November 2022 Natural Awakenings Volusia Flagler

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FREE November 2022 | Volusia / Flagler Edition | VoFLNatural.com HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET WAYS TO TURN ANXIETY INTO POSITIVE ACTION EAT RIGHT TO LIFT YOUR MOOD A GRATEFUL HEART IS GOOD MEDICINE
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3November 2022 VOFLNATURAL.COM HOW TO ADVERTISE To advertise in Natural Awakenings, please call 386-736-3838 or email Ads@VoFLNatural.com. CALENDAR SUBMISSIONS Email calendar events to: Calendar@VoFLNatural.com. REGIONAL MARKETS Advertise your products or services in multiple markets. Natural Awakenings Publishing Corporation is a growing franchised family of locally owned magazines serving communities since 1994. To place your ad in other markets, call 239-449-8309. For franchising opportunities, call 239-530-1377 or visit NaturalAwakeningsMag.com. ADVERTISING & SUBMISSIONS Natural Awakenings is a network of holistic lifestyle magazines providing the communities we serve with the tools and resources to lead healthier lives on a healthy planet. 12 STAYING SERENE IN TURBULENT TIMES How to Turn Anxiety into Positive Action 16 THE GUT-BRAIN CONNECTION How Food Affects Our Mood 20 MAKING FOREVER CHEMICALS GO AWAY Manmade Compounds Pose Lasting Threat to Our Health 22 12 QUICK FIXES FOR ANXIETY Simple Strategies for Mental Well-Being 24 THE COLORS OF HEALING Art Therapy for Kids 26 RACHEL JONES on Grief in the Healthcare Front Lines 27 GRATITUDE IS GOOD MEDICINE 28 CAREGIVING COMPANIONS The Many Benefits of Service, Therapy and Emotional Support Animals Contents DEPARTMENTS 5 news briefs 7 local spotlight 8 health briefs 10 global briefs 15 therapy spotlight 16 conscious eating 20 green living 22 healing ways 24 healthy kids 26 wise words 27 inspiration 28 natural pet 31 calendar 33 resource guide 12 27 8 22 16

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letter from publisher

Hello and welcome to our November edition!

Before directing you to the many valuable articles about living a healthy, balanced life, I want to remind you to support local businesses.

A healthy network of local businesses has never been more important. Money spent locally is an investment in our community. Lives are directly impacted by every dollar spent with independent businesses. I urge you to choose locally produced goods and services during the holiday season, and hope you’ll continue this practice into the new year.

Canal Street in New Smyrna Beach invites you to shop the historic district and enjoy the holiday-themed events beginning on Nov. 25. A community tree-lighting ceremony, live entertainment and a winter wonderland are just a few of the special events planned. Read more on page 6 and visit CanalStreetnsb.com.

We congratulate Empower Solar Solutions on being named a top solar provider in national magazine, The Solar Power World’s 2022 list of top solar contractors. This local, woman-owned company’s mission is to make solar energy effortless and affordable by providing homeowners with turnkey, renewable energy. They handle the entire process from concept to completion. See the article and ad on page 4.

Local Acupuncture Physician Lisa Sweeters is featured on page 7 for her win at the 24th annual Sisters of the Sea Surf Classic in Jacksonville Beach. Sweeters recently resumed competitive surfing after a maternity/postpartum break.

The gut health and mental health connection is explained in conscious eating on page 16. We’ll all heard the phrase, “you are what you eat.” About 90 percent of serotonin is produced in the cut and carried to the brain, not the other way around. Imbalances in gut bacteria can lead to depression and other psychiatric issues. Learn about mood-lifting foods and identifying bio-markers for inflammation. Be sure to try the gut-healing recipes following the article.

Mental health issues continue to rise due to the prolonged state of anxiety caused by economics, politics and the perceived climate emergency. Twelve strategies for overcoming anxiety are offered in our healing ways section on page 22. Whether for yourself are a loved one, you’ll derive many benefits from this five minute read.

Enter this season with thanksgiving and gratitude.

Natural

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Rebecca Young, Publisher

Empower Solar Solutions Earns Top Provider Recognition

National solar magazine The Solar Power World listed Empower Solar Solutions, of Ormond Beach, as one of the top solar providers in the country. The local, woman-owned business, which opened in 2020 and is owned by long-time Volusia County resident, Tracy Joiner, was listed on the nationwide 2022 Top Solar Contractors list.

A statement from the magazine to Empower reads: “It has been a wild last two years, so it has been nice seeing the success of the solar construction market and celebrating all the great achieve ments contractors have accomplished in communities across the country. We thank you for making a difference in many people’s lives—not just your customers’ but also your employees’. Empower Solar Solutions is doing very important work.”

Empowers’ mission is to make independent solar energy ef fortless and affordable. Empowers’ residential division, Empower Home Solar, provides Florida homeowners with turnkey renew able solar energy and home power back-up systems; handling the entire process from concept and design, to installation and utility

interconnection. Through the use of world-class solar technology, they help residents pro tect against rising energy prices and meet the growing residential demand for clean, reliable home energy.

At Empower, they believe in the importance of selfsustainability and energy indepen dence. It is vital that our actions today impact the environment in a positive way for future generations. Their goal is to save homeowners money while lessening the carbon footprint of the community, bringing awareness and utilization of energy alterna tives that are efficient, clean and affordable for everyone.

Empower Founder Tracy Joiner(L) with two of her children

Empower Solar Solutions is located at 356 Destination Daytona Ln., in Ormond Beach. Their Florida license solar contractor number is CVC57067. For more information, visit EmpowerSolar.org. See ad, below.

5November 2022 news brief

Christmas on Canal Street

Thankfully, downtown New Smyrna Beach (NSB)—a historic area filled with quaint boutiques, salons and restau rants—was spared the wrath of Hurricane Ian and will be a hub of holiday festivities over the next two months.

“The Canal Street Historic District was very fortunate,” says Elizabeth Jones, owner of Nature in Beauty Boutique Salon and Spa, located on Canal Street. “The area had minimal damage from Ian and businesses are up and running. We are all so grateful. We’re busy planning our holiday events.”

Scheduled holiday-themed events for downtown NSB are as follows: Spark the Spirit on November 25 from 5 to 7:30 p.m. at the corner of Live Oak and Canal Street—includes a tree- lighting ceremony, live entertainment, a winter wonderland and Santa’s grand entrance at Christmas Park; Coastal Christmas Market on No vember 26 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.—includes shopping and entertainment; Girls Night Out on December 1 from 5 to 9 p.m.— shop, stroll and dine along Canal Street; a Christmas Parade on December 3 from 4 to 6:30 p.m.—land parade ending on Canal Street; and a Holiday Boat Parade on December 10 at dusk—sea parade on the Intracoastal Waterway.

more information, visit CanalStreetnsb. com/calendar.

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East Coast Acupuncture Owner Lisa Sweeters Wins Recent Surf Contest

Inaddition to being an acupuncture physician and owner of East Coast Acupuncture and Alternative Medicine, in Palm Coast, Lisa Sweeters is an avid surfer, who has been competing for more than 30 years. Her latest victory was on September 10 at the 24th annual Sisters of the Sea Surf Classic, in Jacksonville Beach.

“It’s the longest-running all-women surf contest that I’m aware of and is super fun,” says Sweeters, who also mentioned that the contest raises money for the Bosom Buddies Program at the Women’s Center of Jacksonville. So far, Sisters of the Sea have donated $130,000 to the program and will be donating $6,000 more, thanks to the recent contest.

Sweeters says she resumed competing last year after a maternity/postpartum break that lasted a couple of years. “It’s not always easy getting to a contest now with the family in tow. But it’s fun and there are other moms there with their wee folk, and I know they also went through hell and high water to get there,” she says.

“I showed up at a contest with toddler vomit in my hair. Gross but funny because that’s oftentimes what mom life entails. One of the other moms didn’t make that contest because her kid had hand, foot and mouth disease. So there’s this little subcul ture of competitive surfing moms, and it’s pretty cool—and hectic,” shares Sweeters.

As an athlete, Sweeters enjoys help ing patients with sports-related injuries

and pain that limits their activity. She has helped many golfers return to the course after being told to give up the game due to low back problems. Another of her special ties is fertility issues requiring in vitro fertilization (IVF). Her expertise in treat ing women prior to IVF treatments has resulted in many successful pregnancies.

It was because of an injury Sweeters sustained early in life that she ended up becoming an acupuncture physician. As a young adult, she sprained and hyperex tended her elbow. After using her insurance benefits for therapy, she still couldn’t fully flex or extend her elbow. Life with limited range of motion wasn’t an option for the athlete. A friend suggested she try acu puncture, and it turned into a life-changing decision. Sweeters never told the acupunc ture physician she suffered from insomnia or anxiety; however, the treatments not only completely resolved her elbow injury, but also her insomnia and anxiety.

She was fascinated, continued to use acu puncture and found herself asking, “What is this, and how does it work?” At the time, Sweeters intended to go to law school, but was conflicted about the decision because she doesn’t like to argue. Coming from a family of attorneys, she hadn’t considered other career options and was registered to take the Law School Admission Test for a school in San Diego. She entered the exam site with a less-than-enthusiastic attitude, knowing she wasn’t passionate about prac

ticing law. When she opened the written portion of the exam and saw that it was all about acupuncture, she recognized it as a sign that couldn’t be ignored.

She finished the test, was accepted to the law school, but declined and applied to Pacific College of Oriental Medicine, also in San Diego. Every day, she drove past the law school on her way to learn about Eastern medicine. She continued her stud ies in Honolulu and later in China—where she studied acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine in Guang Zhou while earning her master’s degree in Oriental medicine—opening her Palm Coast clinic in 2018.

Sweeters says she can’t imagine doing anything else. She loves her work so much that taking time off to ride the waves can sometimes pose a bit of a challenge. In ad dition to surfing, organic gardening, raising backyard chickens, and family time occupy Sweeters’ time away from her clinic.

East Coast Acupuncture and Alternative Medicine is located at 102 Flagler Plaza Dr., Ste. 102, in Palm Coast. For more informa tion, call 386-302-5363 or visit EastCoast Acupuncturefl.com. See ad, page 11.

7November 2022
local spotlight

Fruit and Vitamin B6 May Relieve Anxiety and Depression

The best strategy to stay upbeat may be to reach for the fruit bowl, suggests a new study comparing the habits and mental states of 428 people published in the British Journal of Nutrition. Researchers at the UK’s Aston University found that the more often people ate fruit, the lower they scored for depression and the higher for mental well-being. The frequency of fruit consump tion seemed to be more important to psychological health than the total amount consumed. People that ate savory snacks such as potato chips, which are low in nutrients, were more likely to report more frequent memory lapses and greater levels of anxiety and depres sion. The researchers found no connection between eating vegetables and psychological health. Nutrients can be lost during cooking. “As we are more likely to eat fruit raw, this could potentially explain its stronger influence on our psychological health,” says lead author Nicola-Jayne Tuck.

In another study, researchers from the UK’s University of Reading gave 478 young adults either high doses of vitamins B6 or B12 or a placebo. After one month, they found that 100 milligrams of the B6 (about 50 times the recom mended daily allowance) significantly boosted gamma aminobutyric acid, which inhibits excitatory impulses in the brain, and reduced self-reported anxiety and depression levels. B12 had no such effects.

Different Fibers Produce Different Results

Although high-fiber diets reduce the risk of heart attack, stroke and cardiovas cular disease, the latest research from Stanford University indicates that not all fibers are equal in their effect on different species of probiotics in the intes tines. Arabinoxylan, which is common in whole grains, was found to reduce cholesterol naturally and was easier to digest than long-chain inulin, which is found in onions, chicory root and Jerusalem artichokes. Commonly used for weight-loss products, inulin was linked to a modest decrease in inflammation markers and an increase in Bifidobacterium, a “good” gut microbe; however, at high doses it increased inflammation and raised the possibility of liver damage.

Mislabeling Found in Some Immunity Supplements

Immunity supplements may not be all they claim to be, according to a new study in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Researchers conducted liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry tests on 30 of the bestselling, four-star-and-up immunity products on Amazon and found that only 13 con tained the exact ingredients listed on their labels. Thirteen were missing some of the listed ingredients and nine contained ingredients not listed on the labels. Missing ingredients were mainly plant extracts such as aloe vera, astragalus, eleuthero, ginger root and slippery elm. Added ingredients included black rice seed in elderberry extracts and pantothenic acid.

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health briefs

Stretching and Balance Exercises Can Avert

Mental Decline

To protect against memory loss, simple stretching and balance exercises work as well as hard-driving aerobics, concludes a new study from Wake Forest University. The study enrolled 296 sedentary older adults with mild cog nitive decline such as forgetting dates, keys and names. Those that performed simple stretching routines for 120 to 150 minutes per week experienced no memory decline in a year’s time, as measured by cognitive tests and brain scans that showed no shrinkage. These results matched the outcome of people that did moderate-intensity aerobic training on treadmills or stationary bikes four times a week, striving for about 30 to 40 minutes of a heightened heart rate. A control group of equally matched people that did not ex ercise did decline cognitively. The people that exercised were supervised by trainers at local YMCAs, which may have helped them stay motivated, say the researchers.

Longevity Diet Involves Fasting, Too

After reviewing hun dreds of studies on nutrition, diseases and longevity in labo ratory animals and humans, the optimal diet for longevity has “lots of legumes, whole grains and vegetables; some fish; no red meat or pro cessed meat and very low white meat; low sugar and refined grains; good levels of nuts and olive oil, and some dark chocolate,” reports University of Southern California gerontology professor Valter Longo. According to the literature review he and others authored for Cell, a day’s meals should ideally occur within a window of 11 to 12 hours, allowing for a daily period of fasting. A five-day fast or fast-mimicking diet every three to four months was also suggested to help reduce insulin resistance, blood pressure and other risk factors for those with increased disease risks.

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Google Downplays

Flight Emissions

The world’s biggest search engine has taken a key driver of global warming out of the carbon calcu lator embedded in the company’s Google Flights search tool, making jour neys appear to have much less impact on the envi ronment than before. Dr. Doug Parr, chief scientist of Greenpeace, says, “Google has airbrushed a huge chunk of the aviation industry’s climate impacts from its pages.”

With Google hosting nine out of every 10 online search es, this could have wide repercussions for people’s travel decisions. In July, the search engine decided to exclude all the global warming impacts of flying except CO2 following consultations with its industry partners.

Kit Brennan, a founder of Thrust Carbon, a UK company that helps businesses reduce the effect their travel has on the climate, fears consumers could come to believe that non-CO2 impacts on the climate are not relevant in the longer term, despite the science that contradicts this view. That would mean up to 1.5 percent of the warming caused by human activity would be ignored, and the pressure on airlines to reduce their emissions would be cut according ly. Some experts say Google’s calculations now represent just over half of the real impact of flights on the climate.

Concrete Made with Rubber Refuse

Plastic Recycling Hoax Revealed

According to a new report (Tinyurl.com/Chemical Recycling) from the non profit Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA), 20 states have passed bills to exempt chemical recycling facilities from waste management requirements, despite sig nificant evidence that most facilities actually incinerate the plastic they receive.

The petrochemical industry, as represented by the American Chemistry Council, has been lobbying for state-level legislation to promote “chemical recycling”, a process that critics say is recycling in name only. Their goal is to reclassify chemical recycling as a manufactur ing process, rather than waste disposal, with more lenient regulations concerning pollution and hazardous waste.

GAIA Policy and Research Coordinator and author of the report Tok Oyewole says, “These facilities are in actuality waste-to-toxic-oil plants, processing plastic to turn it into a subpar and polluting fuel.” The report calls for federal regulation to crack down on the plastic industry’s misinformation and affirm chemical recycling’s status as a waste management process.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is considering whether chemical recycling should be regulated under Sec tion 129 of the Clean Air Act, which would define chemical recycling processes as incineration, potentially short-circu iting the petrochemical industry’s state legislative strategy, although Oyewole says it’s unclear whether the agency’s determination would override existing state legislation.

Concrete consists of water, cement and an aggregate such as sand or gravel. The aggregate has to be mined from the ground, and is now in short supply in many parts of the world, while discarded tires can be partially recycled, but are often burned or relegated to landfills.

Attempts to replace some of the aggregate used in concrete with crumbled, used tires has been stymied by a bonding problem because pores in the rubber fill with water when the concrete is first mixed, and become empty holes as the water evaporates and the concrete sets.

As reported in the journal Resources, Conservation & Recycling, scientists at Australia’s RMIT University have produced good-quality concrete in which all of the aggregate has been replaced with tire particles. They started with wet concrete in which all the aggregate is comprised of tire particles, then placed it in special steel molds as it set to place pressure on the concrete, compressing the particles and the pores within.

Once the concrete dried and set, the cement had bonded much better to the tire particles. When compared to previous 100-percent tire-aggregate concrete produced by conventional means, the preloaded concrete exhib ited 97 percent, 59 percent and 20 percent increases in compressive, flexural and tensile strength, respectively.

10 Volusia / Flagler VoFLNatural.com global briefs
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Urban Crops Can Have Higher Yields Than Conventional Farming

A new study led by Lancaster University researchers shows that urban gardens and hydroponics can thrive and may exceed the yields of rural farms. Professor Jess Davies, project lead for the Rurban Revo lution project that developed this study, says, “Urban food growing is often dismissed as something that cannot meaningfully contribute to food security.”

The paper compiled studies on urban agriculture from 53 countries to find out which crops grow well in cities, what growing methods are most effective and which spaces can be used for growing. It turns out that urban yields for crops like cucumbers, tubers and lettuces can be two to four times higher than conventional farm ing. Cost efficiency remains an open question and important factor.

Most studies on urban agriculture fo cus on private and community gardens, parks and field growing operations. This one includes “grey” spaces in cit ies that are already built, but could be used for growing, such as rooftops and building facades.

Dr. Florian Payen, lead author and researcher from the Lancaster Environ ment Centre, says, “Surprisingly, there were few differences between overall yields in indoor spaces and outdoor green spaces, but there were clear dif ferences in the suitability of crop types to different gray spaces. You can’t exactly stack up apple trees in a fiveor 10-layer-high growth chamber.”

11November 2022 Digestive Issues Constipation Bloating Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) Sports Injuries Pain Relief including: Neck • Back • Knee Tennis Elbow Shoulder Injuries East Coast Acupuncture and Alternative Medicine 386.302.5363Call 102 Flagler Plaza Dr. Suite 102 in Palm Coast (386) 302-5363Call to schedule! Open Mon thru Fri 8:30 – 3:00pm by appointment only www.eastcoastacupuncturefl.com We Undo What Life Does to the Body! Located on the left side of the Winn-Dixie shopping center on SR 100 Community Care Provider for Veterans Administration PTSD • Anxiety • Chronic & Acute Pain Lisa Sweeters Acupuncture Physician Reproductive Health Hormonal Imbalances PCOS – Hot Flashes Menopausal Conditions IVF support Female Infertility Erectile Dysfunction Frequent Urination due to Prostatitis Chronic Pain Migraines Headaches TMJ – Tinnitus Neuropathy Neck Pain Frozen Shoulder Back Pain Lower Back Knee & Foot Injury Fibromyalgia Reclaim your Health and Vitality Gently and Naturally. OldKingsRdSFlagler Plaza Dr. 100 386.341.5068 • NaturalConceptsRevisited.com 142 West Int’l Speedway Blvd. | Daytona Beach (Between Beach and US1) Favorite Smoothie of the month! Mama Jo’s Just mention Natural Awakenings! $5 12ozforonly Organic EnchiladasSoup & SaladTUE: FRI:CAFE SPECIALS Vegan, BakedGluten-FreeGoods! Great Selectionof Store • Cafe • Juice Bar Organic Lifestyle Grab n’ Go Lunch Specials Wednesday thru Friday follow us on: Your Healthy Living Journey Starts Here!
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STAYING SERENE IN TURBULENT TIMES HOW TO TURN ANXIETY INTO POSITIVE ACTION

In this day and age, we have good reason to toss and turn in our beds at night. As our nation faces climate catastrophes, acrid politics, stubborn inflation, unpredictable virus variants and hot-button issues like abortion and guns, there’s good reason our collective anxiety levels are at a high pitch. A recent Yale survey found that 70 percent of Americans report being anxious or depressed about global warming, and a Penn State survey this year found that 84 percent of us say

we are “extremely worried” or “very worried” about where the country is headed. Re searchers are coining new terms: “polycrisis”, for complex, cascading crises in interacting systems, and “pre-traumatic stress disorder”, when fear of an outcome makes it as good as real to our psyches.

“It’s easy for people to feel overwhelmed now, feeling there are breakdowns and threats on many fronts. People can wonder ‘Where do I even start?’ and feel powerless and hope less and numb,” says psychiatrist Janet Lewis, M.D., a founder of the nationwide Climate Psychiatry Alliance and a University of Rochester clinical assistant professor of psychia try. “We are part of a complex system that is moving into new ways of functioning, but there’s no way of predicting ahead of time exactly what all the features of the new ways of operating will be. That makes it impossible for us to wrap our minds around everything that is happening.”

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Still, she adds, “We are also by definition part of the system, and therefore have a responsibility to do what we can. We can’t sit on the sidelines and merely hope that things transform in good directions. The situation being so serious also means that what we do now is really important.”

To move from anxiety into effective ac tion, mental health experts advise several strategies: taking a wider perspective, building resilience through self-care and taking individual steps to make a collective difference. As the Dalai Lama encourages, “If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping with a mosquito!”

We need to take a longer view, rather than expect immediate change.”

In this ongoing process, anxiety has its rightful place. “Anxiety makes us look around, figure out solutions and act. This can absolutely be turned into something positive,” says neuropsychologist Barbara Easterlin, of Jackson, Wyoming, an expert on ecoanxiety who is on the steering committee of the Climate Psychology Alliance of North America. “Doing just one thing to help the planet consistently helps defeat anxiety.”

Taking action moves us into our power— as 15-year-old Greta Thunberg demonstrat ed by holding a sign outside the Swedish parliament. Personal actions matter be cause numbers add up. Only 25 percent of individuals in a social group need to make a shift before significant social change fol lows, conclude researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science that analyzed a decade of societal changes in voting, health, technol ogy and finance. Once a group reaches that tipping point, it can trigger a change in the rest of society, says study author Damon Centola, Ph.D., author of Change: How to Make Big Things Happen.

Taking a Wider Perspective

News reports almost always sound dire— just like the amygdala of our brains, jour nalists often see their function as focusing on threats to alert us to dangers. “Still, if you take the long view of history, we are much better off than we were 200 years ago or 1,000 years ago, but it took many years to make those changes,” counsels Robert L. Leahy, Ph.D., director of the American Institute for Cognitive Therapy and author of the bestselling The Worry Cure and the upcoming If Only

“We never know if something is hopeless until we have all the data, and we seldom have all the data,” he says. “And when it comes to political emotions, many of the predictions that are made by the ‘talking heads’ in media never come true.”

Leahy counsels patience: “Social change does not come about by one person doing something. That usually comes about by a long process of millions of people changing their attitudes and changing their behav ior. Small efforts can be made on a daily basis that move this slow process forward.

Building Resilience with Self-Care

Fears about the shape of the planet and nation are often piled on top of our everyday living anxieties about family and finances, which can induce emotional overload. “We all have a ‘zone of resilience’ or ‘window of tolerance’, outside of which we become more reactive, less able to function effectively. But it is not fixed. We can learn tools to expand it and cultivate the capacity to be with more,” says Easterlin.

Therapy can be a part of that process by challenging us to examine “the mental narratives that can exacerbate distress,” says Leslie Davenport, a climate psychol ogy consultant and author of Emotional Resiliency in the Era of Climate Change. It’s important to find a therapist, she says, that “validates that your feelings are a nor mal response to an existential crisis.” She has helped develop new programs at the American Psychology Association and the California Institute of Integral Studies to train therapists in treating eco-anxiety. For low-cost online support, the Good Grief Network offers a 10-step, 10-week program to help process personal anxiety and grief about climate change. People are also sit ting down to share their distress at climate cafes, small local gatherings springing up across the country and globe, including some online.

Getting enough sleep, eating healthy and exercising are also key self-care strategies. When anxiety strikes, psychologists advise shifting attention from the head to the body, using such approaches as mindful breathing, dancing and grounding. Medita tion, easily accessed these days through apps like Calm and Headspace, helps us to enter into what religious and spiritual teachings call “the still point within.”

Rather than “doomscrolling” when anxi ety mounts, cutting back our media use can significantly lower stress levels, studies show. Wise media strategies include choos ing well-established, credible news sources; reading rather than watching the news to lower its emotional impact; limiting news intake to 10 minutes once or twice a day; taking a “news fast” on occasion; and pass ing up sources that incessantly feed fury.

13November 2022
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On the other hand, it’s essential to find sources for hope, an emotion important in recovery from anxiety disorders, according to a study in Behavior Therapy. Googling “good news on climate change” will bring up articles about alternative energy growth, new super-enzymes that eat plastic rubbish and black rhinos com ing back from the brink of extinction. Although dystopic books abound, others offer hope, such as Drawdown, with its sensible, scaled-down strategies to stop global warming by 2050.

Moving into Action

Virtually no one can take on all the problems of the nation and globe at once—and the good news is that unless we hold high public office, we don’t have to. Instead, “In taking action, focus on what you are good at, what your sphere of influence might be,” ad vises Lewis. “What are you most heartbroken over? Get involved in that and allow yourself to feel really good about what you’re doing and other people are doing.”

By narrowing our focus, we can hone in on an issue and figure out our part in its solution. “We need a broad range of collective action for transformation,” says Davenport. “For climate change, a teacher could bring social-emotional learning to climate educa tion into the classroom or start an after school ‘green club’; an artist could use their creative medium to communicate about climate in a moving way that could engage others; a nurse could create a waste-reduction initiative within a medical setting. These efforts all have ripple effects and help to elevate each other.”

In one recent study, people were found to consume less energy if they believed their neighbors did so and personally cared about conservation. Our neighborhoods are the place to take the small, meaningful steps that address the “crisis of connection” underly

ing rancorous national crises, says New York Times columnist David Brooks. He advocates “radical mutuality”, saying, “Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone.” Through simple actions like having casual conversations around town, pitching in to help a family in crisis, bringing a salad to a block party, tutoring a child or holding a civic post, we build the warm relational bonds that strengthen communities. As we meet others that feel as strongly as we do about our issues, our numbers start building and collective action can unfold.

“Independent of political beliefs, many people can find com mon values such as wanting safety for their families, a clean environment with clean waterways and recreation in natural environments,” says Easterlin.

That, in turn, helps lower our distress. A recent Yale study found that eco-anxiety was linked to depression only among stu dents not involved in group activities; those engaged in collective action such as being part of an environmental group, working in a letter-writing campaign or going to events or protests did not spiral downward emotionally. “Personal transformation and social transformation happen simultaneously. When you reach out and build community, you nourish yourself,” Brooks says.

As Thunberg has put it: “When I’m taking action, I don’t feel like I am helpless and that things are hopeless, because then I feel like I’m doing everything I can. And that gives me very much hope, especially to see all the other people all around the world, the activists, who are taking action and who are fighting for their present and for their future.”

Health writer Ronica O’Hara can be reached at OHaraRonica@ gmail.com.

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ccording to the Centers for Disease Control and

affects about one in four adults in the United States. That’s 54 mil lion men and women. It is a leading cause of work disability,

annual costs for medical care and lost earnings of $303.5 billion. It is clearly a problem, both medi cally and financially.

The most common form of arthritis is osteoarthritis, which is a degenera tive joint condition that results in pain, inflammation, swelling, stiffness, redness and immobility. Another type is rheuma toid arthritis, an autoimmune condition with symptoms that include inflamma

tion, pain, swelling, warmth, stiffness and restriction of motion. In the late stage, severe joint deformity and permanent disability may occur.

Arthritis affects the mind as well as the sufferer’s quality of living. The pain can be unrelenting, which, in turn, can lead to anxiety, depression, fatigue and loss of sleep. Research states that receiving acupuncture therapy, engaging in moderate exercise, and eating a healthy diet greatly help patients decrease symptoms. Acupuncture stimulates specific acupoints optimizing the body’s ability to heal, resulting in blood vessel dilation, endorphin release, nerve supply improvement, a decrease in swelling,

pain relief, and increased range of motion. Early treatment is the best solution to pre vent progression.

The National Institutes of Health recom mends acupuncture therapy for arthritic pain because of its effectiveness and safety compared to many drugs and medical procedures. For more information, consult a doctor of oriental medicine and acu puncture physician that has experience in treating chronic arthritis.

Lorenzo T. Phan is a doctor of oriental medicine and acupuncture physician, as well as the owner of the Acupuncture & Skin Care Clinic, located at 725 W. Granada Blvd., Ste. 15, in Ormond Beach. He is a graduate of the University of Hawaii, with a bachelor of science in biochemistry, and completed four years of post-graduate training in acupunc ture and Chinese herbal therapy at the American College of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, in Houston. For more information or for a free consultation, call 386-615-1203. See ad, below.

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The Gut-Brain Connection

HOW FOOD AFFECTS OUR MOOD

We’ve all heard the phrase, “You are what you eat,” but the connection is more than just physical because food impacts our mood, too. During the last decade, there have been an increasing number of studies explor ing what’s called the gut-brain axis and the role that microorganisms in the gut play in mental health conditions like anxiety, stress, depression and other disorders.

Depression is a leading cause of dis ability in the U.S. and worldwide. There are long-held views in medicine that depression is caused by imbalances in brain levels of serotonin—the neurotransmitter that plays a key role in regulating mood and other func tions like digestion and sleep. These beliefs resulted in decades of extensive use of anti depressants, most of which boost serotonin in the brain.

However, research by University College London, published in July in the journal Mo lecular Psychology, found “no consistent evi dence of there being an association between serotonin and depression, and no support for the hypothesis that depression is caused by lowered serotonin activity or concentrations.”

Michael Gershon, M.D., a Columbia University professor of pathology and cell biology, and author of The Second Brain, has explained to psychologists that “scientists were shocked to learn” that about 90 percent of serotonin is not created in the brain, but is actually produced in the gut and carried from there to the brain, not the other way around. This relationship is called the gutbrain axis.

A recent literature review of 26 studies suggests that imbalances in gut bacteria can disrupt the two-way communication along the gut-brain axis, leading to depression and other psychiatric issues.

16 Volusia / Flagler VoFLNatural.com conscious eating
Photo Sukjai/AdobeStock.com

Gut Health Equals Mental Health

“Gut health is extremely important for mental health,” says Bhavna Barmi, Ph.D., a senior clinical psychologist, relationship therapist and founder of the New Delhi-based Happiness Studio. “The traditional belief that only psychiatry and talk therapy can treat mental health has widened to include lifestyle and food, too.”

“The truth is that our food is the primary contributor of the quality and diversity of bacteria in the microbiome,” says Ishi Khosla, a clinical nutritionist and president of the Celiac Society of India. “There is an intricate relationship between the gut and the brain.” Food sensitivities, alcohol and highly processed, refined and sugary foods can lead to a lower diversity of good bac teria and increases in bad bacteria in the gut, which can trigger gut inflammation and unfavorable health conditions.

Most mood-related disorders start with inflammation of the brain as a response to inflammation in the gut. “Certain foods, like gluten, can cause an inflammatory response in the gut. Over time, sensitivi ties to gluten and other foods can lead to a ‘leaky gut’, an impairment of the gut lining that lets toxins into the bloodstream. Often, if it remains unresolved, it leads to mood-related disorders and other chronic health conditions,” says Khosla.

Clinical nutritionists and other practitioners use biochemical markers and food sensitivity tests to help identify food ingredients that trigger inflammation in patients. However, if a leaky gut is present, a food sensitivity test may not be very accurate. As Tom O’Bryan, DC, chief health officer of KnoWEwell, explains in his bestselling book The Autoimmune Fix, “When you have a leaky gut, a practitioner may do a 90-food testing panel that comes back sensitive to 20 or 25 different foods. And then the patient exclaims, ‘Oh my God, that’s everything I eat.’ Well, of course it is, because your immune system is doing what it is supposed to do— protecting you from toxins. Once the inflammation in the gut is reduced through the elimination of wheat and other offensive foods, and the implementation of a personalized diet and protocol to heal the gut [takes place], the same food testing panel will cor rectly identify those few ingredients to permanently avoid.”

Mood-Lifting Foods

Kelly Brogan, M.D., a holistic psychiatrist and author of The New York Times bestsellers A Mind of Your Own and Own Your Self, as well as co-editor of the landmark textbook Integrative Therapies for Depression, recommends making three dietary changes to lift mood:

n Eliminate processed foods and food toxins

n Add whole foods, good fats and therapeutic foods

n Add fermented foods

Eating foods that are fresh, whole, simple and organic when available fuels good gut bacteria and eliminates the toxins

A powerful mood regulator is the ome ga-3 fatty acid found in such cold-water fish as salmon and trout or taken as a dietary supplement. These fatty acids regulate neurotransmission and gene expression, act as antioxidants and have potent anti-inflammatory properties. Good fats from pasture-raised meats, wild fish, eggs, nuts, seeds, olive oil, coco nut oil and grass-fed ghee also contribute to mood regulation.

“Resetting the gut through good bacteria in probiotics and feeding the good bacteria with prebiotics is a powerful tool to fight mood disorders,” says Khosla. Fermented foods such as sauerkraut, pickles (truly fermented, not just cured in vinegar), kimchi and coconut kefir are natural sources of probiotics. They are delicious and easy to make at home.

A 2018 University of Toronto study in the World Journal of Psychiatry identified 12 nutrients to prevent and treat depres sive disorders and found that the following foods had the highest levels of those beneficial nutrients: bivalves such as oysters and mussels; various sea foods such as octopus, crab and tuna; organ meats; leafy greens; lettuces; fresh herbs; peppers; and cruciferous vegetables such as cauliflower and broccoli.

Choosing what to eat is complex and affected by culture, cost, environment and taste preferences. Dietary changes can be diffi cult and take time, and those suffering from mood swings, depres sion or anxiety have additional challenges in making changes. Nu tritionists advise starting small by incorporating one or two foods rich in beneficial nutrients and eliminating a highly processed or packaged food or two. Focus on incorporating a rainbow of red, yellow, orange and green foods into meals. “Food therapy to improve mood is inexpensive, free of side effects and can begin to show results within days,” says Khosla.

In view of the gut-brain axis, says Barmi, “It is imperative that from this point on, nutritionists, psychiatrists and psycho therapists work together for holistic care of the client to lead to maximum benefit.”

Kimberly B. Whittle is the CEO of KnoWEwell, the Regenerative Whole Health Hub online solution for health and well-being. Visit KnoWEwell.com.

17November 2022
Photo courtesy of Michelle Demuth-Bibb
found in packaged foods such as hydrogenated vegetable oils, preser vatives, dyes, emulsi fiers, taste enhancers and sugars that can upset the proper bal ance in the gut.

of Madiha Saeed, M.D.,

QUINOA AND BEETROOT SALAD WITH A HINT OF MINT

YIELD: 2 SERVINGS

SALAD:

½ cup quinoa

1 medium beetroot, grated 10-12 fresh mint leaves, roughly chopped ¼ cup fresh cilantro

2 Tbsp shelled pistachios, roasted

2 Tbsp golden raisins

1 cup water

DRESSING:

2 Tbsp extra-virgin olive oil

3 Tbsp lemon juice, adjust to taste

2 cloves garlic, adjust to taste

½ tsp roasted cumin powder Salt and ground black pepper to taste Honey to taste

Rinse quinoa and add to a pot. Add water and cook uncovered for around 15 minutes or until all the water is evaporated. Cover the pan and switch off the stove. Keep covered for 5 minutes, remove lid and fluff cooked quinoa with a fork. Set aside to cool.

In a bowl, mix all dressing ingredients and set aside. Place cooled quinoa, grated beets, pistachios, raisins and chopped herbs in a large bowl. Pour the dressing, toss well. Serve cold.

Recipe courtesy of Ishi Khosla.

GUT-HEALING SMOOTHIE

Blueberries contain compounds that increase beneficial bacteria in the gut, as well as antioxidant properties that are remarkable at protecting our brain. In fact, consuming 1 cup of blueberries per day for three years gets our brain working as well as it did 11 years earlier. Bananas are high in pectin, which helps to normalize movements of the large intestine. Look for gelatin powders from pastured animals.

YIELD: 2 SERVINGS

1-1½ cups water

½ cup coconut milk

1-2 frozen bananas

1 cup frozen blueberries

2 Tbsp ground flaxseed

1 Tbsp unflavored gelatin powder

1 Tbsp high-quality fish oil

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1-3 scoops L-glutamine powder (optional)

In a blender, combine the water, coconut milk, bananas, blueberries, flaxseeds, gelatin powder, fish oil, cinnamon and L-glutamine powder (if using). Blend until smooth. Add more water for a thinner smoothie, if desired. Serve immediately or pour into ice-pop molds and freeze for a sweet treat later on.

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Recipe courtesy of Tom O’Bryan, DC, CCN, DACBN, from his book The Autoimmune Fix. Saretta_followyourdr/AdobeStock.com
mariemilyphotos/AdobeStock.com Upcoming Event www.jacksonvillebusinessconnections.com /upcoming-events Saturday Nov 12th 2022 | 11-3pm Palm Coast Makers Market Palm Coast Community Center 305 Palm Coast Pkwy NE Palm Coast • FL Handmade & Homemade Goods Giveaways | Workshops Swag Bags to First 20 Guests! FREE EVENT Scan Here For more info! ALMOND FLOUR BLUEBERRY MUFFINS YIELD: 12 TO 24 SERVINGS 3 cups almond flour 6 eggs ½ cup honey ½ cup avocado oil 1 tsp baking soda 1 tsp salt 1 cup blueberries Preheat the oven to 350° F. In a large bowl, combine all the dry ingredients—almond flour, baking soda and salt—and whisk well. In a separate smaller bowl, combine the wet ingredients—eggs, honey and avo cado oil—and blend until smooth. Then pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and mix until thoroughly combined. Fold in blueberries. Line cup muffin tin with paper liners and pour in batter. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes. Recipe courtesy
ABIHM.

MAKING FOREVER CHEMICALS GO AWAY

M ANMADE COMPOUNDS POSE LASTING THREAT TO OUR HEALTH

Decades ago, environmental groups urged the banning of what are known as forever chemicals, which have been linked to cancer, compromised immune systems and hormonal imbalances, among other health issues. Today, although some of these man-made perand polyfluoro alkyl substances (PFAS) are being phased out, there’s still much to worry about.

“These chemicals are everywhere–in products, in our homes, in our drink ing water. They’re even coming down in rain,” says Mike Schade, director of the Mind the Store program of ToxicFree Future (ToxicFreeFuture.org national nonprofit based in Seattle. “This is a growing public health crisis.”

A recent Environmental Working Group (ewg.org) report says that 200 mil lion Americans are likely drinking water contaminated with PFAS, and that these chemicals are even more toxic than once thought. In June, the U.S. Environmen tal Protection Agency (EPA) established new health advisories for these chemicals, warning about the toxicity of even lower amounts in water. The EPA is offering $1

billion in grants initially and $5 billion over time to help remove them from drinking water. Recent research has also shown PFAS detected in sludge used as fertilizer in home gardens. “We need action at all levels of government,” Schade says. “We need states to step up. We need Congress to step up. We need big companies to step up and consumers to take action.”

Origin of PFAS

Since the late 1940s, forever chemi cals have been manufactured for use in products such as nonstick cookware; water proof, water-resistant and stain-resistant textiles; dental floss; and food packaging, such as microwave popcorn bags and fast-food contain ers. Firefighters also use foam that contains the chemicals.

“Production and disposal of these chemicals is leading to the contamina tion of drinking water supplies and surface water bodies all across the country,” Schade says. “It’s a huge issue, especially in the Great Lakes.”

“We’re talking about more than 9,000 chemicals,” says Susie Dai, Ph.D., a leading PFAS researcher and an associate professor of plant pathology and microbi ology at Texas A&M University. “Because they contain one of the strongest chemical bonds, the carbon-fluorine bond, they are very stable. That makes it difficult for the chemicals to break down and easy for them to accumulate in the environment.”

Several years ago, chemical companies began manufacturing what they deem are less-toxic PFAS. They’re known as either

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green living
NorGal/AdobeStock.com

alternative PFAS, and include chemicals named GenX and PFBS. “The more that scientists study this very large class of chemicals, the more that scientists find the replacement chemicals are likely just as toxic,” Schade says. The EPA June health advisories include these two new PFAS.

Meanwhile, as public concern grows, 11 states have banned PFAS in food packaging, and Congress is considering a similar ban, says Schade. Whole Foods Market has stopped using the chemicals in food packaging, and Keen, an outdoor shoe brand, has phased out use of PFAS in their products.

In February, Toxic-Free Future sent rain jackets, hiking pants, cloth napkins, bedding and other products marked as stain- or water-resistant to independent labs for analysis. “Seventy-two percent of them contained forever chemicals,” Schade says. Some of these products are manufactured by recreational equipment company REI, which Toxic-Free is urging consumers to write to, asking it to end the practice.

In July, Columbia Sportswear received petitions with 48,000 sig natures from the Natural Resources Defense Council and other en vironmental organizations urging the company to eliminate PFAS from its products. Although it has begun taking steps, Columbia has yet to set a timeline or define PFAS sustainability standards.

“We can minimize the threat of PFAS contamination by turning off the tap on their use,” says Paloma Paez-Coombe, an associate of Environment Illinois, which participated in the petition drive. “One of the best ways we can do that is by getting a major brand like Columbia Sportswear to publicly lead the way.”

These actions, however, won’t fix the problem of PFAS already in drinking water. Dai and other researchers have created a new bioremediation technology using plant-based material and fungi that could clean places where forever chemicals have been disposed. She hopes a similar concept can be applied to PFAScontaminated drinking water.

Northwestern University researchers published a paper in Au gust in Science showing PFAS can be destroyed using somewhat harmless chemicals called sodium hydroxide, which is the lye used to make soap, and dimethyl sulfoxide, a medicine for bladder issues. Dai says that before these new approaches, the only way to break down PFAS was to expose them to high temperatures in an incinerator, but that is costly and still introduces harmful chemi cals into the environment.

Meanwhile, the Delaware-based chemical company Chemours, a spinoff of Dupont that manufactures PFAS, has filed a lawsuit against the EPA saying the agency’s most recent health advisory regarding PFAS is based on flawed science. Chemours is the same company that has been ordered to pay a $12 million fine to the state of North Carolina after contaminating waterways with PFAS.

Schade surmises, “This is an issue that should be of concern to every American, especially when these chemicals are linked to health problems that are on the rise in our communities.”

Sheryl DeVore has written six books on science, health and na ture, as well as health and environmental stories for national and regional publications. Read more at SherylDeVore.wordpress.com.

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12 Quick Fixes for Anxiety

SIMPLE STRATEGIES FOR MENTAL WELL-BEING

It is an all-too-human experience to have anxiety—feeling fear or apprehension about what might happen. A survival mecha nism for our species, it can easily get out of hand in times of uncertainty, morphing from a timely signal to a crippling, chronic condition. Happily, mental health professionals have found many useful anti-anxiety strategies to ease us through difficult moments.

Breathe Deeply

“Controlling your breathing is a fantastic hack to help you move out of a stress/anxiety response state. It’s important to try different breathing techniques to figure out which ones work for you,” says Krista Jordan, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist in Austin, Texas. Many options exist such as breathing slowly into the belly; inhaling through the nose for a count of four, holding the breath for a count of seven and exhaling through

the mouth for a count of eight; slowing the breath so that the in and out breaths equalize; and placing mindful attention on our breathing until 10 breaths are completed.

Tap with the Fingers

Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) is a five-minute approach using two fingers to tap on specific points of the head and chest in a certain sequence. In one 5,000-person study, 76 percent of participants found anxiety relief after three EFT sessions, while only 51 percent experienced relief after 15 sessions of cognitive behavioral therapy. “EFT sends a calming signal to the brain that reduces your anxiety, which allows for newfound thinking and solutions,” says Colorado Springs therapist Dana C. Avey. Sim ple instructions can be found online and in YouTube videos.

Write It Off with Journaling

Whether it’s a three-page brain dump in the morning, a frantic scribbling on paper in a stressful moment or a nightly ritual in a bound journal, writing out anxious thoughts helps clarify worries and puts things into perspective, research shows. Seattle spinal surgeon David Hanscom, a chronic pain expert and author of Back in Control, counsels writing down in longhand whatever is on the mind using graphic and descriptive language twice a day for 10 to 30 minutes, and then promptly tearing it up to let the thoughts go.

Meditate Mindfully

Many soothing types of meditation can be tried out on apps like Calm, InsightTimer and Headspace, but the best-studied approach for anxiety is mindfulness, which involves focusing on the breath and body sensations while letting distracting thoughts float by. A 2017 Australian study found that just 10 minutes of daily mindful meditation can help prevent the mind from wandering and is particularly effective for repetitive, anxious thoughts. “Just be clear that having a constant stream of thoughts is fine and part of the process. It’s sadly ironic that people turn to meditation to help with anxiety, and then get anxious that they are doing it wrong,” advises Jordan.

Move the Body in Nature

According to the Harvard Health Letter, “Just a single bout of exercise can ease anxiety when it strikes ” Studies have proven

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finde zukunft/Unsplash.com

the value of everything from aerobics to swimming and yoga, and it’s even better if exercising can be done outdoors, because decades of research have found that being amidst the sights, sounds and scents of natural settings lowers anxiety markers. In a recent study, walking without using a smartphone or another electronic device in urban settings just two hours a week re duced cortisol levels 21 percent in 20 min utes, “which helps to reduce the medical effects of stress, including chronic inflam mation, GI disorders and heart problems,” says Santa Barbara-based John La Puma, M.D., co-founder of the ChefMD health media brand and creator of MyNatureDose. com, a free, anti-anxiety walking program.

Say a Favorite Prayer

Making a deep spiritual connection—an age-old anxiety solution—can involve praying or for example, reading psalms, saying a rosary, chanting a mantra or reading sacred scripture. Eric Almeida, a mental health practitioner in Bernardston, Massachusetts, recommends the Serenity Prayer: “God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can and the wisdom to know the difference.” He says, “It doesn’t matter if you believe in God, the wisdom is useful nonetheless.”

Chill Out

“Sip cold water, hold ice cubes, take a cold shower, blast the AC in your face. Our body and mind are very connected, so if you can’t cool down your mind, cool down your temperature,” advises San Diego-ba sed marriage and family therapist Sarah

O’Leary. Some people find the opposite works: taking a long, hot bath infused with essential oils like bergamot, frankincense and lavender.

Get Rooted

Stand barefoot in grass or dirt while breathing deeply or imagine the roots of trees growing from the soles of the feet deep into the earth. “This helps ‘ground’ you or ‘root’ you, and can help you find steadiness rather than getting lost in anxi ety,” says mindfulness trainer and author Joy Rains of Bethesda, Maryland.

Soothe with Supplements

Boston integrative medicine physician Sarika Arora, M.D., of the Women’s Health Network, recommends vitamins B5, B6 and B12 to improve cellular energy, lower cortisol and restore equilibrium to the nervous system; magnesium to sup port balanced metabolism and increase feelings of calm; L-theanine, found in green tea, to lower stress hormone levels; eleuthero (Siberian ginseng) to limit excess cortisol; and vitamin E to support hormone production and stress recovery.

Be with the Anxiety Tyler Read, the San Francisco-based own er of Personal Trainer Pioneer, decided to bite the bullet by using the tools of dialectical behavior therapy to put him self into anxiety-producing public places. “Instead of convincing myself that I was at peace or not nervous, I accepted that I was nervous. I gave myself permission to shake, sweat and feel nauseous; at times, I acknowledged that I felt like I was dying.

And by permitting myself to be nervous, the anxiety decreased over time,” he says.

Move to Music

Relaxing music can be as effective as medication in altering brain func tion, research suggests, especially if the rhythm is 60 beats per minute, which encourages the slow brainwaves associ ated with hypnotic or meditative states. Dancing to upbeat music like no one is watching can also chase worries away. Holistic psychotherapist Kellie Kirksey, Ph.D., of Youngstown, Ohio, suggests shaking to a favorite song: “Begin by shaking out the hands while holding the thought, ‘I let go.’ If shaking the hands feels good, add in shaking one leg at a time. Shake the whole body while imagining yourself releasing the tension stored in your muscles.”

Bond with an Animal

Merely petting a dog or cat releases the feelgood bonding hormone oxytocin into our system. “Animals speak to you in a nonverbal communication, so the interac tions require you to be present and to feel. Both allow for a meditative experience that is tremendously impactful for reducing anxiety,” says Shannon Dolan, an Austin, Texas, nutritional therapist and horse own er. “If you don’t have your own pet, look up equine therapy in your area, go to a local dog shelter, spend time with a friend’s dog or travel out to a petting zoo, where you can experience the healing power of animals.”

Health writer Ronica O’Hara can be reached at OHaraRonica@gmail.com.

23November 2022
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The Colors of Healing

ART THERAPY FOR KIDS

Opening a brand-new box of crayons or making a happy mess with homemade salt dough can provide hours of fun for most kids, but art therapy—based in a clinical setting—can help children achieve emotional equilibrium, cultivate social skills and increase their capacity for learning. Dipping a brush into bright colors or creating a collage under the guidance of a qualified therapist can help a child express what is beyond spoken language: unprocessed trauma, emotional and physical pain or the multilevel challenges of autism spectrum disorder.

“Art therapy is completely different from arts and crafts, or even teaching a child how to do art. The idea behind art therapy is that not everyone attending therapy is able to talk about what is going on inside of them,” says Robyn Spodek-Schindler, owner of Paint the Stars Art Therapy, in Manalapan, New Jersey.

Art and the Nervous System

According to 2018 research published in the Journal of Applied Psychology & Behav ioral Science, painting-based art therapy has been effective in reducing symptoms of depression and anxiety in preschool-aged children. Dipping into the unconscious wellspring of creative impulse through doodling and drawing, finger painting or taking a photograph can help kids bounce back more easily from bullying or fam ily conflicts, including divorce. Splashing color on a canvas or throwing pottery has been shown to enhance fine motor skills, increase attention spans and instill a sense of accomplishment. For those that are not neurotypical, engaging in guided artistic expression can foster sensory integration and promote positive social interaction.

“I have worked with children who have lost a parent, experienced abuse, abandon ment, consequences of addiction in the family, COVID [-19] anxiety and autism spectrum disorders,” says Andrea Davis, founder and CEO of Dallas Art Therapy, in Richardson, Texas. “Many times, the body is expressing the trauma in the form of sleep disturbance, eating changes, anxiety, depression and panic attacks, to name a few. Art-making bypasses the brain’s trau ma response. The art therapist is trained to support the person in the process of cre ation and allows the person to utilize their other senses to express themselves.”

Celeste Wade, an art psychotherapist at the Child and Family Art Therapy Center, in Haverford, Pennsylvania, emphasizes that emotional processing cannot occur when an individual is on the alert for potential danger, a physiological response from an overstimulated amygdala. “Trau

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ma needs to be processed for the client to gain mastery and function in a calm state versus fight, flight or freeze. Art making can also activate this area of the brain and have calming effects to counteract trauma responses,” she says.

Willingness, Not Talent

The art therapist provides a nourishing presence without art instruction or critiqu ing, and sessions can be private, in a group setting or include family members. Con versation, combined with art making, is typical in any art therapy session. Schind ler stresses that creating pretty images is not the goal of an art therapy session and dispels the common assumption that “the person attending art therapy needs to have either a talent in art or an interest in art. They just need the willingness to participate in a session.” Some children see immediate benefits, while others realize emotional progress after several sessions.

Art therapy, sometimes in conjunction with other modalities, not only gives children a voice, but provides them with an opportunity to stretch their wings. Group therapy, says Davis, “can look like working together to create a collaborative mural. In the process, taking turns, hearing one an other’s ideas, sharing materials, respecting boundaries and each other’s art becomes an important part of meeting goals.”

During an initial art therapy assessment, Wade might ask a client to draw a family of animals, which creates an opportunity “for the client to share about their own family dynam ics in a safe way. If the client has experienced any type of familial trauma and I were to present the same directive as, ‘draw you and your family doing something,’ the child may be more hesitant or may shut down.”

In a world that can be overwhelming, self-expression through art can give a young person a safe harbor. Schindler accentuates human rapport in the clinical setting, saying, “Art, much like play, is a universal communication tool for children. Sometimes you just feel better when creat ing and sharing with a trusted person.”

Marlaina Donato is an author, painter and composer. Connect at WildflowerLady.com.

25November 2022 Call and tell us your needs and get the help you deserve. DeLand 100 S. Spring Garden Ave. #102 (386) 232-5599 Daytona Beach 2525 W. ISB #110 (386) 222-1667 Casselberry 3238 S. US Hwy 17-92 (321) 247-7667 PRE-CERTIFY PHONE HOME BY FROM YOUR NEEDS AND GET THE CALL TELL USAnd HELP DESERVEYou MARIJUANA 99Over MEDICAL CONDITIONS HELPS WITH MEDICAL MARIJUANA CARD Get Your FAST EASYAnd & PAIN MANAGEMENT CENTER ACUPUNCTURE Pain Relief • Depression • Anxiety • Sinusitis • Allergies Smoking Weight Loss • Migraine Headaches • High BP Insomnia • Shingles Side Effects of Cancer Treatments Specializing in, but not limited to treating: You Chang Hu DOM • AP Kunning Li DOM • APLearn more at AcupuncturePainMgmt.com (386) 445-0098FREE CONSULTATION 50 Leanni Way • Unit A2 Palm Coast • FL (386) 760-2112 2135 Ridgewood Avenue South Daytona • FL Call Call
Read more Healthy Kid articles at VoFLNatural.com!

words

Rachel Jones on grief in the healthcare front lines

What are the most pressing challenges in these medical settings?

There’s a stigma where it’s considered weak if you need mental health care, even though you work in a stressful environ ment dealing with death and traumatic incidents. Many doctors and nurses don’t access mental health services for fear that when they renew their licenses, they’ll have to reveal that and be further investigated— even in states where that’s not the case.

Another problem is the shortage of doc tors and nurses that we’re experiencing and will be experiencing in the next decade as Baby Boomers age. Many places are shortstaffed, heightening the burden on those that remain, which doesn’t help retain people. Patching things with travel nurses for short-term contracts isn’t sustainable, and we don’t have enough new people coming into the system.

How do these challenges affect patient care?

After earning a journalism degree from Columbia University, Rachel Jones spent four years as a reporter in Caracas, Venezuela, including a year and a half as a correspondent for The Associated Press. Her articles have appeared in Time magazine, The Lancet, The Delacorte Review and Scientific American. In her book, Grief on the Front Lines: Reckoning with Trauma, Grief and Humanity in Modern Medicine, Jones examines the emotional challenges that healthcare workers face in hospital emergency rooms, hospices and other front-line settings.

What are your most surprising findings about healthcare heroes?

That they’re humans, just like the rest of us. They can make mistakes. Their work affects them, and they take it home. We have this impression that they’re emotionally cut off from their work, and this couldn’t be less true. Also, healthcare workers don’t have all the answers. We have this fantasy that if anything goes wrong, we can go to the doctor and have it fixed, but they can’t save everybody. Even the concept of a hero—that they’re go ing to swoop in and save us—does a disservice because it feeds into that false impression.

Medical errors increase when healthcare workers haven’t slept or eaten, which seems to be the standard, especially medical residents who work insane schedules or hospital nurses who don’t have time to take breaks. Also, mental health issues and depression closes them off from colleagues and patients, giving them tunnel vision. Then there are issues such as bullying where because of the toxicity of the work environment, maybe doctors and nurses aren’t sharing information in the way that they should be, and that can have a very detrimental impact on patients.

Why is it important for health care workers to remain emotionally connected with patients?

Traditionally, doctors and nurses are taught to keep an emotional distance, but that can cause them to compartmentalize and numb out feelings, which then spreads to their personal lives. They may be less able to engage with loved ones and feel discon

26 Volusia / Flagler VoFLNatural.com
wise

nected from patients so their work isn’t as meaningful. Most healthcare workers care about people. They want to help patients and want to feel connected, so that discon nection is harmful to them and to their patients who don’t feel seen or cared for.

At the opposite end, some healthcare workers take on their patients’ suffering, bringing it home and obsessing about it. The idea is to find a balance—remaining open enough to connect, but not seeing yourself as the sole responsible person for a patient’s recovery. You’re not entirely in control, so realizing there are other forces at play when things go wrong, even if you made a mistake.

What coping strategies can help practitioners?

It’s essential that healthcare administra tions provide space and time off for staff to heal and grieve, encouraging staff to speak with chaplains or therapists—normalizing mental health care—and ensuring that therapy is covered by insurance and widely available in safe and confidential settings.

Jonathan Bartels, a nurse in Virginia, came up with The Medical Pause—a mo ment of silence after a patient dies to honor their life, think about what they meant to you and understand you did everything you could to save their life. Honor walks for organ donors are where everyone lines the hallway and watches as a patient is wheeled into the operating room after they’ve died and are going to have their organs transplanted into others. Stepping back for a brief moment of mindfulness is a powerful way to set down emotions, rather than letting them lodge in your body.

Self-care—things like yoga, exercise, journaling, taking walks—and peer sup port are important, but administrations need to make time for them to happen. At Johns Hopkins Hospital, a project called RISE [Resilience In Stressful Events] allows practitioners to page a peer after a bad outcome. Sometimes, talking to someone like you that has been there themselves can be more helpful than a therapist.

Sandra Yeyati, J.D., is a professional writer and editor. Reach her at SandraYeyati@ gmail.com.

inspiration Gratitude is Good Medicine

Stress, work and family routines can trap us in a pattern of negative thinking that feeds on itself and creates stress and unhappiness. With our internal and external worlds being bombarded these days with negativity, being optimistic is more impor tant now than ever before.

Gratitude is not just a feel-good word. It is an emotion expressing appreciation for what one has—a universal concept in nearly all of the world’s spiritual traditions. Practicing gratitude daily is proven to have actual physiological consequences. It helps lower inflam matory markers, influences epigenetics, improves the immune system and even helps the heart, adding years to life.

Optimism has been found to correlate positively with life satisfaction and self-esteem. “Heartfelt” emotions like gratitude, love and caring produce coherent brain waves radiat ing to every cell of the body, as shown by technology that measures changes in heart rhythm variation and coherence.

Our subconscious governs 90 percent of our thoughts and actions. It shapes our every behavior. But the subconscious mind is nothing other than neural pathways that have been established in the brain as a result of past beliefs and conditioning. Our subconscious does no thinking of its own, but rather relies on our perception of the world around us, interpreting verbal and nonverbal cues.

When we consciously turn negativity to positivity from the inside-out, the neural path way associated with negativity will take time to come down fully, so it is critical to practice gratitude regularly. Upon waking in the morning, say 10 things that you are grateful for. Keep a gratitude journal. Put sticky notes all over the house with gratitude messages—on photos, light fixtures, fans, exercise equipment—to create a zone of subliminal positivity.

Remember that our perspective can reflect either our pain or our power. That choice is in our hands. Know what you are grateful for each day.

Madiha Saeed, M.D., ABIHM, is the bestselling author of The Holistic RX, an international speaker, founder of HolisticMomMD.com and director of education for KnoWEwell.

27November 2022
Tinnakorn/AdobeStock.com

Caregiving Companions

THE MANY BENEFITS OF SERVICE, THERAPY AND EMOTIONAL SUPPORT ANIMALS

Animals offer support to humans in innumerable ways, acting as loyal compan ions, providing soothing therapy and emotional support, and being attentive service animals for invaluable medical assistance. As animals increasingly take on these roles in public spaces, it is necessary to understand what each category offers and the type of access each is given.

“Some people misrepresent their animals as assistance animals in order to bring them to places where pets are not allowed, to avoid fees or out of a misunderstanding of the animal’s role,” states the American Veterinary Medical Association (avma.org). It points out that although service, therapy and emotional support animals are sometimes referred to interchangeably, they are distinct categories, each with its own definition.

Assistance Animals

As defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, an as sistance animal is “any animal that works, provides assistance or performs tasks for the benefit of a person with a disability, or provides emotional support that allevi ates one or more identified symptoms or effects of a person’s disability.” If certain conditions are met, a person may be entitled to keep an assistance animal in a hous ing facility that would otherwise prohibit animals.

Service Animals

The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 defines a service animal as “any dog that is individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability, including a physical, sensory, psychiatric, intellectual or other mental dis ability.” Aside from miniature horses, no other species are included.

Service animals perform such tasks as helping with navigation, pulling a wheelchair, assisting during a seizure, providing protection or rescue work, alerting a person to allergens and interrupting impulsive or destructive behavior.

28 Volusia / Flagler VoFLNatural.com
natural pet
Adopt a homeless pet from an area shelter Share the Love

Emotional Support Animals

Emotional support animals (ESA), accord ing to the Fair Housing Act and the Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA), can be any spe cies. Both laws require a disability-related need and a recommendation by a medical or mental health professional. ESAs do not have to be trained to perform a particular task and may be permitted in otherwise banned housing facilities. Some interna tional airlines allow them to travel at no ex tra cost. As of January 2021, following a U.S. Department of Transportation rule-tighten ing, virtually no American domestic airline allows ESAs to fly free. (Small dogs can still be flown by passengers paying extra.)

Therapy Animals

According to the ACAA, therapy animals may take part in animal-assisted inter ventions when there’s a “goal-directed intervention in which an animal meeting specific criteria is an integral part of the treatment process.” Animal-assisted ther apy may involve dogs, cats, horses, llamas, pigs and other species, typically in hospi tals, schools and rehabilitation centers.

Why They Can Be Controversial

While service animals are highly trained and can even receive certifications as psy chiatric service dogs, ESAs are often pets that help a person to cope with daily life or situations they may otherwise find intoler able, such as being in stores, restaurants, museums and on airline flights and other public transportation.

Controversy has arisen when some people have pushed the line, claiming their pet is necessary for emotional support, but in reality, are just there to enjoy access benefits. Yet, in a survey of more than 500 Americans, both service dogs and emo tional support dogs were viewed favorably, and most participants reported feeling that the majority of people with such dogs were not taking advantage of the system.

The Many Benefits

There is seemingly no end to the emotional, physical and mental benefits dogs offer to humans. Regular visits with therapy dogs

may improve the well-being of people seek ing addiction and mental health treatment. Animal-assisted interventions have been used among Canada’s correctional popula tion, for which mental health, addictions and trauma histories are major concerns.

Research published in the journal Anthrozoös found that animal-assisted therapy decreased the need for pain medi cation in people receiving joint replace ment therapy. Studies by the Delta Society suggests holding, stroking or simply seeing an animal may lower blood pressure while lessening feelings of hostility and increasing self-esteem. For children, service dogs can be trained to detect the scent of allergens like peanuts or gluten in food and even pro

vide comfort to them and adult witnesses in courtrooms.

Be aware that out in public, certain rules of etiquette apply. Service dogs, in particu lar, should never be approached, talked to or touched unless permission is granted by the dog’s handler. And take no offense if the handler says no. Distracting a working dog can result in potential harm to the han dler and may interfere with the dog’s focus and ability to follow potentially life-saving commands or cues.

Veterinarian Karen Shaw Becker, DVM, has spent her career empowering animal guardians to make knowledge-able deci sions to extend the life and well-being of their animals.

Smyrna

29November 2022 1712 State Road 44 New
Beach • FL 32168 (Behind the WaWa®) 386.444.6532Phone 10AM to 4PM DailyHours of Operation: We know there are so many options out there. We want you to feel confident that anything you choose from Me & Paw® will be among the best you can find. Offering natural pet solutions! Pet-themed Gifts & Goods for Humans too (For the “Me” in Me & Paw®) Doggy Birthday Cakes & Ice Creams Locally Owned Specialty Pet Supplies Pet CBD Natural, Safe, Tested, Effective Pet Solutions Natural, Healthy Treats & Food Large Selection of Holiday Gifts and Treats for your Best Friend! Pet Food & Supplies Foods • Canned • Freeze Dried • Frozen Dog and Cat Food for Maintenance and Special Needs Feed & Grain Livestock & Small Animal Feed & Minerals Poultry Supplies Animal Health Supplements • Pest Control • Bathing Grooming Beds & Crates • Leashes & Collars Lawn & Garden Soil and Amendments • Lawn & Garden Tools Weed, Pest & Rodent Control Seeds & Vegetable Starter Plants Pet Beds & Crates • Large Selection of Toys & Treats Farm & Ranch Supplies Water Troughs • Buckets • Scoops Tack • Gates • Fencing Hay & Bedding Alfalfa • Timothy Orchard Hays and Bedding 1020 N. US Highway 1 Ormond Beach • FL (The Old Bull Run Location) (386) 675-6021 Questions? Call us! M-F 8:30 – 6:00 Sat 8:30 – 4:00 Sun Closed Store Hours: For All Your Pet and Farm Needs! Dog • Cat • Small Animal • Birds • Reptiles • Horses Cattle • Goats • Pigs • Chickens & More Come and See our 5,000 Sq. Foot Showroom Happy Holidays!
30 Volusia / Flagler VoFLNatural.com CONNECTION YOUR DON’T MISS Join now at NaturalAwakeningsSingles.com YOUR NATURAL MATCH IS WAITING TO MEET YOU! TRY FOR FREE! Welcome to the largest holistic, conscious, spiritual and green network of dating sites online. We invite you to become a member and feel the energy on our site from the moment you first log in. FREE January Location-Edition NaturalAwakenings.com HEALTHY LIVIN HEALTHY PLANET FITNESS TRENDS FOR 2022 TOP 10 Plant-Based Coffee Alternatives The Deep Power Words Why Electric Cars are Gaining Ground FREE December Location-Edition NaturalAwakenings.com HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET WAYS TO BOOST YOURIMMUNE SYSTEM6 HolidaySugar-Free Treats How to ChooseTOYS FOR A DOG Celebrating theSoul of Winter FREE Location-Edition HEALTHY HEALTHY HEALTH TRENDS FOR 2022 TOP 10 Peter Russell on Letting Go Plant-Based Coffee Alternatives Why Electric Cars are Gaining Ground FREE January 2022 Location-Edition NaturalAwakenings.com HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET STAYING WELLIN FITNESS2022TRENDS Peter Russellon Letting Go Healthy Alternatives toYour Morning Cup of Java Trackers to Help LowerYour Carbon Footprint FREE Decem Location-Edition NaturalAwakenings.com HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET HOLIDAY ISSUE FESTIVE TREATS WITHOUT SUGAR CELEBRATING THE SOUL WINTER HEALING POWER OF SACRED CIRCLE SIX WAYS TO STAY HEALTHY FREE LIVING PLANET YOGA TRAUMA RECOVERY WAYS TO NURTURE KIDS’ CREATIVITY ThePOWER CREATIVE inHEALTH HEALING FREE September 2021 Location-Edition NaturalAwakenings.com HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET THEHEALINGPOTENTIAL ART•CHOOSING HEALTHIESTCOOKWARE WAYS TO NURTURE KIDS’ CREATIVITY • YOGA FOR TRAMA RECOVERY HORSES AS HEALERS • THE ART OF THE HANDWRITTEN NOTE FUNGIFABULOUS FARECOOKING WITHWILD MUSHROOMS 2023 EDITORIAL CALENDAR NATURAL AWAKENINGS’ NATURAL AWAKENINGS DEPARTMENTS: HEALTH BRIEFS | GLOBAL BRIEFS | ECO TIP | GREEN LIVING | HEALING WAYS | FIT BODY CONSCIOUS EATING | HEALTHY KIDS | WISE WORDS | INSPIRATION | NATURAL PET JANUARY HEALTH & WELLNESS FEBRUARY HEART-HEALTHY LIVING MARCH FOOD & NUTRITION APRIL SUSTAINABLE LIVING MAY WOMEN’S WELLNESS JUNE MEN’S HEALTH 386-736-3838 | Volusia / Flagler | VoFLNatural.com

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1

Rainbow Tuesday – All Day. Save 20% on regular priced items at Debbie’s Health Foods in Orange City and Port Orange.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12

Learning to Communicate with Your Body –10am. Zoom Meeting – What if your primary partner on earth is your body? Learn to ‘talk’ and listen, and learn what your body knows that you haven’t asked yet. Call or email Cathleen Connor, Access Consciousness Facilitator for details. cathleen@ accessconsciousness.com or 971-732-2168. www. exuberantlybeing.com

Gametastic at the Library – 2-3pm. Interactive gaming program designed to maximize play as a means of developing critical thinking, social, and strategy skills. Ormond Beach Library, 30 S. Beach St. in Ormond Beach.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15

Once upon a storytime series – 10-11am. Fun morning for 4 and under includes a story, free craft and snack. Registration open. Call 386-676-3216 for info. RSVP req. due to limited space. The Casements 25 Riverside Dr. in Ormond Beach.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19

Riverfest Seafood Festival – Saturday and Sunday. Award winning festival with all the fresh fish, fun and fall delights. Rockefeller Gardens and Fortunato Park in Ormond Beach. Food vendors, live music, boats and paddleboards, kid’s activities, draft beer garden and more. Fishing tournament for kids 4-12. Follow Ormond Mainstreet on FB for updates.

Introduction to the Access Consciousness BarsBio-Energetic Bodywork – 2-4pm. Sample of a bio-energetic body process. The Access Bars are 32 points on your head that, when touched, effortlessly, and easily release anything that stops you from joy and ease. Clear limitations, beliefs, and emotions stored in the body. Ocean Marina Dr. in Flagler Beach. Call 971-732-2168 for details and address. www.exuberantlybeing.com

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25

Spark the Spirit at Christmas Park – 5-7:30pm. Tree lighting ceremony, live entertainment and Santa’s grand entrance make this family-friendly event the kick off of Christmas on Canal St. in beautiful downtown New Smyrna Beach. Extended hours at stores and restaurants.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26

Coastal Christmas Market – 9-5pm. Enjoy a wide variety of beautiful gifts and holiday décor handcrafted by local artisans. Shop Canal St. mer chants for treasures available all year long. Music and demonstrations on Live Oak. Downtown New Smyrna Beach.

Small Business Saturday – Celebrate small busi nesses that make Ormond Beach so special. Grab a map and start anywhere along Granada Blvd. be tween A1A and Orchard St. Shop and eat while you support our local small businesses. Follow Ormond Mainstreet on FB for updates.

plan ahead

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6

Rainbow Tuesday – All Day. Save 20% on regular priced items at Debbie’s Health Foods in Orange City and Port Orange.

31November 2022
To submit calendar listings, or for more information about submission requirements, please email Publisher@VoFLNatural.com. calendar of events ehaurylik/123rf.com View our full calendar online at VoflNatural.com/calendar!

sunday

Yin Yoga – 9-10:30am. Begin your Sunday with this gentle yin class. Energetic, yet calming. All levels. Instructor Micki Higgins. BOGO: new students pay for first class; second class free. Also Livestream. Padma Yoga, 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast. 386-225-4733.

Farmers’ Market and More – 9am-5pm. Shop rain or shine for farm fresh produce, plants, trees flowers, herbs and spices, gourmet coffee and teas, honey, jams, salsas and more. Daytona Flea Market, 1425 Tomoka Farms Rd, Daytona Bch.

Unity Community Church – 11am. Join for a weekly spiritual celebration. 1001 S Ridgewood Ave (US 1), Edgewater. 386-481-0890.

Science of Yoga – Discovery – 11am-12:30pm. Connect breath with movement allowing you to be centered in the present moment. Learn more than poses with a deeper study of your body in this class. All levels. BOGO: new students pay for first-class; second class free. Also Livestream. Padma Yoga, 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast. 386-225-4733.

Senior Discount Day – Noon-6pm. Seniors save 10% off all regularly priced items. Debbie’s Health Foods, 862 Saxon Blvd, Orange City. 386-775-7002.

monday

Monday Madness – 8am-6pm. 1st Mon. Save 25% on supplements and food items. Healing Zone, 515 Canal St, New Smyrna Bch. 386-402-7825.

Kripalu Yoga – 9:30-11am. Linking posture to posture with pausing to feel the energy allowing the body to speak to its needs. Also Livestream. Padma Yoga, 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast. 386-225-4733.

LVCY Chair Yoga – 12-1pm. Learn how to make your chair your best friend. BOGO: new students pay for first class; second class free. Limited six per live class; preregistration required. Also Livestream Padma Yoga, 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast. 386-225-4733.

Stretch & Flex – 10am. Pictona at Holly Hill, 1066 Ridgewood Ave.

Beginner Line Dancing – 5pm. $4 Pictona at Holly Hill, 1066 Ridgewood Ave.

Intermediate Line Dancing – 6:30. $5 Pictona at Holly Hill, 1066 Ridgewood Ave.

tuesday

Warrior Group Fitness – 6:30am. Includes Qigong, martial arts conditioning and traditional strengthening exercises, Yoga, Tai Chi, meditation. All fitness levels. 1135 Riverside Park in Holly Hill. 386-214-6465. Donations accepted.

Rainbow Tuesday – All Day. First Tuesday of the month. Save 20% on regular priced items at Debbie’s Health Foods. 3850 S. Nova Rd. in Port Orange and 862 Saxon Blvd. in Orange City.

Barefoot Farmer’s Market – 8-11am. Harmoni ously grown vegetables, raw dairy, local raw honey, pastured eggs and a variety of locally made goods. Tomazin Farms 3705 SR 44 Samsula.

Discovery Yoga (Kripalu Tradition) – 9:30-11am. Linking posture to posture with pausing to feel the energy allowing the body to speak to its needs. Also Livestream. Padma Yoga, 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast. 386-225-4733.

Fitness Fusion Group – 10am. Yoga, Qigong, Tai Chi, meditation and traditional strength exercises. Pictona, 1060 Ridgewood Ave. in Holly Hill. Dona tions accepted.

wednesday

Wellness Walk Wednesday – 8-9am. Walk begins at the Flagler Beach Police Dept. and travels over the Moody Bridge and back.

Yoga-Plus with Ed Eisler –9:30am. Includes Yoga, Qigong, meditation, vitality practices. All levels, standing, sitting (optional) Pictona Senior Center, 1066 Ridgewood Ave. in Holly Hill. Instructor Phone: 386-214-6465.

Multi-level Line Dancing – 9am-12pm. $6 Pictona at Holly Hill, 1066 Ridgewood Ave.

Discount Crystal Live Facebook Show and Sale –5pm nightly Wednesday through Sunday. Real time shopping. Follow Big Box of Rocks on Facebook.

thursday

Warrior Group Fitness – 6:30am. Includes Qigong, martial arts conditioning and traditional strengthening exercises, Yoga, Tai Chi, meditation. All fitness levels. 1135 Riverside Park in Holly Hill. 386-214-6465. Donations accepted.

Senior Discount Day – 9am-7pm. Seniors save 10% off all regularly priced items. Two locations: Debbie’s Health Foods, 862 Saxon Blvd, Orange City. 386-775-7002.

Yoga Inspired Qigong – 6-7:15pm. This practice introduces the layering of specific breathing tech niques with asana, body and mind reflection. Weav ing Qigong throughout encourages connection to the heart space. Padma Yoga, 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast. 386-225-4733.

Canal Street Nights – 5-9pm. Third Thursday of event month fun filled evening with expanded streetside dining, vendors, kid’s zone and specialty food vendors.

32 Volusia / Flagler VoFLNatural.com
ongoing events Pranic Healing® is a highly evolved and tested system of energy medicine developed by Grand Master Choa Kok Sui that utilizes life force to balance, harmonize and transform the body’s energy processes. Pranic Healing® is a simple yet powerful & effective system of no-touch energy healing. New Smyrna Meditation And Healing Center Pranic Healing® is a highly evolved and tested system of energy medicine developed by Grand Master Choa Kok Sui that utilizes our natural energy to support the healing of body issues, stress, and to clear the mind. www.pranichealingnsb.com Phone: 386.410.4809 516 S. Orange St. New Smyrna Beach Every Tuesday at 6:00 pmCommunity Meditation for Global Peace Enjoy a free healing session at Meditation night! PRANIC HEALING MASTER CHOA KOK SUI HEALTH THROUGH ENERGY paulgrecaud/123rf.com

Ormond Beach Farmer’s Market – 8-1pm. Fresh produce, local honey, crafts and live lants. City Hall Plaza, 22 S. Beath St.

Tai Chi Fusion with Ed Eisler – 10am. Includes Yoga, Qigong, meditation, vitality practices. All levels, standing, sitting (optional) Pictona Senior Center, 1066 Ridgewood Ave. in Holly Hill. Instruc tor Phone: 386-214-6465.

friday

Compost and Honey Special – All day. Compost $5/bag and 10% off local honey. 142 W Int’l Speedway Blvd, Daytona Bch. 386-341-5068. NaturalConceptsRevisited.com.

Farmers’ Market and More – 9am-5pm. Shop rain or shine for farm fresh produce, plants, trees flowers, herbs and spices, gourmet coffee and teas, honey, jams, salsas and more. Daytona Flea Market, 1425 Tomoka Farms Rd, Daytona Bch.

Kripalu Yoga – 9:30-11am. BOGO: new students pay for first-class; attend your second class free. Also Livestream. Padma Yoga, 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast. 386-225-4733.

saturday

First Saturday Art Walk – 3-7pm. Join our fine art galleries for art openings and events. Each venue features something different. Also visit historic Ormond Beach shops, ride the Art Walk shuttle to visit venues on both sides of the bridge.

Gallery Walk – 4-7pm. First Saturday of every month. Stroll down Canal, Douglas and Magnolia and enjoy the beautiful galleries and amazing art community in New Smyrna Beach.

Canal Street Classic Cruise Car Show – 5-8pm. Second Saturday of the month. Historic Canal St. in New Smyrna Beach.

Flagler Beach Farmers Market – 9-1pm. Featuring prepared foods, produce, handmade products, local art and more. Wickline Park, Flagler Beach.

Barefoot Farmer’s Market – 8-11am. Harmo niously grown vegetables, raw dairy, local raw honey, pastured eggs and a variety of locally made goods. Tomazin Farms 3779 Honeydew Lane in New Smyrna.

Kripalu – Nidra – 9-10:30am. All levels. BOGO: new students pay for first-class; second class free. Also Livestream. Padma Yoga, 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast. 386-225-4733.

Classic Car Cruise-In – 9am-1pm. 1st Sat. The market welcomes more than 300 classic and collector cars. Enjoy the music of DJ Frank in the west parking lot during the Cruise-In. It’s free to show your car and free to browse rows of classic automobiles. Daytona Flea & Farmers Market, 1425 Tomoka Farms Rd. 386-253-3330. DaytonaFleaMarket.com.

Farmers’ Market and More – 9am-5pm. Shop rain or shine for farm fresh produce, plants, trees flowers, herbs and spices gourmet coffee and teas, honey, jams, salsas and more. Daytona Flea Market, 1425 Tomoka Farms Rd, Daytona Bch.

community resource guide

ACUPUNCTURE PHYSICIANS

ACUPUNCTURE & PAIN MANAGEMENT CENTER

You Chang Hu, DOM, AP Kunning Li, DOM, AP

• 2135 S Ridgewood Ave, Daytona Beach 386-760-2112

• 50 Leanni Way, Palm Coast 386-445-0098

AcupuncturePainMgmt.com

Dr. Hu and Dr. Li are graduates of Traditional Chinese Medical Universities in China. They have practiced acupuncture and Chinese medicine for a combined 45+ years. See ad, page 25.

ACUPUNCTURE & SKIN CARE CLINIC

Lorenzo Phan, DOM, AP 725 W Granada Blvd Ste. 15, Ormond Beach 386-615-1203

• AcuBeautyTherapy.com

Dr. Phan has great success in promoting fertility with acupuncture and herbal supplements. Nonsurgical modalities for natural pain relief include acupuncture, trigger point therapy, Chinese herbal remedies, cupping, neuromuscular therapy, and cold laser for neck injuries, chronic lower back pain, sciatica, hip/knee arthritis and migraines and more. MM20928. See ad, page 15.

EAST COAST ACUPUNCTURE

Lisa Sweeters, Acupuncture Physician 102 Flagler Plaza Dr., #102, Palm Coast 386-302-5363 • EastCoastAcupunctureFL.com

Masters Degree in Oriental Medicine from Atlantic Institute of Oriental Medicine, additional TCM studies in Guang Zhou, China. Individualized holistic care for fertility issues including IVF, chronic & acute pain, digestive issues, anxiety, insomnia, prostatitis, sports injuries. Celluma Low Level Light Therapy for arthritis, muscle & joint pain, acne, skin tone, edema. In-network provider for VA patients. See ad, page 11.

RP ACUPUNCTURE

Rosa Panos, DACM, AP, PT AP3945 397 Palm Coast Parkway SW #5 386-283-4655 • RPAcupunctureFL.com

Doctorate of Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine, Chinese Herbal Medicine, Licensed Physical Therapist, Oncology Rehabilitations Specialist, Integrative Pain Management, Acupoint injections and Zyto Elite Scanning. Over 30 years of medical experience combining Eastern & Western medicine. Studies include Pacific College, China Medical University, Taiwan. See ad, page 2.

CAFÉ – JUICE BAR

SUPERFOODS CAFÉ & JUICE BAR

515 Canal St, New Smyrna Beach 386-402-7825

TheFamilyNutritionStore.com

Daily lunch specials include vegan and gluten-free soups made daily from all organic ingredients. Coldpress juices, 3-, 5- and 10-day cleanse. Doctor-formulated protein smoothies, and create-your-own smoothies with a variety of fruit bases and supplements. Call for daily specials. Café Hours M-F 8am-4pm Sat 8-5; Soup 11am-3pm M-Sat. Two daily soups–one vegan, always gluten-free. See ad, page 9.

CBD PRODUCTS

YOUR CBD STORE

• 117 W Howry Ave, DeLand • 386-627-6715

DeLandFL.CBDrx4u.com

• 160 Cypress Point Pkwy, Ste A105 Palm Coast • 386-627-5271 PalmCoast.CBDrx4u.com

Offering Certified Organic CBD products exclusive to Your CBD stores. Products are formulated using other cannabinoids and terpenes, creating unique synergies that increase efficacy, target specific ailments and increase the binding of CBD. Stop in and try a free sample. See ad, page 6.

CHIROPRACTIC

BE WELL CHIROPRACTIC @Healing Zone

515 Canal St, New Smyrna Beach 386-402-8997 • BeWellNSB.Com

Drs. Wendy and Christian Edwards are dedicated to providing holistic patient-centered care. In addition to chiropractic, they offer Class IV laser, Frequency Specific Microcurrent, functional medicine, pregnancy care and pediatrics. Through specific testing they locate imbalances and recommend natural approaches. See ad, page 9.

COLON HYDROTHERAPY

BEACHSIDE COLONICS

Lidia Nash 18 Bovard Ave Ste A, Ormond Beach Call or text: 386-760-0035

Gentle rinsing of the colon removes toxic waste that can contribute to pain, inflammation and disease. Relaxing and effective. Lidia also offers ionic foot cleanse, infrared detox wraps and healthy food preparation classes. MA46199.

CRYSTAL

KEITH’S BIG BOX OF ROCKS

4601 E. Moody Blvd. Ste. E-4 Bunnell Keithsbigboxofrocks.com 407-212-5013

Crystals for all budgets, $5 and up, specimens, jewelry, cut and polished stones, amethyst, quartz, moldavite, lapis and over 1 million items in stock. Follow us on Facebook, Holiday Lay Away Program. Follow Big Box of Rocks on FB.

DENTIST

HOLISTIC DENTAL HEALTH CARE

George W Edwards, DMD

David W Edwards, DMD

541 N Palmetto Ave, Sanford 407-322-6143

• HolisticDentalHealth.com

Holistic dentistry focuses on whole-body wellness that starts with the mouth. We are dentists who perform dentistry that is good for the body, as well as the teeth and gums. See ad, page 25.

ENERGETIC STRESS REDUCTION

ACCESS CONSCIOUSNESS BIO-ENERGETIC BODYWORK

Cathleen Connor, CFMW, Access Consciousness Facilitator 1011 Ocean Marina Dr, Flagler Beach 971-732-2168

• ExuberantlyBeing.com

Providing one-on-one sessions, free intros/consults, Zoom classes and dynamic group classes with bioenergetic bodywork for the Access Bars and Energetic Facelift. Ses sions support the body to let go of limitations, blocks, projections and implants to allow more ease and joy. See ad, page 8.

HEALTH EVALUATIONS

THE PHYSICS OF HEALTH

Trish Watson, CNC

18 Bovard Ave, Ste A, Ormond Beach 303-257-0058

ThePhysicsofHealth.com

Not sure why you’re feeling fatigued? Biofeedback measurements can evaluate vitamins, minerals, heavy metals, allergies, supplement needs, and much more. Start feeling better today. Call for a free phone consultation.

HEALTH FOODS

DEBBIE’S HEALTH FOODS

• 862 Saxon Blvd, Orange City 386-775-7002

• 3850 S Nova Rd, Port Orange 386-763-7046

DebbiesHealthFoods.com

High quality supplements, CBD, grocery items, organic produce, special needs diets. Area’s most knowledgeable and friendly advice for over 30 years.

FAMILY NUTRITION/HEALING ZONE

515 Canal St, New Smyrna Beach 386-402-7825

TheFamilyNutritionStore.com

Organic produce, natural foods, healthy snacks, personal care, pet products and more. Practitioneronly brands including Standard Process. Save 20% every day. See ad, page 9.

NATURE’S GARDEN NATURAL HEALTH FOODS

2405 Enterprise Rd, Orange City 386-774-1222

Open MondayFriday, 10am–6pm; Saturday, 10am5pm. Quality vitamins, minerals, herbs, body building and dietary supplements, personal care, children and pet products, essential oils, books and mail-order available. 20% discounts every day.

HERBS, TEAS, OILS

SPICE OF LIFE HERBS

214 Beresford Ave, DeLand 386-734-0035

SpiceOfLifeHerbs.net

HEALTH FOODS FOR LIFE

Bob Lewandowski

122 E Rich Ave, DeLand 386-734-2343

Open Monday-Saturday, 10am-5pm. Bob has been in business more than 39 years with specialties including: non-allergenic foods, energizing weight reduction, organic skin care, herbs and vitamins.

HEATH’S NATURAL FOODS

600 E 3rd Ave, New Smyrna Beach 386-423-5126

HeathsNaturalFoods.com

Wide selection of natural supplements and herbs. Bulk herbs and spices, gluten-free products, organic beer/wine, pet products, grass-fed organic meats. Deli/juice bar. Store open 8am-6pm daily. Deli open 8am-5pm daily.

LOVE WHOLE FOODS CAFÉ & MARKET

• 275 Williamson Blvd, Ormond Beach 386-677-5236

• 1633 Taylor Rd, Port Orange 386-767-6543

LoveWholeFoods.com

Open Monday-Friday, 9am-7pm; Saturday, 9am-6pm and Sunday, 11am-5pm with friendly, knowledgeable staff. Get involved in your community, shop local and support organics. Save more with our “Get Healthy, Get Rewarded” program.

Open WednesdaysSaturdays, Noon-5pm. Herbs by the ounce. teas, infusers, specialty collector teapots, and more. Essential oils and diffusers for home and auto, aromatherapy books and jewelry, soy candles in many sizes and scents. Visit and like SunSpirits Tea Room on Face Book. Serving wine, beer, tea and coffee. Shop online www.spiceoflifeherbs.net

INSURANCE

GREAT FLORIDA INSURANCE

Cal Seibert, Agent

415 Dunlawton Ave, Ste 108

Port Orange • 386-256-4812

*Each location is independently owned and operated. Say goodbye to high insurance rates. Contact us for quotes on auto, home, condo, renters, boat, motorcycle, dwelling and flood insurance. Experience personalized service. SR22 and FR44 policies available.

MASSAGE

EISLER THERAPEUTICS

Ed Eisler, CPT Mobile Services LMT #28465, CFT#T54266 386-214-6465

Licensed and insured with 25 years exp. Massage Therapist and Cert. Fitness Trainer. Certified in 200 hr. Yoga instructor, Tai Chi, Qigong & Health Coach. Svc. Include Chinese Med. Massage, Paul St. John Neuromuscular massage, Bellanina Facelift, Thai massage. Group or solo fitness sessions, equip. provided. Group class schedule in ongoing event calendar.

34 Volusia / Flagler VoFLNatural.com

MEDICAL MARIJUANA

WALK-IN MEDICAL MARIJUANA CLINICS

100 S Spring Garden Ave, DeLand 386-232-5599

2575 W US 92, Daytona Beach 386-222-1667

CMMDR.com

Medical marijuana treats more than 250 medical conditions such as: chronic pain, PTSD, cancer, seizures, epilepsy, Parkinson’s, MS, HIV/AIDS, Crohn’s, IBS, glaucoma, fibromyalgia, lupus and more. See ad, page 25

PEST CONTROL NATURAL

NATURALLY GREEN PEST SOLUTIONS

PO Box 354591, Palm Coast, FL, 32135 386-237-9663

NaturallyGreenPest.com Info@NaturallyGreenPest.com

Offering pest solutions for your home and lawn with a natural focus. Unwanted pests in your home can negatively affect your family’s health and your peace of mind. Eliminate them with a program you can feel good about.

PET SUPPLIES

ME & PAW

1712 State Rd 44

New Smyrna Beach 386-444-6532

Most complete pet and supply store, with products for people too. We offer only the healthiest, safest, and most effective choices for your pet, and stand behind all our products with a replacement or refund if you’re not completely delighted. See ad, page 29.

SOLAR ENERGY

EMPOWER SOLAR SOLUTIONS

356 Destination Daytona Ln, Ormond Bch Volusia • 386-327-6937 gosolar@empowersolar.com

Our mission is to make solar energy effortless and affordable. We design energy systems specific to your needs to maximize savings and provide clean electricity for your family. FL Lic. Solar Contractor #CVC57067. See ad, page 5

SOLAR-FIT

1523 Ridgewood Ave, Holly Hill

Volusia • 386-441-2299

Flagler • 386-445-7606 Solar-Fit.com

Relax and let the sun do the work for you. Solar-fitting your home or business is a smart, economical and environmentally sound investment. We offer a wide range of options to make your home more energy efficient. We are making America energy-independent one home at a time.

SPA

NATURE IN BEAUTY

An Organic Beauty Boutique & Parlor 314 Canal St, New Smyrna Beach 386-576-6730

NatureInBeautyOrganics.com

Nourishing products for professional hair care, manicures and pedicures, facials, massage, reflexology, makeup, spa packages, Girl’s Night In. See ad, page 2.

SPIRITUAL CENTERS

UNITY COMMUNITY CHURCH 1001 S Ridgewood Ave, Edgewater 386-481-0890 • UnityCommunityChurch.com

Sunday service is at 11am. Offering prayer services, book study groups, classes, spiritual counseling, weddings, christenings, memorial services, home blessings, home/hospital visitations. See ad, page 8.

STRUCTURAL INTEGRATION

LAUREE MORETTO Soft Tissue Specialist 321-271-1678

Flagler & Daytona Bch LaureeMoretto.com

90% of pain is linked to structural mis alignment. Your pain is really just a symptom. My work addresses the cause to give you lasting relief. Get your life back now. 20+ years experience. MA20965.

THERMOGRAPHY

FLORIDA MEDICAL THERMOGRAPHY

June Drennon, CCT 2008 • JuneDrennon@ FloridaMedicalThermography.com 727-729-2711

FloridaMedicalThermography.com

Certified Clinical Thermographer 2008. Mindful Wellness with Thermography! Knowledge is power: Know your risk factors to make corrections and avoid developing pathology. Call for location convenient for you.

VETERINARY SERVICES

GENTLE PET PASSINGS

Dr Gayle Burrell Volusia / Flagler 386-279-8525 • GentlePetPassings.com

Saying goodbye to your beloved friend is a loving, but difficult decision. Spend those final precious moments with your pet in the comfort of their home surrounded by all that they love. See ad, page 28.

WELLNESS

AMETHYST WELLNESS

Amy Coopersmith, ARNP 50 Cypress Point Pkwy, B-1 Palm Coast 386-283-4180 • AmethystWellness.com

Preventative healthcare, medically supervised weight loss, IV nutrition, hormone optimization, body contouring, aesthetic treatments, laser hair removal, weight loss and more. See ad, page 23

YOGA

PADMA YOGA

Micki Higgins, E-RYT 500 YACEP 5 Utility Dr, Ste 15, Palm Coast 386-225-4733 • PadmaYogaOnline.com

Cell: 904-377-4217. Fully open with day & evening classes. Yoga for all body types and all ages. We are the only yoga studio in Palm Coast that is not hot. See website for schedule. See ad, page 21

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To advertise or participate in our next issue, call 386-736-3838 FREE November2022 Volusia/FlaglerEdition VoFLNatural.com HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET WAYSTO TURN ANXIETYINTO ACTIONPOSITIVE TOEATRIGHT YOURLIFTMOOD A HEARTGRATEFUL ISGOODMEDICINE
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