Monday, March 11, 2024

Forget the diet shots, try working on gut health

 If you are like me, you may be curious about the new weight loss shots. I have certainly heard a lot of differing opinions. I am a bitt depressed with the weight gain that comes on during menopause and have wondered what I can do and if I should try the shots. I just really do NOT wish to be dependent on anything for  the rest of my life, if I can help it.

I love this article and it gives me hope that there may be a few things I can still do to change things.


WebMD Health News

Forget the Shots: Focusing on Gut Health Can Aid Weight Loss

Debbie Koenig

https://www.medscape.com/s/viewarticle/forget-shots-focusing-gut-health-can-aid-weight-loss-2024a10003ld?ecd=mkm_ret_240310_mscpmrk_endo_obesity_etid6360686&uac=149193PV&impID=6360686>


Injectable weight loss drugs like Wegovy, Saxenda, and Zepbound have been getting all the glory lately, but they're not for everyone. If the inconvenience or cost of weight loss drugs isn't for you, another approach may be boosting your gut microbiome.

So how does one do that, and how does it work?

In theory, all you have to do is boost your gut microbiome.

"There are a lot of different factors naturally in weight gain and weight loss, so the gut microbiome is certainly not the only thing," said Chris Damman, MD, a gastroenterologist at the University of Washington. He studies how food and the microbiome affect your health. "With that caveat, it probably is playing an important role."

Trillions of Microbes

The idea that your gut is home to an enormous range of tiny organisms — microbes — has existed for more than 100 years, but only in the 21st century have scientists had the ability to delve into specifics.

We now know you want a robust assortment of microbes in your gut, especially in the lower gut, your colon. They feast on fiber from the food you eat and turn it into substances your body needs. Those substances send signals all over your body.

If you don't have enough microbes or have too many of the wrong kinds, it influences those signals, which can lead to health problems. Over the last 20 years, research has linked problems in the gut microbiome to a wide variety of conditions, including inflammatory bowel disease, autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, metabolic ones like diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, asthma, and even autism.

Thanks to these efforts, we know a lot about the interactions between your gut and the rest of your body, but we don't know exactly how many things happen — whether some teeny critters within your microbiome cause the issues or vice versa.

"That's the problem with so much of the microbiome stuff," said Elizabeth Hohmann, MD, a physician investigator at the Massachusetts General Research Institute. "Olympic athletes have a better gut microbiome than most people. Well, sure they do — because they're paying attention to their diet, they're getting enough rest. Correlation does not causation make.”

The American Diet Messes With Your Gut

If you're a typical American, you eat a lot of ultra-processed foods — manufactured with a long ingredients list that includes additives or preservatives. According to one study, those foods make up 73% of our food supply. That can have a serious impact on gut health.

"When you process a food and mill it, it turns a whole food into tiny particles," Damman said. "That makes the food highly digestible. But if you eat a stalk of broccoli, a large amount of that broccoli in the form of fiber and other things will make its way to your lower gut, where it will feed microbes."

With heavily processed foods, on the other hand, most of it gets digested before it can reach your lower gut, which leaves your microbes without the energy they need to survive.

Rosa Krajmalnik-Brown, PhD, is director of the Biodesign Center for Health Through Microbiomes at Arizona State University. Her lab has done research into how microbes use the undigested food that reaches your gut. She describes the problem with processed foods this way:

"Think about a Coke. When you drink it, all the sugar goes to your bloodstream, and the microbes in your gut don't even know you've had it. Instead of drinking a Coke, if you eat an apple or something with fiber, some will go to you and some to the microbes. You're feeding them, giving them energy.”

Weight and Your Gut Microbiome

The link between gut health and body weight has received a lot of attention. Research has shown, for example, that people with obesity have less diversity in their gut microbiome, and certain specific bacteria have been linked to obesity. In animal studies, transplanting gut microbes from obese mice to "germ-free" mice led those GF mice to gain weight. This suggests excess weight is, in fact, caused by certain microbes, but to date there's scant evidence that the same is true with humans.

Krajmalnik-Brown's group did an experiment in which they had people follow two different diets for 23 days each, with a break in between. Both provided similar amounts of calories and macronutrients each day but via different foods. The study's typical Western menu featured processed foods — think grape juice, sandwiches made with deli turkey and white bread, and spaghetti with jarred sauce and ground beef. The other menu, what researchers called a "microbiome enhancer diet," included foods like whole fruit, veggie sandwiches on multigrain buns, and steak with a side of whole wheat spaghetti.

While the study wasn't designed for weight loss, an interesting thing happened when researchers analyzed participants' bowel movements.

"We found that when you feed subjects a diet designed to provide more energy to the microbes and not to the [body], our subjects lost a little weight," Krajmalnik-Brown said. "It looks like by feeding your microbes, it seems to make people healthier and potentially even lose a little."

Another possible mechanism involves the same hormone that powers those injectable weight loss drugs. The lower part of your gut makes hormones that tell the entire gut to slow down and also help orchestrate metabolism and appetite. Among them is GLP-1. The drugs use a synthetic version, semaglutide or tirzepatide, to trigger the same effect.

According to Damman, you can stimulate your gut to make those helpful hormones with the food you eat — by giving your microbes the right fuel.

Eat to Feed Your Microbes

The foods you eat can affect your gut microbiome and so your weight. But don't go looking for that one perfect ingredient, experts warn.

"Oftentimes we get this micro-focus, is this a good food or a bad food?" warned Katie Chapmon, a registered dietitian whose practice focuses on gut health. "You just want to make sure your microbiome is robust and healthy, so it communicates that your body is running, you've got it."

Instead, try to give your body more of the kinds of food research has shown can feed your microbiome, many of which are plant-based. "Those are the things that are largely taken out during processing," Damman said. He calls them the "Four Fs":

  • Fiber: When you eat fiber-rich foods like fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, and beans, your body can't digest the fiber while it's in the upper parts of your GI tract. It passes through to your lower gut, where healthy bacteria ferment it. That produces short-chain fatty acids, which send signals throughout your body, including ones related to appetite and feeling full.
  • Phenols: Phenolic compounds are antioxidants that give plant-based foods their color — when you talk about eating the rainbow, you're talking about phenols. The microbes in your gut feed on them, too. "My goal for a meal is five distinct colors on the plate," Chapmon said. "That rounds out the bases for the different polyphenols."
  • Fermented foods: You can get a different kind of health benefit by eating food that's already fermented — like sauerkraut, kimchi, kefir, yogurt, miso, tempeh, and kombucha. Fermentation can make the phenols in foods more accessible to your body. Plus, each mouthful introduces good bacteria into your body, some of which make it down to your gut. The bacteria that are already there feed on these new strains, which helps to increase the diversity of your microbiome.
  • Healthy fats: Here, it's not so much about feeding the good bacteria in your microbiome. Damman says that omega-3 fatty acids, found in fatty fish, canola oil, some nuts, and other foodsdecrease inflammation in the lining of your gut. Plus, healthy fat sources like extra-virgin olive oil and avocados are full of phenols.

Eating for gut health isn't a magic bullet in terms of weight loss. But the benefits of a healthy gut go far beyond shedding a few pounds.

"I think we need to strive for health, not weight loss." Krajmalnik-Brown said. "Keep your gut healthy and your microbes healthy, and that should eventually lead to a healthy weight. You'll make your microbes happy, and your microbes do a lot for your health.”

SOURCES:

  • Christopher Damman, MD, clinical associate professor, Division of Gastroenterology, University of Washington Medical School, Seattle.
  • Journal of Experimental Medicine: "The gut microbiome: Relationships with disease and opportunities for therapy.”
  • Elizabeth Hohmann, MD, physician investigator, Massachusetts General Research Institute; associate professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston.
  • Rosa Krajmalnik-Brown, PhD, director, Biodesign Center for Health Through Microbiomes, Arizona State University, Phoenix.
  • World Journal of Gastroenterology: "Gut microbiota in obesity.”
  • Nature Communication: "Machine learning prediction of the degree of food processing," "Host-diet-gut microbiome interactions influence human energy balance: A randomized clinical trial.
  • Obesities: "Gut Microbiota and Obesity: The Chicken or the Egg?
  • Katie Chapmon, registered dietician, Los Angeles.
  • Foods: "Health Benefits and Side Effects of Short-Chain Fatty Acids.
  • Nutrients: "Fermented Foods, Health and the Gut Microbiome."

Friday, March 8, 2024

Why is Gut Health Important?

 

Everyone needs to understand the importance of gut health not only because there are trillions of  microbes in the gut  but because they play many roles in the body. This collection of microbes is called the microbiota and a person’s entire well-being depends on how well it functions..

The world we live in is full of microorganisms, so it’s natural that our body is home to some of them too. Human bodies carry millions of bacteria, fungi, and viruses which together create a microbiome, especially in the guts or intestines. While many of these microorganisms are associated with diseases, the majority of the ones your gut naturally supports are crucial for the proper functioning of the digestive system, the immune system, and even the nervous system.
So, keeping your gut microbiome thriving and healthy is very important for key body functions and overall health. However, there are situations where the gut microbiome can be jeopardized and its balance disrupted, which can have immense adverse effects on your health.

The microbes (gut microbiome) present in the body can also change as a person grows older. As soon as a baby enters the world, these organisms are already present. As they age, the number of microbes also increases, especially when they reach three years old. During this time, the microbiome is already similar to that of an adult.
They can also differ depending on where they thrive. The bacteria on the cheeks are different from the ones that live in the intestines, for example, the profile of the bacteria will continue to modify, but they have the tendency to dwindle in number as you age.

There is a strong connection between the gut bacteria and the Immune system. The gut flora can also influence the way the immune system behaves. These bacteria teach the immune system to learn to h. good and harmful microorganisms. This way, it doesn’t flare up or create an abnormal response every time it comes across “threats” such as dust, pollen, and other types of microbes.

The Gut Microbiome may also affect mental health.

The Effects of Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis

A study published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health in 2018 reveals that this disruption in the gut microbiota is called dysbiosis, and the condition is linked to intestinal illnesses like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), celiac disease, and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Moreover, the study shows that dysbiosis can also cause other issues like obesity, metabolic disorders, cardiovascular syndrome, allergies, and asthma. 

A 2019 study published in Nutrients shows that gut microbiota dysbiosis is now also linked to colorectal cancer, diabetes, and even neurological disorders. The study suggests that there are reciprocal interactions between gut microbiota and the brain - popularly known as the gut-brain axis - and changes in this interaction due to dysbiosis can trigger the onset of neurological issues. Overall, studies indicate that dysbiosis is a condition that can affect your health and quality of life immensely and should be prevented at all costs.

Read more here:

https://well.org/healthy-body/gut-health/ 

Emotional Detoxification:

 I have gathered information from a few sources for Emotional detoxification and the various organs and systems in the body.

I personally love Louise Hay... "How to heal your body" book.

Here is a list for you to refer to from the book and a few other resources.

Emotional Detox

Here are some emotional sources of disease:

  • Accidents - Expressions of anger, frustration, rebellion.

  • Anorexia/Bulimia - Self-hate, denial of life nourishment, "not good enough."

  • Ankles - can be related to trust issues or stability.

  • Arms - Ability to embrace, old emotions held in joints.

  • Arthritis - Pattern of critism of self and others, perfectionism.

  • Asthma - Smother-love, guilt-complex, inferiority complex.

  • Back/Upper - Not feeling supported emotionally, needing support. Back/Middle - Guilt. Back/Lower - Burnout, worry about money.

  • Breast - Mothering, over-mothering a person/thing/place/experience. Nurturing or lack thereof

  • Breast Cancer - Deep resentment attached to over-mothering.....can also be feeling associated with lack of nurturing.

  • Burns, Boils, Fevers, Itis, Sores, Swellings - Anger.

  • Cancer - Deep resentment, distrust, self-pity, hopelessness, helplessness.

  • Colon - Constipation is inability to let go, diarrhea is fear of holding.

  • Constipation - Lack of trust of having enough, hoarding.

  • Ears - Too hard to accept what is said.  Earaches - Anger.

  • Deafness - Refusal to listen.

  • Feet - Self-understanding, moving forward.

  • Fingers/Index - Ego, anger and fear. Fingers/Thumb - Worry. Fingers/Middle - Anger.  Right - A man.  Left - A woman.  Hold with other hand to release. Fingers/Ring - Unions and grief. Finger/Little - Family and pretending.

  • Genitals - Femininity or masculinity issues, rejecting sexuality, "sex is dirty", "women's bodies are unclean". Bladder Infections - Being pissed off, holding in hurts. Vaginitis - romantically hurt by a partner. Prostate - Self-worth and sexual prowess. Impotence - Fear or spite against mate. Frigidity - Fear, sexual guilt, self-disgust. PMS - Denial of female cycles or female worth. VD - Sexual guilt.

  • Hands - Holding on too tightly to money or relationships. Hands/Arthritis - Self-criticism, internalizing criticism, criticizing others.

  • Head - Us, what we show the world, something radically wrong.

  • Headaches - Invalidating the self.

  • Heart - Heart is love and blood is joy.  Heart attacks are a denial and squeezing out of love and joy.

  • Knees - Inflexibility, unable to bend, pride, ego, stubborness, fear of change, self-righteousness.

  • Legs - Fear or reluctance of moving forward, not wanting to move.  Vericose Veins - Standing where we hate.

  • Lungs - Inability to take in and give our life, denial of life.  Emphysema or too much smoking - denial of life, inferiority.

  • Migraines - Anger and perfectionism, frustration.  Masturbate to stop.

  • Neck - Flexibility issues.

  • Overweight - Needing protection, insecurity.

  • Pain - Guilt seeking punishment, notice where it manifests.

  • Sinus - Irritated by someone.

  • Skin - Threatened individuality, others have power over you.  Thin-skinned, feeling skinned alive, need self-nurturing.

  • Stiffness - Stiff Body - Stiff mind, inflexibility, fear, "only one way", resistance to change.  Where it manifests is where the pattern is.

  • Stomach - Inability to digest ideas and experiences.  Who or what can you stomach?  Fear.

  • Strokes - Negative thinking, stopping of joy, forcing change of direction.

  • Swelling - Stagnated thinking, bottled-up tears, feeling trapped.

  • Throat - Fear of change, inability to speak up, anger, frustrated creativity.  Laryngitis - too angry to speak.  Sore throat - Anger.  Tonsillitis or Thyroid - Stifled creativity, deeply stifled creativity in leukemia.

  • Tumors - False growth, tormenting an old hurt, not allowing healing.  Uterine tumors - nursing slights to femininity, misogyny.

  • Ulcers - Fear, not being good enough, lack of self-worth.

The Liver and its role in detoxification and Digestion

 

The liver is the blood purifier, the filter for the body and is very important in digestion and detoxification.  

Healthy liver detoxification pathways

Metabolic detoxification is a way to normalize the body’s metabolization of xenobiotic and endogenous compounds, while temporarily reducing incoming toxic burden.

Step 1: Toxins that are fat soluble are transported from the intestine to the liver. These can include metabolic end products, chemical pollutants and contaminants, microorganisms, food additives, drugs and medications, and alcohol.

Step 2: In the liver, toxins undergo Phase 1 detoxification to neutralize certain toxins. Phase 1, called “functionalization,” involves the release of enzymes by the liver that break down xenobiotics and produce harmful free-radicals.

Step 3: The remainder of the un- neutralized toxins moves into Phase 2 detoxification, which transforms them into water-soluble compounds. By the process of conjugation, large molecules join together with modified xenobiotics to produce harmless water-soluble substances.

Step 4: Newly transformed toxins are then transported to either the kidneys, where they are excreted in the urine; or to the gallbladder, where they are eventually excreted via the feces in Phase 3 of detoxification. Phase 3 relies on the pH scale (acid-to-alkaline ratio). The proper pH level is more alkaline than acid (pH at 7 or above).

Unhealthy liver detoxification pathways

In an unhealthy liver, toxins cannot be detoxified at the rate they are brought to the liver. Phase 1 occurs too quickly for conversion to Phase 2. In this case, toxins build up and recirculate in the blood, contributing to long-term poor health. These un-neutralized, fat-soluble toxins can be stored in body tissues such as fat, the brain, and the nervous system, causing systemic symptoms.

There are many different ways to up regulate liver function as well as some liver cleanses. We are familiar and have tried several of these methods and offer valuable guidance. Please do not hesitate to contact us for more information.  naturalhealthhaven@gmail.com 763 607 2560

Vegetables and herbs that support liver function:

  • Milk thistle

  • Dandelion

  • Beets and beet greens

  • Himalayan Liver care

Friday, March 1, 2024

Natural Oven Cleaner (DoTerra)

 

Natural Oven Cleaner


Cleaning out the oven is one of those dreaded chores that we tend to put off for as 

long as possible. Burnt-on food, stains, and unpleasant smells can make cleaning 

the oven a dreaded event. For a simple and natural solution, try this Oven Cleaner 

DIY with Lemon essential oil. 


Ingredients
½ cup baking soda
1 tablespoon coarse salt
¼ cup liquid dish soap 
5 drops Lemon essential oil


Instructions

  1. Combine ingredients to make a thick paste
  2. Apply a generous layer to the inside of the oven and allow to sit for several 
  3. hours.
  4. Clean out with a sponge.
Please use this link if you wish to order any of these amazing Oils. I personally love 
DoTerra and their philosophy. They give back to all the communities where they 
source the oils and the quality of the oils is beyond reproach.

Thursday, February 29, 2024

Conversations from the Universe

 Talking to the Universe/source/God/Creator whatever you wish to call it has always been interesting to me. I do it on a daily basis and I read many books that discuss reading the signs all around us and what it means to be in alignment with Source etc. The Power of Now by Eckard Toll and more...

We are a part of Universe/creator and everything we do is meant to be an expression of the divinity of creator. 

No matter how much we read or study regarding this, there is no better way to integrate and understand it than to feel it within your body, to sense it at a deep level. I have always heard this from different teachers and spiritual Masters and know it to be true from personal experience.

You do not know how much someone hurts from the death of a pet or loved one or from pain until you experience it. This experience allows you to have more empathy and compassion for those around you.

I am saying all this to get to the discoveries I have made this week and I may or may not be able to do it justice with words...

I did my usual Body and Brain class.  This consisted of moving my body, improving my mobility and flexibility of both body and brain. I love brain training days. We came to the meditation part of class and I was in a primed position to receive the communication from the Universe: Master Hong (our teacher) led us through the experience of breathing in and out and sensing the energy between your palms (held in front of chest a few inches apart) as you move them close together and then apart. I felt the warmth and pressure between my palms. We were then guided to place our hands on either side of our head and move them closer and further apart too. Whilst envisioning that we are stretching and contracting our brain. (what you can imagine and conceive you can create...this is how Universal energy works)

Then we took our energetic brains out of our skull and continued to expand and contract the energy/brain. What happened next was profoundly experiential for me. We were told to expand the energy by moving our hands as far apart as they wanted to go and imagine that we are stepping inside this energy brain. Inside this brain you can see all the neurons and tendril and inner workings of the brain and it was wonderful. (being in healthcare and having seen many pictures and videos of the brain, I had a pretty clear visual) And then we were guided to see the brain observing the body inside itself and then brain inside the body.

I totally got it...observing myself as the brain and observing the brain inside of me, observing me. Eckard Toll always talks about being present and being the observer and I work at this daily. To feel it so profoundly in my body was phenomenal.  

The next morning I got up to do my meditation and read a piece by Dr David R Hawkins (Daily Reflection) and it was another message felt in my body and recognized by my soul:

"a useful approach is to let the love of God replace the willfulness the is driving the seeking. One can release all desire to seek and realize that the thought that there is anything else than God is a baseless vanity. This is the same vanity that claims authorship for one's experiences, thoughts, and actions. With reflection, it can be seen that both the body and the mind are the result of the innumerable conditions of the universe, and that one is at best the witness of this concordance"

I'm not sure if you can see or integrate what this message is saying. I certainly felt it. We are all one. One energy and that energy is Source energy...we are the Universe and the Universe is in us.  And for me, the thoughts that we think are all from our pre-programming and from the Universal thought stream and we just resonate with it and there it is. Same goes for our actions, they are derived from the thoughts we think are ours etc. etc.

Boy, I'm sure I've lost some of you and this is a rabbit hole and I am probably not explaining this very well. It is sometimes challenging to put into words the feelings of the energy that hits you when you hear the conversation from the Universe meant for you in that moment.

Good luck with your conversations with the Universe/Source/Creator and continue to expand your understanding of how it all works, I sure am.

And incase no-one has told you: YOU are perfect just the way you are and YOU are lovable!



Monday, February 26, 2024

10 ways to live consciously

 

Friday, February 23, 2024

Healthy lifestyle and its impact on cognition later in life.

 

Healthy Lifestyle Linked to Better Cognition in Later Life

Eve Bender

February 08, 2024


Leading a healthy lifestyle, including regular exercise, eating fruits and vegetables, and minimal alcohol consumption, is associated with better cognitive function in older adults, according to new research published in JAMA Neurology.

The study, which combined longitudinal and cohort data with postmortem brain pathology reports, found that the association held even in those with Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology, suggesting that lifestyle factors may provide cognitive reserve and improve cognitive abilities in older age.

"While we must use caution in interpreting our findings, in part due to its cross-sectional design, these results support the role of lifestyle in providing cognitive reserve to maintain cognitive function in older adults despite the accumulation of common dementia-related brain pathologies," Klodian Dhana, MD, of the Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, Illinois, and colleagues wrote.

The study was published online on February 5, 2024 in JAMA Neurology. <https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaneurology/article-abstract/2814688>

Better Cognition

The study included 586 participants (71% female) who were followed from 1997 until 2022 as part of the Rush Memory and Aging Project longitudinal cohort study.

Investigators collected information on lifestyle and demographic factors at regular intervals, as well as information on diet, alcohol intake, and time spent participating in moderate or vigorous physical activity such as gardening, walking, calisthenics, biking, or swimming. Participants also received annual cognitive tests.

In later years, participants answered questions about whether they played card games or checkers, read, visited a museum, or did other cognitively stimulating activities.

Postmortem exams allowed the researchers to assess brain pathology (mean age at death, 91 years).

Participants were categorized as living a healthy lifestyle if they scored well in five categories: They exercised moderately or vigorously for 150 minutes per week, did not smoke, consumed one to two drinks per week, regularly played card games or did puzzles, and followed the Mediterranean-DASH Diet Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay diet.

For every one-point increase in the healthy lifestyle score, there were 0.120 fewer units of beta-amyloid load in the brain and a 0.22 standardized unit higher score in cognitive performance (P < .001).

After adjusting for the beta-amyloid load, phosphorated tau tangle, or other dementia-related brain pathologies, the healthy lifestyle score remained independently associated with cognition (P < .001).

More than 88% of a person's global cognition score was a "direct association of lifestyle," investigators noted, leaving slightly less than 12% affected by the presence of beta-amyloid.

"The mechanistic link between lifestyle and cognition could be attributed in part to the antioxidant and anti-inflammatory capacities of each lifestyle factor (eg, nutrition and physical activity) and cognitive reserve (eg, cognitive activities) that contribute to less inflammation and oxidative stress," the authors wrote.

Further studies are necessary, they added, especially research investigating the association of lifestyle factors with markers for inflammation to understand the mechanisms of how lifestyle is associated with better cognitive scores in old age.

Study limitations include the reliance on self-reported data because cognitive impairment could interfere with inaccurate reporting. In addition, the authors noted that cognitive abilities may affect adherence to lifestyle factors.

'Important Evidence'

In an accompanying editorial, Yue Leng, MD, and Kristine Yaffe, MD, of the University of San Francisco in San Francisco, California, noted that the new study adds "important evidence" to the debate over modifiable risk factors and reduction of AD risk.

"These interesting results add strength to the concept that health and lifestyle factors are important strategies for prevention and suggest that several mechanisms may be at work," they wrote, adding that the study is "one of the first to harness brain pathology to investigate these mechanisms and is a crucial step forward in addressing these important questions."

Still, critical questions remain regarding the mechanistic pathways linking modifiable risk factors and cognitive aging, Leng and Yaffe wrote.

"There is an urgent need for more well-designed randomized controlled trials to pave the way for dementia risk reduction in the era of precision medicine," they wrote. "These strategies should be offered in conjunction with AD medications, similar to the approach in cardiovascular disease prevention and treatment in which medications along with lifestyle strategies are the standard of care."

The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging. Dhana reported grants paid to his institution from the Alzheimer's Association. No other disclosures were reported.



The Importance of Napping

 The Daily Om....

I love this article and thought I would share it for those who love napping and feel guilty about it.

My hubby loves naps and he never feels bad about it, I on the other hand keep thinking about all the other things I could have should be doing. I am also working on that should aspect.

So, may you all feel free to enjoy your naps from now on and may you feel rejuvenated after.


Monday, January 29, 2024

Allowing others to be

 This can be challenging for most of us...

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

What's with the energy?

 I'm not sure if I am alone in this but the energy feels crazy right now. There are days where I feel like I am losing my mind. Am I doing the right things? Why do I feel so Blah? Why am I struggling to stay motivated, focused and productive. 

Why do I feel so disconnected from my intuition and Source. This is such a rollercoaster. Finding a routine or practice that works and serves me seems to be so illusive. 

As you can see, I am all over the place and business seems to reflect this. It is always fascinating and amazing to me that I can truly see the reflection of my state of energy in how my business shifts and changes.

I am feeling somewhat lost, like walking through a thick mist without being able to see the way. Each step uncertain and clouded. It is easy for me to feel totally overwhelmed and frozen. This feeling is so foreign, especially after the certainty that I felt around Fall of last year.

I am undergoing a huge shift? OR am I??  The end off last year brought a whole lot of change and challenges and healing ceremonies. I was so sure that after all of that I would have a clearer direction and now, here I sit, wondering: What the F*$k? My schedule of working out and being outside was disrupted. I was allowed very little activity as my body healed and I had no idea how much this would affect everything. I watched as my diet changed and I started eating more sugar and missing meals, and I felt helpless in that too. I am not eating like I used to and I just feel off. 

Now many may say: "well, hell yeah, if your diet is off track then it is not surprising you feel off" and then throw in menopause...that's a whole minefield of it's own. Talk about your body and mind being hijacked!

I know that I should probably know better and have so many tools to help. I am not feeling up to a deep investigation of what to do and how to eat and what supplements to take. It all seems like too much. I am not feeling disciplined or motivated enough to go through a cleanse or a strict dietary schedule, and yet, is that exactly what I need? 

I am rambling and probably just going around in circles and confusing myself even more.

Like I said, what's with the energy? or is it just my energy? 

Taking my own advice, maybe I just need to put one foot in front of the other right now and focus on one thing at a time. Make sure I move my body in some way every day. Find time to meditate and hibernate a little? Find some joy in the moments, even if I feel like I'm a little crazy.


Boy, I appreciate those who read this whole lot of nothing.  Been a while since I just typed whatever was on my mind and I'm too afraid to even read through this as I am sure I Would not post it if I did.

Thank you!


Tuesday, January 16, 2024

What's the disease burden from Plastic Exposure?

 Medscape Medical News...

What's the Disease Burden From Plastic Exposure?


Liam Davenport | January 11, 2024


Exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) via daily use of plastics is a major contributor to the overall disease burden in the United States and the associated costs to society amount to more than 1% of the gross domestic product, revealed a large-scale analysis.

The research, published in the Journal of the Endocrine Society on January 11, 2024 indicated that taken together, the disease burden attributable to EDCs used in the manufacture of plastics added up to almost $250 billion in 2018 alone.

"The diseases due to plastics run the entire life course from preterm birth to obesity, heart disease, and cancers," commented lead author Leonardo Trasande, MD, MPP, Jim G. Hendrick, MD Professor of Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, in a release.

"Our study drives home the need to address chemicals used in plastic materials" through global treaties and other policy initiatives, he said, so as to "reduce these costs" in line with reductions in exposure to the chemicals.

Co-author Michael Belliveau, Executive Director at Defend Our Health in Portland, ME, agreed, saying: "We can reduce these health costs and the prevalence of chronic endocrine diseases such as diabetes and obesity if governments and companies enact policies that minimize exposure to EDCs to protect public health and the environment."

Plastics may contain any one of a number of EDCs, such as polybrominated diphenylethers in flame retardant additives, phthalates in food packaging, bisphenols in can linings, and perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in nonstick cooking utensils.

These chemicals have been shown to leach and disturb the body's hormone systems, increasing the risk for cancer, diabetes, reproductive disorders, neurological impairments in developing fetuses and children, and even death.

In March 2022, the United Nations Environment Assembly committed to a global plastics treaty to "end plastic pollution and forge an international legally binding agreement by 2024" that "addresses the full lifecycle of plastic, including its production, design and disposal."

Minimizing EDC Exposure

But what can doctors tell their patients today to help them reduce their exposure to EDCs?

"There are safe and simple steps that people can take to limit their exposure to the chemicals of greatest concern," Trasande told Medscape Medical News.

This can be partly achieved by reducing plastic use down to its essentials. "To use an example, when you are flying, fill up a stainless steel container after clearing security. At home, use glass or stainless steel" rather than plastic bottles or containers.

In particular, "avoiding microwaving plastic is important," Trasande said, "even if a container says it's microwave-safe."

He warned that "many chemicals used in plastic are not covalently bound, and heat facilitates leaching into food. Microscopic contaminants can also get into food when you microwave plastic."

Trasande also suggests limiting canned food consumption and avoiding cleaning plastic food containers in machine dishwashers.

Calculating the Disease Burden

To accurately assess the "the tradeoffs involved in the ongoing reliance on plastic production as a source of economic productivity," the current researchers calculated the attributable disease burden and cost related to EDCs used in plastic materials in the United States in 2018.

Building on previously published analyses, they used industry reports, publications by national and international governing bodies, and peer-reviewed publications to determine the usage of each type of EDC and its attributable disease and disability burden.

This plastic-related fraction (PRF) of disease burden was then used to calculate an updated cost estimate for each EDC, based on the assumption that the disease burden is directly proportional to its exposure.

They found that for bisphenol A, 97.5% of its use, and therefore its estimated PRF of disease burden, was related to the manufacture of plastics, while this figure was 98%-100% for phthalates. For PDBE, 98% of its use was in plastics vs 93% for PFAS.

The researchers then estimated that the total plastic-attributable disease burden in the United States in 2018 cost the nation $249 billion, or 1.22% of the gross domestic product. Of this, $159 billion was linked to PDBE exposure, which is associated with diseases such as cancer.

Moreover, $1.02 billion plastic-attributable disease burden was associated with bisphenol A exposure, which can have potentially harmful health effects on the immune system; followed by $66.7 billion due to phthalates, which are linked to preterm birth, reduced sperm count, and childhood obesity; and $22.4 billion due to PFAS, which are associated with kidney failure and gestational diabetes.

The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Passport Foundation.

Trasande declared relationships with Audible, Houghton Mifflin, Paidos, and Kobunsha, none of which relate to the present manuscript.

No other financial relationships were declared.