Anti-Inflamatory Shampoo
This is a uniquely formulated anti-inflammatory shampoo gentle enough for everyday use. It contains Black Seed Oil and Australian Tea Tree Oil, which are known for their anti-inflammatory properties. It contains no detergents, such as sodium lauryl and sodium laureth sulfates that may damage hair follicles.
Directions
Apply this shampoo as you would use any other shampoo. Massage it vigorously into the scalp. You may use a moderately stiff fingernail brush to help the shampoo clean your scalp
Tea Tree Oil - The Medicine Kit in a bottle
An estimated sixty million years ago, as the continents of earth continued to shift and change shape, an immense land mass measuring more than three million square miles gradually separated from the Asia mainland and formed the largest island on earth - Australia.
Australia was called "upside down" because, unlike the United States or Europe, southern Australia faces toward Antarctica and is relatively cool; by contrast, the northern region is near the equator, warm and tropical, and supports a rich diversity of life ranging from the mountains to the plains, vast deserts of the outback to peaceful lagoons, lush rain forests to the Great Barrier Reef. Foremost among the rare and unusual trees growing along Australia's coast, in the swampy, low-lying lands of New South Wales, is the Melaleuca alternifolia, or "Tea Tree," from which comes the oil with amazing healing and therapeutic properties.
The folklore of the aborigines of the Australian outback is filled with the mystique about tea tree oil’s use as nature's medicinal gift. The story goes that the Bundjalung aborigines living in the bush country would pick tea tree leaves, which were coated with the wondrous oil, and rub the leaf on their skin to relieve cuts, bites, burns and other skin ailments. They would grind the leaves into a fine paste for dressing wounds, and would crush the leaves to use as insect repellent. The aborigines also sought lakes and pools of bronze-colored water and salt to heal their sore and infected bodies. These pools were surrounded by tea trees; their bronze color came from the oil dripping from the tea tree leaves into the water. It has been known for nearly 100 years that tea tree is a powerful antiseptic, bactericide, and fungicide. Many studies on the uses for tea tree oil have taken place in recent years. It has been used to treat acne, burns, yeast and fungal infections. Tea tree oil stands out among natural herbal remedies and has proven repeatedly that it is truly a medicine kit in a bottle.