I've been using your oil for three months now. 4 drops in some orange juice every morning and the pills with meals. In combination with Dovonex and Dermasone I have noticed a change in my psoriasis, but not when I use the oregano alone. Can the oil be put directly on the skin patches, or should it always be taken internally? Should I perhaps increase the dosage?
Thanks
My brother-in-law bought a small bottle of oil of oregano and
he was told that you can put it on warts and they will dry up.
Can you put this oil directly on your warts, etc., or do you
have to use something else with it. He said it burns when he
puts it on the wart. Can you help or give me a number to call
so he will know what to do with the oil.
Thanks
In Reply to: Re: Oil of Oregano posted by Pat Raughley on January 28, 1998 at 14:57:00:
Dear Pat,
My response will not be welcome although it is true. The healing community (even including the AMA) has known for centuries that the most effective way to get rid of warts is self-hypnosis. There are thousands of remedies because the common denominator is the belief in the remedy & has nothing to do with the stuff being used.
Even Mark Twain had to write about it in the book about Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer: using sump water during the full moon after swinging a dead cat over the scene.
While I was in practice, I routinely cleared warts within a few weeks by painting them with methylene blue & telling the person (usually a child) that the warts would fade as the color did. I have yet to have that fail. I could always burn them off (a pretty powerful placebo) but it was more honest, less painful and cheaper to do the belief thing.
Perhaps, the best you could do for your brother-in-law might be to not tell him anything but to encourage him that the oil will work.
In the long run, recurrent warts are caused by a borderline immune system.
Walt