Aromatherapy
is the use of essential oils, extracted from plants,
trees, and herbs, for therapeutic purposes. Although
aromatic plant oils have been used to treat various
conditions for thousands of years, the term aromatherapy
wasn't coined until 1928, when Rene-Maurice Gattefosse,
a French chemist first used it.
Gattefosse had earlier witnessed the curative capabilities
of essential oils when he used them to treat wounds
during World War I. After the war, he continued to
experiment with various oils, and eventually classified
them according to their "healing" properties: antitoxic,
antiseptic, tonifying, stimulating, calming, and so
on. In 1937, he published Aromatherapie, which remains
a classic book on the subject (it is available in
English). Marguerite Maury, who built on Gattefosse's
work in the 1950s, is credited with developing aromatherapy
as a holistic therapy. She was also the first to tailor
specific oils to an individual's health needs.
Today aromatherapy utilizes approximately 40 different
essential oils, singly and in combination. Generally,
they are helpful for treating stress and stress-related
ailments, for invigorating the body, and for promoting
general well-being. The oils are used in a variety
of ways: They can be mixed with a bland carrier oil
(such as a vegetable oil) and applied to the skin
during a massage; they may be inhaled; or they can
be added to your bathwater.
You can do aromatherapy at home by buying the individual
oils (they're commonly found at health-food stores
and pharmacies) or you can visit a trained aromatherapist,
who will probably mix up a blend of oils customized
especially for you and your condition