I didn't have a ton of success with the lemongrass. Two of the "hot"
oils are wintergreen and peppermint. Wintergreen has a warming affect
and peppermint has a cooling affect. I personally can't get my cold
feet warm other than my old trusty corn bag. So after putting on my
oils I use the corn bag and it helps the oils go deeper as an added
bonus. I use feed corn to make mine (you have to buy a huge bag from
the farm store for this) but my family & friends get their supply from
me. I microwave it for 90 seconds and I'm in heaven. Sorry I don't
have any more info. I've heard others who use barley or rice but I
don't like their smell :( Janet
On Mar 13, 10:42 pm, melody <melod...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello:
> I was wondering if there were oils that had a warming effect like
> peppermint and others have cooling effects?
> When I put my oils on my feet at night, often they are icy cold (in
> the winter). I spend a long time getting them warm so I can sleep
> comfortably, even with socks.
> I see (quilter)Janet mentions lemongrass for cold feet so I will try
> that tonight.
> Any other ideas?
> Tonight I am also experiencing a cold head...not a head cold...but a
> chill, mostly noticed in my forehead. I am hat crazy in the winter and
> never go out without head cover, and often wear something inside as
> well. And yes..cold hands too but they do not bother me too much. ( I
> do take LLV faithfully)
> I have other friends with similar cold issues so I would love to share
> some solutions.
> Thanks,
> Melody
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