Natural Awakenings - S.E. Louisiana Nov 2011

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HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET feel good live simply laugh more

FREE

JOHN BESH

Sustaining Local Farms with Micro-Loans

The Economics of

HAPPINESS For People & the Planet

Eating Out? Eat Green

Eateries That Serve Up Sustainability

November 2011 | S.E. Louisiana Edition | NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com natural awakenings

November 2011

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letterfrompublisher “When you choose organics, you are voting with your fork for a planet with fewer pesticides, richer soil, and cleaner water supplies. When you choose locally grown produce, you are voting for conservation of fuel resources and the economic viability of local communities, along with freshness and better taste.” ~ Marion Nestle, What to Eat Every day we make choices that affect the environment, access to resources and our local and national economies. While “economy” is on everyone’s radar these days, the operative word in Nestle’s quote is “choose”. We can either default to the status quo or jumpstart the kind of world we want. Granted, the choice isn’t always clear-cut, nor is the result perfect. Is it greener to eat organic food grown thousands of miles away or locally produced foods grown with toxic pesticides and synthetic fertilizers? The ideal would be to purchase locally grown organic food. But in most communities, finding foods that are organic and local is a challenge. Louisiana has only 15 organic farms. Oregon and Vermont, in contrast, boast hundreds. So what can Louisianians do? We need to encourage our local farmers to raise more food organically and humanely and support their progress, understanding that there are healthful steps on the way to official certification. Repeatedly let every supplier know that you are shopping for organic choices. It’s a good long-term move for them too, because organic and humanely raised food is the fastest growing sector in the industry, according to the 2010 Organic Industry Survey conducted by the Organic Trade Association. Sales of food and non-food organic products have grown from $1 billion in 1990 to $26.6 billion in 2009, increasing 5.3 percent in the last year despite the current economic situation. Local Chef John Besh, who graces our cover this month, has been voting for local organic food with his fork and purchasing power for years. To assure its availability for his restaurants, Besh became a biodynamic farmer in Lacombe, Louisiana; it’s still one of only a few in the state. Besh tirelessly works to increase our community’s access to local, sustainably grown foods. To that end, his foundation is backing micro-loans to existing organic and humane farms and start-ups. Colleen Morgan visited the farm to report on the concept in “Return of the Local Family Farm”, on page 28. As part of this month’s focus on Personal & Local Economy, we discovered a whole new way of looking at how our country can work in “Economics of Happiness: The New Economy – Changing the Rules to Benefit America’s People” (page 16). Instead of enslaving ourselves to terms dictated by gross domestic product (GDP), more enlightened economists recommend that we include happiness in any measure of economic health. They suggest ways to retool perceptions of material things we think we need to focus more on the key intangibles that lead to true happiness. Here and elsewhere, it is clear the people are fed up with flawed systems of politicized government and business as usual. Thousands are rising up to state that they don’t like much about the way things are. The Occupy Wall Street is just one recent manifestation. We all need to start making choices that will bring about the positive change we want; perhaps one good place to start is by joining forces with a Meditation Mob (see page 10).

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Wishing you all a happy and healthy Thanksgiving,

Lolita Werhan, Publisher New Orleans

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

contact us Publisher/Editor Lolita Werhan Assistant Editors Linda Sechrist • S. Alison Chabonais Paul Scott • Linda Agnello Colleen Morgan Design & Production Paul Scott Advertising Sales Beth Olson beth.nolahealthyliving@yahoo.com Distribution Sonny Daniels • Jennifer Parker Clay Thomas • Peggy Scott • Elizabeth Ohmer Pellegrin

To contact Natural Awakenings S.E. Louisiana Edition: PO Box 750758 New Orleans, LA 70175-0758 Phone: 504-330-2157 Fax: 504-324-0131 editor@NOLAHealthyLiving.com www.NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com © 2011 by Natural Awakenings. All rights reserved. Although some parts of this publication may be reproduced and reprinted, we require that prior permission be obtained in writing.

Natural Awakenings is a free publication distributed locally and is supported by our advertisers. It is available in selected stores, health and education centers, healing centers, public libraries and wherever free publications are generally seen. Please call for a location near you or if you would like copies placed at your business. We do not necessarily endorse the views expressed in the articles and advertisements, nor are we responsible for the products and services advertised. We welcome your ideas, articles and feedback.

SUBSCRIPTIONS Subscriptions are available for $24 (for 12 issues). Please call 504-330-2157 with credit card information or mail a check made out to Natural Awakenings – S.E. Louisiana to the above address.

Natural Awakenings is printed on recycled newsprint with soy based ink.


contents

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4 newsbriefs 9 healthbriefs 10 actionalert 12 globalbriefs 14 greenliving 22 greengames 24 healthykids 30 consciouseating 34 fitbody 36 naturalpet 38 consciousdining 39 calendarofevents 41 ongoingcalendar 42 classifieds 43 community resourceguide

advertising & submissions HOW TO ADVERTISE To advertise with Natural Awakenings or request a media kit, please contact us at 504-330-2157 or email advertising@NOLAHealthyLiving.com. Deadline for ads: the 10th of the month. EDITORIAL SUBMISSIONS Email articles, news items and ideas to: editor@NOLAHealthyLiving.com. Deadline for editorial: the 5th of the month. CALENDAR SUBMISSIONS Email Calendar Events to: calendar@NOLAHealthyLiving. com or call 504-330-2157. Deadline for calendar: the 10th of the month. REGIONAL MARKETS Advertise your products or services in multiple markets! Natural Awakenings Publishing Corp. is a growing franchised family of locally owned magazines serving communities since 1994. To place your ad in other markets call 1-239-449-8309. For franchising opportunities call 1-239-530-1377 or visit NaturalAwakeningsMag.com.

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

Natural Awakenings is your guide to a healthier, more balanced life. In each issue readers find cutting-edge information on natural health, nutrition, fitness, personal growth, green living, creative expression and the products and services that support a healthy lifestyle.

14 SHOP SMART

Keep Dollars Working in Local Communities by Linda Sechrist

16 ECONOMICS OF

HAPPINESS: THE NEW ECONOMY

16

Changing the Rules to Benefit America’s People by John de Graaf and Linda Sechrist

24 CALMING

ANXIOUS KIDS Six Ways to Ease Upsets by Elisa Bosley

LOCAL 28 RETURN OF THE FAMILY FARM

24

Chef John Besh Supports Sustainable Farms with Micro-Loans By Colleen Morgan

30 EATING OUT? EAT GREEN

Eco-Friendly Restaurants Serve Up Sustainability

28

by Sandra Murphy

34 OUR WORST

FITNESS HABITS

Six Roadblocks to Sidestep by Tosca Reno

36 GOOD DOG

Positive Training Yields Fast Results

36

by Sandra Murphy

natural awakenings

November 2011

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newsbriefs

Explore Modern Shamanism in New Orleans

Neurofeedback Trains the Brain

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rain Works Academy of Covington offers neurofeedback or brain-training to treat clients of all ages with disorders such as ADHD, insomnia, autism and anxiety. Neurofeedback is a safe and non-invasive therapy that has successfully helped clients worldwide for over 30 years. It is gaining in popularity since research has demonstrated that neurofeedback can lead to long-term improvement in treating ADHD and related disorders. Neurofeedback trains the brain to selfregulate by using a learning process that strengthens synaptic connections in the brain. A non-invasive diagnostic test maps the brain to determine areas that would benefit from neurofeedback training. During the actual training, sensors placed on the scalp in the specified areas allows the practitioner to view the brain waves and composite data. Sessions last about 45 minutes. Brain Works Academy is located at 5001 Highway 190 E Service Rd. in Covington. To schedule an appointment or ask questions call 985-809-7077. For more information about the technique, visit BrainWorks.us. See ad on page 12.

Nourish your Spirit with Flowers!

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workshop led by Master Shaman Hamilton Souther will introduce multiple facets of the discipline of Modern Shamanism on November 18 and 19 at the Hilton St. Charles. Souther, who serves as co-founder of Modern Shamanism and author of the Modern Shamanism course, is a traditionally trained master Amazonian shaman who carries the titles of ayahausca (ayahuasquero), palero, sanaguero, perfumero and exorcista. He is versed in all tree medicines and is a master of sanango, perfume and performs exorcisms. In 2001, Souther entered the Peruvian Amazon, where he trained with locally renowned master shamans Julio Llerena Pinedo and Alberto Torres Davila in a traditional apprenticeship. Coupling cultural anthropology and traditional shamanic practices, he sought to help solve the spiritual, mental and personal dilemmas of Westerners seeking shamanism as a solution to the lack of enchantment found in their daily lives. The result of that quest is Modern Shamanism. The local event takes participants on a mystical journey, applying insights from personal experience to course theory. The aim is to offer a life-changing experience and the tools necessary to continue the individual evolutionary process launched at the event. The discipline trains students to become modern shamans, so that they can seamlessly integrate practices learned through modern life themes into their daily lives.

Are you tired of taking with side effec Join us at the Hilton St Charles: Friday 18th andterrible Saturday 19th November 2011 Tickets available at ModernShamanism.org. See ad page 27.

Editor’s correction!

In the October issue, the news brief announcing the opening of

NOV Deal : Book a Group Instructional Lesson by 11/25/11 for 5 people – pay for only 4 • Paddleboard Sales • Yoga-paddle Classes • Junior Lifeguard Program

504-717-8847

• Fitness-paddle Classes • Club membership • Lessons • Rentals

New Orleans, LA Madisonville, LA ~ 504 Water St. www.NOLAPaddleboards.com 4721 Magazine St.

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New Orleans

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Bonnie Broel’s Healing with a Heart Holistic Wellness Center 2220 St. Charles Avenue

HOLISTIC WELLN

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ake visit warmth a your who

Call 504-

Let Bonni healing p your life!

St. Charles Avenue had the wrong phone number. The 2220 correct number is • email Conveniently located on the St Charles Ave stree 504-494-2220 or 504-522-2220 Bonnie Broel invites fellow healing practitioners into

meeting rooms are available for healing practitioners c


Chamber Event

Cocktails and Green Talk

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he Building Block is hosting the New Orleans Chamber of Commerce’s “Chamber After 5” event on December 8, with a focus on green and sustainable businesses. The event is to showcase the Chamber’s recently created Green Committee. In the next 10 years sustainable development will supply 90,000 jobs in Louisiana, Chamber President and CEO Ben Johnson said, and the Chamber wants those jobs to be in New Orleans. “We want to commercialize sustainable rebuilding,” he said. “We want to brand the New Orleans region as a place that values best practices related to environmental sensitivity and using green products.” The Chamber After 5 event will be held at the Building Block on the third floor of The New Orleans Healing Center at 2372 St. Claude Ave. on Thursday, Dec. 8 from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Wine and tapas will be served. The event is free for Chamber members and $10 for non-members. For more information about the Chamber or the Green Committee, call 504-799-4260 or visit NewOrleansChamber.org.

Holistic Approach to Psychotherapy

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ina Orihuela, a licensed clinical social worker and doctor of naturopathy opened her new office in Kenner in 2011, called GLO Therapeutics. Orihuela offers to clients a unique set of skills and knowledge in combining psychotherapy with naturopathy. Holding a masters degree in social work from Tulane University and having completed the doctor of naturopathy program at Clayton College of Natural Health, she notes that research has proven that naturopathic methods, like nutrition and lifestyle modifications have a basis in and positive effect on mental health, making them very appropriate for the inclusion in the psychotherapeutic process. “Humans naturally possess the ability to self-heal, when given optimal conditions,” Orihuela states. “Naturopathy can balance and correct some of the underlying dysfunction that our bodies and minds endure in the modern world. At GLO Therapeutics, Orihuela offers individual, family and group counseling for all ages, among other services. For more information visit the website at GloTherapeuticsLlc.com, call 504-466-2266 or email Gina@GloTherapeuticsLlc.com. See ad on page 24.

Ideal Protein Diet

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To improve health and reverse chronic illness by helping people achieve optimal potential through hormonal and energetic balancing along with nutritional supplementation.

KATHLEEN POSEY, M.D. Diplomate American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Diplomate American Board of Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine

Anti-Aging,Weight &Wellness Institute, llc 377 Highway 21, Suite 101, Madisonville, LA 70447 Phone 985-845-4111 www.KathleenPoseyMD.com natural awakenings

November 2011

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Grand Opening New Orleans Food Co-op

Lift a Cup of Tea to Health

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he long-awaited opening of the N.O. Food Co-op is here, and the doors are open to the public from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. Although some departments are still in the works, the produce section is bursting with local, seasonal vegetables. The Grand Opening of the Coop is scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 12 from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. The celebration, called “Harvest” will include local food, live music, farmers and food producers with samples, raffle prizes and kids activities. The Co-op, located inside The Healing Center at 2372 St Claude Avenue, encourages customers to bring their own (clean) containers from home to use for bulk purchases, which helps keep costs down. For more information, call the Co-op at 504-264-5579 or visit NolaFood.coop.

he English Tea Room, owned by Jan and Tim Lantrip, is located in a charming cottage in Old Covington, yet once inside a visitor could imagine they have just stepped into a tea room in the Cotswolds in England. The tables are set up with fine china, delicate lace, fresh flowers and white linen napkins. There is much more than just high tea going on at this cottage. With around 100 varieties of tea available, the selection of loose teas is arguably the largest in the South. All the teas are premium and carefully chosen by the Lantrips from sources that are fair trade and where sustainable farming is practiced. Jan Lantrip is a licensed pharmacist with an interest in all things tea, but in particular in tea’s health promoting qualities. Each week in November she will offer a class on some aspect of tea, which will include tea tastings. On November 1, the topic is “Health Benefits of Tea and Tea Tasting”; on November 8, “Rooibos – South African Awareness”; and on November 15, “Chai Me! Chai Tea Tasting.” Classes will take place from 3 to 4 p.m. and cost $15 per class. Every Thursday in November, except on Thanksgiving, harpist Jessica Meltz will play at the tea room from 12:30-2:30 p.m. On November 26th, 28th, 29th, and 30th, the Tea Room will hold an open house – Christmas in the Country when there will be storewide specials, discount shopping and refreshments from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Besides tea, tea sets and accessories, pantry items and more are available for purchase. The food menu, of course includes high tea as well as a variety of English inspired dishes. The full menu is available all day. Vegetarian and vegan options are now on the menu and more are in the plans. The English Tea Room is located at 734 Rutland St., Covington. For more information call 985-898-3988 or visit: EnglishTeaRoom.com. See ad on page 11.

Why Structural Integration?

• LASTING Freedom from chronic pain • Better Posture • Increased vitality

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First Session

John Calhoun Certified SI Practitioner LA#5026

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Mid-City, New Orleans Location john@centerforalignment.com

504-914-6936

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New Orleans

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Demo and Talk on Traditional Chinese Medicine for Pets

Paddleboard Yoga

anice E. Posey, a doctor of veterinary medicine, will discuss the basics of Chinese medicine as it relates to the healthcare of animals and will also give a demonstration of acupuncture on a dog with degenerative joint disease at Good Dog Naturally in Covington on Sunday, November 6 at 2 p.m. Acupuncture commonly treats musculoskeletal conditions such as arthritis and disc disease; neurologic conditions such as seizures; and gastrointestinal problems such as inflammatory bowel disease. This treatment also strengthens the immune system and can help with dermatologic and endocrine diseases. Dr. Posey offers integrative veterinary care at her clinic,Veterinary Holistic Healing, where she provides acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, food therapy, nutritional supplements and trigger point therapy in a pet friendly and compassionate environment.

OLA Paddleboards, a new company bringing paddleboarding to the Crescent City and the Northshore, now also offers on-the-water fitness and yoga classes. Paddleboarding, which originated in Hawaii and is spreading across the globe, is now available on Bayou St. John and the Tchefuncte River in Madisonville. The sport is a full body workout that requires minimal instruction and gear but all the benefits of being on the water. Paddleboarding uses every muscle in the body and burns 800 calories an hour because of the work required by the core, leg and upper body muscles. The new “Liquid Vitality” fitness classes intensify the workout with “on-the-water” calisthenics; the Yoga Class combines paddleboarding and yoga to achieve a powerful mind and body experience. The company’s owner, Jeff Lakey, is a Metairie native who mastered the sport during his years in San Diego and Destin, FL. His mission, in addition to keeping the waterways clean, is to “bring together the community in an active, fun, eco-friendly way.”

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The clinic is located at 315 Lee Lane, #104, Covington. To contact the office, call 985-898-3623. Good Dog Naturally is located at 1250 Business 190 in Covington. For more information, call 985-871-5222, email GoodDogNaturally@aol.com. See ad on page 11.

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For information, call 504-717-8847, email jjlakey@gmail.com or visit NolaPaddleboards.com. See ad on page 4.

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November 2011

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New Digs for La Leche League in Jefferson

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he La Leche League of Jefferson, which has offered breastfeeding information and support to nursing mothers for many years, has a new meeting place, Destination Maternity, at the corner of N. Causeway and 17th St. in Metairie. The monthly meetings provide opportunity for nursing mothers to meet up with others to share experiences and support. Children are welcome to the meetings, which take place on the second Tuesday of each month. The November meeting is November 15th from 10-11 a.m. The meetings are free and new moms or pregnant women who attend will receive a free multilingual DVD of “Breastfeeding: You Can Do It!”. For more information text to 504-487-7574 or email Rachelle at rnoullet@cox.net or Susan at LLLJefferson@cox.net. Check out http://www.facebook.com/pages/La-Leche-League-ofJefferson/112644312148524.

“You too can move away from the past and towards a life of vitality, wholeness and fulfilling relationships.”

aulette Lucas and Jack Anthony Fontana will again offer a New Year Retreat in the beautiful and peaceful setting of St. Joseph Abbey, just outside of Covington. For a number of years the two have offered this opportunity to begin a new year in an environment of reflection, acceptance, joy and fun through such activities as journaling, guided and process meditation, yoga, breathwork and selfreflection.

Attachment Psychotherapy / EMDR Andrea Scheele, LCSW, LMFT 1303 Amelia Street New Orleans, LA 70115 (504) 899-2686

Your child has a NEUROLOGICAL DISORDER.

What’s the next step? In 1992 Dr. Paul G. Harch introduced low-pressure hyperbaric oxygen for pediatric brain injury to North America. Since then, thousands of children in New Orleans, the U.S., and worldwide have benefited. More than hope, TREATMENT

Treating adults and children with learning disabilities, post concussion syndrome, traumatic brain injury, Down’s syndrome, cerebral palsy, stroke, MS, dementia CO poisoning, and more. We only use pharmaceutical grade hyperbaric oxygen in hard shell chambers. Non-invasive, painless, odorless 504.309.4948 www.hbot.com

PAUL G. HARCH, M.D.

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New Orleans

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

with Joy and Reflection

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Individual, Couples & Family Therapy

Family Physicians Center 5216 Lapalco Blvd. Marrero, LA 70072

Begin the New Year

504.309.4948 hbot@hbot.com www.hbot.com

Registration begins at 9 a.m. on Friday, December 30, 2011 and concludes on Sunday, January 1, 2012 around 2 p.m. An all inclusive price of $425, which is non-refundable, must be paid in full by December 10, 2011. All sessions, meals, and a private room with bath are included. Enrollment is limited, so reserve a place soon. After December 10, call to inquire about availability. Visa, MasterCard and debit cards are accepted as are checks made payable to Jack Fontana, P.O. Box 7218, Metairie, LA 70010. To register call 504-453-9161 or 320-203-7928.


healthbriefs HOME IS WHERE THE HEALTHY MEAL IS

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ne of the joys of heading home for the holidays is the anticipation of gathering around the table with loved ones and enjoying delicious foods. But we do well to indulge in the homecooked meal experience on non-holidays, as well. Foods prepared away from home, including fast food eaten at home and store-prepared food eaten away from home, tend to fuel an increase in total calorie intake. Conversely, eating at home is linked with healthier choices. According to research from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill recently published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association, both the eating location and food source significantly impact the daily calorie intake of school-age children and may be linked to rising rates of childhood obesity. The study found that the percentage of calories eaten away from home increased from 23.4 to 33.9 percent from 1977 to 2006. A new study from McGill University, based on data from 160 women, further suggests that a home-cooked meal can prompt people to make healthier and more nutritional food choices. The women in the study tended to reach more for the greens, rather than high-calorie desserts. Reporting in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, the researchers suggest that when we eat at home, emotionally rewarding factors like contentedness may help override our wired-in preference for high-fat, sugary foods. The findings point to factors that may encourage healthy eating such as interpersonal communication, home design and atmospheric cues, including pleasing music, dining landscape and kitchen equipment; all have all been found to induce positive emotions.

THE NEW COCONUT OIL

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ost older studies that gave coconut oil a bad rap involved partially hydrogenated oil loaded with transfatty acids. But the unrefined virgin coconut oil now available in many health food stores is not chemically treated and is trans-fat free. Marisa Moore, a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association, a nonprofit organization of nutritionists, explains that the main saturated fat in virgin coconut oil is lauric acid, a medium-chain fatty acid that can help increase levels of HDL (good cholesterol).

FREE KANGEN WATER & NEWSLETTER

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Journey into Wellness

a place of learning & complementary therapies A new concept of multiple complementary modalities at one site. Located in newly renovated space in a medical complex.

Opening November 1, 2011 by appointment only

Offering cancer patients and others with serious illnesses new techniques for easing the path back to wellness. Services include a variety of complementary therapies:

• Reiki • Healing Touch • Massage • Vibroacoustic table therapy (FDA approved) • Mind-Body Exercises

• Angel Therapy • Compassionate and motivational sessions for cancer patients • Classes • Other Therapies

Tianne Lastra, Director 3939 Houma Blvd., Bldg. 3, Suite 15 Metairie, LA 70006 Phone: 504-909-3723 www.JourneyIntoWellness.net natural awakenings

Treatment rooms and class space for practitioners are available to rent.

November 2011

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actionalert Supporting Universal Prosperity A Peaceful Perspective Occupies Wall Street

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he Occupy Wall Street movement has succeeded in spotlighting the growing economic gap between sectors of the American populace, yet the grassroots protest is also being criticized for its lack of clear demands and goals. A more focused approach, grounded in more positive intention, is being led by the New York Meditation Mob. From June to August this year, the group held daily meditations in front of the New York Stock Exchange, creating a patch of calmness and peace along an otherwise busy sidewalk. Organizer Anthony Finno says, “Our intention was for [embracing] conscious prosperity, and to practice acceptance and tolerance on Wall Street.� A week into the Occupy Wall Street movement, New York Med Mob organizers remobilized for a meditation flash mob at the park where the occupation was taking place. Meditations continue to take place there twice a week. The Med Mob movement facilitates meditation flash mobs in public places around the world. Their mission is to foster an environment in which people from all religions, worldviews and experience levels unite in meditation. A global meditation flash mob is scheduled for November 11 (Tinyurl. com/44jrp8x). Communities around the world are encouraged to participate; events already are planned in Austin, Texas; Los Angeles; New York City; Orlando; and Paris. For more information, visit MedMob.org or OccupyTheNet.com.

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New Orleans

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Explore Historic Covington “Covington Farmers Market” ~ Live Music ~ Every Saturday (Rain or Shine)/8am-12pm ~ 600 block of Columbia Street Nov 12-13 ~ “Covington Three Rivers Art Festival” ~ Fine Arts & Crafts Festival along Columbia Street Nov 25-Dec 24 ~ “Christmas in the Country” ~ Annual Holiday Shopping Experience! ~ Downtown Historic Covington Nov 26 ~ “Deck the Rails” ~ Free Childrens Event & Holiday Lighting/4pm “Blues Christmas Concert” ~ Free Concert/5pm-8pm Both Events at the Covington Trailhead/419 N. New Hampshire

Healthcare Careers now! oll r En Practical Nursing (LPN) Medical Office Admin. Medical Assistant We also offer: • Dental Assistant • Therapeutic Massage

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VETERINARY HOLISTIC HEALING

I strive to heal your beloved pet’s whole being, not just treat the symptoms. Acupuncture Chinese Herbal Medicine Food Therapy Nutritional supplements Trigger Point Therapy

Janice E. Posey, DVM

985-898-3623/504-466-9129 315 Lee Lane, #104 Covington, LA 70433

Reserve your Holiday Festivities in the Elegance and Charm of a “Full English Tea” Room!

One of the Largest Selections of Loose Leaf Teas in the South! Quaint & Cozy European Atmosphere Finest Quality & Excellent Service Full Menu All Day n High Tea Menu Sandwiches n Organic Salads n Vegan-Kosher COURTYARD GARDEN RESERVE YOUR SPECIAL EVENT WITH US!

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Historic Downtown Covington

734 Rutland Street • 985-898-3988 www.englishtearoom.com

Old WOrld Mediterranean dishes Local, All Natural and Organic* Ingredients Used

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Delicious, Wholesome Foods Vegetarian & Vegan Selections Soups ~ Salads Sandwiches ~ Burgers

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985-893-1463

124 N. Jefferson ~ Covington

natural awakenings

November 2011

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globalbriefs

Community Currency

Forget About Your Worries; Get Rid Of Your Pain…

A local currency movement is again emerging as a way to focus business capital, especially consumer spending, on community economies. BerkShares illustrate the phenomenon. First issued in 2006 in the southern Berkshires region of Massachusetts, more than 2 million of these paper notes are currently in circulation. One hundred BerkShares can be purchased for $95 at one of five local banks and exchanged at participating merchants with the same purchasing value as U.S. dollars. The program provides consumers an incentive to keep the notes active and shop and dine locally in the 400 neighborhood businesses that accept them. “At the moment, we’re a very sophisticated ‘buy local’ program,” says Susan Witt, co-founder and administrator of BerkShares, Inc., “but the potential to move to an independent currency is built in.” Networking is key. Some local currency success stories include New York’s Ithaca Hours, North Carolina’s Plenty and Wisconsin’s Madison Hours, but others have not survived, despite sometimes extensive marketing support. BerkShares continue to represent a relatively small part of the region’s local economy. Witt says: “In the short term, it’s about educating people about local economies. In the long term, it’s transforming the institution of money. We’re not there yet. But everyone knows what BerkShares are.”

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“Service to others is the rent you pay for your room here on Earth.” ~Muhammad Ali

Private Mints on the Upswing

Source: Adapted from E/The Environmental Magazine.

Fairer Trade

B Corps Aim to Right the System

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raditional business models have recently experienced many manmade traumas, including the housing/banking industry collapse, world recession, nuclear pollution in Japan, the BP Gulf oil spill and the Massey Energy Company coal mining deaths in West Virginia. The conventional response is that smarter regulation is needed to prevent such crises in the future, but a growing number of business analysts say the problems go deeper, and a new kind of corporate legal structure is needed that requires companies to operate for the good of society, not just for their shareholders. These new entities, called B Corporations (the B is for benefit), are growing in number, having been adopted so far in Maryland, New Jersey, Vermont and Virginia. According to B Lab, the nonprofit behind the concept, “Our vision is simple, yet ambitious: to create a new sector of the economy that uses the power of business to solve social and environmental problems. It will be comprised of a new type of corporation—the B Corporation—that meets rigorous and independent standards of social and environmental performance, accountability and transparency.” Jay Coen Gilbert, a B Lab co-founder, says, “We can’t have a new economy unless we have a new type of corporation. Corporate law actually works against sustainability.” Its certification effort helps consumers identify truly responsible companies. It also works with private equity investors to help them make better-informed investment decisions. Ultimately, it is pushing for new laws to, “…redefine fiduciary duty and hold companies accountable to create a material positive impact on society and the environment, as measured by an independent, transparent, third-party standard.” Source: GreenBiz.com 12

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oday, Americans can tap into one of the best bargains around by voting to support our local and regional economies. By shifting our shopping to locally owned and operated retailers and service providers, we help create and retain area jobs, support community commerce and build valuable relationships and social connections within our community. With every local purchase, we leave the store enriched, having deepened both community social capital and genuine wealth. Imagine the joy of knowing that your

purchase contributes to the dentist supplying braces for the local grocer’s kids, the local insurance agent’s mortgage payment, the local banker’s roof repair and the local roofer’s dinner— all of them friends and neighbors. The list of benefits— from shoring up local home values to ensuring access to local

produce—keeps expanding as your dollars continue to circulate within the community. Yet, finding a fuller range of locally made items at locally owned stores will continue to be challenging until shoppers demand it. One way to begin aligning purchases with your values is by patronizing stores that offer socially responsible and fair trade items. Shaktari Belew, author of Honoring All Life: A Practical Guide to Exploring a New Reality, explains how purchasing goods and services can actually create local community wealth for all if they are specifically designed for that outcome. “When items are designed to be created and sold locally, everyone involved benefits, from the suppliers that obtain the raw materials through those that manufacture, sell and buy the finished item. Even the environment benefits.” Belew encourages our learning as much as possible about purchases. “Once people are aware of the two vital concepts of localization and design, they will be better able to scrutinize purchases,” advises this designer and whole-systems thinker who focuses on resilient community design. As a Transition US.org workshop leader and one of the primary designers of the Community Engagement Process for Unified Field Corporation’s whole-systems/quadruple bottom line financial model, this Oregon resident tries to follow her own advice.

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“The Cradle to Cradle C2C certification helps,” she says. The C2C program is an eco-label authorized by McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry, co-founded in 1995 by William McDonough, the author of Cradle to Cradle. The certification process assesses a product’s safety to humans and the environment, plus its potential for future life cycles. The “program focuses on using safe materials that can be disassembled and recycled for another purpose or composted as biological nutrients. To date, hundreds of items, from building materials, bedding and linens, baby care and haircare products to personal and household cleaning products, have been C2C certified. If you plan to ship gifts long distances this gift-giving season, why not use the first C2C-certified consumer product—a U.S. Postal Service packing box? It exemplifies how a complex good design makes a product people- and planet-friendly. All 60 of the product’s boxes, decals and labels, involving 1,400 component materials, had to be certified, but the benefits are big: reduced costs for handling waste and disposing of hazardous materials; plus, the receiver may easily recycle the item with a free conscience. “Imagine a closed-loop market system in which any number of items made from finite resources such as glass, paper, steel, plastic and cloth are designed to be reused in a near-endless cycle,” says Belew. “Imagine a world of goods designed for easy repair and maintenance, rather than obsolescence.” Belew, the designer of Will’s Bills, a form of complementary currency, also recommends buying items that have long-term reusability specific to our needs. “My daughter loves a particular curry sauce, which comes in a little glass jar with a screw-top lid,” she relates. Rather than recycle the jars, the family reuses them for storing small things at home. “They’re also the perfect size for single servings,” she says. Sometimes, just a simple shift in perspective can change an item from trash to treasure.

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Linda Sechrist is an editor of Natural Awakenings community magazines. natural awakenings

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Economics of Happiness:

The New Economy

Changing the Rules to Benefit America’s People

by John de Graaf and Linda Sechrist

Most Americans are facing their most significant economic challenges in generations. From the hardships of unemployment to the perils of mounting debt, worry about the health of a national economy that depends on consumerism and market success dominates our conversation. But have we asked what the economy is really for?

S

ince the Second World War, we have been assured that more economic growth is good for us. But is it? By any measure, the U.S. economy, in its pursuit of constant growth, is in dire need of critical life support. Too many people have lost jobs, homes, scholarships and retirement savings, along with peace of mind, in the face of complex uncertainties. Those individuals that have jobs are earning

less in real income than in 2001, even though they spend more hours working and commuting than previous generations. We’ve had enough of the official mantra: Work more, enjoy less, pollute more, eat toxic foods and suffer illnesses, all for the sake of increasing the gross domestic product. Why not learn ways to work less and enjoy it more; spend more time with our friends and families;

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consume, pollute, destroy and owe less; and live better, longer and more meaningfully? To do all this, we need fresh solutions that engage America’s people in redefining goals for the economy (what we want from it) as opposed to the economy’s goals (what it demands from us).

An Economy Based on Quality of Life Although an economy based on a high quality of life that makes people happy may sound revolutionary, Thomas Jefferson, the third U.S. president, enshrined the pursuit of happiness as a human right when he drafted our Declaration of Independence. Jefferson emphasized that America’s government was, “to secure the greatest degree of happiness possible for the general mass of those associated under it.” Likewise, the Constitution of the United States declares that government is to promote, among other things, the general welfare of the people. Americans are able to achieve a better life, as we’ve proved many times in the past, benefiting mightily as a result of forward steps ranging from democracy, women’s suffrage and civil rights to inventive technological leadership. Although history shows that this has been accomplished primarily by changing national policies, any new economy delivering improved well-being is first brought about largely by active citizens that choose to invest more time in building a nation that reflects increasingly enlightened values. Everyone’s quality of life—from today’s parents to future generations of great-grandchildren—depends upon individuals collectively working to build a new economy based on the concept of genuine wealth. In his award-winning book, Economics of Happiness: Building Genuine Wealth, ecological economist Mark Anielski explains this new and practical approach grounded in what people value most, which he states is: “Love, meaningful relationships, happiness, joy, freedom, sufficiency, justice and peace”—qualities of life far more vital than blind economic growth and material possessions.

Preferred Measure of Progress

To determine whether our economy promotes the greatest good or the happiness of the American people, we


need to understand what makes us happy and how economic policies enhance or thwart our pursuit of happiness; we also need a better instrument of economic measurement than the gross domestic product (GDP). The GDP counts remedial and defensive expenditures for pollution, accidents, war, crime and sickness as positives, rather than deducting these costs. GDP also discounts the value of contributions such as natural resources and ecosystem services, improvement in quality of life, unpaid domestic work, volunteer work, good health and social connection. Anielski, in concert with economic experts such as Charles Eisenstein, author of Sacred Economics, Hazel Henderson, author of Ethical Markets, and Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, recommends that economic policies aim to boost societal welfare, rather than GDP. All agree that a new indicator of well-being, such as the U.S. Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI), could be used to more accurately measure economic progress.

The Science of Happiness

A respected “science of happiness,” pioneered by University of Illinois positive psychologist Edward Diener, Ph.D., dubbed Dr. Happiness, and other researchers, has existed for more than a decade. The study of what makes people happy and life fulfilling repeatedly demonstrates that the economic route to happiness does not consist of endlessly widening the superhighway of accumulation. Rather, it resides in a host of personal values that are closer to our hearts, as illustrated by the Himalayan nation of Bhutan (population: about 700,000). For many years, Bhutan has measured its general well-being—as the people themselves subjectively report it—using a Gross National Happiness (GNH) index. Its government bases policy decisions on how they might effect the kind of happiness associated with contentment, family, community, spirituality, education, compatibility with nature and good physical health. After years of primary research, the Bhutanese have identified nine domains for assessing happiness: psychological well-being, physical health, time use (work-life balance), community vitality and social connection, education, cultural

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preservation and diversity, environmental sustainability, good governance and material well-being. In 2004, the first annual International Conference on Gross National Happiness was held in Bhutan. Hundreds of government representatives, scholars and other thought leaders from more than 40 nations gathered to explore the possibility of making GNH the true indicator of a country’s health and quality of life. As of 2011, a non-binding resolution by the United Nations General Assembly urges that countries now measure their health and happiness, as well as wealth. Sixty-six countries backed it.

Measuring Americans’ Life Satisfaction Seattle, Washington, the first U.S. city to implement a measurement of life satisfaction, is parlaying Bhutan’s indicators—psychological well-being, physical health, work/time balance, education and capacity building, cultural vitality and access to arts and culture, environmental quality and access to nature, apt governance and material well-being—as part of its own Sustainable Seattle Happiness Initiative. Spearheaded by Sustainable Seattle Executive Director Laura Musikanski and her team with encouragement by City Council President Richard Conlin, it may become America’s first GNH city. Initial survey results, intended to spark conversations that matter, will be discussed at future town meetings in Seattle neighborhoods and used to

recommend policies for consideration by the city council. Repeating the survey every couple of years will reveal progress. Interest in a similar Happiness Initiative is growing in cities and towns from coast to coast, such as Napa, California; Bowling Green, Kentucky; Duluth, Minnesota; Santa Fe and R o sw e l l , N e w M e x i c o ; B e l l e v u e , Nebraska; Portland, Oregon; and Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Some 100 colleges and universities also are beginning to apply the Happiness Initiative survey.

How to Become Happier

To improve our own well-being within any economy, we need to attend to our security, social connections and the way we balance our time. Choosing to live with less stuff and lighter debt supports a better life with less income but more time, lower stress and better health. As individuals, we can: n Focus more on matters of family and community and on building trust. n Devote less attention to maximizing incomes and more attention to acts of generosity. n Ask our employers for more time off instead of higher pay. In our local communities, we can find ways to design more relationshipfriendly places such as farmers’ markets, where shoppers tend to engage in many more conversations than in supermarket aisles (Worldwatch Institute). In cities, we can call for public and private spaces that

facilitate social connection, instead of discouraging it via urban sprawl. Ecological economist Dave Batker, co-author of What’s the Economy for Anyway? (film clip at Tinyurl.com/3tc9dlk), believes that moving forward requires greater citizen involvement in the shaping of democracy, laws and our collective future. By ditching pundits and talking with neighbors, city by city and town by town, citizens throughout the United States are moving to do this using newly learned techniques such as those offered by Open Space Technology, World Café, Transition Towns, Sustainable Cities, The Cloud Institute for Sustainability Education, and the Institute of Noetic Sciences’ Worldview Literacy Project. In St. Petersburg, Florida, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and other places, citizens are cultivating a stronger sense of community with real discussions about local issues and economic goals. They

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We’ve had enough of the official mantra: Work more, enjoy less, pollute more, eat toxic foods and suffer illnesses, all for the sake of increasing the gross domestic product. Why not learn ways to work less and enjoy it more; spend more time with our friends and families; consume, pollute, destroy and owe less; and live better, longer and more meaningfully? aim to arrive at a clear-eyed view of what citizens really want from the economy. In St. Petersburg, the culmination of Sharon Joy Kleitsch’s 10-year effort to build a flourishing community through helpful workshops on timely subjects, meaningful conversations and aligning constructive partnerships is reaching a crescendo this month at Beyond Sustainability: Ecosystems, Economics, and Education, the Institute of Florida Studies’ 36th annual conference, at Hillsborough Community College (Tinyurl.com/3avntte). Kleitsch remarks, “I show up, pay attention and listen for opportunities where my connections with policy makers, educators, nonprofits and community activists can help convene people in meaningful conversations that can make a difference in building a resilient community.” In Oklahoma City, Sustainable OKC, a volunteer organization working towards community sustainability at the crossroads of business, environment and social justice, frequently partners with the city’s Office of Sustainability, the CommonWealth Urban Farms project and the Oklahoma Food Cooperative (Sustainableokc.org). The grassroots organization advocates shopping locally and sustainably. Jennifer Alig, Sustainable OKC president, is consistently delighted by the growing number of residents that don’t just attend events such as movie screenings of The Economics of Happiness, but also show up to plant food to feed the hungry and join Commonwealth Urban Farms work parties to feed neighborhoods using the products of thriving urban farms on vacant city lots. Alig notes, “After events, we sometimes use Open Space Technology to talk about topics that people are passionate about and willing to invest their time in.” The kind of society that makes for health, happiness, true prosperity and

sustainability is one with strong local economies and flourishing communities that includes many activities provided by local nonprofits. It’s one characterized by: n Local small businesses and banking n Farmers’ markets and urban gardens n Urban designs that favor shared walks instead of isolated commutes n Public spaces for social interaction n Circumstances in which buyers know sellers n Businesspeople that sponsor and volunteer for local activities n Salary differences that are not vast n Citizens building a better world together We intuitively know what is required to create such a society, starting in our own community. What we need is the determination to make sure the economy serves us; rules that benefit all of the people; a commitment to widespread quality of life, social justice and sustainability; and the political will to make good change happen.

John de Graaf, media and outreach director for the Happiness Initiative, speaks nationally on overwork and overconsumption in America. He recently co-authored What ’s the Economy for, Anyway? – Why It’s Time to Stop Chasing Growth and Start Pursuing Happiness, with David Batker. He is also co-author of Affluenza: The All-Consuming Epidemic. Fifteen of his documentaries have aired on PBS. Linda Sechrist writes and edits for Natural Awakenings.

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(504) 214-1632 Laura Flora Laura Flora Laura Flora

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The following businesses have committed to become the models for sustainable business operations in Southeast Louisiana by signing up to compete in the Green Games. Register your business to compete and become certified as a green business and be recognized as a leader in sustainability in your own community. Our readers want to know about you. Learn more at mylifecity.com or call 504-330-2157.

Satsuma

Yoga School

t Satsuma Café, a Bywater bistro with a mission to serve local and fresh ingredients, there are several chalkboards around to announce the seasonal salads, sandwiches and juices. It is a rare day when the place is not packed at mealtime. Locals know when they are eating local, and many invariably crave it. Cassi and Peter Dymond started Satsuma with the hope that they can bring some of the West Coast’s farm-to-table culture to New Orleans. Customer expectations are sometimes the most challenging encounters, since the food changes with the seasons and, often, depending on the day. Sourcing the items they need often takes great effort and time, but the owners and employees do it as much for the cause as for the customers. The Dymonds are developing relationships with local growers, which helps them get the ingredients they need to make it through each meal. The reasons for joining the Green Games were obvious, since Satsuma serves as a beacon for smaller restaurants as the city’s residents clamor for fresh food and put their money where their mouth is.

oga School in Covington has achieved many firsts in its 20 plus years of existence, including being the first yoga studio and school to sign up for the Gumbo Green Games. That would not surprise those who know Yoga School’s founder, Becky Gelatt. Gelatt has been a community activist for many years in the Covington area with regard to environment and preservation of the natural resources of St. Tammany Parish. She was instrumental in bringing Keep America Beautiful to Covington and in the adoption of the town’s tree ordinance which protects trees during construction projects and requires a permit to remove a tree. Yoga School was one of the first Louisiana yoga schools to adopt the standards set forth by the Yoga Alliance for training yoga teachers to a professional level. In addition to offering teacher training, most recently the school has become licensed by the state to offer certification for yoga therapy, a relatively new but growing area in integrative health care. “Yoga therapy requires a different set of skills from those needed to teach general yoga classes to the public,” Gelatt explains. Of the school’s mission, she says, “Our intention is to offer an integrated curriculum that provides a comprehensive program for training professional yoga teachers prepared to teach different populations in a variety of settings, safely, successfully and compassionately.” Gelatt saw joining the Green Games as a way to further align the school with commitment to a sustainable community.

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Potsalot Pottery

P

tkins is a global engineering and design consultancy working on large-scale coastal restoration and storm damage risk reduction. The 70-year-old company, based in London, has 300 offices worldwide. The Metairie team decided to go green to “think globally act locally,” according to Katie VanDeventer from Atkins. “We would like to show the world that we can ‘walk the talk’ by truly being good stewards of our natural environment.” The team has unified with a common goal, brainstorming strategies and elevating them to the corporate office. The team has also participated in community projects and saved money by eliminating bottled water and Styrofoam cups. “It is already becoming apparent…that our business has truly made a change for the better, and we believe that going green will pay off big-time in the long-run,” VanDeventer said. The Green Games gave the team some guidance and direction through Life City’s assessment, but there are other benefits. “We have already reached back to Life City several times with new needs asking if there are any other companies in the Green Games that we can support with our business. It is truly becoming a useful network and we are honored to be a part of it.”

otsalot Pottery manufactures handmade pottery for retail and wholesale. The shop on Magazine Street sells pottery created by the owners, Cindy and Alexander Williams, as well as the pottery made by their friends and apprentices. The products are made at the heart of their operation and then sold all over the South. “The pots we make are inventive, earthy, solid, functional, beautiful, affordable, custom (sometimes), and new,” Mr. Williams said. “We are always evolving and improving our work, and we are fun to meet. That’s why folks buy from us.” The owners, both sculpture majors at Loyola University, opened their shop in 1993, a year after graduation and three months before getting married. Almost a decade later, Williams was considering going green when Lizzy Shephard from Life City walked into the shop promoting the Green Games. “It was just time to line up our consumption and output to make a more minimal impact,” he said. “Eventually, we will save more money.” It is an incremental process, he explained, but joining the games has helped him “mentally,” to make the commitment. As they start to make changes, they will tell more people and see how it helps promote business.

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Calming Anxious Kids Six Ways to Ease Upsets by Elisa Bosley

K

ids today are no strangers to stress. In a media-saturated world, children face scary stuff every day, from wars and natural disasters to divorce and peer pressure. In addition to the mental toll, anxiety affects kids’ bodies, too: A study published in the journal Brain, Behavior, and Immunity found that family stress directly compromises immune function and increases the likelihood of illness in children. As a parent, how can we help? First, take a deep breath. “Childhood anxiety is not a new problem in our society,” says Dr. Anandhi Narasimhan, a Los Angeles physician specializing in child and adolescent psychiatry. She notes that all children go through stages of normal fears and worries, and anxieties can show up as stomach aches, headaches, potty accidents, aggression and sleep problems.

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Here, experts offer tips to discern normal versus unhealthy stress levels and to help a child develop coping skills for life’s inevitable hardships.

Make space

Start by simply listening to your child. “When my children are upset, my immediate instinct is to ask ‘How can I fix this?’” says Dr. Natalie Geary, an integrative pediatrician and mother of three in New York City. “But you need to step back, listen and empathize, without trying to problem-solve right away. If you allow the child to express his or her discomfort, and if you step back and try to gain some perspective, you may start to discern the triggers for his or her anxiety.” Trying to solve the problem immediately can backfire, she advises. Create a consistent time, such as a snack break after school, to allow a child to download her day. You’ll learn more about what causes her stress and she’ll gain confidence in your care and her own ability to face fears.

Examine yourself

For many school-age kids, performance anxiety becomes an overriding constant. Unfortunately, parents often play a role by projecting their own ambitions onto their kids, notes Geary. Carl Honoré, author of Under Pressure, cites parents’ good intentions, but blames modern


forces—including a perfectionist culture, a volatile and hypercompetitive economy and older, first-time parents that bring a workplace ethos to child rearing—for conspiring to pressure kids. “What we’re squeezing out is the simple, soaring human pleasure and joy of being a child,” says Honoré. So find ways to lighten up on expectations.

Consider help

“Children are expected to visit a pediatrician for preventive health, and we should adopt the same principle for mental health,” counsels Narasimhan. “If anxiety is impacting a child’s functioning—such as causing him to want to avoid school or public places, showing extreme difficulty separating from caretakers, or complaining of frequent pains for which the pediatrician doesn’t see a medical explanation—take the child to a therapist or psychiatrist [to screen for anxiety].”

When appropriate, Narasimhan recommends cognitive behavioral therapy, in which a therapist teaches the child strategies to combat fears and address certain feelings and behaviors. “This may include deep-breathing exercises, progressive muscle relaxation and alternative coping thoughts,” she says. A meta-analysis of clinical trials first published in School Psychology Review concludes that such therapy can play a key role in alleviating childhood anxiety.

Unschedule

Speed breeds stress. “Don’t be in such a rush,” advises Geary. “Whatever you can take out of the day, take out.” Work out a looser schedule, whether that means limiting kids to one musical instrument or sport or instituting a weekly day of rest, when playtime replaces all homework and chores. Says Geary, “I see a lot of kids coming in with stomach pains or school issues, or they’re hitting others. Nine times out of 10, I feel like saying to the parents, ‘Just take your kids to the playground, sit in the park with them and get really dirty digging in the mud.’ If they did that for a month, they’d be fine.”

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Pay attention to food

“If blood sugar drops, it’s a very anxietyand irritability-producing sensation,” observes Geary. “Try to feed children snacks that provide slow-release nutrition, meaning they’re not getting a jolt of hard-to-digest fat, protein or sugar.” Her favored choices include low-fat cheese and hummus, or whole-grain bread, spread with nut butter, an easyto-digest protein.

Relax

Children often reflect their parents’ moods, so create calm. “Massage,

maybe with calendula oil or something that smells nice for the child, is wonderful,” says Geary. The key is the interaction of the touch and the stillness. Just before bedtime, enjoy a cup of herbal tea together. “It’s more the ritual of sharing a warm drink at the end of the day than actually what you’re drinking,” she says. “They will absorb the fact that you’re spending time with them.” Elisa Bosley is a senior editor at Delicious Living magazine.

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Massage or massage therapy are systems of structured palpation or movement of the soft tissue of the body. The massage system may include, but is not limited to, such techniques as, stroking, kneading, gliding, percussion, friction, vibration, compression, passive or active stretching within the normal anatomical range of movement; effleurage (either firm or light soothing, stroking movement, without dragging the skin, using either padded parts of fingertips or palms); petrissage (lifting or picking up muscles and rolling the folds of skin); or tapotement (striking with the side of the hand, usually with partly flexed fingers, rhythmic movements with fingers or short rapid movements of sides of the hand). These techniques may be applied with or without the aid of lubricants, salt or herbal preparations, hydromassage, thermal massage or a massage device that mimics or enhances the actions possible by human hands. The purpose of the practice of massage is to enhance the general health and well-being of the recipient. Massage does not include the diagnosis of a specific pathology, the prescription of drugs or controlled substances, spinal manipulation or those acts of physical therapy that are outside the scope of massage therapy.

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Return of the m r a F y l i m a F l a Loc Chef John Besh Supports Sustainable Farms with Micro-Loans

Erick Loos

By Colleen Morgan

If It’s Local It’s Fresh A growing interest in fresh, local food has spawned a multitude of farmers markets, where family farms in the city environs are able to sell their produce directly to customers. At the same time, New Orleans’ urban farming movement is booming, with backyard farmers and community gardens blossoming. The question is, will there be enough to meet the growing demand? Chef John Besh has been among those leading the charge to provide the best fresh local food to the area. At Besh’s restaurants, he strives to use only ingredients from nearby farms and fishermen. That is, the fruits, vegetables and meats he uses at his six New Orleans restaurants are not only fresh and part of this region’s ecosystem, but they are also connected to the local economy. In order to increase availability of local fresh foods in the community, Chef Besh has created a new micro-loan program for local farmers that is meant to support sustainable farming and, therefore, the local economy, while providing better, fresher, and healthier food to more people more often. “The more people who get involved by growing, buying and eating local food, the more people won’t have to pay extra for it,” said Chef Erick Loos of Besh’s restaurant, La Provence. “Chef Besh being a big brother to the little farmers means there will be more for everyone. And it is food that is good for you; it will help you live longer and be happier.”

Building Farm Capacity with Micro-Loans Chef Besh wanted to do more to help boost local farmers so that they can provide more good food to local residents

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and restaurants. He and Chef Loos, Chef de Cuisine Chef Besh at La Provence in Lacombe, know from experience that the farmers who come to the city’s markets provide the best tomatoes, or the best squash, but they are struggling to survive and never seem to have enough capital to do more. Recently, the Chef John Besh Foundation awarded its first loan to Kenny and Jamie Mauthe of Progress Dairy Farm in McComb, Miss., to help the couple recover from their Hurricane Katrina losses, rebuild their herd so they can start making butter, and sell more by going to more farmers markets. This farm, which sells pasteurized (but not homogenized milk) in glass bottles and the beloved Creole Cream Cheese, is the first to receive funds from the chef’s new low-interest loan program. “I know how difficult capital is to come by these days,” Besh said in an Associated Press article on the program. “We’ve been successful with the restaurants, but finding the money I need can be difficult at times. This is a way to make an impactful change and generate more small farmers.” The Mauthes received a $20,000 loan through the program, the maximum amount available, but loans range from $1,000 to $20,000. Any farmer within 200 miles of New Orleans is encouraged to apply, including those in southern Mississippi and Alabama as well as Louisiana, and Chef Besh hopes to fund as many as possible, according to the report. “There has been a huge resurgence in small and urban farming,” Besh said. “It’s where we get so much of our wonderful


product today. But much of it is struggling. The issue a lot of times for these folks has been that they have not been able to find traditional funding.” Currently, several members of the Mauthe family have other jobs besides the work on the farm, which makes it difficult to expand much less keep up with the increasing demand in the market. “We want to earn enough money to support ourselves and for our daughters to support themselves,” Jamie Mauthe said in the AP report. “And I would like to get a new cheese maker so we can expand our product.” The Hope Credit Union reviews the applications and works with the farmers to determine an appropriate repayment plan. The foundation guarantees the loan with cash in a protected account.

La Provence farm to table operation Besh’s restaurant, modeled on the French countryside of its namesake, is set on four acres in Lacombe, Louisiana – halfway between Slidell and Mandeville. Behind the restaurant is the heart of the operation, starting just behind the kitchen with the oyster shell-packed rain garden that drains the water from the roof to the rows of raised beds popping with mint, Arugula and Gulf Fritillary butterflies. A spacious coop offers room to roam for a dozen varieties of chickens, and a large, two-stall pen houses two playful goats and a handful of curious, happy hogs. The hogs are Mangalitsa pigs, a heritage breed originally from Hungary that is famous for their marbled meat, known for their culinary desirability. They thrive on the scraps from the four-star restaurant thrown into their troughs. “The pigs snack every night,” Loos said, explaining that the small farm represents a closed loop: what is not fed to the hogs goes into the compost, which eventually feeds the healthy and fertile garden beds. “They know where their food comes from,” he said of the cooks and the diners, who constantly ask for tours of the farm. They are told about how the hogs are hormone-free and the herbs are not sprayed with pesticides. “It gives you a sense of respect, to see it grow.” The small Besh farm supplies four

restaurants – La Provence, August, Luke and Domenica – with primarily pork products, but it takes many more farms to feed the hungry palettes of all the restaurants’ patrons. Chef Besh also gets grass-fed beef from Two Run Farms and others, and was an integral part of the founding of Covey Rise Farm, a three-yearold, 25-acre outcropping of the 400-acre hunting lodge of the same name in Husser, Louisiana., West of Franklinton. From the outset, that farm has produced vegetables specifically called for in Besh menus, a mutually beneficial agreement because the restaurants can count on stable menu products, Loos said, and the farm can have a guaranteed income. The farm has been so successful that the operation now sells to six other restaurant groups in the city in addition to other clients.

Chef Besh and his protégé The 27 year old Chef Loos hails from Moreno Valley, California, where he learned to cook at home and in professional kitchens before he attended culinary school, which brought him to Restaurant August for his externship after Hurricane Katrina. It took him only three years to be promoted to sous chef, during which time he dedicated his energies to rebuilding the city’s restaurant community. Since that promotion, he spent his summers at Château de Montcaud in Provence, where he was embedded in the culture of provençal cooking along with the other up and coming Besh chefs. Since he was installed as the Chef de Cuisine at La Provence in early 2009, he has kept the traditions of the founder Chris Kerageorgiou and built upon the

sustainable farming model that is the restaurant’s backyard. Previous to his win at the Cochon 555 national competition, he assisted Chef Besh in the final round of the Iron Chef competition, and has earned La Provence a host of other titles. Chef Loos, who has the task among the cooks to feed the pigs, is proud to be following in Chef Besh’s footsteps, especially since he has worked hard to get to where he is now. He beams as he talks about Chef’s dedication to supporting the region’s farmers, calling them a “dying breed.” Chef John Besh has been a celebrity for close to a decade, winning awards and accolades from local diners as well as national magazines and other discerning palettes. He is a frequent guest chef on the NBC Today Show and has appeared on several other network food shows. He is a favorite among professional and novice cooks across the country, but his dedication to related, social pursuits has created a lasting impression on the hearts of Americans. In addition to his support of the local economy through supporting farmers, the former U.S. Marine partnered with a local emergency response firm to create high quality meals for emergency response teams around the world. His contributions to South Louisiana and the globe earned him the title of Restaurateur of the Year in 2008 from the Louisiana Restaurant Association. Colleen Morgan is a free lance writer and environmental editor for Natural Awakenings living in New Orleans. She may be reached at colleen.nolahealthyliving@ gmail.com

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Eating Out? EAT GREEN Eco-Friendly Restaurants Serve Up Sustainability by Sandra Murphy

Simply Gourmet Casual Dining

C

hef Dave Gotter uses only the freshest ingredients for our homemade dressings, sauces and meats to make all of our signature recipes daily.

ating green isn’t limited to salads. It means that sustainable thinking goes into a meal at every stage, from the use of local ingredients and energy savings to recycling and composting waste. Delicious food, served thoughtfully, is the goal of today’s environmentally conscious restaurant. Look first to local mom-and-pop eateries that are doing it right, but there are some chains worth considering, as well. With more than 25 million cups of wake-up java sold each day, coffee shops have a perfect opportunity to start a good day by example. Californiabased Green Café Network consults with owners and baristas to reduce the environmental impact of member shops. Efficient equipment, biodegradable cups and renewable products for flooring and tables make the coffee house experience more sustainable, especially when buyers select shade-grown, organic, free-trade beans. Starbucks Corporation has taken it all a step further by designing a pre-certified Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) prototype store. It features recycled floor tiles, reduced lighting and lower water usage and air conditioning set three degrees higher than usual. Souplantation & Sweet Tomatoes offers fresh-tossed salads, made-fromscratch soups and hot or cold desserts in their 120 restaurants, where vegan, vegetarian and gluten-free items are offered daily. Reclaimed recyclables

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C roque M adaMe


Garden Fresh Restaurant Corp., the parent company of Souplantation & Sweet Tomatoes restaurants, estimates that its recycling and composting programs annually save: n 2,129,400 pounds of

waste paper n 7,452,900 gallons of water n 3,194,100 cubic yards of

landfill space n 4,365,270 kilowatts

of energy come back as takeout containers, towels and napkins. Materials sent out for recycling include glass, paper, aluminum and cardboard. Even garbage is given a new role as part of a chain-wide composting program. Tankless water heaters are in while traditional systems are out and cleaning products are all Green Seal certified. At Chipotle Mexican Grill, “It’s not just a burrito, it’s a foil-wrapped, handcrafted, local farm-supporting, food culture-changing cylinder of deliciousness,” states the company’s website. In 2010, Chipotle served about 5 million pounds of local farm produce through its 1,000 mostly North American stores. The company-wide 2011 goal is 10 million pounds. Inside those burritos, 40 percent of the beans are certified organic, resulting in 140,000 fewer pounds of pesticide added to the soil. The romaine lettuce, bell peppers, jalapeño, red onions, oregano and tomatoes come from family-owned farms. California patrons also enjoy locally grown lemons and avocados. Chipotle produce typically travels no more than 300 miles to its distribution centers. Short travel time means less fuel burned and fewer greenhouse gases plus fresher, more nutritious food on the plate than what less eco-conscious restaurants provide.

“The environment is the basis of our business; we try to be green in everything,” explains Mike Vroman, a store manager in the St. Louis area. So, for example, “Most of the beef we serve in this area is either from Missouri or Kansas. Even our uniforms are 100 percent organic cotton.” Because restaurants draw their highest levels of electricity when community demand peaks, Chipotle installed solar panels on 75 of its Texas restaurants, while a wind turbine provides electricity at the Gurnee, Illinois site, reducing midday drain on the grid. The Gurnee site is the first restaurant ever to receive the superior Platinum Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating. Is it possible to operate a restaurant without a dishwasher, range, hood or oven? Yes, if bowls, straws, cutlery, chopsticks and cups are made from corn or potato starch. Freshii meals are created in biodegradable, all natural, food-safe bags. Custom made, the bags leave a carbon footprint five to seven times smaller than the most energyefficient dishwasher. Everything taken from the store will readily biodegrade or is easy to recycle. Even store size is a factor. Freshii founder Matthew Corrin notes, “As we grow, our stores are built smaller, to use less materials, to use greener materials, to consume less energy, to take less from this Earth.” Some Freshii stores are superefficient, encompassing just 150 square feet. If a burger, fries and shake dinner evokes guilty pleasure, EVOS removes both the guilt and grease, leaving only pleasurable flavor. The restaurant’s

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trademark Airfries are better for more than just folks’ arteries. “Our potatoes are air-fried at a high temperature,” explains Jackie Macaluso, community ambassador for EVOS, “so we have no used and reused vats of grease to discard.”

Less noticeable eco-bonuses include zero-VOC paint and flooring, made from sustainable, eco-friendly, raw materials like wood flour, linseed oil, rosin, jute fiber and limestone. The company’s Southeast U.S. locations work to raise

awareness that even comfort foods can be greener, healthier and still taste good, and to teach children about healthier eating habits. Of course, there’s usually a Subway Restaurant around the corner. Long committed to serving fresh food fast, the company recently announced its new LEED-certified eco-edition. With 35,000 franchises in 98 countries, small changes add up to big blessings for the Earth. The most important thing we can do to go green is to eat green every day. It serves up the most bang for the buck in healthy sustainability. Sandra Murphy is a freelance writer at StLouisFreelanceWriter@mindspring.com. = Natural Awakenings advertiser

La Provance

Local Eco-friendly Restaurants

August

301 Tchoupitoulous Street 504-299-9777 ChefJohnBesh.com

Bodhisattva Tea Spa

3515 Melvil Dewey, Ste. 108 Metairie 504-309-4424 facebook.com/Bodhisattva.TeaSpa 3218 Magazine Street, New Orleans, (also Metairie and Harahan) 504-894-1233 ByblosRestaurants.com

Café Granada

1506 South Carrollton Avenue 504-865-1612 CafeGranadaNola.com 2917 Magazine Street 504-895-2500 CafeRaniMagazine.com

Domenica

123 Baronne Street 504-648-6020 ChefJohnBesh.com

Eco Café

3903 Canal Street 504-561-6585 EcoCafeNo.com 32

New Orleans

734 East Rutland Street Covington 985-898-3988 EnglishTeaRoom.com

Fair Grinds Coffee House 3133 Ponce De Leon 504-913-9072 FairGrinds.com

Good Earth Market

Byblos

Café Rani

English Tea Room

821 Girod Street, Mandeville 985-674-4329 GoodEarthMarket.net

Gott Gourmet

3100 Magazine Street 504-373-6579 GottGourmetCafe.com

Jackson Restaurant 1910 Magazine Street 504-522-5766 JacksonNola.net

Juan’s Flying Burrito

2018 Magazine 504-569-0000 4724 South Carrollton Avenue 504-486-9950 JuansFlyingBurrito.com

The Kupcake Factory

6233 South Claiborne Avenue 504-267-3328 TheKupcakeFactory.com NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

25020 Hwy 190, Lacombe 985-626-7662 ChefJohnBesh.com

Lakeview Brew

5606 Canal Boulevard 504-483-7001 LakeviewBrew.com

Lazziza

2106 Chartres Street 504-943-0416 facebook.com/pages/Lazziza

Luke

333 St. Charles Avenue 504-378-2840 ChefJohnBesh.com

Ruby Slipper

139 South Cortez Street 504-309-5531 200 Magazine Street 504-525-9355 TheRubySlipperCafe.net

Satsuma Café

3218 Dauphine Street 504-304-5962 SatsumaCafe.com

Sukho Thai

1913 Royal Street 504-948-9309 4519 Magazine Street 504-373-6471 SukhoThai-Nola.com

Toad Hollow Café

207 N. New Hampshire Street Covington 985-893-8711 ToadHollowCafe.com


Casso’s Wellness Store & Gym thewellnessstore.com

Water Purification & Filtration Installation and Service Since 1984

Get pure water for your home or business The Wellness Water Company is dedicated to providing the highest quality of water for consumption and use for our customers to aid their immune systems by the removal of toxic chemicals, pharmaceuticals, micro-organisms, and carcinogens that are present in the Southeast Louisiana water supply. Mention this ad for a Complimentary Professional Water Analysis

Wellness Water Company 3308 Cleary Avenue Metairie, Louisiana 70002 (504) 838-8345 www.WellnessWaterCo.com

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Nutritional & Pharmaceutical Consultant

Complimentary Counseling on pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals by a registered pharmacist and clinical nutritionist. • High Quality Nutritional Products • Vitamins, Minerals, Herbs, Natural Hormones • Natural Hormone Balancing Consultation • Alkaline Water available • Therapeutic Massage on BioMat • Hypnotherapy by Delerno Hypnotherapy, who has 50 yrs experience • So Much More...

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3308 Cleary Avenue, Metairie, Louisiana

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This information is for informational and educational purposes only and is not intended to replace or substitute the advice and/or services of a physician or other health care professional. It is not our intention to prescribe or make specific health claims for any of our technologies or products. Any attempt to diagnose and treat illness should come under the direction and supervision of your health care practitioner.

natural awakenings

November 2011

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ew Orleans, LA 70175-0758 • Phone: 504-330-2157 • Fax: 504-324-0131 advertising@nolahealthyliving.com

fitbody

this form and save a copy to your drive for your records. sing@nolahealthyliving.com, or print & fax back to us at 504-324-0131 Ad is shown Actual Size

of for Natural Awakenings — September 2011 Issue P: F:

approved: contact information and spelling is correct

approved: with changes (indicated in email or fax)

Our Worst Fitness Habits

not approved: make changes (indicated in email or fax), send new proof

2 revisions allowed with new ad design)

Six Roadblocks to Sidestep by Tosca Reno

Stress Reduction and Wellness Mind-Body and Mindfulness-Based Groups

4-Week Mindfulness Course Nov/Dec - dates TBA To register call 504.891.8808

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e all know that working out is beneficial. But how you work out makes all the difference in staying safe, seeing better results and keeping your body balanced. Here’s how to make sure you aren’t sabotaging a good workout.

1 THE MINDFUL LIVING PROGRAM © 2009

Cultivating Wellness, Balance and Health

José Calderón-Abbo, m.d.

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Bad form. Correct form is your safety net. Once you compromise the way you do a move, you’re no longer getting the greatest benefits from the exercise, and you’re seriously increasing your risk of getting hurt. Even if it means, for example, lightening up the amount of resistance, follow the correct form for the best results.

2

Over-training. Don’t expect that you are going to dive right in and pound your body into its

ow, I accept this ad as noted above and agree to the terms and conditions of this agreement. wakenings and may not be reproduced in any other publication without permission of the arefully. Natural Awakenings is not responsible for any error not marked. This ad will be s not returned to us. If there are any questions about this proof please call or email.

Date:

34

New Orleans

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

best shape ever overnight. Not only will this all-or-nothing approach cause burnout, but you also risk injury and will give up on yourself, because this is an unreasonable expectation. Instead, you need to gradually build up your muscles so they get the most effective and efficient workout possible. More doesn’t always mean better, faster results. Remember, rest is good for the body. Take days off between training to repair and rebuild or if you’re training daily, don’t work the same muscle groups back-to-back.

3

Under-training. Once you’re dressed and ready to sweat, commit to giving it your all for the next 30 to 60 minutes. Just going through the motions doesn’t do much for the body and makes it easy for boredom to creep in. You owe this time to yourself—you deserve it—so make sure you give it your all.

4

Daydreaming. You can develop a laser-sharp focus by actively involving your mind in every pose, set, rep and step—thinking about how your body moves, how the muscles engage, which muscle or muscles you’re using and correct form. Mindfulness adds up to a better workout and faster results. So forget about the laundry, the kids’ schedules and that


afternoon conference call, turn off the TV and stay 100 percent in the moment.

5

Staying with a few exercises you know. Your muscles love being challenged, so if you just stick to the same routine, they’ll eventually adapt and won’t have to work as hard to do the same moves. But if you change the exercises and even the order you do them in, you ensure that muscles don’t get too efficient with any single routine. Not only is this better for toning, but it also helps your mind stay focused and engaged.

Rediscover Your True Self & Live Free! Underneath the layers of limiting beliefs, fears and the cultural conditioning that we all receive, rests the brilliant essence of our Higher Self. Experience the joy of living from your Truth now. “ I have a peace of mind I never knew could exist.” D.D. NOLA “ Working with Marylou has brought quick resolution to obstacles that were blocking my journey.” Ann W. Atlanta, GA 6312 Argonne Blvd, NOLA 70124 • 504.723.2899 info@marylousmith.com www.marylousmith.com

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Holding your breath. Regular steady breathing has many benefits: Proper inhalations and exhalations can help you power through moves, keep lactic acid (a byproduct that builds up in the muscles during exertion) at bay and help maintain a steady heart rate. A full breath delivers the maximum amount of oxygen to the blood, which in turn delivers more energy to the working muscles.

engage into your space with awareness and implement solutions to positively affect your life.

Tosca Reno is the co-author of Your Best Body Now, excerpted here with permission from Harlequin Books S.A.

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GOOD D G! Positive Training Yields Fast Results by Sandra Murphy

Dogs love to learn and live to please at every age. Teaching a pet good manners, social skills and YouTube-worthy tricks are great ways to build a bond and have fun, too.

“W

hen a fearful or shy dog associates a new situation with good things, the dog blooms. I love to see it,” says Victoria Stilwell, of Animal Planet’s It’s Me or the Dog. “It’s the basis for positive reinforcement training.” Stilwell explains that her method, known as Positive Dog Training, is all about spotting and rewarding the behavior you like as it happens. “Thus, the good behavior is likely to repeat, encouraging the dog to learn to live in a human world successfully.” Each dog has his own idea of the best reward—some favor toys, some work for food, others simply want approval. Training doesn’t have to be timeconsuming, repetitive homework. Once you and your dog learn the basics, you can do short sessions.

The Clicker Method

A click of a small noisemaker used in training lets the dog know when he’s just done the right thing. As soon as we

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

see the behavior, we’ll click faster than our brains can tell our mouths to say, “Good dog!” For example, to train “Watch me,” sit down with your dog, the clicker and some tiny treats. If he focuses on the treats or looks away, do nothing. If he glances at you, click and toss him a treat. A few click/treats later, your dog will figure out he did something to make the reward happen. Be prepared, because that thought will be followed by a very deliberate look at your face. After that, training will move at high speed. “Work on the basics first,” counsels psychologist Linda Michaels, owner of Wholistic Dog Training, in San Diego. “Four commands—sit, down, wait and come—will get you started. You can do mini-training sessions throughout the day, such as ‘sit’ for breakfast or dinner, ‘come’ when called, ‘wait’ before going out the door, and ‘down’ during television programs. Continue practicing during commercials.”


“For me, a house or an apartment becomes a home when you add one set of four legs, a happy tail, and that indescribable measure of love that we call a dog.” ~ Roger Caras, president emeritus, American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals “How my service dog, Hunter, figured out what I needed and how to help me, I don’t know, but I have great respect for the intellectual abilities of dogs. Training is a way of opening communication; just like with a human, you can never be sure where the conversation will take you,” remarks M. Shirley Chong, a professional clicker trainer in Grinnell, Iowa. “Positive training lets a dog be your friend, not a boot camp soldier obeying orders,” advises Patricia McConnell, Ph.D., a certified applied animal behaviorist in Black Earth, Wisconsin, and author of multiple titles, including The Other End of the Leash. “When he exhibits new behaviors, capture them, add a cue and give them a cute name. Always, the basis of the best tricks happens when the dog offers his own ideas.” Pat Miller, of Peaceable Paws, in Fairplay, Maryland, also respects an animal as a thinking partner, “You get to see them figure out how things work,” she says. Miller, who serves as the training editor for Whole Dog Journal, has trained dogs, cats, horses and a pot-bellied pig. She’s particularly pleased to have transformed a terrier, previously deemed unadoptable by a shelter because of his biting, into a happy, stable patron of New York’s Central Park. Positive dog training literally saved his life.

Retraining/Renaming Bad Behaviors

With patience and know-how, jumping up on people can turn into dancing the conga. Grumbly growling noises can turn into “Whisper,” or “Tell me a secret.” Excessive barking can be interpreted as bored whining: “There’s nothing to do!” Or, your pet could be answering another dog that you can’t hear. Changes in weather also can make a dog anxious and vocal. Of course, he may just want attention. If you find the reason, it’s easier to find the cure. Is a dog shy or fearful? “Don’t put him in a situation beyond his comfort zone,” counsels Cara Shannon, an expert in curbing aggressive dog behavior in Austin, Texas. “Let him observe from a safe distance, but not interact, perhaps watching his surroundings with you from inside the car.” She also relates the story of a fearful foster dog that learned nose work (scent discrimination) and can find a small

vial of essential oil hidden in a room. “The praise she receives gives her confidence to try other new things,” observes Shannon. Stilwell remarks, “Learning to cope with newness is a huge benefit for any animal.” Sandra Murphy is a freelance writer at StLouisFreelanceWriter@ mindspring.com. Connect with positive trainers: Victoria Stilwell, Positively. com; Linda Michaels, WholisticDogTraining.com; Pat Miller, PeaceablePaws.com; M. Shirley Chong, ShirleyChong.com; Patricia McConnell, PatriciaMcConnell.com; Cara Shannon, BuddysChance.com/Caravacchiano.html.

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conscious dining northshore GOOD EARTH MARKET & CAFÉ 821 Girod St. Old Mandeville 985-674-4329

Offering delicious organic fare at breakfast, lunch and dinner. Also try our juices, smoothies, baked goods, and organic beers and fine wines. Our market has gluten & wheat free products, natural and organic products, vitamins and supplements. Open 8-8 Mon-Sat and 9-3 Sun.

NUR’S KITCHEN

100 S. Tyler St., 10-B Covington, 70433 985-249-6431 Old world Mediterranean dishes prepared with all natural and organic ingredients (as available). Soup, Salads, Appetizers, Sandwiches, Barbeque, and Daily Specials, seasonal veggie dishes. Catering available. Open 11 am. to 4 pm. Tues through Fri. See ad on page 11.

RUBY’S NATURAL FOODS

1030 Hwy 190 West et Casual Dining Slidell 985-641-1620

hest ingredients for our natural homemade dressings, Market offering & organic products ur signature recipes daily.Fresh soups daily.Veggie and supplements.

burgers, burritos, enchiladas, veggie pockNow Serving • Sandwiches ets, fresh salads, chicken and turkey salads. Wine and daily. BeerLunch $8 soup & salad lunch special

Gumbo 2 for 1 Beer served 10:30-3. Seating available. tues -fri, 4pm until close e Hotdogs TEA ROOM ers THE ENGLISH Best Breakfast three years running

734 Rutland Street, Covington - Where Y’at Magazine 985-898-3988 EnglishTeaRoom.com 3100 Magazine Street, New Orleans One of the largest selec(corner of loose Magazine 8th)in tions of leaf & teas the south! Breakfast, 79 F: 504-301-3456 www.gottgourmetcafe.com Lunch, 8and Tea n 8 am to 5 pm / breakfast amHigh to noon served all day. Organic salads, vegetarian sandwiches, delicious quiches, tea infused soups, famous scones. Pharmacist owned and operated, Wellness Tea Blends, nutritional counseling. See ad on page 11.

38

New Orleans

TOAD HOLLOW CAFÉ

207 N. New Hampshire, Covington 985-893-8711 ToadHollowCafe.com Offering soups, salads, burgers, sandwiches & housemade desserts with wholesome, mostly organic ingredients. Something for everyone including vegetarian and vegan selections. Dine in or take-out. See ad on page 11.

southshore BODHISATTVA TEA SPA

3515 Melvil Dewey, Metairie 504-309-4424 BodhisattvaTeaSpa.com A unique tea boutique and spa with a natural approach to health and well-being. Offering a variety of whole leaf teas, herbs and tea accessories. Spa services include Massage Therapy, Infrared Sauna and Esthetics (Facials, Body Treatments and Waxing), Usui Reiki and Qi Gong. Call and schedule an appt. Mon-Sat 9am-6pm, Sun by appt only.

ECO CAFÉ & BISTRO

3903 Canal St., N.O. 70119 504-561-6585 EcoCafeNO.com Catering and to go orders available. Sustainably operated. SalSoups, Panini’s, and Bistro ads, Hot Plates, and more with fresh all natural ingredients. Vegetarian/vegan options, organic wines, organic Coffee Bar, Full Juice Bar. Tapas Fri & Sat 6-10pm. Breakfast Mon-Fri 8- 11:30 and 8-2:30 Sat/Sun. Lunch Mon-Fri 11:30-3 and Sat/Sun noon -2:30pm.

GOTT GOURMET CAFÉ 3100 Magazine St. (8th), New Orleans 504-373-6579 GottGourmetCafe.com C roque M adaMe

Casual food prepared to a gourmet’s standards. The freshest ingredients in made from scratch food. Salads, soups, paninis, wraps, burgers, gumbo and Chicago style Vienna hot dogs. Take-out in biodegradable containers.Order your favorite menu items in party size quantities. Open Tues-Fri 11-9, Sat & Sun 8-5. See ad on page 30.

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

HOLLYGROVE MARKET AND FARM 8301 Olive St., NOLA 504-483-7037 HollygroveMarket.com

An urban organic farm and CSA-style co“Home of the $25 Local Produce Box” operative and retail market in the heart of Tuesday 12pm-6pm & Saturday 10am-2pm theOpen city offering local and seasonal produce as well as local dairy and meat products. Weekly CSA produce boxes available for $25 every Sat 10am-2pm and Wed 12pm6pm at main location in Carrollton. Pick-up at satellite locations available. See ad on page 25. 8301 Olive St.

Phone: 504-453-0789

www.hollygrovemarket.com

LAKEVIEW BREW COFFEE CAFÉ

5606 Canal Blvd., NOLA 504-483-7001 LakeviewBrew.com A locals favorite! Unique atmosphere with great food & great people! Two outside patios. Healthy veggie selections, gourmet salads, soups, sandwiches, full breakfast, in-house bakery, & more! Open Mon-Sat 7am-9pm & Sun 7am-3pm. See ad on page 31.

SUPERFOOD BAR

4113 Magazine St., NOLA 70115 Phone: 504-891-7733 LocalCultureNola@gmail.com New Orleans only all raw HealthForce and vegan food bar! Truly delicious food prepared by a professional chef. Offering Smoothies, Teas, Snacks and Nutritionals Kid’s Treats, Veggie V H B Rolls and Wraps, Health Force Nutritionals, Probiotics, Nutritional Literature, Raw & Vegan Preparation Classes and Raw & Vegan Catering. Open 10am. to 5pm. Mon to Sat. ital

ealing

otanicals

THE VINTAGE GARDEN KITCHEN

925 S. Labarre Rd, Metairie Soup order line: 504-620-2495 VintageGardenKitchen.org Healthy and delicious soups created by our chef using fresh, wholesome ingredients without preservatives and hormone-free dairy and meats. Local products used as much as is available and some ingredients from our own organically grown garden.Three soups/ week prepared. Ask about special diets. Order by Tues noon for pick-up or delivery that week. Order on-line or by phone. See ad on page 31.


calendarofevents Note: All Calendar events must be received via email by November 10 for the December issue. $10/Event Calendar or Ongoing Calendar listing. $15/Upcoming Events. Free community wide events are listed for free as space is available. Email calendar@nolahealthyliving.com for guidelines and to submit entries. No phone calls please.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1

Health Benefits of Tea & Tea Tasting – 3-4pm. Pharmacist Owner Jan Lantrip, PhD, discusses the newest research on health and tea. Refreshments served; call to reserve seating. $15. The English Tea Room, 735 Rutland St., Covington. 985-898-3988. Ideal Protein Weight Loss Program – 5:30pm. Dr. Debbi Hannan presents: The Ideal Protein Weight Loss Program at Chiropractic Health Center, 101 Clearview Pkwy. at Airline Dr. Free. Reservations required: 504-454-2000. Latino Farmers Coop Cheesecake Sale. Benefits the Latino Farmers Cooperative of Louisiana social services and hunger relief efforts. Cheesecakes delivered week of Thanksgiving. 12 amazing flavors as well as sugar free. Cost: $25-26 each. To order call 504-333-3611 or email info@LatinoFarmersCoop.org.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2

Deep Tissue Massage Clinic – 12:45pm & 2:15pm (Also 11/9 & 11/11). Help a student with their education at the student massage clinic. Deep Tissue is muscle specific and really works out the kinks. Blue Cliff College (in Clearview Mall) across from food court. Metairie. Appointment only. $30. 504-293-0972. Milk Party – 7-9pm. Mother to mother breastfeeding support. Certified International Lactation consultant, Julie Holcomb answers questions from establishing a first latch to child-led weaning. Breast feeding babies and toddlers welcome. No registration required. ZukaBaby, 2124 Magazine St., NOLA. Contact: 504-596-6540.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3

Live Harp Music – 12:30-2:30pm (Also 11/10 & 11/17) w/Harpist Jessica Meltz. The English Tea Room, 735 Rutland St., Covington. Free. 985-898-3988. Swedish Massage Clinic – 12:45pm & 2:15pm (Also 11/4, 11/10, 11/17 & 11/18). Help a student with their education at the student massage clinic. Swedish is good for overall relaxation & increasing flexibility. Blue Cliff College (in Clearview Mall) across from food court. Metairie. Appointment only. $30. 504-293-0972. Surviving Holiday Foods – 6:30-8pm. ( Also 11/17) Food coach Jodi Brown will teach you how to squeeze a bunch of healthy foods (and desserts) in between all the junk that the holidays throw into your path. Get on the road to better health quickly, easily and deliciously! $35. Call 504-616-7171 to register.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4

Meditation in Motion Retreat – 3:30pm (11/4) to noon (11/6). An integrated movement philosophy that uses Tai Chi, Chi Gung, Yoga and other gentle martial arts techniques to strengthen connection between mind and body. By donation. Flowering Lotus Meditation and Retreat Center, Magnolia, MS. To register call Dolores at 504-905-4090.

Medical Lecture on Bruno Groening – 7-9pm. Spiritual healing through the teachings of Bruno Groening. Two medical doctors will present healings that are medically verifiable and discuss their personal experiences with healing on the spiritual path. First Unitarian Universalist Church, 5212 S. Claiborne Ave., NOLA. Info: BrunoGroening.Nola@gmail.com. C. G. Jung Society of New Orleans – 7:30pm. “The Trauma Body,” a lecture by Frances Slocumb, includes stories that can bring understanding of individual and collective, inner and outer, psyche/ body effects of trauma and terror. C.G. Jung Society of New Orleans. Parker Methodist, 1130 Nashville Ave., NOLA. 2 CEUs. Free or $10/non-members.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5

Reiki Level I and II – (11/5 & 11/6). Two-day intensive course taught by Tianne Lastra. Learn to give reiki to self and others, send reiki long distance, learn the 3 pillars of reiki, learn legal aspects of the practice of reiki, and reiki for animals. Cost: $350. Metairie location. To register call 504-909-3723. Cloth 101 – 9am (Also 11/19). Learn about modern cloth diapers, how to care for them, the pros and cons, hands on demonstrations and handouts to take home. Zuka Baby, 2124 Magazine St, NOLA. $20/2 family members. Registration required: 504-596-6540. Saturday Morning Massage Clinics – 9:15am & 10:45am (Also 11/12 & 11/19). Help a student with their education at the student massage clinic. Swedish-11/5; Deep Tissue-11/12; NMT-11/19. Blue Cliff College (Clearview Mall) across from the food court. Metairie. Appointment only. $30. 504-293- 0972. Freret Market – 12noon-5pm. 90 vendors with food, art, music, flea market, children’s play area and pet adoption. 4400 block of Freret St., NOLA. Info: 504-638-2589. The Trauma Body Workshop – 1-4pm. Continuing the Friday lecture in an experiential format, various approaches to releasing deeply embedded remnants of trauma, including those beyond the reach of words, will be addressed. C. G. Jung Society of New Orleans. 3 CEUs. Parker Methodist, 1130 Nashville Ave., NOLA. $35/ members, $45/non-members. Farm to Table Harvest Dinner – 3pm. Enjoy a tour with farmer Jim, craft cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, wine, local brew and a four course meal highlightling the food grown at Mizell Farms. Featuring local and seasonal ingredients. Reservations required. Cost: $100/ticket. Mizell Farm, Folsom, Louisiana. Contact: Nolavore@gmail.com or Cassandra: 504-905-4999.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6

New Orleans Chapter AMORC Rosicrucian’s – 12:30pm: officers meeting; 1:30pm: chapter convocation rehearsal; 2pm: chapter convocation ritual; 3pm: meditation/open forum. 2801 Loyola Ave., Ste. 4, Kenner. More info: 504-472-5635.

Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture for Animals – 2pm. Dr. Janice E. Posey, a doctor of veterinary medicine will introduce these ancient arts as they apply to animals and give a live demonstration of an acupuncture treatment on a dog with degenerative joint disease. Good Dog Naturally, 1250 Business 190, Covington. For info: 985-898-3623.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7

First Degree Reiki Class – Time TBA (11/7-11/10) w/Reiki Master Elizabeth Ohmer Pellegrin. Reiki promotes and accelerates healing and balance of the body, mind and spirit. Learn to do Reiki for the self and others. No experience needed. Private classes and retreats on request. Pre-registration required. $250. Info/registration: 504-388-2356.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8

Rooibos/South Africa Tea Awareness – 3-4pm. Red Bush Herbal Tisane tasting and lecture about this amazing natural tea and health findings. Refreshments served; call to reserve seating. $15. The English Tea Room, 735 Rutland St., Covington. 985-898-3988. Swedish Massage Clinic – 6:15pm & 7:45pm (Also 11/22 & 11/29). Help a student with their education at the student massage clinic. Swedish is good for overall relaxation & increasing flexibility. Blue Cliff College (Clearview Mall) across from food court. Metairie. Appointment only. $30. 504-293-0972. Healthy Desserts? Really – 6:30-8pm. Chocolate is king in this class where food coach Jodi Brown will help you get familiar with using raw and nutrient dense superfoods to transform delicious desserts into nutritional powerhouses that will blow your mind. $35. Call 504-616-7171. Free Tai Chi Class – 7-8 pm. Tamashii Karate and Tai Chi Center, 8132 Willow St., NOLA. 504-866-2241. Intro to Yoga Course – 7:45-9:30pm. This is a 6-week class emphasizing strength, flexibility, and balance with instructor Tamarin Hennebury. Wild Lotus Yoga/Uptown, 4842 Perrier St., NOLA. 504-899-0047.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9

Neuromuscular Therapy Clinic – 12:45pm, 2:15pm, 6:15pm & 7:45pm (Also 11/16, 11/23 & 11/30. Help a student with their education at the student massage clinic. NMT is a partial body massage focusing on a specific problem area. Blue Cliff College (Clearview Mall) across from food court. Metairie. Appointment only. $30. 504-293-0972. Holistic Education Monthly Meeting/Metairie – 6:30-7:30pm. Sponsored by Holistic Center for Health and Healing, Inc., features Cari Roy on Awakening Intuition. Old Metairie Library, 2350 Metairie Rd. Free/open to the public. Inquiries: CommunityWellness@ymail.com. Intro to Yoga Course – 7:45-9:30pm. This is a 6-week class emphasizing stress relief, relaxation, and meditation with instructor Cissy Burson. Wild Lotus Yoga/Uptown, 4842 Perrier St., NOLA. 504-899-0047.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10

Free Tai Chi Class –9:30-10:30am. Tamashii Karate and Tai Chi Center, 8132 Willow St., NOLA. 504-866-2241.

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Sustainable Design Series Panel – 5:30pm. Global Green USA; AIA, New Orleans chapter; and USGBC, LA chapters partner for this month’s panel to discuss NOLA Wise; the exciting new program that helps homeowners lower their utility bills, conserve natural resources, and make their homes more comfortable. Light refreshments at 5:30pm; panel at 6pm. 504-525-2121.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12

Planning a Cottage Garden – 9am-12noon w/Tammany Baumgarten. Plan a cottage garden that is over-flowing with color, wildlife and cutting flowers. Fall colors to begin a cottage garden include mums, foxglove, and more; vegetable plants will also be available. Parkway Partners Greenhouse, 1137 Baronne St., NOLA. TriYoga All Levels Retreat – 9:30am (11/12) 1:30pm (11/13). An invitation to participate in yoga asana, integrated with learning, sharing, art, dining, and social and meditative time. Beginners and yogis practicing other forms of yoga are welcome. Three Rivers Retreat Center, Covington. Info/ registration: Laura 504 -450-1699. OCH Art Market – 10am-3pm. Local arts & crafts, food, fresh juices and raw foods from Surrey’s; even a bike repair workshop! 1618 Oretha C. Haley Blvd., Central City, NOLA. First Degree Reiki Class – 11am-7pm (11/12 & 11/13) w/Reiki Master Elizabeth Ohmer Pellegrin. Reiki promotes and accelerates healing and balance of the body, mind and spirit. Learn to do Reiki for the self and others. No experience needed. Private classes and retreats on request. Pre-registration required. $250. Info/registration: 504-388-2356. Movie Matinee “The Shadow Effect” – 2pm. Located at Unity Church, 3939 Veterans Hwy., Metairie. Entrance and parking in rear. Love offering. 504-885-7575. Yoga Adjustments Workshop – 2-4pm. Explore the Asana w/Meredith Salvago. Meredith guides a short flow class to build tapas (heat) then focus on asanas and their paired adjustments. All levels. Balance Yoga, 120 S. Cortez St., NOLA. $20 by 11/5 or $25. 504-309-9618. Unleashed! Bash on the Bayou – 7-11pm. Benefits St. Tammany Humane Society. Evening includes food from Acme Oyster House, Copeland’s and more. Enjoy ice cold beer and wine and cocktails along with great music, and silent auction; an upscale Cajun themed benefit. Tickets: $75/advance; $100/door. Pelican Park, Castine Center, Mandeville. 985-892-7387.

markyourcalendar

Tai Chi and Qi Gong Basics A 6 month course Fall/Winter 2011/2012 Courses begin October 2011 and January 2012 with long time practitioner and teacher Marilyn Yank Course cost: $250 (payment plans available)

To enroll call 504-610-3672 TheAmmaCenter.org 40

New Orleans

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13

Interactive Music Workshop – 12:30pm w/nationally known musician Jack Fowler from Unity Nashville. Unity Church, 3939 Veterans Hwy., Metairie. Entrance and parking in rear. $15/suggested love offering. No one turned away for temporary lack of funds. 504-885-7575. New Orleans Chapter AMORC Rosicrucian’s – 2pm: open house; 3pm: harmonization ritual. Located at 2801 Loyola Ave., Ste. 4, Kenner. More info: 504-472-5635.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14

Intro to Yoga Course – 7:45-9:15pm. This is a 6-week class emphasizing stress relief, relaxation, and meditation with instructor Beverly. Wild Lotus Yoga/Downtown, 2372 St. Claude Ave. (at St. Roch), NOLA. 504-899-0047.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15

Modern Shamanism – 9am-6pm. Visiting shaman, Hamilton Souther, brings theory into practice, emphasizing through personal experience the value of Modern Shamanism as a foundation for daily life. $150(adv) $160 (door). Hilton, 333 St. Charles Ave., Tickets & info: ModernShamanism.org Paint & E-waste Drop-Off – 10am-2pm. Drop off old paint and electronic waste (computers only) to the Hollygrove Market & Farm, 8301 Olive St, NOLA and pick up a $25 box filled with locallygrown, fresh produce while there. Microdermabrasion Party – 10am-4pm. Microdermabrasion is a non-surgical procedure that targets the surface of the skin for a gentle abrasion that reveals newer, healthier, younger looking skin. $40/party; also 30 min. head, neck, and shoulder: $30. 15% off products for party goers. Esthetique Facial Spa, 5702 Magazine St. By appointment only: 504-896-1006.

La Leche League of Jefferson – 10am. 3rd Tues. each month. New location! Meet with other breastfeeding mothers and their babies. No charge to attend or to contact a leader with questions. Now meeting at Destination Maternity, corner of N Causeway and 17th St., Metairie. Info: SusanLLLJefferson@cox.net.

First Degree Reiki Class – 11am-7pm (11/19 & 11/20) w/Reiki Master Elizabeth Ohmer Pellegrin. Reiki promotes and accelerates healing and balance of the body, mind and spirit. Learn to do Reiki for the self and others. No experience needed. Private classes and retreats on request. Pre-registration required. $250. Info/registration: 504-388-2356.

Chai Tea Tasting – 3-4pm. Take a journey to India to taste and learn about the history and understanding of Chai. Refreshments served; call to reserve seating. $15. The English Tea Room, 735 Rutland St., Covington. 985-898-3988.

Kundalini Workshops w/ Bill Savage – 2-5pm (11/19) & 12:30-3:30pm (11/20). Autumn harvest and giving thanks Kundalini class as taught by Yogi Bhajan. $60/both ($70 after 11/12) or $30/one day ($40 after 11/12). Balance Yoga, 120 S. Cortez St., NOLA. 504.309.9618.

Ideal Protein Weight Loss Program – 5:30pm. Dr. Debbi Hannan presents: The Ideal Protein Weight Loss Program at Chiropractic Health Center, 101 Clearview Pkwy. at Airline Dr. Free. Reservations required: 504-454-2000.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16

Karate/Tai Chi Registration – Registration opens; give the gift of health and safety with tai chi and karate gift packages. New classes forming in January. Tamashii Karate and Tai Chi Center, 8132 Willow St., NOLA. 504-866-2241.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17

Holistic Education Monthly Meeting/Covington – 7pm. Sponsored by the Holistic Center for Health and Healing, Inc. Speaker: Rick Gutierrez: Insight into the mystic George Gurdjieff. Discussion follows. Covington Council Chambers, 222 Kirkland St., Covington. Free/open to public. 985-898-0016.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18

Kirtan Concert w/Sean Johnson & Wild Lotus Band – 8pm. Mantras merge with rock, world, funk, and trance grooves. Sean Johnson and The Wild Lotus Band. Wild Lotus Yoga/Downtown, 2372 St. Claude Ave. (at St. Roch), NOLA. 504-899-0047. Modern Shamanism – 7-10pm. Visiting shaman, Hamilton Souther, trained by Peruvian Amazon shamans, will give an overview of Modern Shamanism, discussion of how it works in daily life. $20 (adv) $25 (door). Hilton, 333 St. Charles Ave, Tickets & info: ModernShamanism.org

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19

Ortho-Bionomy: Isometrics – 9am-4pm. 2-day workshop. Learn a gentle technique for working with stiff joints and underdeveloped muscle tone through the use of restrained movement. State & national CEUs for LMTs. Instructor Peggy Scott. Lakeview. For more info: Mary Catherine at 903-263-8684.

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20 New Orleans Chapter AMORC Rosicrucian’s – 1pm: Council of solace; 1:30pm: Pronaos convocation rehearsal; 2pm: Pronaos convocation ritual; 3pm: TMO home oratory. 2801 Loyola Ave., Ste. 4, Kenner. More info: 504-472-5635. Breathwork thru Ancient Music Workshop – Time TBA w/Phil Jones who travels the country teaching breathwork through ancient music. Didgeridoos provided during workshop. Unity Church, 3939 Veterans Hwy., Metairie. Entrance and parking in rear. $20/suggested. 504-885-7575.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21 Milk Party – 9-10am. Mother to mother breastfeeding support. Certified International Lactation consultant, Julie Holcomb answers questions from establishing a first latch to child-led weaning. Breast feeding babies and toddlers welcome. No registration required. ZukaBaby, 2124 Magazine St, NOLA. Contact: 504-596-6540. Turkey Tea at Longue Vue – 1-3pm. Children and parents are invited to celebrate Thanksgiving Longue Vue-style with songs, stories, games, and a fall craft. Toast the holiday with a complimentary glass of champagne, served with hot chocolate, cookies, sandwiches, and tea. $15/members; $18/ non-members in advance. Contact Lydia Vaughn at 504-293-4722.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22 Karate/Tai Chi Registration – Registration opens; give the gift of health and safety with tai chi and karate gift packages. New classes forming in January. Tamashii Karate and Tai Chi Center, 8132 Willow St., NOLA. 504-866-2241.


Healthy Desserts? Really – 6:30-8pm. Chocolate is king in this class where food coach Jodi Brown will help you get familiar with using raw and nutrient dense superfoods to transform delicious desserts into nutritional powerhouses that will blow your mind. $35. Call 504-616-7171.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25 Christmas in the Country – 9am-6pm (Through 11/30-not open Sunday). Open house with refreshments, storewide specials and discount shopping. The English Tea Room, 734 Rutland St., Covington. 985-898-3988. Tea Tasting/Bodhisattva Tea Spa – 7-11pm. The public is invited to taste the teas at this new tea boutique and spa, offering whole leaf teas, herbs and tea accessories as well as massage therapy, infrared sauna and esthetics, yoga and reiki. Free. 3515 Melvil Dewey, Metairie. Info: 504-309-4424.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26 Pet Loss Grief Support – 9:30am. Monthly pet grief support group meets the last Saturday of each month. Location changes as the weather changes. Free. Call Pastor Bonnie at 985-373-2321. Floating Through the Holidays – 1-3:30pm. Restorative Yoga Workshop w/Tamar Starck. The restful and rejuvenating qualities of restorative yoga can help face holiday joys and challenges with new perspective and better balance. Space limited. Balance Yoga, 120 S. Cortez St., NOLA. $30. 504.309.9618.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27 From Dreams to Destiny/Creating One’s Reality Workshop – 11:30am-5pm. Set an intention for the New Year and create a reality wanted. Workshop includes dream board, energy work, yoga, and meditation. Mid-City. $55 ($82.50/2 persons by 11/18). Contact Annick at 504-250-7477. New Orleans Chapter AMORC Rosicrucian’s – 2pm: open house; 3pm: harmonization ritual. Located at 2801 Loyola Ave., Ste. #4, Kenner. More info: 504-472-5635.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28 Holistic Medicine Education Meeting – 7-9pm. Potluck and network time 6:30-7pm. Different speaker each month. House of Broel, 2220 St. Charles Ave., NOLA. Free. Contact: Bonnie Broel 504-494-2220.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Tea 101 – 3-4pm. Learn about the basics of Tea with tea expert, Jan Lantrip, Pharmacist. The English Tea Room, 734 Rutland St., Covington. 985-898-3988. A Green-It-Yourself Workshop – 6-8pm. Come to this free workshop on winterizing the home and learn how to keep the home warm and dry and utility bills low as the temperature drops. Green Building Resource Center, 841 Carondelet St., NOLA. 504-525-2121.

ongoingevents sunday tuesday Daily Kundalini Yoga by Donation – 9am. Kundalini yoga is the yoga of awareness. Clear the obstacles that limit life and awaken to fullest potential. Beautiful community Space. Divine Yoga, 1223 Baronne St. and 1228 O.C. Haley Blvd. Contact: Info@YogaNola.com. Beginners Yoga Class – 9:30-10:45am. Focus is on key themes of the practice and introductory poses. Assumes little or no yoga experience. Great for beginners and those needing to refresh basics. $15 drop in/$10 students. Freret Street Yoga, 4608 Freret St., NOLA. Info: 504-899-1142 or gr@FreretStreetYoga.com Spiritual, but not religious? – 11am. If you like what Wayne Dyer and Maryann Williamson have to say, you will love Unity Church of Practical Christianity in Metairie. We encourage the transformation of your life through practical spiritual principles. 3939–2A, Veterans Blvd., Metairie (2 blocks west of Cleary, rear of building). For more info call 504-885-7575. Transmission Meditation – 6:30pm. Want to help the world and build a stronger connection with your own spiritual nature? Transmission Meditation is the simplest way to do both at the same time says Benjamin Creme. Free. Jefferson Hwy. at Clearview. For info: call Alan 504-606-8512.

monday Metairie Tri Yoga Class – 1-2pm. All levels. Led by Karen Scott. Relax, renew, realize in gentle flowing yoga class that accommodates your strength, flexibility, and range of motion. Provance Chiropractic Clinic. 2007 Clearview Pkwy., Metairie. Contact: 504-220-5325. Guided Meditation – 5-6:30pm. Strengthen your overall health as you are guided through meditation. Great for beginners and those experienced. Nov. 28th—off. Uptown Holistic Center, 723 Hillary, New Orleans. Jess Tregle 504-352-6418. Northshore Yoga – 6-7:30pm. Blending two practices to promote muscle-health, balance/movement, needed relaxation in a stress-free environment. Fun w/respect to levels. Mats & props provided. $10.00/ class No class Nov 21.Yoga School, 603 South Tyler St., Covington. Info: BrandyYoga@att.net. 985-502-7576 Candlelight Kundalini w/ Odile – 7:30-9:00pm. By donation! Come relax into the yoga of pure awareness. Expand into your self and set intention for the week. Divine Yoga Center: 1228 O.C. Haley Blvd. Contact: Info@YogaNola.com

Order Vintage Garden Soups – Order by noon Tuesday for delivery on wedneday. Fresh delicious savory soups developed by our chef. Options for special diets. Visit website on ad for soups of the week and delivery/pick-up options. Call 504-620-2495. Sivananda Yoga w/ Becca Hebert – 11am-12:30pm. Tuesday and Thursday. By donation. Enjoy the beautiful new space, Divine Yoga Center , 1228 O.C. Haley Blvd. Check website in ad for more donation classes. Info@YogaNola.com Eyebrow Threading – noon-5pm. Special rate of $10, normally. Esthetique Facial Spa, every week on tuesdays Eyebrow threading is $10, 5702 Magazine St., NOLA. 504-896-1006. Hollygrove Market & Farm – noon-6pm. NOLA’s only CSA-style market selling each week assorted fresh local and organic fruit and vegetables from LA, MS & AL. 8301 Olive St., NOLA (across from Carrollton Boosters). Beginners Yoga – 5:30-6:45pm. Donation based. Swan River Community Center, Arabi, 7011 St. Claude Ave., Ste. 213, Arabi, LA. 985-218-0724 or Arabi@SwanRiverYoga.com. Yoga on the NorthShore – 5:30-7pm. Gentle postures, breath work, tai chi movements; beginners welcome. $10 per session or $48 for six. Yoga School, 603 S. Tyler St., Covington. Info: 985-276-8599 Breathing & Meditation – 7-7:50pm. Donation Based. Swan River Community Center, Arabi, 7011 St. Claude Ave., Ste. 213, Arabi, LA. 985-218-0724 or Arabi@SwanRiverYoga.com Insight Meditation Group – 7:30-9pm. Meditaton practice and discussion. 2134 Magazine St., 3rd fl., New Orleans. Info: NOIMG@me.com or call Larry at 504-343-8378. B-boy / B-girl Jam – 7:30-9:30pm. With Monica and Jeff get your break dance on, by donation. Enjoy the beautiful new space, Divine Yoga Center, 1228 O.C. Haley Blvd. Check website in ad for more donation classes. Info@YogaNola.com HypnoBirthing Childbirth Education Classes – Registration for group or private couple classes for a calm, confident and more comfortable birthing experience. 5 classes - info and registration: Bonnie Miller @ Methodist Hypnotherapy Services, Slidell, 985-726-9333/118, BMiller@MHSFI.org

wednesday

planahead SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11

Crescent City Farmers Market – 9am-1pm. Open air market with fresh locally grown fruits, vegetables, seafood, baked breads and pies, bedding plants, dairy products, freshly cut flowers. Located in the parking lot of Uptown Square.

Advent Celebration – For the special needs community, children up to 14 years of age are invited to partake in this traditional festival at Raphael Academy. Space is limited. Call for time and more details: 504-598-3227.

Covington Farmers Market – 10am-2pm. Offering fresh produce, fresh baked breads, prepared foods and plants. Located at The Covington Trailhead, 419 N. New Hampshire, Covington.

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Guided Meditation – 10:30am-noon. Meditation is an excellent way to directly connect with your true inner self and with all divine energy to receive self-healing! Uptown Holistic Center, 723 Hillary, New Orleans. Call Dr. Jess Tregle: 504-352-6418.

Self Esteem Workshop – Fine tune your attitudes and beliefs and discover the real you while letting go of the past baggage. Info and registration: Bonnie Miller @ Methodist Hypnotherapy Services, Slidell, 985-726-9333/118, BMiller@MHSFI.org,

German Coast Farmers Market – West Bank – 3-6:30pm. Open-air market offering fresh produce, rotisserie & fresh meats, fresh pastries/breads, sausage, kettle corn, cracklins, prepared foods, soy candles, goat milk soap and lotions. Arts and crafts 4th Wed. Located at 12715 Highway 90, St. Charles Plaza Shopping Center, Site of the old K-mart building, Luling, LA

thursday Crescent City Farmers Market – 3-7pm. Farmers Market at 3700 Orleans Ave., American Can Co. building, New Orleans, rain or shine.

All Levels Hatha Yoga – 5-6:30pm. Beginners welcome and appropriate for intermediate and experienced practitioners. Asana, pranayama, mantra, mudra, maybe some Sanskrit and more. $10/class or $48/6. Yoga School, 603 S. Tyler St., Covington. Info: 985-892-4170 or JgbJoseph@bellsouth.net. Vipassana Meditation – 6-7pm. Vipassana means to see things as they truly are. Learn the simple art of self-transformation through self-observation. No experience necessary. Donations graciously appreciated. Divine Yoga 1228 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd. New Orleans. Contact Clifton Beary at ClifBeary@gmail.com or 415-308-5459. A Course in Miracles – 6:30-8pm. Offered by Dr. Gary Arnold continuously in New Orleans since 1988. Free and open to the public. Location: Unity Church of Metairie, 3303 Richland, Ste. 2A, Metairie. Meditation & Discussion Group – 7-8:30pm. Vipassana Meditation oriented, but all practitioners welcome. Meditation followed by lively discussion and refreshments. Donations appreciated. 621 Opelousas Ave., Algiers Point (gate locked 7pm sharp!). Info: 504-905-4090 or Evolved812@aol.com.

classifieds LIST FOR RENT, ITEMS FOR SALE, HELP WANTED, OPPORTUNITIES, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES HERE. To Place a Classified Listing Email to advertising@nolahealthyliving.com. Must be received by the 10th of the month prior to publication. $1 per word. $20 minimum. Must be prepaid. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES CURRENTLY PUBLISHING NATURAL AWAKENINGS MAGAZINES – For sale in Birmingham, AL; North Central FL; Lexington, KY; Santa Fe, NM; Cincinnati, OH; Tulsa, OK; Northeast PA; Columbia, SC; Southwest VA. Call for details 239-530-1377. EARN A MONTHLY INCOME by switching your internet homepage to this one. ITS FREE! http://www.viradyne.com/pdcory1089

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friday Level 1 & 2 Yoga – 9:15-10:30am. Modifications and variations on sun salutations and standing poses are taught so that everyone can practice in a way that feels challenging but not overwhelming. Teacher: Lindsay. $15/ drop in; $10 students. Freret Street Yoga, 4608 Freret St., New Orleans. Contact: gr@FreretStreetYoga.com or 504-899-1142.

saturday Vietnamese Farmers Market – 6-9am. Over 20 vendors set up shop on blankets spread with produce, beyond the courtyards are shops selling Vietnamese baked goods and imported groceries. 14401 Alcee Fortier Blvd., New Orleans East.

Self Hypnosis Classes – All ages. For your health and happiness rediscover your most powerful resource – your mind! Take control, manage stress and make your goals a reality. 3 classes $105. Info and Registration: Bonnie Miller @ Methodist Hypnotherapy Services, Slidell, 985-726-9333/118, BMiller@MHSFI.org. Northshore Yoga Class – 6-7:30pm. Beginning to intermediate class focusing on breathe, stretching and a variety of yoga poses to strengthen muscles, achieve balance, self-awareness, and general fitness. $10/class or $48/6 classes. Yoga School, 603 S. Tyler, Covington. Joy Roussel: 985-892-5575. Vinyasa – All Levels –7-8:15pm. Donation based. Swan River Community Center, Arabi, 7011 St. Claude Ave, #213, Arabi, LA. 985-218-0724 or Arabi@SwanRiverYoga.com

FOR RENT - COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE – MID-CITY AND MARIGNY. Virtual, Private or Share floor space in a triple bottom-line atmosphere. Competitive/below market rent for your growing business. Full amenities including WiFi/ conference room/office equip plus value added services provided! TheBuildingBlock.com or call 504-561-7525. PERFECT SPACE for licensed massage therapist or other quiet holistic provider. 462 sf includes large 14 x 17 treatment room, closet, office/kitchen and waiting room. $500/mo (includes utilities) with annual lease. 3200 Lake Villa Ave, Ste 208, Metairie. 504-535-9771.

JOB OPPORTUNITIES Natural Awakenings – S.E. Louisiana edition is actively looking for sales representatives on the Northshore and Southshore of the Greater New Orleans area. Prior sales experience is a must. An interest in health and sustainable living is desirable. Potential for good income. Commission based. Terms negotiable based on experience. Great opportunity to work in the fastest growing sector of the economy. Send resume to advertising@NOLAHealthyLiving.com.

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

German Coast Farmers Market - East Bank – 8am-noon. Open-air market offering fresh produce, rotisserie meats, fresh meats, fresh pastries/breads, sausages, kettle corn, cracklins, prepared foods, soy candles, goat milk soap and lotions. Arts and crafts 2nd Sat. Ormond Plantation, 13786 River Rd., Destrehan. For info call 985-359-0190.

Crescent City Farmers Market – 8am-noon. Openair market with great selection of fresh locally grown fruits, vegetables, seafood, baked breads and freshly made pies, bedding plants, dairy products, fresh flowers. Cooking demos by some of the city’s most acclaimed chefs. Located at 700 Magazine, corner of Girod, New Orleans.

SERVICES PET SITTER – Greater N.O. area EB & WB. $15/visit includes walk & feeding. Discounts for regular business & referrals. Military base access. Pet First Aid Certified. Contact Michelle 504-298-PETS, petsitter504@ymail.com or http://504PetSitter.webs.com/

VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES The Humane Society of Louisiana needs volunteers. To find out how you can help contact Jeff Dorson at 901-268-4432 or StopCruelty11@gmail.com. St. Tammany Humane Society – Help foster pets, many tasks for fundraising, help with animal socializing, many more. Call for wish list. Contact: 985-892-7387, x 106. The LatinoFarmersCoop.org An urban agriculture nonprofit committed to promote responses to food, farm and nutrition needs gardening and food pantry volunteers. Call 504-333-3611 or Info@LatinoFarmersCoop.org.


communityresourceguide Connecting you to the leaders in natural healthcare and green living in our community. To find out how you can be included in the Community Resource Guide email Advertising@NOLAHealthyLiving.com to request our media kit.

BODY SUGARING USA DAY SPA

ACUPUNCTURE KELLY KIVIKO, ACA

Camellia City Farmers Market – 8am.-1pm. Featuring yard eggs, Mediterranean foods, herbs, produce, baked goods, coffee and iced tea, local musicians, tastings and cooking demos. Griffith Park, 333 Erlanger and Second St., Olde Towne, Slidell. Info: 985-640-8291. Gretna Farmers Market – 8:30am-12:30pm. Featuring fresh fruits and vegetables, meats, baked goods, dairy, native fruit wines and garden plants. Located in the old train depot, 300 Huey P. Long Ave., between 3rd and 4th streets, Gretna. Info: 504-362-8661.

Louisiana Lic.# ACA.200012 530 E. Rutland St., Covington 985-869-3299 Acupuncture Works! It is a safe, drug-free approach to managing many common health concerns. Specializing in herbal medicine, pain, stress, women’s health, and more.

TONYA TIGART, ACA

Louisiana Lic.# ACA.200032 4710 Canal St & 3618 Magazine St 504-224-1069 AcupunctureInNOLA.com Acupuncture is gentle and effective. Tonya offers Acupuncture Westwego Farmers & Fisheries Market – 8:30am12:30pm. Open year round, rain or shine. Free and Oriental medicine in a reparking. Featuring fresh produce, seafood, bakery laxing environment. She is exitems, dairy, plants, prepared foods & handperienced in the treatment of crafted items. Plus live music & kids activities. 484 pain, stress and allergies, plus Sala Ave., corner of 4th St., Westwego. Contact many more conditions. Call to 504-341-3424, x 209. schedule an appointment. Covington Farmers Market – 9am-1pm. Offering fresh produce, fresh baked breads, prepared foods and plants. Located at Covington City Hall, 609 N. Columbia St., Covington. Mandeville Trailhead Community Market – 9am1pm. Fifty-plus vendors weekly: Gourmet foods, art, produce and plants. Tai Chi at 9:30am. Parking lot of the Mandeville Trailhead on the St. Tammany Trace off LA59. For vendor/entertainment info: Donna Beakley 985-845-4515. Beginners Yoga Class – 9:30-10:45am. Focus is on key themes of the practice and introductory poses. Assumes little or no yoga experience. Great for beginners and those needing to refresh basics. $15 drop in/$10 students. Freret Street Yoga, 4608 Freret St., NOLA. Info: 504-899-1142 or gr@FreretStreetYoga.com Hollygrove Market & Farm – 10am-2pm. NOLA’s only CSA-style market selling each week assorted fresh local and organic fruit and vegetables from LA, MS & AL. 8301 Olive St., NOLA (across from Carrollton Boosters).

ANIMAL HOLISTIC MEDICINE JANICE E. POSEY, DVM

985-898-3623/504-466-9129 315 Lee Lane, #104 Covington, LA 70433 Offering a holistic, integrative approach to healing your beloved pet through acupuncture, herbal medicine/nutritional supplements, and food therapy. We treat the patient, not the symptoms. See ad page 11.

JOY OF LIFE! NATURAL HEALTH

Dr. Kevin Le Blanc, ND, MMP, LMT # LA2487 504-535-9771 Greater New Orleans + Pacific NW We are a result-oriented practice incorporating different modalities specific to each Client and Session. Find your Joy in Living with relief from pain and stress. Discover your Source of energy, clarity, flexibility, and vibrant health. See ad page 26.

CHIROPRACTIC/WELLNESS CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER

Dr. Debbi Hannan 101 Clearview Pkwy at Airline, Metairie 504-454-2000 HannanWellness.com Experience the difference! We offer total wellness care: Chiropractic, detoxification, nutrition, endermologie, DRX-9000 nonsurgical spinal decompression, cold laser, EB-Cellular Cleanser, Far Infra Red Sauna and the Ideal Protein Diet plan. See ad page 7.

COLON HYDROTHERAPY

BODYWORK AVIVA MASSAGE & BODYWORK SPA

Dora Ochoa, L.M.T. 1800 W. Causeway Approach., Ste. 122 Mandeville, 985-626-5538 BodySugaringUSA.com Unique, painless & permanent hair removal, specializing in Brazilian bikini lines. Home of the “Slimmer You” body wrap and cellulite massage. Instant gift certificates on our website.

ALORACLEANSE

Linda L. Strickland, BA, CHt, RM, LMT Sankofa Farmers Market – 10am-2pm. Weekly 601 Lafitte St., Mandeville market in the Ninth Ward offering fresh produce, 985-727-9665 seafood, baked goods, and plants from local Discover the difference & farmers and fishermen. 3500 St.Claude Ave., corner feel the peace through masof Gallier St. sage/bodywork, select spa services & energy work. Meditation Group – 2:30-3:30pm. Fairgrinds CofIntegrative, intuitive, cusfee House. Sponsored by Art of Living Foundation. tomized approach. Aromatherapy at all ses3133 Ponce de Leon, New Orleans. For info contact sions. LA 1479;E2445. See ad page 26. Allen 504-247-6692.

1131 S. Tyler St, Covington 985-809-3133 AloraCleanse.com Colon Hydrotherapy removes stagnant fecal matter and toxic bacteria along with cellular debris. Get relief of unhealthy digestive symptoms and achieve greater immunity, enhanced energy, clearer skin, improved mental clarity, and a general elevation in mood.

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HOLISTIC LIFE

4401 Veterans Blvd, Ste 200 504-885-8800 HolisticLife.us A Colonics, Wellness, Weight Loss Day Spa, Colon Hydrotherapy, massage therapy, activated oxygen sauna, ion foot bath, reflexology, integrated medicine, and other natural /spa offerings. Across from Clearview Mall in the major business area of Metairie. See ad page 28.

VIVACITY WELLNESS SPA

3333 Kingman St, Ste 102, Metairie 504-885-8355 VivaCityNOLA.com Reclaim health and vitality by eliminating toxins in the body. We offer Open System Colon Hydrotherapy, Far Infrared Sauna with Ozone, Ion Foot Detox and Hyperbaric Oxygen Chamber Therapy. Certified Colon Hydrotherapist and member of I-ACT. See ad page 25.

GINA L. ORIHUELA, LCSW-BACS, ND, CTN

DYNAMIC MEDITATION

Holistic Psychotherapy & Counseling 3213 Florida Ave, Ste D, Kenner 504-466-2266 Psychotherapist and Naturopath. A unique holistic approach to assist you in coping with loss, illness, stress, depression, or other life transitions. Individual, family and/or group therapy clients. Children, adolescents, and adults. See ad page 24.

JENNIFER ENGEL, M.ED LPC

JUSTINE A.MIS

Certified Silva Method Instructor & Life Coach SilvaMethodSeminars.com 340-690-6900 World’s premiere mind development and self-improvement program. Practical techniques for managing stress, health, creative problem solving. Learn Dynamic Meditation and Cognitive Control to create remarkable changes in your life. Classes and personal life coach services.

5002 Prytania, NOLA, 70115 504-813-9130 Licensed Professional Counselor. ENERGY PSYCHOLOGY Psychotherapy forofperwith theHolistic transformational power PSYCH-K sonal growth, stress, transition, Experience your unlimited and power through the gentle process MARYLOU SMITH etc. Individual Group Mind. FreeSkills yourself from traumatic memories, of PSYCH-K Advanced PSYCH-K Facilitator Body Training (guided limiting thoughts and addictive behavior. Support504-723-2899 what is imagery, meditation, breathing, most meaningful in the journey of living your life’s purpose. relaxation, tapping, etc). Evening and Satur- MarylouSmith.com day appointments available. Marylou Smith Engage the power of mind to Advanced PSYCH-K Facilitator create rapid change and experiPrivate Sessions ence the life you choose. The MANDALA THERAPY CENTER process of PSYCH-K® is a simUptown Holistic Center • 723 Hillary St, NOLA • 504.723.2899 638 Seguin St., NOLA 70114 COOKING INSTRUCTION marylousmith.com • info@marylousmith.com • psych-k.com ple & effective way to release 504-251-7820/504-722-0877 Mandala Therapy Center pro- the past and consciously design your present THE ULTIMATE KITCHEN vides counseling for stress, anxi- and future. See ad on page 35. COMMANDO ety, depression, grief, trauma, Jodi Brown anger management, relationship 504-616-7171 issues, career decisions, personal UltimateKitchenCommando.com growth and creative blocks. Our therapists Tired of your doctor and nutri- serve adolescents, adults and couples on an tionist TELLING you what to affordable sliding scale basis. do and wish someone would just come to your house and SHOW you how to make it all work? FENG SHUI Here I am. I offer full-day food makeovers & healthy cooking classes. Take JOAN MARSHALL, M.Ed. back your life! Feel ALIVE again. 504-812-8676 joan@fengshuinola.com COUNSELING AND FengShuiNoLa.com PSYCHOTHERAPY Eco-therapy for you and your environANDREA SCHEELE, LCSW, LMFT ment. Holistic health ast andAttachment towards Psychotherapy counseling and feng shui consultations for ng relationships.” 1303 Amelia St., New Orleans individuals and businesses throughout DENTIST 504-899-2686 GNO. Specialities include design consulting, career counseling, and stress manageWhen you experience loss, illment. Design your space - Design your life. ness, depression, stress or are MIKE ROBICHAUX, DDS going through major life transi- 1101 Robert Blvd, Ste A, Slidell, LA LIVE, LOVE AND FENG SHUI tions Attachment Psychotherapy 70458 Eveline Hoffmann will benefit you. Individual, cou- 985-641-8058 Feng Shui practitioner ples, family, parent/child and MikeRobichauxDDS.com small group therapy. See ad on page 8. Offering a holistic and patient- 504-861-3370 centered approach to dentistry, boehlen747@gmail.com because we believe the health of Offering Feng shui consultations for homes the mouth and overall health and businesses Find balance and serenity cannot be separated. We help within your home .Make intentional changes those we serve make decisions in your dwellings and you will alter your that are in their best interests, based on their life in positive wide ranging ways. Your envalues and goals, by providing state of the vironment will begin to assist you and you art information within a trusting relation- will uncover solutions to your day to day issues and life will improve. See ad page 35. ship. See ad page 18. 44

New Orleans

Set Yourself Free TM

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NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

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HOLISTIC/ENERGY HEALING CENTER FOR ENLIGHTENED TRANSFORMATION

Cindy B. Daigle 504-931-6494 North shore and New Orleans area cindy@outlookdesign.com Cindy utilizes powerful energetic healing methods to shift and balance the auric field, chakras and the cells of our body. Health, Joy, and Balance within, attracts the same externally. See ad on page 29.

POWER PATH CENTER

Mike Wittenbrink, MBA, C.Ht. 504-339-0594 Help44@gmail.com PowerPath.org Remove your pain and the blocks that are holding you back. Empower-ize Your Self. Turn your stress into your power! Find the Path to your Power, and your Purpose in Life! Learn to heal yourself and create the life you were meant to live!

HYPERBARIC OXYGEN THERAPY HARCH HYPERBARICS/ FAMILY PHYSCIANS CENTER

5216 Lapalco Blvd. Marrero, LA 70072 504-309-4948 juliette@hbot.com HBOT.com HBOT(R), oxygen under pressure acts as a drug. Oxygen is the cleanest medicine in the world. Noninvasive & painless treatment for wounds, TBI, autism, stroke, ADHD, dementia, multiple sclerosis and many other neurological disorders. See ad page 8.

INSURANCE

LIFE COACH CHARLY BORENSTEIN-REGUEIRA

COMBINED INSURANCE

Mark Correa, Agent 504-908-3200 Supplemental Insurance: Accident, Disability, Life, Health.

INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE IRENE SEBASTIAN, M.D., Ph.D

401 Veterans Blvd, Suite 203 Metairie, LA 70005 504-838-9804 IreneSebastianMD.com Offering a holistic approach to healthcare: Integrative Medicine, Homeopathy, Functional Medicine, Herbal Therapy, and Nutrition. See ad page 6.

DR. KATHLEEN POSEY, M.D.

377 Hwy 21, Ste 101, Madisonville 985-845-4111 KathleenPoseyMD.com Our mission is to improve health and reverse chronic disease through hormonal and energetic balancing and nutrition. A practice of preventive medicine and wellness with a holistic approach to women’s gynecological and overall health. We offer a healthy medically supervised weight loss program. See ad on page 5.

Certified Professional Life Coach Corporate & Life Coaching Services 7121 Walmsley Ave, Ste D, NOLA 70125 504-259-7726 Charly@CrescentCityCoach.com CrescentCityCoach.com Elite athletes and executives have coaches. Imagine how much more productive and fulfilling your life would be if you had your own Life Coach. You don’t have to imagine anymore, contact Charly today.

WENDYLYNN BERGERON

Certified Life Empowerment Coach 504-421-0567 CoachWendy@live.com Having a Life you Love to LIVE starts when you Choose to CREATE it. I would Love to empower you to create the changes that you Desire and Deserve! Emotional Empowerment Coaching for Teens and Adults.

MARTIAL ARTS TAI CHI-QI GONG

Shifu King Lam 8132 Willow St, Uptown 504-866-2241 KingLam1131@yahoo.com Asian Arts to improve health, fitness, personal safety, rejuvenate energy. Achieve a better mind, body and spirit. Serving New Orleans community for 35 years. KingLamtaichi-karate.com. See ad page 37 and calendar for classes.

INTEGRATIVE PSYCHIATRY HYPNOTHERAPY METHODIST HYPNOTHERAPY SERVICES

Bonnie Miller, Clinical Director 985-726-9333 ext 118 bmiller@mhsfi.org MHSFI.org Hypnosis is not magic…it is a powerful tool to transform your life, heal your body, empower your mind, and revive your spirit. Stress, Pain, Anxiety, Fear, Birthing, Forensic, PLR, IBS, FMS, Habits, Disorders, Motivation, etc. You must take the first step towards your good health and happiness. Individual, Group and Corporate Wellness Programs. Hypnosis Works!

JOSÉ CALDERÓN-ABBO, M.D.

3439 Magazine Street New Orleans, LA 70115 504-891-8808 MindfulPsychiatry.com Integrating biomedicine, psychotherapy, and mind-body medicine including mindfulness stress reduction to treat psychiatric conditions, addictions, and to promote wellness. Mindful Psychiatry offers: Individual and group psychotherapy; medication management, including Subuxone; Wellness and Stress Reduction groups through the Mindful Living Program©, corporate wellness consultations, and educational and professional training workshops. English and Spanish. See ad page 34.

MASSAGE SCHOOLS BLUE CLIFF COLLEGE

Clearview Mall Metairie, LA. 70006 504-293-0972 Train for an exciting, new career as a Licensed Massage Therapist. Earn an Associates degree upon completion of advanced massage training. Inquire about financial aid. See calendar for information about our $30-student massage clinic. Visit our retail shop for massage supplies: Biotone & Therapro Cremes & Oils, aromatherapy products, books & more. Monthly specials!

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DELTA COLLEGE

Slidell and Covington Campuses 985-892-6651 DeltaCollege.com We offer the finest of career training for in-demand careers, including therapeutic massage, dental assistant, practical nursing (LPN), medical assistant, and medical office assistant. Also job placement assistance, and certification opportunities in many majors. See ad on page 11.

NATUROPATHIC DOCTOR DR. LISA MARIE CHAMBERS, ND

Northshore Office 1305 West Causeway Approach Mandeville, 70471 985-624-2295 Accurate Clinic 2401 Vets Blvd, Ste 16, Kenner 504-472-6130 DrLisaMarieChambers.com Dr. Chambers works in partnership with her patients to discover, understand and address the root cause of their illness. By treating the whole person, she also offers preventive care before serious illness occurs.

NEUROFEEDBACK MINISTRY/SPIRITUALITY REV. BONNIE POIRIER

985-373-2321 PeacefulPlanetPets.com HolisticTherapyCenter.com Holistic, metaphysical Christian minister, ordained 1994. Ministering to people and pets including pet grief and memorials, Reiki, pet blessings and naming, labyrinth walks and pet sitting. Also for people: weddings, funerals, divorce ceremonies, baptisms, communion, and blessings.

UNITY CHURCH OF METAIRIE

3939-2A Veterans Blvd, Metairie 504-885-7575 Daily Prayer Line 504-885-7056 Breaking boundaries through transformative thought. A Christian church celebrating the Love of Spirit while honoring all paths. (2 blocks off Cleary, entrance/parking in rear of bldg). Sunday service 11am.

NATURAL BABY & CHILD ZUKABABY

New Orleans

Cheryl Schoenberger, RRT 985-809-7077 BrainWorks.us Neurofeedback is a safe, non-drug therapy that gently balances the brainwaves by exercising the neural pathways. If you’ve been diagnosed with ADD/ADHD, autism, depression, or other disorders, please contact us for a free consultation. See ad on page 12.

NUTRITIONIST

CHERYL GAUTIER, REALTOR, GREEN

Dorian Bennett Sotheby’s Int. Realty 2340 Dauphine St, NOLA 70117 (c) 504-638-7441 (o) 504-944-3605 cheryl.gautier@sothebysrealty.com Upbeat creative problem solver with an easy going New Orleanian style helping individuals to find their dream home!

DARLENE WAPEGAN CALDWELL BANKER TEC

3938 Magazine St., NOLA 70115 504-899-4040 (o) 504-258-0294 (c) I especially love my career as a realtor and thoroughly enjoy helping clients buy or sell a piece of America. My specialty is residential real estate, and in particular, working with buyers purchasing residential property.

DANIELLE PACIERA, LDN, RD, CCN

3618 Magazine St, New Orleans 70115 504-889-8771 Danielle@365Vitality.com Cutting edge holistic nutrition services. Specializing in complementary and alternative medicine, therapeutic uses of foods, supplementation, vegetarian nutrition, women’s health, sports performance, eating disorders, depression, addiction, and more. See ad page 19.

OXYGEN THERAPY CHI MACHINE

2124 Magazine St., NOLA 504-596-6540 ZukaBaby.com ZukaBaby is a new shop specializing in cloth diapering, babywearing and handmade children’s items. Cloth diapering classes every Saturday. See calendar for other events. See ad page 35. 46

BRAIN WORKS ACADEMY

REALTOR

Joffrion Mitts, M. ED. Alternative Health Consultant 504-897-9670 ChiMachineForYourHealth.com Stress, poor circulation, headaches, back pain, insomnia, depression, stroke, asthma, weight loss? You name it! Oxygen heals! Free one week inhome trial!

NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com

RECONNECTIVE HEALING® DR. JESS TREGLE

Reconnective Healing® & The Reconnection™ 504-352-6418 ReconnectingLife.com Healing takes place physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually! Become reconnected with your true inner self and with your true purpose in life! Strengthen your sense of unity with yourself, others, the earth, and the universe!


REIKI ELIZABETH OHMER PELLEGRIN, R.M.T.

Reiki Master Teacher & Practitioner 504-388-2356 NOLAReiki@gmail.com NOLAReiki.com Offering 21 years experience in Usui Shiki Ryoho, upholding the highest standards in Reiki classes and Reiki sessions. Practitioner and Teacher of Australian Bush Flower Essence. Also providing Astra-Lite massage & Reiki tables – lightweight and easy to transport. See ad page 9 and calendar for classes.

TIANNE D. LASTRA

Usui, Karuna & Rainbow Reiki Master 504-909-3723 AmazingReiki.com Certified & experienced Master Teacher offering sessions & classes to the Greater N.O. Area. Healing Touch, Pranic Healing, Crystal Healing, Reiki Drumming and Animal Reiki practitioner. Visit our website for full information. See ad page 25.

YOGA DIVINE YOGA

1223 Baronne St. Kundalini@YogaNOLA.com YogaNOLA.com Kundalini Yoga is considered to be the most comprehensive of yogas, combining meditation, physical practice and breathing exercises. All levels of experience are welcome to all classes. See ad page 20 and calendar for events/classes.

WILD LOTUS YOGA

4842 Perrier St. New Orleans, LA 70115 504-899-0047 WildLotusYoga.com Gambit’s ”Best Place to Take a Yoga Class” eight years in a row. Over 40 ongoing classes per week for beginners and experienced taught by skilled teachers in a peaceful, positive atmosphere. Offering courses, workshops, retreats and concerts. See ad page 20 and calendar for events/classes.

Your Healthy Living, Healhy Planet DISCOUNT Netwrok! Natural Awakenings invites you to join our discount network focusing on natural health and a healthy lifestyle.

RETREAT CENTER DOLORES WATSON

621 Opelousas Avenue NOLA 70114 504-905-4090 evolved812@aol.com FloweringLotusMeditation.org Elegant, yet affordable retreat center in quaint, quiet Magnolia, MS just 1 1/2 hours from New Orleans, Baton Rouge or Jackson. Ongoing retreats in meditation and yoga. Ongoing meditation group in New Orleans. Vegetarian. Available for rental. Capacity for 40 people. See ad page 34 and ongoing calendar.

SOLAR SOUTH COAST SOLAR, LLC

2605 Ridgelake Dr. Metairie, LA 70002 504-529-SUN9 SouthCoastSolar.com 100% locally owned and operated, South Coast Solar is Louisiana’s largest solar energy company. Call or visit our website to set up a free estimate. See ad page 24.

FINALLY!

YOGA TEACHER TRAINING YOGA SCHOOL, L.L.C.

603 S. Tyler St., Covington, LA 70433 985-893-8834 YogaSchoolCovingtonLA.com Offering Yoga Alliance registered teacher training with certification at the 200 hour and 500 hour levels. Also a state licensed Yoga Therapy training program. Visit website for more information. See Ad page 20.

YOGA THERAPY AMY ARCHINAL, RYT, PRYT

Phoenix Rising Yoga Therapy 504-899-6167 NewOrleansYogaTherapy.com Phoenix Rising Yoga Therapy combines meditation, assisted yoga postures, breathwork and client-centered dialogue to promote self-awareness. Discover the wisdom of your body. See ad page 20.

As a Natural Awakenings Network Provider, You Can: Expand your customer base while increasing your income Receive referrals from our Customer Service Center Receive your client payment when you render service. Zero claims! Be part of a network dedicated to promoting healthy lifestyles

CALL TODAY 504-330-2157 or email NAN@NOLAHealthyLiving.com online at NaturalAwakeningsNetwork.com

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turn your passion into a business... own a Natural Awakenings magazine! As a Natural Awakenings publisher, you can enjoy learning about healthy and joyous living while working from your home and earn a good income doing something you love! Your magazine will help thousands of readers to make positive changes in their lives, while promoting local practitioners and providers of natural, Earthfriendly lifestyles. You will be creating a healthier community while building your own financial security. No publishing experience is necessary. You’ll work for yourself but not by yourself. We offer a complete training and support system that allows you to successfully publish your own magazine. Be part of a dynamic franchised publishing network that is helping to transform the way we live and care for ourselves. Now available in Spanish as well. To determine if owning a Natural Awakenings is right for you and your target community, call us for a free consultation at 239-530-1377.

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