Tip
1 : CALM YOUR MIND
We live life at a hectic pace with many
demands and responsibilities. Stress has
become an important part of our lives. But
for most of us the balance between deep
relaxation and stress has been lost. Deep
relaxation is a completely different state
from just socializing with friends or being
in front of the television. In a deeply
relaxed state our minds are alert, yet calm
and peaceful. Our metabolism, heart rate and
breathing become even slower as we become
more relaxed. Our body produces nitric oxide
to neutralize the negative effect of
excessive stress hormone Cortisol.
Excessive stress can
make us feel older than we really are.
Stress affects telomeres, strips of DNA at
the end of chromosomes, which appear to
protect and stabilize the chromosome ends.
These key pieces (telomeres) of DNA are also
involved with the cell divisions, until
eventually there is nothing left, making
cell divisions less reliable and increasing
the risk of age-related disorders.
High stress people
have lower levels of telomerase in their
immune cells. It is suggested that changes
in stress hormone levels could have an
effect on telomeres activity. Learning and
practicing serenity to elicit deep
relaxation response is the most important
step toward neutralizing stress response.
Here are some
suggestions for serenity practices:
Breathing: Life is in the
breath. He who half breathes, half lives.
Your breath is the first line of defense in
stress and can create almost instant calm
and relaxation. Breathing is necessary for
speaking, laughing and singing.
Meditation: Individuals practicing meditation for more
than five years were proven to be twelve
years younger than their chronological age,
as measured by physical testing. Any moment you attempt to clear the
mind creates the intention of healing.
Prayer is the
most personal and intimate of all spiritual
practices.
Affirmations
are positive statements we tell ourselves. A
positive affirmation is a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
Journaling our
thoughts and experiences are ancient
serenity practices with its origins at the
beginning of humankind. Journaling moves
your emotions and thoughts from your
mind/body to the paper. It also integrates
the mind, body and soul.
Gratitude is
accepting what you have. Grateful
individuals have more energy, less physical
complaints and a higher level of enthusiasm
and optimism.
Laughter:
In laughter we are lifted above our feelings
of fear, discouragement and despair. When
you are engaged in a good heart laugh the
energy system in our body gets a workout
(inner jogging). Hearty laughter stimulates
practically all the large organs and
heightens resistance and vitality against
disease but it should not be artificial that
does not match with inner which is dangerous
for heart..
Hugging helps
the body's immune system; it cures
depression and reduces stress. It is
invigorating and rejuvenating. Hugging is
all natural. It is organic, naturally sweet,
no pesticides, no preservatives, no
artificial ingredients, 100% wholesome and
fully returnable.
Tip 2 : KEEP YOUR
BRAIN SMART
There is a growing
interest in preserving and enhancing the
brain's capabilities into high age.
Neuroscientists around the world with
powerful tools have literally been looking
into the mind as it thinks. They are
discovering that many of the negative myths
about the aging brain are, indeed, only
myths. In much the same way that we can
maintain our physical well-being, we can
take charge of our mental health and
fitness.
A new form of brain
exercise called neurobic is
designed to keep the brain agile and
healthy. These exercises enhance the overall
health of your brain as you grow older.
These new approaches can be incorporated
into every day activities to develop and
maintain brain connections by adopting these
strategies. Scientists, in 1996,
demonstrated for the first time that brain
cells are generated in adult humans (
November 1998, Nature Medicine). Also old
neurons can grow neuritis to compensate for
losses. Neural circuits in adult brains have
the capacity to undergo dramatic changes.
The aging brain, however, continues to have
a remarkable ability to grow, adapt and
change patterns of connections.
Neurobics as a new
brain exercise can help you take charge of
your overall mental fitness, strength and
flexibility as you age. The exercise program
calls for presenting the brain with
non-routine or unexpected experiences using
various combinations of your physical
senses; visions, smell, touch, taste and
hearing - as your emotional ?sense.? It
stimulates patterns of neural activity that
creates more connection between different
brain areas and causes nerve cells to
produce natural brain nutrients, called
neurothrophin ? a protein-based
brain gross factor. Neurotrophin can
dramatically increase the size and
complexity of nerve cell neurites.
Neurotrophin also make surrounding cells
stronger and more resistant to the effects
of aging.
Any other exercise,
using five senses in a novel way can
stimulate the brain, so that you can grow
your own brain food.
Examples of
multi-sensory (mind-body) exercises:
1. Do your daily routine activities with
your non-dominant hand (brushing your teeth,
shaving, eating and using TV remote).
2. Walk without swinging your arms, holding
arms away from your body as if you were
carrying a sack of rice, while keeping your
fingers open (Chi Gong walking).
Tip
3 : NUTRITION & WATER
1. Nutrition:
Eat a rainbow of colorful fruit and
vegetables which provide powerful
antioxidants. Animal fat and shellfish cause
inflammation due to arachidonic acid. Sugary
foods, or refined grain, (e.g. white flour
and white rice) can trigger inflammation by
raising blood sugar and insulin levels. Fine
tune your fats. Avoid margarine and anything
with hydrogenated oil in it and replace them
with extra-virgin olive oil. Eat more plant-
and fish based proteins.
Cut down on meat,
alcohol and caffeine and increase your
intake of beans and dark green leaf
vegetables for keeping your homocysteine
level low enough to decrease the risk of
Alzheimer's disease.
High-quality,
nutrient-rich and anti-inflammatory food is
the most fundamental step toward protecting
your brain.
2. Water:
Water is Mother Nature's perfect cocktail. We are water, in order to maintain radiant
health; we need to replenish the water that
comprises two-thirds of our bodies. It is
important to drink good quality water. The
health benefits of water are numerous and
Mother Nature knows best.
The liver filters 200 liters of water each
day, sending purified water to other organs
in the body. Drinking purified,
electrically-charged (enlivened) water, acts
as a live antioxidant and stimulates the
body's ability to cure a wide variety of
health problems. Drinking good water should
be a discipline that reduces the workload
and stress on the liver, and has a positive
impact on the body's energy field. When the
kidneys are overworked, some of their
functions are transferred to the liver which
normally metabolizes stored fat into energy.
If the liver is doing the kidney's work, it
metabolizes less fat as a source of energy
and the cholesterol level rises.
Tip
4 : PHYSICAL
EXERCISE: Mind-Body
Practices
1. Walking is
a man's best medicine (Hippocrates). A
regular walking program has a host of
positive health benefits; weight loss,
muscle conditioning, improved cardiovascular
health, offsetting osteoporosis and lowering
the risk for diseases including depression,
diabetes and heart disease.
Fitness walking
delivers a sense of euphoria by releasing
endorphins. Mindful walking conveys its own
rewards including the opportunity for
contemplation and reflection. Mindful
walking brings about deep relaxation.
Walking provides the tremendous health
benefit of preventing lifestyle disease. It
is also a wonderfully calming and
spiritually restorative activity.
Walking in nature is
an opportunity to support and nurture our
spirit. Take a walk in nature, unaccompanied
except for the presence of your real self as
guide. You send forth an invitation for
meaningful encounters with birds, trees and
crystalline insights.
2. Chi Gong is
an ancient Chinese art form for
strengthening the body's vital energy. It is
a mind/body practice for physical, mental
and spiritual fitness. It combines gentle,
circular, graceful movements and whole body
breathing exercises.
Chi Gong is a Chinese
system of self-care which aims to balance
the flow of ?Chi? (vital life energy). Chi
is believed to regulate mental, physical,
emotional and spiritual well being. Chi
flows along the meridians, which are like
rivers that irrigate the body and nourish
the tissue.
Chi Gong helps one to
experience with the non-physical self when
you connect with your Chi field (energy),
you experience yourself as pure
consciousness. Any obstruction along the
meridians will block the vital energy flow,
therefore creating dysfunction and disease.
Tip 5 : WHOLESOME
SLEEP
Our brain works
poorly when deprived of sleep, when we loose
sleep, or do not sleep at regular times. Our
brain chemicals become imbalanced, leading
to higher Cortisol (stress hormone) and
lower growth hormone (a healing and repair
hormone).
The purpose of sleep
is for the body to relax totally, recuperate
and regenerate damaged cells caused by
stress and strain. The sleep allows the
brain to take out the trash to deprogram the
miscellaneous events that are not to be
stored for long term memory. Lack of sleep
for a prolonged period of time results in
mental derangement in humans, and
sufficiently prolonged, in animals may even
result in death.
Sleeping is a great
way to bypass the conscious mind with all
its illness, role playing and
nationalization. It is a high road to your
higher self right to subconscious. Dreaming
is an important part of sleep. Dreaming has
to do with organizing information, it is a
filtering process. It is connecting with the
soul.
We all need more and
better sleep to protect our brain function.
Here are some tips for improved sleep:
? Go to bed and wake up at the same time
every day and try to get to sleep before
midnight.
? Try to get at least 7-8 hours of sleep a
night. If you have trouble falling asleep,
try a little ritual. Stop your day at least
one or two hours before bedtime to wind
down. Don't watch TV or check your e-mail.
Take a hot bath with Epsom salt and 10 drops
of lavender oil and just soak and relax for
20 minutes.
Tip
6 : COOL THE HEAT
Avoid lifestyle diseases by keeping
silent inflammation at bay.
Invisible and
symptom-free chronic micro-inflammation is a
factor in Alzheimer's and all lifestyle
diseases. Cooling the fires of hidden
inflammation may be the most important thing
you can do for your long term health and
well being. Silent inflammation is the key
cause in almost all chronic degenerative and
lifestyle diseases.
What ignites the fire
in the first place? Repeated or prolonged
ailment, such as sinus or bladder
infections, gingivitis or stomach ulcers,
can trigger chronic silent inflammation, as
can food allergens, pesticide, even
untreated surgical sutures. People often
don't know they have it. You might not have
any symptoms at all.
To detect silent
inflammation you measure blood level of C ?
reactive protein (CRP), a substance found in
the blood when systemic inflammation is
present, reported level 1.0 to 10.0mg/L. A
level below 1.0mg/L is ideal. When CRP is
elevated, additional tests are done to
determine whit's triggering the
inflammation.
You can cool the
heat by very ordinary and simple strategies:
1. Calm your mind.
Your emotions have as much to do with silent
inflammation as your lifestyle. Researchers
at Duke University Medical Center have found
that people who are prone to anger,
hostility and depressive symptoms, have
higher CRP levels. You don't have to be a
hothead to be at risk for inflammation,
however, many of us feel overscheduled,
overworked and overwhelmed ? in other words,
stressed. In the case of stress, that
invader is psychological, rather than
physical. Unrelenting stress makes the
body's normal immune function suffer, the
net result is that inflammation works
overtime. Serenity practices that calm the
mind, such as mindfulness has been linked to
lowered CRP levels. More mind/body practices
like Chi Gong and Yoga may also help keep
inflammation at bay. Try one of the serenity
practices that appeal to you and see if it
works.
2. Eat an
Anti-Inflammatory Diet. Revising
your diet is one of the easiest, most
effective ways to affect inflammation. Food
contains not only calories, but also
specific messages that turn on or off
messages of inflammation.
Boost your berry
intake: Blueberries, cherries and
blackberries are rich in anti-inflammatory
flavonoid compounds.
Fill up on fiber:
Incorporate beans, legumes and whole grains
(such as brown rice or quinoa) into your
diet. Also add nuts: Sprinkle almonds,
hazelnuts, or walnuts on cereal; toss them
into salads.
Fine tune your
fats: Rid your kitchen of saturated fats
and trans fats (avoid margarine and anything
with hydrogenated oil in it) and replace
them with healthier options, such as
extra-virgin olive oil and flaxseed oil.
Eat more plant-
and fish-based proteins. Wild salmon,
sardines and herring are rich in omega-3
fats and relatively low in the toxin
mercury.
Spice up your
Mealtime: Certain spices have strong
anti-inflammatory effects ? in particular,
ginger, garlic, onion, turmeric and
rosemary. Make them an integral part of your
diet. Try using ginger, garlic and onion in
stir-fries, turmeric in soups and rosemary
on roasted veggies.
3. Move More:
Regular, consistent physical activity is
one of the best ways to keep inflammation at
bay. This may explain why long-term regular
exercise dramatically reduces heart disease,
a condition we know to be a disease of
inflammation. An active body revs up
production of antioxidants, which ?vacuum?
the free radicals that can otherwise lead to
inflammation. Free radical damage is like
rust on the inside of our bodies, in the
cells themselves. Don't overdo:
Working out too hard may boost inflammation
levels rather than reduce them. While some
muscle soreness is warranted, if you are
feeling exhausted or overly achy, rest a day
before hitting the gym again.
Tip
7 : NATURE
Nature is the most powerful tool to
facilitate health and well being. Nature
offers an easy and safe path to subordinate
the ego and access our higher selves, which
is the beginning of transformation. Nature
?meditates? us whether we are aware of it or
not. Nature, one of the best medicines, can
be harnessed to bring about transformation
toward health and well being. Nature is a
universal pattern of resonant energy which
can influence other energies to move toward
wholeness and healing.
Take a walk in nature
(forest or Oceanside), unaccompanied except
for the vital presence of the soul guide.
You send forth an invitation to your own
psyche and to the world at large that you
are available for meaningful encounters with
birds, trees and water, or possibly your
sudden crystalline insights. You enter the
imaginable and fruitful realm that belongs not
quite to the ordinary landscape you usually
pass through but to a numinous fertile place
in between.
|