WHY A ROSEMARY IS GOOD
Better circulation, better stomach work, headache relief ...
If we go back to distant history, we learn that the ancient Greeks dedicated this plant to the goddess of beauty, Aphrodite, and the Hungarian queen used rosemary as a natural means of rejuvenation.
Our folk medicine most often uses rosemary as a means for better circulation and raising low blood pressure. It may be less known, but not less important, that rosemary helps anemic children, improves appetite, has a beneficial effect on the stomach, strengthens the exhausted organism, improves mood, calms nervousness, tension, and removes anxiety (fears). Due to the mentioned positive effect on the circulation, this plant also relieves menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea), and can help with the absence of menstruation (amenorrhea).
If rosemary tea is drunk in the evening, it will reduce the need for sleep. Rosemary tea (as well as rosemary compress) relieves headaches, especially those caused by excessive mental stress. It is popularly known that rosemary tea or wine dilates blood vessels and thus stimulates circulation in men.
Rosemary wine
If you are not in the mood, wake up in the morning more tired than you were when you went to bed, during the day you are sluggish and sleepy, and you have low blood pressure, rosemary wine will come in handy.
Preparation:
Mix one handful of rosemary leaves in 1 liter of quality wine (best homemade red). Store the mixture in a glass bottle for seven days and shake well 2-3 times a day. On the eighth day, strain and drink one glass of brandy every day, in the morning before breakfast and one in the afternoon before lunch.
Rosemary bath
It is useful in the morning because it wakes up and refreshes. It should not be used in the evening as it can disrupt sleep. Rosemary extract will serve well for this bath. It can also be obtained in the form of rosemary bath salt.
I use rosemary