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Altaira
30th October 2013, 08:52
I was going to post this a few day ago but completely forgot and also forgot to watch it. I am glad at least at the last day of its free screening I remembered. I am watching it now and it seems interesting. It is about the plants and our relationship with them from many different perspectives such as medical professionals, shamans, botamicals historians, etc. It is presented in a very spiritual without omitting the scientific points. Good amalgamation between both spirituality and science.


Numen, defined as the animating force in nature, is a 75-minute documentary film focusing on the healing power of plants and the natural world.

Featuring stunning footage of medicinal plants and thought-provoking interviews with Drs. Tiearona Lowdog and Larry Dossey, the late Bill Mitchell, ND, author Kenny Ausubel, herbalists Rosemary Gladstar, Phyllis Light and many others, the film calls for a re-awakening of traditional knowledge about plants and their uses.

Numen is for herbalists, gardeners, medical practitioners, plant lovers—and everyone concerned about human and environmental health. It offers an introduction to the following topics:

Whole plant medicine
Ecological medicine
Environmental toxins
The limits of allopathic medicine
Spirit and healing and more
Dew on Plant Buds
photo by Sandra Lory
A primary objective of Numen is to bring the same awareness to medicine and the medical industry that the organic food movement has brought to food and the food industry. The film presents a sobering view of conventional healthcare and the dangers of environmental insults, as well as a vision of safe, effective and sustainable medicine. It offers stories about how individuals have improved their own health and well-being and provides concrete steps for viewers to do so as well.

Most broadly, the film encourages viewers to think deeply about the sources of their medicine and how their healthcare choices affect themselves and the larger web of life. It inspires us all to deepen our relationship with the natural world and reminds us of the healing made possible by re-embracing our place in the wider web of life.






here is a link to the trailer and to the whole film

https://numenfilm.leadpages.net/8min/

The One
30th October 2013, 09:18
Great thread Altaira.Plants they are just amazing

May i add these below cheers

The Secret Life of Plants

It means even on the lower levels of life, there is a profound consciousness or awareness that bonds all things together. Published in 1973, The Secret Life of Plants was written by Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird. It is described as “A fascinating account of the physical, emotional, and spiritual relations between plants and man.” Essentially, the subject of the book is the idea that plants may be sentient, despite their lack of a nervous system and a brain. This sentience is observed primarily through changes in the plant’s conductivity, as through a polygraph, as pioneered by Cleve Backster. The book also contains a summary of Goethe’s theory of plant metamorphosis.

That said, this book is about much more than just plants; it delves quite deeply into such topics as the aura, psychophysics, orgone, radionics, kirlian photography, magnetism/magnetotropism, bioelectrics, dowsing, and the history of science. It was the basis for the 1979 documentary of the same name, with a soundtrack especially recorded by Stevie Wonder.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=7_X2Z9v8-6Q

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The Secret World of Plants

Plants have marked the evolution of life and continue to fulfill an essential role in a balanced ecology. For millions of years, plants have created habitat in which animals could develop. They are the first link in a long chain of life, but the job of the silent green army that takes care of the planet has not been easy. They have had to develop survival strategies which contain surprising secrets, evolutionary secrets that guarantee their reproduction, secrets that make things striking and secrets that turn them into terrifying traps, magnificent giants and hidden assassins.

Despite the fact that the secrets behind their chemistry hold the origin of one out of every four medicines that we use, some plants cannot survive on nutrients from the soil alone. They are carnivorous plants, able to create appetizing bait in order to obtain food. Their traps are especially designed for invertebrates, which are attracted to them because of their smell and are quickly deceived.

The Venus flytrap is very deceptive. It has two sensitive leaves that act like jaws, which close upon their trophies. A relative of the Venus flytrap, the Sundew has a different way of hunting. The glands on its leaves secrete a false nectar that attracts certain insects. They are trapped in a sticky liquid and they become a meal.

Insects are trapped in different ways according to the species. Nepenthes have a gel like structure and a lid that closes airtight, which prevents their trapped prey from escaping. Other carnivorous plants accumulate a lethal liquid that drowns their victims, which are absorbed by the digestive fluids of the plant. The opening on the border of the plant hides a trap. The creases make the victims lose their balance and fall into a kind of mouth-stomach cavity and there is no way out. When they are lucky, their prey is quite large, which is attracted by the contents of the dangerous receptacle. In nature, death for some means life for others.

Mosquitoes know to wait for the rain to come, when these fearsome plants fill up with water, creating the perfect place for them to protect their eggs. This is where the larvae of this terrible propagator of diseases develop, under the protection of the beautiful and attractive capsule of life or death.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=8QSWP56J8DA

Altaira
30th October 2013, 09:26
I like the addition Malc, great for our re-connection with nature.

Tribe
30th October 2013, 17:42
Rayna I have just watched that documentary and it was so wonderful , really great stuff and I wish I had known about it before I want to share it with everyone !! Thank you so much for sharing , it's a gem ! :) xx

thenmac
3rd November 2013, 09:37
Appreciate the trailer Altaira, thanks.

Love the way nature charms you out of your head and back in to your heart.
Will be looking out for the full length version when it screens.

Reminds me of Stephen Harodd Buhner and his book " The Secret Teachings of Plants, - The intelligence of the Heart in the Direct Perception of Nature ".
A tad suprised not to see him in this, he could be in the full length version, possibly.

Will be dipping into Numen for some Plant Wisdom, for sure.

Altaira
3rd November 2013, 20:49
I managed to watch the whole film and I have to say it is well made. It was worth watching becaouse they put together various view points.



Welcome to TOT thenmac, I like your posts, I hope you will enjoy here :).