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Tava Tea

Blended Teas for the Holidays

Archive for the ‘Bad Breath’ Category

PostHeaderIcon The Special Health Benefits of Green Tea

Green tea has been around a long time. It’s been used by the ancient Chinese for many medicinal purposes for about 4,000 years. It’s been used in their culture for just about everything – including depression!

Modern-day scientists have studied green tea and reported a possible linkage with the reduction of chances for people to contract some types of cancers, along with positive effects on our bodies like increasing our energy levels.

Green tea has been linked to helping eliminate our chances of contracting other diseases as well, such as cardiovascular disease and arthritis – and it can even help lower our cholesterol levels.

Using green tea can help with our minor aches and pains like headaches and joint pain. Green tea contains catechin polyphenols, which are believed to be the ingredients that give us all of these wondrous health benefits.

The polyphenols are found in the leaves of the camellia sinensis plant, which is then ground up and made into our green tea. These polyphenols are thought to inhibit the cancer cells from growing to form the many types of cancer we see today, without damaging any tissues in the process.

Polyphenols are considered to be very powerful ant-oxidants, which promote healthier body processes. It’s also known for helping some people lose weight, by increasing your energy levels and promoting a healthier rate of calorie burning within your body.

It’s an all-natural answer to your diet program without the side effects of controversial supplemental diet pills. Drinking green tea is a natural, safe way to provide these health benefits, but it’s not a replacement for regular health checkups with your doctor.

Continue to see your doctors, but give your body a little added benefit of a healthy lifestyle in addition to your checkups. It may be linked to providing natural treatments for some ailments and lessens the chance for others, but don’t forego your physicians’ prescribed treatment plan. It may lessen your chances for diseases, but it’s not a miracle cure for everything. Use it to enhance your treatment plans.

Green tea can also provide you with a healthier oral hygiene regimen. It helps prevent plaque from forming, while keeping bacteria under control so it doesn’t get out of hand and cause halitosis problems. With all of the reports of harmful effects that some treatments cause, green tea is an attractive option.

The only harmful effect it can cause is from the caffeine you consume with it, but if you choose a decaffeinated version, the effects are minimized. If you want to keep your body truly healthy, give green tea a try. The ancient Chinese did – and they used it for almost all of their medicinal needs.

PostHeaderIcon If Bad Breath Plagues You, Try Tea!

Are you one of those people plagued by a nasty halitosis problem? If you are, then you know how hard it is to get rid of it and how embarrassing it can be. You may have tried the over the counter products that didn’t work for you or just made your mouth feel like cotton.

One little known fact for those who suffer from bad breath is that tea can help. Tea is an all-natural way to rid yourself of the bad breath blues and it enables you to face the world again without worrying that your breath will drive others away.

You no longer have to put up with cotton mouth again or give your money away for something that doesn’t work. Bad breath occurs when bacteria rapidly grows on the surface of your tongue or hides in gum pockets. The bacteria then gives off a sulfurous-like odor that gives you what’s known as halitosis or bad breath. Most over the counter products try to cover the smell, which is why they fail to work.

In order to rid yourself of the halitosis problem, the bacteria itself would need to be taken care of. Black tea is known to help control plaque within the mouth, which would normally cause the bacteria to grow.

Without the plaque, bacteria are kept under control, thereby keeping bad breath problems at bay. Studies show that the polyphenols found in some teas helps keep the foul odor bacteria from forming.

By drinking some tea regularly, you can help keep bad breath and plaque under control and also reduce the amounts of colds, throat infections and even dental problems you endure.

What better way to do this than to do it with tea, which happens to be an all-natural product that has no harmful side effects linked to it? Not only that, but it assists with so many other things that help our body stay healthy longer.

Why take handfuls of supplements and over the counter products to stay healthy, when you can just drink some tea to help almost all of the problems the supplements and products supposedly help control after it’s too late.

Tea isn’t meant to replace your normal healthy regimen – like brushing your teeth daily. It’s only meant to work with your oral hygiene routine to produce a better, healthier mouth.

It works in between the brushing times to eliminate bacteria and plaque from forming on the teeth when you can’t brush. Eliminate bad breath problems and get those nasty oral bacteria under control before they end up embarrassing you with their foul smelling odor.

PostHeaderIcon Health Benefits of Tea Throughout History

Tea starts its debut in the medicinal sense in the ancient times of China and Japan. Tea was popular – not only for the delightful taste it provided – but for offering health benefits as well.

It was commonly used for ailments such as headaches, depression-like symptoms, boosting energy for those who were fatigued, and even to aid in improving eyesight.

As the story goes, an emperor was presented with a cup of hot water that had turned brown from a leaf that had dropped into a pot of boiling water. He was pleased with the taste of it and from that point on, tea was born. It was also ground into a paste-like substance and was applied to reduce pain and inflammation as seen in rheumatoid arthritis.

It became popular with Buddhists as a means to stay awake for long periods of meditation. As the centuries came and went, tea evolved, but kept its medicinal purposes. Instead of drinking the tea to rid themselves of their ailments, our ancestors started to ground up the leaves and boiled them with food such as rice, ginger and milk.

Tea is also reported to have been used for things like normal aches and pains, digestion problems and as a means of boosting a body’s immune system to defend against any foreign bodies that enter our bodies.

It was an historic belief that tea also held religious properties that enabled those who drank it to elongate their life expectancy. Tea traveled to many different countries and its medicinal benefits came along with it.

Tea was used for everything from skin problems to joint pain to mood enhancers. It became the choice of treatment for the strange diseases and ailments that plagued citizens around the world.

In many cases, the tea helped decrease one’s chances of contracting these diseases and lessened their suffering once the disease took hold of their lives. Tea became popular and was used throughout medical history.

Its uses expanded to include spiritual healing. One would drink the tea for the purpose of obtaining peace and serenity for the mind to balance it with the body and achieve oneness with nature as they saw it.

Over the years, tea has found its way through many more countries and its uses became more apparent. It was used in the high societies as a sign of a distinguished person and people drank it for sheer enjoyment.

In recent years, the medicinal purposes have come more to light. Tea been linked to help decrease our chances for diseases and eliminate some problems like pain and bad breath.

Tea has been around for many centuries and its medicinal purposes have withstood the test of time as they continue to be used today. This shows how insightful our ancestors were centuries ago by the fact that today’s researchers can use advanced science to test theories that have long prevailed.