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formulate-herbal-remedy

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Diese Claude Skill formuliert pflanzliche Heilmittel basierend auf der mittelalterlichen Pharmakopöe der Hildegard von Bingen. Er bietet Pflanzenbestimmung, Zubereitungsmethoden wie Tinkturen und Abkochungen sowie Dosierungs- und Sicherheitshinweise. Nutzen Sie ihn, wenn Sie ein historisches pflanzliches Heilmittel erstellen oder die Pflanzenheilkunde des 12. Jahrhunderts erforschen möchten.

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Dokumentation

Formulate Herbal Remedy

Make plant medicine Hildegard way. Physica book. Medieval plant lore + prep technique.

When Use

  • Need herbal remedy for ailment, Hildegard pharmacopeia
  • Want plant properties from Physica view
  • Need prep method guidance — tincture, poultice, infusion, decoction
  • Need dosage + safety for traditional remedy
  • Research medieval plant medicine
  • Mix Hildegard plant wisdom into holistic health

Inputs

  • Required: Ailment (digestive upset, respiratory congestion, skin inflammation)
  • Optional: Known plant preferences or contraindications
  • Optional: Prep preference (tincture long-term, infusion acute)
  • Optional: User temperament (sanguine, choleric, melancholic, phlegmatic)
  • Optional: Season + fresh vs dried availability

Steps

Step 1: Find Plant in Physica

Match ailment to Hildegard Physica plants (Books I-IX: Plants, Elements, Trees, Stones, Fish, Birds, Animals, Reptiles, Metals).

Common Ailments → Physica Plants:
┌─────────────────────┬──────────────────────┬────────────────────┐
│ Ailment             │ Primary Plants        │ Physica Reference  │
├─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│ Digestive upset     │ Fennel, Yarrow,      │ Book I, Ch. 1, 61  │
│ (cold pattern)      │ Ginger, Galangal     │                    │
├─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│ Respiratory         │ Lungwort, Elecampane,│ Book I, Ch. 95, 164│
│ congestion          │ Hyssop, Anise        │                    │
├─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│ Skin inflammation   │ Violet, Plantain,    │ Book I, Ch. 34, 28 │
│ (hot pattern)       │ Yarrow, Marigold     │                    │
├─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│ Nervous agitation   │ Lavender, Lemon balm,│ Book I, Ch. 40, 123│
│                     │ Chamomile, Valerian  │                    │
├─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│ Joint pain          │ Comfrey, St. John's  │ Book I, Ch. 21, 158│
│ (cold/damp)         │ wort, Nettle, Birch  │                    │
└─────────────────────┴──────────────────────┴────────────────────┘

Hildegard Selection Rules:
1. Temperature: match plant heat to condition
   - Cold → warm plants (fennel, ginger, galangal)
   - Hot → cool plants (violet, plantain, lettuce)
2. Moisture: match plant wet to imbalance
   - Dry → wet plants (mallow, linseed)
   - Damp → dry plants (yarrow, wormwood)
3. Temperament match: plant harmony with user constitution
4. Season: fresh in growing time, dried in winter

Got: One to three plants match pattern (hot/cold, dry/damp) and user constitution.

If fail: Unsure of pattern? Default gentle plants (fennel, chamomile, yarrow). Hildegard says suit most constitutions.

Step 2: Pick Prep Method

Choose extraction + delivery by ailment location, acuity, plant parts.

Preparation Methods from Medieval Tradition:

┌──────────────┬────────────────────┬──────────────────┬──────────────┐
│ Method       │ Best For           │ Duration         │ Shelf Life   │
├──────────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ INFUSION     │ Aerial parts       │ Acute conditions │ 24 hours     │
│ (hot water)  │ (leaves, flowers)  │ Internal use     │ refrigerated │
├──────────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ DECOCTION    │ Roots, bark, seeds │ Chronic use      │ 24 hours     │
│ (boiled)     │ Hard plant parts   │ Deep ailments    │ refrigerated │
├──────────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ TINCTURE     │ Long-term use      │ Chronic support  │ 2-5 years    │
│ (alcohol)    │ Concentrated dose  │ Travel-friendly  │              │
├──────────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ POULTICE     │ External wounds    │ Acute topical    │ Use fresh    │
│ (crushed)    │ Skin conditions    │ Inflammation     │              │
├──────────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ OIL INFUSION │ Massage, salves    │ Skin/muscle care │ 6-12 months  │
│ (oil carrier)│ External only      │ Long-term        │              │
└──────────────┴────────────────────┴──────────────────┴──────────────┘

Decision Tree:
- Internal + Acute → Infusion or decoction
- Internal + Chronic → Tincture or daily decoction
- External + Acute → Poultice
- External + Chronic → Oil infusion or salve

Got: Prep method matches plant part (aerial vs root), use case (acute vs chronic), route (internal vs external).

If fail: Uncertain? Default infusion — safest, most forgiving for beginner.

Step 3: Prep Remedy with Dosage

Do prep. Precise measure, technique.

INFUSION (for aerial parts: leaves, flowers):
1. Measure: 1 tablespoon dried herb (or 2 tablespoons fresh) per 8 oz water
2. Boil water, remove from heat
3. Add herb, cover (to preserve volatile oils), steep 10-15 minutes
4. Strain through fine mesh or cheesecloth
5. Dosage: 1 cup 2-3 times daily, or as specific ailment requires

DECOCTION (for roots, bark, seeds):
1. Measure: 1 tablespoon dried root/bark per 8 oz water
2. Combine in pot, bring to boil
3. Reduce heat, simmer covered 20-30 minutes (up to 45 for hard roots)
4. Strain while hot
5. Dosage: 1/2 cup 2-3 times daily (more concentrated than infusion)

TINCTURE (alcohol extraction, 4-6 week preparation):
1. Ratio: 1 part dried herb to 5 parts menstruum (40-60% alcohol)
2. Combine in amber glass jar, seal tightly
3. Shake daily, store in dark place for 4-6 weeks
4. Strain through cheesecloth, press to extract all liquid
5. Dosage: 15-30 drops (approximately 1/2 to 1 dropper) 2-3 times daily,
   diluted in water or tea

POULTICE (fresh or rehydrated dried herb):
1. Fresh: Crush or chew herb to release juices, apply directly to skin
2. Dried: Rehydrate with hot water to paste consistency
3. Apply to affected area, cover with clean cloth
4. Replace every 2-4 hours or when dry
5. Duration: Acute inflammation (24-48 hours), wounds (until healed)

OIL INFUSION (for external salves):
1. Ratio: Fill jar 3/4 with dried herb, cover completely with oil
   (olive, almond, or sunflower)
2. Method A (solar): Seal jar, place in sunny window 2-4 weeks, shake daily
3. Method B (heat): Place jar in water bath (double boiler), low heat 2-4 hours
4. Strain through cheesecloth, press herb matter to extract all oil
5. Store in dark bottle; use within 6-12 months

Got: Remedy done per method. Right herb-to-menstruum ratio + steep/extract time. Dosage clear for internal/external.

If fail: Too strong (bitter, burn)? Dilute half. Too weak (no effect after 3 days proper dose)? Up herb amount 50% next batch.

Step 4: Document Contraindications

Flag safety, drug interactions, populations who must avoid.

Common Contraindications by Plant Category:

EMMENAGOGUES (stimulate menstruation):
- Plants: Pennyroyal, Rue, Mugwort, Tansy, Wormwood
- Avoid: Pregnancy (all trimesters), breastfeeding
- Caution: Heavy menstrual flow

PHYTOESTROGENS (estrogen-like activity):
- Plants: Fennel, Anise, Hops, Red clover, Licorice
- Avoid: Hormone-sensitive cancers, pregnancy
- Caution: If taking hormonal medications or birth control

BLOOD THINNERS (anticoagulant properties):
- Plants: Garlic, Ginger (high dose), Feverfew, Ginkgo
- Avoid: Before surgery (stop 2 weeks prior)
- Caution: If taking warfarin, aspirin, or other anticoagulants

HEPATOTOXIC (potential liver stress):
- Plants: Comfrey (internal use), Pennyroyal, Kava
- Avoid: Liver disease, alcohol use disorder
- Caution: Long-term high-dose use

PHOTOSENSITIZERS (increase sun sensitivity):
- Plants: St. John's wort, Angelica, Celery seed
- Avoid: Before sun exposure, with photosensitizing medications
- Caution: Fair skin, history of skin cancer

GENERAL CAUTIONS:
- Pregnancy/Breastfeeding: Most herbs lack safety data; avoid unless
  traditionally used for pregnancy (ginger, red raspberry leaf)
- Children under 2: Avoid all herbal preparations except gentle teas
  (chamomile, fennel)
- Children 2-12: Use 1/4 to 1/2 adult dose, depending on age and weight
- Elderly: Start with 1/2 dose; may be more sensitive to effects
- Chronic illness: Consult healthcare provider before use
- Surgery: Discontinue all herbs 2 weeks before scheduled surgery

Got: All contraindications listed for chosen plants. Specific populations flagged (pregnancy, children, drug interactions).

If fail: Uncertain about contraindications? Tell user see qualified herbalist or healthcare provider first. Default: "Not for pregnancy, breastfeeding, or children under 12 without professional guidance."

Step 5: Safety Review + Integration

Last check + guidance for monitoring effects + health integration.

Safety Review Checklist:
- [ ] Plant correctly identified (botanical name confirmed)
- [ ] Preparation method matches plant part and condition
- [ ] Dosage is within traditional safe range
- [ ] Contraindications reviewed and documented
- [ ] User informed this is historical folk medicine, not medical advice
- [ ] Expected timeline for effect noted (acute: 1-3 days; chronic: 2-4 weeks)

Monitoring Protocol:
Days 1-3:
- Note any immediate reactions (digestive upset, skin rash, headache)
- If adverse reaction occurs, discontinue immediately
- Positive signs: Symptom improvement, increased energy, better sleep

Days 4-14:
- Assess effectiveness: Are symptoms improving?
- If no improvement by day 7 (acute) or day 14 (chronic), reassess plant selection
- If partial improvement, continue; full effect may take 2-4 weeks

Integration Notes:
- Herbal medicine works best in context: adequate sleep, whole foods diet,
  stress management, and connection to nature
- Hildegard's remedies are not isolated pharmaceutical interventions —
  they are part of a holistic health practice
- Record observations in a journal: date, remedy, dose, effects
- Seasonal adjustment: Some remedies are more effective in specific seasons
  (warming herbs in winter, cooling herbs in summer)

Got: User has all info: remedy prep, dosage, contraindications, monitor plan, integration context. Safety disclaimers clear.

If fail: User uncertain about self-prep? Tell see trained herbalist first, then replicate home when confident.

Checks

  • Plant from Physica with right heat/moisture properties
  • Prep method matches plant part (aerial = infusion, root = decoction)
  • Dosage given with frequency + duration
  • Contraindications documented (pregnancy, drugs, conditions)
  • Safety review + monitor plan done
  • User told: historical folk medicine, not medical diagnosis/treatment
  • Timeline for effect clear (acute vs chronic)

Pitfalls

  1. Wrong plant: Common name confusion. Always confirm botanical (Latin) name
  2. Over-extract: Boiling delicate aerial parts kills volatile oils. Use infusion (steep), not decoction
  3. Under-dose: Medieval preps often stronger than modern tea. Follow traditional ratios
  4. Skip contraindications: Pregnancy + drug interactions serious. Doubt = advise against
  5. Modern substitute for medieval: Hildegard plants = European medieval flora. Substitutes break temperament system
  6. Want pharmaceutical speed: Plant medicine slow. Acute: 1-3 days. Chronic: 2-4 weeks minimum
  7. Solo remedy focus: Hildegard medicine holistic. Works best with diet, prayer, rest, seasons

See Also

  • assess-holistic-health — Temperament shapes plant choice (cold constitution → warm plants)
  • practice-viriditas — Viriditas connection boosts plant medicine receptivity
  • consult-natural-history — Broader Physica cosmology context
  • heal (esoteric domain) — Post-remedy health check + recovery
  • prepare-soil (gardening domain) — Growing medicinal herbs
  • maintain-hand-tools (bushcraft domain) — Harvest + process herbs

GitHub Repository

pjt222/agent-almanac
Pfad: i18n/caveman/skills/formulate-herbal-remedy
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