The Cayce Herbal
 A Comprehensive Guide to the 
Botanical Medicine of Edgar Cayce

Overview | Remedies | Profiles | Graphics


 Overview



The Life and Work of Edgar Cayce

    Edgar Cayce was born on March 18, 1877, on a farm near Hopkinsville, Kentucky.  His childhood was marked by paranormal experiences such as seeing and speaking to recently deceased rela-tives and sleeping with his head on textbooks to memorize school lessons.  His abilities as a psychic diagnostician surfaced during his early twenties when he developed a gradual paralysis of the throat and medical doctors were unable to provide relief.  As a last resort, he allowed a friend to hypnotize him so that he could reestablish the altered state of consciousness that he had utilized as a child to memorize his school books.  From this trance state, he was able to diagnosis his condition and prescribe treatments which remedied his problem.

    Cayce was hesitant to use his ability to help others.  He felt responsible for the information and was concerned that the suggested treatments might have deleterious effects.  Consequently, many of the early beneficiaries of his services were desperate cases, often given up by medical doctors.  Working closely with various types of physicians who applied his recommendations, Cayce gradually became convinced that his unusual ability could provide help to suffering humanity.

    As an indication of Cayce's interest in providing help to persons suffering from physical illness, over 9,000 were given in response to health issues.  The remainder cover virtually every field of human endeavor, from religion and philosophy to business and international affairs.  Apart from the content of Cayce's readings, the trance process itself is a fascinating aspect of Cayce's work.  Harmon Bro provides a glimpse into the trance procedure and the physical context of the readings:

    What took place in the morning and afternoon trance sessions, in the months that followed when I heard and took notes on some six hundred of Cayce's readings, was a profound shock.  Nothing could adequately prepare one for the amount of swift helpfulness that flowed from the unconscious man. His outward procedures were simple enough.  Cayce sat on his plain green studio couch in his cheerful windowed study, across the room from his desk and little portable typewriter.  He prayed, then lay down and step by step went unconscious.  He spoke in measured address about each person or need to which his wife, sitting beside him, quietly directed his attention.  After an hour or more of discourse and questions which his secretary recorded in shorthand, he came swiftly back to consciousness, remembering nothing of what he had said, and got up to resume the activities of his busy correspondence and office.  It was all done in broad daylight and simplicity, as naturally as if he were still taking portraits in a photographic studio.  But the plainness of the process did not take away the jolt of seeing him accomplish day after day what our culture said was impossible. (A Seer Out of Season: The Life Of Edgar Cayce, Signet Books, 1990, p. 58)

    Although many of the early readings were not recorded, over 14,000 were stenographically transcribed and have been preserved by the Association for Research and Enlightenment (A.R.E.) in Virginia Beach, Virginia.  A CD-ROM containing the Cayce readings is available from A.R.E. Press.

    Recognizing the need for confidentiality, each reading is assigned a number corresponding to the person or group requesting the information.  The identifying number is followed by another number designating the sequence of the reading.  For example, a reading cited as 182-6 indicates that this is the 6th in a series of readings for an individual or group designated as 182.

    Throughout The Cayce Herbal, excerpts from the Cayce readings are provided to familialize the reader with the content and style of this vast resource.  Since Edgar Cayce seldom used herbal medicines alone, a sense of the context of Cayce's recommendations is essential.  The principal of "integration" in the next section describes the importance of combining herbals with complementary modalities.



Principal Concepts of the Cayce Approach to Health and Healing

    The Cayce approach to health and healing is based on the following fundamental concepts:



Tips for Using the Electronic Version

    Here are some simple tips for using the electronic format of The Cayce Herbal:


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