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Saturday, April 23, 2011

Bach Flowers

Bach flower remediesImage via WikipediaMost people have never heard of Bach flowers, but I use this homeopathic remedy quite often in my counseling practice.  It is a very powerful remedy to use in dealing with the background noise of our emotions as we move through life.  Homeopathic remedies have been around for many, many years but because we are so much more used to pharmaceuticals, when someone gives us a more natural kind of remedy we either don't understand it or we take it and expect it to work like an aspirin or an anti-depressant and when it doesn't we assume it didn't work.  Bach flower remedies are similar to homeopathic remedies in many ways, however they are produced differently than homeopathics and are not depending on the theory of successive dilutions.  Therefore, although they are considered homeopathic, they are not true homeopathic remedies.

Dr. Edward Bach is the man attributed to the development of this homeopathic treatment.  Dr Bach received his formalized medical education at Birmingham University and at University College Hospital in London.  However the more he practiced, the more he observed that there was a relationship between chronic disease and intestinal poisons.  He also believed that a patient deserved individual treatment rather than a mass remedy for a certain disease.  In 1924 he wrote a paper entitled "Intestinal toxemia and its Relations to Cancer" which is what eventually led to his interest in botanicals and finding natural substances to treat disease.

Old homeopathic remediesImage via Wikipedia"In 1928, Bach found the first of these remedies, noting that the vibrations of seaweed had almost the same vibrations of the dysentery-type of virus.  He noted that using his remedies in a homeopathic potentizing method left the remedy with a positive polarity while a reverse polarity was required to be associated with the disease.  After observing the dew on the plants he was using, Bach collected the dew and found that the sun had naturally potentized the dew and that it had the reverse polarity he needed.  Thus, he had discovered the process to be used in most of his remedies-simple water, heat (sun) and a botanical flower.  He noted that the strongest power of the plant was in the flower.......


.....Most amazing was his understanding of the mind and that the mind controlled the physical.  By simply normalizing the mind, a sick body would correct its own infections.  Bach was a student of people and an observer of the sick.  His observations lead him to classify individuals into personality groups.  Bach found that when the personality is treated, the body is able to correct physical problems in a natural way, without the aid of chemical medicines."   (excerpt taken from Dr. Edward Bach: A History) 


I find the most effective use of Bach Flower therapy is when someone is dealing with so many emotions that have built up over time and have not been resolved.  It is much easier to deal with present day problems when you are only dealing with the emotions from present day.  However, often we find ourselves dealing with emotions from past hurts, grief and loss that has been with us for awhile and it feels something like background noise.  We get used to it, but it is hard to hear specifics through.  Sometimes those emotions come to us from past trauma that we don't remember, but yet the emotional echo is still reverberating in our physical bodies.  Finding the correct flower remedy that will treat those background emotions brings a lot of relief to an individual.

Figure 15 from Charles Darwin's The Expression...Image via WikipediaBach Flower therapies are also used with animals, especially shelter animals.  Shelter animals have been subjected to a lot of trauma.  They are suffering loss that can become depression if they have been lost, their owners have not been able to keep them or the trauma of being a stray - wandering, being hungry and dealing with human beings who don't want them on their property.  Although in these cases, the therapies often need to be re-applied consistently, animals are among the best patients and respond quite well to these natural remedies.  When I give them to my animals, I often put them in their water, or apply them topically on their paws or on the back of their necks.

Some of the best reasons to choose homeopathic remedies include:

  1. Homeopathy has no side effects
  2. These remedies have no drug or food interaction, are safe and gentle
  3. Homeopathic remedies never interfere with presently taken medications
  4. Homeopathic remedies are approved by the FDA and have never had any application taken off the market
  5. Remedies have long shelf lives and can be used well beyond the expiration dates required by the FDA
  6. Remedies have no allergic properties so can be taken by anyone
  7. Remedies properly matched to the particular emotional responses are very effective.  If not properly matched, they simply do nothing.  
Bach Flower remedies can be taken in water, as mints, in cream form that is applied to the skin and work equally well in each format.  Most remedies such as "Rescue Remedy" or "Calming Essence" are used to alleviate emotions dealing with fear or anxiety, but depending on what is causing the fear or anxiety, there can be more effective remedy compilations custom made which target the specific underlying emotional motivators.  

In my experience dealing with the different emotions and where you find them in the physical body, then alleviating some of the underlying feelings can bring a certain amount of healing to the individual organs that are affected by the emotion.  For example, in sexually abused females, we often find a higher occurrence of bladder infections.  A correlation could be made between the emotion of feeling stuck, having a paralyzed will because of the control that comes from sexual abuse and the bladder because the bladder is where that emotion is often localized.  It has been my observation that when this trauma is dealt with effectively, the number of bladder infections will tend to decrease or go away altogether.  Effective therapy can come from a combination of spiritual comfort, counseling, trauma therapy and/or homeopathic remedies; however when I have combined counseling therapies with the Bach flower therapy I have often found it to be very effective. 

There are 38 original Bach remedies plus the five flower remedy used for anxiety.  Each of these remedies is prescribed for certain mental and emotional problems, forming a complete therapeutic system.  If you have never tried these remedies, I would encourage you to speak with a knowledgeable person and find out more about how they could help you in your healing journey.  


Sunday, April 10, 2011

Water is More Important Than You Might Think

Up To 60%Image by Cayusa via FlickrOne of the things that I have been encouraged to do with this blog is to bring you information from resources that I have come across and found useful.  I am the first one to admit that I don't know everything, but what I am good at is gathering information in the form of books, articles and studies that I often refer to if the topics warrant it.  This is one of those references that I'd like to share with my readers.  To begin, here are a few facts about water that I've found over the course of my study:

  • Approximately 85% of your brain, 80% of your blood and 70% of your muscle is water
  • At birth, water accounts for approximately 80 percent of an infant's body weight
  • A person deprived of water will die in 60 to 80 hours.
  • Our brain is over 80water and controls each and every process that happens inside of our body.
  • The average adult must replace the ~10 cups (80 oz) of water it loses each day through perspiration, the kidney/bladder system, bowel movements and the respiratory system (which must be moist or breathing would be painful)
  • Water adjusts the body's temperature and assists in digestion.  
  • Because of the neutral pH level of water, it assists in helping the body maintain a healthy pH level. The human blood has a natural pH of about 7.4. The human body cannot survive if the pH of their human blood drops to 7 or rises to 7.8! So the body has natural buffers it uses to keep the blood within these narrow limits. Hint: your bones (including your teeth) are mostly calcium--an alkaline substance. So if your body gets too acidic, it leaches the calcium from your bones creating tooth decay and bone loss. Increased storage of fat and water retention is also a way your body protects itself. To get to your ideal weight--alkalize.
  • Drink 1/2 your body weight of water in ounces, daily.
  • Use 1/4 tsp of salt for every quart of water you drink.  As long as you drink the water, you can use the salt (non-refined, sea salt only - table salt or sodium chloride is undigestible)
  • Every 6 oz of caffeine or alcohol consumed requires an additional 10-12 oz of water to re-hydrate you.  Caffeine and alcohol dehydrate the body.
  • If you have diabetes, sugar concentration happens to your blood when you're dehydrated. Because your blood is 83% water, when you lose water, the volume of blood decreases and the sugar remains the same. More concentrated blood sugar means higher blood sugars.
  • In the elderly, it is very important to make sure they remain hydrated.  Dehydration can result in blood pressure problems, dizziness and falls.  

Although there is a lot of information out there about how water is used in the body and why we need it, do we really understand what dehydration looks like.  Yes, severe dehydration we can usually recognize, but what if we are a little dehydrated?  

Cover of Cover of Your Body's Many Cries for WaterSeveral years ago I came across a book titled, "Your Body's Many Cries for Water".  I thought it was a very good resource and I wanted to share some of its information with you.  Although the book calls many of these things cures and preventions...which I don't quarrel with...I also see these different symptoms as what happens as our body experiences different levels of dehydration.  

  • WATER PREVENTS AND RELIEVES HEARTBURN:  Heartburn is a signal of water shortage in the upper part of the gastrointestinal tract.  It is a major thirst signal of the human body.  The use of antacids or tablet medications in the treatment of this pain does not correct dehydration, and the body continues to suffer as a result of its water shortage.   
  • WATER PREVENTS ARTHRITIS:  rheumatoid joint pain - arthritis - is a signal of water shortage in the painful joint.  It can affect the young as well as the old.  The use of pain-killers does not cure the problem, but exposes the person to further damage from pain medications.  Intake of water and small amounts of salt will cure this problem.  
  • BACK PAIN:  Low back pain and ankylosing arthritis of the spine are signs of water shortage in the spinal coumn and discs - the water cushions that support the weight of the body.  These conditions should be treated with increased water intake - not a commercial treatment, but a very effective one.  NOTE:  This is one that I can personally acknowledge - I have had lower back pain for many years but once I increased my water intake significantly, the back pain disappeared.  
  • ANGINA:  Heart pain - angina - is a sign of water shortage in the heart/lung axis.  It should be treated with increased water intake until the patient is free of pain and independent of medications.  Medical supervision is prudent.  However, increased water intake is angina's cure.
  • MIGRAINES:  Migraine headache is a sign of water need by the brain and the eyes.  It will totally clear up if dehydration is prevented from establishing in the body.  The type of dehydration that causes migraine might eventually cause inflammation of the back of the eye and possibly loss of eye sight.
  • COLITIS:  Colitis pain is a signal of water shortage in the large gut.  It is associated with constipation because the large intestine constricts to squeeze the last drop of water from the excrements - thus the lack of water lubrication.
  • ASTHMA:  Asthma, which also affects 14 million children and kills several thousand of them every year, is a complication of dehydration in the body.  It is caused by the drought management programs of the body.  In asthma, free passage of air is obstructed so that water does not leave the body in the form of vapor - the winter steam.  Increased water intake will prevent asthma attacks.  Asthmatics need also to take more salt to break the mucus plugs in the lungs that obstruct the free flow of air in and out of the air sacs.
  • HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE:  Hypertension is a state of adaptation of the body to a generalized drought, when there is not enough water to fill all the blood vessels that diffuse water into vital cells.  As part of the mechanism of reverse osmosis, when water from the blood serum is filtered and injected into important cells through minute holes in their membraines, extra pressure is needed for the "injection process."  Just as we inject I.V. "water" in hospitals, so the body injects water into tens of trillions of cells all at the same time.  Water and some salt intake will bring blood pressure back to normal.
  • ADULT-ONSET DIABETES:  Adult-onset diabetes is another adaptive state to severe dehydration of the human body.  To have adequate water in circulation and for the brain's priority water needs, the release of insulin is inhibited to prevent insulin from pushing water into all body cells.  In diabetes, only some cells get survival rations of water.  Water and some salt will reverse adult-onset diabetes in its early stages.
  • CHOLESTEROL:  High cholesterol levels are an indicator of early drought management by the body.  Cholesterol is clay-like material that is poured in the gaps of some cell membraines to safeguard them against losing their vital water content to the osmotically more powerful blood circulating in their vicinity.  Cholesterol, apart from being used to manufacture nerve cell membranes and hormones, is also used as a "shield" against water taxation of other vital cells that would normally exchange water through their cell membranes.
  • DEPRESSION, LOSS OF LIBIDO, CHRONIC FATIGUE SYNDROME, LUPUS, MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS, MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY are conditions caused by prolonged chronic dehydration.  They will clear up once the body becomes well and regularly hydrated.  In these conditions, exercising one's muscles should be part of the treatment program.  
With this information, you can begin to do your own research regarding water and how increasing your intake significantly can benefit your health.  More information can be found at www.watercure.com   Dr. Batmanghelidj has researched this field of study for many years and I believe he is a reliable source of information.  Please check out his website on your journeys around the web and see what you can learn.  Clean, pure water is a very inexpensive way to improve and maintain health.  It's worth looking in to!

Blessings to you as you seek out your health!

If you are looking for a good source for high quality and/or whole food supplements, please go to Supplements For Living Well  on the web.  

Sunday, April 3, 2011

The Most Important Key in Maintaining Good Health

As I was taking my daily walk, I began thinking about some of the things that I wanted to share with my readers today.  It always amazes me with regard to complexity and wondrous ability the physical body has to just go through its day to day functioning.  I reflected back on all the studying that I have done over the last four or five years in the natural health field. I remembered different books that I've read, lessons that I've learned and people that I've learned from, but what has impressed me most is the incredible capacity that the human body has to simply live.  Our bodies have been programmed on many levels to stay healthy...in fact there was a quote that I read at one point which stated that if the body is allowed to do what it is created to do, you can't beat health off with a stick!  So if that is the case, then why do we get sick?

In all reality, our bodies are very complex chemical laboratories which have one purpose...to live and to do whatever is necessary in order to maintain homeostasis.  Our bodies have redundant back up systems that kick in when our primary systems are compromised; they regulate minute changes in hormone levels, changes in brain chemistry and digestion...however even with that said, when our bodies have to go to those back up systems, it is not without a price.

But as I thought back over so much of my life and how often I never thought about the impact that certain behaviors would have on my health, in the whole scheme of things, the primary tool that I realized we have been given to remain in good health is something that we don't think about very often.  It works behind the scenes and we hardly aware of its existence until it is overwhelmed....that tool is our IMMUNE SYSTEM.

Our immune system is as important to our good health and longevity as oil is to an automobile.  It is the system the good Lord gave us to fight off the many germs, bacteria and viruses that are in the environment we live in.  We don't think about it, but when we overload our bodies with toxins and negative emotions, don't give it the proper rest or nutrition, don't drink enough water or exercise enough, we begin to overload our immune system...creating an environment that it cannot overcome, resulting in disease and sickness.  If our immune systems are operating at peak efficiency, we can fend off a host of diseases and stay healthy.  Although you don't think that a public health organization would recognize something that the natural health community has been aware of for many years, I was amazed to read that even the Center for Disease Control has begun to link disease with the emotions related to stress. “Up to 90 percent of the doctor visits in the USA may be triggered by a stress-related illness.”  


If we maintain a healthy immune system, we can avoid many of the diseases that lead to difficulty later in life.  Diseases like cancer, high blood pressure, diabetes and heart disease can be avoided if we do what we need to do to keep our immune system healthy.  So...you may be asking...what are the things that I can watch for to maintain my immune system? Here is a list of things that you can research.  I have provided the links to good articles and from there you can search in other places to increase your understanding of this subject.  This is not an exhaustive list, but it will give you a good start.   

  • Stress -The body responds to stress by releasing stress hormones, such as epinephrine (also called adrenaline) and cortisol (also called hydrocortisone). The body produces these stress hormones to help a person react to a situation with more speed and strength. Stress hormones increase blood pressure, heart rate, and blood sugar levels. Small amounts of stress are believed to be beneficial, but chronic (persisting or progressing over a long period of time) high levels of stress are thought to be harmful (1).

  • Port-8Image via WikipediaAnger - A study from Harvard School of Public Health studied hostility in men and found that those with higher rates of hostility not only had poorer pulmonary functioning (breathing problems), but experienced higher rates of decline as they aged.  
  • Ruminating - Rumination is comprised of two separate variables - reflection and brooding.  The reflection part of rumination can actually be somewhat helpful - reflecting on a problem can lead you to a solution.  Also, reflecting on certain events can help you process strong emotions associated with the issue.  however, rumination in general, and brooding in particular, are associated with less proactive behavior and more of a negative mood.  


  • TomatoImage via WikipediaNon Processed FoodsMany high quality, non-processed foods are both inexpensive and highly nutritious, while others do cost a bit more but can go a long way toward healing your body of chronic inflammation and boosting your immune system naturally, without resorting to either supplements or drugs.
  • Chronic Inflammation:  According to Donnie Yance, clinical master herbalist and certified nutritionist, chronic conditions such as cancer and cardiovascular disease have a strong link with chronic inflammation, which promotes the production of free radicals
  • Dietary Guidelines:  a good diet that consists of whole food, low toxicity and promotes a more alkaline pH level will help to avoid many of the obstacles that lead to ill health.  Eating smart and eating with the goal of good health in mind helps to minimize the obstacles many individuals build up over a lifetime of creating acidity in their bodies.
Scripture also has a lot to say about health and maintaining our bodies so that we can fulfill our life purpose.  Here are a few scriptures taken from the book of Proverbs:
  •  Proverbs 14: 30                                                                                                                          A calm and undisturbed mind and heart are the life and health of the body, but envy, jealousy and wrath are as rottenness of the bones.
  • Proverbs 13: 12                                                                                              Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but when the desire is fulfilled, it is a tree of life.
  • Proverbs 3: 7-8
          Be not wise in your own eyes; reverently fear and worship the Lord, and turn [entirely] away         from evil.  It shall be health to your nerves and sinews, and marrow and moistening to your bones.
A scanning electron microscope image of normal...Image via Wikipedia
  • Proverbs 16: 24

          Pleasant words are as a honeycomb, sweet to the mind and healing to the body.

  • Proverbs 17: 22

          A happy heart is a good medicine and a cheerful mind works healing, but a broken spirit dries the bones.


I believe that the side of good health which can be gained from attitude and a hopeful, positive mental state can be summed up in this verse, which is one of my favorites:

 Icon from Nuvola icon theme for KDE 3.x.Image via Wikipedia
Philippians 4:8 Finally, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is of good repute, if there is any excellence and if anything worthy of praise, dwell on these things.

Hopefully this information has provided you a good start to an overall healthy lifestyle.  Often, making changes like this is easier said than done, but it is important to remember that a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.  Small, consistent changes over time will result in reaching a goal of good health.  I wish you all the best as you begin and maintain your journey.


Sunday, March 20, 2011

Vitamin D3, It Just Isn't About Milk Anymore

Now that we are approaching Spring, it seems that I am reading more and more articles about the benefits of Vitamin D.  It makes me wonder why the articles are coming out now, rather than during the Fall or Winter months when most people really need to increase their intake of Vitamin D3.  I suppose the answer to that would be that in Spring we tend to see more sunlight and sunlight is a natural source of Vitamin D.  Vitamin D is a fat-soluable vitamin, with its main role to help the body absorb calcium.  


According to the Environmental Illness Resource (www.ei-resource.org):


"The less sunlight you are exposed to during the winter month, the more likely you are to develop SAD to some degree. This is because sunlight helps to regulate a multitude of hormones and neurotransmitters that control the body clock and have strong effects on mood and behaviour. Two of the main players are melatonin and serotonin. When the sun goes down the pineal gland signals the production of melatonin to increase, which in turn signals the body that it is time to sleep. In the morning when sunlight enters the eye, the pineal gland signals production of melatonin to decrease and that of serotonin to increase. Serotonin wakes us up and keeps us in a good mood, bringing emotional stability and allowing us to see the sunny side of life! Sunlight hitting bare skin is also very important. The body requires sunlight on the skin to be able to produce vitamin D, which has important mood modulating properties of its own, as well as playing a role in influencing other important chemicals."


Vitamin D therefore has a big part in regulating our emotional well being and in turn, our outlook on life.  The farther away from the equator we live, the less sunlight we are exposed to.  Yes, ordinarily when we grow up in a certain environment we become acclimated to that place but in this day and age people move frequently and often move great distances which has an effect on their bodies.  For example, I had a friend once who moved to Eastern Washington from Georgia, where he had lived all his life.  Within three years he decided to move back to Georgia because he could not acclimate to the dry climate.  He didn't like the dry skin, his sinuses were dry and he was sick quite often.  Now, when I go to Georgia or Florida or anywhere on the South Eastern coast, I literally suffer extensively from the high humidity and heat because I live and have grown up in a much more dry climate.  I can't imagine that I would even last a year, let alone three years in a climate like that.  It is the same with sunlight.  There are those who need the sunlight extensively so migrate South in the wintertime if they live in the Northern parts of the United States.  With the advancement of light technology, others purchase light boxes and spend time with them each day in order to increase their production of Vitamin D.  The older we get, the more we need to pay attention to our exposure to sunlight since we tend to be inside more due to work, illness or disabilities as we age.


Healthy levels of Vitamin D help fight off depression and inadvertently help with anxiety as well.  The reason I say inadvertently is due to its effects on blood sugar, which when high can increase levels of anxiety.  Our bodies are extremely complex creations and the combination of what is necessary to keep them functioning precludes the idea that vitamins, minerals and other forms of supplementation tend to work in a vacuum.  One thing effects another which effects another.  Although I support the use of supplements, my main caution to my readers would be to ask this question:  Why do I need the supplement?  We tend to be a pill popping population and don't ask why we need to take them.  In optimum health, our bodies work quite well and if they don't, there is a reason.  Treating the symptom isn't always the first course of action.  The first thing to ask is why is my body behaving like this?  


Healthy blood calcium levels are also maintained through healthy levels of Vitamin D in the body.  Blood calcium levels effect the nervous system, blood pH,  bone density and enable the body to use calcium efficiently.  Our bodies are programmed to live and they have many backup systems that kick in when things go wrong.  For example, when we eat a diet high in the wrong kinds of fats, if we don't eat enough fruits and vegetables, it puts stress on the liver and the gall bladder.  If the gall bladder doesn't have the proper amount of plant sodium (not sodium chloride or table salt) it is unable to keep the pH levels in our digestive tract at the proper levels.  The backup system for that is to pull calcium from the bones...which eventually leads to osteoporosis.  So, when one has osteoporosis, it is not necessarily a lack of calcium, it can be a lack of plant sodium which we can get from any celery stick, which then results in calcium loss to the largest calcium holding organ in the body...the skeleton.  The question of why is an important one because if you understand why something is happening, you can get to the appropriate cause and correct it.  


As mentioned above, Vitamin D3 has an effect on blood sugar.  Although it seems that more research needs to be done on this subject, it is suggested that there is a correlation between the level of vitamin D3 in a person's body and glucose tolerance and/or insulin secretion, especially when they are diabetic.  


Tender Dawn Sunlight and LeavesImage by Pink Sherbet Photography via FlickrSo where do we get Vitamin D3?  The most obvious place is from the sun.  We want to work with our body's natural mechanisms as much as possible.  When we are outside, we are exposed to the sun and most likely we are moving our bodies which is healthy as well.  Why do you think that there is a correlation between how much we exercise and how strong our bones are?  It is because when we have healthy Vitamin D3 levels promoted by sunlight, calcium is more efficiently appropriated by our body and our bones become healthier.  Take a hint from our feline friends....they make an appointment with a sunny spot several times a day and you don't hear about cats with osteoporosis.  I know, that may be simplistic but it makes the point!


Other places to get Vitamin D is from mackerel, salmon, tuna, cod liver oil and beef liver, however if liver is used as the solitary source you would have to eat eight slices a day according to the USDA.  Just as a matter of personal opinion, I can't imagine doing that!  Milk is another source, however it is only fortified with 100 IU per cup or 25% of the RDA.  The National Institute of Health says only 29% of men and 17% of women are able to satisfy their daily Vitamin D needs through diet alone.  Some of that could be because of the nutritional deficiency in our food these days, but that is a story for another time.  


CleoImage by lazybone83 via FlickrI would also suggest that in the place of natural sunlight, that you bring natural light, full spectrum light, into your home.  Replace as many light bulbs as possible with full spectrum light bulbs...especially the bulbs over the bathroom vanity.  Women especially tend to spend time at the vanity putting on their makeup, doing their hair and other necessary functions.  Why not use that time being exposed to full spectrum light?  If this doesn't do the job, then purchase a light box and use it daily.  If you can't find one locally, a company called Full Spectrum Solutions has them.  www.fullspectrumsolutions.com


According to Veggie Fitness:   Vitamin D Boosts Your Immune System.Not only does Vitamin D play a key role in our immune function, it also helps us fend off autoimmune diseases and illnesses such as Multiple Sclerosis. Vitamin D helps keep the harmful T-helper 1 cells low, these cells attack our immune systems. 


Although I realize that soy products have become a notable form of protein for individuals, I would caution their use because they also contain a large amount of plant estrogen.  According to the Weston A Price Foundation: 


"Soy foods contain trypsin inhibitors that inhibit protein digestion and affect pancreatic function. In test animals, diets high in trypsin inhibitors led to stunted growth and pancreatic disorders. Soy foods increase the body's requirement for vitamin D, needed for strong bones and normal growth. Phytic acid in soy foods results in reduced bioavailabilty of iron and zinc which are required for the health and development of the brain and nervous system. Soy also lacks cholesterol, likewise essential for the development of the brain and nervous system. Megadoses of phytoestrogens in soy formula have been implicated in the current trend toward increasingly premature sexual development in girls and delayed or retarded sexual development in boys."


Needless to day, Vitamin D3 levels need to be paid attention to.  As a counselor, I work with individuals who suffer from depression as well as other forms of emotional disturbance so as part of their treatment, I tend to send them to their Primary Care Physicians asking that their Vitamin D levels be checked.  When we are depressed, there is a darkness that settles over our lives and it is hard to peek around the curtain to see what life should be like.  If our neurotransmitters are not functioning at optimal levels, it will be difficult for us to benefit from or even achieve a positive outlook on life.  If you work indoors extensively, live in an area that doesn't get a lot of sunlight or you are not outdoors to get your 15 - 20 minutes of sun exposure daily, I would encourage you to check out your Vitamin D3 levels and see if you need some supplementation or a lifestyle change.  Just remember that supplementing at levels approaching or exceeding 10,000 IU daily needs to be monitored by a healthcare professional.

For a high quality, whole food Vitamin D3 supplement, visit my website at www.supplements4livingwell.com

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Saturday, February 26, 2011

What Do Emotions Do to our Liver?

I'm sure you have always wanted to know the answer to that question!  Haha!  More than likely it never even occurred to you that your emotional life could have any effect at all on your liver and even if it did...so what?  According to Dr. A.F. Beddoe who wrote the book on biologic ionization, "over 80% of all illness begins within the mind.  Hate, bitterness, anxiety, fear, greed, strife, lust, depression and guilt all interfere with the brain's electrical communication and proper stimulation of the vital organs, especially the liver."  Before I go on, I need to say that this is a very complicated and large subject.  There won't be any way I can write an exhaustive article on all the ways these things go together, but hopefully as you read this it will peak your interest enough to go find other information.  I'm mainly hitting the highlights here, but perhaps in such a way that it will make sense and give you one of those "aha" moments.

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 14:  Lleyton Hewit...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
OK, emotion interferes....so why is that big news?  It's big news because the liver is the "primary organ through which all the rest of the body's organs and tissues are maintained, either for better or for worse.  The liver needs the right amount and type of water, oxygen and calcium, as well as the right electrical stimulus from the brain.  If the brain's function is interfered with, by anxiety, hate, bitterness, frustration, turmoil, etc, then the liver sympathetically responds in such a way as to prevent proper uptake and utilization of water, oxygen and calcium in food energy.  This usually means an upset indigestion, caused by an interference of liver function.  Thus the digestive enzymes are weakened so that even good diets and foods turn to poor nutrition and toxicity.  Just as Proverbs 17:1 says, 'Better a dry morsel and quietness..than feasting with strife.'  The weaker the digestive enzymes and the longer their function is impaired, the greater the minieral deficiency will become.  The greater the minieral deficiency from food, the more the body will erode away the vital force or reserve energy.  This will eventually exhibit itself in an increasing number of symptoms as the "vital force" or reserve energy is depleted."  (Biologic Ionization, Dr. Beddoe, pg xv)

NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 03:  Actress Diana DeGarm...Image by Getty Images via @daylife

As stated before in some of my previous posts, Dr. Scott Walker developer of NET, indicates that the major emotion that stays with the liver is anger.  Anger has a very large and negative effect on health and as our livers become more and more affected, sluggish and unable to filter through the toxins in our bodies, we may find ourselves dealing more with the emotion of anger.    It is very important to understand that our bodies are effected on a holistic level, one system effects another system which effects another system.  For example, did you know that one of the symptoms of declining liver function is thyroid problems?  To some extent declining liver function can contribute to excess weight gain as well.  In that case the liver works in concert with the pancreas to increase production of a thyroid enhancing enzyme that appears to influence the body's ability to successfully handle fat metabolism.  In addition, fat cells wrap themselves around toxins in order to protect the body.  If the liver isn't filtering the toxins or we are overwhelming our bodies with toxins, they make it past the liver and the body then deals with them by surrounding them with fat.  The body is created to live and it will always do what it needs to do in order to accomplish that goal.  That is why it is important to drink a lot of water when you are losing weight.  As the fat cells are neutralized, more toxins are released into the system and it is important that those toxins be flushed away rather than reabsorbed into the body.

The liver also has a significant part in regulating blood sugar levels.  Glucagon (produced by the pancreas) is responsible for making the liver convert more glycogen to simple carbohydrates.  However, glucagon and insulin production are dependent on the proper conversion of glycogen in the liver, according to Dr. Beddoe.  If the liver is not working properly, we have issues with blood sugar.  We often associate night sweats with menopause, but night sweats can also be attributable to elevated blood sugar levels.

So, what do we do to maintain a healthy liver?  First of all we need to deal with our emotional baggage....easier said than done, right.  For the most part we just need to let go of the things that aggravate us...whether it be people, work or situations.  Although this is a consistent battle through life, it depends on how we look at things and determining what we have control over and what we don't.  What if we have a critical parent in our lives who we just don't ever seem to be able to please?  That will usually keep us striving for more things or more success to prove to them that we are acceptable.  In dealing with that, we have to understand that we are not the problem.  The problem lies not in focusing on what we do, but rather focusing on who we are.  Are you a person of good character, are you honest, do you have a good work ethic, do you treat your children well, are you responsible, are you a good wife or husband?  Those are the important things and out of that comes everything else.  If that critical person is unable to see that, that is their problem not yours.  For most other things in life, it becomes important to understand what you can control and what you can't.  If you can't control it, it becomes something you need to let go and that may alleviate a significant amount of stress in your life.

Upward Salute – Urdhva Hastasana - Person perf...Image by mikebaird via Flickr

Once we are successfully dealing with the emotional side of life, we turn to other things.  How much water are we drinking?  Water is the most important element for good liver .  It is a neutral pH level so it helps the body maintain good pH, it carries oxygen to the liver which is the second most necessary element for good liver function, it hydrates as well as carries away the toxins that are filtered out by the liver.  Second is a good supply of oxygen.  We help maintain good oxygen levels by drinking water and exercising.  Again, according to Dr. Beddoe blood oxygen levels to the liver and blood carbohydrate levels are very closely related.  If the blood carbohydrate is not within a proper range at all times, then the blood's ability to allow oxygen into the cell is impaired....a reduced supply of oxygen to liver cells means they are unable to pick up the full compliment of necessary calciums.

The third important component for good liver function is calcium.  No, this does not mean go out to your closest drug store and buy all the calcium tablets you can find.  What it does mean is that we need to keep an appropriate amount of calcium coming into our system through good food and a balanced diet.  Dr. Beddoe explains that when calcium is lacking to the liver, then the oxygen and water are not utilized.  Therefore, as we look at the big picture, we can see that all these things work together to help our bodies work toward optimum efficiency.

Our bodies take a lot of abuse until they begin to show signs of wear.  However the road to a breakdown in health tends to cascade after we have indulged ourselves in many different directions.  Sedentary lifestyles, unhealthy diets and emotional aggravations combine after three or four decades to become health problems that we hope to turn around in a few months as signs of disease come our way.  If we start to move towards a more emotionally and physically healthy life, it will take some time to reverse the effects of what 40 years of abuse has brought on.  It isn't about being perfect as much as it is about being consistent.   Consistently take positive steps towards good health and you will get there.

As opposed to what our culture tells us, it isn't about the stuff and being successful, it is about living a peaceful life, loving those around us (including ourselves), moving our bodies and supplying them with good nutrition.  If we can do these things, we will have our health which in the end is what allows us to live the life we choose.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Understanding Grief and Repressed Emotion

Inconsolable griefImage via Wikipedia
Grief is a series of many thoughts and emotions in response to a loss.  The extent the heart is connected to what is lost, affects how much grief is experienced.  For individuals who are unable to adjust to a loss and move on, it may be necessary to look deeper to see what might be contributing to the prolonged grief.  Unresolved past emotions may be triggered by a current loss.  In such cases, the resolution of the current grief may be inhibited by a previous decision to either not think or not feel.
In her book, “Molecules of Emotion”, Dr. Candace Pert presents evidence that the experience of emotions are the result of neuropeptides released from the hypothalamus in response to a thought.  Each emotion has a specific chemical makeup that flows throughout the body and is picked up by receptor sites in various organs.  Each emotion will effect a unique combination of organs in a specific way, and hopefully this will trigger a resolving thought.  Dr. Scott Walker has developed a process he calls Neural Emotional Technique which has helped to pinpoint where in the body and what organs are usually effected by each of the different emotions.  For purposes of this article, we will choose the three emotions we have talked about here; fear, grief and bitterness.  Dr. Walker says that fear is an emotion that effects the kidneys and grief effects the lungs.  Scripture leads us to believe that bitterness effects the bones.  
Two difficulties can occur in the processing of grief.  If one refuses to think about the loss, unresolved energy remains in the brain, resulting in mental distress.  Secondly, if the emotions are internalized, repressed, denied or transposed, rather than embraced and expressed, the chemistry of the emotion remains in the organ, and the natural mental processes do not continue to resolution.  Since each organ shares a neural pathway with a specific set of muscles, the unresolved emotion will continue to affect both the organ function and the related muscle groups resulting in predictable disorders and pains.  However, when the emotion is expressed, the thought processes continue toward resolution causing the release of new emotional chemistry that resolves and replaces the previous set.  If each successive new emotion is embraced and expressed, this process finally results in the flow of the vital feel-good, unifying chemicals of a state of joy that facilitate both our biology and behavior.    
A scriptural example of this connection between thought, emotion and body function is revealed in Psalm 73.  Asaph is envying the apparent ease of the wicked, (vs. 3-12).  In verses 13 and 14 he declares his judgment against his efforts for purity of heart and innocence.   However, he then realizes the foolishness of that judgment and turns to God for His perspective.  Verses 21-22 state, “When my heart was embittered, and I was pierced within, then I was senseless and ignorant ”.   In the Hebrew, “within” is the word “Kilyah” which means kidneys.  When he held onto bitterness in his heart, his kidneys were afflicted and his thinking was blocked.  The conclusion of the Psalm in combination with verses 18 through 20 present a godly resolution of his dilemma.  We can see this kind of connection when we look at individuals who have certain kinds of kidney failure.  As the kidneys are unable to do their job filtering toxins from the body, the toxicity builds and thought processes begin to erode.  In advanced stages people become delusional, they may lose their ability to comprehend time and their understanding of simple every day life declines.
Many children are told, “Big boys don’t cry”, or “You’re just too emotional”.  These events can result in inner determinations of the heart not to express emotion.  Therefore, as loss is experienced, a person may repress the grief and choose to just move on.  Also, the processing of overwhelming experiences, especially in childhood, can be so traumatic that the subconscious defensive systems of the mind will shut it down until a time when the person has the capacity to handle the emotion.  A person may also stop the processing of grief because they judge a particular thought or emotion within the process as unacceptable.  If any of these patterns of repression continue through life, the mental tension and physical chemistry of grief will build.  Each successive event can then trigger fresh waves of the chemistry of the unresolved previous events along with those appropriate to the present situation.  As a result, they may experience excessive, inappropriate stages, or prolonged grief along with physical symptoms of pain in their bodies.  This extreme and confusing response often leads to further repression. 
It may be helpful to reconsider other losses in the life and explore how grief was handled in those situations.  When a previous event is recalled, it should be meaningful information, but if a wave of emotional chemistry is released it indicates the emotions have not been allowed to resolve.  Emotions, when allowed to come forward can resolve when we cry, as we talk and share with another safe person or during the night when we experience REM sleep and begin to dream.  Dreams are a human being's way of working through the "baggage" of the day.  If we don't dream, we don't process as effectively.  
As suppressed emotion is faced, understand that for past experiences, that unresolved chemistry will feel exactly the same.  However the good news is that if you are feeling emotion that was suppressed during childhood, what felt overwhelming at the time, may not be as overwhelming as an adult.  Allow yourself to feel, work through the emotions and resolve the chemistry...that is the path to good emotional health.