Monthly Archives: April 2008

Help for Emotional Eating


Isn’t the “mind” amazing? It has the ability regardless of one’s age, to continue to form associations.
These associative links inside the brain can be for good or not so good.

As we age, if we never take a look at all of these associations, it is easy to see how a feeling of being lost may develop. It is like being full of things that have no meaning, and within them you lose yourself. This sense of loss can show up anywhere. Is it because we are simply too full and really need to create inner space?

Food is often used to to abate, soothe, squelch, drown or otherwise turn on or off emotions.
Which leads to the question, “what are you hungry, for”? “What’s eating you?”

Take a look at these signals, from the authors of Think Thin, Be Thin. Is your hunger truly physical or a sign of something deeper?

Physical Hunger
- Builds gradually
- Strikes below the neck (e.g. growling stomach)
- Occurs several hours after a meal
- Goes away when full
- Eating leads to feeling of satisfaction

Emotional Hunger
- Develops suddenly
- Above the neck (e.g., a “taste” for ice cream)
- Unrelated to time
- Persists despite fullness
- Eating leads to guilt and shame

Relax…instead of eating, go for a walk, take a nap, take a soaking bath with fragrant oils, write your thoughts out on paper, draw, paint or just sit still and take a moment to simply, be.

Weekly Inspiration #8

55. The Yoga Sutras of Pantanjali

By the proper practice of pratyhara, your senses come fully under your control. They become obedient horses, taking you wherever you want. You become a complete master over them.

We shouldn’t think we lose anything by avoiding sensual pleasures.
If our senses try to pull us somewhere we should feel, “No; I’m not going to satisfy you.”
Although we might feel a little tension at first, it is just momentary.
After that we’ll really feel proud: “Ah, I have gained some mastery.”
If we satisfy the senses, we might feel momentary pleasure followed by a greater dejection afterward.

The happiness we can receive by mastery lasts longer than temporary joys. We should all become masters. That is true freedom and real victory. If you are free from your own mind and senses, nothing can bind you; then you are really free. Even imperial power, even dictatorship, can never bind you. You are not afraid on anything.

This isn’t the birthright of just a few people. It is everyone’s. But we should build up our mastery, never allowing the mind to fall back. If we have that control, we can do whatever we want, find peace and joy within and share the same with all humanity.

Again…the Silence of the Yams

According to the article below, the foods that food and nutrition professionals want children to eat more of, such as fruits and veggies are not eaten in health promoting quantities. However, professionals are not our primary caregivers. That role belongs to parents, mom and dad. They are the ones who provide for and feed the family.

So, what does it take to feed the family in health promoting ways? For one, we can bring back mother wit. Parents themselves have to learn and care to eat in healthy ways, that is how it is passed on. An example is a powerful influence. Marketers, e.g. tv commercials have their interests in mind…to sell a a product. To counter the influence of television commercials that urge eating poor quality food, ne solution, turn off the television. On Saturday mornings, cook breakfast and eat together as a family. It can help.

Children Fed Diet of Poor Nutrition on Saturday Morning Television
Nine out of ten food advertisements shown during Saturday morning children’s television programming are for foods of poor nutritional quality, according to researchers at the Center for Science in the Public Interest and the University of Minnesota.

During a sample of 27.5 hours of shows aimed at pre-school and elementary school-aged children, 91 percent of food ads were for foods or beverages high in fat, sodium or added sugars or were low in nutrients, according to the study. Forty-nine percent of the 4.08 hours of advertisements shown were for food (281 food ads out of 571 total). The sample, taken from a 2005 review by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies, included major broadcast and cable networks that had Saturday morning programming.

The most commonly advertised food categories were:
ready-to-eat breakfast cereals and cereal bars (27 percent of all ads)
restaurants (19 percent)
and snack foods (18 percent).

Of the 281 food ads, 59 percent were for products that exceeded criteria for added sugars, according to the study. About one in five foods advertised exceeded other guidelines, including total fat, saturated plus trans fat and sodium. The majority of advertised foods (84 percent) met the criteria for vitamins and minerals, often as a result of fortification. None of the 27 beverage ads met the study’s nutrition standards.

The researchers conclude: “The findings indicate that the foods that food and nutrition professionals encourage children to eat more of, such as fruits, vegetables, low-fat dairy products and whole grains, are seldom encouraged in advertisements shown during children’s Saturday morning television programming. Instead, most advertisements promote…foods high in fat, sugars or sodium, or low in nutrients.”

April 2008, Journal of the American Dietetic Association

Tree Man

If you haven’t heard or seen this bizarre tale, here is the YouTube view. This story came out in Nov. 2007.
The US doctor who examined, Dede for the documentary would like to bring him to this county for further tests. However, that may be blocked by the Indonesian health ministry. His government is concerned about the stress of him having to give blood and the effect of such long distance travel.

The Indonesian man suffers from a rare skin condition that causes his body to be covered with tree-like growths may soon get help from an American doctor.

Dede, 35, who has gnarled growths sprouting from his hands and feet, has baffled medical experts since the warty “roots” began appearing after he injured himself as a teenager.
You Tube -tree man

“Tree Man” in the News

The Tree Man story continues, now he’s in search of a mate…(more)

Looking Forward to Laughter Heals

Anticipating a Laugh Reduces Our Stress Hormones, Study Shows
ScienceDaily

In 2006 researchers investigating the interaction between the brain, behavior, and the immune system found that simply anticipating a mirthful laughter experience boosted health-protecting hormones. Now, two years later, the same researchers have found that the anticipation of a positive humorous laughter experience also reduces potentially detrimental stress hormones. According to Dr. Lee Berk, the study team’s lead researcher of Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA, “Our findings lead us to believe that by seeking out positive experiences that make us laugh we can do a lot with our physiology to stay well.”

In their earlier work the researchers found that the anticipation of “mirthful laughter” had surprising and significant effects. Two hormones – beta-endorphins (the family of chemicals that alleviates depression) and human growth hormone (HGH; which helps with immunity) – increased by 27 and 87 percent respectively when volunteers anticipated watching a humorous video. There was no such increase among the control group who did not anticipate watching the humor film.
Using a similar protocol, the current research found that the same anticipation of laughter also reduced the levels of three stress hormones. Cortisol (termed “the stress hormone”), epinephrine (also known as adrenaline) and dopac, a dopamine catabolite (brain chemical which helps produce epinephrine), were reduced 39, 70 and 38 percent, respectively (statistically significant compared to the control group). Chronically released high stress hormone levels can weaken the immune system.
The research is entitled Cortisol and Catecholamine Stress Hormone Decrease Is Associated with the Behavior of Perceptual Anticipation of Mirthful Laughter. It was conducted by Lee Berk with Stanley A. Tan, both of the Oak Crest Health Research Institute, Loma Linda, CA; and Dottie Berk, Loma Linda University Health Care, Loma Linda. Lee Berk is presenting the team’s findings at the 121st Annual Meeting of the American Physiological Society, part of the Experimental Biology 2008 scientific conference.

The Study

Having found that the anticipation of a laughter event increased certain “beneficial” chemicals/hormones, the researchers proposed that the anticipation of a laughter event might reduce stress hormones. To test their theory they studied 16 healthy fasting male volunteers for cortisol and catecholamine level changes. The participants were assigned to either the control group or the experiment group (those anticipating a humorous event).
Blood was drawn from both groups prior to the event (anticipation), four times during the event, and three times afterward (event and residual effect). Analysis showed that the blood levels in the anticipatory phase decreased for stress hormones cortisol, epinephrine and dopac in the experimental group. Trend analysis showed a progressive pattern of the decrease for the three hormones through the event.
As a result, the researchers suggest that anticipating a positive event can decrease stress hormones that can be detrimental when chronically released. These findings have implications for understanding the modalities that can benefit stress reduction in health and wellness programs.
“Biology of Hope”

Norman Cousins was a journalist and an editor of the Saturday Review. He was also a pioneer in the idea that beliefs, thoughts and emotions have biological effects (“biotranslation”). His view about the body’s unrecognized ability to heal itself was captured in his 1979 book, “Anatomy of an Illness (As Perceived by the Patient).”
Forty years ago, few scientists would likely have agreed with Cousins. Today, researchers like Berk are beginning to pinpoint exactly what thoughts can drive which affects. Researchers like Berk are finding that, in addition to what resides in our bodies, what resides in our brains and mind is important, too.

Adapted from materials provided by American Physiological Society.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/04/080407114617.htm

Maasai warriors to run London Marathon

Water is difficult to come by, so these Maasai men came to London to run a marathon. Not to win it but to raise awareness of their plight.

It is the first time the men have left their remote African village of Eluia in Tanzania. The group is far from anxious about completing the 42 kilometer event. One of the men, Isaya, says it’s a ‘walk in the park’.

“Twenty-six miles (42 km) not far. Back at home we sometimes run for five or six days, day and night.”

He and his fellow warriors, all between 20 and 25 years old, expect to reach the finish line of Sunday’s race within 4½ hours.

The Tanzanians have been granted special permission to run without a numbered shirt.

They will be sporting traditional clothing, including sticks, shields, jewellery and sandals made from car tyres. They also plan to carry shields and spears.

The Maasai warriors hope to raise enough money to find and access a fresh water source for their community, which is around $AUD128, 000.

Up to a million Maasai inhabit scattered and remote villages across northern Tanzania and southern Kenya, living a semi-nomadic existence.

But years of drought in the region around Eluai, where these six warriors live with their elders and children, is killing their cattle and threatening their way of life with disease and famine.

Two thirds of the children born in Eluai die before they reach the age of five.

World News Australia

Homegrown Veggies Encourage Healthy Eating

If you are looking for novel ways to help your children eat their veggies. Start a garden.

Young children who regularly eat homegrown fruits and veggies eat more than twice as much of those healthy foods than kids who seldom get fresh-from-the-garden produce on their plates, U.S. researchers report. Over 1,600 families were interviewed. The children who were raised eating from the family vegetable plot developed a preference for the taste of fruits and vegetables over other foods.

The gardens encouraged variety and family closeness. Healthy eating shouldn’t be a struggle and it doesn’t have to be. If you don’t have a green thumb, see if there is a coop in your area, they may have a farm with fresh produce that you can buy and volunteer with the children for a great activity.

article abstract here

Weekly Inspiration #7

Living in this marvelous reality ~ living in peace, is something we all want.
But I would like to ask: Do we have the capacity of enjoying peace?
If peace is there, will we be able to enjoy it, or will we find it boring?
To me, peace and happiness and joy and life go together,
and we can experience the peace of the divine reality right in the present moment.
It is available, inside us and around us.

If we are not able to enjoy that peace,
how can we make peace grow?

Thich Nhat Hanh


TV In Your Teens Bedroom, Just Say No

(HealthDay News) — Although your teenager may poignantly plead that he or she is the only child left in America without a bedroom television, health experts recommend that parents stand their ground and keep TV out of the bedroom.

There seems to be a good reason for this. The latest research, published in the April issue of the journal Pediatrics, shows that having a bedroom television not only leads to more TV viewing, but also results in less time spent with the family, less time exercising, lower fruit and vegetable intake, more sweetened beverage consumption, and in lower grades.

“The big take-home message from our study is that TVs should be removed from kids’ bedrooms, and it could have a positive effect on kids’ health,” said the study’s lead author, Daheia Barr-Anderson, a postdoctoral fellow at the Adolescent Health Protection Research Training Program at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health in Minneapolis.

Health professionals have been warning for years about too much television watching among young people, and especially about making the TV set so easily accessible. But past research suggests that many parents aren’t heeding that advice. About 68 percent of American youngsters have televisions in their bedrooms, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.

One large study found that children between ages 8 and 18 spend more than three hours every day watching television. Numerous studies have been done to assess TV’s effect on young children, but research on bedroom TVs and older adolescents is scarce, according to the current study.

Barr-Anderson and her colleagues gathered information on the presence of a bedroom TV and socio-demographic, behavioral and personal characteristics through a questionnaire mailed to 781 teens who were an average age of 17.2 years.

The results mirrored past studies. Almost two-thirds of this group had a TV in their bedroom. Having a personal TV doubled the risk that a teen would regularly watch more than five hours of TV daily, compared to teens without a television in the bedroom.

Teenage girls who had a bedroom TV watched an average of 20.7 hours each week, about 5 hours more than female teens without a bedroom TV (15.2 hours). For boys with TVs, 22.2 hours were spent in front of the tube, compared to 18.2 hours for boys without personal TVs.

Both girls and boys with bedroom TVs attended fewer family dinners — about one less per week — than kids without their own sets. Girls with TVs ate slightly fewer vegetables each day, while boys with TVs consumed less fruit.

Girls with TVs in their bedrooms participated in less physical activity, and boys with bedroom TVs had lower grade point averages.

“For most kids, a TV in the bedroom is not a healthy thing,” said Anita Gurian, clinical assistant professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the New York University Child Study Center in New York City. “It’s not bad for all kids; there are those who use it constructively, and there is a lot of good stuff on TV, but it definitely has its downside,” she said.

Parents should know that research has shown TV’s deleterious effects on grades, eating habits, in attraction to violence, and most importantly, in social relationships,” added Gurian. “If teens are in their bedrooms, watching TV for three hours a day, they don’t have time to develop relationships or to do homework,” she said.

Barr-Anderson said she suspects it’s not always an intentional plan to give the child a TV. Instead, it’s usually because the family has upgraded to a larger TV, and now has a spare set. She recommended that parents resist the pressure they’ll likely feel to put the extra TV in their teen’s bedroom. “You may experience a backlash, but parents have to do what’s best for their child,” said Barr-Anderson.
HealthDay