Winter is the cold and flu season, but springtime can bring sickness, too.
Catching a cold just as warm weather begins is one of the worst ways to start the year,
but as long as you have a handful of these natural remedies, you should start feeling
better faster.
Homemade Inhaler
If you have asthma ― or know someone who does ― you understand the power of inhalers
to open your airways, which is precisely what you need to feel better during a cold.
After procuring a blank inhaler, usually from an aromatics purveyor, you can mix your own
inhaler blend from essential oils to make you breathe easier.
The best recipe is as follows, but you can tweak it to your preferences:
• 5-7 drops eucalyptus
• 4 drops black spruce
• 4 drops tea tree
• 2 drops lavender
• 1 drop lime
Healthful Heater
As long as you aren’t running a fever, applying a heat to your chest and head can be especially
soothing when you’re sick.
Moist heat, like that from a hot water bottle, tends to loosen phlegm and break up congestion
deep in your sinuses and lungs.
Usually, placing the heat on your back, between your shoulder blades, is most effective, but
resting it on your chest may also be beneficial.
Essential Bath Salts
A bath is usually just what your body needs when you are suffering from sickness, but adding
specific salts can make you feel even better after your soak.
While you might be able to find sinus-clearing salts at the store, you can also make your own
solution at home with the right ingredients:
• 1 cup Epsom salt
• 3 drops eucalyptus essential oil
• 3 drops peppermint essential oil
• 3 drops lavender essential oil
Adding about three tablespoons to a full tub should be enough to have you breathing deep
in no time.
Strong Tea
Tea is one of the oldest remedies for any sickness, including the common cold.
There are a number of plants with curative properties that work to kill whatever virus is
sending you sniffling and mitigate whatever irritating symptoms you feel.
An antiviral beverage, like one made from calendula flower, thyme, or lemon balm, will
help your body fight the infection and make you feel stronger and healthier much faster.
Organic Gargle
Sore throats make everything harder, from drinking tea to breathing.
Store-bought gargles effectively numb the pain, but the jumble of chemical components
is terrifyingly absurd.
Instead, you can make a completely natural gargle using a couple ingredients you already
have in your kitchen cupboard:
• 1 cup water
• 4 tablespoons dried sage
• 1 teaspoon salt
• 1 cup apple cider vinegar
You must steep the sage in boiling water for about 15 minutes, after which you may add the
salt and vinegar.
While it isn’t the tastiest concoction, it should draw out the excess fluid in your throat and
reduce the pain you feel whenever you swallow.
Warm Soup
For some reason not entirely backed by science, soup remains one of the best meals for
the sick and ailing.
There are dozens of healthful, immune-boosting vegan soups you (or your loving caretaker)
can whip up while you recover.
Some of the best include:
• Carrot yam ginger soup
• Warm hummus soup
• Cream of broccoli soup
• Toasted pecan soup
Simple Syrup
Unfortunately, sugar and water won’t help you recover from your springtime cold, but
you can make a number of other natural cough syrups that will.
If you have a sick kid, you will have an inordinately hard time convincing them to drink
down some bitter tea, but it is amazingly simple to get them to swallow a sweet syrup.
Here is the tastiest and most beneficial concoction:
• 1 tablespoon licorice root
• 1 tablespoon marshmallow root
• 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
• 1 tablespoon chopped ginger
• 4 cups water
• 1 cup agave syrup
You simmer the herbs and water until the mixture is reduced by half, then you add the
agave syrup and heat for another 10 minutes or so.
One or two tablespoons per day is enough to relieve the worst sore throat, coughing,
and congestion.
Garlic
The most essential of seasonings also has well-known antiseptic and antispasmodic
properties.
Adding garlic to your favorite foods, drinking garlic-infused tea, or munching on some
raw root could help stifle your cough and even lower your fever.
Mustard
Mustard is another delicious treat that secretly helps you get well.
Eating mustard might help open your respiratory passages, but applying a plaster
(a mixture of a tablespoon of mustard with three tablespoons of flour, one egg white,
and a small amount of warm water) to your chest is like an all-natural version of Vick’s.
PIN and SHARE!
What are your favorite natural homemade cold remedies?
Share your thoughts and comments with us.
“Shared on Kind and Healthy Fridays”
“Shared at Let’s Get Real Friday Party”
I stopped by from Kind & Health Fridays. My favorite is oregano oil. I buy capsules and if I feel a cold coming on I take one. You must do it right away. Once the cold gets moving it doesn’t prevent it, but it can shorten it a little. Stay well.
Hi Karen,
I need to add that natural remedy to my arsenal. That’s a great suggestion. Thanks for hopping by. I appreciate it.
Thanks for a helpful list of remedies. I’ve pinned it for reference!
Hi Leigh,
I am so glad you enjoyed these natural cold remedies. Do you make any of your own?
I could do with these tips – thank you for sharing with Pin worthy Wednesday
Thanks for a helpful tips. That’s really important………