
5 minute read
Calling All Seniors
from June 15, 2023
This week, I’m in Boston visiting my baby girl at Tuft’s Physicians Associate School with my oldest daughter and her two littles. It is times like this that I am reminded of how grateful I am for the life I have led that allows me to eke every bit of joy possible at this phase of being.
Turning 60 this past spring, I am now taking full advantage of senior discounts offered without hesitation. No matter your age, there are repercussions to our behaviors, and while in our senior years we might consider “giving in” to our current status of health and ability, now is your time, and it is never too late to get healthy.
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As a young wife, mom, and business owner, life was ever-changing and exciting. As we grew to a family of six, life was crazy and wonderful, and for years my hubby and I were just holding onto the roller coaster of life.
Both triumphs and tragedies marked our life path, but while I understand there are some circumstances that are beyond our control, most of our choices are within our control and will affect our futures.
Most focus on college funds, retirement accounts, and planning their next vacation, while too many ignore lifestyle behaviors that show up right about when that senior discount comes into effect.
I want to help you change your focus,
Letter to The Editor
RESPONSE TO PIER BOWL BRAWL
CRAIG KESHISHIAN , San Clemente
My late uncle is a Marine. He fought on Okinawa in World War II. Not many survived to tell that tale. My late father is a Reserve Marine, ready to drop out of college at a moment’s notice to pick up arms in Korea and fight for freedom.
Just as I was leaving the Reagan White House as a young staffer to start law school, 241 Marines were blown up in their barracks in Beirut as they slept; they were there trying to keep the peace in war-torn Lebanon.
I don’t know a lot. But I do know we failed those kids who beat those Marines (in San Clemente recently). Our public schools failed them, by forsaking lessons on valor, service and civics. About heroic deeds that saved
Food For Thought
BY GINA COUSINEAU
but this requires learning how to advocate for yourself starting with your primary care provider and beyond. To help you learn how to begin a different kind of relationship with your health care providers, I want to offer a few thoughts on how and why you might consider this self-advocacy.
Preventive Care Screening services have been established to prevent illnesses, diseases and other health issues, and/ or allow early diagnoses, which can save lives. These services are typically free when you get your care from an in-network provider, and the benefits of these screenings are literally life-saving.
A quick internet search will provide many options; check out healthcare.gov, cdc.gov, and hhs.gov, to name a few. There are guidelines based on gender and age, along with other conditions that might warrant earlier screening, but your provider can help guide you.
This list of screenings should be taken with you to your primary care provider, and checked off one by one at your next annual exam to make sure you are taking full advantage of these services.
While my primary role is a nutritionist who helps clients get into a healthy a nation and, indeed, the world. Places like Saratoga, Antietam, the Argonne, and the Bulge.
Instead of these teachings, our public schools are more concerned about social reengineering and “bullying.” Well, they failed on that latter score, for sure.
Our local leadership failed them. Preserving law, order and imposing respect for authority is leadership’s prime directive. Some leaders wanted to help our exceptional but overextended sheriffs with supplemental non-lethal security to monitor our homeless crisis, ironically the argument the Left presses when they screech for defunding police.
This would free up deputies to focus on what they do best: protecting us from criminals. I say get more deputies and get more non-lethal security folks. Can’t afford it? Cut the budget from somewhere else. Maybe someone other than that heroic lady could have stopped the melee before it started.
And, finally, our families failed them. When I grew up here and went to school eating pattern, paired with some basic exercise, helping them achieve both weight and health goals that change their life trajectory, my skill set has grown over the years as my patient population gets tangled in the web of confusion that is our health care system.
Too many people tell me they “love” their providers, but after extensive conversations with them, many aren’t getting the care needed to prevent, halt and reverse disease processes, and that is when my role grows as a “patient advocate.”
I want to encourage you to partner with your health care providers, participating in “shared decision making,” not just assuming they have your best interest at heart.
With the lack of time allotted to each patient, you must take the reins and ask questions that can literally increase your years of longevity and decrease your years of disability. SC here, this town was a true melting pot of whites and Latinos, straight, gay, whatever. And we all got along just fine. None of us had any real money, let alone a car or an e-bike. There was respect for authority thanks to a scary vice principal who did one-armed pull-ups. He is a Marine, too. There was mischief, there was reefer, but nothing like the altercation at the Pier Bowl.
Gina Cousineau, aka Mama G, is your local nutrition expert, chef, and fitness professional, with her BS in Nutrition and MS in functional and integrative nutrition. She uses a food-as-medicine approach for weight loss to health gain, and everything in between. Follow her on social media @ mamagslifestyle, and check out her website mamagslifestyle.com to learn more about her programs and freebies offered throughout the year.
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San Clemente Times, Vol. 18, Issue 24. The SC Times (sanclementetimes.com ) is published weekly by Picket Fence Media, publishers of the Dana Point Times (danapointtimes.com) and The Capistrano Dispatch (thecapistranodispatch.com).
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