Description
- Helpful for Pain: Pimento Berry Essential Oil has a numbing effect on the nerves which does not let the sensation of pain reach the brain or be felt by our nerves. This helps to overcome pain resulting from wounds, headaches, colds, among others. Moreover, it doesnt make your nerves and brain dull in the long run, nor does it have any adverse effect on the heart.
- Detoxifies Body: Pimento Berry oil can actually help in detoxification processes of the body as it facilitates the elimination of toxins & other harmful substances out of the body. You can create a massage blend using Pimento Berry oil & a carrier oil such as coconut or rosehip oil & proceed to gently massage it onto the abdominal area to stimulate detoxification. or you can also add about 5-6 drops of the oil into a tub of warm, bathing water and soak inside for a few minutes.
- Helpful for Pain: Myrtle Essential Oil helpful in caring of spread of harmful germs, facilitates the healing of wounds, and addresses muscle aches, pain, strains, and sprains. Mix about 5 drops of the Myrtle oil with 3ml of olive oil and gently massage it onto the affected areas. Massage into the chest and back of neck/shoulders for soothing relief.
- Helpful for Tension: Pimento Berry have been shown to reduce tension and Tension with inhalation in aromatherapy. Pimento Berry has been proven to reduce the tension. Not only does it have a pleasant scent, but can also relax the muscles & allow the production and processing of the chemicals that control mood and reactions to Tension. Add a few drops of the Pimento Berry oil into a diffuser or vaporizer and proceed to inhale the warm aroma as it engulfs you.
- Blending: The essential oils of ginger, geranium, lavender, orange, patchouli and ylang-ylang blend very well with pimento essential oil.
Pimento Berry Oil (also known as Allspice oil, Jamaican Pepper and Pimenta) is steam distilled from dried, crushed, fully grown, but unripe fruits of the West Indian tree, Pimenta Officinalis. The tree is native to the West Indies and grows abundantly in the wild on many of the islands, particularly Jamaica. Pimento is used extensively by the food industry for flavouring foods. Its other common name, Allspice, comes from the fact that it tastes like a mixture of cloves, juniperberry, cinnamon and pepper.