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Oregon's Wild Harvest Organic St. John's Wort -- 1 fl oz


Oregon's Wild Harvest Organic St. John's Wort
  • Our price: $13.46

    $0.45 per serving

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Oregon's Wild Harvest Organic St. John's Wort -- 1 fl oz

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Oregon's Wild Harvest Organic St. John's Wort Description

  • St. John's Wort Extract
  • Support for Emotional Well-Being
  • USDA Organic
  • Non GMO
  • Gluten Free

Let's get fresh. Enjoy fresh, organic St. John's Wort prepared with love and hand-crafted for optimum potency. Here's to your health!

 

The Benefits of St. John's Wort

> Mood support

 

Named after John the Baptist, St. John's Wort was once considered a holy herb and was widely used to help protect people from evil spirits. Today it's used to support a healthy mood and emotional well-being.

 

We care about the future. As certified organic farmers, we grow many of the herbs found in our products. Our regenerated practices heal the land, sequester carbon from the atmosphere and ensure that pure, potent herbal medicine is available today and for future generations. Peace.


Directions

Suggested Use: Take 1 mL three times daily in warm water or juice, or as directed by your health care professional. 1 mL = approx 40 drops. Do not exceed recommended dose.

Shake well. Store upright in a cool, dry place.

Free Of
Dairy, wheat, peanuts, soy, gluten and corn allergens.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Supplement Facts
Serving Size: 1 mL
Servings per Container: 30
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value
Fresh Organic St. John's Wort flower buds
(Hypericum perforatum)
1000 mg*
*Daily value not established.
Other Ingredients: Organic alcohol. Alcohol content: Not more than 85%.
Warnings

Caution: If taking ant prescribed medication, please consult with your healthcare professional prior to use. Avoid excessive exposure to UV radiation (e.g. sunlight, tanning) when using this product. Do not take if pregnant or nursing. Discontinue use if unusual symptoms occur.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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5 Myths & Facts About Stress (Is it Really as Bad for Us as We Think?)

Stress, renowned for its tension-ridden downside, is in desperate need of rebranding. Yes, stress is linked to an array of illnesses, including heart disease, leaky gut and autoimmune disorders. Stress also serves as a catchall for mind-boggling gamut of experiences, situations and responses—most notably burnout, fatigue and anxiety.

The original definition of stress by the late doctor Hans Selye, who coined the term as it is presently used, was, “the non-specific response of the body to any demand for change.” Stress gets pinned as the culprit for everything, from overspending to underperforming.

Hands Holding Scissors Cutting Paper With Printed Word Impossible to Represent Facts About Stress | Vitacost.com/blog

But stress also comes with advantages: resilience, productivity and discrimination. What if instead of making stress the enemy, we learn to befriend it? Maybe stress itself is not the problem—the problem may be our attitude to stress. In order to challenge several fixed notions about stress, let’s explore—and reframe—five common stress myths.

1. Stress is the same for everybody

One of the most common way to gauge a situation’s stressfulness is the amount of threat or harm an event poses. Another way of thinking about the magnitude of stress: stress levels increase the more adaptation (or change) a stressor demands. Still others define stress as a mismatch between demands and resources. The more resources you have, for example financial resources, the more you can mitigate the “stress” of the demand.

But if you don’t have resources, the demand can feel exponentially more overwhelming. Finally, a fourth way of assessing stress measures the extent of which a life event requires an “interruption of goals.” Different stressors combine with different resources to affect different predispositions uniquely—so there is no standard stress response. 

Tip: Figure out for yourself what your top stress triggers are. For many its money, for others its relationships, including parenting. Examine your relationship to the trigger by examining the perceived threat neutrally. Your response to the threat may be unconsciously impacted by similar threats you experienced growing up, when you were powerless to make choices. With the help of a therapist you can explore these triggers from a more adult perspective.

You can also limit stress by thinking of it as detrimental to the quality of your life. When faced with a stressful scenario, ask yourself: Is this worth having a heart attack over? Is this worth getting depressed over?

2. Stress is always bad for you

According to the American Institute of Stress, there is such a thing as good stress. It’s called eustress, which often connotes euphoria. Stress has a sweet spot, above which productivity, attention, creativity, and, of course, happiness are all depleted. "A 'good' stressor—a passion project or great adventure or adrenaline-inducing sport—may seem to evoke similar signs of stress in your body, but even butterflies in your tummy can actually be energizing, if not enlivening.

Tip: Notice how your expectations of stressfulness effects the outcome: If you perceive stress as negative, that mindset will shape your body’s response. One study of the stress response suggests that perceiving stress as benevolent can positively affect the ratio of stress hormones the adrenals release. If you interpret jitters as a sign you are engaged, alive, and a little vulnerable, that’s much different than wanting those jitters to cease and desist.

3. Stress is inevitable

Stressful events may be unavoidable, but your reactions determine whether or not you feel stress. Steep slopes can be stressful to a new skier, but part of the “stoke” for an experienced one.

Tip: Try telling yourself you are excited when you feel anxious, says Kelly McGonigal, a Stanford psychologist and author of the book “The Upside of Stress.”

4. Severe stress will always escalate

Depression is not an inevitable effect of a major life stress; some people are more resilient than others. Positive self-esteem is a marker of resilience; negative attitude and a tendency to ruminate will tip the scales toward depression. And not all traumatic events foretell PTSD: Amit Sood, chair of the Mayo Clinic Mind-Body Medicine Initiative, says, roughly 10 to 15 percent of people who live through traumatic events experience post-traumatic stress disorder.

Tip: If you want a way to handle anxiety better, tell yourself you can handle it. McGonigal cites one study that when people are told their performance improves under pressure, their actual performance improved 35 percent. Likewise, finding a community of support if you are stressed limits the isolating effect of stress—and helps you find the common humanity that is at the root of your experience.

5. Only major symptoms of stress require attention

Recognize how your body responds to stress, such as difficulty sleeping, increased alcohol and other substance use, quick to anger, depression and low energy. Feeling overwhelmed is a spectrum—you don’t have to consider yourself suicidal to seek support.

Tip: Pro-actively find ways to strengthen your resilience to stressors. We all will live with some profound personal sorrow, says writer Ross Gay.  There will be constant and ongoing “demands for change.” How we live with that change, that impermanence, is up to us. Community and social support plays a huge role as resource. Talk with trusted friends or family members, or seek professional help from a support group or therapist. 

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