Tinctuur en pillen van placenta

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Placenta Traditions

For centuries the placenta has received ceremonial handling by many cultures around the world. In western medicine the human placenta is usually regarded as nothing more than human waste.

Revered for its symbolism of life, spirit and individuality, it is often buried outside. Some people even promote cooking and eating it as a celebration of birth and a source of rich nutrients.

Here are some cultural traditions from the different continents

Africa

The Ibo of Nigeria and Ghana treat the placenta as the dead twin of the live child and give it full burial rites. In many African cultures, "zan boku" means "the place where the placenta is buried." and bury the placenta under a tree.

The Kikuyu of Kenya place it in an uncultivated field and cover it with grains and grasses, while other cultures bury it in the dirt floor of the family's house.

Some African nations swaddle the placenta in blankets and bury it beneath a tree as a tree symbolizes ongoing life.

In Mali, it is thought that the placenta can affect the baby's mood or even make the baby ill. The placenta is washed, dried, placed in a basket and buried by the father.

A belief held by many Arabs is the future fertility of a woman is connected to the disposition of the placenta. Should something unpleasant happen to it the woman might be rendered sterile.

Asia

In some cultures such as Vietnam and China the placenta is viewed as a life-giving force. Therefore, it is dried and added to certain placenta recipes in order to increase a person’s energy and vitality.

In Indonesia, the placenta is seen as the baby’s twin or elder sibling and is perceived as the baby's guardian throughout life. It is the father’s responsibility to clean, wrap, and bury the placenta on the day of the birth.

Filipina mothers are known to bury the placenta with books, in hopes of a smart child.

In Korea the placenta is often burned and the ashes kept. During periods of illness the ashen powder is given in a liquid to help heal the child.

Among the Hmong culture, the word for placenta can be translated as "jacket," as it's considered an infant's first and finest clothing. The Hmong bury the placenta outside as they believe that after death, the soul must journey back through the past until it reaches the burial place of the placenta and await rebirth.

In Cambodia, the placenta is carefully wrapped in a banana tree leaf, placed beside the newborn baby for three days and then buried.

In Thai culture the placenta is often salted and placed in an earthen jar. On a day deemed auspicious for burying this clay pot, a site is prepared and the placenta is laid to rest. The jar is buried under a tree that corresponds to the symbol of the Asian year of the child's birth and depending on what month the child was born dictates which bearing the pot faces.

Europe

The indigenous Bolivian Aymara and Quecha people believe the placenta has its own spirit. It is to be washed and buried by the husband in a secret and shady place. If this ritual is not performed correctly, they believe, the mother or baby may become very sick or even die.

The commercial use of "placenta extract" found in some cosmetics, such as facial cream, is sold in France. In 1994, Britain banned the practice of collecting placentas in hospitals from unsuspecting mothers, after it was learned that 360 tons of it were annually being bought and shipped by French pharmaceutical firms. They used it to make a protein, albumin, for burns and to make enzymes to treat rare genetic disorders.

North America

For Navajo Indians, it is customary to bury a child's placenta within the sacred four corners of the tribe's reservation as a binder to ancestral land and people. The Navajos also bury objects with it to signify the profession they hope the child will pursue.

In Hawaii the placenta is brought home and washed, then buried following a religious ritual with a tree planted on it. It is believed this binds the child to his or her homeland. The “iewe” (placenta) of the newborn child is sacred and must be handled in a sacred manner in order to provide for the physical health of the child.

South America

In some regions of South America the placenta is burned after birth to neutralize it and planted in the ground to protect it from evil spirits.

Oceania

New Zealand Maori gift the Placenta or Whenua as a gift to Papa Tua Nuku or Mother Earth. In Maori, the word for land and placenta are the same - whenua, and illustrates the connection between them and it is usually planted with a tree on family land.

Some Aboriginal tribes bury the placenta either under the tree where they birthed or under an ant pit for the green ants. Many believe that when the green ants eat the placenta no more babies will come or at least not for a while.

In Samoa the placenta must be totally burned or buried so it will not be found by evil spirits. Burying or burning it at home also ensures the child will remain close to home as it moves through life. If buried under a fruit tree, the placenta provides nutrition for the tree that in turn will provide years of nutrition for the child.


 
Hi sheila,

Ik ben wel erg benieuwd. Als je dat zou willen doen graag.

Inderdaad, het zou zo moeten zijn dat je bevalt en een uur later weer fit bent. Maar ja, dat is niet meer zo, dus ik roei maar met de riemen die ik heb.

 
san, dit moet het zijn.

Telefoon: 06-11056287

Email: mariekeverschelling (apenstaartje) gmail (punt) com

 
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American Medical anthropologists at the University of South Florida and UNLV, surveyed new mothers, and found that about 3/4 had positive experiences from eating their own placenta, citing "improved mood", "increased energy", and "improved lactation".[7] [8]

Human placenta has also been an ingredient in some traditional Chinese medicines,[9] including using dried human placenta, known as "Ziheche" (simplified Chinese: 紫河车; traditional Chinese: 紫河車; pinyin: Zǐhéchē), to treat wasting diseases, infertility, impotence and other conditions.[10]

7. ^ Bawany, Afsha (February 27, 2013). "Steamed, Dehydrated or Raw: Placentas May Help Moms’ Post-Partum Health. UNLV anthropology survey examines why women consume their placentas after childbirth.". UNLV News Center. Retrieved March 25, 2013.

8. ^ J. Selender, A. Cantor, S. Young, and D. Benyshek. "Human Maternal Placentophagy: A Survey of Self-Reported Motivations and Experiences Associated with Placenta Consumption". Ecology of Food and Nutrition. Retrieved March 25, 2013.

9. ^ Traditional Chinese medicine contains human placenta, News-Medical.Net, May 8, 2004, retrieved 2007-12-12

Jump up

10. ^ Tierra, Lesley; Tierra, Michael (1998), Chinese traditional herbal medicine, Twin Lakes, WI: Lotus Light Pub, pp. 225, ISBN 0-914955-32-2

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placentophagy

 
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it is important for every mother and every child to preserve their own placenta as a

source of life for times to come. The baby has this chance only once in its entire lifetime.


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This book learns you how to keep and store your own placenta, for mother, child AND father!!!

It even teaches you how to make your own placenta extracts.


Quote:
Scientists from all over the world agreed that cells from the human placenta could provide an

alternative to the ethically and legally controversial use of fetal stem cells.

These placenta stem cells are multipotent and a “new type of cells” between embryonic and adult stem cells and are similar with cells found in cord blood.

Stem cells are immature cells that are like blank slates, in this early stage they have yet to

differentiate into the specific cells that can make up any desired organ tissue. The aim will be to

reverse brain, nerve, muscle and organ damage, possibly curing paralysis.

http://www.placenta-anticancer.info/welcome/PlacentaebookCHAP1.pdf

 

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