2012年1月15日 星期日

Digest of wisdom

My education emphasizes the body like small universe. So the digestive system, as like the ground to absorption energy  them used it into the world  and life.

From this point of view, in theory, each substance has its access todifferent parts of the body and results in the theoretical basis for thisdiscussion on the intake and a variety of functions are from there.
This is why learning Chinese herbs in particular about human food is always a double benefit. Is both a food is medicine.
But this thing is a few hundred or thousand years ago in the past. We need using the word in now;
If I told you your body know everything in your intake and output but not just by the dose. how but you?

This is inherently sensual of thing - eat.
Eating in the body as like uptake information.
But everyone's a little different focus;
Some people eat with your eyes,
Some people with mouth,
Some people use the nose,
Some people with brain,
It was also with the ears,
There were using hands,some people even use the muscles or bones.
In other words,everywhere the body is understand what's eat it's to director of your body.
Therefore your body know it , then you?

However, this is always a positive to know something is only a part of the explanation is not all.


Here is an example. A asian woman who year around 50-60  year old ; she visit me in 1 years ago. the woman in my office ,she looks emaciated so that walking came the feeling is very weak. She wanted me to treat her problems on swallowing, cause she always felt something stuck in her throat ; but she looked through almost all of the Doctors did not find any reason for the inspection.


Then I also asked her other problems found that:

  1. She is also very easy to feel abdominal pains and bulge.
  2. Her Eating habits is a single content in the only by her so-called "health food" and use of cooking idea in "part of " Asia.
  3. Her "symptoms"related with the working time, that on working days was particularly vulnerable to showing. However, the objective view the hospital job had excellent pay and benefits , but during go to work let her uncomfortable increase.
  4. Of course , she has a good background of science and medical education.Therefore if making recommendations on her diet she may challenge for the food. Instance, even if she was always worried about the weight continued to decline but still on the question of food such as avocado - "it's fatty" she say.
  5. Her has religion but seen's to be let she more "can't eat" things.

In short she caught my attention the interesting 
multiple conflicts.



In Chinese medicine professional I can quickly determine the problem -“ Mei-He- Qi” and the so-called about"emotional" and liver. But I believe she did not want to hear this , usually have to find their most basic fear of being labeled ; although other family members also  tell me truth - yes, her past relevant to mental disorders - depression.


In fact, all the problems that such a woman will finally not only that ,Osteoporosis is of course obvious.Therefore, the face of one of her psychological problems including fear of activity or movement. This has become another challenge for me.


I summed up all the help she needs , Including :

  • workplace counseling department.
  • Psychological counseling.
  • Nutrition consultation.
  • Specialist track.
  • Sports life guidance.........etc.


But this need slow and step by step. so in the next six months we gradually let her from here's treatment by TCM and acupuncture way conversion to the gentle yoga movement.
Finally, our role-based, must clearly understand that she needs overcome is to  learn how to release the information as " need help"  between in work and family ,but not harm herself's body.
To left us is a compromise but do not give up yoga that she thinks what is good practice for her.


Our common to know is to through the use of yoga be engage in dialogue with the body and not be deceived by the appearance of the body.


2012年1月1日 星期日

Suggestion from a holistic nourishment




By Hale Sofia Schatz
If you've ever tried to practice yoga right after a meal, then you know how uncomfortable your Downward-Facing Dogs and spinal twists can feel with a full or bloated belly. Even if you've finished eating several hours before stepping onto the mat, your body may still be working to digest your last meal, which means less available energy for your practice. To keep your body feeling light and vibrant, look within—to your digestive tract.
The main reason we eat is to provide our bodies with the fuel we need to live—fuel for walking, thinking,, making art, working, playing with our children, and doing yoga. But the very act of digestion also takes energy. You can assist your body's digestion before you even take the first bite of food. If you think of the stomach as a blender that purees food into a molecular soup, then what you eat together at one time doesn't matter because it all gets mixed up anyway, right? Wrong.
Different foods have different digestion times and require different digestive enzymes. Therefore, eating too many kinds of foods at one time—such as proteins with grains, fats, and sugars, a la the common peanut butter and jelly sandwich—can result in difficult digestion. Eating the appropriate food combinations not only helps improve digestion, it can also increase energy, regulate elimination, and help relieve depression, anxiety, and mood swings. And increased physical energy means more vitality, clarity, and focus in all areas of life. Although food combining isn't a panacea, it can ease digestion so that energy flows through the body unimpeded.
We do yoga not just for the sake of physical results, but so those results—a strong, supple, and receptive body—give us greater access to our spirit. Why should feeding ourselves be any different? Think of food combining as food yoga. By keeping the core of our bodies functioning with ease, we can access our inner selves more deeply because less of our attention is diverted to the physical.
A Process of Elimination
How often do you actually think about the food that's being digested by your body? Most of us think about digestion only when we suffer indigestion—bloating, gas, heartburn, constipation, diarrhea, and all the other unpleasant symptoms that quickly direct our attention to our bellies. Yet the digestive tract is the center of the body—the alchemical furnace in which what we eat is transmuted from separate foods into the fuel our bodies and minds need. The next time you eat something, think about when your food actually becomes you.
The digestive tract has three basic functions: The stomach separates the food into smaller parts, the small intestine completes the breakdown and assimilates nutrients to supply to the rest of the body, and the large intestine eventually eliminates any remaining waste. Keeping this system in good working order is essential to overall health and vitality.
Digestive problems can arise as we age, undergo stress, eat too quickly or on the run, or eat diets composed of refined and rich foods, too much food, or foods eaten in complicated combinations. Eventually, the proper flow of digestive juices slows down, compromising the breakdown of foods in the stomach and small intestine. Like any plumbing system, the digestive tract can erode or get backed up, resulting in chronic diarrhea and/or constipation. If elimination doesn't happen properly, we don't receive the nutrients we need and toxic waste matter can remain in the system. This causes us to feel uncomfortable and lethargic; the flow of life energy is blocked.
The word digestion comes from the Latin for "separate" or "arrange." In fact, this is exactly what happens in the digestive tract: Nutrients, in the form of molecules, are separated from food and arranged through assimilation to provide energy for all the body's internal organs. With food combining, you assist digestion by separating and prearranging your food before it even lands in your stomach.
Although medical research hasn't yet been done on the specific benefits of food combining, this system, which has been around in various forms since the 1930s, is based on the understanding that eating foods in combinations that have compatible enzymes and digestive times makes for easier and more complete digestion. High-protein foods require the acidic medium of the stomach to be broken down, whereas carbohydrates require the alkaline or neutral medium of the small intestine. When high-protein and high-carbohydrate foods are eaten together, digestion becomes more complicated, since the transit time for carbohydrates is slowed by the breakdown of protein in the stomach. If the breakdown is impeded, then the absorption of nutrients and elimination also may become more difficult, with undigested food particles remaining in the system. These undigested particles can create allergens, bacterial imbalances, and other disorders in the gastrointestinal tract.
A Simple Approach
In many aspects of life, with simplification comes less excess. The same is true for the body. In a world obsessed with abundance and the availability of every imaginable foodstuff 365 days a year, food combining helps us simplify our food choices. The basic rule of thumb is: The simpler the meal, the easier digestion will be. Simple meals, moderate portions, and chewing food slowly and with an attitude of reverence all help maintain easy digestion and free-flowing energy in the body. It doesn't take long to get the hang of food combining with these simple guidelines:
Fruits are the easiest and fastest foods to digest, and for that reason should always be eaten separately from proteins, grains, and vegetables. They are further classified into acid, subacid, sweet, and melons—based on their levels of acid and sugar—and have their own set of guidelines for combinations. Digestion time: 20 minutes to one hour.
All vegetables can be combined with one another as well as with proteins. For optimal digestive ease, it's best to combine only nonstarchy and low-starch vegetables with grains. Digestion time: 30 minutes to two hours.
Grains can be eaten alone or combined with nonstarchy and low-starch vegetables. Do not combine grains with protein or with starchy vegetables. It's best to have only one type of grain at a meal, so decide if you really want that hunk of bread or if it's worth waiting for the rice. Digestion time: two to three hours.
Proteins can be eaten alone or combined with nonstarchy, low-starch, and starchy vegetables. It's best to have only one type of protein at a meal. Digestion time: two to four hours.
When selecting what to eat, consider not only the culinary appeal of your choices but how your body will interpret the foods you are about to ingest. Ask yourself: Will these foods fuel my body so it can be a strong vehicle for my spirit, or will they slow me down? Feeding yourself purposefully is like doing yoga off the mat: Each choice of what and how to feed yourself is an opportunity to practice awareness, compassion, and self-love.
Hale Sofia Schatz is the author of If the Buddha Came to Dinner: How to Nourish Your Body to Awaken Your Spirit (Hyperion, available in 2004). She is a holistic nourishment consultant in Boston.