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  Good Morning,  Nutrition and Hormonal Balance As an acupuncturist in the area of fertility, I realize tha...

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Wednesday, October 21, 2015

[AlternativeAnswers] 18 Signs

 

 

Lissa Rankin - "18 Signs You're Here to Transform Human Consciousness"
 
I have like 99 % of the Team traits on the list. Most of these traits are also Indigo traits.
 

Yeah, I thought so. I had a feeling you were one of us! Welcome to what my friend Martha Beck calls "The Team." In her book Finding Your Way In A Wild New World, Martha Beck defines Team members by the following characteristics. You may not recognize every single attribute, but if you're a Team member, you're likely to be nodding your head a lot as you read through these characteristics of those whose souls incarnated here on this planet right now to facilitate this mystical shift in human consciousness. See if any of these Team traits resonate with who you are and how you feel.

  1. A sense of having a specific mission or purpose involving a major transformation in human experience, but being unable to articulate what this change might be.
  2. A strong sense that the mission, whatever it is, is getting closer in time.
  3. A compulsion to master certain fields, skills, or professions, not only for career advancement but in preparation for this half-understood personal mission.
  4. High levels of empathy; a sense of feeling what others feel.
  5. An urgent desire to lessen or prevent suffering for humans, animals, or even plants.
  6. Loneliness stemming from a sense of difference, despite generally high levels of social activity. One woman summed up this feeling perfectly when she said, "Everybody likes me, but nobody's like me.
  7. High levels of creativity; passion for music, poetry, performance, or visual arts.
  8. An intense love of animals, sometimes a desire to communicate with them.
  9. Difficult early life, often with a history of abuse or childhood trauma.
  10. Intense connection to certain types of natural environment, such as the ocean, mountains, or forest.
  11. Resistance to orthodox religiosity, paradoxically accompanied by a strong sense of either spiritual purpose or spiritual yearning.
  12. Love of plants and gardening, to the point of feeling empty or depressed without the chance to be among green things and/or help them grow.
  13. Very high emotional sensitivity, often leading to predilections for anxiety, addictions, or eating disorders.
  14. Sense of intense connection with certain cultures, languages, or geographic regions.
  15. Disability, often brain-centered (dyslexia, retardation, autism) in oneself or a loved one. Fascination with people who have intellectual disabilities or mental illness.
  16. Apparently gregarious personality contrasting with a deep need for periods of solitude; a sense of being drained by social contact and withdrawing to "power up" again.
  17. Persistent or recurring physical illness, often severe, with symptoms that fluctuate inexplicably.
  18. Daydreams (or night dreams) about healing damaged people, creatures, or places.

You! You! You!

 

If you read that list (like I did) thinking "Check, check, check," you're definitely one of us visionary healer mender way-finders on The Team. And the world needs you to fulfill your sacred purpose — pronto!

As Martha wrote, "If enough people start mending their true nature in the incredibly interconnected world we're creating, the cumulative effect really could begin healing the true nature of, well, everything."

Diane

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[AlternativeAnswers] Food Tips

 

Food Storage Tips:
 
Put paper towels in the salad drawer.  Lining greens with paper towel absorbs condensation -- since excess moisture can make foods wilt faster, this keeps them fresher for longer.

Don't separate bananas before eating.  The trick to stop them going brown is to keep them together as long as possible. 

Put an apple in your bag of potatoes.  Apples produce ethylene gas, keeping potatoes fresher and firmer.

Keep apples away from other fruits and veggies.  Ethylene gas may be good for potatoes, but it's bad for almost everything else.

Wash berries in vinegar.  Extend their life by giving them a bath in 1 cup of vinegar and 3 cups of water before you put them in the fridge — this kills mold spores and bacteria.
 
Don't refrigerate your tomatoes. To make the most of your tomatoes, keep them on a counter to ripen.
 
Freeze flour for 48 hours to kill any insect eggs that might be present. Then, place in a tight-sealing container; and store in a cool, dry spot away from sunlight. Keep whole-grain flours in the refrigerator or freezer to extend their life.
 

Remove the lettuce from its store packaging. Wrap it in paper toweling, and place it in an open storage bag. Replace paper towel if wet.


Wrap celery in foil.  Swap the original packaging for a sheet of aluminum foil to let the gas that spoils celery escape.

Keep mushrooms in a paper bag. Storing them this way keeps them clean and dry. 
 
Store nuts in the shell until you are ready to use them. Refrigerate or freeze any that you plan to keep for more than three months.

Make sure to wrap all cheese securely in wax paper, plastic wrap or cheese paper before storing it in the refrigerator, which allows it to breathe without letting in excess moisture or odors from your fridge. You can also rub butter on the cut parts of hard cheeses to prevent them from drying out. You can also freeze cheese!
 
  • In order to make cottage cheese or sour cream last longer, place the container upside down in the fridge. Inverting the tub creates a vacuum that inhibits the growth of bacteria that causes food to spoil.
  • The best way to keep herbs fresh is to by storing them in whole bunches. First wash them, then seal them in zip lock bags and place them in the freezer. Storing them this way should keep them at peak freshness for up to a month. When you are ready to use them, you'll find they are actually easier to chop frozen – and they will defrost in a hurry once you toss them into a hot pan.
  • Keeping brown sugar in the freezer will stop it from hardening. But if you already have hardened sugar on your shelf, soften it by sealing in a bag with a slice of fresh bread or an apple – or microwave on high for 30 seconds.
  • Keep your refrigerator at the right temperature, kept between 38 and 40 F. to keep your foods as fresh as possible without freezing them.
  • Keep your eye on expiration dates when you shop.
 
Plan meals in order of what needs to be used up first.
 
Diane

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Tuesday, October 20, 2015

[AlternativeAnswers] Sugar and Inflammation

 

Good Morning!

Sugar and Inflammation

One of the reasons inflammation occurs is from a rapid rise in blood sugar, which causes biochemical changes in the cell. Staying away from sugar and high-glycemic (simple) carbohydrates, which the body rapidly converts to sugar, is one of the best ways to decrease inflammation. C-reactive protein (CRP) is a key factor of inflammation. In a major study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, people with elevated CRP levels were four and one-half times more likely to have a heart attack. Not only is elevated CRP more accurate than cholesterol in predicting heart attack risk, but high CRP levels have turned up in people with diabetes and pre-diabetes and in people who are overweight. [58, 59,61]

When blood sugar goes up rapidly, sugar can attach itself to collagen in a process called "glycosylation," or the Browning Reaction, increasing inflexible and inflammation. CRP is not found in foods. However, its levels in the body are strongly influenced by diet.

A recent study by Simin Liu, M.D., Ph.D., of the Harvard Medical School found that women who ate large amounts of high-glycemic (or diabetes promoting) carbohydrates, including potatoes, breakfast cereals, white bread, muffins, and white rice, had very high CRP levels. Women who ate a lot of these foods and were also overweight had the highest and most dangerous CRP levels. [62].

The body makes CRP from interleukin-6 (IL-6), a powerful inflammatory chemical. IL-6 is a key cell communication molecule, and it tells the body's immune system to go into asperity, releasing CRP and many other inflammation-causing substances. Being overweight increases inflammation because adipose cells, particularly those around the midsection, make large amounts of IL-6 and CRP. As blood sugar levels increase, so do IL-6 and CRP. Both overweight and high blood sugar levels increase the risk of heart disease, very likely because of the undercurrent of inflammation. [61].

The best way to deal with cravings is to very carefully control blood sugar and insulin by staying away from the simple carbohydrates and eating more protein. In a few days, blood sugar will stabilize and cravings will go away. Good (complex) carbohydrates, which are low on the glycemic index include: apples, apsaragus, beans, broccoli, blackberries, blueberries, cabbage, cantaloupe, citrus fruits, green beans, honeydew melon, kiwi, leafy greens, peaches, pears, plums, raspberries, spinach, strawberries.

Bad (simple) carbohydrates, which are high on the glycemic index include: bananas, breads, carrots, cereals processed with added sugar, corn, French fries, French toast, fruit juices, mangos, pancakes, papaya, pasta, peas, popcorn, white potatoes, white rice, sugar, waffles.

Dietary fats also influence inflammation. Most omega-6 fats, found in margarine and corn and safflower oils, are the basic building blocks of arachidonic acid and prostaglandin E2, two of several key inflammation-causing substances in the body. In contrast, omega-3 fats, found in fish, fish oils, and vegetables, have an inflammation-suppressing effect. [63]

Gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) is an omega-6 fat that enhances the anti-inflammatory effect of omega-3 fats. Both GLA and omega-3 fish oils have been found helpful in arthritis and other inflammatory disorders. [64,65] GLA is found in leafy green vegetables and dietary supplements. Similarly, oleic acid, an omega-9 fat found in olive oil, walnut oil, sunflower oil, soybean oil, canola oil, avocados, nut butters and macadamia nuts have anti-inflammatory properties.

Good sources of protein include: Fish such as sardines, salmon, cod, haddock, halibut, snapper and tuna. Meat and poultry include: turkey, chicken with no skin, occasional lean beef, lean pork and lean ham. Soy products are also a great source of protein. Also included are egg whites, low fat cottage cheese, milk and yogurt. 



Andrew Pacholyk MS L.Ac
http://www.peacefulmind.com/anti-aging.htm
Therapies for healing
mind, body, spirit 




References

58. Ridker PM, Hennekens CH, Buring JE, et al. C-reactive protein and 
other markers of inflammation in the prediction of cardiovascular 
disease in women. New England Journal of Medicine, 2000;342:836-843.

59. Pradhan AD, Manson JE, Rifai N, et al. C-reactive protein, 
interleukin-6, and risk of developing type 2 diabetes mellitus. JAMA, 
2001;286:327-334.

60. Festa A, D'Agostino R, Howard G, et al. Chronic subclinical 
inflammation as part of the insulin resistance syndrome. The insulin 
resistance atherosclerosis study (IRAS). Circulation, 2000;102:42-47.


61. Manson JE, Buring HE, et al. Relation between a diet with a high 
glycemic load and plasma concentrations of high-sensitivity C-
reactive protein in middle-aged women. American Journal of Clinical 
Nutrition, 2002;75:492-498.

62. Simin Liu, M.D., Ph.D., found that women who ate large amounts of 
high-glycemic (or diabetes promoting) carbohydrates, including 
potatoes, breakfast cereals, white bread, muffins, and white rice, 
had very high CRP levels. Harvard Medical Journal 2000 Oct 19; 343
(16): 1139 47.
63. Lau CS, Morley KD, Belch JJF. Effects of fish oil supplementation 
on non-steroidal anti inflammatory drug requirement in patients with 
mild rheumatoid arthritis - a double-blind placebo controlled study. 
British Journal of Rheumatology, 1993;32:982-989. 
64. Curtis CL, Hughes CE, Flannery CR, et al. n-3 fatty acids 
specifically modulate catabolic factors involved in articular 
cartilage degradation. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2000;275:721 
724. 
65. Zurier RB, Rossetti RG, Jacobson EW, et al. Gamma-linolenic acid 
treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. A randomized, placebo-controlled 
study. Arthritis & Rheumatism, 1996;11:1808 1817.
66. Ebeling P, Koivisto VA. Physiological importance of
dehydroepiandrosterone. Lancet 1994;343:1479-81.

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