each of these ingredients alone has wellness benefits however in combination they enhance the healing properties of both of them.

Castor Oil – has a wide range of nature benefits

  • Joint Pain
  • Skin Care 
  • Hair and Nails

Baking Soda – has health and beauty care

  • Balance Stomach Acids
  • Skin Care
  • Oral Health

15 uses for this pantry remedy that combines both Caster Oil and Baking Soda

  1. Reduces itching of allergic relations by calming cooling and soothing inflamed skin

2.    Reduce swelling and itch from bites

3. Removes warts, bumps, cysts and pigmentation spots

4.    Anti-bacterial

5.    Anti-fungal

7.    Reduce infections

​8.    Clears up infections like athletes’ foot, ringworm and acne 

9.    Quickens healing

10.  Speeds up the growth of skin for wound healing 

11.  Reduces inflammation

12    Relieves joint and muscle pain

13.  Hydrates skin – soften the skin – youthful and vibrant appearance

14.  Revitalizes the skin – plumps it out and creates elasticity 

15.  Reduces eye bags

Measurements of each ingredient for different uses:

  • Warts, infection, pigmentation and bumps: 1 part to 1 part (equal measures)
  • Skin hydration and calming, wound healing: 1 part Oil to 1/4 – 1/2 part soda

Read more benefits for these ingredients or order them on Amazon with these quick links:

More on Caster Oil

More on Baking Soda

This information is for educational purposes only. I only give suggestions that I have tried myself and have noticed change through exploration.

Life Hack: Pantry Remedies using Baking Soda

Maintaining wellness naturally

@insideawareness

Life Hack – Baking Soda, Pantry Remedy, growing up with a whiskey drinker this was the morning after drink! Now it is being used to sleep better, balance stomach ph, & more…… pantryremedies, lifehackforstomachacid @insideawareness

♬ original sound – The Macarons Project – The Macarons Project

This video demonstrates a strategy that my father used daily to calm the acid in his stomach. At least once a day I would hear the spoon clinking in the glass and know exactly what he was doing. His only other wellness habit was tiny liver pills. I have no idea what those were and I no longer see anything resembling them. However, I was amused to notice that baking soda is in my wellness pantry. I use it for various natural pantry remedies and cleaners in my household. Some of the new ways I have begun to use Baking Soda is in my skincare. I would like to share its benefits in the post.

As a Feldenkrais Practitioner, I discovered that Baking Soda will soften the connective tissue that hardens with repetitive use and effort. Sometimes there is pain and restriction to the joint and bone movement. Baking Soda is a water softener and when bathing with Baking Soda in the water it also seems to soften the skin, facia, tissue and connective parts, like muscles and tendons, etc. This softening increases the range of motion in the joints and micro-movements of the bones. Here is more information on Baking Soda and its potential uses.

Baking Soda for health and beauty care

  • Balance Stomach Acids
  • Skin Care
  • Oral Health

Baking soda is sodium bicarbonate or bicarbonate of soda. It is a versatile all-purpose powder that has many uses from baking to calming heartburn, and for personal hygiene, balancing ph in mouth and stomach, skin and oral care, urinary tract infections, household cleaning agent and now it is being studied for cancer therapy. Baking Soda has antibacterial and antimicrobial properties.

Cancer Therapy

It is an adjunct to cancer treatment and is being studied for its effects on tumour acidosis.

Oral Care

It is common to find Baking Soda listed as an ingredient in toothpaste however it can also be used as a mouthwash. It reduces acid in the mouth and fights bacteria growth and gingivitis. In toothpaste it is used as a whitener and element to remove plague. However, it is abrasive and if used at home from the box straight without other ingredients like in toothpaste it can wear down the enamel with repeated use. It is also used for canker sores in the mouth and on the lips.

Measurements for mouthwash: 1/2 teaspoon to one glass of water

Deodorant

Sweat only smells when it meets bacteria. Mix baking soda with coconut oil or shea butter to make your deodorant. This would be a nice option as it would support the lymph node health in the armpits.

Measurements for Deodorant: 1/4 teaspoon to one teaspoon of coconut oil or shea butter. Coconut Oil also has antibacterial qualities.

Skin Care

Baking Soda is soothing for bug bites and sunburns. It reduces skin itch and with it’s antibacterial and antimicrobial properties it would support skin rashes, infections and wound healing. The best way to experience the qualities of baking soda on the skin is bathing for 20 minutes or more. It softens the skin and supports ph balance. It is enhanced with the addition of Dead Sea Salt Minerals and would make for a wonderful rejuvenating experience. Especially if some essential oils were added like Lavender for relaxation.

Measurements: 1/4 to 3/4’s of a cup of Baking Soda per full tub of warm to hot water. It combines Dead Sea Salt Minerals and use 3/4’s to 1 cup.

Combining other pantry items mentioned in this post to create your remedies could include:

  • Caster Oil – Read more
  • Coconut Oil
  • Dead Sea Mineral Salt
  • Lavender Essential Oil

Read more benefits for these ingredients or order them on Amazon with these quick links:

Spice Tea to reduce cravings

Here are some spices that seem to reduce cravings and balance out digestion. I find they even reduce hunger at meal so the meal sizes naturally become smaller.

Spice Tea – These spices are a natural way I tap into for reducing hunger between meals and meal sizes. They are also packed with nutrients missing in our fast food and eating out phases. It is also good for digestion. Fenugreek was recommended for mothers breastfeeding to help babies with digestion too!

  • If you need to stock up your cupboard here are links to Amazon Spices:

An eloquent definition of the differences in interpretations of the value of cooperation

I am sharing Damion Williams’s eloquent interpretation of the value word ‘cooperation.’ He is sharing an understanding of how this word is used for different effects in our Western culture. This is a seed of understanding that lit up my consciousness during a process of conversational groups gathering to integrate values. No one knew their inner definition and understanding of universal values or each had a different interpretation. I loved Damian’s eloquence in explaining this experience in the use of the value word cooperation that I had to share for educational purposes.

Today the Moon goes into it’s full phase.

Today, Sept 17, 2024 is the last full moon before Fall Equinox. It also reflects the phases of my goal setting program that is structured around the eight phases of the moon that reflects when he intentions set during he new moon phase are set. I suggest it is the phase where, ‘it is done.’

Here is a little clip of a moment in time on the eve of this full moon that happened on my desk as I was working. It was a moment to pause and reflect. I hope you enjoy it.

Overthinking lacks balance of functional alignment: example are diets

Recently I had to admit the bread substitute I was purchasing wasn’t my favorite and it was too expensive. Admitting this to myself created an incentive to consider something different. Then I forgot about it. Online, a recipe and picture crossed the screen and I was attracted to it. It had few ingredients and would provide a protein source for my eating plan. There was no energy put into thinking, strategizing or searching except in my own cupboard prior to bed last night. That involved putting the lentils on to soak. Here is the result. Will it taste okay? Have to wait until it cools. However, it leads to a topic I have been wanting to introduce with a more concrete focus………..

Making a decision to explore living foods about 8 years ago led to a discovery that wasn’t in my mind’s eye when making this choice. The focus was on what foods are available in front of us that we are overlooking. In the course of taking this action, the exploration led to creating recipes that were known such as growing cultures and making sourdough bread, apple cider vinegar, sauerkraut, kombucha and kefir. As these cultures began to coincide with more fresh greens through edible weeds and homemade dressings something odd began to happen. All old cravings vanished and something else replaced it. There was a physical incentive that inspired organic motivation that was new. When recognized as a shift in behaviours I knew it wasn’t a familiar one when it came to food choices, preparing food and even making time for it. My experience has been that when someone is developing a career or has been food shamed or controlled by a partner this experience mentioned above is not an organically felt somatic experience. It is certainly one I appreciate.

Having this experience and entertaining it for a good length of time allowed it to manifest as a baseline experience. One that I began to observe and engage with when working with functional integrative sessions with students. I began to observe the connection between food and function. As a communication mentor and empathy coach, I extended this same observation to behaviours. I discovered there is a correlation to the balance of health and well-being connected to functional movement, emotions and mental focused dominance when it came to food and diets.

The main takeaway has been that when the diet has a scientific or trending focus the likelihood for success in integrating it into a lifestyle is minimal. It remains an outside strategy versus the inner incentive that motivates one into long-term habitual changes. However, I can say that a habitual lifestyle diet can be interrupted by a change in influences. For example, being on holiday and eating completely outside of ones wheelhouse for an extended period. The discovery is that it only takes a short period to develop new food habits and it somehow shifts an inner messaging system toward that last pattern of eating. What you put in for extended periods is what the body wants to continue eating. Diets focus on the mental and emotional states of being that lend themselves to self-judgements and those of others. However, it is a physiological condition as I discovered. However, each time one taps back into the foods that feed their organs and body functions the easier it is to get back into it. The mental, emotional and physical aligns to make it easier to achieve through experience versus a focus on thinking about what it should be, and how it should be, it seems more organic. My goal is to grow this in my own experience.

I can only imagine this is how people once connected with their food and landscape before organized food availabilities and current luxuries. They would gather what was available and create meals with it spontaneously unless dried and packed along with them on their journey.

This journey of food discovery that began as a personal eating plan has given more insight into environmental influences through coaching others and shifting my own lifestyle habits that I will share over time. I hope you will be motivated to join me in this exploration.

A self care life hack that has merit by shifting the dimensions between pain, struggle & effort to softening, ease & effortlessness

Peace and Harmony

In the last post called; Lifestyle Hacks – Reverse pain, stiffness and aging in fingers, hands, wrists & lower arms naturally the focus is on a physical shift in the felt sensations through a pattern of self-care. In the same self-care pattern there is an emotional release that is available. The tough connective tissue like the skin, facia, flesh, muscles, ligaments, etc., all create a felt sensation that stimulates tension, anxiety stress, impatience, irritation, and angry feelings. The softening and release of inflammation in the same connective tissue creates a different range of emotions through the felt sense shift. The softening can create an enjoyable range of emotions like an increase in tolerance, joy, playfulness, peace and harmony. The self-care that was suggested in this post focused on one’s hands. Our hands have a huge map in our brains due to their constant use. Each time we move our fingers, hands, wrists lower arms and elbows it deepens the groove in the neural pathways in the brain. The lack of micro-movements in the same functional areas will reduce the grooves in the neuro pathways and eventually they will be lost. This is when the saying, if you don’t use it, you’ll lose it, applies.

The Feldenkrais perspective has focused on patterns to introduce these lost movement patterns and reintegrate them. This self-care would increase the felt senses in an Awareness through Movement Lessons. This means one could feel a difference in the movements of the joints and bones differently. The muscles around the joints and flesh would be softer increasing the range of motion.

From my perspective of a Nonviolent Communication Educated Communication Specialist please note I do not have the perspective that we carry stories in our physical function. Rather the short and long-term memories are stored in the prefrontal cortex in the hippocampus area. However, the tension or held patterns in the functional physical body can stimulate the stored memories. A Western trend currently is to fixate on memories as a way to resolve issues and shift movement patterns. Unfortunately, the story memories are a function in the brain that has an alignment with another function which is physical movement. Physical functional movement can be stimulated by memories, and memories can be stimulated by movement. Stories cannot be held in the arm, the belly, etc. They however can stimulate emotional responses that would influence these areas. I have come to call these environmental influences.

An example I would like to share it with a student who had worked with a therapist to resolve physical pain through processing emotional trauma by having the body part held while releasing the story. This was called somatic therapy. The person had been doing this work for a few years when I began to work with the actual physical function from a somatic perspective in movement transitions. The person’s habit was to defer to the stories as trained by the therapist so I suggested we focus attention on the felt senses in the movement. In two visits the arm was functioning normally pain-free. No stories, only micro-movements with an increase in rotation and getting other joints and bones to participate in the movement. The student had been off work for a few years due to this injury and soon they were back at work.

From both a Feldenkrais perspective and a communication perspective I work with what is in the present moment. This is a focus of attention on the felt senses now, not in the past and not in the future. If I can bring a mindfulness focus like this into the lesson the student begins to train their minds in the same way as in mindfulness meditation. The difference is it is in movement, focus and sensing, not sitting in meditation. It’s more of a mindfulness function where the physical, mental and emotional are aligned to experience the present.

Disclaimer – words, phrases and sentences have similar use however, they can have different definitions depending upon the context. The English language is limited and such that it is left up to interpretation. Each person has different resources for forming memories to shape opinions, beliefs and interpretations from.