I live stressed. The cardiologist has just told me that I'm lying in the operating room, as I get through my veins and my heart records. It's not the first time I lie down and I'm at home. The kindness of the Kirofano team also makes it easier to take the floor that is least believed. Do you know that? Yeah, giving her the dolls. And the conversation has taken us to the plants.
I've been getting my first piece of metal into a heart artery for several years now. The surgeon, showing me the network that was going to introduce me, told me his name in the operating room: Taxus IV. Surprised, when I told him that Taxus is the genus of the muela (Taxus baccata), the mythical tree here, he said to me: yes, it means tejo, because that piece of metal is soaked with the poison of the muela, in order to keep the artery open.
In this last catre the curious man sent me to tell me if he was making me dizzy. When he realized that I was fainting, he said "atropine" to his neighbor. The assistant had beaten me in the blood. With great relief, knowledge soon returned. When it was over, I remembered that we were talking about stress. And I asked him. From which plant has the atropine that you use been extracted? He told me earlier that it would be made from plants, but now, in his opinion, it will be produced in laboratories. Belaikia or belladonna (Belladonna atropa), estramonium (Datura estramonium), urrillo or mandragora (Mandragora officinarum) and black turret (Hyoscyamus niger) have been the plants used for some time for atropine, all belonging to the solanaceous family. Anesthetic, psychoactive, poison... Why this alkaloid has not been used!
When I go home, the stress drowns me. I started reading and I found a text I had left before. In it it offers a clear advice to cure stress: to start working the earth. A bacterium that's on the ground will complete you: Mycobacterium vaccae. Apparently, the bacteria have an anti-inflammatory effect that corrects the incorrect effects of depression and stress.
Playing in mud, growing the orchard, caring for flowers, touching the ground on the last black brings health. David Strachan explained in 1989 in the “Hygiene Hypothesis” that people living in rural areas who were animals had less asthma and allergy problems. Living in supposedly clean helmets makes us sick, while getting dirt dirty is cleaning us up. Wash the disease, kill it.