A ginger compress can be used for localised pain and inflammation. A compress can be useful to ease period pain, back pain, and sore muscles.

Ingredients

2 tablespoons fresh ginger, grated
500 ml water
1 tablespoon caster oil
cling wrap/ 1 plastic bag
2 small towels
hot water bottle

Method

Simmer ginger in water for 10 minutes.

Rub affected area with caster oil lightly.

Soak a cloth  (clean tea towel or hand towel)  in the ginger water, squeeze out the excess fluid and apply to area. Be careful it isn’t too hot. It should be warm but still comfortable.

Seal the area with cling wrap or a plastic bag and cover with a hot water bottle wrapped in a towel. Lie down for 10-15 minutes.

Follow this procedure twice daily when pain is acute.

Enjoy!

 

 

About Kate Smyth

From Olympian to Practitioner & Coach

Kate’s path into high‑performance sport didn’t follow the traditional script. A late bloomer and recreational runner, she found her spark during the Sydney 2000 Olympics, watching her idols surge into the stadium. That moment ignited a commitment that would quietly and profoundly reshape the course of her life.

Eight years later, she realised her own Olympic dream, representing Australia in the women’s marathon at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.

Her running career spanned the Commonwealth Games, multiple Australian representative teams, and national‑level competition across cross‑country, track, and road racing. With a marathon personal best of 2:28, Kate was one of Australia’s all time fastest female marathoners.

But her journey was far from linear. Significant health challenges forced her to question conventional medicine, sports nutrition and traditional training models. What felt like setbacks at the time became turning points, pushing her to explore deeper, listen more closely to her body, and ultimately develop a more sustainable, female‑centred approach to performance.

These experiences now form the foundation of the work she shares with other women: how to train smarter, nourish deeply, honour physiology, and build resilience from the inside out.

She holds three degrees including a Masters and Bachelor of Health Science (Naturopathy). Kate is an accredited athletics coach with Athletics Australia and a member of NHAA.

Kate’s expertise is widely recognised, leading to regular invitations to speak on podcasts, at seminars, within industry education forums, and across corporate and women’s health initiatives.

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