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Discover The Healing Power of FlowersColors have strong psychological and physiological effects on people, including the power to stimulate, depress and even help heal. Careful color selection can help make gifts of flowers more than just ornamentation. Read on for more about Chromotherapy and the Healing Power of Colors and Flowers.
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Keith Riewe ![]() Copyright 2007 Keith Riewe All rights reserved. "Colors have strong psychological and physiological effects on people, including the power to stimulate, depress and even help heal. Careful color selection can help make gifts of flowers more than just ornamentation. Read on for more about Chromotherapy and the Healing Power of Colors and Flowers." Fort Worth, Tex. (PRWEB) -- Carol Bice told the prestigious Texas Senate Ladies Club the vibrant colors of flowers send powerful messages that recipients' brains process as more than simply the thoughtfulness of a gift - although most aren't aware it's going on. In a recent presentation - "Chromotherapy and the Healing Power of Colors and Flowers" - to the wives of Texas state senators, Bice cited a growing body of evidence that humans react physiologically, as well as emotionally to different colors. For example, research has demonstrated that a blindfolded person will have varying psychological reactions when placed under different colors of light rays. "Chromotherapy is still in its infancy," Bice said, "but the scientific evidence is mounting. It gives us a lot to think about in terms of preventive and therapeutic potential." There is solid science behind chromotherapy, beginning with the fact that light is energy. Sunlight is essential to make plants grow, and it's the best source of Vitamin D for humans. The different colors in the spectrum are actually energy fields vibrating at different frequencies. Red, for example, has a wave length of 1/33,000 of an inch, about twice that of violet. Light therapists say light is a nutrient to the body, just as food is, and that humans need light in different intensities and color ranges to regulate their biological clocks. The pineal gland acts as the body's light meter, processing spectral differences it then passes on to the brain. Various systems in the body respond positively to different colors. Humans sense light both through the skin and visually, so simply seeing different colors can be therapeutic. Color studies have long played a major role in marketing and product development of everything from automobiles to high fashion. Bice says people sending flowers should have a basic understanding of the meanings different colors convey and the reactions they can evoke:
This Press Release was reproduced with permission from PR Web and is ©Copyright 2007 Keith Riewe. |
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