This period between Christmas and the New Year is often when people start taking a hard look at their health and decide what they want to sort out in the coming year. One of the areas coming onto the radar in recent years has been digestive disorders.

 A significant increase in the number of people suffering a range of complaints affecting the digestive system can only be down to diet and lifestyle – what we’re choosing to eat, how much of it we’re eating, and how we are living life in general.

It’s a touchy subject because people don’t want to be told how to live their life. But shut away in their bedrooms and bathrooms around the planet, from mouth and throat ailments, down to the stomach with its gurgling acid, all the way through that serpentine plumbing with its bowel disorders, down to those pesky haemorrhoids, folks are not having a good time, enough said.

Some of these disorders are mild, others are extremely serious and need addressing without delay. One area that continues to be overlooked is proper intestinal/colonic health and elimination. Diseases linked with poor bowel function are extremely common and debilitating and are almost always linked to overweight, poor diet, lack of raw plant-foods, and so on.

Fancy making a change? You’ll need to be ready to do things you haven’t done before… and keep doing them! Your best friends in this worthy endeavour? Plants. Lots and lots of them. First, let’s find out where the major problems lie.

CROHN’S DISEASE (REGIONAL ENTERITIS)

Pain in the lower right abdomen, malabsorption of nutrients, low-grade fever, weight-loss, flatulence. Crohn’s is a condition where segments of the colon (large intestine) become inflamed, thickened and ulcerated. Traditional treatments will include corticosteroids, antibiotics, immunosuppressive drugs and dietary changes. Crohn’s can cause partial blockage of the large intestine, causing pain and bouts of diarrhoea. The same condition occurring in the small intestine is known as regional enteritis, the chronic form of which may also create fistulae (unnatural joinings) between adjacent loops of the intestines or between bowel tissue and the bladder, vagina or skin.

ULCERATIVE COLITIS 

Inflammation of the colon lining. Symptoms are pain, with blood and/or mucus in the faeces.

LEAKY GUT SYNDROME

Where damage to the small intestine wall can increase gut permeability to undigested food particles which enter the bloodstream and begin causing ‘allergic’ reactions. Dr Leo Galland, Director of Medicine at the Foundation for Integrated Medicine, states:

“Leaky gut syndrome is a group of clinical disorders associated with increased intestinal permeability. They include inflammatory and infectious bowel diseases, chronic inflammatory arthritides, cryptogenic skin conditions like acne, psoriasis and dermatitis herpetiformis, many diseases triggered by food allergy or specific food intolerance, including eczema, urticaria, and irritable bowel syndrome, AIDS, chronic fatigue syndromes, chronic hepatitis, chronic pancreatitis, cystic fibrosis and pancreatic carcinoma. Hyper-permeability may play a primary, etiologic role in the evolution of each disease, or may be a secondary consequence of it which causes immune activation, hepatic dysfunction, and pancreatic insufficiency, creating a vicious cycle. Unless specifically investigated, the role of altered intestinal permeability in patients with leaky gut syndrome often goes unrecognised.” [1]

DIVERTICULOSIS, DIVERTICULITIS 

Sacs may appear in weak sections of the intestinal tract, caused by pressure from the inner lining (pulsion diverticula) or from pressure exerted without (traction diverticula). Diverticulosis describes the passive existence of diverticula. Diverticulitis describes the condition when these sacs become perforated, inflamed or impacted.

DYSBIOSIS

The human digestive system contains over four hundred species of microflora (bacteria, yeast, fungi, protozoa, etc.) weighing over three pounds. Usually, in a properly pH-adjusted, harmonious alimentary tract, they live together in peace and balance (homeostasis). When, through our choices of food and lifestyle, we upset this balance, dysbiosis occurs, a term coined by Russian scientist Elie Metchnikoff, who maintained that toxic compounds produced by the aberrant breakdown of food by these bacteria caused many of the degenerative conditions, especially since this toxicity was carried to other parts of the body via the bloodstream and lymph.

IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME (IBS)

A general condition, thought to affect over 15% of the western populations, describing generalised abdominal pain, usually accompanied by diarrhoea and constipation, which leads to dysfunctional contractions in the intestine. Officially (according to orthodox medicine, unwilling to accept its existence as a separate disorder) the cause of IBS is unknown. In reality, IBS is yet another manifestation of what happens when 21st century processed food is put through the human digestive system.

COELIAC DISEASE (MALABSORPTION SYNDROME)

A condition in which the small intestine fails to digest and absorb food. Usually due to gluten/gliaden damage, which atrophies the nutrient-absorptive villi lining of the intestine. Symptoms include stunted growth, distended abdomen and pale, frothy, foul-smelling stools.

STOMACH ULCERS, REFLUX AND HP

Pain in the stomach after eating and reflux (‘heartburn’), where hydrochloric acid is driven up the oesophagus, is often caused by excess abdominal fat distorting the ring of muscle at the base of the oesophagus – the oesophageal sphincter - a one-way valve designed to prevent this from happening. Other causes include too much acid, not enough acid, a hiatal hernia, gluten/gliaden aversion, and helicobacter pylori (HP)infection, a troublesome bacterium that can inhabit the mucus of the stomach causing ulcers in the stomach lining and, eventually, stomach cancer.

HIATAL HERNIA

The top section of the stomach displaces itself by pushing through the gap in the diaphragm. This common complaint is often symptom-free but in other cases, acid reflux is experienced due to distortion of the , which can proceed in time to ‘Barrett’s Oesophagus’, a pre-cancerous condition, and thereafter to esophageal or stomach cancer.

CHRONIC CONSTIPATION AND ITT

Many have up to eight full meals in them at any one time. The proper Intestinal Transit Time (ITT) is ideally around 24 hours. This is the length of time it takes a meal to go from mouth to anus. In many, this period is extended dramatically up to 48-72 hours because of over-consumption of low-fibre meats and grains (breads, pasta, etc.). As you know from your childhood, flour and water make great glue. Dr Dennis Vander Kraats from Australia advises:

“Generally, most of the digestive processes and absorption of beneficial nutrients occur within 12 hours after consuming the food. Therefore, the slower the ITT, the longer the spent toxic waste matter sits in the bowel, putrefying and fermenting. The bowel is a semi-permeable membrane, which means toxins that have built up in the waste matter can filter through the bowel wall and be absorbed into other tissue and the bloodstream.”

In other words, toxins are taken all over the body where the immune system will have to detoxify and eliminate the trouble. The act of the immune system clearing this mess is sometimes mistakenly remarked upon as a ‘disease process’.

Constant straining of a constipated bowel has been linked to colorectal cancer. Certainly putrefying matter caught in the colon is subjected to bile acids over an extended time, and bile acids in human colons are carcinogenic.

CHIEF CAUSES OF DIGESTIVE ANGST
  • Overweight, overweight, overweight
  • Overeating, too much food at one time
  • Too much fat and sugar in the diet
  • Gluten/gliaden damage from wheat, barley, rye and oat products
  • Bacterial and/or mycoplasmic (fungal) infections
  • Small intestine bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), brought on by low digestive enzyme output
  • Processed diets
  • Lack of proper exercise
  • Terror, stress and emotional upsets
  • Too much refined sugar and grains (a high percentage of western grains, stored in silos, are contaminated with aspergillus moulds)
  • Too little fibre
  • Clogged or damaged villi receptors in the intestine preventing inadequate nutrient absorption
  • A generally acidic, anaerobic internal environment, resulting in an inadequate immune system response
  • Antibiotic abuse
  • General drug abuse
  • Coffee, carbonated beverages and alcohol
  • Poor water intake
In her best-selling book, Internal Cleansing, Dr Linda Berry, a chiropractor and clinical nutritionist, summarises the symptoms of self-poisoning.

“If you experience any of the following symptoms, you may be experiencing autointoxication (a process whereby you are poisoned by substances produced by your own body as a result of inadequate digestion and elimination), and therefore you might want to consider some type of internal cleansing program:
  • Allergy or intolerance to certain foods
  • Bad breath and foul-smelling gas and stools
  • Constipation, diarrhoea, sluggish elimination, irregular bowel movements
  • Frequent congestion, colds, viruses
  • Flatulence or gas and frequent intestinal disorders
  • Frequent headaches for no apparent reason
  • General aches and pains that migrate from one place to another
  • Intolerance to fatty foods
  • Low energy; loss of vitality for no apparent reason
  • Lower back pain
  • Lowered resistance to infections
  • Needing to sleep a long time
  • Pain in your liver or gall bladder
  • Premenstrual syndrome (PMS), breast soreness, vaginal infections
  • Skin problems, rashes, boils, pimples, acne”
If any of these problems affect you, try the following template:

THE FOOD FOR THOUGHT LIFESTYLE REGIMEN Ø      Little or no meat in the diet. Any meat consumed should be hormone- and pesticide-free. White meat is better than red. Avoid pork

Ø      Avoid sugar, dairy, coffee and alcohol

Ø      Ensure at least 80% of the diet comprises organic, plant-based foods, the majority eaten raw. This represents a new system of eating for most people but is highly effective in sorting problems in a hurry. Eat properly constituted, organic, whole, living foods. If you want hot, briefly steam your veggies, do not murder them. Remember that heat kills enzymes, vitamin C, wrecks fats and destroys around 50% of the protein content of your food. Excellent transition recipes are provided in our companion guide, Food for Thought.

Ø      The ideal balance is: 80% alkali/20% acidic ash foods. Most diets today comprise 90% acid/10% alkali

Ø      Avoid the foods below

Ø      Hydrate the body (2 litres (4 pints) of clean, fresh water a day)

Ø      Ensure half a teaspoon per day of Himalayan salt goes into the mouth. Sprinkle a few flakes on your tongue before retiring to help sleep

Ø      Keep high-glycaemic fruit intake down. Eat more fruits that have low sugar-conversion, such as pears and apples

Ø      Eat small meals, ensuring a) that you don’t go hungry, and b) that the body has a constant supply of nutrients

Ø      Juice veggies. Learn the art. What a fantastic way to drop weight and pile in the nutrients with minimal processing deficit

Ø      Take a BASIC SUPPLEMENT PROGRAM comprising ionised colloidal trace minerals, antioxidant tablets, Vit C and B complexes and essential fats. Also, Vitamin D serum concentration needs to be optimised to around 140-150 nmol/L for maximum immune function (see A GUIDE TO NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS)

Ø      Peak performance exercise (to get everything moving and assist in detoxing the body in an oxygen-rich environment) (see EXERCISE). A regular walk in the early morning and last thing at night is also healthy and very invigorating

Ø      Avoid stress. Your thoughts affect your biochemistry. If stressed, you need either to modify your response to the event(s) in order not to elicit a physical response, or else change your lifestyle/situation completely to avoid stress. The majority of the diseases suffered by western cultures occur because the immune system has been compromised by lifestyle factors. Diet, lack of exercise and stress are the three leading contenders

Ø      Rest. Rest. Rest. Rest. Rest

Foods to avoid

Ø      Pork products (bacon, sausage, hot-dogs, luncheon meat, ham, etc.) These are high in nitrites and are known homotoxins which can cause high blood urea and dikitopiprazines, which cause brain tumours and leukaemia.[2]  

Ø      Scavenger meats (inc. ALL shellfish and other carrion-eaters – see Leviticus 11 in the Bible). Carrion-eaters, pork and shellfish in particular, concentrate toxins of other animals in their tissues, which we then consume to our detriment. The same goes for the elimination organs of commercially raised animals, such as liver and kidney, which can be high in drug and pesticide residues

Ø      Aspartame/saccharin, artificial sweeteners. These are known mental impairment problems and cancer risks.

Ø      Eliminate grains in general for a period if suffering a grain-sensitive problem. Avoid refined sugar/flour/rice. SUCROSE FEEDS CANCER. Restricted amounts of wholegrain bread are OK for those who can tolerate it. Use only wholegrain rice. No sugars should be consumed other than those contained naturally in whole foods

Ø      Hydrogenated & partially hydrogenated fats (margarine)

Ø      Junk (processed) food, including fizzy sodas and other soft drinks containing sugar, artificial sweeteners or phosphoric acid, which are drunk out of aluminium cans 

Ø      Fat-free foods. Essential fats are essential!

Ø      Olestra, canola, soy, etc. Avoid fake or synthetic fats. Soy, in its unfermented state (meat and milk substitute products), disrupts the hormone (endocrine) system, blocks the absorption of calcium and magnesium, and acts like estrogen in the body. Small usage of unfermented soy and fermented soy products (soy sauce and miso) is OK. For more information on soy, see Food for Thought

Ø      Polluted water (chlorinated or fluoridated – see Health Wars, ‘Water Under the Bridge’)

Ø      Caffeine products

Ø      Alcohol products

Ø      Excess refined salt. Himalayan salt is fine. It’s also a good idea to spice food with ground kelp to maintain a healthy iodine intake
 
Your main food intake – Take the raw challenge

The emphasis should be on a dietary intake high in plant foods, the majority eaten raw. This is undoubtedly an alien concept to those addicted to cooked, processed animal-protein-heavy diets – I make no excuses. If you want to avoid what everyone else is getting, animal products need to come down to under 5%, and the raw component of your food needs to be above 80%. Synthetic, processed fats need to go. Natural fats can come in. I can throw all the science in the world at you on the benefits of eating a majority plant-based diet in this way but if you really won’t, you will fulfil your part in the statistics which make up the Western disease scourge. Here are some points to consider by way of review:

Ø      You do not need to eat animal protein to generate human protein. Animal protein cannot be directly used as human protein, it needs to be deconstructed into its component amino acids and then reconstructed using DNA/RNA transcription into the required protein peculiar to the particular task in your particular body. The animal protein we ingest is invariably cooked and thus much of its useable protein component is useless and worse, now toxic junk.

Ø      To make proteins, you need amino acids. The most plentiful source of amino acids on Earth is the uncooked plant kingdom.

Ø      Cow’s milk is unnecessary for human health and is potentially harmful and even dangerous to many humans. Cow’s milk is for baby cows.

Ø      The ‘eat right for your blood type’ farce is based on the faulty premise of Darwinian evolution (though even evolutionist scientists have shot it out of the sky). Anyone who tells you to eat a high level of animal products ‘because you are a blood group O hunter type’ has been getting high on their own supply and not reading the scientific literature.[3]

Ø      The argument is not about whether to eat animal products or not, it’s a question of degree and quality. Humans are omnivores and can eat some meat. Science has shown, however, that a cumulative consumption of animal products in excess of 10% will contribute to the Western disease profile.[4] 

Ø      Humans are also suffering because of an over-consumption of grain products, specifically wheat, barley, rye and oats – the gluten-predominant grains. These foods can cause serious digestive issues but are flogged off to the public as breakfast cereals and health foods because they are cheap to produce and highly profitable. Many of these products are contaminated with aspergilus moulds or fungi due to long-term storage issues.   

Ø      Cooked food doesn’t keep you warm in winter beyond the initial heat ingested from the cooking appliance. Tremendous internal heat, on the other hand, is generated from the consumption of real, living raw plant dietary since this is the fuel the body uses to make more of you with. You have mentally conditioned yourself to believe that cooked food nourishes and keeps you warm. Try a prolific salad on a snowy day and judge the results honestly - you will be surprised. And by the way, no-one’s saying you can’t have a cooked meal now and then or briefly steam your food if you wish. Don’t murder it.

Ø      Switching to a majority plant-based diet requires a little organisation:

Ø      Locate a good company which can supply organic produce to your door without you even needing to get in the car. There are many benefits to Western civilisation and this is one of them. In Britain, I use www.riverford.co.uk. Take a look at their site and see if you have an equivalent in your area/country.

Ø      Familiarise yourself with the foods in the Credence UK store at www.credence.org to give you ideas on what to add to make your food special and highly nutritious.

Ø      Make use of a juicer to make delicious vegetable juices. Use organic vegetable powder mixes like Nature’s Living Superfood and Credence’s Green Phytofoods to top up. I also use tropical superfood juices such as mangosteen, goji, noni and acai to boost phytonutrient payload.

Ø      Avoid soy milk and meats. Unfermented soy is bad news because it is an endocrine (hormone) disrupter. For a thorough treatment of this subject, log on to www.soyonlineservice.co.nz.

Ø      Visit specialty organic food stores and give them your business. Become an expert at preparing food the natural way. There are simply hundreds of organic and raw food sites specialising in promoting this way of eating. My food choices are now so wide, I view hotel menus with a mixture of disgust and withering pity whenever I’m on tour – pretty much the same emotions I level at TV celebrity chefs like Gordon Ramsey, whose diet has turned him into a raging, potty-mouthed incubus of the fallen order, or Nigella Lawson, Britain’s inflatable kitchen sex-Valkyrie. Listen, it’s your body, you feed it.

Conclusion

Fruit before noon on an empty stomach assists elimination. Big breakfasts thwart it. Try this regime for five days and notice how different the body feels. A diet comprising 80-85% unrefined plant dietary (unadulterated fruit and veggies) will ensure a body saturated in highly bio-available, waterborne nutrition. A body well-watered in this way can expect Appropriation, Assimilation and Elimination to work with consummate ease. High water-content foods rich in fibre will fill you for less, leave you satisfied with stabilised blood sugar, increased energy, better clarity of thought, fewer mood swings and a twinkle in your eye.

Exercise – don’t dodge this one

Research shows that those with a sedentary lifestyle are more prone to disease. A good exercise program will assist in cleansing the body and getting all the pieces toned and in proper working order. The most effective way to exercise and save time is peak performance training (see The Essential Guide to Exercise). Firstly calculate your maximum heart-rate, which is 220 less your age for females, 226 less your age for males. Next:

Aerobic: Exercise 30-40 minutes a day, ensuring to vary your heart-rate regularly between resting pulse and 70% of your maximum heart-rate. Gyms are best for this because they have a variety of equipment with heart monitors. Anyone can sit on a stationary cycle and read a magazine while they do this. Cycling, stair-climbing, hill-climbing, rowing, etc., are all ideal activities outside. Do not shirk!!

Resistance/weights: 15 minutes a day, weight/load-bearing exercise

Stretching: 10 minutes a day

Further resources

Health Wars by Phillip Day

Food for Thought by Phillip Day

Digestive Health by Phillip Day

Simple Changes by Phillip Day

The Essential Guide to Exercise by Phillip Day

Notes
[1]Galland, Leo, ‘Leaky Gut Syndrome: Breaking The Vicious Cycle’ at http://www.healthy.net/asp/templates/Article.asp?Id=425 [2] Food for Thought, op. cit; Biologic Therapy,“Adverse influence of pork consumption on human health”, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1983[3] For a critique on Peter D’Adamo’s work, see Wikipedia under ‘blood type diet’. [4] “Animal-based nutrients linked with higher risk of stomach and esophageal cancers”, Science Daily Magazine, 31/10/2001; “Animal fat consumption and prostate cancer: a prospective study in Hawaii”, Le Marchand L; Kolonel LN; Wilkens LR; Myers BC; Hirohata T, Epidemiology May 1994, 5 (3) p 276-82; “Animal product consumption and mortality because of all causes combined, coronary heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and cancer in Seventh-Day Adventists”, DA Snowdon, American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 48, 739-748; “A case-control study of milk-drinking and ovarian cancer risk”, Mettlin CJ, Piver MS, American Journal of Epidemiology 132(5): 871-876, 1990; “A High Ratio of Dietary Animal to Vegetable Protein Increases the Rate of Bone Loss and the Risk of Fracture in Postmenopausal Women”, Sellmeyer DE, Stone KL, Sebastian A, et al., Am J Clin Nutr. 2001;73:118-122; “A prospective study on intake of animal products and risk of prostate cancer”, Michaud DS, Cancer Causes Control 2001 Aug;12(6):557-67; “Beta-carotene and animal fats and their relationship to prostate cancer risk: a case-control study”, Mettlin C, Selenskas S, Natarajan N, Huben R, Cancer 1989;64:605-12; “Blood pressure and blood lipids among vegetarian, semi-vegetarian and non-vegetarian African Americans”, Melby CL, Toohey ML, Cedrick J, Am J Clin Nutr. 1994;59:103-109; “Bovine growth hormone: human food safety evaluation”, Juskevich JC, Science 1990 Aug 24;249(4971):875-84; “Breast cancer in Argentina: case-control study with special reference to meat eating habits”, Matos EL, Thomas DB, Sobel N, Vuoto D, Neoplasma 1991;38(3):357-66

 

 
 
This month we again serve up the most interesting bits of the health and medical news. This time we cover: the link between starch and tumors, does your weight reflect your health, 3 mins of exercise to prevent diabetes, simple ways to improve your eyesight, and more about drugs: vitamins and drugs (which claims more lives?), drugs and kids, drugs and cancer.

Relax, move and laugh
  • In Australia/Korea this Jan/Feb? Have a NEW YEAR BRAIN CLEAN-OUT. Delete all the stuff that's not working for you and create space for the health, wellbeing and all that stuff you'd REALLY like in 2012. And have a great relax in the process.
  • JUST THREE MINUTES OF EXERCISE A WEEK COULD PREVENT DIABETES, SAY SCIENTISTS: Jumping on an exercise bike in just 20 second spurts can improve insulin function.
  • THE WEEKLY HEALTH TIP: EXERCISE YOUR EYES: Most short sight is not ‘an affliction’, it’s how your eyesight has adjusted to what you use it the most for. Also, far-sightedness, poor night vision, ‘Middle-age’ sight (reading glasses), crossed eye (strabismus), lazy eye (amblyopia), and sensitivity to light, eyestrain, headaches and burning eyes can all be improved if you decide to invest some effort. 
Feed your body
Be aware
Do no harm
 
 
Story at-a-glance
  • Laundry detergents typically contain hazardous ingredients, including: sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS)/sodium laureth sulfate (SLES); 1,4-dioxane; NPE (nonylphenol ethoxylate), and phosphates
  • The typical American home contains 3-10 gallons of toxic household cleaning materials that can cause respiratory problems, eye irritation, endocrine system disruption, and cancer
  • The dangers of SLS alone have been documented in 16,000 studies
  • 1,4-dioxane, aka dioxane, is a byproduct rather than ingredient and is therefore not listed on any label. And it's been found to be toxic to your brain,central nervous system, kidneys, liver and respiratory system, and two-thirds of laundry detergents contain it
Your laundry detergent may contain toxic ingredients

When most people think of pollution, they think of the outdoors—garbage-choked streams or industrial waste.

But you probably spend a large portion of your time indoors—as much as 80 to 90 percent of your life.

You work, study, eat, drink and sleep in enclosed environments where air circulation may be restricted.

The typical American home contains 3-10 GALLONS of toxic materials—everything from glass and bathroom cleaners to garden pesticides and fertilizers.

Health effects of ingredients in common household products include:
  • Respiratory problems
  • Eye irritation
  • Cancer
  • Disruption of the endocrine system
As a result of cleaners and other toxic household products, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reports that the air inside the typical home is 2-5 times more polluted than the air immediately outside—and in extreme cases, 100 times more contaminated.

Did you know that cleaning products are responsible for nearly 10 percent of all toxic exposures reported to U.S. Poison Control Centers?

In one New York medical center, reports of burns, rashes, dizziness and scratchy throats among hospital employees plummeted after the staff switched over to less toxic cleaning products. The number of missed work days due to cleaning product injuries declined from 54 in 2004 to zero in 2009.

Contributors to indoor pollution include the products you use every day in your home, which can come in contact with your skin and lungs. Household products have been found to contain very powerful and often toxic chemicals that you unknowingly expose yourself to in the course of an ordinary day. One of the most common household products is laundry detergent.

Getting Down on Dirty Detergents


The average family washes approximately 80 pounds of laundry per week--or 35 billion loads of laundry per year! This means that 17.5 billion cups of laundry detergent are being used every year in the U.S. alone. Not only can you come in contact with caustic chemicals via your clothing, from having been laundered in them, but you can breathe them into your lungs once they become airborne in the process of doing your laundry.

The detergent you're using may contain a cocktail of potent cancer-causing chemicals, some of which the manufacturer doesn't even have to list on the label. This loophole reduces the odds that you'll ever discover what's in there.

Four of the worst offenders are:
  1. Sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS)/sodium laureth sulfate (SLES)
  2. 1,4-dioxane
  3. NPE (nonylphenol ethoxylate)
  4. Phosphates
Not only are these chemicals potentially damaging to your health, but they are also contaminating waterways and harming the environment.

According to an article in the Journal of Oleo Science, a laundry detergent concentration of only 2 ppm can cause fish to absorb DOUBLE the amount of chemicals they would ordinarily absorb. The accumulation of these compounds—phosphates and toxic surfactants—in the environment through wastewaters has had a terrible impact on aquatic wildlife. First, let's take a look at the surfactants, SLS and SES.

Any discussion of SLS/SLES must include a discussion of 1,4 dioxane because the manufacturing process of SLS/SLES results in its being contaminated with 1,4 dioxane—a known carcinogen.

Sodium Lauryl Sulfate (SLS), Sodium Laureth Sulfate (SLES), and Ammonium Laurel Sulfate (ALS)


Sodium lauryl sulfate is a surfactant, detergent and emulsifier used in thousands of industrial cleaners and cosmetic products. It is present in nearly all shampoos, scalp treatments, hair color and bleaching agents, toothpastes, body washes and cleansers, make-up foundations, liquid hand soaps, and laundry detergents.

Although SLS originates from coconuts, the chemical is anything but natural.

SLS is mixed with sulfur trioxide or chlorosulfuric acid and then neutralized with aqueous sodium hydroxide (lye). SLS is the sodium salt of lauryl sulfate and is classified by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) Cosmetics Database as a "denaturant, surfactant cleansing agent, emulsifier and foamer," rated "moderate hazard."

Similar to sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) is sodium laureth sulfate (short for sodium lauryl ether sulfate, or SLES), a yellow detergent with higher foaming ability. SLES is considered to be slightly less irritating than SLS. SLS goes by other names, including:
  • Sodium dodecyl sulfate
  • Sulfuric acid, monododecyl ester, sodium salt
  • Sodium salt sulfuric acid
  • Monododecyl ester sodium salt sulfuric acid
  • A13-00356
  • Akyposal SDS
  • Aquarex ME
  • Aquarex methyl
Ammonium lauryl sulfate (ALS) is another variation commonly put into cosmetics and cleansers to make them foam. ALS is similar to SLS, showing similar risks.

Sixteen Thousand Studies Document the Hazards of SLS


According to the Environmental Working Group's Skin Deep: Cosmetic Safety Reviews, research studies on SLS have shown links to:
  • Irritation of the skin and eyes
  • Organ toxicity
  • Developmental/reproductive toxicity
  • Neurotoxicity, endocrine disruption, ecotoxicology, and biochemical or cellular changes
  • Possible mutations and cancer
If you visit the SLS page on EWG's website, you will see a very long list of health concerns and associated research studies. In fact, you will also see mention of nearly 16,000 studies in the PubMed science library (as well as their link to that list) about the toxicity of this chemical.

A number of studies report SLS being damaging to oral mucosa and skin. This is not at all surprising since SLS is actually used as a skin irritant during studies where medical treatments for skin irritation require first using an intentionally irritating agent. A study appearing in Exogenous Dermatology confirmed SLS to be a very "corrosive irritant" to the skin—irritation which persisted in research subjects for 3 weeks. SLS exerts its damage by stripping your skin of protective oils and moisture.

SLS has also been linked to nitrosamines. Nitrosamines are potent carcinogens that cause your body to absorb nitrates, also known to be carcinogenic. For more information about SLS/SLES, please refer to my earlier article.

Two-Thirds of Laundry Detergents Contain 1,4 Dioxane


David Steinman, an environmental health consumer advocate with the Green Patriot Working Group (GPWG) and former representative at the National Academy of Sciences, has been on a mission since 2007 to organize product testing for the petrochemical 1,4-dioxane in your personal care and household cleaning products. He forged a partnership between his organization and the Organic Consumers Association (OCA) to get the dirt on dioxane-laden products.

In 2008, the focus was personal care products, and 2010 has brought the spotlight to laundry detergents. In 2008, the findings were shocking.

Many popular brands of shampoos, body washes, lotions, and even baby products—as well as many "natural" and "organic" brands--were found to contain 1,4-dioxane.

Levels of contamination were so high that many companies have come under legal attack for poisoning consumers. Unfortunately, this phase of testing proved no lesser threat. About two-thirds of the laundry detergents tested contained 1,4-dioxane. Results suggest it's time for these companies to clean up their acts.

It is reassuring, however, that all brands with the USDA organic certification were found to be dioxane-free.

At a press conference in Anaheim, California, on March 12, 2010, Steinman shared the test results from 20 laundry detergents—13 conventional brands and 7 "natural" brands. As you would expect, the natural brands fared better.

The Organic Consumers Association and Green Patriot Working Group have put together a handy printable guide for Personal Care and Cleaning Products that includes everything from dish soap to hand soap to deodorant, and everything in between.

Why You Should be Concerned About 1,4-Dioxane


Don't confuse 1,4-dioxane with dioxin— they are completely different compounds. Dioxin is not manufactured commercially but is a byproduct of combustion. For example forest fires and the burning of garbage, produces a family of 17 different compounds of varying toxicities. Dioxane (also called 1,4-dioxane) is a byproduct of an industrial process used to make cleaning ingredients, and this is what can contaminate your personal care and cleaning products.

How does 1,4-dioxane get into your products? It's not added intentionally. As I mentioned earlier, it is a by-product of SLS, which is an extremely common ingredient in detergents.

According to the "1,4-Dioxane Product Safety Watch" website, dioxane is a byproduct of ethoxylation, "a cheap shortcut process companies use to provide mildness to harsh cleaning ingredients." Ethoxylation involves combining low-sudsing ingredients with ethylene oxide (which is a known human carcinogen) to produce softer detergents that produce more suds. The result is diethylene oxide, or 1,4-dioxane, or simply dioxane.

Since it is a byproduct rather than ingredient, it doesn't have to be listed on product labels. But you really DON'T want to have your skin coming into contact with this stuff, byproduct or not. 1,4-dioxane is considered by the State of California to cause cancer and has been found to be potentially toxic to your brain and central nervous system, kidneys, liver and respiratory system, according to the CDC. According to the Organic Consumers Association's 1,4-Dioxane
Facts Sheet:
  • The cumulative effects of 1,4-dioxane exposure, even at very low levels (a few parts per billion) resulted in laboratory animals developing cancer.
  • 1,4-dioxane is readily absorbed through the lungs, skin and gastrointestinal tract of mammals.
  • The U.S. federal regulation systems consider dioxane's potency to be equivalent to or greater than many pesticides considered dangerous to humans.
  • Cosmetics (and detergents, presumably) contaminated with 1,4-dioxane may also have traces of other contaminants, including formaldehyde, nitrosamines, and phthalates.
  • There are many inexpensive and effective alternatives to ethoxylation in the manufacturing of your personal care and cleaning products.
The National Institute of Health (NIH) substance profile sheet confirms that 1,4-dioxane is "reasonably expected to be a human carcinogen" based on the research to date, and even trace amounts bring cause for concern.

Dioxane is a Major Groundwater Contaminant


Dioxane is an increasing threat to waterways across the country and is of growing concern to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Dioxane has fouled the water in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and in several towns in Orange County, California. But it is likely present in many other places that do not routinely test for it. Since it has only recently been identified as a health hazard, it hasn't been tested for. So no one really knows just how prevalent it is. Water filters can't remove it—and it isn't biodegradable.

When you use a laundry detergent contaminated with dioxane, it goes everywhere. It never breaks down. According to a quotation Steinman uses from the March 2008 issue of Chemosphere:

"As a groundwater contaminant, 1,4-dioxane is of considerable concern because of its toxicity, refractory nature to degradation, and rapid migration within an aquifer."

What we do know is, when it's tested for, it often shows up—and that fact is of great concern. To be proactive about your own health, you have to learn how to read labels. To avoid 1,4 dioxane, the Organic Consumers Association (OCA) recommends avoiding products with indications of ethoxylation.

Look for the following suffixes in the ingredient list
  • "Myreth," "oleth," "laureth," "ceteareth," any other "eth"
  • "PEG"
  • "Polyethylene," "polyethylene glycol," or "polyoxyethylene"
  • "Oxynol"
Remember, sodium laureth sulfate (as well as sodium laurel sulfate) are often contaminated with 1,4-dioxane. But there is more bad news. SLS and SLES are not the only surfactants warranting concern.

NPE (Nonylphenol Ethoxylate)—the "Gender Bender"


Like SLS and SLES, NPE is an inexpensive nonionic surfactant frequently used in laundry detergents. NPE is an endocrine disruptor and estrogen mimicker that can potentially cause hormonal problems, or even cancer. When you absorb NPE, your body can't tell the difference between NPE and estrogen.

Organisms exposed to NPE show kidney and liver damage, decreased testicular growth and sperm count, disrupted growth and metabolism, and increased mortality.

When rainbow trout are exposed to NPEs, they become part male and part female! According to the Sierra Club, who recently petitioned the EPA to regulate NPE, roughly 270 million pounds of NPE are used in the United States each year—and the majority of this ends up being rinsed down your drain. A U.S. Geological Survey study found metabolites of NPEs in more than 61 percent of tested streams in the U.S. (reported by Sierra Club).

According to a Sierra Club paper, researchers now believe that:

"NPE pollution is likely to be at least partly responsible for a variety of odd gender bending phenomenon now being seen in aquatic species. And while human effects remain unknown, scientists believe it may be affecting people, too."

NPEs have been banned already in Canada and Europe. Even Wal-Mart has listed NPEs as one of three chemicals they're asking suppliers to phase out.

Even the most sophisticated water treatment plants are unable to remove NPEs and their toxic metabolites. In fact, according to the Sierra Club report, sewage processing can make NPE metabolites more toxic, more estrogenic, and more persistent than NPE itself.

Look for evidence of NPE on your laundry detergent label—or declaration that it's not in there. Some detergents contain NPE alternatives such as alcohol ethoxylate, which the Sierra Club suggests is less toxic and can break down naturally. Another enormous threat to your water supply is phosphates.

Phosphates and the Choking of Aquatic Life


Phosphates are the main cleaning ingredient in many detergents and household cleaners because they break down dirt particles and remove stains by softening the water and allowing suds to form, which enhances the cleaning power of the detergent. Some dishwasher tabs are more than 30 percent phosphates!

However, there are human health problems as well as major environmental hazards associated with phosphates. Phosphate residues on items that have been cleaned with phosphate-containing detergents have been known to cause nausea, diarrhea and skin irritations.

The largest concern with phosphates, however, is the environmental hazards they are creating.

Phosphates are difficult to remove from wastewater and often end up in rivers and lakes, where they increase algae growth, choking off waterways and suffocating salmon and other aquatic life, literally starving them of oxygen. Phosphates act like a "fertilizer" in waterways. When the overabundant algae die, they release toxins that deplete the waterways of oxygen. Phosphates remain active even after wastewater treatment.

Phosphate Wars and Water Spots


Detergents are available with or without phosphates—so you have a choice! As of March of 2008, twenty-five states had issued phosphate detergent bans, and the list continues to grow. Fifteen new states joined the cause in July of 2010. These new laws ARE making a difference. In Spokane, officials reported a 10.7 percent decrease in phosphate coming from the city's sewage treatment plant, which discharges into the Spokane River, after their phosphate limit was put into effect.

You always know you're making a difference when some serious pushback begins to occur. The transition to phosphate free products is no exception, in terms of bumps in the road.

Some folks report the performance of phosphate-free cleaning products just isn't up to snuff, particularly with respect to dishwasher tabs. Many people have complained the greener cleaners just don't do as good a job as the original (but more toxic) cleaners. One representative from Cascade said the conversion to low-phosphate has been "complex, with three or four ingredients needed to match what the phosphates accomplished alone."

The phosphate war has even sparked a team of angry rebel dish detergent smugglers who, in vehement protest to the phosphate ban in Spokane, drove all the way to Idaho to buy phosphate-based detergents as a means of "sticking it to the environmentalists."

But seriously, how clean do you REALLY need to be? Are water spots on your glassware worth fouling the precious water filling them?

Get over the water spots. If they bother you, wipe them off with a towel. New products can butt heads with our old cultural concepts of cleanliness. As I see it, we all need to start making some concessions for the good of our planet and our health. Besides the chemicals I've already mentioned, are there other agents lurking in your laundry soap, for which you should be on the lookout? Unfortunately, yes.

Pretty Scary Laundry List


Besides surfactants and phosphates, the average detergent has a long list of other chemical ingredients—and most are not good for you or the Earth. Anything in those products can potentially be absorbed through your skin or breathed in through your nose, as well as passed down the drain to our waterways.

Typical chemicals include:
  • Linear alkyl sodium sulfonates (LAS), a.k.a. anionic surfactants
  • Petroleum distillates (a.k.a. naphthas), which have been linked to cancer
  • Phenols, which can cause toxicity throughout the entire body
  • Optical brighteners, which cause bacterial mutations and allergic reactions, and can be toxic to fish
  • Sodium hypochlorite (bleach)
  • EDTA (ethylene-diamino-tetra-acetate)
  • Artificial fragrances, which have been linked to various toxic effects on fish and animals, as well as allergic reactions in humans
And polysorbate 60 and polysorbate 80 are also often contaminated with 1,4 dioxane, according to Dr. Samuel Epstein. Over time, these toxins can build up in your body and cause a number of unknown, unpredictable effects.

Tips for Greener Laundering


Hopefully, public awareness about dioxane and surfactants will, in time, result in bans similar to those now being implemented for phosphates. The wheels of progress are slow, but at least they are turning.

In the meantime, there are some relatively painless steps you can take to decrease your exposure and shrink your ecological footprint (some of the tips below were incorporated from Planet Green's How to Go Green Laundry page):
  • Become a label reader. Look especially for "Does not contain..." because manufacturers are not yet required by law to list what is in the product. However, green companies will proudly display what is NOT in the product if they want to sell their product to environmentally conscious people like you.

    Look for "phosphate free," "no bleach," "SLE free" and "NPE free." Look for "biodegradable" detergents since those often do not contain the harmful ingredients listed above. Look for plant- and animal-based ingredients, instead of petroleum-based.
  • Buy concentrated detergents. These have reduced packaging and a smaller carbon footprint (requiring less space and fuel for shipping).
  • Become a Soap Nut! Soap nuts are the dried fruit of the Chinese Soapberry tree (Sapindus mukorrosi). People have been using these natural soap-releasing berries for thousands of years, and they've recently caught on in the U.S.
  • Wear it more than once. Too often, we just toss our clothing into the hamper after wearing it, out of habit, without regard to whether or not it's really dirty. Washing less often also extends the life of your clothes.
  • Wash and rinse in cold water. You will save a bundle on electricity (one estimate is $100 per year) just by doing this, because 90 percent of the energy required for washing lies in heating the water.
  • Wash only full loads of laundry. It's more energy efficient.
  • Hang it out to dry. Put up a clothesline! Become part of the Right to Dry movement.
  • Try making your own detergent. Here's one formula costing pennies per load.
  • Ditch the dry cleaning. Traditional dry cleaning is a very un-green and toxic process using harsh, carcinogenic chemicals, such as perchloroethylene (aka "perc"), which has been linked with a variety of cancers and other problems. Many "dry clean only" products can be safely hand washed. For those that can't, try to find a greener dry cleaner in your area.
If you're interested in the Enzyme Formula we produced, you can read more about it here!

Source:  1,4 Dioxane Product Safety Watch Source:  Safe Laundry Guide Source:  Worldwatch.org, “Cleaning products” Source:  “Dioxane is not the same as dioxin” (March 2009) DioxinFacts.org Source:  “Sodium lauryl sulfate facts?”
 
 
Well, we’ve almost made it to another Christmas! There’s no denying these are interesting times across the world but now is not the time for that stuff. Now’s the time to set all woes aside and get down to the serious business of having some fun with the family. Yet even in this the cynical British press won’t be denied. Apparently one in three families will have blazing rows before the holidays are over, but that could be just Britain, though I understand Sarkozy and Merkel will probably… oh, don’t get me going.

Christmas is a time to stop swimming, stick our head above the waves and reflect on how far we’ve come in the past year and what’s ahead for 2012. There will be empty places around the turkey for some families, including my own this year, where loved ones have passed away over the previous twelve months. A time to reflect too on our mortality; that we live each day just one heartbeat from eternity. You can bet more than a few conversations under the holly will be about just this; who’s passed on, who’s suffering what illness, what they are doing about it, and how they wish they knew what to do, etc., etc., etc.

Every day we encounter people with health problems who don’t mind unburdening themselves. Over Christmas this is accentuated due to the requirement of that almost forgotten skill of conversation - having to find something interesting to say to one another without causing undue offence and launching the aforementioned blazing rows. Copious alcohol consumption in confined spaces with small children and Christmas musak naturally works against you. The problem for most of us is how to help loved ones without getting into the two-hour speech, appearing consummate know-it-alls, and wrecking the festive atmosphere.

I have a few observations. Firstly, they brought the subject up. Secondly, each of us has a duty to let as many people as possible know that there are diet and lifestyle answers to almost every health problem that can make a difference. Thirdly, you don’t need to get into the two-hour speech, just: “Hmmm, cancer. You should watch Food Matters.” Or “You should get on to www.credence.org, drop Phillip Day an email. More eggnog, Grandma?”

George Bernard Shaw remarked that the worst sin toward our fellow man is not to hate them but to be indifferent. This lack of empathy is the essence of inhumanity. Just taking an interest in a person’s predicament and saying, “Why don’t you check out Credence’s online films….?” or “Drop Phillip Day an email or call him…” is often all it takes to help them relieve the stress of feeling ‘alone against insuperable odds’ and encourage them to take action. If the patient is a family member, it’s a good idea to defer to a third-party information source to help them, such as Food Matters, Health Wars or The ABC’s of Disease. As most of you have probably worked out by now, you’re never a prophet in your own household.

To this end I encourage you to become familiar with Credence’s books, DVDs and CDs which can help in your encounters. These have a great track record of bringing people into the fold by explaining the solid credibility and science behind nutritional and lifestyle treatments for a whole range of conditions. The people you want to help will almost never hear this quality information from conventional doctors or even the media, their two main (and baleful) sources of health news. Your brief encounter with someone, recommending or giving them a DVD or a book, can make the difference in what path they choose to take for their illness, and even whether they make it or not. A study of numerous testimonies over my 30-year career in this field reveals exactly this. 

So this week Credence is launching a number of bulk book specials which are heavily discounted and available with free shipping for those residing in the UK or Australia. These deals will be good until the end of the year and contain vital, life-saving information. Please accept my apologies if you live in other regions where free shipping is not available. The cost for delivering heavier items such as books is outside our control, often prohibitive, and the international shipping scene is currently a bear-pit, making it hard for us to eat all the shipping costs. Having said that, call us if you are outside the UK and Australia and want a book pack and we’ll sharpen our pencils and come up with something! (steve@credence.org). 

Have a great week. And please help someone towards a better 2012 if you can.

Phillip
 
 
Would you like a guilt-free holiday which you actually enjoyed? Here are a few simple tips.

Tip 1 – Give up your guilt and judgements about 'bad food'.

Science tells us that our bodies react to food the same way whether we eat it, or just think about eating it. So you might as well enjoy actually eating it! And the impact of guilt and judgements about 'eating the wrong things' may well do your body more harm than the food itself. Go easy on yourself, relax, and enjoy your food.

If anger, rage, hate, fury, guilt, blame, shame are toxic....laughter, joy and happiness are healing. So allow your food to heal you this season.

Tip 2 – Ask your body what it requires.

Have you ever tried this? Consciously ask your body and see what shows up. Maybe you'll start to salivate when you think/see a particular food. Maybe your eye will hover over a particular menu item. Or maybe you'll just 'know'. Your body is a remarkable thing that operates your heart, pancreas, liver, kidneys etc with remarkable precision. (Do you think your university-educated higher brain could do that?). So it might just know a thing or two about what it requires. Just because your brain is programmed to eat 'Christmas food' doesn't mean you body needs it. And you'll feel much better if you listen to your body.

Tip 3 – Choose for YOU. Yes you can.

All festivals usually come with a standard cultural menu. Just because your parents served it that way, doesn't mean you have to too. Just because your parents may be staying with you, doesn't mean you have to choose their (or anyone else's) menu. There is no right or wrong, there are only choices. So why not choose food that you know will work for you?

Tip 4 – Be aware of where your food comes from and what your body does with it.

If you buy from a large/chain/bulk-style supermarket, the food you buy may already be 'dead'. It has probably been grown in nutrient deficient soil, sprayed with pesticides, heated, processed, stored, and shipped thousands of kilometers before it gets to you. What if you asked instead where you could buy locally grown, organic food? What if it were FREE from your OWN garden?

Tip 5 – Drink lots of water

Your body is 75 per cent water and every system in your body relies on it. Not enough and your body will literally 'cry out' in pain and start to shut down. Drink 1-2 litres a day, and no, this does NOT include alcohol, soft, caffeinated or milk drinks. If you prefer another taste to your water, squeeze in some fresh lemon juice or soak superfood Goji berries (ku-ki-ja) or Shizandra berries (o-mi-ja) in it for a few hours.

Tip 6 – Get some sun.

You need Vitamin D, including to PROTECT against skin cancer. The sun provides this and it's free! Make sure you get a sensible amount, especially through the winter. And it's a GREAT excuse for a holiday in Australia or Thailand!

Tip 7 – Be grateful.

Thank your food, thank your body. It got you through another year operating equipment more complicated than a NASA space station. Truly amazing.

Do you know how it works? No, but thank goodness it does. So thank it and ask what it requires to see you through another fabulous year.

 
 
by Mary-Jane Liddicoat and Marilyn Bradford (interview with Mary-Jane broadcast on TBSe FM 1013 Mainstreet 'Family Affairs' program 14 December 2011 - click below to listen)

Everyone loves the end of year holidays, but in truth how many also have a sense of foreboding, knowing that the 'festive season' often ends up with feeling a physical and emotional wreck? Too much food and drink, and too many people pushing all the wrong buttons....

Try these tips to see what else could be possible for you this year.
Tip 1 – Be aware of addictive or compulsive behaviours. Simply being aware of this makes it easier to deal with and it won't blind side you. This is not just drinking or eating too much. It can show up in many forms, including:
  • being the peacemaker or problem solver, where you feel compelled to make sure everyone is OK and settle conflicts.

  • being perfect, having to have the perfect gift, the perfect party, the perfect day.

  • Overspending because you can't stop buying expensive presents, paying for everyone's meal and drinks, or running up credit card debt to decorate your tree.

  • And just plain over doing things, being exhausted, but not being able to stop and take time for yourself.
Tip 2 – Be honest about past years and what this year is likely to become. Ask yourself what you could really do this year, and what would be too much, too unhealthy, or too stressful. Take charge and ask questions! What would I like the holidays to be like? What would bring me true joy at this time? How much time can I spend on X without it costing too much? What am I actually expected to be or do? Does that work for me? What would work for me? What would be fun for me?

Tip 3 – Know you have a choice. You can choose how much time, money and energy you put into anything. You can choose not to go somewhere at all. Even if you do choose to go somewhere you'd rather not, ask: 'what would make it easier on me? Going for a shorter time? Staying at a hotel?'. Always be willing to leave if things get bad. Work out in advance what you require, and make your choices from that point.

Tip 4 – Let go of your expectations and judgements of yourself and others for the holidays. Let go of worrying about 'fitting in' and what other people think of you. If you are willing to be disapproved of, you have much more freedom. Anything anyone ever says is just an interesting point of view. You don’t have to resist and react, or stop being you just because others want you to be something else. So what if people are critical or worried about something? It really has nothing to do with you, even if you think it does.

Tip 5 – Be aware of the roles people want you to play. It may be the 'dutiful daughter', the 'successful son', the 'super provider', or the 'great party host'. Choose to do and be what works for you, and know that you don’t have to do everything everyone expects of a role.

Tip 6 – Maximise what you like about the holidays. Some people love corny Christmas music. Others like Christmas games. Whatever that is for you, do it. It makes some of the other stuff more tolerable.

Tip 7 – Make time to nurture you. This may be exercise, or photography, or horseback riding, or having lunch with friends. Whatever it is for you – do it!

What else is possible for you this Christmas?

***
About the authors

Mary-Jane Liddicoat (www,mary-jane.co and www.healthyhomes.asia) and Marilyn Bradford (Right Recovery For You and Online Recovery Centre) are certified facilitators in using transformational tools and techniques to dissipate the stresses of life and work and to open people to new possibilities for greater health, wellbeing, productivity, prosperity, and innovation.
 
 
‘If God had intended us to be nudists, we would have been born with no clothes on.’ – Leonard Lyons

Most people don’t exercise. Rubbish food coupled with indolent, acidic lifestyles punctuated by unhealthy stress all seem a far cry from the farm-fresh produce and romps on the Downs enjoyed by our forebears.

The fact is, though times have moved on, the body’s needs for nourishment and exercise have not. If we don’t meet them, let us expect trouble. Here are the exercise basics:

Consult a doctor before any exercise regimen(!)

Warming up: If you are new to exercise, work up to walking 10,000 brisk steps a day. For a few won/yen/yuan/dollars you can get a plastic pedometer from a sports store to clip onto your belt. Doing nothing all day but shuffling around in your pyjamas will clock up 3,800 steps (In the name of research, I measured it three days in a row). 10,000 steps places a progressive load onto your muscle and cardio systems and ensures you stay well-oiled and piped. Next…

Move! Once you’re walking easiliy, exercise 40-60 minutes a day, some of which with your heart rate up around 65% - 70% of your maximum (max rate = 220 minus your age for females, 226 minus your age for males). Practise short bursts of all-out effort for a minute at a time, then relax. Swimming, cycling, rowing, stair-climbing and hill-climbing are all good for this – start slowly and work into it. The right level of exertion is when you’re slightly out of breath while talking! Also:

Load-bearing exercise: The dreaded weight-training, push-ups, knee bends, squats and stair-climbing are all resistance moves that prevent the muscles and skeleton from atrophy. These movements pump the lymph system and help clean you out. Weight-training can be done by all ages, though kids under ten are better off with the usual chores, slavery and play until the body matures in its middle teens. Serious muscle builders, it’s all about intensity and rest. Log onto www.precisiontraining.com. Don’t forget:

60-90 minutes a day spent outside. The body requires sunlight and fresh air to manufacture Vitamin D and catalyse other reactions. Solar radiation penetrates even that lead blanket over Kent, so don’t think of using weather as an excuse for indolence, unless you live in Siberia.

Motivation

Exercise is hard for many because exercise equals pain and the brain moves away from pain toward pleasure as part of the survival response. ‘No pain, no gain’ results in thousands of gym memberships being paid for and never used. Nike’s famous slogan ‘Just Do It!’, frankly, for most people didn’t. Why? ‘No pain, no gain.’ We like the idea of what exercise can do for us, it’s just the grunting and heavy-breathing part most of us have a problem with.

Shift Your Focus

Don’t call it exercise – play!  Re-label and shift your focus. Get involved in a hobby that combines exercise with fun: walking, gardening, cycling, swimming. I like exploring battlefields and historical sites, so climbing mottes and nodding at baileys gets me all hot and bothered. Orienteering, rollerblading and fell-walking are great but if you’re getting on a bit, gardening, sponsored walks, swimming, cycling and invading France were all enjoyed by your forebears.
  • Exercising is easy if you’re having fun (play)
  • Remember: You are the sum total of everything you’ve ever done to yourself
  • Don’t overlook exercise
And check this out:
JUST THREE MINUTES OF EXERCISE A WEEK COULD PREVENT DIABETES, SAY SCIENTISTS: Jumping on an exercise bike in just 20 second spurts can improve insulin function.

What's near you now?

Live in Korea? Join this class. Or somewhere in Asia? Beg this guy to train your trainers NOW. You won't look back and your body will love you for it.
 
 
We're just about enter the 'festive season'. How festive and stress free is yours? Hands up anyone who likes spending the holidays with their in-laws? Have you got relatives who give you a hard time because you married their favourite cousin (and you're 'not good enough')? Or just nasty ones who know you're an easy mark? Welcome to the club known as 'most of the world'.

If you're someone who dreads attending family gatherings because you know someone is: a) out to get you b) trying to control you, or c) just plain NOT FUN to hang out with, try these games to generate some fun yourself.

1. Gratitude Trumps - How many family fights are really just individuals crying out for more attention? So give the ones giving you the hardest time, the attention they want. Tell them how grateful you are for them (find something you really are grateful for), and how you'd like to find out more about them. Don't offer them solutions. Just ask them questions and listen. I guarantee, no one will have paid them so much genuine attention in a long time. Being totally open, vulnerable and present with them will knock them over like a house of cards.

2. Nurture You Monopoly – Whatever arrangements your family has made, make sure you plan an escape. Work out what would nurture you (a massage, pedicure, coffee with friends, walk up the mountains or along the beach or down the road) and devise an exit, even if this means asking a friend to call you with an 'excuse'. When the call comes, say: “Thank you so much for today! I just have to pop out now to help my friend. I'll be back to enjoy it even more a bit later!” Then LEAVE.

3. Expand Outwards Reverse Origami – The rules are simple. When you start to feel you are folding, stapling, mutilating, or contracting yourself to fit in with someone else, or the weight of your family's thoughts, feelings and emotions, expand outwards. How far? As far as you need in all directions to become pure space. Can anyone hang their baggage on your hooks if you're just space? Will there be any hooks left? When you master this game, people might even fall straight through you, flat on their face. Hey, who said slapstick wasn't funny?

4. Interesting Point of View Dominos – Sometimes no matter how truly phenomenal you are, other people will simply not see it. The addiction to being right and righteous is one of the strongest we have. So can you give it up? There is freedom only in being in allowance, which means giving up trying to prove your rightness. Most people think we must fight to show others how their lives would be better if they agreed with us and took on our 'right' points of view. Most do not understand that it is quite feasible for there to be multiple (infinite in fact) 'right' points of view.

So here's the game. Every time someone says anything, no matter how provocative or lunatic, do not resist and react, or agree and align. Simply smile, nod your head gently three times and say – without heat – “interesting (point of view)”. You are allowing them their view, allowing them to think they are right and superior. You're not agreeing that they're right. You're just allowing them to enjoy (the insanity of) their point of view. And if you want to really pull the heat out of someone's onslaught, simply say “you're right, I'm wrong” three times. Again, look into their eyes, nod gently and smile. If everyone were in allowance, would conflict and war fall over like dominoes?

5. ELFs and Rattlesnakes - Who are they in your family? You know the ones, the Evil Little Freaks who take pleasure in making your life hell and the rattlesnakes who bite you on the butt when you're not looking. Are you always shocked, horrified, disappointed or hurt when they do this? So give up expecting everyone to be nice like you. Instead, play the game like this. First, identify the ELFs and Rattlesnakes in the room, then acknowledge them for being so great at what they do. You can even tell them. Without heat say “Wow, you are really good at doing people over/being an ELF/rattlesnake. Can I watch?”

These strategies are not intended to help you win, or to make someone else lose. Neither are they intended to force, coerce, seek or ask anyone else to change to suit you.

They are designed to allow you to be you, everyone else to be themselves, to know THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH YOU, that it's ok to be you, and to generate more ease, joy and lightness in your family.

What if by being so different from how your family normally operates that you became the invitation to change? Not by doing anything other than being yourself?

At the very least, what if you got to play with your insanely mad dysfunctional family members so that it was more fun for you?

Happy holidays!
***
Mary-Jane Liddicoat is an ex-diplomat now looking at what different choices we might be making to help create more ease, joy, prosperity and abundance in our communities. For more information visit www.conscious-living.asia. Mary-Jane lives between Seoul, Korea and Wollongong and Canberra, Australia, with her Korean sculptor husband and their three children, aged eight, six and three.
 
 
(Mercola)

Drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline has preliminarily agreed to a $3 billion settlement over the sales and marketing practices of several of its drugs, including the diabetes drug Avandia.

This represents the largest federal drug-company settlement to date, surpassing the $2.3 billion paid by Pfizer in 2009 for illegally promoting off-label uses of four of its drugs.

The sum, though extraordinarily large by most people's standards, represents only a slap on the wrist to the drug giant, which assured investors the payments would be funded by "existing cash resources."

To put things into perspective, GlaxoSmithKline has a market value of more than $110 billion, according to the New York Times. 

This massive financial clout essentially allows them to engage in criminal behavior that they can later buy their way out of – not unlike the way you might pay for a speeding ticket.

Read the full story here
 
 
(Mercola)

Drisdol is the synthetic form of vitamin D2; the form of vitamin D typically prescribed by doctors.

But this is not the type produced by your body in response to sun or safe tanning bed exposure.

A recent meta-analysis by the Cochrane Database looked at mortality rates for people who supplemented their diets with D2 versus those who did so with D3, the form naturally produced by your body.

The analysis of 50 randomized controlled trials, which included a total of 94,000 participants, showed:
  • A six percent relative risk reduction among those who used vitamin D3, but
  • A two percent relative risk increase among those who used D2
Read the full article here.