The purpose of this book is to investigate those herbs that are readily available to the West. Most of the herbs in this book are either native to Europe and/or North America or have become common in these continents. For each herb I look at evidence for its effectiveness, evidence for its safety, and how specifically to use it. In short, this book is a compilation and distillation of modern evidence for a traditional Western art.
My research is a survey of the various strands of Western herbalism. That research pulls from five main sources:
British herbalism (which had a heavy influence on North American herbalism)
Continental European herbalism (especially from Germany’s Commission E)
Traditional Native American herbalism
Folk uses in Europe and North America
Standard scientific research from around the world (especially the United States)
It is a combination of tradition and new research, practical experience and scientific method, and it pulls from literally hundreds of sources in an attempt to get the “big picture” for any given herb.
Among the references regularly cited are these:
The 1918 U.S. Dispensatory. This volume is the twentieth edition of a reference book used mainly by pharmacists back when you could still get an herbal remedy made up for you by your local pharmacist. It is the last of the dispensatories to deal in depth with herbal medicine, and it represents the best science of its time.
“The Eclectic School” was a branch of American medicine in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. This school believed in merging traditional herbalism with other treatment methods. Eclectic physicians reserved the right to choose whatever methods most benefited their patients, hence the name “eclectic” from the Greek eklego, meaning “to choose from.” The last Eclectic medical school closed in Cincinnati in 1939. Two authors have passed down to us the knowledge of the Eclectic School. Harvey Wickes Felter authored The Eclectic Materia Medica, Pharmacology and Therapeutics. And John William Fyfe, a teaching physician in New York, authored three manuals for physicians detailing how herbs can be used to treat specific conditions. They are The Essentials of Modern Materia Medica and Therapeutics (a.k.a. Fyfe’s Materia Medica), Pocket Essentials of Modern Materia Medica and Therapeutics, and Specific Diagnosis and Specific Medication.
Commission E monographs. The Commission E monographs are analyses of various herbs, commissioned by the German government to assist in the national regulation of herbs. These monographs, written by health professionals are sometimes detailed and carefully reasoned. They sometimes read like “medicine by committee.” But they do reflect a modern take on traditional European herbalism.
The PDR for Herbal Medicine. The herbal counterpart to the Physicians Desk Reference, it is a reference book for modern mainstream physicians. It contains information on therapeutic properties and drug interactions.
The Modern Herbal. The Modern Herbal, despite its name, isn’t modern. The edition cited here was published in 1931 by Maud Grieve, president of the British Guild of Herb Growers. She was one of the leading experts in British traditional and folklore uses of herbs during and after World War I.
The Purpose of this Book
It is not my intent here to investigate every possible use of every herb, but to focus on those herbs that may be of particular use to martial artists. I look at herbs that may help with bruises, scrapes, and cuts, sprains, muscle strains, and breaks and dislocations. I look at those that help with breathing. I look at those that deal with management of “adrenaline” and other products of the fight-or-flight system such as anxiety and insomnia. And I look at a couple of minor issues that tend to plague martial artists: battered feet, skin chafed from gear, plantar warts, jock itch, athlete’s foot, and for those who commonly kick or grapple after supper, flatulence.
Those familiar with Eastern herbs will see a couple of large gaps. I don’t deal with herbs for conditioning of hands and feet or herbs for regulation of qi before or after martial injury. Why? Western medicine has no equivalent for these uses. The typical Westerner has no need to condition hands. As for qi, because its very existence is questioned by Western doctors, it’s not likely to pop up in Western clinical trials. I omit these topics not because they are unimportant. I omit them because of a complete lack of available Western information about them.
Apart from those particular gaps, the research here is eclectic and wide-ranging. I have investigated insights from Europeans, North Americans, and Native Americans about what has worked for their people throughout the centuries. But I’ve also gone digging into the research: clinical trials, animal trials, and chemical analyses. I’ve gone looking for herbs that would impress not just the grandmother who learned herbal lore from her mother, but also the granddaughter training in modern biochemistry.
As for precautions, this book is full of them. Though I believe in boldness, I also believe there is another name for a beginner who would charge boldly into great risk for small reward. That other name is “fool.” This herbal is a beginner’s guide. It is written for people who don’t have enough experience to give them instincts about which herb uses are safe and which are not. For that reason, I’ve included even the most conservative cautions postulated for each herb. Some trained herbalists will scoff at some of them. I include them anyway, so the beginners reading this book may have as long a view as possible of the herbal landscape and its potential dangers.
The goal is to give the martial artist enough information to make an informed choice about which Western herbs to experiment with. In terms of “acceptable risk,” there are those herbs that nobody should use, those that only expert herbalists should use, those that only people with a high tolerance for risk should use, and those that just about anyone can use. The goal is to help you sort out which is which. On the other hand, there are herbs that scientific studies, herbalists, and medical doctors all agree work; herbs that only traditional herbalists acknowledge; and herbs that your Cousin Phil used once and now swears by. Again the goal is to help you sort out which is which. If you can come away from this book with a clear preliminary risk–benefit analysis for an herb that may meet a training need, the book will have met one of its main goals.
A word about my credentials and philosophy in using herbs: First of all, I am not an herbalist; I’m a researcher. My educational background, my work experience, and my writing for the last twenty years has trained me to sift through mountains of information, to pull out the useful bits, and to present them in a way that’s clear and immediately useful. That’s what I’ve tried to do here. This book rests not on my own personal ability to prescribe or use herbs, but on my ability to seek out the best of the best among those people who do. That’s why the book is heavily endnoted, so you can follow the trail of my research, dig deeper if you’d like, and draw your own conclusions. Most of all, I’m not telling you what you should use; I’m telling you what I have discovered about these herbs. If you chose to use any of the herbs presented in this book, it is your responsibility to go beyond my research until you yourself are convinced of the safety and efficacy of the herb you are using. It’s for that purpose that I have documented my sources and offered resources for further investigation. Any time you take a drug, supplement, or botanical, you must remember this: it is your body, your choice, your responsibility to bear the consequences. I wish you wise choices.
Throughout the book I use my own grading scale from zero, and one to five. One is “somebody, somewhere thought the herb might be useful.” Five is “pretty much everybody, traditionalists and Western scientists alike, thinks it’s useful.” Here are the criteria I used: