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Therapia’s Ultimate Snoring Cure is a guaranteed aromatherapy cure

AROMATHERAPY SNORING CURE

Do you know someone who snores ? 


Therapia’s Ultimate Snoring Cure is a guaranteed aromatherapy cure that combines the therapeutic properties of the natural essential oils of lavender and marjoram contained in two separate glass jars. Lavender is a proven sedative, it relaxes and helps induce sleep, is good for insomnia, depression and anxiety, boosts the immune system and relieves nervous headaches. Marjoram is widely recognised as a cure for snoring all on its own. It works on the lining in the back of the throat to lessen the vibrations in the soft palate and also clears the sinuses to help you breathe more easily. It is also for those who don’t necessarily have difficulty getting to sleep but awaken easily and cannot get back to sleep due to ‘mental chatter’. Marjoram has been proven* to help stop snoring... but combine it with lavender and we absolutely guarantee* that it will stop snoring, thus ensuring a proper night’s sleep – every night – at a cost of just 6p a day! 

Immediate, lasting results and so easy to use! Simply open the jars on the bedside table closest to the snorer two hours before going to bed and leave open all night. This will allow the fragrances to gradually fill the bedroom with their pleasant aromas, help you breathe more easily and stop snoring. Used in this way the jars will last for about 12 months. 

Price: £21 for the two jars (Mail Order postage UK: £4.00) 

95%+ success rate!

 

*Return within 28 days in a saleable condition with original packaging for refund if not satisfied. Always keep jars upright and close lids tightly when not using or moving them. Keep [jars] away from children, pets and direct sunlight. When the top of the sponge diffuser is significantly dry, replace lid and invert jar for a few minutes to recharge. Please use a place mat, saucer or similar to protect polished or painted surfaces. © 2000–2025 

But don’t take our word for it, here is what Judith Woods of the Daily Telegraph had to say:

"Adultery is all very well, but snoring must surely be the biggest test of any marriage; I know many a wife who would happily overlook the occasional infidelity, as long as her husband did the decent thing and slept over.
 
Only someone who has endured life with a snorer can possibly understand the stress, exhaustion and, above all, rage it causes.
As he slumbers like a (very noisy, very annoying) baby, you toss and turn beside him, a toxic cocktail of frustration and enter pumping through your veins.
 
My husband is a snorer. He has the bruises on his ribs to show for it, as well as elbow-shaped indentations the length of his spine, where I have prodded and, if I’m being honest, once in a while even punched him, ostensibly to get him to shift position and change his breathing pattern – but mostly to vent my fury.
 
He gets off lightly, though. I have a friend who has admitted she gets so wound up that she could kill.
 
On holiday, I have been known to take refuge under a pile of towels in the bath to escape the sound. At home, I sometimes shake him awake and pack him off to the spare room or scuttle off myself.
 
I’m not alone. According to the British Snoring and Sleep Apnoea Association, there are an estimated 15 million snorers in Britain, which adds up to an awful lot of nocturnal misery. A loud snorer can reach 90 decibels — around the same volume as a passing train.
 
The irritating thing about snoring is that the sufferer doesn’t actually do the suffering; it’s the loved ones who bear the brunt.
 
In rare cases, snoring can be an early indicator of sleep apnoea, a condition where the person stops breathing, then wakes up automatically with a loud snore or snort so that they can breathe. It is usually mild, but in some instances it can lead to the snorer waking up dozens of times a night.
 
Men are two-and-a-half times more likely to snore as women — some of whom snore only when they are pregnant, while most tend to start during or after menopause, indicating that hormones play a role. But snoring in both sexes increases with age as the throat muscles weaken. Now there’s something to look forward to, assuming you stay married into old age.
 
Snorers make love less often than the rest of the population, with 55 per cent admitting their snoring has a detrimental effect on their sex lives — presumably because their partners are furious and exhausted most of the time.
 
Snoring is defined as a “coarse sound” made by vibrations of the soft palate and other tissue in the mouth, nose and throat, collectively know as the upper airway. Although it tends to be seen as a sleep problem, it is a respiratory complication that is highlighted by sleep. (We don’t snore when we’re awake because the muscle tone in our upper airway is maintained.)
 
During sleep, the tone is reduced and the narrowed airway is more likely to vibrate. Alcohol reduces the muscle tone further, as do sedatives and sleeping pills, so snoring gets louder after a few drinks. Other factors include being overweight, lack of exercise, allergies and nasal catarrh. People who breathe throughout their mouths are likely to snore, as are those who sleep on their backs, and anyone whose tongue tends to fall backwards and block their airway.
 
With so many disparate causes, it’s little wonder that a whole industry has sprung up around the problem. There are breathing gadgets in the mouth, herbal sprays and nasal strips to dilate the nostrils. You can buy adhesive chin straps and ominous-sounding, Hannibal Lecter-style “mandibular advancement devices”, which open the upper airway. As a last resort, surgery can remove some of the soft palate — to removing the tonsils in their entirety.
 
All this, however, in predicated on your partners agreement. And therein, for most of us snores, lies the rub. As if tempers weren’t frayed enough, snorers rarely apologise as abjectly as they should. Most deny there is a problem at all. My husband has always refused to believe his snoring could possibly be as bad as I claim, and there was no question of him ever consenting to nasal dilators, much less the surgeon’s knife.
 
I had all but given up hope that I could ever get a decent night’s sleep, until I came across an aromatherapy cure sold by Therapia that claims a 95% success rate within one month, or your money back.
 
It comprises two jars of essential oils, one containing lavender, the other marjoram. Lavender is well known as a relaxant, enhancing sleep and relieving insomnia. The marjoram apparently lessens the vibrations in the back of the throat and clears sinuses, promoting easier breathing. Asthmatics will also see a benefit.
 
The idea was to keep both jars on my husband’s bedside table, open them an hour or two before going to bed, leaving them open all night and replacing the lids in the morning. It was worth a try so I bought the two jars (£21).
 
And, dear reader, it is almost a month on, and the snoring has virtually stopped! Not completely — there are still nights when I’m woken up, and, frankly, marjoram can only do so much when confronted with half a gallon of Merlot.
 
But four nights out of five, I’m getting a full eight hours’ rest. The chronic sleep deprivation has lifted and so have my spirits. Not only do I feel much less violent towards my husband when he does snore, but I’ll probably stay married long enough to get my own back and start snoring myself."

 


 

Immediate, lasting results and so easy to use
Therapia's Snoring Cure has a 95% success rate
A natural remedy that works
Try it - Judith Woods of the Daily Telegraph did and has never looked back
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