Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

I just ate my last bag of microwave popcorn



Ugh. So I have not been to the grocery store in awhile. This is common during the beginning of a new semester at school. I just look around the cupboards for anything that resembles nourishment, and I go for it.

I think it's time to take a trip to the co-op.

On that note, today for a snack I ate my last bag of microwave popcorn (MP)--thankfully it was also the last one in the house so I won't be tempted. Truth be told, I had known this day would come, because I had heard "some things" about microwave popcorn in the past but I chose to ignore them because they did not serve my love for MP.

Anyway, today after eating the last bag in the house I did some searching and found many articles suggesting the problems associated with MP.

Here is one article that lists microwave popcorn among "7 foods the experts won't eat."

Here is a website that is dedicated to people who suffer from "Popcorn lung," which is a disease most commonly known among popcorn factory workers but has been showing up in the homes of those people who enjoy the smell of popcorn a little too much.

There were many more articles out there so if you are interested in reading more do the research :)

After reading several articles I have come to the decision that I am done with MP until it becomes more appealing. I wish I did not research after eating a bag of it, but such is life.

Also, this decision does not mean that I will never enjoy popcorn again, c'mon, let's be realistic folks. The reason why I am kicking MP out of my home is primarily because I used to eat popcorn a lot more frequently than I do now (more than I'd like to admit), and while I know the health risks associated with MP are probably slim, I see no point in taking that risk if I can make better tasting, homemade popcorn that is safe and free of toxic fumes.

With that said, I am excited to be trained in making old-fashioned stovetop popcorn. I've had friends make some for me in the past and I actually prefer the flavor!

Monday, January 31, 2011

A new semester begins, with some new habits to boot

My final full semester of school begins today. I am taking four courses, all of which I am actually quite excited about.

I have research class, which hopefully despite the extra work will be more rewarding this semester with my new direction, community building.

I have a movement class which talks about how different movements affect the body/mind/spirit's health. Oooh, I can only hope that means we will be getting out of our chairs during class time.

I'll be doing an independent study on how art affects the health of an individual, a community and the world, as well as exploring different forms of art on my own (a self-study). I will also address the bigger question, "What is the purpose of art?"

My last class will be at the Cultural Wellness Center and it is called Organization for Social Change. I'm stoked for it. My biggest reason for going into my field of holistic health studies is because I believe EVERYBODY should have access to good health and there are ways we can do it without having to rely on insurance companies and medical doctors. We can take care of ourselves! Woo hoo :)

Additionally, I will be continuing with training in Beginning Yoga I and II, which will be great learning but also great self-care for the semester.

It will be busy but I am excited for some movement this cold winter.

Beyond the exciting news of the classes I am taking I wanted to come on here and be open about some goals I am trying to meet on the side of academics. I feel by sharing this news it will further my dedication to these goals.

Number One: Become a Vegetarian.
It's already been three days meat-free and I have to say I am feeling fine. I am looking forward to this challenge of eating a nutritionally balanced vegetarian diet. After basically being a flexitarian my whole life, I am making the final plunge and letting go of meat-eating for awhile. I will assess my health and see if it is a good choice for me along the way.

How I came to this decision?

1. Recent discussion with my pal who just went vegan. Thanks Ash, for the inspiration.

2. Listening to exerpts from the book, Slaughterhouse. The cruelty of animals in factory farming just killed me. There was one part where a factory worker was describing just before a pig was to be slaughtered. He said it came up to him and nudged up against the worker like a puppy. For some reason after hearing all of the horrific ways these animals are being killed and treated, hearing about this pig described as a puppy begging for forgiveness made my stomach turn. It also made me want to adopt a pig and have it as a pet. I'm working on this one with Jay.

3. My connection to Buddhism, long ago instilled a wish inside me to follow the vegetarian ways of life. It is much better on the environment, the animals and the world.

4. This decision will further my want/need to pursue gardening.

Number two: Kick the refined sugar, flour and what have you.
We'll see how this one goes. For some reason sugar has been the ultimate hardest thing for me to let go, and it is addictive as hell. While I have periods of no-sugar I have not given it up for more than a couple weeks. I'd like to at least go a month greatly reducing refined/processed foods in my life and see what happens. I figured this would be a necessary pairing with my choice to be a vegetarian because many vegetarians eat sugary, processed, white bread products to keep awake because they may lack protein.

Number three: Get back on the treadmill.
My 12 times a month to the Y have looked more like me stopping by and laying in the hot sauna for 20 minutes and then calling it a workout. I need to get my body moving. I always feel better when I do.

Number four: Take more public transportation.
I am going to try taking more PT to school (baby steps). So when I attend classes on Wednesdays and Thursdays, I will try my best to take PT or carpool. I talk about being environmentally conscious and I'd like to incorporate this piece more in my daily habits.

Those are the some things I am going to really work on in addition to school and life in general. While it will be challenging for me, I am excited at the prospect of feeling more energized and in line with my beliefs/principles.

Friday, January 28, 2011

On drugs: in particular, Darvocet.

I warn you, today I come to write down some reflective but somber news.

I dedicate this post to my Grandma J--she was a wonderful woman, and as I have been baking through her recipe cards, I have felt closer to her this year, closer than I've felt in the past 10 years since she left us.

Oddly enough, as I have been thinking more about Grandma, as well as mind-body stuff (how they are interconnected) I have been pondering why it was that she suffered from a heart attack. From the little I have gathered on spiritual causes of illness, the heart is often associated with joy and love--two things I thought my Grandma had. So from that point of view I have been a bit confused about what was going on with Grandma when she had a sudden heart attack, especially since she was pretty healthy and never had heart issues before.

Well, I recently found out that my Grandmother was on a drug for her back pain for many years, called Darvocet. She was probably on it since the 1980's. As of November of 2010 this drug has been recalled by the FDA and has been pulled off the shelves in the U.S.

Besides the many side effects this drug has (like all drugs), the final straw was that the drug could cause "potentially fatal heart rhythm abnormalities" (US Recall News), and the drug interferes with "the heart's electrical activity" (Darvocetrecall.net).

Since this medication was banned in the U.K. in 2005, it is estimated that between 1,000-2,000 people have additionally died from this drug in the United States the past five years.

With this news, I am convinced that my Grandma may have been another death associated with Darvocet. She passed away in 2001 after suffering a sudden heart attack. I remember the phone call to our home like it was yesterday. I was so shocked at the news, but I was under the impression that heart attacks happen to people for no reason, and I just accepted that fact, like many of us do. They said something went wrong with the electrical in her heart. I didn't know what that meant. I think we were all too shocked to think about an autopsy.

Now that I am 10 years older, and a student in a program that focuses on a whole systems approach to health and well-being, I am learning that heart attacks and cancer are not as mysterious as the American Cancer Association and medical doctors make them out to be. There are some causes that are just starting to surface in our collective awareness, and I believe if we pay attention they will only continue to come to light.

Now I warn again, here is my diatribe that I have to write in honor of my grandmother. I would feel sick inside not to do this for her and anybody else who has been or will be affected by the impact of drugs:

Believe it or not, but I think drugs are one of the causes of many of our health problems. I know this is hard for people to swallow with the current medical paradigm we live within, but I personally believe that while drugs do help MAINTAIN and keep certain people alive, one cannot argue with the fact that these drugs do not CURE/ADDRESS the real problem. In most cases they mask the pain that our wise bodies are trying to send us to alert us that something is wrong. While we go pain free with our new drugs, whatever mechanism that is off in our body that is causing the pain is finding other ways to wreak havoc in the body. Instead of taking a pill to hide and surpress this pain, why not pay attention to it and try to figure out what is causing it in the first place? In most cases, the problem will never really go away if we treat it with drugs.

My grandmother was on this drug for a number of years, and as I said, she suffered a sudden heart attack. The doctors said something happened with the electrical activity of her heart and just like that, she was gone from our lives.

Ten years later, I uncover this piece of Grandma's story. And then I wonder, this drug, Darvocet became available to people in 1957. The FDA banned it in 2010. While I commend the FDA for doing so, why does it take thousands of deaths to get us to this level of protection? And how come it took 53 years for it to happen? How many generations were impacted over the years? How many more people were affected? I am thankful people have spoken up, because had it not been for this collective awareness, my family would never have come to this conclusion on our own.

I am upset today because our system is flawed, our checks and balances are imbalanced and the people who pay the price are the consumers, you and me. For more expansion and details on how I came to this conclusion, please read Marcia Angell's The Truth About Drug Companies for an alarming account of the histories and operations of drug companies. See how you feel about drugs after that book.

All I ask of you is to please think twice before you take a pill. Think first, do I really need to be doing this? Because chances are there have not been enough studies to prove that the drug is safe. And let's just face our limitations: it is impossible to know if the drug is safe until humans have taken the drug for enough years to see what may develop. We are the living case studies.

We don't even know how these drugs impact generations to come.

"For instance, fruit flies exposed to a drug called geldanamycin show unusual outgrowths on their eyes that can last through at least 13 generations of offspring even though no change in DNA has occurred (and generations 2 through 13 were not directly exposed to the drug)" (As mentioned in Time). Do we really want to commit to unnecessary drugs that may impact the health our future generations?

Bottom line: Don't do drugs. We learned this from grade school. I remember when the D.A.R.E. program came to visit my elementary school, and funny enough I recently read my little paragraph on how I planned to stay drug-free. I believe it was my pledge.

What worked for me in 5th grade is worth a read:

"I have plenty of ways to say No."
Like:
"I'm saving all my brain cells for science."
"Chocolate and alcohol don't mix."
"If I wanted the high life I'd rather go skydiving."
"Just plain NO!!!!"


While things have changed for me on a superficial level--wine and chocolate definitely work for me now that I am of age, and I am slightly cooler now than I was in 5th grade, I still strongly believe that we should say NO to drugs when it's possible. That is my conclusion.

And, Grandma, I love you. This post is for you. My dedication to the field of health is for you. I think about you all the time, and I'm doing my part to see if there is anything that can be done about what happened to you.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Building Community, Building Health



The above diagram is the Cultural Wellness Center's take on how sickness develops. They call it the People's Theory, and they link one's lack of community directly to one's health and well-being.

This organization's goal is "to unleash the power of citizens to heal themselves and build community."

For my Master's research project, I have recently switched from the topic of healthy homes to community building. I figure if we want to spread the word about what is healthy and what is not in our homes and in our life, we need a place and a people to start the movement and the discussion first. So now I sit with many empty pages that need to be filled, ready to start research on community.

As of now, I really do have a blank page. I have dialed some people and wrote some emails but I am not sure where the project will go.

I hope to collaborate with the Cultural Wellness Center for part of my research project, and I have sent an email and left a phone message. Now I wait to hear back. Crossing my fingers that something pans out.

So here's to hoping they call me and hoping that today brings you a positive sense of belonging and worth :)

Questions to ask yourself about community and health:
* Who is your community?
* What different communities do you belong to?
* How do these communities affect your health and well-being?
* When was a time you felt isolated and lonely, without a community? How was your health during this time period?

Thursday, January 20, 2011

SHAMpoo. Is it a sham?



This may be TMI, but I just thought since it has been a month since I last shampooed my hair, I would pay tribute to the cause on my blog.

Due to a recent conversation with some friends from Austrailia who are in town visiting, I must say that Jay and I joined the no-shampoo groupies over a month ago.

Apparently there is a big movement in Austrailia against shampoo, and our Aussie friend of the family, who is a University professor, also has been participating for the past months as well. After seeing how silky smooth his hair looked, we had to try. And I admit, being in the middle of the bitter cold of winter, it has been easy to wet my hair only when neccessary.

This no-shampoo movement isn't new. I googled the idea and found this Huffington Post article about "The case for not washing your hair". Read it if you are interested in the reasons why shampoo messes with the natural balance of hair. It has some good links.

We will see how long this experiment lasts, but for me, so far it has been a month and two days and I am feeling pretty good about my decision. I admit about a week ago I was so close to washing it (it was getting nasty--which is normal at the beginning), but once I got through that hump my hair has started to look really healthy. Healthier than it has been in a long time. I hear the longer I continue this, the better it will get. Cool.

I will also note that Jay's mother is trying this method now, too. After discussing the idea with her hairdresser, she gave it a try. Her stylist told her that she was once at a party and saw this red-headed woman with beautiful hair, and she went up to her and gave her the compliment. The woman said, "You want to know my secret? I haven't shampooed it in 2 years." So, the hairdresser could only support the idea that giving up shampoo might do some good.

Oh, and you might be wondering about the photo of Robert Pattinson. That photo was connected to an article that talks about his beauty secret--not washing his hair. Not sure if that photo makes the case for stopping the hairwashing, but it's interesting stuff.

Friday, December 3, 2010

5 Healthy Christmas Gift Ideas

Back by popular request, I am generating another "healthy Christmas list." I am sharing these items because I think they are inspiring, great ideas.

Number One:
Clutter Busting. Most people in America have an issue with accumulating and grasping stuff. The last thing we need is another thing to add to the pile. We don't need all of the clutter we surround ourselves with and what a better gift to ourselves or to our loved ones than to encourage eliminating that extra weight this holiday. The less we are attached to this "stuff," the easier we can move about the world and realize our goals and be the people we want to be.

Another tip: If you are an environmentalist buying for an eco-friend consider purchasing this book (or any book) used and online. They will be appreciative of your thoughtfulness.

Number Two:
Arm warmers. I don't know about you, but with the arrival of winter, it's gotten colder in the house. Since we do not blast our heat (in honor of saving money and saving energy), I find myself bundling up.

Help your loved ones stay warm and healthy this season with a pair of arm warmers. They are useful and a cute way to bundle up. Because I have sensitive skin, I would personally opt for arm warmers that are made of bamboo or organic materials. Etsy is a great place to find all sorts of arm warmers or anything really, and you can buy them directly from the artists.

Another tip: Feeling creative and have extra time? You can make arm warmers out of an old pair of tights or socks that have a hole in them (maybe consider keeping these for yourself) or you can make them easily out of a new pair of tall socks (better for your friends). Check out this helpful video if you feel like doing-it-yourself.

Number Three:
Quotable mugs. Do you have a friend who is less than enthusiastic about their job? Brighten up their work day with a quotable mug. The power of the messages we tell ourselves affects our health and overall outlook on life.

Another tip: Too many mugs? A water bottle may be another useful gift. My favorite brand of water bottles for health purposes is the Klean Kanteen. You can buy these online or at your local co-op.

Number Four:
Give the gift of education. Giving is one of the main ingredients to being a happy and healthy person, and one of the most invaluable gifts we can give is education.

Purchase a community education class for a friend or a workshop in an area of interest that inspires your friend/family. "Education" could range from a crafting class, a wine tasting class, a nutrition class, a cooking class or something really technical or academic, like a bookeeping class or a writing course. The possibilities here are endless.

Another tip: Do you want to be socially conscious in your gift giving? Instead of giving your family and friends a voucher for a class, make a donation in honor of your friend/family and give the gift of education to a person in need.

After reading Three Cups of Tea, I did this for my mother 2 years ago. Because she was a teacher and she didn't need more "stuff," I made a $40 donation on her behalf to support one teacher's annual salary in Afghanistan. If you would like to give to a different cause, there are many non-profit organizations that offer similar holiday gifts that can make a difference.

Number Five:
Your time. In this day and age when everyone is moving a mile a minute, giving somebody your time is the greatest gift of all.

Be creative, maybe make a menu of the person's favorite restaurant and give some dates that you are free and consider taking them out to dinner. Or if you enjoy cooking, make a menu of a few possible meals you can cook and have them R.S.V.P. to a private home-cooked meal put on by you.

Another tip: Your time doesn't have to be given away in dinner dates. Consider other alternative "things to do." You could give movie tickets, tickets to a concert or a speaker (my friend was gifted tickets to go hear the Dalai Lama speak), the science museum ,etc. Just make sure you follow through and set up the date.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Food cravings series: Gimme salt--sea salt, that is.

Why do we crave salt?

Salt is a mineral that everybody needs. Sometimes people crave salt not because they don't eat enough salty foods but because of a mineral deficiency (Rosenthal, 2008).

* Salt from the sea contains over 60 different trace minerals. However, most people who consume salty foods get their sodium in the form of table salt. Because table salt is refined and processed, it lacks many of the essential minerals that are found in naturally occurring sea salt.

* On top of this fact, because people's diets are already missing nutrients and minerals (from all of the overprocessing of our foods), people will reach for salty foods. Unfortunately because of the quality of sodium found in most processed foods, people will never attain their mineral fix and will continue to grab for those salty foods that will never nourish the body. A perpetual cycle begins where the body craves nourishment and nutrition but only feeds itself nutrient and mineral deficient foods.

What can be done?

* Reaching for foods high in minerals, like a wide variety of vegetables and leafy greens, may help curb the craving for salt (nutrition). Apparently veggies make it into yet another posting.

* Kick table salt and use sea salt instead.

Per Dr. Mercola,"natural salt is essential for life" and helps:
• allow fluids to pass in and out of your cells
• carry nutrients to your cells
• nerve cells in your brain and body to transfer information
• various metabolic reactions in your body
• regulate blood pressure

It also helps aid in mood, although, one could argue that providing minerals to a mineral deficient person may elevate mood in general.

Regardless, everyone is different; some people may need more salt than others to fulfill their bodies' needs so play around with these suggestions and see what happens.

Feel guilty about tossing out your table salt for sea salt? Don't throw it out.

Creative uses for table salt:
• Table salt can be used to get rid of ants. Just add salt to boiling water and prepare a salt solution. Now spray this salt solution in all corners of your house.
• Salt can remove kitchen odors from your hands. If your hands smell like garlic or onions, make a little paste of vinegar and salt and scrub with it (just be careful for any cuts).
• Use it in your arts and crafting; if you watercolor paint, throwing a pinch of salt can create a cool effect.
• The list continues. Just google "Uses for table salt." You will find articles like this one, among many others.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Food cravings series: What is your body trying to tell you?



Cravings are not always problems, but alert us to something that may be off in the body. People ought to pay more attention to their cravings and ask why they might be experiencing a particular craving.

This blogpost will cover one of the most basic flavors/tastes people crave: sugar.

Over the next week or so, I will post more on different types of cravings. Hopefully this information can help shed some light on what you might be craving and how you might react to the craving.

Crave something sweet?

We all need sugar to make our bodies run properly. However, in this case,if you are craving sugar it may not be because you actually need it. Did you know that at the turn of the 19th century people ingested about 5 pounds of sugar a year? Now, annually, people consume over 165 pounds of sugar on average. Wow! Think about that, if you think you maybe only consume 50 pounds a year, that means somebody else is consuming even more than 165 pounds. What do you think that increase in sugar does to our bodies? To keep it simple--let's just say not a whole lot of good.

With that statistic in mind, if you always crave sugar, chances are you have a sugar imbalance. Because if you are living in modern society and eating a western diet you are probably getting plenty of sugar.

Q: So what should we do when we crave sugar?

A: Aim to satisfy this desire with milder, sweet foods that do not contain refined white sugars. Try different fruits or vegetables that are naturally high in sugar.

Some examples of sweet vegetables are:
* corn
* carrots
* onions
* squash
* sweet potatoes
* beets

Q: And what about those sweeteners, we love so much?

A: Try using natural sweeteners instead.

The sweetness that comes from natural fructose is absorbed slowly by the body, unlike their refined counterparts which make you crash and then grab for another sweet treat. Some popular, natural alternatives to sweeteners are:
* brown rice syrup
* barley malt
* stevia
* agave nectar
* date sugar
* honey
* molasses

For more information about sugar:
A very basic, introductory video on sugar addiction
CNN's Q & A: Emotional eating, sugar addiction and depression?

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Dream Reflection: The importance of expanding one's conscious awareness

A recently published article about dreaming, a class discussion and a dream I had last night, all have prompted me to post something about dreaming today.

I don't have any groundbreaking news to share but want to pose a question and some thoughts.

Question: Do you lack psychic equilibrium between your conscious mind and your unconscious mind? Translation: Are the thoughts, desires and self-expression of your dreams in communication (in a positive way) with your conscious mind? Or is there a disconnect?

Why?
Because Carl Jung believes that the consious mind (our thinking mind) acts as a censoring mechanism that limits access to our unconscious thoughts. Jung says that in the long-run, if this censoring continues, internal stress can build up and sickness will develop. Translation: If there is an inability to bridge the unconscious to the conscious part of ourselves, we will get sick and we will never fully understand ourselves.

What might this mean for you?
Maybe you should pay more attention to your dreams and see what happens in your life. Does your stress reduce? Does it lead you to self-discovery?

How might this be done?
Most experts suggest, as you go to sleep, repeat to yourself that you will remember your dreams and promise yourself that when you wake up you will spend time lying in bed recalling the dreams.

For more info on dreams, check out some of these links:
* The art of dreaming
* International Association for the Study of Dreams Go to: About Dreams
* The Dreams Foundation
* 6 observations Jung made about dreams

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Meet your veggie/fruit goals: Some more tips

This will be my final post on veggies and fruits for awhile, because honestly I'm getting a bit burnt out on the topic. Don't get me wrong, I have been incorporating this process into my life through ingestion, reading of materials, thinking about it all and then online discussion/writing (here), so needless to say I am ready to consider topics other than greens for a bit. I also have some big projects due this week and then will have at least one project due every week until the end of the semester so I am trying to relieve myself of my blogging duties. Although as I mentioned before I really think the blogging is for me more than anyone (as much as I love the .2 people who read this thing):) so who knows, maybe I will be on here a lot to just have some balance in my life.

Don't worry, I still love vegetables and will certainly continue to pay homage to them because they are a big part of my life, I mean heck they obviously are because I am sitting here writing about them again. So with that said I will leave you with five more considerations. Please if you have more hints or ideas related to making veggies and fruits a bigger part of your life, do share! We are all literally starving for this kind of wisdom!

1) Buy lots of fruits and veggies when you shop so that you have plenty of choices in the house. Seems like a no brainer, but actually try this, and don't let the food go to waste.

2)Separate your veggies into those that go bad quickly and those that do not so that you can be sure to use them. If you are having trouble finishing them quick enough, freeze them for later.

3) Keep a bowl of cut up veggies in your fridge for quick snacking. This is a good one. How many of you will eat veggies from a pre-cut tray, but won't put in the time to cut them up yourself. Take a step back in the processing, it will save you money and it will help your health tremendously!

4) If you need a snack for the day pack a piece of fruit or a veggie. People might have thought I was weird, but when cucumbers were good this summer from the farmer's market I would actually just bring a whole cucumber to work and eat it like a banana. Was very refreshing, gave me energy and made my skin clearer.

5) Add extra veggies to whatever dish you are making. For example if you are making spaghetti add some broccoli or zucchini to it. If you are eating a frozen dinner, add veggies to it.

That's all I have for now.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Produce: Sometimes organic is mandatory.


So maybe you're a health pro and you consume 5 fruits/veggies a day, well let's up your game. Do you always consider where these veggies came from? Knowing how they were produced is so important in understanding the nutritional value of your food. Unfortunately to save time and money the use of pesticides with our food has become prevalent. Annually, more than 1.2 billion pounds of pesticides is sprayed/added to U.S. crops (Murray, p. 47).

Pesticides kill pests. What do you think they do to humans? There is a huge consensus out there that pesticides can really damage your health, especially during fetal development (in womb) and in early childhood. So if you are a pregnant mother or a new parent, consider your child if anything (EWG Handout). Also, consider the health of the workers who use the pesticides, and the environmental damage that occurs because of pesticides. All the more reason for you to use your consumer dollar to deny support to this harmful practice, and to protect yourself, humanity and the earth as well.

Aside from the politics, the point of this post is to expose the fruits and veggies that have lots of pesticides. You gotta start somewhere. The Environmental Working Group explains that people who consume 5 fruits and veggies from the Dirty Dozen list on average ingest 10 pesticides a day. Yummy...hmm, not so much. Especially if your body is on overload mode and can't get rid of these toxins properly. People who eat from the 15 least contaminated list consume less than 2 pesticides on a daily basis. What's upsetting is that people think they are doing something good for their health but they are also putting themselves at risk.

Don't risk it and buy organic when you can (even if it's not on the list). Turns out broccoli (which is not on the list) has more than 50 pesticides used on it. I guess it wouldn't make the list when you compare it to the 110 pesticides that are used on apples(Murray, 49). Point is, just be mindful of what you are ingesting. To help get you started, here is the Environmental Working Group's list to consider.

DIRTY DOZEN Buy these ones organic.
From the worst:
1) Celery
2) Peaches
3) Strawberries
4) Apples
5) Blueberries
6) Nectarines
7) Bell Peppers
8) Spinach
9) Cherries
10) Kale/Collard Greens
11) Potatoes
12) Grapes (Imported)

CLEAN 15 Lowest in pesticides.
From the best:
1) Onions
2) Avocado
3) Sweet corn
4) Pineapple
5) Mangos
6) Sweet peas
7) Asparagus
8) Kiwi
9) Cabbage
10) Eggplant
11) Cantaloupe
12) Watermelon
13) Grapefruit
14) Sweet Potato
15) Honeydew melon

As a woman reminded me tonight, if you are going to buy a pair of good shoes do you go to Payless or do you go somewhere else known for more quality? If you will fork out the money for a good pair of shoes for your feet what about your body?

Same goes for food, it may be more expensive but there is a difference between price and value. The price might be lower, but what about the value?

Food topic for the week: Get veggies back into your life. Lots of them.


In my Alternative Approaches to Nutrition class I am learning a lot of little tips to help with eating a more balanced diet and living a healthier lifestyle. I'm also learning about food safety (you'll hear more on this later).

With that said I've decided to post some "food for thought" each week to help get our minds thinking about what exactly we put into our bodies for nourishment. If we want to wake up and live our lives, food choice is a big part of it. With the winter months creeping around the corner I think its a good time to establish some patterns and habits so it will be easier to stay healthy and active through the stillness of Winter.

Who needs more veggies in their life? Chances are, you do. As the Daily Beast reports yesterday, "the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a study this month that says only 26 percent of American adults eat vegetables three or more times a day. According to the 'Eating Patterns in America' report released this week by a market research company, only 23 percent of meals include a vegetable—and that’s including lettuce on a hamburger." If people are considering a leaf of lettuce on a hamburger one vegetable serving I would argue that the 26 percent figure may even be an overestimation.

So what does this mean? Yeah, we all know we should eat our vegetables, and we don't eat enough of them, so what? Well, for starters a diet rich in fruits and veggies is one of the best ways to prevent almost all chronic diseases. It's true. As Murray's Encyclopedia of Healing Foods says, "Fruits and vegetables are so important in the battle against cancer that some experts said--and we agree--that cancer is a result of a 'maladaptaton' over time to a reduced level of intake of fruits and vegetables" and similarly the medical journal, Cancer Causes & Control says, "Vegetables and fruit contain the anticarcinogenic cocktail to which we are adapted. We abandon it at our peril" (18).

Maybe in my younger years this would be a foreign matter, but as I get older and my bones begin to get creak when I get up I've started to pay more attention to "chronic disease" prevention and I'm all about it. Hell yes I enjoy life too much to discard all the evidence surrounding this topic, and I love food so I'm taking the veggie challenge. You should too. Try to eat more vegetables this week and you'll notice you'll have less room in the stomach for other things like, let's say chips, cookies, ice cream, etc.? And you'll feel better. I promise!

Tip of the day:
BUY LOTS OF FROZEN VEGGIES (PREFERABLY ORGANIC) FOR COOKING SO YOU CAN EASILY ADD A VEGGIE DISH TO A MEAL.
(SO EASY...NO WASHING OR CHOPPING INVOLVED. NO LETTING IT GO BAD IN THE FRIDGE, IT'S THERE AND READY FOR EATIN'!)

Frozen veggies retain their nutrients better than most canned and even fresh vegetables, which start losing their nutritional value the moment they are picked. Don't get me wrong though, eat lots of fresh veggies when you can!

You can be very creative with frozen veggies, they are good for stir-frying, side dishes to a meal, or even a snack. If you have any snack/meal ideas to share that incorporate frozen veggies please do share!

Here is my favorite breakfast meal lately, that incorporates frozen veggies:

1 clove of garlic chopped (from farmer's market...we'll discuss good places to buy food another week)
1 beaten egg (from the farmer's market)
1 cup of frozen organic veggies
Cheese (whatever's in the fridge)
Olive Oil

Directions
1) Chop up a clove of garlic. Beat one egg (or two if you need).
2) On medium heat, heat a little olive oil in a pan on the stove.
3) Add garlic, let cook for a minute.
4) Add the veggies (1 cup). Let cook for a couple minutes.
5) Add the beaten egg and mix it up/scramble with the veggies. Grate a little cheese over the mixture.
6) Add a little sea salt, pepper, dried herbs to suit your palate.
7) Eat a homecooked yummy breakfast with veggies and protein that took less than 10 minutes to prepare! If you're looking for some carbs to add to the mix, grab a piece of fruit like a banana and you'll really be set.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Food, Inc.



Do you like scary movies? Whether you do or don't, Food, Inc. is an astonishing movie that paints the picture of what our food production/processing has become in America--down right scary. This movie impacts anyone who eats in America...(so everybody). Therefore, all people must, must, MUST watch this movie, chances are it will change your life. I know I will never look at a chicken breast the same after learning more about them. Yuck! Let me just recommend that you don't watch the movie after a day of eating lunch at Buffalo Wild Wings and then a dinner consisting of a big chunk of pork schnitzel. Oops. I rarely eat meat, but of course on the day I watched Food, Inc. I indulged twice.

Last year I saw King Corn which is an eye-opener about the overproduction of corn and the abundance of corn hidden in our food and diet. I made lots of changes to my diet after viewing this movie and I didn't think I needed to see Food, Inc. because I knew it shared a similar message. However, I am so glad I saw Food, Inc.! If I had to choose between only seeing one of those films Food, Inc. has a greater impact. The movie provides images of the production of meat and arresting information that really woke me up for good to the disgusting culture our farmers have had to adapt to in order to make it within the meat industry. It also touches on some of the corn issues that are addressed in King Corn. The movie also provides more motivation to join the organic and grass-fed movement. After watching those poor animals and the condition of the food we are eating I have officially vowed to not eat another piece of meat unless it is grass-fed or locally produced. I'm serious about it this time. Now I will call in an order to The Grass Fed Cattle Company when I have a hankering for a chunk of meat. When I want some eggs for breakfast, Farmer's market here I come! Otherwise its abstinence for me.

Moral of the post: Seriously, GO. RENT. IT. NOW. Heck, buy it so that when your future children want to watch something ridiculous from the old times or learn from history, they can see what messed up times their parents lived in. The movie at least gives me hope that each and every day we are getting closer to waking up collectively, I have no doubt one day this nation will finally wake up and realize that we've got it all backwards and we're doing all the wrong things and need to start changing. We're getting there...slowly.

Here is a link to the trailer, (the trailer doesn't do any justice to the movie, the movie is way better, but I wanted to provide some multimedia/visual to get you rolling and reeling like me).

Have you maybe seen Food, Inc. or are already on board with its message and want to do something about it? Go to www.takepart.com/foodinc to learn ways you can make a difference.

Here is a sneak peek list of ten ways you can change our food system:
1) Stop drinking sodas and other sweetened beverages.
2) Eat at home instead of eating out.
3) Support the passage of laws requiring chain restaurants to post calorie information on menus and menu boards.
4) Tell schools to stop selling sodas, junk food, and sports drinks.
5) Meatless Mondays—Go without meat one day a week. (Or more than one day...)
6) Buy organic or sustainable food with little or no pesticides.
7) Protect family farms; visit your local farmer's market.
8) Make a point to know where your food comes from—READ LABELS.
9) Tell Congress that food safety is important to you.
10)Demand job protection for farm workers and food processors, ensuring fair wages and other protections.

Eat out a lot? Make better choices about where you eat. Here is a link to restaurants that are local/organic in the twin cities.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Speechless about this video...well not totally ;)




Tonight I attended the first session in a series of wellness talks at a chiropractic center called Revolution Chiropractic Wellness Center. It's in Maple Grove. Funnily enough (to those who know I was entering sweepstakes pretty crazily for a week in January before classes started), I must admit that I won first prize at a Wellness event called, Restore Healing in March. I only entered in three contests while at this event, and I happened to win grand prize from this Chiropractic center which invited me to a 4-part lecture series on health, and I also won second place from Red Clover Clinic, an acupuncture clinic in Roseville for a one-hour foot reflexology session. I will reflect on that fabulous experience another post (as well as sweepstakes strategies), but for now just wanted to say two things.

Number One) Enter sweepstakes if they are around because as No Fear puts eloquently, "You miss 100% of the shots you don't take."

Number Two) Don't give up hope and ALWAYS believe.

Okay, I want to say three things...the above video almost made me cry in this seminar I went to tonight. The seminar itself was not new information to me, but this video was beautiful. I mean I practically cried! Ask Jay, he saw me holding back the tears. It is truly amazing what touches us, and I was lucky enough to have one of those moments tonight. I am so thankful for it.

Now, I must get some rest and prepare for a meditation retreat that is happening all day tomorrow followed by the researching and writing of a 25 page lit-review as well as other chores... Somehow this video makes me feel more ready for it and makes my life seem simple and easy just for a minute...

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Mediterranean cooking night--a Healthy Start to the New Year!

Since I have had some free time this month (no school) I have been able to be a bit more mindful about what I am putting into my body. I have heard so many good things about the Mediterranean diet and so I thought I would test it out. My partner is very interested in cooking and learning about other culture's diets, so he picked up this book at Half Price Books:

Since the Mediterranean diet is rich in a variety of seafood, I thought a good place to begin would be with the Italian Shrimp Skewers. Pretty safe. With all of the different kinds of fish and shellfish recipes introduced in the cookbook, I thought it would be good insurance for my first stab at this cooking style.

I decided to couple the Italian Shrimp Skewers with the Halloumi and Grape Salad. (I saw the fried cheese on the salad and was sold!) No but really, I thought it would be a perfect side, sticking to the lightness of the shrimp, but also adding an element of rich and substantial flavor. Plus if you are a cheese lover you can't go wrong here!

Both the shrimp and the salad are SUPER easy to prepare. Really with the salad it is just finding the cheese (call ahead to your grocer to make sure it is there), and with the shrimp you just need an hour or so to let it sit and marinate.

HALLOUMI AND GRAPE SALAD
In Eastern Europe, firm, salty halloumi cheese is often served fried for breakfast or supper. Feta cheese makes a good substitute in this recipe.

FOR THE DRESSING:
1/4 cup olive oil
1 TBSP lemon juice
1/2 teaspoon of sugar
salt and ground black pepper to taste
1 TBSP chopped fresh thyme (or dill...I used thyme)


FOR THE SALAD:
5 oz. mixed salad greens (1 bag)
3 oz. seedless green grapes
3 oz. seedless red grapes
9 oz. halloumi cheese (the packet came in 8.8 oz. so I just went with that)
3 TBSP olive oil
Thyme leaves (or dill) to garnish


SERVES 4

1. To make the dressing, combine the olive oil, lemon juice and sugar. Season. Stir in the thyme (or dill) and set aside.

2. Toss together the salad greens and the green and red grapes, then transfer to a large serving plate.

3. Thinly slice the cheese. Heat the oil in a large frying pan. Add the cheese and saute briefly until turning golden on the underside. Turn the cheese with a spatula and cook the other side.


(Jay may have overdone them according to the recipe, but it still tasted phenomenal!)

4. Arrange the cheese on the salad. Pour on the dressing and garnish with thyme (or dill). (We just put the cheese pieces in a bowl and like croutons, added as much cheese as we wanted on our own salads).

So simple, but so good!

ITALIAN SHRIMP SKEWERS
Simple and delicious mouthfuls from the Amalfi Coast

2 pounds raw shrimp, peeled
1/4 cup olive oil
3 TBSP vegetable oil
1 1/4 cup very fine dry bread crumbs (I used Italian since it made sense with
the name and I couldn't find anything else)
1 garlic clove, crushed
1 TBSP chopped fresh parsley
salt and ground black pepper to taste
lemon wedges, to serve


SERVES 4 (Note about serving size: When I made it, I halved the above written recipe and it yielded 48 pieces of shrimp, 8 skewers with 6 pieces of shrimp each, for Jay and I halving this recipe still yielded 4 servings for us, we each ate 2 skewers for dinner and each had 2 more leftover for lunch).

1. Slit the shrimp down their backs and remove the dark vein (I bought the deveined kind so I was fortunate to save some time here). Rinse in cold water and pat dry.

2. Put the olive oil and vegetable oil in a large bowl and add the shrimp, mixing them to coat evenly. Add the bread crumbs, garlic, and parsley and season with salt and pepper. Toss the shrimp thoroughly to give them an even coating of bread crumbs. Cover and let marinate for at least an hour.

3. Thread the shrimp onto four metal or wooden skewers (for us this was actually 8 wooden skewers for the half recipe), curling them up as you do so, so that the tail is skewered in the middle.

4. Preheat the broiler. Place the skewers in the broiler pan (cookie sheet) and cook for about 2 minutes on each side, until the bread crumbs are golden. Serve with lemon wedges.

NUM NUM NUM NUM...you are finished!


Italian Shrimp Skewers


Up Close of the Halloumi Salad


Forgot to add the lemon wedges for garnish


I can't get enough angles of this meal!

Really, I cannot stress enough the simplicity of this meal, and as you can see in the photos, for how simple it is to make, it sure cleans up well and makes for a good presentation. If you have any other questions about this recipe, let me know.

To have your own copy of this cookbook (and I only would suggest that you buy it if you really like ALL kinds of seafood--including squid), click here. I highly recommend buying a USED copy of this book to lessen the environmental impact of your purchase.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

New Year's Resolutions: Do you INTEND to make one? (or two, or three or maybe none at all...)

The Christmas season just blew by for my family and me, and just like the piles of snow have accumulated, a lot of forgotten chores, hobbies, dust, papers, and other crap have accumulated in my car, closet, house, and mind. As arbitrary as it may be, it seems like the "New Year" is arriving just as quickly as ever and just in time to save me/re-center me/prep me for all of the "stuff" it seems like I need to be/should be/want to be doing.

While it would be easy to curl up under a blanket right now and take a nap, I decided it will be just as good to take a minute to sit down with myself and mull over last year's abandoned New Year's Resolutions and think about what I really intend to incorporate or bring into my life as 2010 approaches.

Luckily I have a nice break from working at the school as well as a month break from my graduate program to begin to unpack all of this "stuff" I speak of. I feel lucky to have this extra time, but also recognize that more time might not necessarily make it any easier to accomplish what I choose to set out for. Many people argue that the excuse "not enough time" is not the true culprit behind failed New Year's Resolutions. Various studies estimate that of about 50% of determined New Year's Resolution Makers, that only 10% will realize their goal. What's with that? They say it is not the time, but the intention. And their talking true intention here. People always say, "Oh we should hang out" or whatever suggestion and while they might think they intend to, they really don't truly intend to follow through with it. It is the same with resolutions.

Well, as I have been noting from the book I was gifted for Christmas called, "The Life Organizer: A Woman's Guide to a Mindful Year," (which I highly recommend) most goals we set for ourselves are too vague or too big for us all to absorb/understand at once. We become easily turned off by the difficulty of the goal as well as the fact that we do not create a plan for how we can get there. For instance, rather than saying, "Be better with finances" as a goal, one might be better off rephrasing the idea to "Save $50 from each paycheck and put aside" or "Eat out no more than 4 times a month." Stating the goal in a more action-based way, one can realize how they actually can begin making steps toward their goal or maybe how difficult it may be for them. Or another example would be, rather than saying, in my life time I want to write a book or a good short story, one should make the goal of spending 2 hours a week free-writing, or more depending on what may work for the individual. Test it out and see what works. We must be honest with ourselves and our intentions and realize if we really want to do something or not. If we think the doctors say we should floss each day, so we make that our resolution, for a minority of people that might be enough ammo to work, but for most people we must have our own personal need or desire to help us follow through.

So for me what all this intention, resolution talk means is a couple of things.

1) I must make myself workable, somewhat tangible goals--which means that I can visualize how they might work into my lifestyle.

For example, last year I said I wanted to "learn something new each month." Well this was a little difficult to do in terms of keeping it to a month and it almost seemed unnatural because sometimes I would learn like 5 things in a month and then another month I wouldn't learn anything (in terms of a trade). Also, the vagueness of this goal made it hard to define what "learning" was for me, was it just trades or important life lessons too? Based off of this idea, this year I am making the commitment to take one Community Education class each time they come out with new class schedule. I started to do that toward the end of this year, and it has really been working out for me. So far I have taken Water Aerobics, Belly-dancing, and I have in the books now to take an Oil Painting class with Mpls. commmunity ed come end of January! While I was never a painter (actually pretty poor) I am looking forward at giving it another go!

2) On that note, I must have fun with the resolution and not judge myself about not reaching my goals. So many times people give up on something because it didn't work once. Well if you truly do want it to work, I'd say eventually we might in fact get there with a little persistence.

This goes for flossing (persistence). I know its slightly because the docs say I should, but more so because I do have a history of bad teeth in the fam, and I do need to do it. The problem is I just get so tired before I go to bed. Lame excuse, right? No, I mean there is a reason it is a problem for many people and I am sure this is part of it for some people. Well this year I am changing it up a bit. My goal for this year (since all of my conscious life I have been trying to floss my teeth) I am going to start by flossing in the morning time. Granted it might not be the best, it will be better than no flossing at all. Double pat on the back if I can do it at night, but for now, I am just going to work on doing it in the morning time when I am awake and have time. So here, rather than giving up, I have decided to find an action that will be more likely to succeed/happen that can bring me closer to accomplishing this goal. And hey I might fail miserably, but that's okay because I am being honest with myself and giving it my best go.

Now, I could go on and on, obviously and plan to privately later. I had a two-page list of resoultions last year, so some dissecting/revamping needs to be done, but I will not bore you further with these things for now.

For now I will just send you my good luck with revisiting your old resolutions and creating new ones from the old, or even ditching them completely if you choose to. If you have any good ones, feel free to share, I love hearing what people are doing.

Until then, cheers to a happy and healthy 2010!

<3

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

A Healthy Christmas List...

After spending some time with my boyfriend's family and hearing about their amazon wishlists (to get gift ideas for them for this Christmas),I decided to start one of my own for fun. I have to say that I enjoyed what felt like a pseudo-shopping experience. I think I have about 15 items on my public wishlist and maybe about 10 more on my private wishlist. I wanted to share some of my favorite finds for this holiday season.

I'd like to preface this short list by saying that initially I felt kind of bad making a wishlist and all, considering I feel as though I have all I need in life to lead a good life and should not ask for more...however I must say, of course I had an enjoyable time realizing there are so many cool things out there that could add even more quality to my life (dare I say) ;) And as I have been compiling my list I found that many of my gifts could be generalized to be health-centered, which makes sense. One of the greatest gifts in life is good health, so here is what I found that I think could benefit people open to the idea of taking better care of themselves.


A Zenergy Chime


This cool little chime is yes, a chime, but its name suggests its cooler than just any ol' chime, right? This little guy can be used in a session (so if I continue to ever pursue something along the lines of a holistic health practitioner or a health coach I could begin my sessions with this ring. It could also be used for opening and closing meditation ceremonies (which I will be doing come next February for class!) Or as I found suggested on Amazon (through customer reviews), it could be a good resource for a sort of quieting/dismissal/announcement in a classroom setting. As this month marks my first month of teaching Spanish language in an after-school program, I can't help but think such a gem might make class time more special.

Music to Inspire Positive Thinking by John Herbmann


So I am not going to go into a novel on each of these items, I think this one is pretty self-explanatory, and I believe there are other ones out there that are relaxation, stress-relief and creativity inspiring, but I just thought that this CD would be a good one to wake up to in the morning and one worth a try.

Coloring Mandalas book by Susan F. Fincher


Everybody needs to color, or as my Foundations of Holistic Health and Wellness class would call it, "make marks on paper." Art is something that is so important to maintaining good health and balance in your life. As cheesy as that may sound or as unartistic as you may feel, we all must take some time to express ourselves through this medium (and it can be in many forms). I happen to want to re-explore coloring and inspire myself to take some time to breathe and relax in my day. This is also something I am looking at as an activity to do with my little (and future children). We can color a mandala together and keep it somewhere safe and accessible, so when we are having a bad day we can look at the mandala and remember what is really important in life.

The Artists Way book


As taken from amazon.com's review:

With the basic principle that creative expression is the natural direction of life, Julia Cameron and Mark Bryan lead you through a comprehensive twelve-week program to recover your creativity from a variety of blocks, including limiting beliefs, fear, self-sabotage, jealousy, guilt, addictions, and other inhibiting forces, replacing them with artistic confidence and productivity.

This book links creativity to spirituality by showing how to connect with the creative energies of the universe, and has, in the four years since its publication, spawned a remarkable number of support groups for artists dedicated to practicing the exercises it contains.

So...I could go on with more details showing you this cool teapot I found or talking about hand blenders and their amazing clean-up/convenience, or the 100% silk pillowcases I have been asking for ever since I was young, but I am not going to continue, I think you get the idea and can start making your own lists this Christmas. By thinking about what you really want can shed light onto what kind of gift you might find valuable in giving to another person. I just wanted to share a few items on my list with the theme of health and healing since it has been my life lately. If you have other requests or questions about books, essential oils, natural beauty products, etc. I may have some knowledge to share from my program, so please feel free to ask. Otherwise just enjoy this list for what it is worth to you and have fun making your own.

Have a healthy day today!

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Michael Pollan's 20 Dietary Do's and Don'ts

From 2,500 responses about people's rules about eating, Michael Pollan has chosen 20 to share.

1. Don’t eat egg salad from a vending machine.

2. Don’t eat anything that took more energy to ship than to grow.

3. If you are not hungry enough to eat an apple, then you’re not hungry.

4. Eat foods in inverse proportion to how much its lobby spends to push it.

5. Avoid snack foods with the “oh” sound in their names: Doritos, Cheetos, Tostitos, Ho Hos, etc.

6. No second helpings, no matter how scrumptious.

7. It’s better to pay the grocer than the doctor.

8. You may not leave the table until you finish your fruit.

9. You don’t get fat on food you pray over. (Meals prepared at home, served at the table and given thanks for are more appreciated and more healthful than food eaten on the run.)

10. Breakfast you should eat alone. Lunch you should share with a friend. Dinner, give to your enemy.

11. Never eat something that is pretending to be something else (artificial sweeteners, margarine, etc.)

12. Don’t yuck someone’s yum. There is someone out there who likes deep-fried sheep eyeballs and, well, more power to them.

13. Make and take your own lunch to work.

14. Eat until you are seven-tenths full and save the other three-tenths for hunger.

15. I am living in Japan and following these simple rules in preparing each meal: GO HO – incorporate five different cooking methods, GO SHIKI – incorporate five colors, GO MI – incorporate five flavors.

16. One of my top rules for eating comes from economics. The law of diminishing marginal utility reminds me that each additional bite is generally less satisfying than the previous bite. This helps me slow down, savor the first bites, stop eating sooner.

17. Don’t eat anything you aren’t willing to kill yourself.

18. When drinking tea, just drink tea. I find this Zen teaching useful, given my inclination toward information absorption in the morning, when I’m also trying to eat breakfast, get the dog out, start the fire and organize my day.

19. When you’re eating, don’t talk about other past meals, whether better or worse. Focus on what’s in front of you.

20. After spending some time working with people with eating disorders, I came up with this rule: Don’t create arbitrary rules for eating if their only purpose is to help you feel in control.

The above list was posted by Dr. Mercola, a doctor that I have recently subscribed to (since I began my research on vaccines and H1N1). He often sends out 5 or 6 articles a day that really interest me. This one in particular spoke to me because I am starting my research paper for my Ecology and Health course and my group has chosen to read The Omnivore's Dilemma, which talks about the national eating disorder that our nation faces. Michael Pollan is the author of this amazing book, and I was hoping that this list would help me avoid reading the entire 411 pages, but I was wrong. Regardless it was a funny and informative list, and I am still incredibly excited to spend more time with his book, as it has been very insightful and eye-opening. If you want to know about how much corn you really eat and how much of it is genetically modified, and how you can take an active role in your decisions about what you put into your body, this is the book for you.

I have only read 30 pages of the book, but my favorite passage is in the first two pages where Pollan discusses our national eating disorder/our lack of culture and traditions. Here it is:




INTRODUCTION: Our National Eating Disorder

What should we have for dinner?

This book is a long and fairly involved answer to this seemingly simple question. Along the way, it also tries to figure out how such a simple question could ever have gotten so complicated. As a culture we seem to have arrived at a place where whatever native wisdom we may have once possessed about eating has been replaced by confusion and anxiety. Somehow this most elemental of activities--figuring out what to eat--has come to require a remarkable amount of expert help. How did we ever get to a point where we need to investigative journalists to tell us where our food comes from and nutritionists to determine the dinner menu?

For me the absurdity of the situation became inescapable in the fall of 2002, when one of the most ancient and venerable staples of human life abruptly disappeared from the American dinner table. I'm talking of course about bread. Virtually overnight, Americans changed the way they eat. A collective spasm of what can only be described as carbophobia seized the country, supplanting an era of national lipphobia dating to the Carter administration. That was when, in 1977, a Senate committee had issued a set of "dietary goals" warning beef-loving Americans to lay off the red meat. And so we dutifully had done, until now.

What set off the sea change? It appears to have been a perfect media storm of diet books, scientific studies, and one timely magazine article. The new diet books, many of them inspired by the formerly discredited Dr. Robert C. Atkins, brought Americans the welcome news that they could eat more meat and lose weight just so long as they laid off the bread and pasta. These high-protein, low-carb diets found support in a handful of new epidemiological studies suggesting the nutritional orthodoxy that had held sway in America since the 1970s might be wrong. It was not, as official opinion claimed, fat that made us fat, but the carbohydrates we'd be eating precisely in order to stay slim. So conditions were ripe for a swing of the dietary pendulum when, in the summer of 2002, the New York Times Magazine published a cover story on the new research entitled, "What if Fat Doesn't Make You Fat?" Within months, supermarket shelves were restocked and restaurant menus rewritten to reflect the new nutritional wisdom. The blamelessness of the steak restored, two of the most wholesome and uncontroversial foods known to man--bread and pasta--acquired a moral stain that promptly bankrupted dozens of bakeries and noodle firms and ruined an untold number of perfectly good meals.

So violent a change in a culture's eating habits is surely a sign of a national eating disorder. Certainly it would never have happened in a culture in possession of deeply rooted traditions surrounding food and eating. But then, such a culture would not feel the need for its most august legislative body to ever deliberate the nation's dietary goals--or for that matter, to wage political battle every few years over the precise design of an official government graphic called the "food pyramid." A country with a stable culture of food would not shell out millions for the quackery (or common sense) of a new diet book every January. It would not be susceptible to the pendulum swings of food scares or fads, to the apotheosis every few years of one newly discovered nutrient and the demonization of another. It would not be apt to confuse protein bars and food supplements with meals or breakfast cereals with medicines. It probably would not eat a fifth of its meals in cars or feed fully a third of its children at a fast-food outlet every day. And surely it would not be nearly so fat.

Nor would such a culture be shocked to discover that there are other countries, such as Italy and France, that decide their dinner questions on the basis of such quaint and unscientifc criteria as pleasure and tradition, eat all manner of "unhealthy foods," and, lo and behold, wind up actually healthier and happier in their eating than we are. We show our surprise at this by speaking of something called the "French paradox," for how could a people who eat such demonstrably toxic substances as foie gras and triple creme cheese actually be slimmer and healthier than we are? Yet I wonder if it doesn't make more sense to speak in terms of an American paradox--that is, a notably unhealthy people obssessed by the idea of eating healthily. (Michael Pollan, pp. 1-2)

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Miso soup recipe to boost your immune system

I have been feeling a little itch in my throat for the past month or so, and I had blamed it on allergies, but after a mini frost and some snow on the ground, as well as some yucky looking red bumps on the back of my throat I decided that I probably should get to the grocery store and buy some fruits and vegetables to help boost my immune system to help fight this bug.

Being a student trying to live a lifestyle that prevents health issues rather than one that reacts to them, I admit I feel a bit guilty buying veggies AFTER I felt sick, but I am doing my best! In my defense, I was eating lots of fruits and veggies before last week, but it has been a hectic week of eating on the run, eating what I could find in the cupboards, and going from place to place at the speed of light. I didn't make time for healthy foods and what do you know, I don't feel very good!

However, I would like to give myself a little credit, because this recipe below is the most proactive thing I have done for my diet with the little knowledge I have gained so far from my program through various readings, research, and speakers.




Shiitake Miso Soup Serves 4(recipe and info taken from Robin Robertson's One Dish Vegetarian Meals)

Miso is a rich Japanese soybean pastethat is said to have many healing properties. Be sure not to boil the soup once the miso paste has been added, since boiling destroys valuable enzymes. Long- or short- grain brown rice would be a good choice here for maximum nutritional benefits.

Ingredients:
5 cups water
4 ounces shiitake mushrooms, stemmed and sliced (about 1 cup)
1/2 cup chopped scallions
1/4 cup finely shredded carrots
1/2 teaspoon minced fresh ginger
1 TBSP tamari
-----
3 TBSP miso paste (you can usually find this in the produce)
1 cup chopped spinach leaves
1 cup cooked long- or short-grain brown rice
4 ounces firm silken tofum drained, blotted dry, and diced

1) Bring the water to a boil in a medium saucepan over high heat. Add the mushrooms, scallions, carrots, ginger, and tamari, reduce the heat to medium, and simmer for 10 minutes, or until the vegetables soften.
2) Reduce the heat to low. Transfer about 1/4 cup of the hot soup to a small bowl and add the miso paste, blending well. Stir the blended miso into the soup along with the chopped spinach and simmer for 2 minutes, being careful not to boil. Divide the rice and tofu among 4 soup bowls and ladle the hot soup into the bowls.



***Beyond the note about the healing powers of miso paste, the spinach and shiitake mushrooms have been mentioned to me several times in helping prevent/combat the flu. As I heard from a naturopathic doctor who spoke in my class the other day, the shiitake mushroom is great for fighting flus and colds. Here is more research to back her word (that I found on wikipedia):

Shiitake (椎茸, 香菇, 표고) is a popular culinary mushroom used in dishes around the world. Research has demonstrated the Shiitake mushroom:

Stimulates the immune system[5]
Contains a cholesterol lowering compound known as eritadenine.[6]
Possesses anti-bacterial properties[7][8][9]
Possesses anti-viral properties[5][10] (including anti-HIV[11][12][13] and anti-HSV-1[14]) (contains a proteinase inhibitor[15])
Reduces platelet aggregation[16]

Some other words of advice mentioned was if you are sick you should make sure to AVOID sugar, dairy, and wheat. With over 60% of the immune system in your gut it is important to put the right things in there to support it!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Training for Turkey Trot 5K

Week 1 fri2-th8
fri: CT/Rest
sat: 3 x 400 IW
sun: 2 m
mon: 30 min tempo
tue: Rest
wed: 5 m
thu: 30 min EZ

Week 2 fri9-th15
fri:CT/Rest
sat: 4 x 400 IW
sun: 2 m
mon: 30 min tempo
tue: Rest
wed: 5 m
thu: 35 min EZ

Week 3 fri16-th22
fri: CT/Rest
sat: 4 x 400 IW
sun: 3 m
mon: 30 min tempo
tue: Rest
wed: 6 m
thu: 35 min EZ

Week 4 fri23-th29
fri: CT/Rest
sat: 5 x 400 IW
sun: 3 m
mon: 35 min tempo
tue: Rest
wed: 6 m
thu: 40 min EZ

Week 5 fri30-th5
fri: CT/Rest
sat: 5 x 400 IW
sun: 3 m
mon: 35 min tempo
tue: Rest
wed: 7 m
thu: 35 min EZ

Week 6 fri6-th12
fri: CT/Rest
sat: 6 x 400 IW
sun: 3 m
mon: 40 min tempo
tue: Rest
wed: 6 m
thu: 40 min EZ

Week 7 fri13-th19
fri: CT/Rest
sat: 6 x 400 IW
sun: 3 m
mon: 40 min tempo
tue: Rest
wed: 7 m
thu: 45 min EZ

Week 8 fri20-th26
fri: CT/Rest
sat: 3 m
sun: 30tempo
mon: 2 m run
tue: Rest
wed: Rest
thu: 5K Race!

Training Schedule begins today!

So I decided I am going to participate in a Thanksgiving day 5K. I think Chuseok inspired me. I haven't decided which one yet, but think that it is time to actually train here. I usually like to jog at a leisurely 10 minute/mile. When I did a half marathon I finished with 9:58/mile. This past weekend with no training at all or even much exercise I finished the 5K with about a 9:15/mile. I was thinking now might be the time to actually try for a personal best. Sadly the fastest mile I have ever run in my life time(in jhigh/high school) was probably like 7:20/mile. I've never been good at fast running. I would love to finish this upcoming race with an 8 minute mile, so about 24 minutes/25 minute total. We'll see what happens.

The above training schedule is meant for people who want to run their best 5K, so I am giving it a whirl. I am starting a couple days late, but have run 3.1 miles this past Sunday and I just did the 30 minute tempo training right now. School is getting really busy though(despite the fact I am still posting blogs), and so it might be tricky training, but it won't take up nearly as much time as when I "trained" for the half (although I didn't really follow through on the schedule but was rather focusing more on not dying in the race versus running well).

Here goes nothing!