FREE HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET September 2022 | Tampa Bay Edition | NATampa.com YOGA FOR H EALTHY AGING THE SCIENCE OF STAYING YOUNG REUSE AND RESALE MARKET RISING WAYS TO SUPPORT A G RIEVING CHILD SPECIAL INSPIREDEDITIONLIVING
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Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com6 CONTACT US Natural Awakenings Tampa Bay Ph: dwilson@natampa.com727-865-9339 FollowNATampa.comusonFacebook! Natural Awakenings Publishing Corporation 4851 Tamiami Trail N., Ste. 200 Naples, FL 34103 NaturalAwakeningsMag.com Publisher Debbey Wilson Editor Cheryl Hynes Design & Production Patrick Floresca ontributing Writer Eleanor Bailey ales & Marketing Debbey Wilson Circulation Manager Dean Wille Accounting Susan Hoffman Website Kyle Hass Operations Amy Hass © 2022 - 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. Please call to find 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. Check with a healthcare professional regarding the appropriate use of any treatment. DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONSFREE email: dwilson@natampa.com to request or visit NATampa.com Natural Awakenings is printed on recycled newsprint with soy-based ink. HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET TAMPA BAY EDITION Natural Awakenings Magazine is ranked 5th Nationally in CISION’S 2016 Top 10 Health & MagazinesFitness NATIONAL TEAM CEO/Founder Sharon Bruckman COO/Franchise Sales Joe Dunne Art Director Josh Pope Layout & Design Gabrielle W-Perillo Financial Manager Yolanda Shebert Asst. Director of Ops Heather Gibbs Digital Content Director Rachael Oppy National Advertising Lisa Doyle-Mitchell Administrative Assistant Anne-Marie Ryan C M Y CM MY CY CMY K
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Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com8 30 AGING GRACEFULLY How a Yoga Practice Keeps Us Young 36 FOOD DEHYDRATION MADE EASY Best Ways to Preserve the Harvest 34 CONSUMERISMCONSCIOUS The Rise of Sharing and Reselling 40 HEALTHIER PETS Top Supplements for Dogs and Cats44424038363432302827201412DEPARTMENTSnewsbriefshealthbriefsglobalbriefsinspirationwisewordsfitbodyhealingwaysgreenlivingconsciouseatinghealthykidsnaturalpetcalendarresourceguide CONTENTS Natural Awakenings | Tampa Bay Edition | September 2022 24 YOUNGERGROWING
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The Best Ways to Preserve the Harvest suggests we “waste not” (thrift precedes prosperity) by dehydrating all manner of fruits and veggies, including nutritious and tasty peels. An included recipe for Mango Leather is inviting me to get busy in the kitchen!
Aging (evolution/growth) is in evitable. We don’t want to “anti” anything as what you resist will not only persist but increase. Aging gracefully is an art, a science (alchemy involved) and a spiritual quest. Tuning to the world within (over which one has control) is key, and reading this month’s issue lends itself to assisting this incred ible internal (and external) adventure.
Healing (true healing) is a return to “wholeness”. This month’s article, Lissa Rankin on the Mysteries of Healing, is not to be missed. A doctor who is taking “whole” healing to its height and depth where it can actually take place, Rankin’s book, Sacred Medicine: A Doctor’s Quest to Unravel the Mysteries of Healing, a NY Times bestseller, delivers hope where other paths have failed. For enjoyable things around the house, Conscious Consumer ism shares tips on becoming a “sharing community” in-place, right where you are. The now well-known Ashevillans, of the Blue Ridge Mountains, are cited for just such innovative resourcefulness.
As always, with an open heart and an open mind, may you enjoy and find value within these pages.
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com10 letter from publisher HOW TO ADVERTISE To advertise with Natural Awakenings or request a media kit, please contact us at 727-865-9339 or email dwilson@ natampa.com. Deadline for ads: the 15th of the month EDITORIAL SUBMISSIONS Advertisers email articles, news briefs to dwilson@ natampa.com. Deadline for editorial: the 10th of the month. CALENDAR SUBMISSIONS Email Calendar Events to: dwilson@natampa.com. 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 727-865-9339. For franchising opportunities call 239-530-1377 or visit NaturalAwakenings.com. ADVERTISING & SUBMISSIONS Natural Awakenings is a family of 50+ healthy living maga zines celebrating 27 years of providing the communities we serve with the tools and resources we all need to lead healthier lives on a healthy planet. Based on Nikola Tesla’s and Dr. Lakhovsky’s works POLARAID ® Harness Your Body’s Health With PolarAid! Sales that Bring Joy! Great Deals for a Great Cause! ACT NOW and get Polaraid at 25% discount 64$ www.polaraidhealth.com49.95$!1-450-486-7888 Hundreds and hundreds of authentic, compelling testimonials — PolarAid® encourages the overall health of the body: “This will be the fourth PolarAid I’ve purchased! I fully believe in this product and it’s healing power! I’ve given them to family members and we’ve all had great success with it.” C.A.T. (Vista, CA)
Liana Kramer, AP, DOM Bobbie Wilson, APRNMiranda Giusti, DOJeanne Bangtson, DCTracie Leonhardt, DO Medical Director ∙ BHRT including pellets ∙ Wt-Loss Metabolic ∙ Type II Diabetes ∙ Adrenal Fatigue ∙ Chronic Fatigue Syndrome ∙ Thyroid ∙ IV Therapy ∙ PRP Injections ∙ Prolozone Therapy ∙ Chronic Infection Treatments ∙ GI Repair ∙ Chelation Therapy ∙ Autoimmune Disorders∙MonaLisaRejuvenationVaginal ∙ BOTOX® ∙ EMSCULPT NEO® ∙ EMSELLA® ∙ EMTONE® ∙ Acupuncture ∙ Nutritional Blood Analysis ∙ DNA Analysis ∙ LASER RemovalHair visit our online store www.PeaksOfHealth.comCERTIFIEDREGIONALPRACTITIONERTRAINER 50% OFF 3 Therapies in 1 Session Results You Can See & with purchase of (validpackageto9/30/22)
Locations: 114 N Kings Ave., Brandon, 813-657-2555; 11301 N 56th St., Temple Terrace, 813-980-2005. For more information, call 877-2088200 or visit CBDMadeEasy.com/thcv-products.
Chuck’s Now Offering CBD Made Easy Age Advantage Brands’ CBD Made Easy Hemp Oil has been shown effective in the process of returning to whole health. The constituents found in CBD work within the human endocannabinoid system (ECS) which in turn regulates physical and mental well-being, influencing how we experience stress and anxiety, sleep, eating, and especially hormone levels. Non-psychoactive, it is ideal for daytime and anytime optimum functionality is sought and employed. To that end, it may even help to ease residual effects of Covid and other illnesses.
In 2004, White completed her first 500-hour teacher training at Bikram’s Yoga College of India, in LA. Since then, she has trained with many teachers, including David Swenson, Cameron Shayne, Shiva Rae, Ana Forrest, Desiree Rumbaugh, Duncan Wong, Andrey Lappa and more.
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Studio 108 Yoga and Holistic Healing Studio 108 Yoga and Holistic Heal ing, located in Tampa, has been helping keep the Tampa Bay commu nity spiritually and physically fit for ten-plus years. It was recently voted the number one yoga studio in Tampa Bay and third best yoga studio in the State of Florida by Best Things Florida.
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For those seeking coaching for wellness and health, including tips for weight loss and lifestyle changes, see the website for class schedules, workshops and Yoga Alliance certified teacher training, Studio108Tampa.com
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com12 news briefs
Studio 108 offers in-studio and online yoga classes for all levels, and private and semi-private lessons with Missy White, an E-RYT 500 and the owner of Studio 108. The creator of the 108 Asana series and a Yogavated Athletic ambassador, White has taught workshops and given confer ences worldwide, from Yoga Journal Live to Sri Lanka to the Om Yoga Shows in Manchester and London.
Age Advantage Brands is pleased to announce Chuck’s Natural Fields Market is now carrying several of their one-of-akind, issue-specific, medical-grade CBD Made Easy Hemp Oils, includ ing Alert & Clarity, Appetite Suppression, and Energy & Focus. “We are thrilled and honored that our CBD Made Easy products are in both their Temple Terrace and Brandon locations,” shares Andrew Strickman, founder and chief innovation officer of Age Advantage Brands. Strickman goes on to share, “Chuck’s mission is to offer the high est quality organic foods and nutritional supplements, which makes them a great retail partner for our CBD Made Easy products which are all of the highest quality and efficacy.”
Location: 12512 Rawhide Dr., Tampa For more information and/or to register, call 813-343-8887 or visit Studio108Tampa.com. See ad page 31.
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“I did not know that Dr. Young used the Enbrel injec tion for depres sion, so I did not know to look for that result; it was a
wonderful surprise I had not expected! My hand and arm are not fully healed, but I do feel one step closer to getting to my goal: complete healing! I can open and close my hand without using my other hand to open and close it. Maybe there is hope now for a condition that the medical community says is a helpless condition.”
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com14 Off-Label Use Proves Great
Success for Patients
Recently, a patient who had wrist surgery a year before came to see me. She advised that shortly after surgery, her hand would curl up and she physically had to use her other hand to open it. Addition ally, her hand felt hot and numb and pain would shoot up her arm. Painful muscle aches would come and go without warn ing. Her life was miserable. After a year of pain and torture, the bright and vibrant woman’s mental attitude had completely changed and she was depressed; her career as a pianist was gone and her future lookedThisbleak.isthe manner in which she presented to this office, with all of her depression, her career gone, her chronic pain, and decreased use of her hand and arms. We tried Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) injections into her hand and arm without much success. I suggested a prescription used in an off-label manner. The medical community uses this prescription on a regular basis for autoimmune disease, however, administered in a different way instead of as an IV in the arm, you get completely different results. This is called an off-label use of a drug. The FDA regulates the approval of a prescription but any doctor can prescribe a prescription drug for any reason they think it may be medicallyVirtuallyappropriate.everyprescription we have today is used for other reasons than what that prescription was originally intended. A woman was concerned that a beta blocker drug used for heart disease and fast heart rate was being used off-label to
John D. Young, MD has been treating patients at Young Foundational Health Center since he opened the private practice in 2005. The author of Beyond Treatment and creator of Young Health Products, Dr. Young’s approach is “Treat the cell, heal the body.” Sought after because of his out-ofthe-box thinking in conjunction with inte grative and natural medicine, Dr. Young is an innovator and always offers his patients cutting edge treatments. Young Foundational Health Center is located at 7241 Bryan Dairy Rd., Largo. To schedule an appointment, call 727545-4600. Most major medical insurances accepted. For more information, visit YoungFoundationalHealth.com. See ad right. treat her migraines yet with great success. WebMD in fact says that the off-label use of any prescription drug can be used to treat any medical condition. After treatment with the off-label drug, this is what our patient had to say: “I am usually a very positive, happy person but it gets difficult to keep your head up when every day you are in pain with very obscure symptoms that are difficult to treat. Dr. Young offered me a shot one day when I was in the office for a PRP treat ment. After a lengthy discussion with my physical therapist, I decided to give it a try. We were hoping that it would break the cycle of my nervous system telling my con Virtually every prescription we have today is used for other reasons than what that prescription was originally intended. nective tissue system to “clamp down”. The morning after the injection, I found myself smiling and laughing at little things as I got ready for my day. I remembered that feeling of happiness—I had always been happy before I had such a difficult year with my health problems. I immediately found my husband and told him ‘I feel like myself today!’ Over the next week, I realized I had more range of motion, my hand opened more eas ily and I felt stronger. But beyond all that, I felt like I had an emotional reset.
Complex regional pain syndrome is a condition in which an arm or leg has suffered an injury. Examples would include surgery, trauma or stroke causing intense pain greater than one would expect in relation to the original injury. The actual cause is unknown and there is no cure. Treatment consists of pain medications, physical therapy and biofeed back, most of which is not very helpful.
by Dr. John D. Young
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Fermented Dairy Helps Sidestep Depression
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Nettle Root Improves Prostate Symptoms
An enlarged prostate, known as benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH), afflicts half of men by age 60 and 90 percent of men by age 85. Although it isn’t cancer ous, treatment can involve medications and surgery. European doctors often prescribe the herb nettle root, and Iranian research ers tested its effectiveness in a study that divided 80 BPH patients into two groups. One was given 300 mil ligrams of nettle root extract twice a day for eight weeks; the other group received a placebo. The researchers found the nettle root significantly improved urinary frequency, urinary urgency and night urination compared with the placebo group. It was not effective in modifying prostate volume, the feeling of incomplete emptying, intermittency, urine stream and straining.
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Sales of fermented dairy products like yogurt and kefir have been steadily rising in the U.S., and a new study from Australia’s Deakin University might accelerate that trend. Researchers examined 24 years of nutritional and health data from 2,603 Finnish men between 42 and 60 years old. They found that men that ranked in the top third of consump tion of non-fermented dairy products such as milk and cream had double the risk of depression, while those in the top third of consumption of fermented dairy products like kefir, yogurt, cottage cheese, sour cream and butter milk enjoyed a 45 percent reduced risk of depression.
In a study published in Cancer Discovery, re searchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center reported that vitamin E can enhance immunotherapy responses in cancer patients by stimulating the activity of dendritic cells in tumors.
Combing the records of patients with melanoma, breast, colon and kidney cancers that were being treated with immunotherapy, they found that taking vitamin E improved survival times and boosted treatment responses. In laboratory work, the re searchers demonstrated that vitamin E directly binds and blocks the activity of the SHP1 checkpoint protein in den dritic cells, which primes T cells for an anti-tumor immune response.
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Revised Supplement Formula Slows Macular Degeneration
Age-related degenerationmacular(AMD), the most common cause of blindness in older Ameri cans, became less of a threat in 1996 when the national Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS) verified that certain otheritscopperne,trients—beta-carotenuvitaminC,vitaminE,andzinc—slowedprogression.Butafterstudiesshowedalink between beta-carotene and lung cancer, it was removed from the formula. Two carotenoids found in the retina—lu tein and zeaxanthin—were added, and the formula was rebranded as AREDS2. In a new, 10-year, follow-up study by the National Eye Institute (NEI), AREDS2 was found to reduce late AMD symptoms an additional 20 percent com pared to the original formula. “This 10-year data confirms that not only is the new formula safer, it’s actually bet ter at slowing AMD progression,” says Emily Chew, M.D., lead author of the study and director of the NEI Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Application.
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“This study broadens our understanding of factors that can influence responses to immunotherapies,” says author Dihua Yu, M.D., Ph.D. Unlike chemotherapy, which acts directly on cancerous tumors, immunotherapy treats patients by revitalizing their immune system and “teaching” it how to identify and destroy cancer cells.
Vitamin E Enhances Cancer Immunotherapy
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Addresses Global Racism Established in 1981, the United
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Assemblypeace.”theme21theholidayorInternationalNations-sanctionedDayofPeace,WorldPeaceDay,isaobservedaroundworldonSeptembereachyear.The2022is“Endracism.BuildTothatend,theGeneralhasdedicatedthisday to observing 24 hours of non-violence and Secretary-Generalcease-fire.António Guterres says, “But achiev ing true peace entails much more than laying down arms. It requires the building of societies where all members feel that they can flourish. It involves creating a world in which people are treated equally, regardless of their race.”
Childhood Adventures and Team Sports Boost Well-Being
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The pandemic has chal lenged both children’s learning environments and their emotional well-being, but new research shows that playing adventurously outdoors and participat ing in team sports can help lower their mental health risks. Researchers from the UK University of Exeter surveyed nearly 2,500 parents of 5-to-11-yearolds in the UK and Northern Ireland. The study found that kids that climbed trees, rode bikes, jumped from high surfaces and had other outdoor adventures without adult supervision experienced a lower incidence of anxiety and depression, and were more upbeat during the COVID-19 lockdown. In another study, researchers from California State University, Fullerton, found that kids in team sports like volleyball and soccer, but not others in individual sports like gymnastics and wrestling, did better emo tionally and mentally. Analyzing data from 11,235 kids between 9 and 13 years old, they found that compared to kids that did not participate in sports, those that were on teams had a lower incidence of attention issues, social problems, anxiety, depression and withdrawal. Kids that participated in individual sports had higher levels of those mental health challenges.
Igrew up in the Bahamas, on Abaco Island. As a pre-teenager from the northeast United States, moving to a small town on an island with a population of 500 to 1500 (depending on the number of tourists) was unique. We had access to phones at the post office three days a week, waiting in line for over an hour at times. Television did not exist. There were no cell phones—only CB radios to communicate from home-tohome or island-to-island.
One of the plants that I learned first from Noel is still one of my favorites—Spanish Needles/Bidens alba/Xian Feng Cao— which grows throughout Florida and the Caribbean. In China, this herb is enjoyed as a cooling summertime tea. Noel would add it with other herbs for the flu or as a wash/soak for infection. I remember him saying it was good for “fiery pee” and it’s always a go-to for bug bites and stings. I frequently educate people about the common plant medi cine in our area. It is so important to know our bioregional plants whose heritage goes back to the Caribbean and Central/South America. We must recognize that after one generation, the knowl edge that the elders may have held is lost if not passed on. We see young and old people who feel disconnected from their heritage and from their land. Many who join me on an herb walk are reminded of a parent or grandparent who talked about a particular plant, and from that remembrance frequently add new knowledge that they share with the group. I hope that each of you takes time to learn your local plants and trees, and as you learn, share that knowledge with those who are in need of connection.
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In the Caribbean, we use the leaf more than the fruit. In some countries, it may be used for mosquito-borne diseases, intestinal parasites, viral issues and even some cancers. The common name varies from island-to-island and country-tocountry; commonly known names include Bitter Melon, Cer rasee, and Cunda Amore.
I started learning about edible and medicinal plants at a young age, first with Stalking the Wild Asparagus, by Euell Gibbons, and from many survival books by Bradford Angiers. And then we moved to this remote location. I started working with a quiet Bahamian fisherman named Noel Bootle. We worked from a small skiff with me as labor, diving up conch. Each night, we would pull the boat up on a deserted island, him cracking the conch out of the shell, and me skinning them with my teeth. As the long day would close, with dinner on the fire, Noel would often tell stories about his youth, fishing and the plants that surrounded us. He would speak about how to use them for medicine and I tried to absorb all of it. After about six months of trips, Noel’s trust in me and my trust in him grew. The stories about plants started to shift from how a plant could be used to heal a physical issue to plants' magi cal properties. I didn’t know the term shaman at the time, but now I would be happy to use the term for Noel. There are more seafar ing stories, but I’m here to talk about plants. I now try to pass on my knowledge and experience of 45 years from my unique times in the Bahamas, Florida, the Carib bean and South America. I teach classes most weekends and see patients four days a week. I’ve also had the incredible opportunity to travel to Ecuador and create a 12-part television series on Inti TV—Sanaciones con Bob Linde. I grow about 200 tropical plants on two properties to teach my students and to harvest medicine. I work hard to blend my experience in the Bahamas with my formal training in Chinese and Western Herbalism and my endless research to learn more. A great example of a bioregional plant is bitter melon, Momordica charantia. It is a common herb growing throughout the tropics. I find it on fences, hedges, trees, and creeping along the ground. It’s a rough-skinned orange fruit that opens to reveal bright red pulp-covered seeds. I remember standing outside at a gathering one Friday night in Abaco and some women nearby picked the leaves to eat. I can clearly hear Jennifer Russel say, “You got to eat t’ree leaves a day to cool ya blood.'' Certainly then I could not conceive of the TCM concept of Blood Heat, but now I understand this Caribbean bitter melon, so aptly named, can lower blood sugar, reduce fevers, help with parasites, malarial disorders and so much more!
Tropical Herbal Medicine RECONNECTING TO OUR ROOTS by Bob Linde, RH, AP
Learn more about Bob Linde and the Traditions School of Herbal Studies, in St. Petersburg, at TraditionsHerbSchool.com and acuHerbals.com.
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Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com20 Neoscapebyrendering global SeattlebriefsProviding
Australian Office Building to Feature Solar Facade
A rooftop solar array and 1,182 solar panels on the sides will adorn an eight-story, $40 million, high-rise planned for West Melbourne, Australia, to provide the office building with most of its power. Avancis, a German firm producing glass panels containing solar cells, will supply the solar skin. Architect Pete Kennon says, “These things are possible, and the fact that a building can harness the sunlight from its own skin, it sounds like something you dreamed of, or you saw in a cartoon.” Generating 50 times as much power as a typical home rooftop solar array, the solar skin will save an esti mated 77 tons of CO2 emissions each year. Although this will be the first in Australia to use the panels, several projects in Europe have been built with the technology, including the world’s largest wooden sky scraper in Skellefteå, Sweden. “It feels urgent to innovate our building technologies to more sustainable methods,” says Kennon. “Collecting solar is a natural trajectory on our large-scale projects, particularly in locations that have great access to sunlight.”
As people switch to electric vehicles (EV) to reduce their emissions, some homeowners and apartment dwell ers without installthings2030,belowemissionsreduceofdisadvantage.infrastructurechargingareataThecitySeattlesetagoaltotransportation83percent2008levelsbyandtomakeeasier,theywillchargersonlo cal utility poles on demand. Seattle City Light will conduct the project as part of a more extensive portfolio of trans portation electrification investments and services to help the utility service area transition to zero-emission electric transportation options. Residents can accomplish some emission reductions with public transit, biking, walking and other options, but many still rely on personal vehicles for some trips.
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Carbon Labels Cut Environmental Impact of Dining
Electric Vehicle Chargers on Utility Poles
The Curbside Level 2 EV charging program is available to anyone on a first-come, first-serve basis. The person making the request must own or plan to own an EV within the next 12 months, and their ex isting address must not offer off-street parking (where they could buy their own). Once a request is made, the utility will evaluate the area and ask for input betheychargersposeownerspropertyneighboring50IfEVstallingbeforeneighborsfrominanewcharger.morethanpercentofopthe,willnotinstalled.
Making changes while shopping at supermarkets, res taurants and with delivery apps can change minds about sustainable options and garner public support. Psycholo gist Ann-Katrin Betz and her colleagues at Germany’s University of Würzburg studied the design of restaurant menus and tested how adding carbon labels indicating the greenhouse gas emissions per dish and changing the most prominent menu items to foods with a lower impact on the climate affected the choices people might make when dining out. When people were given menus with the low-emission option as the default, the share of high-emission choices decreased by an average of 31.7 percent. When given menus with carbon labels, the emissions associated with their dish choices averaged 13.5 percent lower per dish. Combining carbon labels with prominent placing for lowemission options appears to have the greatest effect. Other strategies might include increasing the availability of plant-based options; making them more prominent elsewhere (the meat aisle); and renaming veggie options to make them sound more appealing (slow-roasted, butternut squash and seasonal vegetable lasagna versus vegetarian lasagna). Multiple practices are needed to persuade people to adopt sustainable diets, so all of these methods are just the beginning of a shift away from highemission food by overcoming unconscious barriers.
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Wind Turbines Modeled After Palm Trees
Over the last six years, Pao’s team, in conjunction with collaborators at the University of Virginia, the University of Texas at Dallas, the Colorado School of Mines and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, have collaborated to develop the Segmented Ultralight Morphing Rotor turbine, a two-bladed, downwind rotor, to test the concept in action. The researchers found that their turbine performed consistently and efficiently during periods of peak wind gusts. Mandar Phadnis, lead author of a study in Proceedings of the 2022 American Control Conference, says, “The blades are manufactured to be light weight and very flexible, so they can align with the wind loads.”
Hurricane-Resilient
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Shady Solution
Atlantic hurricanes pose risks to renewable energy wind turbines, and researchers at the University of Colorado-Boulder are developing more resilient models. Lucy Pao, the Palmer endowed chair in the Department of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering, says, “We are very much bio-inspired by palm trees, which can survive these hurricane conditions.” Traditional upwind turbine blades face into the wind, so the blades must be stiff, which requires more material and increases cost. Blades on downwind rotors face away from the wind, with less chance of hitting the tower when the winds pick up, so they can be lighter and more flexible, requiring less material. Downwind blades can also bend, instead of break, like palm trees do.
California Canals Gain Solar Panels
To both conserve water and gener ate clean energy, Project Nexus, an innovative pilot project from the University of California-Merced, will install solar arrays over 25-foot- and 100-foot-wide canals in the Turlock Irrigation District so operators can monitor and evaluate their impact on water quality and evaporation, as well as assess maintenance and lo gistical issues. In Europe, canals are lined with tree cover, while India has already started using solar panels. Project partner Solar AquaGrid, LLC, recognized the untapped opportunity to curtail evaporation and advance California’s Solar Over Canal ini tiative. CEO Jordan Harris states, “Research and common sense tell us that in an age of intensifying drought, it’s time to put a lid on evaporation. Our initial study revealed mounting solar panels over open canals can result in significant water, energy and cost savings when compared to ground-mounted solar systems, including added efficiency result ing from an exponential shading and cooling effect. Now is the chance to put that learning to the test.”
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Burying Human Waste in the DeemedWildernessUnsustainable
Common California Bumble Bees Go Missing
Laura Scott, a geneticist with the U.S. Geological Survey, found antibiotic-resistant bacteria in soil and water at all 10 national parks she sampled in 2016, with the abundance of such bacteria increasing along with human activity. The authors of a 40-year-old Montana study concluded, “The idea that shallow burial renders feces harmless in a short time is fallacious.”Nolonger is it safe to bury waste in a “cat hole” that is six inches deep and at least 200 feet from any water, as for merly believed. The solution is to use a Waste Alleviation and Gelling (WAG) bag, double-layered with chemical powder to render feces inert. Attach the bag to the outside of a backpack and deposit it in the trash on the way home. They are inexpensive and available at major retail outlets nationwide. If there are multiple WAG bags, collect them in a lightweight, dry bag.
Cooper/AdobeStock.comErnie Shvets/Pexels.comAnna WALKING WALKING What is the best natural medicine?What is the best natural medicine?What is best natural medicine? Learn to ReDesign your ABCs for Walking Learn your ABCs for Learn to ABCs for Walking to ReDesign ABCs for NEW ONLINE Classes Starts October 2 NEW ONLINE Classes Starts October global briefs
When pathogens in buried poop from campers and hikers leach into the soil, they can spread into water ways or become integrated into an ecosystem, repro ducing and living on after the feces have decomposed. Modern-day dung is also likely to contain chemicals, birth control hormones and antibiotic-resistant bacte ria.
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The Western bumble bee, once easily spotted in Cali fornia, could not be found in a recent survey led by the University of CaliforniaRiverside (UCR). The first statewide census of Califor nia bumble bees in 40 years found several other species absent, as well. UCR ento mologist Hollis Woodard’s research group collected bees from 17 sites representing six different ecosystems previously known to host a large variety of bumble bees, as documented in the journal Eco logy and Evolution. One of the missing species, the Western bumble bee, is an important pollinator of wild plants and crops. “We didn’t find it, even once,” says Woodard. This study was an effort to document changes in bumble bee populations across large geographic areas in Califor nia since the last one in the 1980s. Smaller-scale studies have documented significant declines in bumble bee pop ulations around the world due to climate change, develop ment of wild habitat and the use of bee-killing pesticides, so it is important to have data that documents bee health. Bumble bees can fly in cooler temperatures and lower light levels than many other bees, helping to pollinate crops worth $3 billion annually in the U.S., including tomatoes, peppers and cranberries.
L ongevity, a human quest through the ages, is now a hot topic among scientific researchers that assert there has never been a better time to maximize our potential for metabolic renewal.
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GROWING YOUNGER L ONGEVITY STRATEGIES THAT HELP REVERSE THE AGING PROCESS by Marlaina Donato
Researchers are now understanding what factors can turn on positive gene expressions and turn off those that may activate life-threatening diseases.
Biological age—the state of our health at the cellular level—is in the spotlight, as are the anti-aging benefits of science-supported phyto nutrients, cell-rejuvenating foods and safe, non-surgical, stem cell procedures. Functional medicine, with its focus on the biologybased root causes of disease, is also a rising star in the arena of ageNoreversal.matter which path we follow to aging vibrantly, the most inspiring takeaway is that lifestyle, not genes, deter mines destiny. “On average in the United States, the last 16 years of life are spent with multiple diagnoses and on multiple medications. We are giving our hard-earned money to phar macies, hospitals and nursing facilities,” says Kara Fitzgerald, a naturopathic doctor in Newtown, Connecticut, and the author of Younger You: Reduce Your Bio Age and Live Longer, Better. She and other researchers contrast “lifespan”, the years from birth to death, to “healthspan”, the years spent in good health free of age-related disease and disability. “Lifespan is not necessarily healthspan, and we can change that,” she says. Age Is Not Just a Number
“Bio age is how fast our bodies are aging, and aging is the main risk factor for all diseases, including Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease,
Until recently, age was determined by the year on our birth certificate, but “bio age” is the new number to pay attention to. It might not only predict health outcomes down the road, but also add years to our lives. In groundbreak ing work in 2017, anti-aging researcher Steven Horvath at the University of California, Los Angeles, used algorithms to calculate biological age on the basis of how extensively our genome is modified by a process called DNA methylation.
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com24
September 2022 25 michaeljung/AdobeStock.com
Molecular Magic Harvard genetics professor David Sinclair, author of the seminal Lifespan: Why We Age—And Why We Don’t Have To, discovered antioxidant-rich resveratrol in grapes in 2003. Since then, he and other researchers have found additional compounds with the ability to activate longevity pathways. Nicotinamide adenine di nucleotide (NAD, or B3), a coenzyme involved in many metabolic processes essential to life, has been shown to rejuvenate aging mice, increasing energy-producing mitochondria in the cells and fortifying muscle mass. The body makes less NAD as we age, but research suggests that intermittent fasting, exercise and heat sau nas can stimulate this youth-preserving molecule. NAD-boosting supplements are also on the market, but consuming foods like naturally fermented sauerkraut, raw milk, nutritional yeast and pumpkin seeds is also a good strategy.
The Trifecta of Acid, Inflammation and Stress
cucumbers, rivals ever-beneficial quercetin. Research published last year in the European Journal of Pharmacology cites fisetin’s nu merous potential benefits for neurodegenerative conditions such as Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, stroke and vascular dementia.
Chronic, unmanaged stress is a major factor in physical and mental decline due to elevated levels of cortisol. “Stress threatens
dementia and neurodegenerative disorders,” says Fitzgerald, noting that only 10 to 20 percent of longevity outcomes are genetic.Fitzgerald and her team drove this point home with the first randomized, controlled study on the power of lifestyle and diet to turn back the biological age clock. Based upon functional medicine, the program enrolled 18 healthy men between ages 50 and 72 in a target group and 20 in a control group. Those in the target group ate a nutrient-rich diet, slept seven hours a night, practiced relaxation techniques and took supplemental probiot ics and phytonutrients. They ate only between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m., exercised for at least 30 minutes five days a week, avoided sweets and consumed two cups of dark, leafy, greens and three cups each of cruciferous vegetables and colorful vegetables daily, as well as six ounces of animal protein.
SIRT6, an enzyme in close relationship with NAD and respon sible for many molecular anti-aging processes, including DNA repair, is abundant in seaweeds, especially the strain Fucus vesi culosus, commonly known as bladder wrack. Research published in the journal Marine Drugs in 2017 indicates bladder wrack’s anti-inflammatory and anti-tumoral properties, as well as its potential to protect the liver and normalize high blood sugar and bloodFisetin,pressure.apowerful flavonoid found in certain foods like strawberries, peaches, apples, persimmons, tomatoes, onions and
Chronic systemic inflammation is now understood to be the physi ological springboard for most diseases ranging from cancer to de pression, but its connection to uric acid is critical in producing free radicals that accelerate aging. “Unfortunately, most doctors look upon uric acid solely as a risk marker for gout. We now recognize that uric acid serves as a powerful signal in the body to prepare for food and water scarcity,” says neurologist David Perlmutter, author of The New York Times bestseller Grain Brain and the recent Drop Acid, a guide to lowering uric acid in the body. “Uric acid levels above 5.5 milligrams per decilitre trigger the body to raise the blood pressure, increase the blood sugar, become insulin-resistant and increase the formation and storage of body fat,” he says. “Cen tral to regaining metabolic health and reducing risk for metabolic conditions like Alzheimer’s disease, coronary artery disease and Type 2 diabetes is reining in uric acid.”
The results, published last year in the journal Aging, showed that three years of bio age were reduced in the target group in just eight weeks compared to the control group. “What we eat, our stress load and our response to it, the quality of the air we breathe and if we exercise are all drivers or reducers of our bio age. Know ing this, we absolutely need to take responsibility for our lives,” saysThisFitzgerald.bioagereversal
is good news when we look at the grim statistics. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Cancer Society, approximately 610,000 people die of heart disease in this country each year and more than 600,000 Americans are predicted to succumb to cancer this year alone.
Even with exciting advances in the promotion of long life, ex perts are unanimous in stressing that going into our golden years disease-free begins and ends with individual lifestyle choices, starting with what we put in our mouths. “Diet is the most critical variable in terms of our metabolic destiny. It’s been said that a person can’t exercise away a poor diet, and there’s great wisdom in this statement,” says Perlmutter.
Eating to reduce inflammation is key, and there is power on our plates when we add some of Fitzgerald’s longevity boosters like turmeric, green tea, shitake mushrooms, wild-caught salmon, eggs, liver and sunflower seeds. A study last year in Experimental reported that the amino acid L-theanine, found par ticularly in green tea, reduced oxidative stress, liver degeneration and inflammatory responses in aging rats.
Marlaina Donato is an author, composer and painter. Connect at WildflowerLady.com. No matter which path we follow to aging vibrantly, the most inspiring takeaway is that lifestyle, not genes, determines destiny.
Radical Renewal Without Surgery
the health and diversity of our gut bacteria, leading to increased gut permeability, a central mechanism underlying widespread inflammation, which is the cornerstone of all chronic degenera tive conditions,” says Perlmutter. “Those conditions as a category are ranked by the World Health Organization as the number one
“While stem cell treatment has been quite effective, it is important to remember that avoiding chemicals in the environment, exercising vigorously and maintaining a low BMI [body mass index] are clearly the most important factors in good health,” advises Prodromos.
Fitzgerald concurs, “Excessive inflammation—an imbalanced immune response—accelerates the aging process, and it increases with stress. Stress is the gasoline on the fire of aging.”
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“Stem cells improve DNA methylation and telomere length, and result in a reduced physiologic age compared to your chronologic age,” says Chadwick Prodromos, a Chicago-based, board-certified orthopedic surgeon and the founder of the Prodromos Stem Cell Institute, in Antigua. “Joint replacements are offered quite liber ally nowadays, but most of our patients with severe arthritis who were offered joint replacements do well in our care without them for virtually any joint in the body.” Prodromos and his team com bine umbilical cord-derived stem cell treatment (non-embryonic/ fetal) with specially selected nutritional supplements and in some patients, platelet-rich plasma and hyaluronic acid injections.
In the daily survival game, the body’s stem cells generate special ized cells to replace those throughout the body that are damaged and dying. This ongoing repair process slows down as we advance in years, but cutting-edge procedures offer new hope for condi tions ranging from arthritis to age-related brain fog.
Mohite/Pexels.comMadhuri
Living Life in Full Color by Marlaina Donato
N ature concludes each day with a fiery mural, never again to be exactly duplicated and missed if we look away for a moment too long. “What color is in a picture, enthusiasm is in life,” said Vincent van Gogh, and to live with passion is to live life in full color. As children, it was in our nature to live out loud. We sang off-key, belly-laughed and showed off our blueberry-stained tongues. Somewhere between grade school and adoles cence, we learned to swim with the social current, content to blend in for comfort. As adults, too often we are barely aware of our lives stuck in grayscale, but if we look deep inside, we long to be the brave red rose in a black-and-white world. Sometimes it takes something drastic, like being faced with a terminal illness, to throw off the shackles of, “What would they think?” and follow our own brand of bliss. Hopefully, most of us can make that decision without such a drastic wake-up call. In many parts of the world, nature saves her best for last and pulls out all the stops. She dresses the trees in unapologetic glory, inviting us to live more boldly before it’s too late, and to express the passions we’ve held in for dear life. If we are wise, we will follow our bliss, whether it’s painting that wall in a color that might compromise resale value or dust ing off the violin we set aside after high school. Autumn gives us much-needed permission to let our hair down, let our locks go silver or feisty red, let our souls blow in the wind and come in for dinner a little late and disheveled. What parts of ourselves do we hold inside for fear of standing out a little too much? What would we wear if we defied fickle trends? How would we love if we realized that there is nothing more important than embodying love? Here’s to living in full color, come what may. Marlaina Donato is an author, composer and painter. Connect at WildflowerLady.com.
September 2022 27 inspiration
After 14 years of studying and practicing conventional medicine, I left it at age 37 because I became disillusioned and “mor ally injured” by the limitations of conven tional medicine and the U.S. health care system, which give lip service to a patient’s well-being and ultimately are about the financial bottom line.
What’s the difference between curing and healing?
Generally, curing is about the elimina tion of all evidence of disease. Healing is a restoration of wholeness, which is what the word “heal” is based upon. When I’ve been present with people during end-oflife care, I’ve witnessed the restoration of wholeness in the tying up of the loose ends of a well-lived life or a life not so
Lissa Rankin on the Mysteries of Healing
by Linda Sechrist in my medicine bag. It only took me nine months to realize that I could quit my job as an Ob-Gyn, but I couldn’t quit my calling. That which drew me to medicine from age 7 was still alive in me. I began spiritually seeking to find out what else heals. During my years of studying and practicing everything along the health, wellness, psychology, yoga and spirituality gamut, I tried many things, cherry-picking from various spiritual traditions, Eastern religions and New Age spirituality. None of these quite fit either. I found as much shadow in this camp as I did in the conven tional medicine camp. Why use a carefully balanced brew of several healing interventions? Limiting how you approach your health care to one camp or the other could prevent you from having the best possible health outcome. There’s light and shadow in both camps. My book helps educate readers so they can practice discernment and make wise choices about which tools from the world’s medicine bag serves them best. It’s meant to help them become more miracle-prone and hopefully to embrace the paradoxes of healing, one of which is: You can heal yourself and you can’t do it alone. A lot of the practices I write about are intended to facilitate the restoration of wholeness. That doesn’t mean that people shouldn’t also seek out potentially cura tive treatments with their conventional medical doctor. But those treatments often don’t cure either, so I really see it that individuals don’t have to choose one or the other. Rather, they can choose conven tional medicine and sacred medicine.
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com28 M ind-body physician Lissa Rankin, a New York Times bestselling author and founder of the Whole Health Medicine Institute in the San Francisco Bay Area, takes readers on her decade-long journey in her latest book, Sacred Medicine: A Doctor’s Quest to Unravel the Mysteries of Healing. She pro vides a discerning guide to the sometimes perilous paths available to patients when wellness fads, lifestyle changes and doctors have failed them. What motivated you to write Sacred Medicine?
I never lost respect for the life-saving aspects of conventional medicine. I simply believed it shouldn’t be the only medicine wise words
Consider not only what the mind is telling you about what’s wise and smart and what the science shows, but what intuition is telling you about what might be in your best interests. Or consider what your gut or other aspects of your body are feeling. It’s not only the gut that can give us somatic intelligence. We can tune into various intel ligences all over our body. Some healers I’ve met are finely tuned into this kind of intelligence to the point that they can ask a “yes” or “no” question and feel the answer somatically. They use this as one of the ways to guide themselves and their clients. What part does trauma play in sacred medicine?
September 2022 29 well-lived, even in the presence of physical decline. Repair, healing and forgiveness in both internal and external relationships in our lives can come from doing deep shadow work. What are our whole health intelligences? Because healing is a return to wholeness, connecting with your whole health intel ligences—mental, intuitive, emotional and somatic—must be the foundational part of your healing journey to create conditions which make the body miracle-prone. I think of the work of integrating them as I do a symphony that requires a conductor to arrange and harmonize the intelligences. I call the conductor the “inner pilot light”. For example, if we’re making medical decisions or any significant decision, it’s important to consult all the intelligences.
According to so many sources in the main stream medical literature, anywhere from 60 to 80 percent of illnesses have stressrelated emotional underpinnings. What causes stress? Trauma does. Linda Sechrist is Natural Awakenings senior staff writer. Connect at lysechrist@gmail.com.
Although trauma as a cause of physical disease might be disputed by skeptics who resist information that contradicts their worldview, the body of scientific data linking psychological trauma and both pediatric and adult-onset disease is airtight.
Ancient Moves for Modern Life
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com30 fit body Aging Gracefully
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by Maya Whitman
HOW A YOGA PRACTICE KEEPS US YOUNG
“What I learned is that we need four es sential physical skills to navigate through life as we age—strength, flexibility, balance and agility—and we get that from yoga. We can find independence in our everyday life, and we don’t need a vigorous yoga class to do that,” says Ruth Pipitone, a gentle yoga instructor at various studios and senior centers in Northeastern Pennsylvania. For those that only associate the practice with youthful bodies and hip yoga gear, yoga is a full-spectrum practice. “Anyone can do yoga—gentle yoga, chair yoga and even wheelchair yoga.”
n 1967, Tao Porchon-Lynch left a successful Hollywood career as a model and actress to become a fulltime yogi in her 50s. At age 87, she added ballroom dancing to her list of passions and at 93, she landed in the Guinness World Records as the oldest yoga teacher on the planet. She continued to teach a weekly yoga class just days before her death at age 101. “I love seeing students realize what is possible,” Porchon-Lynch said in an interview, and her words are an added incentive to reap the many benefits of a regular yoga practice at any age. Whether it involves getting down on a mat or practicing modified poses with the use of a chair, yoga helps us to stay nimble, manage stress, reduce symptoms of depres sion and tame high blood pressure. Yoga has been around for thousands of years for good reason, and health organizations like the Johns Hopkins Arthritis Center are now recommending the healing modality for a better quality of life.
In essence, we deepen as we age, and yoga can meet us on a multidimensional level. “Yoga does not have to mean poses. Pos sibilities are infinite, and adaptations are unlimited, based upon our needs,” says Blair.
coming in the october issue HEALTHY PLANET
September 2022 31
The keystone of all yoga practice is working with the breath, an action that is naturally compromised by just getting out of bed and into the day’s challenges. “Most adults breathe from their chest. That’s where we activate the stress response of fight, flight or freeze. We need to use the lower lungs, too, so we can activate the parasympathetic nervous system to find calm,” says Pipitone Blair, who specializes in helping others to find emotional equilibrium after trauma, concurs: “The nervous system is sym biotic with the breath, and vice versa. A long, deep inhale and a long, slow exhale can act as an immediate elixir for the nervous system to recognize that, in that moment, we are okay.” She has taught groups of people, some in wheelchairs and hospital beds, and she “still experienced the entire room shift when breathing together. As long as we are able to consciously notice breath, we can do yoga.”
Connect with Maya Whitman at ekstasis28@gmail.com.
According to a 2016 study of 227 participants reported in the journal Topics in Geriatric Rehabilitation, just 12 minutes of daily gentle yoga over 10 years improved bone mineral density in the spine and upper legs. About four in five participants had osteo porosis or osteopenia (low bone density), indicating that yoga is a good strategy for the 10 million Americans over the age of 50 with osteoporosis and the 44 million with osteopenia.
For Terecita “Ti” Blair, yoga offered a new way of life after a catastrophic automobile accident in 2009. The Denver-based trauma and resilience educator and 2017 SilverSneakers Instruc tor of the Year says, “Virtually any style or type of yoga can appeal and work well for you today, but not tomorrow. Therefore real ‘yoga’ is about adaptability, and yes, those of us with compromised joints, immune systems, pain, disability and illness can absolutely benefit from yoga.”
No matter how many trips we take around the sun, tapping into the life force can give us a new perspective. “I use asana (yoga poses) to examine my thoughts and feelings and to find introspec tion to examine what is happening with myself physically, as well as mentally and emotionally,” says Pipitone. “You become more mindful of what you need to carry with you and what you don’t need to carry with you.”
Those with conditions ranging from cancer to Parkinson’s dis ease can reap benefits from an appropriate yoga environment. In 2021, a meta-analysis of 12 studies published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health found that yoga can increase muscle strength, mobility, balance and lower body flexibility in mature adults. An older study from Temple University showed that Iyengar yoga can improve balance and prevent falls in women over 65 years old.
The Breath of Now
NATURAL STRATEGIES HELP HALT THE PAIN
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by Carrie Jackson H eadaches are one of the most common pain conditions in the world. According to the Cleveland Clinic, up to 75 percent of adults have had a headache in the past year. While symptoms vary in scope and intensity, understanding the un derlying cause of a headache can lead to better treatment outcomes. Most headaches can be treated holistically, and lifestyle modifications can be key to lasting relief. There are more than 150 types of headaches, with the most common being tension, mi graine and cluster. Migraine attacks, which according to the Migraine Research Founda tion affect 12 percent of people in the U.S., are about three times more common in women than in men. Classic symptoms, which can be mild to severe, include throbbing or pound ing pain located in the sinuses, forehead, back of the head or one of the temples Triggers Migraine can be triggered by changes in the weather, fatigue, stress, anxiety, insufficient sleep, dehydration and hormonal changes, according to the American Migraine Foundation. Headaches can also be provoked by certain allergens, such as cigarette smoke, exposure to harsh chemicals in cleaning or beauty products, mold, dust, caffeine, alcohol and fermented foods. According to Alexander Feoktistov, M.D., Ph.D., founder of the Synergy Inte grative Headache Center, in Chicago, many headaches are caused by some form of stress. “Both physical and emotional stress can manifest with headaches. These are often triggered by changes in a routine or schedule, which throws the body’s regula tory rhythm off. Skipping meals, varying
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com32 healing ways Heading Off Headaches
Carrie Jackson is a Chicago-based writer and frequent contributor to Natural Awakenings magazine. Connect at CarrieJacksonWrites.com.
The Mind-Body Connection While not completely understood, mental stress and anxiety can also be a trigger.
Renee also suggests maintaining a regular exercise routine to ward off headaches.
Good Practices
Try Acupuncture or Acupressure Evidence suggests that acupuncture is ef fective in relieving the pain of headaches by changing the flow of energy, increasing blood circulation, releasing endorphins and relaxing muscles. Acupressure and other techniques can be done anywhere, says chiropractor and acupuncturist Michele Renee, director of integrative care at Northwestern Health Sciences University, in Bloomington, Minnesota.
Most headaches can be treated holistically, and lifestyle modifications can be key to lasting relief.
Feoktistov recommends that patients experiencing headaches start with lifestyle modifications and over-the-counter meds such as ibuprofen. “Practice good sleep hygiene, stay hydrated by drinking water and minimizing caffeine, and introduce meditation as a way of focusing on what’s physically and emotionally going on in your body,” he says. “If headaches disrupt your daily routine, are severe or frequent and/or poorly controlled with over-thecounter medications, it’s time to seek help from a headache specialist or other medi cal professional who can work with you on a path to healing.”
“The mind-body connection is fierce,” says Christina P. Kantzavelos, a licensed clinical social worker who specializes in chronic illness and pain at Begin Within Today, in San Diego. “It’s important to keep in mind that pain literally originates in the brain. I use a Constructed Aware ness approach with clients and bring curiosity to the pain they are experienc ing, including headaches. What thoughts and emotions are coming up when they focus on the pain?” she says. “Physical symptoms are often the manifestation or tangible evidence of what is going on in your unconscious mind. Our bodies self-criticismstate.emotionalingdependorstrongerbecomeweaker,onourFear, and invalidating the self can be the root of a headache.”
“The less active someone is, the tighter their muscles are and the more likely they will experience headaches. Make sure to get out for a walk every day, or try running to keep the body and mind moving. Yoga is another great activity as a mindfulness practice that decreases stress and also keeps the body moving to eliminate tension.”
“The best acupressure point for head aches is the soft skin in-between the thumb and pointer finger. Massage it for 20 to 30 seconds at a time to relieve pain or hold it for 10 seconds,” she says. “Mi graines are caused by vascular dilation in the head, so I recommend putting your hands and feet in hot water or taking a bath to stimulate blood flow away from the head to the rest of the body.”
September 2022 33 your sleep patterns and exercising incon sistently can all confuse the body and lead to a headache, varying in intensity from dull and distracting to severe and debili tating,” he explains.
Supplements Help Nutritional supplements can also be helpful, Renee says. “Increasing nutrients such as magnesium, coenzyme Q-10 and riboflavin can help minimize pain. Before stocking up on supplements, be sure to consult with a holistic practitioner to make sure you are making the wisest and safest selections for you. Many nutrients can be found andgreens,late,darkfoodscommoninlikechocoleafyseedsnuts, meat, fatty fish and legumes.”
Don’t Forget Exercise
AshevilleToolLibrary.orgofcourtesyImage and rummage sales. Often aided by online technology, local shared enterprises and secondhand shops are saving people money and reducing the impact of excess consumerism on the environment.
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Neighborly Sharing More than 50 tool-lending libraries ex ist in cities like Denver, Seattle, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., allowing people to “cut down on waste and overbuying, while helping out neighbors,” reports The Washington Post. Typically, they are staffed by volunteers and supported by nominal, income-based annual fees.
“When you need a pressure washer once a year or decide to put in a garden, you don’t really need to own those tools,” says treasurer Stephanie Kane. People are allowed to take on projects they couldn’t otherwise afford, she says, “or they utilize existing skills to build the life they want, or even get a business off the ground.”
Another way that people share resources is through Little Free Libraries—the charming “library on a stick” boxes on neighborhood posts and fences that give away books to passersby. It began in Hud son, Wisconsin, in 2009, when Todd Bol built a tiny model of a one-room school house as a tribute to his deceased mother, an educator and voracious reader. He stocked it with books and put it on a post in his front yard for neighbors and friends. The concept became so popular that he built more and gave them away. Today, more than 150,000 Little Free Libraries are found in communities worldwide.
To combat inflation, which is squeezing family budgets, Americans are increasingly exploring shared resources and eco-friend ly alternatives like thrift stores, flea markets
Starting a tool-lending library begins by connecting with other people in the com munity, using local online groups and coop bulletin boards to attract volunteers and donations, or hosting a drive for people to clean out their basements, Kane says. As memberships grow, additional tools can be purchased and employees can be hired. Web site design and inventory tracking in Asheville and elsewhere is simplified by the “library of things” software from MyTurn.com.
green living Conscious
THE RISE OF SHARING AND RESELLING
T ucked into the Blue Ridge Moun tains of North Carolina, Asheville is a DIY kind of community, attracting artists, musicians, yoginis, homesteaders and other folks looking to live a simpler life. When they garden and undertake home repairs, Ashevillans find it easy to cut expenses: They’ve formed a collective tool shed, the Asheville Tool Library, which offers them the use of 2,000 donated tools ranging from safety goggles to leaf mulchers and circular saws. Consumerism
by Sheila Julson
Whether housed in a local storefront or existing digitally online, resale shops have become big business due to pandemic-inspired decluttering and belt-tightening pursuits. Industry analysts expect thrift store clothing sales to grow globally 11 times faster than fast fashion and to be worth twice as much, at $84 billion, by 2030. Buying secondhand benefits not only shoppers, but also local governments struggling with the expense of operating landfills.
Sheila Julson is a freelance writer and regular contributor to Natural Awakenings magazine.
An influx of online resellers adds even more choices for secondhand items. Although they make shopping more convenient, online sites carry risks: In 2019, the Federal Trade Commission reported more than 173,000 instances of online shopping fraud. When shopping online for secondhand items, experts advise, it’s wise to shop and pay on a trusted website or app, and to avoid using a personal debit card. Be sure there are photos of the product. On sites like Craigslist, eBay and Facebook, check each seller’s rating and thoroughly review all buyers’ comments before making a purchase.
Secondhand Thrifting
September 2022 35
With a little enterprise, savvy and flexibility, mass consumerism can be circumvented by sharing community resources and fre quenting quality secondhand stores. As Kane puts it, “The sharing economy is essentially about leading a less consumerist lifestyle.”
Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore has more than 900 locations nationwide, offering an ever-changing stock of secondhand furni ture, household items and building materials like doors, windows and lighting fixtures. On the other hand, for-profit thrift stores, even if they claim a link to a worthy cause, often donate a much smaller percentage of profits to charity and are reluctant to release financial figures, reports Salon.com.
Online Pluses and Minuses
Hennepin County, Minnesota, which includes Minneapolis, has resolved to send zero waste to its landfills by 2030. Part of this effort includes the Choose to Reuse campaign, which encour ages people to shop secondhand as a way to save money, help the environment, reduce packaging, support local businesses and find uniqueNonprofititems.thrift stores like Goodwill Industries and The Salva tion Army or those run by longtime charities like the American Cancer Society and Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Ani mals have well-established reputations and proven track records.
Many types of food can be dehydrated, in cluding fruit, veggies, meat, fish, herbs and nuts. “It’s easier to say what can’t be dehy drated,” Cancler says. “The general rule is you don’t want to dehydrate food that has a high fat content, such as fatty meats or avocados.” They go rancid quickly during storage. While there are dehydrated, highfat foods sold commercially such as cheese, peanut butter and eggs, these are processed using special equipment and techniques that can’t be copied in a home kitchen.
“People tend to throw those foods away a lot. They buy them and don’t use it all up before they spoil. Dehydrate leftover strawberries for snacks and dehydrate vegetables to use in soups or stews,” Cancler suggests.
Sliced strawberries, chopped onions or celery are good foods for beginners.
by Sheila Julson
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rying food is the oldest known method of food preservation. Middle and Far Eastern cultures have used the sun and wind to dry foods since 12,000 B.C., ac cording to the National Center for Home Food Preservation (NCHFP). Today, the easy availability of food dehydrators offers a convenient way to preserve the fall harvest.
BEST WAYS TO PRESERVE THE HARVEST
When done correctly, dehydrating food is a safe method for maintaining its original state, says Tracey Brigman, NCHFP associate director and University of Georgia clinical assistant professor. “Dehydrators remove the water content in foods, resulting in a low risk of bacteria and spoilage.”
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MadeDehydrationEasy
Julia Skinner, founder and director of Root-Kitchens.com, an online fermentation and food history company, adds that when foods theydehydrated,areshrink and therefore take up less storage space. “They’re great to pack for traveling or for small tomatoes.”asflavors,tratealsoDehydratingkitchens.canconcensomesuchwithdried
conscious eating Food
Almost Anything Can be Dehydrated
Unlike other food preservation methods such as canning or fermenting, dehydrating food does not require lots of special equipment, tools or skill. “Dehydrating food is super easy to do,” says Carole Cancler, the Hawaii-based author of the Complete Dehydrator Cookbook. “Drying food is more forgiving. You can’t make a lot of mistakes. Canning, if you do it wrong, can make everyone in your family sick.” The only caveat, Cancler says, is that food not thoroughly dried will get moldy. In humid environments, dehydrated foods must be kept tightly sealed to keep out moisture and prevent mold from forming.
Getting Started Starter model home food dehy drators, often found at resale stores or rummage sales, can be purchased for about $50. Some have adjustable temperature settings for different kinds of foods.
Peel leather from trays while still warm. Leave the second tray on the dehydrator while peeling the first leather, or re-warm leathers slightly in the dehydrator if they cool too much prior to peeling. Cut into quarters, lay on a piece of clean parchment paper about 1 to 2 inches longer at each end of the leather and roll into fruit leather rolls. When cool, twist the ends of the parchment paper tightly to close. Store fruit rolls in an airtight container for short-term storage, up to about 1 month. Leathers should be stored in a cool, dark dry place. For longer storage up to one year, place tightly wrapped rolls in the freezer.
1 cup clover honey ½ tsp ground cinnamon ¼ tsp ground nutmeg ¼ tsp ground cloves
Source: National Center for Home Food Preservation
Preheat electric dehydrator to 140° F. Wash and peel mangoes, chop roughly into chunks. Purée in blender until smooth. Pass purée through a food mill or sieve; discard any coarse fiber extracted in food mill. Add honey and spices to the purée and mix thoroughly.
Sheila Julson is a freelance writer and regular contributor to Natural Awakenings magazines throughout the country.
String (such as cotton baker’s twine) Rinse off the fresh herbs and pat them dry. Tie the herbs by the stems in small bunches. Hang them upside-down indoors and out of direct sunlight. Depending on the type of herb, they will take several days to a week or longer to dry. When dry, crush herbs with a mortar and pestle or in a clean coffee grinder. Store in glass jars with tight-fitting lids.
Fresh herbs of choice (basil, parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme and dill are all good candidates)
September 2022 37 LiliGraphie/AdobeStock.comyuriygolub/AdobeStock.com
Cancler says that in some cases an oven can be used to dehydrate food, but it isn’t the most cost-effective method. “I don’t recommend continued use of the oven, because depending on where you live and the type or size of food being dried, drying can take anywhere from eight to 36 hours. Running an electric or gas range for that long uses a lot of energy.”
Remove trays from dehydrator when purée is dry, with no sticky areas (about 10 hours— this will be highly dependent on the relative humidity of the drying room). Test for dryness by touching gently in several places near the center of leather; no indentation should be evident.
MANGO LEATHER YIELD: 8 FRUIT ROLLS FROM ABOUT 2, 14-INCHDIAMETER DRYER TRAYS
When purchased new, most food dehydrators include recipeWhenbooklets.usinga dehydrator, Skinner advises, turn it on to the appropriate set ting and lay the food in a single layer on the trays provided, then let the dehydrator run for a few hours. She usually turns food halfway through to prevent sticking.
AIR-DRYING FRESH HERBS
4 cups mango purée (from about 4 large, unripe mangoes)
Lightly spray two fruit roll tray liners from an electric dehydrator with vegetable oil cook ing spray. Spread mango mixture evenly to ¼-inch thickness on the trays. Position fruit roll liners on dryer trays and place in dehydrator. Dry continuously for about 10 hours. Main tain dehydrator air temperature steadily at 140° F. (Monitor the dehydrator air temperature periodically with a thermometer.)
She says that ideal temperatures are 125 to 135 degrees, but most standard ov ens only go as low as 170 degrees, which is too warm to dehydrate fruits or veg etables. “Then you must do wacky things like prop the door open to cool down the oven.” The exception, she says, is jerky: “It must be dried at a higher temperature, and lower-end food dehydrator models don’t get hot Sun-dryingenough.”foodsoutdoors is risky, Brigman cautions, due to varied weather conditions. In addition, insects and air pollution have to be considered. “For safety reasons, consumers should really purchase a food dehydrator. While it may be a high cost when you begin dehydrat ing, if you are a serious food preserver, it will save you money in the long term,” she says.
In My Yellow Balloon, an award-winning children’s picture book, a little boy named Joey comes to love the lemon-colored balloon he receives at a carnival. Tied to his wrist, it isn’t just Joey’s favorite toy, it also becomes a loyal companion through many fun adventures.
The beginning pages of My Yellow Balloon are rendered in full color to illustrate Joey’ s innocence. He has never known pain. After he loses the balloon, the ensuing pages turn black-and-white. “Loss is disorienting. I wanted to give kids that visceral under standing that it feels like the whole world turns upside-down and you just have to sit there helpless and watch your balloon float away—watch your life as you knew it get ting away from you,” Papageorge says.
HOW TO HELP CHILDREN NAVIGATE THROUGH LOSS
According to Papageorge, her book is intended to serve as a roadmap through grief that parents and kids can read together. “It’s important to acknowledge
One day, the string slips off his wrist and Joey’s best friend flies away, catapulting him on a journey through grief.
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com38 healthy kids
Learning to Grieve
WavebreakmediaMicro/AdobeStock.com
by Sandra Yeyati
“The yellow balloon is a metaphor for all kinds of losses—divorce, death, grade school graduation,” explains the book’s author and certified grief worker Tiffany Papageorge. “We think of loss as the death of a person, but loss can also be any change, transition or disappoint ment—big or small. The older we get, the more we shake them off, but some disap pointments can feel big in the moment, especially for little kids.”
A dults often want to shield children from suffering, but that isn’t always possible or advisable. Loss and grief are natural parts of life. Acknowledging and express ing uncomfortable feelings are necessary lessons in being human, and while there is no right way to grieve, adults can provide gentle guideposts. Most importantly, kids need to know that they aren’t alone as they process complicated emotions and inte grate lessons of empathy and acceptance.
“At first, Joey misses his yellow balloon all of the time, then he misses it most of the time, then a lot of the time and then just some of the time, and the color slowly comes back into his world. At the end, when he says, ‘I still miss you, but when ever I see the sun, I’ll feel you with me,’ that’s when the color has shadow, light and range, because when you go through a profound loss and feel your feelings, you can see the world with greater depth and empathy for those around you.”
Expressive writing (journaling using emotion words) promotes regulation of the nervous system, which in turn lowers that stress response and creates physiological relief, Collins notes, adding, “Scientific data suggests that the metacognition involved in identifying feelings and writing feeling-based words in narratives improves immune and liver function, elicits higher quality-of-life scores and improves psychological well-being.”
According to Brittany Collins, an educator, curriculum designer and author of Learning from Loss: A Trauma-Informed Approach to Sup porting Grieving Students, “Grief elicits a fight-or-flight stress response, and chronic exposure to high levels of stress hormones can have deleterious effects on develop ment, especially in adolescents when the prefrontal cortex is still in development. At the same time, neuroplasticity, the ability of the brain to grow, change and adapt at any point in life, is also at play. So, adolescence is a wonderful moment to introduce teens to coping strategies they can use throughout their life, whether that’s mindfulness, different types of emotional regulations, storytelling activi ties, meditation, journaling or yoga.”
When we lose a loved one, we lose what psychologists call hidden regulators—sensory facets that subconsciously make us feel that things are okay in the world. It could be the sound of a parent’s car pulling into the driveway after work or the smell of a loved one’s cologne. Collins says that teachers and parents can counterbalance a destabilizing loss by introducing routine and predictability in children’s schedules, perhaps starting class the same way every day with a five-minute free-write, or scheduling regular visits with a special mentor or relative every Saturday. Kids come to rely on such anchors in times of stress, upheaval and loss. Collins suggests that caring adults shift their mindset away from being a savior, because grief is not something to be fixed or solved, and instead serve as a facilitator of connection. “Think about what form of outlet might resonate with young people and shift the onus away from one adult being the person that says and does the right thing, and instead wrapping a community around them for support,” she says. Helpful resources include mental health profes sionals; youth engagement programs where kids experiencing loss can share and learn from each other; and activities that offer release and friendship, such as theater, dance, sports or music.
Sandra Yeyati, J.D., is a professional writer and editor. Reach her at SandraYeyati@gmail.com.
yganko/AdobeStock.com
Adults should resist the temptation to jump in and assume they know what’s best for a grieving child, Collins coun sels. “Ask open-ended questions like, ‘What would be most helpful to you in this moment?’ or, ‘What makes you feel calm or connected?’ Find ways to inspire introspection and reflection without telling young people that we know the answer.” Making space to remember a lost loved one or to honor something we’ve lost can be healing for both kids and adults. Collins sug gests that we ask kids how they’d like to memo rialize a loss, preferably in community. Maybe they want to plant a tree in honor of someone’s memory or create a fundraiser for a cause that the loved one cared about. Ultimately, the greatest gift we can give grieving children is our presence. According to Collins, one of the best predictors of adjustment is a psychological concept called “perceived sup port availability.” Letting young people know that we’re think ing about them and that we’re there if and when they need us can go a long way.
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September 2022 39 and validate the pain a child is experiencing,” she says. “When a toddler throws a tantrum at the store, instead of ignoring them or telling them to stop it, say ‘I know you’re disap pointed and sad. I understand that; it doesn’t feel good. I’m here with you.’ Something magical happens when anyone at any age is acknowledged and understood.”
natural pet
TOP SUPPLEMENTS FOR DOGS AND CATS
Vitamins, Minerals and Joint Support
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com40
T
FS-Stock/AdobeStock.com
Enzymes and Probiotics
To provide immune and antioxidant sup port, and to bolster digestion, skin and coat health and overall wellness, a basic supple ment should contain vitamins and miner als as well as small amounts of glucosamine and chondroitin for joint support.
by Shawn Messonnier
Healthier Pets
Digestive enzymes are used in supplemen tal form to improve or increase digestion and nutrient absorption. They can be de rived from pancreatic, plant or microbial sources such as bacteria or fungi. Enzymes are important especially when the animal’s digestive processes become exhausted or inefficient, such as during periods of stress or such gastrointestinal diseases as acute gastroenteritis, pancreatitis or either liver or inflammatory bowel disease. Enzymes may also be helpful for cancer, allergies andProbioticsarthritis. are living, healthy bacteria and yeasts, many of which are a part of a dog’s or cat’s microbiome. They can assist with healing in a variety of ways, including producing healthy fatty acids; decreasing the attachment of harmful bacteria and yeasts to the intestinal walls; increasing antibody production; support ing immunity; restoring healthy GI flora; and reducing inflammation. As a result, probiotics are useful for treating dogs and cats with a variety of medical problems, including leaky gut syndrome, acute non-specific gastroenteri tis, antibiotic or other medication-induced diarrhea, allergies, stress, obesity, neuro degenerative disorders, high cholesterol
he market for pet products is awash with supplements, so it’s not surprising that it can be challenging to figure out what a dog or cat really needs. The foundation of any healthcare program for dogs and cats, regardless of age and breed, is a healthy diet, well-chosen and appropriate supplements, minimal vaccines and medications, and veterinary check-ups. Basic helpful additions to a pet diet include a vitamin-mineral product, an enzyme and probiotic combination, and a fatty acid. For older animals, a choline supplement may delay the onset of cognitive disorder. Any tweaking of diet and supplements should follow regular testing that may diagnose a disease in its early stages. Here’s an overview of the top basic supplements every dog or cat should have.
September 2022 41
Choline For dogs and cats 5 years old and up, a choline (phosphatidylcholine) supplement ad dresses aging changes that affect the brain and can lead to cognitive disorder. Choline is a component of several major phospholipids that are critical for normal cell membrane structure and function. The body uses it to maintain water balance; to control cell growth and gene expression; as a component of lung surfactant; and most importantly, to produce the major nerve transmitter acetylcholine. It may reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease by lowering homocysteine levels.
Choline is used to treat high cholesterol, improve memory and protect the liver. It may prevent fatty liver syndrome (especially in diabetics), help prevent or treat cognitive dis order and support liver function. It may reduce insulin requirements in diabetics and can reduce seizure Supplementsfrequency.otherthan these can be used as needed, based on the results of diagnostic testing and regular veterinary health exams. Under the guidance of a holistic or integrative veterinarian, supplements can add to a dog’s or cat’s health and longevity.
Fatty Acids
Shhiver me timbers! A ball playing aficionado, 10-year-old Roco, a weiner dog living in St. Pete, shares his human Samantha with bros Snoopy and Kouta, a beagle and a pit. Diversity rules! Email your favorite pet picture to Debbey at dwilson@natampa.com for inclusion in the magazine. levels, inflammatory and irritable bowel disorders, and GI and parasite infestations. Pro biotics may also be helpful for middle-aged and older dogs and cats, because GI microbial diversity diminishes with aging.
A good fatty acid fish oil supplement is also important. There are many brands on the market; some offer the flexibility of being administered either as a liquid (pump) or gel capsule. Phytoplankton, which serves as a food source for fish, is the source of the ac tive ingredients docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA). Fish oil tends to be derived from cold-water fish rich in EPA and DHA such as wild (not farmed) salmon, mackerel, sardines and herring. This is beneficial for the treatment of heart disease and may reduce atherosclerosis, thrombosis (blood clots), coronary heart disease, arrhythmias, heart failure, sudden car diac death and stroke. Due to its anti-inflammatory effects, fish oil is often used for dogs and cats for the treatment of skin problems, arthritis and cancer, along with heart, inflam matory bowel, autoimmune and kidney diseases. It may reduce the side effects of chemo therapy and radiation therapy in cancer patients, decrease cancer growth and metastasis, and reduce wasting in undernourished animals.
Shawn Messonnier, DVM, owner of Paws & Claws Animal Hospital and Holistic Pet Center, in Plano, Texas, is the author of several books on veterinary medicine.
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com42 calendar of events ONGOING EVENTS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 Yoga Session: Hatha Yoga with a Therapist –6:30-7:30ish pm. Join Elizabeth Rice, LCSW ACE CFI, for a yoga session that will not only strengthen your mind-body connection, but will help you to get in deeper touch with your inner calm. Space is limited, reserve now. $15/per session. 6251 Park Blvd., Ste. 9, Pinellas Park. 727-346-5875.
Yoga Session: Hatha Yoga with a Therapist –6:30-7:30ish pm. Join Elizabeth Rice, LCSW ACE CFI, for a yoga session that will not only strengthen your mind-body connection, but will help you to get in deeper touch with your inner calm. Space is limited, reserve now. $15/per session. 6251 Park Blvd., Ste. 9, Pinellas Park. 727-346-5875.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 Basic Hypnosis 2-Day Training 10am-3pm, Sept. 10-11. Online or Live (Oldsmar). No prior training needed. Patricia V. Scott, Certified Master Trainer with 30 years’ experience, teaches a brief history of hypnosis and simple techniques with interactive practice that you can use immediately for yourself and others. Certificate of Completion, scripts & handouts. $55 (UPHI Member); $75 (Non-Member). 727-943-5003. UPHypnosis.com.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17
WEDNESDAY A Course in Miracles Study Group – 10am. Unity Palm Harbor, 1960 Tampa Rd., Palm Harbor, 727784 7911, UnityOfPalmHarbor.org Yoga Session: Hatha Yoga with a Therapist –6:30-7:30ish pm. Join Elizabeth Rice, LCSW ACE CFI, for a yoga session that will not only strengthen your mind-body connection, but will help you to get in deeper touch with your inner calm. Space is limited, reserve now. $15/per session. 6251 Park Blvd., Ste. 9, Pinellas Park. 727-346-5875. Gong Meditation and Sound Journey – 7pm. (2nd Weds. monthly) Facilitated by Gregg Akin, Sound Healer. Unity Palm Harbor, 1960 Tampa Rd., Palm Harbor, 727-784 7911, UnityOfPalmHarbor.org
Hypnosis International Certification Begins 10am-3pm Online (Zoom) or Live (Oldsmar). Receive 2 certifications: International Association of Counselors & Therapists and UP Hypnosis Institute, with Patricia V. Scott, PhD, Certified Master Trainer. Basic & advanced techniques, medical uses, regres sion, parts-integration, time-line, smoking, weight/ diet, NLP & more. Tuition: $3395 or $3095 (UPHI Member). 727-943-5003. UPHypnosis.com.
Yoga Session: Hatha Yoga with a Therapist –6:30-7:30ish pm. Join Elizabeth Rice, LCSW ACE CFI, for a yoga session that will not only strengthen your mind-body connection, but will help you to get in deeper touch with your inner calm. Space is limited, reserve now. $15/per session. 6251 Park Blvd., Ste. 9, Pinellas Park. 727-346-5875.
THURSDAY Meditation for Beginners – 6:30-8pm. A true beginner’s class. Never meditated? Tried to medi tate, only to feel frustrated? Attend all 6 classes, do your at-home practice and we guarantee you will meditate or your money-back. $10 per class or $50 in advance for the entire 6-week program. Sacred Path Spiritual Center, 9011 Park Blvd. N, Ste. 207, Seminole, 727-798-3363 or 727-289-6599.
NLP 2-Day Training On-Line or Live – 11am-4pm, Sept. 17 & 18. No prerequisite. Patricia V. Scott, PhD, Certified Master Trainer teaches fun, interactive class on Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) principles, presuppositions & techniques for personal or pro fessional use. Online or Live (Oldsmar). Register by 9/7: $115 ($85 UPHI Member); After 9/7: $135 ($115 Member). Repeat $55. 10 CEUs-Hypnotists/ NLP Practitioners. 727-943-5003. UPHypnosis.com.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 Reiki Master Training Series Begins – 5pm. Join Revs. Michele & Star to become a Reiki Master through a series of 3-hour workshops. The Violet Butterfly Metaphysical Healing Center, 35154 US Highway 19 North, Palm Harbor. Call for details 727-386-4535. TheVioletButterflymhc.com MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 Free Seminar: The Medicine in Your Mind! – 5:30-7pm. Certified Master Trainer, Patricia V. Scott, PhD, with 30+ years’ experience as a Medical Hypnotherapist, NLP Master Practitioner and Trainer, shares her experience using hypno-anesthesia for surgery, research & science, explaining how the mind profoundly affects health and healing. Holistic Center for Vibrant Health, Oldsmar. RSVP 727-943-5003, UPHypnosis@outlook.com, UPHypnosis.com.
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TUESDAY Meditation Practice & Study Group – 6:30-8pm. Tuesdays & Sundays. For beginners & experi enced. Join Dr. Castellani in his integral awareness approach to effortless meditation, melding methods of Mantra, Mindfulness & Core-consciousness Awareness. $5/class. 809 S. Hillcrest Ave., Clear water. Info 716-816-5464.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 NLP 2-Day Training Early Registration Ends Today – 11am-4pm, Sept. 17-18. Online or Live (Oldsmar). No prerequisite. Patricia V. Scott, PhD, Certified Master Trainer teaches fun, interactive class on Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) prin ciples, presuppositions & techniques for personal or professional use. Register by 9/7: $115 ($85 UPHI Member); After 9/7: $135 ($115 Member). Repeat $55. 10 CEUs-Hypnotists/NLP Practitioners. 727943-5003. UPHypnosis.com. Yoga Session: Hatha Yoga with a Therapist –6:30-7:30ish pm. Join Elizabeth Rice, LCSW ACE CFI, for a yoga session that will not only strengthen your mind-body connection, but will help you to get in deeper touch with your inner calm. Space is limited, reserve now. $15/per session. 6251 Park Blvd., Ste. 9, Pinellas Park. 727-346-5875.
Free Hypnosis-NLP Webinar: Forming the Hap piness Habit – 7:30-8:30pm. Interactive webinar with Certified Master Trainer Patricia V. Scott, PhD. With 30+ years of experience as a Medical Hypno therapist & NLP Master Practitioner and Trainer, Patti shares practical, easy to use techniques with Q&A. (Usually 3rd Weds. monthly w/various topics) Register by 5pm for log-in details: UPHypnosis@ outlook.com, UPHypnosis.com.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28
Tell the Story Your Soul Wants You to Write –6-7pm. Join Dr. Danielle as she gives tips and techniques for writing your book, blog or personal essay, within a loving community setting. $40. The Violet Butterfly, 35154 US Highway 19 North, Palm Harbor. 727-386-4535. TheVioletButterflymhc.com
SUNDAY Sunday Celebration Services – 11am. Unity Palm Harbor is building a beautiful community. Join in for uplifting, heart-centered celebration every Sunday. 1960 Tampa Rd., Palm Harbor, 727-784 7911, UnityOfPalmHarbor.org Meditation Practice & Study Group – 6:30-8pm. Tuesdays & Sundays. For beginners & experi enced. Join Dr. Castellani in his integral awareness approach to effortless meditation, melding methods of Mantra, Mindfulness & Core-consciousness Awareness. $5/class. 809 S. Hillcrest Ave., Clear water. Info 716-816-5464.
Longtime users say they haven’t been sick in years. They have less stress, less medical costs, and more time to enjoyCustomerslife. report using copper against:Thehandle is curved and textured to increase contact. Copper can kill germs picked up on fingers and hands after you touch things other people have touched.
Copper can stop a virus before it starts
Soon hundreds of people had tried it. 99% said copper worked if they used it right away at the first sign of germs, like a tickle in the nose or a scratchy throat.
“It saved me last holidays. The kids all got sick, but not me.” “I am shocked! My sinus cleared, no more headache, no more congestion.”
“The antimicrobial activity of copper is well established.” National Institutes of Health.Scientists say copper’s high conductance disrupts the electrical balance in a microbe cell and destroys it in recommended hospitals use copper for touch surfaces like faucets and doorknobs. This cut the spread of MRSA and other illnesses by over half, and saved lives. The strong scientific evidence gave inventor Doug Cornell an idea. He made a smooth copper probe with a tip to fit in the bottom of the nostril, where viruses collect. When he felt a tickle in his nose like a cold about to start, he rubbed the copper gently in his nose for worked!”seconds.60“It
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The EPA says copper works just as well when tarnished. Dr. Bill Keevil led one of the science teams. He placed millions of viruses on a copper surface. “They started to die literally as soon as they touched it.”
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Hundreds of studies confirm copper kills viruses and bacteria almost instantly just by touch. That’s why ancient Greeks and Egyptians used copper to purify water and heal wounds. They didn’t know about viruses and bacteria, but now we do.
Tampa Bay Edition NATampa.com44 Connecting you to the leaders in natural healthcare and green living in our community. community resource guide ACUPUNCTURE ACUPUNCTURE & ORIENTAL MEDICINE Chris Dziubinski, DOM, AP, L. Ac 12952 N Dale Mabry Highway, Tampa 813-935-CARE MindBodySpiritCare.com(2273) Florida Board Certified Acupuncture Physician offering acupuncture therapies for the whole family. Established, comfortable, caring and professional integrative medicine clinics in South & North Tampa. Innetwork with most medical insurances; accept payments from HRA, HSA and FSA. NATURAL MED THERAPIES Machelle Perkins, D.O.M. 7600 Bryan Dairy Rd # C, Largo NaturalMedTherapies.com727-541-2211 National & state board certified with 15+ years experience in Acupuncture, Homeopathy, Naturopathy, Cold Laser & more. Bio-Puncture and Mesotherapy to treat pain, ADHD, anxiety, depression. Lab testing, most insurances. Free Nutritional Consultation. 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NATampa.comTampa Bay Edition46 Place your business listing here Call 727-865-9339 for more information REFLEXOLOGY REED ‘NAHAM’ MYLES Certified Reflexologist and LMT 727-543-3048 by appointment Clearwater, MA0028171 Whether you need deep therapy, a tuneup or just a relaxing treatment, I can help you. Just call me. SPIRITUAL INTUITIVE LISA MILIARESIS Extreme 2Communicate.netLisa@2Communicate.net727-239-0656Communication Lisa offers private individual and group channeling sessions, as well as private counseling sessions for those looking for direction in developing their own personal practice. UNIVERSOULLIGHT CONSULTING Rev. Amanda Segovia, Reiki Master Certified SRT Personal Consultant UniverSoulLight@gmail.comUniverSoulLight.com Private sessions using various heal ing, clearing & spiritual modalities. Akashic Records, Intuitive Medium, Astrologer, Personalized Astrology Reports, Numerologist, Meditation, Chakra-Balancing, Tarot/Oracles, Candles, EOL Transition, Teacher/ Mentor & more. THERMOGRAPHY GREENPOINT THERMOGRAPHY John D. Bartone MD Thomas Hudson MD 7901 4th Street North, Suite 316 St. Petersburg, FL 33702 GreenPointThermography.com727-576-0100 The only physician owned and operated thermography practice in Tampa Bay – serving Pinellas, Hillsborough, and Pasco counties. Accredited by the American College of Clinical Thermology. See ad page 26. FLORIDA MEDICAL THERMOGRAPHY June Drennon, CCT 2008 FloridaMedicalThermography.com727-729-2711FloridaMedicalThermography.comJuneDrennon@ Certified Clinical Thermographer 2008. Mindful Wellness with Ther mography! Knowledge is power: Know your risk factors to make corrections and avoid developing pathology. Call for location conve nient for you. See ad page 21. UNITY CHURCH REV. TRACEY QUILLEN, SENIOR MINISTER 1960 Tampa Road Palm Harbor, FL 34683 UnityOfPalmHarbor.org727-784-7911 Unity is a practical, progressive approach to a Spiritual Based Life. Join us Sunday mornings live at 11am or online. See ad page 35. VETERINARIAN HEALTHY PAWSIBILITIES NATURAL PET WELLNESS CENTER Dr. Cathy Alinovi, DVM 628 Cleveland St., #17, Clearwater HealthyPawsibilities.com727-510-3665 Offering only holistic health op tions. Nutrition, herbal support, body balancing, canine fitness, reiki and more. See ad page 41. MEDICINE RIVER ANIMAL HOSPITAL Shawna L. Green, DVM 13495 Gulf Boulevard Madeira MedicineRiverAnimalHospital.com727-299-9029Beach Compassionate health care catered toward the needs of your pet offering preventative medicine, surgery, dentistry, senior wellness, and more. See ad page 41. CALENDAR Event Listings For more information: email Debbey dwilson@natampa.comat $25 $50 SUNDAY, JULY 24 Hypnosis Training (Live or Online) 10am-4pm. Part of Certification program with Patricia V. Scott, PhD, UP Hypnosis Institute, open to hypnotists for CEUs (prior training required). Basic & Advanced techniques. Approved: International Association of Counselors & Therapists. Single Day: $45/UPHI, IACT, IMDHA or HEA Member; $55/Non-Member. Two Days: $75/Member; $95/Non-Member. Includes materials & scripts. 727-943-5003. UPHypnosis.com. mark your calendar Indian Rocks GreenfestBeach Enjoy this eco-friendly family event in its 14th year, including Earth-con scious businesses, services, vendors, artisans and nonprofits. Healthy food, live music, kids events. FREE March 26 • 10am-5pm. 24th Ave. & 1st St., Indian Rocks Beach. Info, irbGreenfest.com examples example TUESDAY Meditation Practice & Study Group – 6:30-8pm. Tuesdays & Sundays. For beginners & experi enced. Join Dr. Castellani in his integral awareness approach to effortless meditation, melding methods of Mantra, Mindfulness & Core-consciousness Awareness. $5/class. 809 S. Hillcrest Ave., Clear water. Info 716-816-5464.
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