
GRAND RAPIDS — Natalia Schott communicates with flowers.
Just to be clear, I’m not sending you a bouquet of flowers, but rather spending hours in her backyard garden, filled with roses, dahlias, irises, rhododendrons, and other flowers, and listening to her intuition about the purpose of each flower. It stimulates. She then uses the flowers to create essences to help people heal and evolve spiritually.
Though the use of Schott flowers to heal may raise some eyebrows, Susan Owens, founder and co-owner of La Vie de la Rose Flower Essences, uses pink and white Angelique tulips to He claims that pouring a few drops into water a day will “promote its effects.” spiritual maturity. ”
Schette and Owens’ business includes financial investments such as:
We have 10 women on our team and we have fans all over the world. Women tend to gardens in the Grand Rapids area.
“We are all survivors of child abuse who came together 10 years ago for our own healing,” Schott said. “We decided we wanted to do something to make a difference in the world.”
“Together, we have decided that we want to serve humanity.”
“The most surprising thing is how safe and effective it is,” Owens said.
The Schott website explains this as follows: “When creating flower essences, Dr. Schott uses nature to release the healing and balancing patterns of flowers to their fullest potential in water with petals placed for the greatest healing and spiritual growth of humanity.” She then asks the beings of light to bless the solution. Place the solution in the sun for approximately 3 hours to set the healing pattern.”
Schott spends hours on beautiful spring and summer days creating the essence, blooming the most perfect flowers he finds in spring water to absorb the sun’s rays, then bottling the water with brandy. Aged for 1 year and 1 day. The garden is completely organic and smelling the flowers is prohibited to avoid contamination.
Essence is sold online and in retail stores in small blue vials.
In holistic healing, flower essence therapy is classified as vibrational medicine and incorporates the use of chi energy within living organisms such as plants, gemstones, crystals, water, sunlight, and food.
Does it sound a little off? Schott doesn’t think so. She sees it as another option for those who believe in a world beyond the senses. She attracts great attention wherever she goes to sell them.
“It doesn’t matter if you don’t receive medical care.
“This is not about medicine, so the science behind this is important,” she said. Ours supports spiritual fulfillment. ”
They connect their 30 essences to qualities and states of being such as generosity, vitality, innocence, contact with other levels of being, sexuality, and spiritual protection. We also have essences for children.
“Every flower has a healing pattern, and we take that pattern and put it into an ingestible form, and over time that pattern becomes part of us,” Schott said. Told.
Dr. Edward Buck, a British physician and homeopath, created 38 types of original essences in the 1930s. Bach also claimed that his own intuition determined the purpose of each flower.
At the New Age trade show in June, the company won four awards from the Coalition of Visionary Resources, a Denver-based organization that recognizes products that include a variety of “spiritually uplifting products and services.” did.
We are currently obtaining organic certification.
“It doesn’t work in the physical body,” Schott says. “Essences are not designed to affect any physical or medical condition. They work energetically.”
So do they really work? Many conventional doctors say there may be more of a placebo effect.
The function of essence
• Exuberence Rose “Passionate Kiss”: Awakens the desire to create your life as art.
• Rhododendron ‘English Rosem’: develops its ability as a receptor and translator of subtle energies.
• Magnetism – Clematis ‘Prince Philip’: Helps strengthen magnetism.
• Generosity – Rose “Angel Face”: Supports transcending codependent giving and conditional love.
• Perfect Manifestation – Lily of the Valley: Increases consciousness and allows you to come up with ideas and intentions.
• Raspberry Wine, a bee balm that expands your higher purpose: supports you in conceiving, creating, realizing and unfolding the completed work of your soul.
If you go: The workshop is scheduled for Jan. 18 at 7 p.m. at Schuler Books & Music, 2660 28th St. SE.
Schott said there is no way to prove or disprove a theory when it comes to spiritual enlightenment.
“I know the impact they have energetically. They don’t affect the physical body. It’s about metaphysics. Something that transcends the physical.”
Schott and Owens say they take all 30 essences daily and want to share their benefits with others.
“We know how much they’ve helped us, and we know how much they’re helping others,” from giving the right amount of water to additional additives. said Owens, who is working to grow the healthiest flowers possible.
Ladybug in the garden.
Schott is not your everyday businesswoman. She has studied spirituality extensively and has counseled many women who have sought her help for their healing. She holds a PhD in Therapeutic and Spiritual Counseling from the Open Interactive University College of Complementary Medicine and she is a Level 5 graduate of the International College of Spiritual and Psychic Sciences. She started working in flower essences in 1986 and founded her business four years ago. Her book, Accelerated Spiritual Growth, will be published this year.
Owens has a more mainstream background. She is the special education supervisor and occupational therapist for Muskegon Public Schools. She was an adjunct faculty member at Grand Valley State University and a professor at Eastern Michigan University and Wayne State University for 15 years. She is also the executive director of the Michigan Brain Gym Consortium.
As a therapist, Owens has worked with medical models in which drugs are made from minerals and used in other ways. She said she believes Essence has helped transform her competitive personality into a more collaborative one.
Schott said these essences can help support the spirituality of “people of any religion or people of no religion.”
Please email the author of this article: yourlife@grpress.com