Posts Tagged ‘Time’

Vegetarianism For Physical, Mental and Spiritual Health

Saturday, February 26th, 2011

By Dada Dharmavedananda

A rich man is sleeping in his house. Suddenly he is awakened by the burglar alarm.

“Ach! These stupid systems never work properly!” he exclaims, rubbing his eyes and struggling to stand up. He goes downstairs and, still cursing the system, turns off the alarm. Going back to his bedroom he quickly falls asleep again.

The burglars can’t believe their good luck, as they take their time to carefully find and steal every available expensive item in the house.

The health situation of most people in the meat-eating nations of the world is analogous to that rich man’s condition. Usually when people experience uncomfortable symptoms and sickness, they turn to doctors and medicines to turn off the symptoms so that they can again be comfortable. Just like the rich man who believes he is safe falls back asleep, so most people, under the illusion of recovered health go back to eating the wrong food, and resume other bad habits. Meanwhile, the cause of the suppressed symptoms remains and gets worse. Over time the person becomes more and more sick.

The physical cause of more than 90% of human sickness is the same: too many toxins in the body. Most of these toxins are located in the stomach, intestinal system, organs and circulation system. As an example let’s look at the common cold. Here the symptoms are a running nose, fever, sore throat, sneezing, and so on. The use of medicine turns off these “problems”. Unfortunately they are alarms, not problems. They are also the means for the body to rid itself of the real problem — excess toxins. The increased flow of mucous provides a channel for toxins to flow out. The fever causes sweat, which is also a medium for elimination. At the same time the message of the sore throat and the sneezing is: “Stop eating! Drink more and more!” Because they go on eating even though they are not hungry, most people who catch colds are compelled to continue suffering for many days or even weeks at a stretch. If they were simply to fast on water or lemon water (with a little salt, not sugar), the cold almost always fulfills its purpose and stops within one or two days.

In this case, what is the reason for the effectiveness of fasting? To answer this question we should understand a most fundamental principle of our digestion system. The digestive system has two functions: 1) abstract energy from the food and immediately pass the waste matter out of the body and 2) clean itself of old static waste matter that has clung to the walls of the intestines and other organs for days, years, or even decades. The first function is well known to everyone. The second function is also known, but essentially ignored, by most conventional doctors. They especially neglect the fact that when the digestive system becomes clean, the body next directs its cleaning efforts at any other organs or systems which contain toxins.

The two functions of the digestion system are basically non-simultaneous. That is, whenever the body is busy in digesting newly consumed food, then no energy remains for deep cleaning activity. It is only when the stomach and intestines are more or less empty of fresh food, then those organs will automatically start cleaning themselves. The toxins causing the cold are rapidly eliminated, the symptoms stop, and the person can resume eating. Hopefully s/he is wiser due to having been sick, and is more careful to avoid over-toxifying the body.

From which foods does toxification more likely occur? Here the principle is easy to understand: food which is more difficult to digest is more likely to not be fully digested. When any food enters one’s mouth, digestive juices start secreting in the mouth, esophogaus, and stomach. When the food reaches the stomach, the digestive acids try to quickly break it down into small particles. Easy-to-digest food requires less acid secretion, difficult-to-digest food requires more acid. The process continues as the food solids and liquids are worked upon by the liver, the kidneys, the small intestine, the large intestine and other organs. Acids, fats and other toxic substances also pass into the blood stream, polluting the circulation system and adhering to the walls of the arteries and other blood-carrying channels. Thus, the difficult-to-digest foods are called acid-forming, while easy-to-digest foods are classified as alkaline. In the case of some extremely alkaline foods, such as juicy fruits, they contribute their own fruit acids which may help in the digestion of other foods. There are a few foods, like sugar, tea and onion which are not difficult to digest but are classified as acidic because they contain elements which greatly disturb the equilibrium of the body. These elements are mildy poisonous.

Here is a list of foods categorized from most alkaline to most acid-forming. (As one reads down the list, each succeeding item is somewhat more acid-forming.):

1) Lemon water

2) Herb tea

3) Honey (a little)

4) Citric fruit juice

5) Other fruit juices

6) Vegetable juice

7) Citric fruits

icon cool Vegetarianism For Physical, Mental and Spiritual Health Juicy fruits

9) Other fruits (except banana)

10) Non-starchy vegetables *

11) Buckwheat

(up to here all items are relevant for “graduated fasting”)

12) Yoghurt

13) Starchy vegetables and banana *

14) Fresh tofu

15) Nuts

16) Raw sugar

17) Whole grains

18) Beans

19) Refined grains

20) Refined sugar

21) Tea, coffee

22) Fried foods

23)Milk varies according to personal situation **

Avoid extremely acidic food: 24)mushrooms, 25)onion, 26)garlic, 27)fish, 28)meat, 29)eggs

* Non-starchy vegetables may also be considered as salad-vegetables, i.e. they may be eaten raw. Starchy vegetables, like potato, are difficult to eat raw. Banana is much more starchy then most other fruits (unless it is extremely ripe, in which case its classification become more alkaline).

** Depending on the condition of one’s liver, and also on the functioning of milk-digestion enzymes, people differ in their capacity to digest milk and milk products. For some people milk is a medicine, e.g. certain patients of ulcer. For many, milk causes gas formation, and may thus be recognized as being highly acid-forming. Non-homogenised milk is much easier to digest than homogenised milk because when fats are forcibly mixed with the rest of the milk such that separation does not occur, such globules of “whole milk” become strenuous for the liver.

Items numbered from 1 to 11 generally have a cleansing effect on the body. If a person thus restricts his diet for any length of time to those initial items, the body will undergo a gradual or radical cleansing process. The higher up on the list the restriction is made, so the faster the cleansing will occur. In this regard, the most extreme method of cleaning the body is to neither eat nor drink anything, not even water. But such a method, though appropriate for some people for a short time, is dangerous for most people.

In any case we may thus clearly understand that if an individual uses simple natural means to keep the body relatively clean from toxins, and if there is a regular intake of a reasonable amount of nutrition (not too much and not too little), then there is the greatest possibility that such a person will maintain a high degree of health.

Of course many factors enter into “keeping the body relatively clean from toxins”. It is not only a matter of food and fasting. These factors include exercise, bathing, sleep, mental activity, purity of air and water, presence or absence of chemicals in the food, hormonal inbalances of the glands, and inborn genetic peculiarities. But of all these, food and fasting remain the foremost important for most people.

Thus we come to the main statement of this article: a vegetarian diet is better than a non-vegetarian diet for our all-round health. For the moment we are looking only at the physical aspect, and later will deal with the psychic and spiritual aspects. Vegetarianism is preferable for the bodily health because it consists of items which are easier to digest and thus much more alkaline than fish, meat and eggs.

The human body system has exactly the same food-eating and digesting characteristics as other vegetarian mammals (like cows, monkeys, deer and elephants), and totally different from the meat-eating mammals (like tigers, lions, wolves, dogs and cats). These characteristics include:

1) Vegetarian mammals including man have flat rear molar teeth for grinding their food. Meat-eaters do not have flat molars, and instead have sharp front teeth for tearing food.

2) Vegetarian mammals have an intestinal tract 10 to 12 times their body length. The intestines of meat-eaters is only 3 times their body length so that rapidly decaying meat can pass out quickly.

3) The stomach acid of vegetarians is 20 times less strong than that of meat-eaters.

4) Vegetarians have no claws, whereas meat-eaters have claws to catch and kill their prey.

5) Vegetarians perspire through their skin. Meat-eaters have no skin pores, and instead perspire through their tongues.

6) Vegetarian mammals require high-fiber diets (available in fruits, vegetables and whole grains) or else they eventually become constipated. Meat-eating mammals remain perfectly healthy even when their diets include very little fiber. Constipation is usually the first cause of digestion-related diseases in humans.

7) Meat-eaters can easily digest foods containing a high quantity of cholestorol and saturated fat. Vegetarians have a very limited capacity to deal with these same elements. For example laboratory experiements show that if dogs are gradually given more and more butter fat, even 250 grams every day, they show no increase in their serum cholesterol level. On the other hand, if vegetarian mammals eat much fat a great strain is first placed on the liver, fatty deposits develop on the inner walls of the arteries, and gradually the heart weakens through over-work, causing heart attacks and blood clots.

It is clear that human beings are bound to face difficulties in the digestion of meat, fish and eggs. Furthermore, humans who regularly eat such heavy foods gradually experience weakening of their digestive systems such that they are unable to rapidly eliminate waste matter, and thus their bodies get less and less time to perform self-cleaning.

Regarding heart disease, the cause of more than half of the deaths in the USA, the American Medical Association states that more than 90% of all heart disease could be prevented by vegetarian diet.

The editor-in-chief of the prestigious “American Journal of Cardiology” and a foremost expert on heart disease, DrWilliam Roberts, wrote: “When we kill animals to eat them, they end up killing us because their flesh was never intended for human beings, who are naturally herbivores.”

The reader may be interested in my own experience of low-protein diets. Not only have been a strict vegetarian for the last 25 years of my life, but numerous times for months at a stretch I have also eliminated from my diet milk products, grains, beans and starchy vegetables. During those periods, which continued for as long as 9 months at a time, I ate only fruit and salad. Without any major source of protein I felt stronger and better than during any other times of my life. Indeed I would maintain such a diet always, except that I prefer to be able to eat together with other people. Also, this sort of diet is awkward or even impossible in very poor societies where the climate is cold, such as in Mongolia and Russia (where I am presently working). Thus, only due to circumstances, not due to physical need, I eat a diet containing some high protein foods. Still, I prefer that my meals predominantly consist of fruits and salad-type vegetables.

About the Author: Dada Dharmavedananda is the the director of the Ananda Marga Wellness Center in the Philippines. He has been teaching yoga and natural health for almost forty years. Visit his website http://www.amwellness.org for more information about natural health and diet.

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Taking A Mental Health Day: Let Self-care Count

Saturday, February 26th, 2011

By Charles Harmon

It seems like so many of us are always busy. There’s never enough time to get everything done. Is it time to take a holiday, a special one, a holiday for ourselves? When was the last time you took a day off of work to take care of yourself? For some of us, maybe its never happened.

Taking a personal day can be very rejuvenating and rewarding for your spirit. It enables you to be in a less crowded environment and be more relaxed than on the weekend when most of us are off. It’s easy to get things done, especially since you avoid the weekend crowd if you have to go to any public place or large business such as a department store, supermarket or similar crowded place.

Make a list of things you’ve been wanting to do for a long time but circumstances have prevented you from doing so. Don’t put any restrictions in your mind but just let it run wild. It can be driving to a country fruit and vegetable stand to get fresh food, spending the whole day at the hair salon getting highlights and your nails done, taking out the fishing rod and driving to a remote location for some good non interrupted fishing, or calling an old college buddy to go watch a football game on TV like the good old days. Most anything you really wanted to do but couldn’t and now you can is fair game if it can be done on your special day off.

Don’t be shy. Don’t tell yourself you don’t need it. Take a day for yourself and don’t feel guilty about it. You certainly have a right to restore your energy and recharge your battery. We all need that every so often. Try to not make it work related or to deal with general business concerns or your set routines. This is what you need a break from. Distance yourself from these things. Remove them from your mind so you gain a brand new perspective. It will be a challenge to abandon your habits for a day but it leads to a secret key to a true inner adventure.

Don’t wait till retirement to postpone these mental breaks. By then it probably won’t happen or it might be too late. We’re always waiting for the perfect time, the perfect conditions to do something for ourselves. Many times we put it off indefinitely. The time to take a well deserved mental break is now! We don’t know what our physical health will be like in the future.

We had a small business where we cared for older folks in our home. Most of them were in no condition to do much of anything for themselves. They had pretty much given up on life; although some of them weren’t even sick, but just a victim of old age. Don’t wait until you are like that as by then all your hopes and dreams for the future are overshadowed by mental and physical conditions if you are like so many of the older senior citizens.

A lot of people berate themselves if they think of taking a day off just for themselves. It doesn’t mean you are being self-indulgent. When you renew your own spiritual, mental, and physical energy you bring more energy into the world, your job, the people around you, and those you love. All gain some of the energy you radiate.

It’s up to you to take that next step. Take your special, not too frequent, personal day off to recharge yourself and relax and enjoy the moments that day brings.

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Supporting A Friend With Mental Health Difficulties

Saturday, February 26th, 2011

By Arthur Buchanan

Someone who is experiencing mental health difficulties is usually able to live a successful full life, particuarly if they are receiving help to manage their illness. However, it is not uncommon for stigma to be attached to experiencing mental health difficulties. This often causes people to feel embarrassed. Often people with mental health difficulties worry that people will tease them or treat them differently. There are some things that you may want to do to help your friend feel more comfortable, these are:

Avoid being judgmental – Being aware of the stigma. Keeping an open mind may help to create a safe environment for your friend which may mean they are more likely to relax and enjoy themselves. Talk about what they find helpful – Make conversations about their mental health difficulties easy and open. Try asking about what helps them when things are tough. By talking openly, you are letting the person know about your love and support for them. You may like to talk about what you have read and ask how they feel about it.

Respecting your friend’s limits – There may be times when your friend says they are not able to do something because of their illness. It is important that you respect this and don’t put extra pressure on them. Often those who are taking medication are not able to drink alcohol. This may make it hard for your friend in certain social situations. If you know that your friend is unable to drink it may be a helpful when you do hang out to choose to do something that doesn’t involve alcohol.

Encouraging your friend to stay with their medication – It is likely that someone with long-term mental illness will be on regular medication. This may have side effects, which mean your friend may not like taking the medication. However, medication is often an important part of managing the illness and your friend may need your support to stick at it.

If your friend stops using or changes the amount of medication they use without getting the OK from their psychiatrist or doctor, encourage them to make an appointment quickly. Similarly if they are experiencing side effects that weren’t expected they should also contact their psychiatrist or doctor.

Ensure that you have contact numbers – Having the contact numbers of people like their psychologist, doctor or psychiatrist is often important in helping your friend through a crisis. It means that you can contact someone who knows your friend should they be unsafe.

Getting help for your friend

For those who have a mental health difficulty, there may be periods when things are not manageable. Harder times may be triggered if your friend has been over-stressed or there has been a traumatic event or a change in medication. These things can trigger the characteristics of the mental illness they experience. This is often called an episode.

If you are concerned that your friend is not behaving as they normally would then it is important to encourage them to talk to someone they trust like their doctor, psychologist or psychiatrist. If you think that your friend is likely to hurt themselves or someone else find some help immediately even if they don’t want you to.

Looking after yourself

Sometimes when we are helping a friend we forget to look after our ourselves. It is important to also take care of your own needs as well as helping your friend. Make sure that you don’t give up things that you enjoy and if you are feeling tired or ovwhelmed take some time out and relax.

About the Author: Listen to Arthur Buchanan on the Mike Litman Show! http://freesuccessaudios.com/Artlive.mp3 THIS LINK WORKS, LISTEN TODAY!
With Much Love, Arthur Buchanan President/CEO Out of Darkness & Into the Light 43 Oakwood Ave. Suite 1012 Huron Ohio, 44839 567-219-0994 (cell) http://www.out-of-darkness.com
http://www.adhdandme.com (still working on)
http://www.biologicalhapiness.com (still working on)

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Our Mental Health

Friday, February 25th, 2011

By Jennifer Macleay

At some stage in our life most of us will at times struggle with despondency or even depression. Or we may have a large dose of self-pity and have a major ‘pity party’. Most will get over it and get on with normal life. But sometimes the phase does not pass and more and more time is spent in these struggles. This article is not a study on depression but a few tips that have been know to be of great benefit when despondency sets in.

A basic measure is to check if a good nutritious diet is being consumed. Often the addition of some B vitamins are necessary, seek professional advice from your local health food store.

During these low times we tend to be emotional and keep looking inward, maybe in self-criticism or self-pity, feeling like a victim and not like one who overcomes. We tend to take innocent statements of others and apply them to ourselves in a negative sense. We quickly take offence.

Like the old saying ‘take time to smell the roses.’ This is sound advice. Just start with a few minutes a day, looking outside of yourself, don’t think of your problems, banish any negative thoughts that pop up. This could be the first step in taking control of your mind. Look at a bird or a flower. Really look at it, see how the petals come together to form one beautiful unit. Look how gracefully the stamen comes out of the center, how it attracts the bees. Look at the color, note how different colors blend together. Allow yourself to be amazed at this beautiful creation. If you can find the strength, start a journal of the things in the creation that you spend time observing, describe what you see, they are all around you just waiting for you to be in awe of them.

Determine to spend this time of appreciating beauty every day, you will soon start looking forward to these times of studying creation and realise it is a much happier place than looking inward all the time.

There is an article that has been around for many years called “Lessons from the Geese” Author unknown. I won’t quote the article but it reveals some facts about geese. For example, we have all seen geese fly over in the familiar V formation, there is a leader and two rows form out behind the front goose. It has been learnt that the reason for this is that as each bird flaps its wings it creates uplift for the bird immediately behind it.

Flying in this formation causes the whole flock to be able to increase its range by about 71% more than if the bird was flying alone. Whenever if a goose falls out of formation it feels the drag and resistance of trying to go it alone and quickly gets back into formation to take advantage of the power of the flock.

When a goose is sick or injured and falls out of formation, two other birds will follow to protect the sick bird. They will stay with the weak one until it recovers or dies. Then they will seek to find another formation to join to get back to their group. This study of the geese gives us a beautiful picture of caring and the advantages of having a leader who gives help and direction. Who is the wind beneath our wings. A shield in the times of trouble.

The One who programed the geese to be like this shows us another example in the Bible in the book of John. This is using sheep as an example of being careful whom we follow. “If a person climbs over or through the fence of a sheep pen instead of going through the gate, you know he’s up to no good – a sheep rustler! The shepherd walks right up to the gate. The gatekeeper opens the gate to him and the sheep recognize his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. When he gets them all out, he leads them and they follow because they are familiar with his voice.” Jesus further explained like this. “I am the Gate for the sheep. All those others are up to no good – sheep stealers, every one of them…Anyone who goes through me will be cared for – will freely go in and out, and find pasture. A thief is only there to steal and kill and destroy. I came so they can have real and eternal life, more and better life than they ever dreamed of. I am the Good Shepherd. The Good Shepherd puts the sheep before himself, sacrifices himself if necessary. A hired man is not a real shepherd. The sheep mean nothing to him.”(Quote from The Message)

If you need leading out of your despondency and depression by all means seek professional help. But take care who it is leading you, choose the One who has your best interest at heart. The One with the power to create and heal. The choice is yours, to keep looking in at the turmoil or to look up and embrace the Good Shepherd.

I will put a link below to a book that makes sense out of turmoil and gives purpose to a lot of common queries that trouble us in our world view.

About the Author: http://www.ArticleswithAttitude.com For more free articles. http://www.goodseed.com/preview.aspx The Stranger – Free book download.

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Guard Your Mental Health

Friday, February 25th, 2011

By Martin Stoleman

I am a firm believer that the mental health of a person is just as important as their physical health. I guess I believe this so strongly because I have seen the affects of someone not caring about the state of their mental health. By mental health I am not referring to the serious mental health conditions such as depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, or any of the other very serious issues people often face.

By mental health I’m simply referring to the state of our minds and the ways that our thinking affects our lives. I’m talking about caring for our minds in the same ways that we care for our physical bodies. One of the biggest ways to promote mental health is to take rest. Just like our physical bodies need sleep in order to be restored with energy, so our minds need time to just relax and reflect upon life and regain perspective. You can rest your mind in a variety of ways, it is simply important that you take the time to rest. For one person, guarding their mental health may mean setting aside time each day to meditate or reflect upon the good things in life. For another, mental health might be best maintained by reading a good book, writing in a journal, or listening to soothing music. And still another person may need to get outside and exercise in order to refresh their health mentally.

Learn yourself. Know the things that stress you out and know how to relax and refresh yourself as well. The state of your mind is much too important to be ignored, so do whatever it takes to keep your mind at rest and at peace. I guarentee that ignoring problems will only numb your mind for a little while at best. As the stresses of life have increased in the past few years, I have learned that one of the main things I need in order to guard my mental health is time alone. No matter what my schedule looks like each day, I always block out at least twenty minutes just to be alone. During that time I do a variety of things that help renew my perspective and keep me on track. Somedays I go for a brisk walk and other days I sit in a coffeeshop with a latte and a newspaper. The important thing is not so much what I do, but simply that I take time to be alone and recharge my mental health.

Take time starting today to guard the state of your mental health. Take time to enjoy the small things in life and to remember all there is to be grateful for.

About the Author: Martin Stoleman believes that guarding their mental health should be a priority for everyone. He counsels everyone he knows to make time to be alone and enjoy doing things they love. See more at www.funhealth.info.

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