Category: poetry

  • Poem a Day April 24, 2012

    salicylic acid (suggested by Grant)

    the willow leaned
    over the ailing
    faun
    and whispered
    nibble at my bark
    which heals

    the man watched
    as the deer gamboled
    in the sun
    and wondered
    whence came the
    relief

    the philosopher
    drank tea
    for headache
    and contemplated
    the effects of bark and root and leaf

    the scientist-doctor distilled
    and recombined
    and tested
    and named

    from
    salicylate
    willow-i-ate
    aches and pains lifted
    salicylic acid

    The science behind pain relief begins in the ancient times, when humans had only their ability to observe, compare and remember. The pharmacy was their larder: the great outdoors. We can’t know the first person who realized that willow extracts were helpful against pain and other problems, but we can be sure that it took a while to “get it right” and know when it would work and when other treatments were needed.

    I know from my studies and personal experience that herbal dosing requires skill and a certain amount of luck. A wise friend of mine who was a doctor once told me that when modern physicians were first analyzing digitalis for its heart benefits they realized that the amount of digoxin varied from plant to plant (so sometimes the dosage was right and sometimes it was very wrong). The advantage to modern medicine in many cases has been the ability to be sure of dosage (and therefore efficacy).

    Chemistry, plants, nature, nurturing, and careful thinking: these are things I love, and they come together in this one amazing, yet common item.

    PubChem at NIH gives the scientific and medical details, and the chemical structure

    Another site, gives sources, with history and herbal uses: drugs.com

    I want to be clear: I am NOT a medical professional and this post is not intended to be medical advice. It is for entertainment only.

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