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Legal
aspects
| Coca Leaves, Erythroxylum
coca lam |
| NUTRITION
FACTS |
| Serving
size 1 coca tea bag (1gm) |
|
|
|
%
Daily Value
|
| Total
Fat |
0
|
g
|
0
|
%
|
| Calcium
(Ca) |
18.0
|
mg
|
2.3
|
%
|
| Phosphorus
(P) |
6.4
|
mg
|
0.8
|
%
|
| Magnesium
(Mg) |
2.1
|
mg
|
0.7
|
%
|
| Potassium
(K) |
30.0
|
mg
|
1
|
%
|
| Sodium
(Na) |
0.0
|
mg
|
0
|
%
|
| Protein |
0
|
g
|
0
|
%
|
| Total
Fat |
0
|
g
|
0
|
%
|
|
| Contains
also 13 alkaloids: Papain, pectin, Globulin, Quinolin, Benzoin,
Inulin, Reserpin and other substances still unknown. |
|
According
to extensive research
MATE
DE COCA:
-
CONTAINS MORE PROTEINS (19.9%)
THAN MEAT (19.4%)
- FAR MORE CALCIUM (2,191%) THAN CONDENSED MILK
- RICHER IN VITAMIN B-1 (276%) THAN FRESCH CARROTS
- SATISFIED DIETARY ALLOWANCE FOR CALCIUM, IRON,
OSPHOROUS, VITAMIN A, B AND E.
PHYSICAL EFFECTS
The physical effects of MATE DE COCA are as follows
- INCREASED STAMINA.
- ABILITY TO GO LONG PERIODS OF TIME WITHOUT FOOD.
- BLOCKED SENSE OF FATIGUE AND COLD.
- DECREASED NEED FOR SLEEP.
- MOOD ELEVATION.
MATE
DE COCA is a traditional remedy for:
- ALTITUDE OR MOUNTAIN SICKNESS
- STRESS (excellent!!)
- TREATING GASTROINTESTINAL DISORDERS.
- ALLEVIATING IRRITATION AND INFECTION OF THEVOCAL CORDS
AND LARYNX
- PREVENTING VERTIGO.
- REGULATING
ARTERIAL PRESSURE AND THE METABOLISM OF
CARBOHYDRATES.
- ALLEVIATING DIARREA.
- IMPROVING SEXUAL PROWESS.
- RELIEVING COLDS, BRUISES, SORE JOINTS, MUSCLES.
- SWOLLEN FEET AND HEADACHES.
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Discover the Secrets
of the Ancient Peruvians
|
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Anxiety, Stress
?
MATE
COCA
Mate Coca is indeed an agreeable and invigorating mood-brightener.
High
Blood Pressure, THE BEST!!!
Altitude illness, THE BEST !!
Gastrointestinal, Excellent
Motion sickness GOOD
Fatigue, Excellent, THE BEST
Antidepressant, Excellent !!
Anxiety, Excellent !!
Fitness Program Excellent !!
Tooth ache, Super
Mate
Coca is a medicinal tea made from the leaves of the Coca plant (Erythroxylum).
This tea has been used for over four thousand years by the people of South
America.
Coca was and is still considered a sacred aspect of the Andean culture.
It is only in this past century that the chemical configuration was changed
to make the drug cocaine. Since then, the rest of the world has seen Coca
as the raw material for the drug cocaine and not as the medicinal plant
used for thousands of years. Coca was and is still used at every stage
of the Andean peoples lives. Before giving birth, a woman drinks and chews
Coca to hasten the labour and ease the pain. When a child is born, relatives
celebrate by chewing the Coca leaf together. When a young man wants to
marry a girl, he offers Coca to her father. And when somebody dies, Mate
De Coca is drunk at the wake and a small pile of leaves are placed in
the coffin before burial. From ancient times, these rituals were considered
sacred, and as such, the Coca leaf continues to have a great significance
in the culture of the Andean people.
More than any other Natural product:
Vitamins
Vitamin A............. 14.000 UI.
alfa carotene..................... ......2,65 mg.
B1 (tiamine)....... ...0,68 mg.
B2 (riboflavine).......1,73 mg.
B6 (piridoxine)........0,58 mg.
beta carotene..........................20 mg
C (ascorbic acid)....................53 mg.
E (tocoferol)............................44,1 mg.
Nicotinic acid.............................5.0 mg
H (biotine)................................. 0.54I.
-----------
G (niacine)
Since
the Spanish conquerors identified it as one of the essential elements
of the magical, religious and medicinal ritual of Andean tradition and
as a factor that permitted the conquered Indians to maintain their cohesion
and resistance, coca has always been persecuted and combated as a "diabolic
weed". Within the ethnocentric view of the European colonizers, the
mysterious leaf employed in rituals and religious offerings to the Sun
and Mother Earth hindered the conversion of the indigenous peoples to
Christianism. The first adversaries of the coca plant appeared and proposed
its straightforward eradication under the pretext of ensuring the salvation
of indigenous souls.
By virtue
of its properties in medicine, health and work, the traditional form of
coca leaf consumption is neither harmful nor injurious to the organism,
unlike caffeine, tannin and nicotine which have spread and achieved universal
recognition. Throughout the centuries the coca leaf has been attacked
and defended from all sides. It was attacked by the colonizers as part
of a process of cultural alienation and by the Inquisition, behind which
hid the ferocious appetites for gold, silver and all the wealth that slumbered
in the depths of the Andes. Despite the inestimable contribution by the
pre-Columbian civilizations to old Europe in the form of a number of valuable
plants such as the potato, maize, the tomato, okra, cotton, the chili
pepper, quinoa and certain varieties of bean, paradoxically coca is singled
out for discrimination. However, the aboriginal peoples identify with
the coca plant - a living expression of Andean culture - and by defending
it they have always defended the rights of the Andean people to preserve
their millennial traditions and values.
In contrast
with growing alcohol and tobacco consumption, the traditional use of coca
in its manifold forms is not and never has been a form of drug addiction,
but a natural indigenous custom which it is possible to give up without
producing any narcotic syndrome. No one can claim, in the absence of scientific
proof to the contrary, that the Quechua and Aymara Indians, particularly
in Peru and Bolivia, who have been chewing the sacred leaf of their ancestors
since time immemorial, have become drug addicts.
Consequently, the indigenous coca producing populations have every reason
to be indignant about the lack of logic in the contradictory arguments
of the Western countries, which maintain that the perverse effects of
the drug in their rich societies can be controlled without eradicating
the economic, social and moral factors that have engendered one of the
West's greatest scourges.
I also
started to notice the more subtle aspects of the taste - I could taste
the similarity it has to Coca Cola (which now uses de-cocanized coca leaves).
When I first sip, I taste the green tea/leafy type taste, and then as
I swallow, I taste the coca-cola type taste. It tastes good!
Coca is a densely-leafed plant native to the eastern slopes of the Andes.Erythroxylon
coca is widely cultivated in Peru. The leaves are rich in vitamins, protein,
calcium,iron and fiber. Chewing coca also counters the symptoms of 'mountainsickness'
and oxygen-deprivation.
Stictly
speaking, the leaves aren't actually chewed.
Typically, the dried coca leaf is moistened with saliva.
The wad is placed between the gum and cheek and it is gently sucked. The
invigorating juices are swallowed.
Shamans
from some traditional Indian tribes still smoke coca leaves for magical
purposes. Inhaling the sacred vapours induces a trance-like state. Coca
enables a shaman to cross 'the bridge of smoke', enter the world of spirits,
and activate his magical powers. Alas the leaves don't travel well; and
this ancient usage is uncommon in the urban industrial West
ORDER
NOW !!
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| Energy |
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| Power |
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| BE
FREE !! |
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| Anxiety |
If
you want to be relaxed and open, make lifestyle changes instead
of relying on drugs. They can interfere with mental function,
contribute to depression and lead to dependence. |
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| The
adversaries of Andean culture, who condemn the coca plant, with
a glass of whisky in one hand and a cigarette in the other, clamour
for its eradication and treat its producers as pariahs should give
a plain answer to the following questions: If alcoholism is one
of the greatest scourges in Europe and responsible for the slow
extermination of the indigenous populations in America, why is the
cultivation of the vine not eradicated, even though the vine incarnates
one of the elements of the old world's identity? Since the tobacco
habit is responsible for a huge number of victims in consumer societies,
why is it impossible to prohibit the growing of tobacco? Obviously,
no answers will be forthcoming. |
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more about stress |
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