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Tag >> self-care

Jun 24
2008

Warning for summer pinics and BBQ's

Posted by Specialtslisa in self-careRosevilleRocklinPlacervilleplaceropolisPlacer CountyPlacerparentingNevada CountyNevada CityGrass ValleyGold Country FamiliesGold CountryfoodfamilydiningCommunitychildrencampingcampblogsblogbackpackingauburn

Specialtslisa

Food-borne illness is no joke. over 5,000 people die each year from food-borne illness. Do not let common myths make you or your family sick.

 

Three myths that make consumers sick.

 

"If it tastes o.k., or smells o.k. it is safe to eat"

Fact : If you trust your taste buds to detect unsafe food, you may be in trouble.

The CDC estimated as many as 6.5 million to 33 million illnesses yearly are food related. Taking even a tiny bite to test the saftey of a questionable food can be very dangerous.

 

"We have always handled our food this way and nothing has ever happened"

 

Fact: Many incidents of food-borne illness went undetected in the past. Food-borne illness signs and symptoms of vomiting, cramps,and diarrhea were often still blamed on the "flu." Also, both the nature of our food supply and the virulence of food- borne pathogens has changed.

 

"I sampled it a couple of hours ago and never got sick, so it should be safe to eat."

 

Fact:Food-borne illness may develope with-in a half hour to a few days: some may occur as long as 2 or more weeks after a contaminated food is eaten.

 

Another consideration: While you might safely consume a food, someone with a weaker immune system could be more susceptible to a food-borne illness. Young Childern, older individuals, pregnant women, and persons with an illness are more vulnerable and would be more likely to get sick.

 

Coming soon highly effective tips for safe handling of food products in the home.

 

To safe and happy summer,

 

Lisa Fults,

Special T's and Sports

Custom screen printing

Feb 21
2008

ROUND TABLING

Posted by Loyce in self-careauburn

Loyce

Post-program at Courthouse Coffee I was joined by the returning Liz Pope, golfer Spencer Strand and Diana Farr from The Ridge.  It was good to see Liz and share golf stories with Spencer as we all talked about our golf experiences and ties with the community.  No golf today or tomorrow but I am grateful for the rain and the quenching of the thirsty earth so will look forward to some play next week.  Stopped by the Assistant League Thrift Shop on Hwy 49 in Auburn and was asked to spread the word regarding the shop's need for volunteers.  Monies received go toward a variety of good causes and I always enjoy my treasures from this shop.   Feeling good after a great session of  Reiki with Donna Arz and looking forward to working out the kinks tomorrow with Body Mechanic Gabrielle, she of the nimble fingers and intuitive manner.  

Feb 05
2008

REGAINING THE MOMENTUM

Posted by Loyce in self-carelife

Loyce

It would seem that in January we are all off track from all the overeating and overspending in December and by February we collectively began to return to our regular habits, eating healthier and smaller portions and omitting the sweets (for the most part).  I've finally found some momentum on the treadmill and Millie The Meek, the family dog, licked my hand in appreciation for the short, brisk walks I've recently taken her on.  Seeing and feeling the sun makes for the impetus to force oneself outside and away from the inclination to become a hermit during the grey, grim days.  I look forward to golfing tomorrow, probably solo, and with pal Donna Arz on Friday when we look forward to experiencing The Ridge.  Working out the stiffness with a massage certainly restores some flexibility brought about by the cold weather; so I look forward to having body mechanic Gabrielle Pullen iron out the kinks in this somewhat stiff bod.   Pullen tells me that since I'm not using the muscles I had stretched out for golf, that shortening has taken place.  So, if you don't use it, you DO seem to lose it, at least during the winter. 

Dec 09
2007

Free Benefit For Veterans In Need!

Posted by thewellnessguru in veterans benefitstrauma resolution skillsself-caremental focusmeditationinjurieshuman potentialfree help for veterans

thewellnessguru

Greetings all, attention Veterans! Good News!

I just want to give you a heads up about a free resource for veterans of all eras in Yuba City. I know that's a long way to go, but many of you travel to Sacramento for V.A. services so, consider this:

 Spa Therapy Wellness Center has been in business for eight years in Yuba City, and has recently opened a new 3600 square foot facility in Plumas Ct., at the end of Plumas St., owned by Physical Therapist, Jennifer Nagy-Cordray. The Gold Studio, which provides a calming location for the long awaited wellness classes  has plenty of room. During this interim period, while classes are still small, Spa Therapy would like to offer 24 veterans in need a free six week class in trauma resolution skills out of thanks for contributing to our ability to thrive. 

This powerful Relaxation & Trauma resolution skills class, known as ‘iRest,’ has been used at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. In a preliminary study done at Walter Reed, iRest has been shown to help alleviate symptoms in military personnel returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with P.T.S.D. Soldiers suffering a 40 or higher on the military’s post-traumatic stress scale showed a decrease of 24 points after practicing iRest as a relaxation technique.  

Spa Therapy Wellness center is donating the space. I am donating the expertise. We still have some spots open. Each free stipend will be good for a six week series of iRest classes beginning Jan. 3rd on Thursdays from 2:30-3:30 p.m. Each stipend will also include six audio CD’s to work with at home. Using a CD while falling asleep can reinforce the relaxation benefits of the live classes. Each CD will match the six steps of the class, gradually taking each Stipend recipient through a series of stages in the direction of wholeness and balance. Your cost: zero. Please call me or email me for more information and help spread the word! This is not only an amazing deal, it works! Please do not suffer in isolation. You have to take the first step, contact me, Gabrielle Pullen, at 530 263-3323.

Nov 03
2007

MONDAZE

Posted by Loyce in sportsshoppingself-carebusiness

Loyce
Mondays can be challenging after a lazy Sunday; but the bounce factor worked today as I discovered a new store on Highway 49 in the Dry Creek Plaza:  The Clothing Rack offers gently used clothing/accessories  with designer labels for the family and Husband Jack scored with difficult-to-find rugby shirts.   A fan of traditional/vintage sportswear, I'll return for another search as The Clothing Rack is on my circuit traveling home.   I finally made it out to Combie Rd. to Double Cuts Salon where the capable Toni sheared away some of the summer growth and I headed out to The Ridge for some putting practice as the Fall season has shortened the range practice.  As I say, those of us who adapt, are less frustrated.   All-in-all, today rates as a productive one as I even managed to fit in some grocery shopping and fended off frustration with a computer snag by calling that whiz-kid Cristina, co-owner of Dr. PC Repair.  I'm more than ready to attack Tuesday and what with this great weather, it's all win/win.   Smile.
Oct 02
2007

SELF-CARE FOR RUNNERS

Posted by thewellnessguru in self-carerunningpaininjurieshealthfeldenkrais

thewellnessguru
SELF-CARE FOR RUNNERS
Feldenkrais - Changing How You Run for Less Wear & Tear on Your Body!


If you are someone who is perhaps fiercely independent, driven, tense, but not especially inspired by the idea of taking on another exercise program what you’re looking for is a way to improve what you are already doing.

This unique method, known as Feldenkrais, can help you reorganize yourself so that the muscles you feel as tight bands can lengthen, no longer threatening your running with tears or pulled muscles, ligaments or tendons.

On the other end of the continuum from pure strength training approaches to balancing muscles, Feldenkrais is a form of movement training that teaches you how to balance muscles without stretching or straining. As such, it’s especially rewarding for people who are not necessarily inspired by the idea of cross training. Instead, you can learn a technique for focusing on improving how your muscles work together. The conventional approach to dealing with muscle strain is to strengthen the weaker, longer muscles. Muscles of equal strength tend to be of equal length and thereby exert more even tension on joints. This is what physical therapists are attempting to achieve when they give you exercises to balance your muscles.

Yet, strength is only half the picture. Imagine someone extremely strong – Frankenstein, perhaps? Imagine his lumbering, stiff gait – ever feel like that the morning after a good run? Not only is the coordination impaired by a variance in muscle length, but the unequal tension itself impairs the functional mobility of the joint.

Runners typically tune out to make the grade. There is a certain amount of really pushing past pain that is necessary to get into running. But an all or nothing approach is doomed to create problems in the future. All things require balance and the body is where we get to feel first hand if we are not in balance. The body is our gage and it’s vital that we listen. When we tune it out, we risk injury. If that’s what you had to do to make running a part of your life, fine, but it cannot go on that way forever. Once you are secure enough about running to know what you have to do to be competitive, you have to change your relationship with your body. You can only tune out for so long in safety and eventually, it’s vital that you learn how to tune back in.

The Feldenkrais Method is a scientifically based means of developing human potential. How does it work? By teaching you to tune back in. Most movement classes focus on movement as an exercise. Feldenkrais focuses on learning. It improves your ability to learn experientially, to figure things out. When you learn a physical skill - running is a perfect example - no end of reading about it will give you the ability to do it. You have to actually learn by doing. Feldenkrais improves on that natural ability to learn by doing and trains you to feel and prefer what is ergonomically more optimal. Equal muscle length is more comfortable. You feel less tense and more ready to move in any direction with the spontaneous grace of a puppy at play.

Even your posture will improve. How? As a natural evolution of learning to sense what is optimal. You gradually begin to feel better when you are standing with better alignment. Instead of trying to impose the idea of ‘good posture’ on yourself, you learn to feel your way into it. Good alignment becomes something you simply experience as more comfortable. Instead of learning about it as if it were a theoretical idea out of a book, you have a chance to experience it in a very solid, grounded, concrete way. This can be a really empowering experience for people who push through every obstacle using brute strength or sheer determination. Strength will fail if it is your only means of coping with extremity, and determination is often accompanied by a disconnect that can lead directly down the path of injury.

What controls coordination? Your nervous system coordinates your muscles to move in unison. In fact, your nervous system is exponentially more capable than any computer. It tracks both conscious and automated functions and responds to them simultaneously and, in many cases instantaneously. Your nervous system is designed to organize itself for optimal self-use. When it doesn’t happen, usually it’s because we have unintentionally been trained to tune ourselves out! Feldenkrais lessons give you an opportunity to capitalize on the amazing ability of your own nervous system to correct itself.

Most of what we do in our daily lives occurs below the radar of our everyday noticing. Feldenkrais classes are called Awareness Through Movement (ATM) precisely because each lesson creates a unique opportunity to see ourselves anew. Meditation is another medium that can establish what is known as ‘Beginner’s Mind.’ Feldenkrais is similar in that regard, however the medium is slow movement rather that sitting still. You to experience yourself with this same sense of novelty. You learn to use movement to make a shift in consciousness that brings life a new sense of aliveness.

Feldenkrais is especially great for people in recovery from rehabilitation or surgery because the emphasis is on learning how to sense when you are about to hurt yourself before it happens. Most lessons start lying on the floor, so that you don’t have to use your postural muscles to contend with gravity. This makes it less work to pay attention to what you feel so that you develop a heightened sense of what works and what doesn’t. All the movements are done with the primary intention of finding the easiest, most comfortable way to move in a safe, comfortable environment. In the same way that water flows down the path of least resistance, you learn to find the path of greatest ease. Imagine how this can improve your running!


In the Yuba City area, Spa Therapy is currently the first to offer Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement classes. The instructor, Gabrielle Pullen, GCFP, completed the four-year training in this unique Method in 2004, and also offers one-on-one sessions, known as Functional Integration. In a private Functional Integration session, she evaluates your posture and movement. In many cases she can expedite the process of learning to move in ways that are more comfortable, and more effective. Learn to move through injury, rehabilitation or postural dysfunction by focusing on what works!

For those of you in Nevada City area, Gabrielle has been offering Feldenkrais classes there since 2002, when she was first certified to teach group lessons (the Training stipulates two years of schooling for teaching classes and four years of schooling for teaching hands-on Functional Integration. The Nevada City Office is located at 305 Railroad Ave., Ste. 7 and classes are held at two locations and times for your convenience, see below.


Class Schedule FALL 2007
Every Friday 10:30-11:30 a.m. Wild Mt. Yoga Center, 574 Searls Ave., Nevada City
Wednesdays 5:30-6:30 p.m. Still Point Studios, 300 Sierra College Dr. Ste. 155 six week series Start Sept. 19, 26, Oct. 3,17, 24, 31, Grass Valley
Tuesdays 4:00-5:00 p.m. Spa Therapy, Live Oak Blvd., Yuba City opening to be announced.
Thursdays 10:00-11:00 a.m. Spa Therapy, Live Oak Blvd., Yuba City opening to be announced.