Tuesday, 10 July 2018

Get stronger bones

Good morning, warm enough for you?  I can't believe how long this weather is lasting.  Today I'm off to the funeral of one of my uncles, and as much as the inner goth in me still loves black clothing I was not looking forward having to wear it in 30 degree heat.  Thankfully the dress code has been altered to no black, lots of colour!  Think it'll be shorts for me too.  

Availability this week.  Appointments available all week

For my own mental and physical wellbeing, I've committed myself to doing at least 20 minutes  of Yoga a day.  I've quite a few niggly little injuries which I know are due  to lack of stretching and bad posture and the type of exercise I usually do.  The other day I found this article online from the  BBC which proved to be an  interesting read.

Give your bones a workout.
 
Too many of us are neglecting to do exercises for strong muscles and bones, says Public Health England (PHE).
It's launched a new report giving advice on how people can age better by doing the right workouts.
While the message about doing aerobic exercise for a healthy heart and lungs is getting through, people are less clear about the need to look after their overall strength too, it says.
We should all be doing strengthening exercises at least twice a week.
Lifting weights is one option, but taking up tennis or dancing also works, says PHE and the Centre for Ageing Better.
Activities offering the most benefit include:
  • Ball games
  • Racket sports
  • Dance
  • Nordic walking (walking with poles to give your upper body a workout as well as your legs)
  • Resistance training (using weights or bands or your own body weight to push or pull against for a workout)
Yoga, Tai Chi and cycling are also somewhat good for bones, muscles and balance.
Only one in three men and one in four women is doing enough of the right types of exercise to keep both healthy and strong, say the experts.
Muscle and bone strengthening and balance activity can improve physical and wellbeing at any age and reduce the risk of an early death.
It can also help improve health during difficult or life-changing times like pregnancy, menopause, onset of or diagnosis of disease, retirement and recovery from hospitalisation.

Use it or lose it

The experts advise young people to build up muscle and bone mass, which tends to peak by the time we reach 30.
Older adults need exercises to maintain what they've hopefully already got and slow the natural decline that happens with age.
Those who are frail and/or at risk of fractures, including people with osteoporosis, should be especially careful, however, particularly with higher-impact activities such as tennis, and seek advice from their doctor.
Dr Zoe Williams from Public Health England said: "Being active isn't just about getting your heart pumping - although this is a good way to begin. Strength and balance activities work in conjunction with cardio activities like brisk walking, and come with a range of health benefits throughout your life - it's never too late to start."
Adults should do:
  • At least 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity, such as brisk walking, every week AND
  • Strength exercises on two or more days a week that will work all the major muscles

Saturday, 3 February 2018

Turmeric vs Cancer

Good morning all, guess what?  I've actually had a massage myself within the last week and you'll be pleased to know that it killed!!!  In fact, it was that bad that a 45 minute session was just enough time to treat 1, yes 1 leg!!!  My body is that tensed up!!  So I need to stretch out more than I already do to counteract the effects of all the activity I do daily/weekly.  The motto of this story?  Don't leave massive gaps between massage sessions.  I shall need to get my other leg sorted soon as well as my shoulders which I know are seriously broken with tension.  Won't that be pain free session..not!!! 

This week's topic is on the benefits of consuming curcumin/tumeric internally.  Tablets are available from Little London Herbal Stores, Trinity Walk, Nott'm.

The Many Benefits of Curcumin

As the active ingredient in turmeric powder, curcumin is well-known for its broad range of curative properties. It has been used for thousands of years as a spice and beauty aid, and in both Ayurvedic and traditional Chinese medicine to treat a wide range of maladies — from cancer to indigestion and heart disease to neurodegenerative conditions. Given its many antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, below are a few of the conditions responsive to curcumin:
Cancer prevention and treatment: Taking a curcumin supplement regularly may help prevent and treat cancer based on the fact it appears to block the blood supply to cancerous tumors, thereby suppressing the growth and replication of malignant cells.
Heart health: Animal studies have shown curcumin can help regulate blood pressure and prevent heart disease. It may be particularly beneficial to reduce the incidence of atherosclerosis, also known as hardening of the arteries. In other studies, curcumin has been found to lower LDL and total cholesterol and prevent your blood from clotting.
Intestinal and bowel issues: Because curcumin stimulates your gallbladder to produce bile, it may help improve your digestion, reduce bloating and gas, and soothe digestive disorders. When combined with conventional treatments, curcumin may help promote the remission of ulcerative colitis.
Neurodegenerative conditions: Curcumin may help prevent and treat neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, MS and Parkinson's.
Scientists investigating curcumin's biological activities had this to say about the extent to which it plays a vital role in supporting your health: "Modern science has shown that curcumin modulates various signaling molecules, including inflammatory molecules, transcription factors, enzymes, protein kinases, protein reductases, carrier proteins, cell survival proteins, drug resistance proteins, adhesion molecules, growth factors, receptors, cell-cycle regulatory proteins, chemokines, DNA, RNA and metal ions."

In animal-based lab research during the past 20 years, curcumin has been shown to have both cancer prevention and cancer treatment properties. Its usefulness in the treatment of colon cancer is particularly well established.  One group of scientists investigating curcumin's ability to suppress the proliferation of colon cancer cells by targeting a major cell cycle protein, said:
"Curcumin … is one of the most popular phytochemicals for cancer prevention. Numerous reports have demonstrated modulation of multiple cellular signaling pathways by curcumin and its molecular targets in various cancer cell lines. Cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2), a major cell cycle protein, was identified as a potential molecular target of curcumin. Indeed, in vitro and ex vivo kinase assay data revealed a dramatic suppressive effect of curcumin on CDK2 kinase activity."
Other cancers in which curcumin has shown protective effects in rodent models include breast, bladder, brain, esophageal, kidney, liver, lung, pancreas, prostate and stomach, to name a few.  As noted by Dr. William LaValley — one of the leading clinical researchers and medical practitioners in the field of integrative cancer treatment,— curcumin appears to be universally beneficial for nearly every type of cancer treatment.
This is unusual considering cancer's many varied molecular pathologies. One reason for this universal anticancer proclivity is curcumin's ability to affect multiple molecular targets, via multiple pathways.
Once it gets into a cell, curcumin affects more than 100 different molecular pathways. And, as explained by LaValley, whether the curcumin molecule causes an increase in activity of a particular molecular target, or a decrease or inhibition of activity, studies repeatedly underscore its potent anticancer activity.
Notably, curcumin is nontoxic, and does not adversely affect healthy cells, suggesting it selectively targets cancer cells. In cases in which certain chemotherapy drugs are used, curcumin has been shown to work synergistically with the drugs to enhance the elimination of cancer cells.

Til next week
Michael B

Saturday, 23 December 2017

Are moods contagious

As we approach the time of year when we end up spending more time with people than we normally would, we, hopefully, enter this thinking that World war 3 isn't going to kick off at any point especially if there is some family issues involved, if you get me.  That, or someone is generally in a rather pissed off mood.  I'm sure we all know someone who, on entering a room, instantly brightens it up.  Conversely the same could be said for the doom monger who walks in and sucks the life out of everything.  So are moods contagious?  I know we claim to think they are but in truth are they?

According to some Psychologists yes they are and it is called, in the case of bad moods, an emotional contagion and it happens in 3 stages.  The first involves you unknowingly copying the moody person's posture, behaviour, facial expressions.  If you catch yourself frowning, stage 2 makes you feel sad then you end up sharing bad experiences and feelings with the original person until you become "synched" into a dark pattern.  The good news is this can work in the opposite direction with a person in a good mood can "turn that frown upside" and cheer people up.  This synching of moods is called nonconscious mimicry (think of when someone yawns you end up doing it too) or the chameleon effect.  Stress too is one mood/emotion that can be passed around especially if there is a strong bond between people.  Studies on married couples have shown that women are less affected by their husband's stress whilst the husband's picked up on the negative emotions of their wives when the stressful situation was reversed.

These studies emphasise the importance of choosing wisely the company you keep so you get the good moods over Xmas and not the bad ones.

Til next week
MB

Wednesday, 13 December 2017

Calming Christmas Strategies

Morning, hope your xmas preparations are progressing smoothly and you're not too stressed out by it all.  If you're struggling then this week take advantage of 10 stress busting tips to get through it all and out the other side with a modicum of sanity in tack.
 
If you're aiming to simplify Christmas, take time to ponder ways to cut stress, save money and tame over-the-top traditions. Setting simplicity strategies in place early will keep you from being swept up in holiday madness.
Get armed! Try these simple strategies to calm holiday chaos and rein in the seasonal overkill this year.

1/ Trim the back the to do list, is something really really necessary? Be brutal
2/Trim back the gift buying list to just immediate family, close friends and gift exchanges at work.
3/Wrap presents as you get them instead of ding it all in one go.  Ideally get it wrapped in store.
4/Just this once, buy and don't bake, especially if you're having a lot of folk round.  Use the oven to warm things through if you must.
5/Instead of sending a card, call them instead.  Not only is this more personal it will stay in the persons mind longer than a card plonked on the mantle piece.
6/Stream line the great house clean to public areas such as kitchen, dining room, lounge, toilet.  Everywhere else can wait and have a deep clean after it is all over.
7/Downsize your dish washing.  Do you really want to be washing that delicate expensive tea service that can't go in the dish washer just to show off?  Use everyday stuff that can go in the machine or better still use paper plates!
8/go for finger food buffets rather than the full on dinner experience.  Get guests to contribute a plate of something, less work for you.
9/Scale back the decor.  Concentrate on the areas you'll be using the most, dining room, lounge and a welcoming front door.

Til next week
Take care
MB

Wednesday, 6 December 2017

Banish Bingo Wings

Morning, so, we're into the final month, Xmas only round the corner, New Year after that, I'm looking at planning stuff for early next year as well as booking clients in for January already.  Phew!  The next week or so I'll be able to announce the first block of Fitness Pilates for 2018, but are you already planning in your mind a new exercise regime for the new year?  Banish those bingo wings? If you are then read on for something that many people don't do and that I don't do enough of.

Research confirms that exercise is the best "preventive drug" for many common ailments and chronic diseases, from psychiatric disorders and pain to heart disease, cancer and diabetes.
 
Unfortunately, many make the mistake of focusing on cardiovascular exercise to the exclusion of everything else. Strength training is overlooked by many for a number of different reasons. Women may think they'll bulk up and look manly, the elderly might worry about it being too strenuous or dangerous, and parents might think weight training is too risky for their children for these same reasons.
The truth is, nearly everyone, regardless of age or gender, will benefit from strength training. Working your muscles will help you shed excess fat, maintain healthy bone mass and prevent age-related muscle loss, the latter of which can start as early as your 30s if you do not actively counteract it.  Load-bearing exercises help counteract bone loss and postural deficits that occur with each passing year. During your youth, bone resorption is well-balanced, ensuring healthy bone growth and sustained strength. However, as bone loss accelerates, it starts to outpace your body's ability to create new bone. The more sedentary you are, the weaker your bones get as a result.

The same can be said about muscle, without good muscle tone mobility begins to suffer,and muscle weakness coupled with brittle bones is a disaster waiting to happen if you slip or fall.

Resistance training can improve your chance of getting diabetes as muscle fibres uses blood sugar for energy.  This in turn reduces your waist size, cholesterol levels and high blood pressure.

Doing weights also helps with menopausal symptoms, depression, weight gain, irregular periods and brain fog by just increasingly slightly testosterone levels.  We're not talking becoming built like Brigitte Nielson here folks :)

Also, lifting a bit of iron can lower inflammation in the body that can result in chronic illnesses and promotes a sense of wellbeing.

In addition, doing this type of exercise can improve cardiovascular health too.

Of course, don't just think you can begin doing weights like an olympian and hey presto you're Superman or Wonder Woman, ease into it, get help and advice from trained professionals who can show you the best exercises and correct technique to avoid ending up in traction from injuring yourself.  Need any advice?  Get in touch, and if I can't help I'm bound to know someone who can.

Til next week
MB
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Thursday, 30 November 2017

Cauliflower Power

Morning, as we move into winter I've found myself having more stews and casseroles for evening meals, loving the warm fuzzy feelings these winter comfort foods bring.  It's also a good way at getting more fresh veg into the diet.  Parsnips, carrots, leaks are just a few staples that I find myself retreating to as well cauliflower which when you read up on it is really healthy & beneficial too.

Cauliflower, which like broccoli is a member of the cruciferous family, contains an impressive array of nutrients, including vitamins, minerals, antioxidants and other phytochemicals. It's a good source of vitamin K, protein, thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, magnesium, phosphorus, fibre  vitamin B6, folate, pantothenic acid, potassium and manganese.
Cauliflower is also packed with natural antioxidants such as vitamin C, beta-carotene, kaempferol, quercetin, rutin, cinnamic acid and others. Antioxidants are nature's way of providing your cells with adequate defence against attack by excessive amounts of reactive oxygen species. As long as you have these important micronutrients, your body will be better equipped to resist damage caused by everyday exposures to pollutants, chronic stress and more.
Without an adequate supply of antioxidants to help squelch excess free radicals you raise your risk of oxidative stress, which leads to accelerated tissue and organ damage. Adding to cauliflower's appeal is its versatility. You can eat it raw, add it to salads or use it in your cooking. Cauliflower can even be seasoned and mashed as an alternative to potatoes or made into rice.

Fighting cancer
Cauliflower contains the cancer-fighting compounds sulforaphane and isothiocyanates, the former of which has been shown to kill cancer stem cell responsible for metastasis or spread of cancer.

Boosting heart health
Sulforaphane in cauliflower also helps improve blood pressure and kidney function. Scientists believe sulforaphane's benefits are related to improved DNA methylation, which is crucial for normal cellular function and proper gene expression, especially in the easily damaged inner lining of the arteries (endothelium).

Lower inflammation
Chronic inflammation is a hallmark of most diseases.  Cauliflower contains ingredients which eases inflammation at the cellular level.

Brain health booster
B vitamin Choline is known for aiding brain development, cognitive function, learning & memory. 

Supports detoxification
Aids digestion
Cauliflower is a source of fibre as well as containing nutrients that protect the stomach lining by not allowing bad bacteria to cling to the stomach wall.

Til next week
MB

Thursday, 23 November 2017

Have you been phubbed?

Good morning all.  I'm sure we've all experienced this, hell I've probably done it myself and that is ignored someone in favour of my iphone.    Apparently this act has been christened Phubbing.  Having not come across this term before, I did a bit of snooping around the internet, and this is what I found. 

Phubbing is the practice of snubbing others in favour of our mobile phones. We’ve all been there, as either victim or perpetrator. We may no longer even notice when we’ve been phubbed (or are phubbing), it has become such a normal part of life. However, research studies are revealing the profound impact phubbing can have on our relationships and well-being.
There’s an irony in phubbing. When we’re staring at our phones, we’re often connecting with someone on social media or through texting. Sometimes, we’re flipping through our pictures the way we once turned the pages of photo albums, remembering moments with people we love. Unfortunately, however, this can severely disrupt our actual, present-moment, in-person relationships, which also tend to be our most important ones.
The research shows that phubbing isn’t harmless—but the studies to date also point the way to a healthier relationship with our phones and with each other.

What phubbing does to us

According to their study of 145 adults, phubbing decreases marital satisfaction, in part because it leads to conflict over phone use. The scientists found that phubbing, by lowering marital satisfaction, affected a partner’s depression and satisfaction with life. A follow-up study by Chinese scientists assessed 243 married adults with similar results: Partner phubbing, because it was associated with lower marital satisfaction, contributed to greater feelings of depression. In a study poignantly titled, “My life has become a major distraction from my cell phone,” Meredith David and James Roberts suggest that phubbing can lead to a decline in one of the most important relationships we can have as an adult: the one with our life partner.
Phubbing also shapes our casual friendships. Not surprisingly to anyone who has been phubbed, phone users are generally seen as less polite and attentive.(I unfriended someone I'd known for years because every time she came to visit, she ignored me and spent all the time talking or texting) Let’s not forget that we are extremely attuned to people. When someone’s eyes wander, we intuitively know what brain studies also show: The mind is wandering. We feel unheard, disrespected, disregarded.
A series of studies actually showed that just having a phone out and present during a conversation (say, on the table between you) interferes with your sense of connection to the other person, the feelings of closeness experienced, and the quality of the conversation. This phenomenon is especially the case during meaningful conversations—you lose the opportunity for true and authentic connection to another person, the core tenet of any friendship or relationship.
In fact, many of the problems with mobile interaction relate to distraction from the physical presence of other people. According to these studies, conversations with no smartphones present are rated as being of a much higher quality than those with smartphones around, regardless of people’s age, ethnicity, gender, or mood. We feel more empathy when smartphones are put away.
This makes sense. When we are on our phones, we are not looking at other people and not reading their facial expressions (tears in their eyes, frowns, smiles). We don’t hear the nuances in their tone of voice (was it shaky with anxiety?), or notice their body posture (slumped and sad? or excited and enthusiastic?).
No wonder phubbing harms relationships.

The way of the phubbed

What do “phubbed” people tend do?
According to a study published in March of this year, they themselves start to turn to social media. Presumably, they do so to seek inclusion. They may turn to their cell phone to distract themselves from the very painful feelings of being socially neglected. We know from brain imaging research that being excluded registers as actual physical pain in the brain. Phubbed people in turn become more likely to attach themselves to their phones in unhealthy ways, thereby increasing their own feelings of stress and depression.

A Facebook study shows that how we interact on Facebook affects whether it makes us feel good or bad. When we use social media just to passively view others’ posts, our happiness decreases. Another showed that social media actually makes us more lonely.
“It is ironic that cell phones, originally designed as a communication tool, may actually hinder rather than foster interpersonal connectedness,” write David and Roberts in their study “Phubbed & Alone” Their results suggest the creation of a vicious circle: A phubbed individual turns to social media and their compulsive behaviour presumably leads them to phub others—perpetuating and normalising the practice and problem of “phubbing.”
“It is ironic that cell phones, originally designed as a communication tool, may actually hinder rather than foster interpersonal connectedness”
―Meredith David and James Roberts
Why do people get into the phubbing habit in the first place? Not surprisingly, fear of missing out and lack of self-control predict phubbing. However, the most important predictor is addiction—to social media, to the cell phone, and to the Internet. Internet addiction has similar brain correlates to physiological forms like addiction to heroine and other recreational drugs. The impact of this addiction is particularly worrisome for children whose brain and social skills are still under development.
Nicholas Kardaras, former Stony Brook Medicine clinical professor and author of Glow Kids, goes so far as to liken screen time to digital cocaine. Consider this: The urge to check social media is stronger than the urge for sex, according to research by Chicago University’s Wilhelm Hoffman.
These findings come as no surprise—decades of research have shown that our greatest need after food and shelter is for positive social connections with other people. We are profoundly social people for whom connection and a sense of belonging are crucial for health and happiness. (In fact, lack thereof is worse for you than smoking, high blood pressure, and obesity.) So, we err sometimes. We look for connection on social media at the cost of face-to-face opportunities for true intimacy.
The urge to check social media might be stronger than the urge for sex.

How to stop phubbing people

To prevent phubbing, awareness is the only solution. Know that what drives you and others is to connect and to belong. While you may not be able to control the behavior of others, you yourself have opportunities to model something different.
Research by Barbara Fredrickson, beautifully described in her book Love 2.0, suggests that intimacy happens in micro-moments: talking over breakfast, the exchange with the UPS guy, the smile of a child. The key is to be present and mindful. A revealing study showed that we are happiest when we are present, no matter what we are doing. Can we be present with the person in front of us right now, no matter who it is?
Studies by Paula Niedenthal reveal that the most essential and intimate form of connection is eye contact. Yet social media is primarily verbal. Research conducted by scientists like the GGSC’s Dacher Keltner and others have shown that posture and the most minute facial expressions (the tightening of our lips, the crow’s feet of smiling eyes, upturned eyebrows in sympathy or apology) communicate more than our words.
Most importantly, they are at the root of empathy—the ability to sense what another person is feeling—which is so critical to authentic human connection. Research shows that altruism and compassion also make us happier and healthier, and can even lengthen our lives. True connection thrives on presence, openness, observation, compassion, and, as BrenĂ© Brown has so beautifully shared in her TED talk and her bestselling book Daring Greatly, vulnerability. It takes courage to connect with another person authentically, yet it is also the key to fulfillment.

What to do if you are phubbed

What if you are phubbed? Patience and compassion are key here. Understand that the phubber is probably not doing it with malicious intent, but rather is following an impulse (sometimes irresistible) to connect. Just like you or I, their goal is not to exclude. To the contrary, they are looking for a feeling of inclusion. After all, a telling sociological study shows that loneliness is rising at an alarming rate in our society.
What’s more, age and gender play a role in people’s reactions to phubbing. According to studies, older participants and women advocate for more restricted phone use in most social situations. Men differ from women in that they viewed phone calls as more appropriate in virtually all environments including—and this is quite shocking—intimate settings. Similarly, in classrooms, male students find phubbing far less disturbing than their female counterparts.
Perhaps even worse than disconnecting from others, however, internet addiction & phubbing disconnect us from ourselves. Plunged into a virtual world, we hunch over a screen, strain our eyes unnecessarily, and tune out completely from our own needs—for sleep, exercise, even food. A disturbing study indicates that for every minute we spend online for leisure, we’re not just compromising our relationships, we are also losing precious self-care time (e.g., sleep, household activities) and productivity.
So, the next time you’re with another human and you feel tempted to pull out your phone—stop. Put it away. Look them in the eyes, and listen to what they have to say. Do it for them, do it for yourself, do it to make the world a better place.

This article was adapted from Greater Good, the online magazine of UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, one of Mindful’s partners.
Til next week
Michael B