E E FR
HEALTHY
LIVING
HEALTHY
Homebody Workouts Getting Fit
PLANET
HAPPY FOODS Feel-Good Eating Tips
Without a Gym
FAMILY TRAVELING BRAIN STORIES IN PLACE BOOSTERS
Help Kids Cope During Tough Times
Finding Adventure Close to Home
Optimizing Cranial Blood Flow
June 2020 | Broward County, Florida | NaBroward.com
Contents 12
12 HOMEBODY WORKOUTS
Getting Fit Without a Gym
13 MOVE WELL.
13
EAT WELL. BE WELL.
14 FAMILY STORIES
Help Kids Cope During Tough Times
16 TRANSFORMATIVE STAYCATIONS
Finding Respite and Adventure Close To Home
19
19 EVERYDAY ADVENTURES
20
Taking to Vans & RVs for Life on the Road
20 FEEDING HAPPINESS Lift Your Mood with Feel-Good Foods
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22 DAVID HAMILTON
on Kindness in the Pandemic Age
22 22
23 POWER UP YOUR BRAIN
Six Ways to Boost Blood Flow
DEPARTMENTS 6 news briefs 7 health briefs 10 global briefs 12 fit body 14 healthy kids 19 green living 20 conscious eating
22 wise words 23 healing ways 25 ask the
therapist 26 calendar 27 classifieds 28 community resource guide
Natural Awakenings is a family of nearly 70 healthy living magazines celebrating 26 years of providing the communities we serve with the tools and resources we all need to lead healthier lives on a healthy planet.
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1st demonstrated by Georges Lakhovsky and Nikola Tesla. Adapted by Dr Dino Tomic.
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Weak, unhealthy aura
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The cells of an organism vibrate at certain natural frequencies. If these vibrations are strong, such as in young people, the cells will better defend against harmful external and internal agents, and then the person is healthier, more vibrant, more present. PolarAid offers an easy and quick way to increase the flow of vital energy into the body, thereby enhancing cell vibration and strengthening and supporting the immune system. With all recommended hygiene and protection protocols in place, PolarAid elevates your aura to a real protective shield!” Dr. Tomic “Over the years I gifted many people with the disc and my sister in particular felt the effects in a very big way. Because she is so sensitive to EMF’s she had an EMF expert visit her home to create a calm and safe environment. She has a very difficult time going to malls since they are riddled with EMF’s. After about one hour she leaves the mall with her brain feeling totally scrambled. She also has difficulty traveling. The disc has literally been life changing. She does not leave her home without it and finds it protects her from outside forces. I also gifted my naturopath with a disc and he carries it in his pocket all the times. He happens to be an EMF expert and his sophisticated testing equipment indicates it is one of the most powerful tools for EMF protection. He recommends all of his patients purchase a disc and keep it close at all times. With the onslaught of G5 installations we will need protection more than ever. Thanks so much for this powerful tool.” (R.T., Phoenix, AZ)
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letter from the publisher
B
esides the flowering plants blooming, we’re seeing a few of the businesses that were closed due to the pandemic beginning to bloom again too. That’s great news and it also means that more people are venturing out into the neighborhoods. It’s a changed visual landscape with reminders that a face mask is required for entry into so many places. Queues form outside with social distancing reminders of either lines or circles marking the “spot” in which one may stand while waiting for the person in front to advance. There may even be an employee directing flow. We hear there are even “one-way arrows” 2020 on theEDITORIAL floor and/or CALENDAR other signage, again, to remind us to kindly maintain ANNUAL GUIDE social distancing and make it easier for us to shop safely. It’s all about the PROFILES , safety JAN ANNUAL Age-Defying Habits and respect for one another and spatial Plus: Healthy Immune System distancing is honoring that personal Health responsibility. FEB Cardiovascular Plus: Regenerative Medicine If you’re reading the emailed HEALTHY LIVING
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PLANT-BASED NUTRITION ISSUE
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H E A L T H Y Pon L A Na E T Plant-Based Diet Thriving Plus: CBD
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ANNUAL PROFILES , JAN Beyond Factory Farming 2020Age-Defying EDITORIAL CALENDAR Habits JUL Plus: Gut Health Plus: Healthy Immune System
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SELF-EMPOWERMENT ISSUE Plus: Healthy Immune System PLANT-BASED NUTRITION ISSUE
SEP FEB MAR
Emotional Cardiovascular Health Thriving on aWell-Being Plant-Based Diet Plus:CBD Adaptive Yoga Plus: Regenerative Medicine Plus:
Stress Management PLANT-BASED NUTRITION ISSUE Grassroots Climate Crisis Strategies
OCT Plus: APR Plus:Healthy Joint Health Home Thriving on a Plant-Based Diet MAR Plus: CBDCHALLENGE ISSUE THE DIABETES WOMEN’S WELLNESS ISSUE
Personalized Diabetes Grassroots Climate CrisisStrategies Strategies Breakthroughs NOV Autoimmune APR MAY Plus:Healthy Skin Care Plus: Protein &Home Collagen Connection Creating Community & Connection WOMEN’S WELLNESS ISSUE DEC Inspired Lifestyle Travel Plus: Spending Locally JUN Plus: Brain Health Breakthroughs MAYINAutoimmune Plus: Protein &ISSUE... Collagen Connection EVERY
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JUN JUL
communications from your local government or getting your information in another form, you may have come across a similar concept of what is being used inside buildings to reinforce a new standard of participating while shopping or moving from one place to another. Some streets are closing down to better allow pedestrians to keep their distance from one another while in the area. Can you imagine more walking spaces and green spaces expanding out of this? We can look at the bright side of social distancing and opportunities for more permanent changes that have come from this difficult time. That sounds like a good thing too. This month’s edition has a focus on Transformative Staycations, including informative ideas for respites and finding adventure closer to home. Also included in this article found on page 16 are some traveling resources and tips for surfing from the comfort of your couch. Our Florida Keys have reopened, in part, for tourists. Our Broward beaches have opened, however, we’ll have to wait a while longer to be allowed to set up a beach chair for sunbathing or take our picnic lunch, plus the hours are limited from sunrise to sunset. Nonetheless, it’s a welcomed start by those that enjoy the beach. We asked our distribution locations and our advertisers to submit information about changes in their business; to that end, we have placed as many local briefs and articles as we can. We welcome news NaBroward.com
of how the wellness community is being of service. Our distribution department has expanded delivery to include some of the Walgreens and CVS Pharmacies in the area, and this brings in a new audience. This month, the Conscious Eating Department focuses on Sweet Healthy Snacks (page 20) to lift the moods for both those who love spending time creating them as well as those who enjoy eating them. Even without all the exact ingredients in your pantry, many of these goodies can be modified for what you have on-hand. Such a tasty and healthy way to enjoy the creative process! How important is empathy? Within our Wise Words department article with David Hamilton, we may connect the importance of empathy with the current pandemic. Empathy emanates from actual experiences, overcoming difficulties and obstacles, in grace, with dignity. Owning and embracing our own personal challenges can lead to helping others through a rough time. Reading this article may help to expand our hope and best wishes for our collective future. See page 22. May your June be amazing! Stay well.
Bloom as if you want to make the whole world beautiful. ~Debasish Mridha
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news briefs
Recalibration Session Offered Via Phone
W
ith the wondrous light activations to raise humanity’s awareness, we are now forced to go inward, stopping all normal/habitual activity. Know that we are safe. Many of us incarnated into this lifetime specifically to shift this world of mind/ego. In a recent meditation, Carole Aileo Ha’la Ramsay was awakened to new guides calling themselves the Venusians 44 (44 beings of Light, inhabitants of the planet Venus) who have been waiting for humanity to raise its frequency, to purify and surrender in order to enable a telepathic contact. There was a mutual understanding that they work through her on other humans who are ready to move into higher states of consciousness. This technique is similar to and surpasses the results of Clear the Path sessions (info at GoddessTouch.net). Ramsay connects with the client via phone (connecting with the breath, surrendering to Higher Self), allowing guides to work together. Session lasts 30 to 60 minutes. Prerequisite is to hydrate well four hours prior to session and 24 hours afterwards, being extra gentle with one’s self post-session 24 to 48 hours. Cost: $44. Locations: Remote. Other multi-dimensional services are offered in Broward County at Jade Wellness and Lisa’s Healing Center and some remotely. For more information and appointment, call 954-655-5490.
HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET
Spiritual Vaccine of Hope BROWARD CO, FL EDITION
M
aintaining a positive outlook can sometimes feel daunting, no matter who you are. Pulling ourselves out of the rabbit hole of fear, as it relates to our particular set of circumstances— mental and emotional health, family, work and the ability to provide—may be challenging. Finding hope in this time of apparent darkness may just be the spiritual medicine needed. The Darshan Center for Spiritual Evolution at A Healing Space will resume their Sunday evening services at 6:30 p.m., starting June 7. Service will take place outdoors, in the rear of their location at 840 East Oakland Park Boulevard, Suite 102, Fort Lauderdale. All attending are asked to honor safety precautions implemented, including strictly adhering to the 6-foot minimum social distancing practice, facial coverings, and bringing their own lawn chairs. For more information, contact Rev. Dr. Grace Telesco, 917-579-3750 or RevDrGTelesco@gmail.com. “Stay safe, stay positive and let’s fight our despair with the spiritual vaccine of hope!” See ad page 30.
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Broward County, Florida edition
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Yello’s Vegan Café
health briefs
Y
ello Creative Arts and Events Center is a dynamic, creative arts facility. Yello features a vegan café offering gourmet, plant-based dishes. Allow their Executive Chef Alan Nippert to introduce you to vegan cuisine that will take your taste buds on a journey they’ll never forget. Everything they make is 100 percent plant-based so grab a plate and get ready to say “Yum!” Yello offers classes in ballet, jazz, tap, hip hop, belly dance, ballroom and more. The eco-friendly facility offers two dance studios, a common area with online exploration terminals and a retail cooler that offers plant-based foods, desserts and beverages. Yello is open for lunch from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., TuesdayFriday, and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday. Dine-in as well as contactless curbside pick-up and delivery are available. Location: 2495 E. Commercial Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, 954-519-3258. Visit YelloFL.com/vegan-foods-cafe for more information, Facebook.com/yellofl and Instagram @yellofl.
Green Up Cities to Reduce Violent Crime
The Art of Ageless Beauty
A
t Anti-Aging Center of Boca, they believe in staying ageless. Using a technology that is exclusive to their facility, they eliminate years from body and face while tightening, detoxing and rejuvenating the skin. Procedures are painless with no side-effects or downtime, and results are immediate and permanent. In just one treatment, an average person can lose 2 to 6 inches of fat while getting tighter and more youthful skin, and the center guarantees that if there is not a loss of at least 2 inches, there will be no charge. For a free consultation, call 561-654-0177. For more information, visit AntiAgingCenterOfBoca.com. See ad page 28.
Well-designed and maintained green spaces in cities such as parks, community gardens and tree-lined streets lower the rate of violent crimes, make communities safer and keep people healthier, concluded Cornell University and University of Virginia researchers that conducted a meta-study of 45 papers studying the links between greenery and crime. In particular, more green spaces, such as community gardens converted from vacant lots, decrease gun violence, six studies found. But poorly designed green space with inadequate maintenance, bad lighting and excessive nearby traffic can help crime take root and spread.
• Safe Removal of Amalgam Fillings following IAOMT Protocol • Mercury, Fluoride, Latex-free office • Restorative/Aesthetic Dentistry • All Porcelain Crown and Bridges • Ceramic Dental Implants • Bone & Tissue Grafting • Oral & IV Sedation
• TMJ/TMD Disorders • Natural Facial Rejuvenation using PRGF and Solid Filler Threadlift • Oral Surgery • Ozone Therapy
June 2020
7
health briefs
Consume Olive Oil to Fight Off Aging In what might be good news for teetotalers, researchers at the University of Minnesota found that it’s not the resveratrol in red wine that increases the life span of cells of those following the Mediterranean Diet, but the fat in olive oil that activates the critical pathway which prevents age-related diseases. “This pathway has been linked to almost all of [aging diseases]. It’s the roots,” says Doug Mashek, Ph.D., a professor in the departments of medicine and biochemistry, molecular biology and biophysics. His studies suggest that the benefits of olive oil are most pronounced when coupled with fasting, limiting caloric intake and exercising. “We found that the way this fat works is it first has to get stored in microscopic things called lipid droplets, which is how our cells store fat. And then, when the fat is broken down during exercising or fasting, for example, is when the signaling and beneficial effects are realized,” Mashek explains. 8
Broward County, Florida edition
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Eat a Plant-Based Diet to Lessen Stroke Risk People that eat a vegetarian diet rich in nuts, vegetables and soy may have a lower risk of stroke than others with diets that include meat and fish, concluded a new study in the journal Neurology. Taiwanese researchers studied two groups of healthy people over age 50 that lived in Buddhist communities in which drinking and smoking were discouraged and vegetarian diets were followed by about a third of residents. Compared to the meat- and fish-eaters, vegetarians consumed less dairy, animal protein and fat, about the same amount of eggs and fruit, and more fiber and plant protein. In the group of 5,050 people studied for six years, vegetarians had a 74 percent lower risk of ischemic stroke, in which blood flow to the brain is blocked, than nonvegetarians. In the group of 8,302 people followed for nine years, vegetarians had a 48 percent lower risk of overall stroke than nonvegetarians, a 60 percent lower risk of ischemic stroke and a 65 percent lower risk of hemorrhagic (bleeding) stroke. “Stroke can also contribute to dementia. If we could reduce the number of strokes by people making changes to their diets, that would have a major impact on overall public health,” says study author Chin-Lon Lin, M.D.
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Natto, a fermented soybean dish of Japan, offers postmenopausal women protection from bone fractures, concludes a new study in The Journal of Nutrition. Studying 24 years of records of 1,417 Japanese women older than 45, researchers found that compared to those women that rarely ate natto, those that consumed one to six 40-gram packs a week had 21 percent fewer fractures and those consuming more than seven packs had 44 percent fewer fractures. Tofu and other soybean products had no effect on fracture risk. With its strong smell and sticky consistency, natto is an acquired taste, but is also one of the few plant sources of vitamin K2, which activates bone-building proteins. Other studies have linked it to healthier gut flora, lower cholesterol and blood pressure levels, and a stronger immune system.
ANTONIO TRUZZI/Shutterstock.com
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Decrease Bone Fractures with Natto
A Traditional Chinese Medicine herbal mix known as Gegen Quinlian decoction, when combined with standard Western pharmaceuticals, is more effective in treating the painful condition of ulcerative colitis than pharmaceuticals alone, concluded a Chinese review of 22 studies that included 2,028 patients with the disease. Typically used to heal diarrhea and gastrointestinal inflammation, the herbal mix produced few adverse reactions and resulted in low recurrence rates, researchers said.
Maintain a Healthy Gut to Sidestep Colorectal Cancer In a study that for the first time establishes a direct link between the microbes inhabiting our bodies and the genetic alterations that drive cancer development, researchers from the Hubrecht Institute, in the Netherlands, have found that mutations linked to colorectal cancer can be caused by common gut bacteria carried by about one out of five people. By exposing cultured human mini-guts to a particular strain of E. coli bacteria, they observed that the bacteria induced a unique pattern of mutations in the DNA of human cells that was also found in the DNA of patients with colorectal cancer, implying that these mutations were induced by the “bad� bacteria.
June 2020
Andrii Zastrozhnov/Shutterstock.com
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Try Chinese Herbs for Ulcerative Colitis
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Pest Alarm
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Generating Electricity from Rain
A surprisingly high voltage can be generated from raindrops using a field-effect, transistor-style structure, reports a new study from the City University of Hong Kong in the journal Nature. A single drop can muster 140 volts, enough to briefly light up 100 small LED bulbs. The new design couples an aluminum electrode with an indium-tin oxide electrode layered with polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), a material with a quasi-permanent electric charge. When a raindrop hits the PTFE/tin surface, it bridges the two electrodes and creates a closed-loop circuit that helps fully release any stored charges. The technology could handle sustained rainfall, as well. If there are continuous drops, the charge accumulates and eventually hits a saturation point. Building rooftops could supplement some of the electricity used inside, and electric boats could extend their range.
Dementia Linked to Air Pollution
Mindfulness Training May Reduce Paranoia In news that may be useful for people dealing with the stress of the global pandemic, researchers from the University of London have found that just one week of practicing mindfulness—moment-to-moment awareness—reduces feelings of paranoia. The research, published in the journal Mindfulness, was based on questionnaires of 494 people, enabling researchers to find a correlation between paranoia and judgemental thinking. They found that higher levels of nonjudgement predicted lower levels of paranoia, even in individuals that had a predisposition for it. Then, 68 people were selected and divided into two groups: one that was asked to go through a prerecorded, guided mindfulness session once per day, and one that acted as a control. The session consisted of a quick body scan, mindful breathing and awareness exercises. The results showed a drop in judgmental thinking and paranoia in the mindfulness group.
Broward County, Florida edition
The United States, Europe and China are growing “sentinel trees” in strategic locations around the world to receive advance warnings of destructive pests that could destroy native plantings. According to a study published in Plos One, “Sentinel nurseries represent one potential mechanism to address the current lack of knowledge about pests in the countries from where live plants are shipped and the threats they represent to native flora and crops in importing countries.” As global trade intensifies, the risk for accidental importing of and exposure to new invasive pests is a constant worry for entomologists and arborists, stimulating a search for new tactics to prevent future losses.
Beware the Air
Mental Relief
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Sentinel Trees Give Advance Warning
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People continuously exposed to air pollution are at increased risk of dementia, especially if they also suffer from cardiovascular diseases, reports a new study from the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, published in the JAMA Neurology. Researchers examined nearly 3,000 adults with an average age of 74 living in the Kungsholmen district in central Stockholm for up to 11 years. Of those, 364 people developed dementia. The district’s annual average level of particulate matter 2.5 microns or less in width is high by Swedish standards, but low compared to international standards. Heart failure and ischemic heart disease both enhanced the dementia risk, and stroke explained almost 50 percent of air pollution-related dementia cases, according to the researchers.
Amy Lutz/Shutterstock.com
global briefs
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Iso-
Tofu Takeaway
flavones Lower Risk of Heart Disease
Observational research published in Circulation, the flagship journal of the American Heart Association, states that tofu and other foods that contain higher amounts of isoflavones are associated with a moderately lower risk of heart disease, especially for younger women and postmenopausal women not taking hormones. Researchers at Harvard Medical Schools’ Brigham and Women’s Hospital analyzed data from more than 200,000 people that participated in three health and nutrition studies; all participants were free of cancer and heart disease when the studies began. Consuming tofu, which is high in isoflavones, more than once a week was associated with an 18 percent lower risk of heart disease, compared to a 12 percent lower risk for those that ate tofu less than once per month. Tofu and whole soybeans are rich sources of isoflavones. Chickpeas, fava beans, pistachios, peanuts and other fruits and nuts are also high in isoflavones.
Hot Power
Heat Converted into Electricity Researchers from Japan’s Osaka University have found how the thermoelectric effect, or converting temperature differences into electricity, can be best used to power small, flexible devices, reports the journal Advanced Materials Technologies. Future healthcare applications will require internet connectivity between billions of sensors, and the devices that enable them must be small, flexible, reliable and environmentally sustainable. Batteries are not optimal because continually replacing them is inconvenient and expensive. Many researchers have optimized device performance solely from the standpoint of the thermoelectric materials themselves. “Our approach is to also study the electrical contact, or the switch that turns the device on and off,” explains Tohru Sugahara, the corresponding author of the study. “The efficiency of any device critically depends on the contact resistance.” Thermoelectric power generators are self-sustaining, self-powered and have no moving parts. Solar power and vibrational power do not have all of these advantages. June 2020
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science photo/Shutterstock.com
Anna LoFi/Shutterstock.com
The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. ~Lao Tzu
fit body
twice. He also suggests doing sprints or bear crawls for distance exercise and step-ups on park benches or large rocks. “If a park is not available, similar things can be done in your backyard. Just have fun with it.”
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Exercising Outside the Box
Homebody Workouts Getting Fit Without a Gym
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by Marlaina Donato
hen getting to the gym is not possible, there are plenty of options to explore for at-home workouts. From finding fun ways to stay fit to getting loved ones involved, figuring out what works and committing to a few simple goals is a good start. Although it may be hard to pull ourselves up from the couch during periods of adversity, sticking to an exercise program can help boost immunity and emotional resilience. “Not feeling like exercising is common during stressful times, but try to remember how good you feel afterward and the sense of accomplishment. Remember the why,” says life coach Suzanne King, in Marlton, New Jersey.
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Broward County, Florida edition
Begin With the Basics
Trainers agree it’s important to see working out and taking care of our health as an investment, and having a plan goes a long way. “You would never just brush off a business appointment if it was in your calendar and you knew you had to attend,” says personal trainer Chris Wong, in Oakville, Ontario. “The simple act of putting it in your schedule makes it real. Now you have a responsibility. Now you have structure.” Stephanie Mansour, host of the PBS fitness and health show Step it up with Steph, concurs: “Once I started viewing workouts as my own personal confidence-boosting time, a lightbulb went off in my head and I became addicted to this time with myself.” The Chicago-based personal trainer recommends lightening up. “Find something fun. Do something goofy like dancing around. Schedule this in and instead of ‘workout’, call it ‘pumpup time for me’.” Getting outside and hitting the trails or walking every evening after dinner is a great way to get oxygen-infused aerobic time. “Use outdoor space to your advantage,” says Wong. “I’ve taught boot camps at parks, and one game I like doing is Touch 20 Things. Run around and touch 20 things at least 15 to 20 feet apart, but don’t touch the same thing NaBroward.com
Working out with a different rule set offers an invitation to add a new twist to a usual favorite. “I personally practice martial arts every day, but that can be done in a variety of ways,” says Wong, pointing to gentle qigong, shadow boxing, breathing exercises, footwork drills and heavy bag training. He recommends exercising every day, but limiting more intense workouts to three or four times a week. Cardio exercises such as walking and bicycling are a good daily choice, while high-intensity interval training workouts can be accomplished with minimal or no equipment. There are a variety of methods with timing elements that can be used to get a good workout. For example, with the As Many Rounds As Possible regimen, three exercises are done back-to-back for as many rounds as possible in a 10-to 12-minute period. Exploring free online classes on YouTube and other platforms opens up even more options, including yoga, Pilates and dance classes. Many trainers offer virtual workouts over Zoom or Skype live in real time. There are also mobile apps with workouts available for download.
The Support Factor
Partners or family members can help each other to stay on a workout schedule. “You can set up a chart for you and your family members to put a star or checkmark once you’ve finished a workout. Turn it into a competition, and whoever has the most stars at the end of a few weeks gets to pick the workout for the whole family to do,” suggests Mansour. Partners can also make a pact to take care of the kids when it is the other’s turn to grab some fitness time. Being motivated is easier with some self-love, King reminds us: “You can begin something new by fully appreciating yourself with daily gratitude.” Marlaina Donato is an author and composer. Connect at AutumnEmbersMusic.com.
“Your body’s ability to heal is greater than anyone has allowed you to believe.” ~ author unknown
Move Well. Eat Well. Be Well.
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by Vanessa Shields-Fiore, DC, BCAO, PScD
here’s much talk about ways to prevent the spread of coronavirus but not much providing ways to make stronger our own natural defenses… and they are legion. For those who still have this choice, we can strengthen and/or enhance our own immune system. One must have a clear, uninterrupted nervous system as this controls every organ and system in the body, including the immune system and immune organs (bone marrow and thymus gland). Correcting the subluxations or misalignments in the spine removes interference in the nerve system and improves brain-body communication thus adaptability and resilience. The immune system has several components of which the nerve system is just one; it also has an adaptive part, innate part, hormonal part and gut-brain part. When we get sick or injured, by maintaining this clear brain-body communication, we will be allowing the body its ability to begin healing. Movement or exercise is also important to health, increasing blood flow which increases oxygen to the cells and brain, releases endorphins and lowers stress hormones (chronic elevated stress hormones alone will lower immunity). Eat well. Plants are nature’s original medicine, whether a food, herb or essential oil. Foods high in vitamins A, D and C, fermented foods and essential fats are especially good for immune function. If one cannot get the nutrients from their food, supplementing with high-quality whole food or herbal supplements is suggested. Limiting or reducing sugar intake is also beneficial. Sugar has been shown to lower the immune system for up to eight hours after just one serving. Sugar is also very addicting: the more you eat, the more you crave. Not only does nutritional deficiency
lead to lower immune resistance, so does chemical toxicity. Consideration must be given to what gets put on the body as what you put on it eventually ends up in it. Common household and beauty products are extremely toxic. There are few to no government regulations on these products (but that’s another article). Lastly, but perhaps foremost, be well. Focus more on your emotional and mental well-being. The recent self-quarantining and social isolation can be used as catalysts, and once eased back, used as the springboard to enjoy the freedom of movement even more, Go out of doors and absorb the sunshine and fresh air; physical activity is good for not only your physical health but also your mental health. Natural sunshine also allows the body to produce vitamin D, one of the essential immune vitamins. Essential oils can be effectively used to lower stress levels and change a mood almost instantly! Smell is the *only thing that can stimulate the amygdala in the brain. The amygdala affects the limbic
system. The limbic system controls our emotions, memories, hormones (endocrine system) and autonomic nervous system. Diffusing not only smells good but comes with numerous benefits, including natural air purification as, by nature, essential oils are antimicrobial, killing bacteria, viruses, parasites, fungus and molds (different oils may be better for one infection over the other). In conclusion, it is wise to take charge of our mind-body health; see your chiropractor, stretch, have bodywork (massage, acupuncture, reiki, etc.), eat well, take your supplements, use essential oils, meditate and keep close with family and friends. Poor health choices lead to chronic stress and inflammation in the body. A compromised immune system puts one at risk for a whole host of problems, not just this year’s virus. Health is a choice. Take charge of it. “Health is not a matter of chance; health is a matter of choice.” ~ author unknown “Move well. Eat well. Be well.” is the motto at New Life Chiropractic Center, where Dr. Vanessa Shields-Fiore, DC, BCAO, PScD, has her practice, located at 820 S. State Rd 7, Plantation. For more info and appointments, call 954-389-8297 or visit TopDocFL.com. See ad page 28.
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healthy kids
FAMILY STORIES Help Kids Cope During Tough Times by Ronica O’Hara
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TheNaturesEmporium.net Karuna Reiki is trademarked by the International Reiki Center
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n these challenging times as our children struggle to cope with a swiftly changing world, one of the best things we can do is simply to let them know what strong stuff they come from. Decades of research show that children that know their family’s stories—especially how their parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles and other forebears overcame adversity—have the ability to handle societal and personal trauma better. “Family stories help children feel safe, secure and grounded,” says psychology professor Robyn Fivush, Ph.D., director of the Family Narratives Lab at Emory University, in Atlanta. “The stories provide a sense that they belong to something larger than themselves.” In the midst of unsettling events, she says it’s especially important for children to know that the family has been through hard times before and persevered. Emory research shows that children, teens and young adults that know more of their family’s narratives have a greater sense of control over their lives, more self-esteem, better grades, higher social competence, less anxiety and depression, and fewer behavior
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problems. After 9/11, children that tested high in measures of family narratives proved to be more resilient and less stressed. Family stories can be of loss—“Once we had it all”—or of triumph—“We came up from nowhere”—but the most powerful stories are those that show both the peaks and the valleys, the hilarious escapades and deep losses. “Even simply hearing what other people wish they could have done differently helps to offer children a broader perspective to current experiences,” says Carrie Krawiec, a family therapist at Birmingham Maple Clinic, in Troy, Michigan. Accounts of the deepest trauma also prove formative: Knowing how their great-grandparents survived the Holocaust gave young adults a sense of gratitude, pride, courage and a greater religious commitment, a University of Pennsylvania study found. Stories unfold easily at holiday dinners and during long car rides; even during an ordinary dinner, some kind of story—“Guess what happened today at the store?”—occurs about every five minutes, Fivush’s research shows. But summer vacation or days spent together inside a house provide a special opportunity for kids to dive deeper into their family background. For example, they can write an essay about a grandparent or aunt, write and direct a play with siblings, make a scrapbook, read history or novels to study events that took place during a specific time period, write a song or story from the ancestor’s point of view, research and draw a family tree or create a mini-documentary based on an interview with an older relative. This is the quiz used in family narrative research, but Fivush cautions that the 20 questions are only a starting point, and many more can be created. Nor does getting the facts exactly right matter—those can easily be in dispute among family members. “It is the telling, the sharing and the listening that is more important than the story itself,” she says.
Do you know how your parents met? Do you know where your mother grew up? Do you know where your father grew up?
Do you know where some of your grandparents grew up?
Getting Started with Family Narratives Read more about family narratives at Robyn Fivush’s Psychology Today blog:
Do you know where some of your grandparents met?
PsychologyToday.com/intl/blog/the-stories-our-lives
Do you know where your parents were married?
Questions kids can ask family grownups: Tinyurl.com/ClassroomRoots
Ideas for writing and craft projects: Tinyurl.com/CreatingAFamilyNarrative
Do you know what went on when you were being born?
Do you know which person in the family you act most like?
happened to your mom or dad when they were in school?
Do you know the source of your name?
Do you know some of the illnesses and injuries that your parents experienced when they were younger?
Do you know the national or ethnic background of your family?
Do you know some things about what happened when your brothers or sisters were being born? Do you know which person in your family you look most like?
Do you know some of the lessons that your parents learned from good or bad experiences? Do you know some things that
Do you know some of the jobs that your parents had when they were young? Ronica A. O’Hara is a Denver-based health writer. Connect at OHaraRonica@gmail.com. June 2020
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Transformative Staycations
Finding Respite and Adventure Close to Home by April Thompson
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and Wildlife. In Colorado parks, people can, for example, river raft in the Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area; boat, fish and hammock camp in Jackson Lake State Park; and rock climb in Eldorado Canyon. Parks can be discovered and trail maps downloaded by visiting TrailLink. com, run by the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy. It provides searches for nearby trails using parameters such as distance, types of activity and wheelchair accessibility. Its smartphone TrailLink app is free to download and $30 per year for unlimited customized use. State, local and regional parks across the country offer rich educational opportunities for kids and adults alike, including naturalist-guided activities, bird and botany walks, lessons in local history, ecology and geography, and more. Several states offer free admission to all state-run parks, including Hawaii, Tennessee and Illinois. State-by-state listings of fees and policies can be found at Tinyurl.com/StateParkPasses.
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Making a Quick Getaway
Weekend forays into natural and rustic settings can be ideal escape valves for people needing a simple, quick change of venue. Camping, of course, is always an option, but for those that want to be in nature in a more comfy fashion, using “cabin” as a search word works well in websites like Airbnb.com and TripAdvisor. com. The option of glamping—or glamorous camping—offers surprisingly luxurious stays outdoors in tents, pods and domes; check out Glamping.com. Getaway.House offers woodsy outposts in 10 locations equipped with “tiny house” cabins around the country designed for quick escapes from cities. “If you were at your desk in need of an escape, you could cut out early and be there by 6 p.m.,” says Vice President of Marketing Rachel Mansfield. The private experience, with no check-in desk or communal areas, enables it to continue operating safely during the pandemic. The cabins, designed to blend in with
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S
taycations—sticking close to home for new travel experiences—was a growing trend even before the COVID-19 pandemic turned it into a practical necessity for many of us. Staycations reduce costs, minimize travel time and also lower our carbon footprint by eliminating international travel. Happily, they don’t reduce the pure pleasure of finding new adventures, exploring untrammeled nature, seeing the familiar with fresh eyes and meeting people from all walks of life. All of that is close at hand, and especially when compared to foreign jaunts, the price is right. A good place to start is by checking out state and regional parks, often overlooked gems offering scenic miles of trails for hiking, biking, birding, fishing, picnicking and other activities. “Whether mountains, prairies, rivers, forests in the country or heart of the city, there is always a state park waiting to welcome you, no matter what kind of recreation you enjoy,” says Jason Clay, spokesperson with Colorado Parks
Local-led excursions are another way to see our home turf through a new lens. Airbnb Experiences, offered virtually everywhere that Airbnb lists lodging, are one-of-a-kind tours and classes designed and hosted by locals with unique expertise. Experiences run the gamut from neighborhood tours on foot or bikes with athletes to museum tours led by local artists or art historians. Many include a hands-on learning component, like how to make mosaics in a community art space or cook a local delicacy from a family recipe. Similar tours and experiences can be found on TripAdvisor’s Things To Do listings. WithLocals.com, whose mission is “to break down the barriers between travelers and locals worldwide,” also offers foodie fun and off-beat adventures. Kelly Kniewel stumbled onto tour guiding after experiencing burnout in her
Traveling the World Without Leaving Home
Hosting travelers can bring new meaning to a staycation, offering a rich opportunity for cross-cultural exchange without any exchange of currency. The popular
June 2020
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Local Attraction
CouchSurfing.com connects travelers with locals offering free use of a couch, air mattress or spare bedroom. Available in more than 200,000 cities worldwide, it has 14 million members and sponsors local language exchanges, dance classes, hikes and dinners, so there are opportunities to make new friends and have new experiences even without offering a place to sleep. (During COVID-19 restrictions, these activities were moved online.) Similar organizations that offer opportunities for local hosting (including low- or no-cost lodging) include Servas. org, established in 1949, which stresses world peace and cultural exchange, and pre-interviews potential guests and hosts to ensure safety; GlobalFreeloaders.com, a free registry for hosts and guests that do their own online screening and matching; and EvergreenClub.com, in which hosts provide a bed-and-breakfast homestay for travelers over age 50 for $20 a night. An exciting option for homeowners is HomeExchange. com, a $150-ayear service that allows people in far-flung places to switch homes, either directly or through a staggered point system so they can truly live like locals. John Fackenthal, of Rockville, Maryland, has hosted more than 100 couchsurfers from 29 countries, and loved every experience. “I had a big apartment in the heart of Washington, D.C., when I first started hosting, but lived alone and felt a little isolated. I wanted to bring back the youth hostel feel from travels in my younger days, where you’d hang out with fellow travelers and go hiking, share a
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their natural surroundings, are equipped with food for purchase, stove, books, radio, firewood, fire pit and Adirondack chairs, as well as a map for local hikes and adventures. “I did a getaway at a point in my life where I wanted some time alone, away from commitments, to figure out what my next chapter in life was going to be,” says Paige Conner Totaro, of Alexandria, Virginia, the founder of Unquote Travel, a web-based tour agency focusing on small group, off-the-beaten-track adventures. “You can change your environment without going very far, and that in turn can change the way you think about things. Little things like sleeping on the other side of the bed can help you shake up your brain.”
previous career in the beverage industry. An Airbnb Experiences host, Kniewel now leads small group tours of Chicago, introducing locals and visitors alike to many of its little-known facets. “I’ve fallen in love with my city all over again doing these tours,” says Kniewel, a self-proclaimed history geek. She loves to take guests inside Art Deco and Beaux Arts buildings they may have passed before without realizing the gorgeous art and architecture that exists inside, such as the library-turned-cultural center, Chicago Cultural Center, boasting two impressive glass domes, one designed by Tiffany Glass. Another favorite excursion is taking guests on a water taxi tour. “It’s a cheap and unique way to see Chicago. The water, both the Chicago River and Lake Michigan, is so much a part of who we are as a city.” During the limitations imposed during the COVID-19 period, Airbnb and other websites began offering experiences online, allowing people from all over the world to connect and make pastries with a Swedish baker, draw with a Mexican cartoonist, learn about apartheid from a South African or experience a day in the life of an American Olympic bobsledder.
Be a Weekend Farmer
Agrotourism, in which working farms open the barn doors to visitors for day or overnight trips, has the added advantage of supporting local agriculture. AgritourismWorld.com and FarmStayUS.com provide listings for farm stays worldwide searchable by type, such as Christmas tree farm, vineyard, orchard, dude ranch or alpaca farm. The 40-acre Taos Goji Farm and Eco-Lodge Retreat, in Taos, New Mexico, is one such venue. “My husband and I returned to the land nine years ago after many years working as professionals in stuffy offices. The farm has been developed for
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our family and others who wish to be close to nature and to live off of the land,” says coowner Elizabeth vom Dorp. The farm is open for paid guests, as well as to the volunteers known as “Wwoofers” that come through Worldwide Opportunities on Organic Farms to help raise goji berries, fruits, vegetables and freerange chickens. All cabins date from the early 1900s, including an old dairy barn converted into a duplex and five sheep herder cabins. The farm is surrounded by a national forest, so many guests visit to enjoy hiking, biking, fishing, rafting and ballooning. “Families with children love to come and pick berries, collect eggs and pet the animals. We have rescue alpacas, sheep, goats, chickens and turkeys,” says vom Dorp. While the world may still be at the mercy of unfortunate circumstances this summer, travel is ultimately a state of mind. By staying open, curious and present, there are always new encounters and discoveries underfoot very close to home. Connect with Washington, D.C., freelance writer April Thompson at AprilWrites.com.
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meal or play cards,” he says. A web developer, he recalls such memorable guests as a carpenter in his 60s from the Pacific Northwest that helped him with fixerupper projects, a pair of pro volleyball players from the Czech Republic and two young women from China that prepared him a massive traditional Chinese feast “with all four burners going,” he says. “It’s restored my faith in humanity. I’ve encountered nothing but wonderful people, all with such different personalities and backgrounds.”
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green living
Everyday Adventures Taking to Vans and RVs for Life on the Road
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by Sandra Yeyati
any Americans choose to travel in recreational vehicles (RVs) or well-equipped vans with all the comforts of home—no hotels, just the open road and a tank full of gas. Cindy Jane is a Florida naturalist, vegan advocate, accomplished artist and wife to land surveyor Kevin Georgeson. Now 50 years old, she’s had a dream since she was 18 to travel the country in a van, visiting state and national parks, hiking trails and spending quality time in nature. She envisions setting up an easel and painting in inspiring settings. “It’s about getting out of that social norm of always knowing what the next day is going to be like, doing the same thing every day. I like a little bit of the unknown, the unexpected. I want to see things. I want adventure. I want the freedom that comes with going,” she says. The couple purchased a 2018 Ford Transit van with low mileage and a little warranty left on it. Together, they are customizing it to create a comfortable home away from home to satisfy Jane’s wanderlust. Crafty and resourceful, they voraciously watch YouTube videos to learn the ins and outs of solar panels, electrical hookups, kitchen countertops, insulation and 1,000 other details that
go into a successful buildout. They’re taking their time to do it right after investing thousands of dollars already. To document their progress and hopefully inspire others, they record videos on Jane’s smartphone and post them to her website (ArtfulVeganNomad.com). Val and Nick Wheatley are veteran nomads, having travelled the world for almost four years in all kinds of rides, including the 1994 Ford Bronco they drove across the U.S. for six months. Camping outdoors was challenging, and they vowed never again to travel in a vehicle without a bed. They purchased a Ford Econovan to explore New Zealand and sold it three months later when they left. In Germany, where beautiful campgrounds and free public lots with inexpensive electric and water hookups are plentiful, a rented RV was the way to go. With experience, the couple has come to prefer converted vans or smaller RVs, thanks to their fuel savings and easier maneuverability in cities and on narrow country roads. According to the Wheatleys, traveling and living in close quarters has its drawbacks. Cleaning out portable toilets and taking showers at truck stops can be challenging, but for the avid explorers, these inconveniences were always eclipsed
by jaw-dropping scenery and cultural immersion in new countries. “Because we had wheels and time, we got to see some cool stuff off the beaten track that most people that were visiting for a weekend or week never see,” says Val. Offering tips, tricks, candid descriptions and inspiring photography of their many world-trotting experiences, the couple’s travel blog (WanderingWheatleys. com) tallied more than 600,000 visitors last year. Through online advertising and affiliate programs, they earned enough money for living and travel expenses. “The world actually isn’t a scary place at all. People all over the world in every culture are friendly and welcoming,” Nick says. For those looking to connect with fellow travelers, there are numerous recreational clubs that offer base camps, programming and social opportunities. One such club is Sisters on the Fly (SistersOnTheFly.com), an all-women outdoor adventure club founded in 1999 by Maurrie Sussman and her sister Rebecca Clarke with a penchant for small, vintage trailers that are restored and embellished by their owners. With 9,000 active members and an organizer in each state, these resourceful and festive ladies hold more than 1,000 events nationwide every year, including fly fishing, guided tours, kayaking, mountain climbing, biking and more. “It’s about being outdoors and meeting amazing women. We love going into the national parks, taking back roads and visiting all the small towns,” Sussman says. Living in an RV or van full-time has become an attractive option for many people, including college kids looking for inexpensive housing or retirees on limited incomes. “I think more and more we’re seeing people who value their time more than a bunch of possessions,” says Jane. “Maybe that means working less and living more frugally, so you see a rise in minimalism and van life.” For a wealth of information on vans and RVs as full-time options, as well as in-depth interviews with van lifers, visit Bob Wells’ YouTube channel CheapRVLiving. Sandra Yeyati is a freelance writer. Reach her at SandraYeyati@gmail.com. June 2020
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conscious eating
Feeding Happiness
Lifting Moods with Feel-Good Foods by Marlaina Donato
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hether it’s a pandemic, a breakup or a busy day with the kids, heading to the kitchen for a carb fix or a pint of ice cream is a common kneejerk response to stress. It’s easy to get caught in a whirlpool of poor eating when our bodies need nutritional support more than ever. Sustained or chronic stress can reduce levels of dopamine and serotonin— neurotransmitters linked to feelings of both satiety and happiness. “When serotonin levels are normal, it leads to both emotional satisfaction and a sense of fullness after a meal,” says Certified Integrative Nutrition Health Coach Maria Marlowe, in New York City and Dubai. “Conversely, when serotonin levels are low, it can lead to depression and a tendency to reach for sweet and starchy foods.”
Avoiding Extremes
Stress-eating sparks only temporary physical and emotional fulfillment. “When your brain is in need of energy, it can mimic the symptoms of depression and anxiety,” notes Tara Waddle, holistic life coach at The Center of Balance, in Greeley, Colorado. 20
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“Finding healthier substitutes that are less processed can make a huge impact.” Experts agree that concentrating on weight loss or super-strict diets during times of adversity might do more harm than good. “Focusing on the need to lose weight during crisis will only do two things—make you feel guilty if you’re not eating what you think you’re supposed to and potentially make you eat more out of guilt,” says Registered Dietitian Nutritionist Jennifer Neily, in Dallas. Opting for healthier versions of favorite comfort foods is a doable compromise that can prevent endorphins from plummeting after the usual temporary spike. “With the right ingredients and recipes, we can satisfy our cravings for sweet, salt, creamy or crunchy with healthier upgrades of our favorite junk foods,” says Marlowe.
Friendly Fare
Eating to stay healthy during hard times can tickle the taste buds without a lot of invested time. Marlowe’s go-to favorites like homemade banana ice cream or chocolate truffles not only take minutes to prepare, NaBroward.com
but fortify the brain. For must-have salty favorites, she suggests opting for snack foods seasoned with unrefined or pink Himalayan salt, fresh guacamole, salsa, olives or pickles. Filling a seaweed sushi wrap with avocado can be a satisfying and easy snack. For easy-exotic, Marlowe says, “I always keep coconut milk and unsweetened curry paste on hand to whip up a red Thai curry, my favorite 15-minute dinner. Simply add fresh or frozen vegetables and protein of choice and you have a satisfying, flavorful meal that is faster than delivery.” Waddle’s healthy comfort foods include nuts of different flavors, dried fruits and baked Brussels sprouts with nitritefree bacon, black pepper and a sprinkle of nutmeg. “The food you consider comfort food is comforting because it’s familiar,” she says. “When you start eating healthier food more often, it will become comfort food. Just keep trying new things.”
Keep it Simple
The kitchen can be our greatest ally during any life-storm, but having a stress-free strategy is key, especially paying attention to emotional states. “Ask yourself, ‘Is it head hunger or belly hunger? Above the neck or below the neck?’ If it’s the latter and that’s truly what is desired, don’t deny yourself, but choose with conscious understanding. Savor the flavor,” says Neily. Marlowe recommends easy meal planning and maintaining an eating schedule. “This helps remove some of the stress and decision fatigue that comes with figuring out what to eat in the moment, especially with random ingredients in the fridge.” Food shopping can be an instant junk food trap. Waddle’s approach is a sure way to outsmart impulse buying based on habit. She says,“Start with the produce department first. This fills your cart with fresh foods and your cart will be full by the time you get to the snack aisle.” Self-compassion can be one of the most important, yet overlooked considerations. “Regardless of what you choose to eat, be gentle with yourself,” notes Waddle. “The guilt of eating poorly is more damaging than the food.” Marlaina Donato is an author and a composer. Connect at AutumnEmbersMusic.com.
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Sweet Recipes for Healthy Snacking Banana Ice Cream
Five-Minute Chocolate Truffles Truffle
3 Tbsp cacao powder 1½ cups dates, pitted 3 Tbsp shredded coconut, unsweetened
Toppings (choose a few)
photo courtesy of Maria Marlowe
Cacao nibs Cacao powder Sesame seeds Shredded coconut Pistachios, crushed Walnuts, crushed Acai powder Goji powder Maqui powder Pomegranate powder
Add-Ins: choose as many as desired 2-3 tsp cacao powder 1 Tbsp almond butter 2-3 tsp carob powder 3-4 pitted dates ¼ tsp cinnamon 1 cup frozen strawberries 6 mint leaves 1 Tbsp coconut flakes (or coconut butter or shredded coconut) 1 Tbsp ginger 1 Tbsp almond butter or almonds ½-inch peeled ginger piece Peel bananas, break in half and put in a zip-top freezer bag. Freeze for at least 4 hours or overnight. Place all ingredients (banana base plus the add-in ingredients of choice) into a high-speed blender such as a Vitamix, and blend on high until soft-serve ice cream consistency is reached, which should be in about 30 to 60 seconds. Taste to determine whether any more add-ins are needed and re-blend if desired. Spoon out and serve. Source: Certified Integrative Nutrition Health Coach Maria Marlowe
Add cacao powder, dates and coconut to a blender. (A bullet blender works well.) Blend until a paste is formed, which should only take a few seconds. Roll about a tablespoon or so of paste into a ball. Repeat. Choose a topping, sprinkle it onto parchment paper and roll date ball in it to coat.
Fast, Healthy Pasta Gluten-free bean and legume-based pastas provide more fiber and protein compared to traditional pasta, points out Marlowe. She suggests placing a steamer basket full of chopped veggies like broccoli, cauliflower and squash over boiling pasta water for a quick pasta primavera. Add some garlic sautéed in olive oil and a little salt and pepper.
Feel-Good Foods Serotonin boosters for better mood and digestive harmony:
kiwis, bananas, pineapples, plums, all types of berries, tomatoes, raw cacao nibs, 90 percent dark chocolate, chia seeds, pumpkin seeds, butternuts (related to walnuts), almonds, eggs, beans, oats, protein-rich foods, sea vegetables, avocados, Swiss chard, beets, green tea and spices like turmeric.
Dopamine boosters for better mood and memory, and warding off neurodegenerative diseases: artichokes, ripe bananas, tahini, wheat germ, almond butter, leafy greens, lentils, chickpeas, black beans, papayas, red beets, apples, watermelon, blueberries and prunes.
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photo courtesy of Maria Marlowe
2 overripe bananas ¼ tsp vanilla extract
Natural Awakenings recommends using organic, non-GMO (genetically modified) and non-bromated ingredients whenever possible. June 2020
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wise words
David Hamilton on Kindness in the Pandemic Age by Sandra Yeyati
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avid Hamilton has authored 10 books, including The Little Book of Kindness, How Your Mind Can Heal Your Body and The Five Side Effects of Kindness. He holds a doctorate in organic chemistry and spent four years in the pharmaceutical industry developing drugs for treating cardiovascular disease and cancer. During clinical research trials, he noticed that a significant number of people experienced health improvements while on fake, or placebo, drugs. This inspired a career change more than 20 years ago, when he became a writer and public speaker teaching people how to understand and harness the mind-body connection to improve health.
Have you noticed an increase in kindness during the current pandemic emergency?
I think so. In the past, you said things like, “Hello, how are you?” as a greeting. But now, when people say it, they really mean it. There’s a sense of genuine compassion that I think is coming out in everyone on a scale that I’ve never seen before. We’re feeling empathy for people that are suffering, but also feeling empathy for each other, because we realize that everyone is in a similar place.
How do you explain this upsurge in kindness during 22
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social distancing and isolation?
We are genetically wired for kindness. The genes that produce the kindness hormone are some of the oldest in the human genome, like 500 million years old. So, our natural state is to care, to be kind and compassionate. But in life, we get caught up in everyday stresses and worries—financially, work-wise and in relationships—that often obscure that natural tendency to care. When a lot of that stuff is taken away, people’s natural sense of kindness and compassion come to the surface.
Do you see an opportunity for a shift in collective consciousness?
Absolutely. We’ve been called to unify, to recognize that we are part of the same human family. There’s a global outpouring of compassion. We’re transforming, becoming more aware of our own kindness and the needs of other people. On another level, I saw a meme that said, “It feels like the universe has sent us home to our rooms to think about what we’ve done.” There’s research that correlates an increase in viruses and parasites over the last couple of years to a loss in biodiversity due to human action, like knocking down rain forests and humaninduced climate change. Species extinctions are 1,000 to 10,000 times greater today than they’ve ever been in recorded NaBroward.com
history, except for 65 million years ago when an asteroid crashed into the Earth and wiped out the dinosaurs. Parasites, viruses and bacteria have nowhere else to go, so they’re jumping species, from bats to humans, for example. We’re being called spiritually not only to be more compassionate and kind to each other, but also to recognize the damage we’re doing to the planet and to be more respectful of nature, the environment and animals.
What are the positive physical effects of kindness? Physiologically speaking, kindness is the opposite of stress. Where feeling stressed can increase blood pressure, tense the nervous system and suppress the immune system, feelings induced by kindness reduce blood pressure, calm the nervous system and elevate the immune system.
Are certain acts of kindness better than others?
It doesn’t matter what you do. What matters most is that you do it because you mean it; you genuinely have a sense of empathy and want to help someone. All of the physiological benefits of kindness come because the feelings induced by kindness generate what I call kindness hormones, the most important one being oxytocin, which is a female reproductive hormone that also plays a big role in cardiovascular health.
Can a small act of kindness really make a difference in the world?
Absolutely. It’s been charted scientifically that if you do something kind for somebody, that person will be kind or kinder to five other people over the next day or two because of how you made them feel. Those five people will be kind or kinder to five further people, which turns into 25 people, and each of those 25 will be kind to five people, which takes it to 125 people’s lives that can be changed and affected in small and large ways three social steps away from you simply because of one tiny little thing you did. Sandra Yeyati is a freelance writer in Naples, Florida. Connect with her at SandraYeyati@gmail.com.
healing ways
POWER UP YOUR BRAIN Six Ways to Boost Blood Flow by Ronica O’Hara
fish protein, eating antioxidant-rich produce such as pomegranate, blueberries, spinach and kale, and consuming lots of nitrate-rich food like celery and leafy greens which are converted to NO in the body. He especially recommends beets—one study reported that in juice form, it increases nitric oxide levels by 21 percent in 45 minutes—as well as dark chocolate. In a Harvard study, older people that drank two cups of hot chocolate a day for 30 days had improved blood flow to the brain and better memory.
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Take amino acid supplements. “Consuming supple-
ments containing both L-arginine and L-citrulline are welldocumented to boost the production of endothelium-derived NO,” says Ignarro. “Adding antioxidants to the amino acid mix provides added benefit by increasing NO levels.” He recommends pomegranate extract, cocoa flavonols and omega-3 supplements.
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O
ur brain has many well-known structures like the amygdala that detects danger and the prefrontal cortex that enables planning, but we often take for granted the 400 miles of blood vessels that push through a liter of blood per minute, carrying in oxygen and nutrients, and porting out wastes. “Our brains are highly metabolic organs, so they require lots of nutrients and oxygen to function properly, and those can only get to our brain when we have good blood flow,” says naturopathic physician Emilie Wilson, of the Synergy Wellness Center, in Prescott, Arizona. When that blood flow is optimal, we feel energized and clear-headed; when it’s low, we feel foggy and listless. Low levels of cranial blood flow have been linked in brain imaging studies to strokes and dementia, as well as bipolar disorder, depression and suicidal tendencies. The first imperative for healthy cranial blood flow is to make sure our blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol numbers are in a healthy range. Health practitioners can help us address that, as well as the conditions linked to reduced blood flow—heart disease, hypothyroidism, diabetes, anemia, depression and smoking. To boost brain blood flow, specific lifestyle strategies have proven to be highly effective:
1
Eat strategically, especially beets and chocolate.
Nitric oxide (NO) is made in the endothelium, the thin layer of cells that line blood vessels; it relaxes the inner muscles of those vessels, maximizing blood flow. “The continuous formation of NO in the brain is essential to life,” says prominent pharmacologist Louis Ignarro, Ph.D., who received the Nobel Prize in Science in 1998 for discovering that humans produce NO and that it lowers blood pressure and improves blood flow. He advocates passing up meat for soy and
Move the body. Fast walking, running, cycling, swimming, ball playing, weight lifting and yoga all help improve cranial blood flow, says Ignarro: “Physical activity stimulates the production of NO in all arteries, including those in the brain.” In one study, women over 60 that walked for 30 to 50 minutes three or four times a week increased ongoing cranial blood flow up to 15 percent. Yoga exercises like downward dog and shoulder stands also raise blood flow in the head.
4
Play music. Research using functional magnetic resonance imaging published in Scientific Reports found that blood flow in the brain increases when people listen to music they love, whether it’s Mozart or Eminem. In a recent study, Weightless, a song written by the British group Macaroni Union along with sound therapists, reduced participants’ anxiety levels by 65 percent and physiological resting rates by 35 percent.
5
Do a chanting meditation. Kirtan Kriya, a 12-minute
daily meditation that includes chanting, finger movements and visualization, “has been researched for over 18 years and has documented benefits in increasing blood flow to the brain,” says Krystal Culler, senior Atlantic fellow with the Global Brain Health Institute, in San Francisco and Ireland. YouTube offers several versions, as does the Alzheimer’s Research and Prevention Foundation (Tinyurl.com/12MinuteYogaMeditation).
6
Consider acupuncture and craniosacral therapy.
“Acupuncture has been used for thousands of years to boost blood flow, and it can also relax tense muscles in the neck and head, which can impair blood flow more than we realize,” says Wilson. She also recommends the gentle, hands-on-head approach of craniosacral therapy: “It can directly improve blood flow by removing restrictions, and it can also rebalance sympathetic and parasympathetic functions, which has beneficial effects on our nervous system and on blood flow.” Ronica O’Hara is a Denver-based health writer. Connect at OHaraRonica@gmail.com. June 2020
23
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Karen L. Kaye, MS, LMHC
A Divine Intervention
Q:
Dear Karen Kaye How do you know the difference between your own inner voice and a divine intervention? Monica.
Dear Monica, The only way I can answer your question is through my own personal experience. The first 10 years of my private practice, I believed I was a caring and effective therapist who did my own “inner work” and cared about my clients and their results. Luckily, my clients were in agreement with me. Then, in my 10th year, something unexpected happened: my husband walked out, leaving me with an 18-month-old baby and my house in possible foreclosure. So I figured if all I knew brought me to this point in my own life, I didn’t know much! Oh, and did I mention, I am a 40-year practitioner of Transcendental Meditation and a 30-year student of yoga? I know that each discipline has made a major impact in my life and my work, but I also knew something was still missing. So to continue my story, after my “ah-ha” moment of how little my knowledge had paid off in my life, I finally reached “bottom”. I remember after three months of hell, I was desperate for answers. I sat in my family room after putting my precious baby to bed one evening and decided to have my last good cry. I looked up to my ceiling and said to my higher power, “Okay, I guess it’s just You and me.” I waited. As I wrote in my journal that night, the pen in my hand felt as if it glided automatically across the page. Looking back, I believe that good intentions combined
with intuition created the opening for a divine intervention to occur, giving me the messages and lessons that I use and teach to this day. I can only surmise that once I went to my knees, I could hear a voice bigger than my own. It has been my quest to share this divine guidance with as many people as I can reach. I remain immensely grateful for what happened that night, in my time of need. I fully believe that all people are capable of divine intervention. To find that voice, it takes admitting that there is a problem bigger than you can handle alone. Once you realize you can’t go any further in the direction you have been going, your ego will have to subside. When you are able to connect with that inner voice, deep within you, that is your higher power’s voice! It’s not just in some of us… it’s in all of us! All the best, Karen L. Kaye, LMHC Karen Kaye has written and published a book for children of divorce titled, My Parents Are Getting a Divorce… I Wonder What Will Happen to Me. For more information, visit ImStillMeBook.com or KarenKayeTherapist.com. See ad page 29.
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calendar of events
W
e at Natural Awakenings know that supporting the health of our population is of the upmost importance. We encourage everyone to be conscious of the social distancing mandate and to support our community by following the health guidelines set forth by our health professionals. We have received multiple reports from our providers of wellness and health services about how seriously they take following and maintaining the strictest guidelines as it relates to their office environments in creating the most safe and clean space they can for those that need to come in and use their services. For any doctor appointment, class, or service provider you want to visit, attend, or participate, we suggest you call ahead to address any questions you may have and then
Local ongoing calendar items for the community may be submitted online at NaBroward.com/calendar-event. We do not accept phone calls for these items. to confirm your appointment. To help stimulate and encourage the continuation of connecting our readers and providers of services, we’ve modified our corporate policy to have our ongoing and datespecific calendar items include information for us to connect via the internet through our various electronic devices. We understand the importance of being able to stay “in touch” with one another and thus support the expansion of online events, podcasts, webinars, Skype, support sessions, and other communication software systems that can be utilized for us to stay connected and stay safe. If you have an ongoing calendar item with us and would like to modify it, kindly email us your updated information; we’ll change it starting with the upcoming issue at
no additional charge. We have also increased the word count for Date-Specific Calendar items to be up to 55 words, and Ongoing Calendar items may include up to 45 words for each one.
upcoming event TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 Atlantic Institute of Oriental Medicine — Earn a Master’s Degree in Oriental Medicine in 36 months & be on the path to become a Licensed Acupuncture Physician. We are now accepting applications for our Fall class which starts September 8, 2020. Contact us at admissions@atom.edu or call 954-763-9840. Financial Aid & VA Benefits accepted.
ongoing events
sunday Sacred Journey Interfaith Seminary — 9am– 5pm. Classes for Interfaith Ministry Ordination. A Healing Space, 840 E Oakland Park Blvd, Ste 102, Oakland Park. Rev. Dr. Grace Telesco 917.579.3750. Thubten Kunga Ling Buddhist Center: Zoom classes — Meditation Hour: 10–11am an overview of meditation including basic meditation techniques, breathing meditation, mindfulness meditation, visualization meditation, and analytical meditation, Tibetan Mahayana Tradition. Coping with Difficult Times: 11am–12pm. For details and other classes, visit ThubtenKungaLing.org. Catholic Mass (non-Roman Catholic) — 10:30am, (+ Sat 5pm) The Parish of Sts. Francis & Clare, staffed by Franciscan friars. 2300 NW 9th Ave (Powerline Rd), Wilton Manors, 33311, 954.731.8173. Non-Denominational Spiritual Center — 11am. Empowering, Universal Spiritual Principles, honoring the wisdom and divinity within you. Bridges Spiritual Centers, Wilton Plaza, 1881 NE 26th St, Ste 244, Wilton Manors, 33305. Call 954.530.6006.
26
Broward County, Florida edition
IANDS South Florida- International Association for Near Death Studies — 1st Sunday monthly, 4:30-6:30pm Meeting - Pavilion’s Gym (behind Main Hospital) Discussions include; Spiritually Transformative Experiences. All interested in the studies, are welcomed. University Hospital, 7201 N. University Dr, Tamarac. Questions Reverend Gail Fein, 305.798.8974. Interfaith Sacred Celebrations of Spirit — Weekly on Sunday evenings 6:30–7:30pm at Darshan Center for Spiritual Evolution at a Healing Space, 840 E Oakland Park Blvd, Ste 102, Oakland Park. Rev. Dr. Grace Telesco 917.579.3750. Free Meditation Gathering — 7–9pm, first Sunday each month. Guided meditation, kirtan, spiritual reading, Sivananda tradition. Yoga Warehouse, 508 SW Flagler Ave, downtown Ft Lauderdale, 954.525.7726.
monday Chiropractic — Every 1st Monday, 5-6pm. Free, attendees will receive a discount off their first visit. New Life Upper Cervical Chiropractic, 820 S. State Road 7, Plantation, 33317. Phone: 954.389.8297.
NaBroward.com
Group Shayman Sound Vibe Healing — 6:30pm $20. Just walk in. Crystal Junkie Metaphysical Shop 819 SE 8th Ave, Deerfield Beach 33441 Details, 954.254.3828. Men and Women’s Support Group: Conscious Awareness — 8–10pm. $25 per session. Designed for men and women to learn from each other regarding relationships, self-worth and the rewrite of negative patterns. Contact: Karen Kaye, LMHC, 954.384.1217 (landline).
tuesday Raja Yoga Meditation — Free Hollywood Library meditation sessions resume in Sept... Meanwhile Subscribe to YouTube: “BK Meditation Center Miami” and like FB: Brahma Kumaris Hollywood & FB Brahma Kumaris Miami. 954-801-6639 (Celebrating our 15th year here.) Daily — 9pm Join Sheri Kaplan for a Nightly Virtual Sound Healing Meditation on Zoom Live Stream. bit.ly/livestreamsoundbath. Call 646-876-9923 EST- bit.ly/localzoom -Meeting ID: 846 189 611-Virtual Tip Jar.
wednesday
friday
Free Tai Chi Classes — 5–6pm (except Holidays). Relax your mind and body at ATOM’s Wellness Center! Tai Chi is a low-impact, slowmotion exercise that can treat & prevent many health problems. Atlantic Institute of Oriental Medicine (ATOM), 100 E. Broward Blvd., Ste 100, Ft. Lauderdale. 954-763-9840 ext. 219.
Tea Time — 10am–6pm. Enjoy an organic, crystal infused tea for $3 at Crystal Junkie Metaphysical Shop, 819 SE 8th Ave, Deerfield Beach 33441. Details 954.254.3828.
thursday Free Tai Chi Classes — 5–6pm. Relax your mind and body at ATOM’s Wellness Center! Tai Chi is a low-impact, slow-motion exercise that can treat & prevent many health problems. Atlantic Institute of Oriental Medicine (ATOM), 100 E. Broward Blvd., Ste 100, Ft. Lauderdale. 954-763-9840 ext. 219. Meditation/Relaxation Class — 5:45–6:30pm, free. Guided meditation & relaxation led by Ina Lee. All levels. George English Park Rec Center, 1101 Bayview Dr., Ft Lauderdale. Call first, 954.463.4733. Group Reiki Circle with Crystals — 6:15pm. $20. Just walk in. Crystal Junkie Metaphysical Shop, 819 SE 8th Ave, Deerfield Beach 33441, Details, 954.254.3828. Online Neurogenic Yoga — 6:30–7:45pm via Zoom. $25 suggested donation. This safe and gentle practice facilitates the release of emotional stress and tension by enabling us to access self-induced neurogenic tremors. To register please visit homSouthFlorida.com Staisha, 954.683.7071. Free Teletalk on Ancestral Clearing/Emotional Release — 7pm, last Thursday of month. Learn how to release blocks and limiting beliefs and change energetic thought patterns, to move ahead to live with freedom, fulfillment and happiness! Call Ilka for details: 754.222.6971. My Awakening Story — 7pm. My awakening, twin flame, psychic abilities story, shared weekly, episodically, anonymously. Floored, Just Floored, Type “floored JustFloored” in YouTube search bar.
Reiki Circle — Noon & 7:30pm, $10. Love @ Bridges Spiritual Centers, Wilton Plaza, 1881 NE 26th St., Ste 244, Wilton Manors, 33305. Rev. Scott Friedman 954.854.7937. Restorative Yoga — 4–5pm. $15 per class; $5 intro offer for new students. Enjoy a calming & rejuvenating series of sequences, to help relax & soothe the body. Sound bowl experience included! Peace Heal Grow, 1419A E Commercial Blvd., Oakland Park 33334, Mardi Berrouet, 786.227.2173. Monthly Gallery Night, Meet the Artists, Show & Sale — 6–11pm, (second Friday ea. mo). A great gathering of varied talents. Host/ Artist: Michael D. Colanero. Uncommon Gallery, 2709 E Commercial Blvd, Ft Lauderdale, 954.336.4305. Online Abiding in Mindfulness — 7:30 -8:30pm via Zoom $10 suggested donation. Offering dharma reflections exploring the many rich dimensions of mindfulness practice, along with a guided meditation and group discussion. To register please visit homsSouthFlorida.com Staisha, 954.683.7071.
saturday Reiki Healing Circle — 9–10am, Free. Usui Reiki Circle. All are welcome. Love & Light Spiritual Emporium, 1419 E Commercial Blvd. Ste B, Oakland Park, FL, 33334, 954.261.3878. Paddle With A Purpose, Waterway and Shoreline Cleanup — 9–11am, help remove trash and make new friends (third Saturday each month). Kayaks and canoes available on a first come, first serve basis; bringing your own is encouraged. Location varies. Info, Robert Figueroa, 917.652.1050.
The Sistrunk Farmers Market — 10am–2pm. Locally, organically grown fruits & vegetables, old fashioned family fun, Artisan Market Vendors. Market hours EBT & SNAP accepted at the Market. Corner of Sistrunk Blvd & NW 10th Ave, Ft Lauderdale. Raja Yoga Meditation — Free Dania Beach meditation sessions resume in Oct. Meanwhile Subscribe to YouTube: “BK Meditation Center Miami” and FB: Brahma Kumaris Hollywood & FB Brahma Kumaris Miami, 954-801-6639. (Celebrating our 7th year here). Rock Kirtan: Sacred Devotional Singing — bi-weekly 7–8:30pm, $10. Darshan Center for Spiritual Evolution, 840 E Oakland Park Blvd, Ste 102, Oakland Park. Call Rev. G. 917.579.3750.
classifieds To order a listing, email Info@NaBroward.com or order online: NaBroward.com/classified. Due date is the 10th of the month. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD HERE – With Natural Awakenings Magazine, get real results, distributing monthly about 28,000 magazines throughout Broward County. Call our office today 954-630-1610.
SPACE AVAILABLE HOLISTIC HEALTHCARE OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE – in the Plantation area. Newly remodeled, wood floors, includes internet, use of private bathroom, kitchen, and separate client waiting room. Rent is $625 per month. Contact Angie 954-478-2062.
Free Reiki Circle — 10–11am. Divine Love Institute & Gift Shop, 2832 Stirling Rd, #H, Hollywood FL 33020. Conveniently located just west of I–95 on Stirling Rd, 954.920.0050.
June 2020
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JULY THE FOOD CONNECTION ISSUE
Coming Next Month
Gut Health
Plus: Beyond Factory Farming
community
Resource Guide (crg)
W
hy we may want to take a closer look at the Community Resource Guide this month with some information that seems to be “grayed out” and what that really means for us.
denoting that their business location is currently not open. Their photo or logo is also purposely faded to reflect their temporary closure. Our digital version of the magazine nabroward.com/issues/ now has twice the views it normally has. Included within these “GRAY” CRG listings, additional links, besides the standard website, may be included, such as Instagram or LinkedIn. They are “active” within our digital issues, as we recognize the importance of having these links active. According to Google, “Links help our crawlers find your site and can give your site greater visibility in our search results.... Google interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote by page A for page B.” You may want to connect with our advertisers, and thanks to the collaborative process, we have some additional choices. Be healthy; stay well.
AYURVEDIC ASTROLOGER PRACTITIONER
CHIROPRACTIC PHYSICIAN
As we have been in communication with our advertisers who have either had their businesses closed down due to mandates, or other reasons at this time during the pandemic, many of these businesses were looking for ways to share that they are offering additional ways to connect, such as, an individual appointment, Video-Conferencing, Facebook, Zoom, email, website, etc. Collectively the idea of graying out their street address was created, and thus some of our resources listed, have a portion of their information in gray ink instead of black,
DR. SCOTT, AYURVEDIC ASTROLOGER PRACTITIONER 631-375-8702 DrSKeller@aol.com Ask-DrScott.com
Create abundance in all areas of your life through this unique blend of Astrology and Ayurveda. This includes total healing in the areas of Health, Relationships, Career, and Life Path.
NEW LIFE UPPER CERVICAL CHIROPRACTIC
820 S State Rd. 7, Plantation FL 33317 954-389-8297 TopDocFL.com Upper Cervical Chiropractic, light force extremity adjusting, whole-food nutrition, Applied Kinesiology, The Emotion C o d e , E n e rg y m e d i c i n e , Mysofascial release.
COLON THERAPY BODY SCULPTING ANTI-AGING CENTER OF BOCA 33 SE 4th St, Ste. 102 Boca Raton FL 33432 888-287-3989 AntiAgingCenterOfBoca.com
To advertise or participate in our next issue, call
Specializing in taking years off your face and body without invasive surgery, injections or other painful procedures. Plus acupuncture, facials, waxing and much more.
954-630-1610 28
Broward County, Florida edition
NaBroward.com
A COLON CARE CENTER
Michele Miglino, LMT/CCT 837 SE 9th St. Deerfield Beach FL 33441 954-421-0703 954-695-6595, cell AColonCareCenter.com
Colon hydrotherapy is one of the best things you can do for your health and wellness, and to keep your body functioning at peak efficiency. MM18325, MA0007506.
community resource guide
COUNSELING/THERAPY KAREN KAYE, HOLISTIC PSYCHOTHERAPIST, LMHC
1500 Weston Rd. Weston FL 33326 954-384-1217 KarenKayeTherapist.com Therapists.PsychologyToday.com/rms/ name/Karen_L_Kaye_MS,LMHC_Weston_ Florida_35986 I am Natural Awakenings’ “Ask the Therapist.” Please refer to the column and archives for the many topics I specialize in. I counsel individuals, couples and families. You can also view my website.
CRANIOSACRAL THERAPY PERFECTING TOUCH
Kathy Bates Wilton Executive Suites 2312 Wilton Drive Fort Lauderdale FL 33305 954-647-9010 PerfectingTouch1@ymail.com Cranial sacral therapy - CST- a light touch approach releasing tension and restrictions, reducing pain and dysfunction. Therapeutic massage also available. Feel good within yourself. MA70919.
TOTAL BALANCE 4 U
TJ Robinson 2800 E. Commercial Blvd, Suite 211 Ft. Lauderdale FL 33308 954-234-3299 Release “stuck” areas in your body that cause chronic pain: migraines, neck, low back, PTSD, anxiety, and more. It feels good to feel good! MA24266, MM30072.
See page 28: “Why we may want to take a closer look...”
DAY RETREATS THERMAE STILLNESS RETREAT
604 S. Federal Hwy. Fort Lauderdale FL 33301 954-604-7930 ThermaeRetreat@gmail.com ThermaeRetreat.com FB: @thermaeretreat IG: thermae.ftlauderdale Thermae Retreat
An organic serene daily retreat to prevent or heal. Infrared saunas, massage, skincare, body scrubs and masques, holistic healing, energy therapy. Yoga, meditation, hydrotherapy.
DENTAL HEALTH BRENT J. BRACCO, DDS – COMPREHENSIVE DENTISTRY
2467 E Commercial Blvd. Fort Lauderdale FL 33308 954-771-5300 DrBrentBracco.com
Do you wait till it hurts to see the dentist? Enhance your smile at our new tranquil, state-of-theart office. We have been providing wholistic family dental care since 1985. Most insurance accepted. Mon – Thurs, 7:30am – 5pm.
INTEGRATED DENTAL CENTER Aurel Chebanu, DMD, PhD 333 NW 70th Ave., Ste. 207 Plantation FL 33317 954-792-6266 Chebanudmd@comcast.net
Dr. Chebanu recognizes the importance of natural therapies and health solutions. His office specializes in Biocompatible a n d H o l i s t i c D e n t i s t r y, Restorative and Cosmetic Dentistry, Ceramic Dental Implants, Oral Surgery, and TMJ Disorders. See ad page 7.
THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR DENTAL EXCELLENCE Yolanda Cintron, DMD 2021 E Commercial Blvd., Ste. 208 Fort Lauderdale FL 33308 954-938-4599 GoNaturalDentistry.com
A ll phases of dentistry for optimum health, holistic, biocompatible dentistry. • Sedation dentistry • Removing of toxic metals • Replacing them with bio-compatible materials • Laser dentistry for painless surgeries & extractions • Zirconia/ceramic implants • Natural bone augmentation / Plasma Rich Growth Factor • Oral DNA Testing • Add gums to receding gums. .
DR. YANI HOLISTIC AND HEALING DENTISTRY Dr. Yani, DMD 212 SE 12th St (Davie Blvd) Fort Lauderdale FL 33316 954-525-6010 info@Yanidmd.com Yanidmd.com
We follow strict amalgam removal protocols incorporating nutritional supplements for safe mercury detoxification ~ IAOMT member. To promote better healing, our hygiene care incorporates ozone and essential oils for gum treatments. Only mercury-free biocompatible crowns and dental materials used. Free holistic toothpaste recipe.
ENVIRONMENTAL ARTIST SUSIEQ WOOD
954-630-1610 SQWood@gmail.com SusieQWood.com Shop.Spreadshirt.com/susieqwood Artist, Advocate, and Speaker. Available for corporate and community art projects and presentations. Award-winning artist, SusieQ, brings awareness to global waste management issues by using discarded materials in her work with the intention of inspiring viable solutions. Also available, unique Global TRASHformation jewelry, plus online store for tees and more. See ad pages 4 and 22. June 2020
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community resource guide HOLISTIC MEDICAL CENTER ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE CENTER OF FORT LAUDERDALE
Dr. Gary Snyder 2640 E Oakland Park Blvd. Fort Lauderdale FL 33306 954-486-4000 DrGarySnyder.com
A holistic medical center for wellness and healing, where caring professionals approach the whole person instead of just treating symptoms, with natural, scientific products and services. See ad page 11.
PRONUNCIATION COACH INTEGRATIVE HYPNOSIS
FORT LAUDERDALE HYPNOSIS AND COACHING
Catherine Edelson MA, CH 2550 N Federal Hwy. Fort Lauderdale FL 33305 954-745-0735 InFocus@CatherinEdelson.com FB business: Fort Lauderdale Hypnosis Hypnotists believe everything is hypnosis. We offer powerful, ecological and practical solutions to each client. Benefits are obvious as you allow it to happen!
PERFECT YOUR AMERICAN ACCENT
Professor Alice Wujciak / woo-jack / 954-963-7661 PerfectYourAmericanAccent.com Upgrade your accent and speak English confidently. “Quick fixes to language issues.”
PSYCHOTHERAPY A HEALING SPACE
Kris Drumm, LCSW, ACHT 954-549-0263 AHealingSpaceWiltonManors.com
HOMEOPATHY HOMEOPATHY CURE
Dr. Iqbal Nazir, M.S, D.Pharm, D.H.S. Licensed Lab Medicine Practitioner 954-226-3652 HomeopathTreatment.com
Natural cure in homeopathy of
the most diseases and symptoms.
LYMPHATIC DRAINAGE TOTAL BALANCE 4 U
TJ Robinson, LMT, CST 954-234-3299 TotalBalance4u.com
Speed up the elimination of toxins and reduce water retention caused by injuries, surgeries, inactivity. Manual lymph drainage helps prevent stagnation in your body. MA24266, MM30072.
No side effects.
C a l l D r. I q b a l N a z i r, Homeopathic Specialist, for an appointment.
HYPERBARIC OXYGEN THERAPY HYPERBARIC MEDICAL SOLUTIONS
Gregory Alfred, MD, FAAEM, ABEM 2866 E Oakland Park Blvd., Ste. 100 Fort Lauderdale FL 33306 954-834-1280 hmshbot.com
MUSIC FULL CIRCLE MUSIC INC. 3302 N.E. 33rd Street, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308 954-797-6085 FullCircleMusicInc.com
Experience the healing and rejuvenating power of pure oxygen under pressure. HMS offers state-of-theart hyperbaric therapy under board-certified physicians and certified medical personnel. Just breathe! See ad page 9.
We’ve been repairing / healing instruments for 45 years. We carry an eclectic assortment of instruments from around the world, including orchestra and band instruments.
Uncover and transform limiting and damaging belief systems with individual and group therapies, including heartcentered hypnotherapy and inner child healing. Free one half-hour consultation offered.
SALON HAIR HOLISTIC ECO-FRIENDLY STUDIO Ibana Villasenor 141 NW 20th St., Ste. B7 Boca Raton FL 33431 561-372-5354 HairHolistic@gmail.com HairHolistic.com
Hair services & products with a truly holistic approach like scalp-hair detox, and jet rejuvenation. Hair coloring with Henna or eco-friendly dyes, and formaldehyde-free keratine.
SPIRITUAL CONSULTANT DEBORA RAMOS
305-401-0607 DeboraRamos07@gmail.com DeboraRamos.com
To travel is to take a journey into yourself. ~Danny Kaye
30
Broward County, Florida edition
NaBroward.com
Angel Coach Readings and Therapy. Clear past lives, blocks to prosperity and relationships. Reiki (continuing education). Crystal therapist. Certified classes. Archangels Soy Candles. English/Spanish.
community resource guide THERMOGRAPHY 3RD EYE THERMOGRAPHY HOLISTIC CENTER
Darcie Barron, CTT 1451 W Cypress Creek Rd., Ste. 300 Fort Lauderdale FL 33309 954-204-5602 3rdEyeThermography@gmail.com 3rdEyeThermographyHolisticCenter@gmail.com
See page 28: “Why we may want to take a closer look...” WELLNESS CENTER
DEEP ROOTS FAMILY WELLNESS 9532 Griffin Rd. Cooper City FL 33328 954-434-1800 DeepRootsHolistic.com
Thermography (Medical Infrared Imaging), Breast, full Body Scans available. Nutrient Mapping from the hair root showing Vitamins, Minerals, Amino Acids, Mold, Fungus, Parasites and more. See ad page 25.
Natural treatments for enhancing fertility, supporting pregnancy and postpartum, natural children’s remedies, lasting relief from pain, fatigue, i n s o m n i a , a n x i e t y, a n d migraines. Your personal consultation is free. MA39137
WHOLISTIC PHYSICIAN DR. AMADI’S WHOLISTIC HEALTH CENTER Hepsharat Amadi, M.D., L.Ac. 10189 W. Sample Rd Coral Springs FL 33065 954-757-0064 954-757-2612, fax DrAmadi@DrAmadi.com GreatNaturalDoctor.com
Primary Health Care with a Natural Approach including Bioidentical hormone replacement therapy, Quantum Biofeedback, Weight Loss, Detoxification, Natural Allergy Tr e a t m e n t , H e r b a l a n d Homeopathic Remedies, Supplements, Nutrition, Lifestyle Counseling and Circulation enhancement/BEMER therapy.
It is better to travel well than to arrive. ~Buddha
June 2020
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