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Digging Deep with Cynthia Brian – Harvest a Medicine Chest

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Digging Deep with Cynthia Brian – Harvest a Medicine Chest

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“Flowers always make people better. Flowers are sunshine, food and medicine to the soul.” Luther Burbank

Whether you have a sore throat or a sore hip, your prescription for optimum health may be as close as your garden.  Since the dawn of humanity, even before recorded history, herbs and plants have been used for medicinal purposes. Ancient cultures including the Chinese and Egyptian documented on papyrus the benefits as early as 3000 B.C. One fourth of pharmaceutical drugs we find on the market today are derived from botanicals. According to the World Health Organization, approximately 80% of the earth’s population depend on herbal remedies as primary health care. 

The falling autumn leaves signal the beginning of the influenza season as most of us rush to our local internist or drug store for the updated flu shot. I have already been vaccinated and now am preparing my first aid kit with natural remedies from my garden pharmacy.  Many fruits, vegetables, herbs, seeds, and leaves that are growing in your garden can be harvested not only to be added to your dinner menu, but, to boost your immune system, clean wounds, calm bites, reduce fevers, and arrest pain. Always consult your physician before beginning any new regimen and of course, if you need medical attention, seek a physician.

Here is a short list of my favorite common specimens and the ailments they relieve. 

Mint: Spearmint, peppermint, hyssop, or any mint except pennyroyal (poisonous), is not only great for making your breath smell fresher, but is useful for soothing headaches, reducing fatigue, calming stomach aches, fighting nausea, and keeping colds and flu at bay.  For indigestion or diarrhea, chew on peppermint leaves. Nosh on mint raw, add it to salads, garnish dishes, or make mint tea. Mint is one of the wonder drugs.

Catnip: Besides making cats euphoric, catnip relieves cold symptoms, toothaches, flatulence, and breaks fevers. It is a member of the mint family, can be eaten raw or made into teas. Pregnant women should not consume catnip as it may induce contractions.

Rosemary: This Mediterranean herb is part of the mint family also. It’s called the “remembrance” plant because it improves circulation to the brain. The oil in the flowers act as antibacterial and anti-fungal agents. Add rosemary to meats on the barbecue grill.

Sage: The name says it all. Salvia, derived from the Latin, salvere, meaning to be saved. Sage is a lifesaver as it aids in multiple ways. Sage reduces diarrhea, relieves cramps, kills bacteria, minimizes inflammation, reduces swelling, and fights colds. Make a poultice or salve for cuts, burns, and bruises.

Red Clover: It may be growing in your lawn or you may use it as a cover crop.  The pink flowers can be made into a broth to ease coughs and colds.

Allium: Increase your intake of onions, garlic, leeks, shallots, and chives not only for the aromatic culinary delights, but also if you suffer from arthritis, rheumatism, or joint pain. Researchers have found dialyl disulphide, a substance found in alliums inhibit enzymes that cause damage to joint protective cartilage.  Raw or cooked the delicious allium appear to boost your immune system. When we were kids, we even put a clove of garlic in our ears with a bit of olive oil to battle earaches. Garlic is reputed to keep vampires away, too.

Parsley: After a garlic infused meal, a bite of fresh parsley sprigs freshen your breath. Parsley also inhibits the secretion of histamines, which cause allergies and hay fever. A tea of parsley seeds or leaves is also helpful as a diuretic or laxative.

Dandelion: We all have dandelions sprouting somewhere in our gardens. Instead of cursing these tough weeds, embrace them as a nutritious addition to your diet to enhance the elimination of toxins. Dandelions may be used as a diuretic to help with PMS symptoms. Chop the leaves and add them to salads ramping up the intake of vitamin C and beta carotene.

Elderberry: Hippocrates named his elderberry tree a “medicine chest” in 400 BC. The blue/black berries made into jams, syrups, and wines are high in antioxidants, vitamin C, and iron.

Grape: Grind ripe grapes into a juice and drink without adding any other liquid to relieve migraines.

Winter savory: You use it to flavor stews, meat, and soups, but did you know that the leaves are effective antiseptics and also an ointment for insect bites and stings?

Lady fern: Roll some leaves in the palm of your hand and mash them to sooth minor burns, stings, and cuts.

Lavender: What is a garden without the soothing smell of lavender? Besides being a bee magnet, rubbing the flowers or leaves between your fingers then inhaling the fragrance is a sure stress reliever and tension liberator. If you are feeling depressed or anxious, lavender soothes the soul. Make a tea of lavender to induce sleep or use the petals in the bath as aromatherapy to bring on the calm.

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Lavender

Sunflower: It’s not just the seeds that are nutritious, but a tea made from the leaves works as an astringent, expectorant, and fever reducer. Use sunflower tea to treat colds and coughs. 

Aloe Vera: This is a plant that everyone must have around the house. For burns and minor abrasions, pop open a leaf and rub the jelly on the wound to keep it from getting infected. Aloe is a great mild laxative when added to water and alleviates heartburn and sunburn.

Cabbage: Crush a handful of leaves, wrap in a cloth, and apply to forehead as a compress to help with headaches. When the compressed leaves dry out, replace them with fresh leaves.

Lemon: I use every part of the lemon for a variety of health treatments. Before any speaking engagement, radio or TV appearance, I drink a hot concoction of Meyer lemon rinds, juice, and pulp mixed with mint, water, and honey to clear my throat and enhance my vocal chords. Feel a cold coming on? Drink this brew with added torn lemon leaves, shredded ginger root, and Echinacea flowers. To clean my hands after gardening, I cut a lemon and rub them over my dirt stained digits. Want lighter, brighter locks? Squeeze the juice of any lemon on your hair and enjoy the sunshine. Migraine? Grind the peel and apply as a paste to the forehead.

Chamomile: Use fresh or dried florets and leaves to making a tummy calming tea. Chamomile helps steady jittery nerves and anxiety.

Rose: The fruit of the rose is the rose hip, one of the richest plant sources of vitamin C, high in vitamin A, B, and the antioxidant lyopene. Eat raw, cooked, or brewed to prevent colds and flu as well as an anti-inflammatory to relieve the pain of arthritis. Use the petals of rose to make a lovely scented rose water for an astringent, skin toner, and body bath.

Apple: Filled with antioxidants, pectin, and fiber, apples fight tooth decay, decrease risk of diabetes, lower cholesterol, protect against Parkinson, cancers, and perhaps Alzheimer’s diseases, prevent cataracts, gallstones, and boost the immune system. An apple a day will keep the doctor away.

These are just a smattering of the plant based healing that you will find in nature’s drug store, also known, as your backyard garden. If the year was 1692 and I lived in Puritanical Salem, I’d be hung as a witch for prescribing these “devilish” herbal remedies. Since it’s 2013 in Lamorinda, I’ll keep stirring the cauldron of healthy natural choices and caution you to use these powerful potions wisely.

Happy Harvest. Happy Halloween Haunting. Happy Gardening and Growing.

 

©2013
Cynthia Brian
The Goddess Gardener
I am available as a speaker, designer, and consultant.  
Cynthia will answer one or more questions every other issue as space allows. Email your comments or questions to Cynthia@GoddessGardener.com 
 
Cynthia Brian is the producer and host of StarStyle®-Be the Star You Are!® heard LIVE every Wednesday on the Voice America Empowerment Channel from 4-5pm PT at . More information is available at http://www.StarStyleRadio.com

The Tantric Lounge

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The Tantric Lounge

By:  Jacqueline Hellyer

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The Thinking Person’s Sexpert – that’s what one listener calls Jacqueline Hellyer! It’s true, this show is not for the intellectually lazy – Jacqueline challenges you to think. She and her co-host, Xavier Waterkeyn, have started their radio show, The Tantric Lounge, by busting sex myths that permeate our society, myths that are so engrained we don’t even realise they’re not true. And they’re replacing that misinformation with alternatives that are enlightened, positive, and will take you on a journey to realness and sexual empowerment.  Jacqueline will make you feel too. Part of each show is practical, as she guides you through practices to help you become more present and able to use your sexual energy – leading to a greater understanding of yourself, and a greater ability to connect with a partner. Last week’s episode was “Why Are Humans So Sexy”, looking at the surprising reasons why humans evolved to be so sexual. This coming well is devoted to men and masculinity – what does it really mean to be a man, and how does that translate to being an awesome lover?  Tune in to find out, on The Tantric Lounge…

Jacqueline Hellyer

Jacqueline Hellyer is one of Australia’s foremost experts in sex, love and intimacy as well as the host of The Tantric Lounge on the VoiceAmerica Empowerment Channel.  She’s a Sex Geek, unabashedly fascinated by sex, love and intimacy in all its aspects from the biological to the psychological to the spiritual.

Educator, therapist, coach, author, blogger, workshop presenter and speaker, Jacqueline brings her extensive knowledge and experience to her work, combining the wisdom of the ancients with the best of modern scientific practice. Best of all, she shares what she knows in an incredibly open, playful and inspiring way.

“Sex is a celebration of life and our sexual energy is our fundamental life energy. Yet we live in a sexually dysfunctional society with millions of people confused, misinformed and struggling with their sexuality.”

“I’m committed to enabling women, men and couples to become fully in touch with their sexuality so that they can use this powerful energy for personal growth and transformation, allowing them to rise out of the mire of what passes for sex in our sexually immature society, and create extraordinary lives for themselves.”

“My job is to be a ‘light in the darkness’ to help guide people to fulfill their sexual potential and become truly empowered!”

Understanding Your Mind, Mood & Micronutrients

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Understanding Your Mind, Mood & Micronutrients

Listen live and on demand to Holy Hormones with host Leslie Carol Botha.

Date: August 15

Episode Title: Understanding Your Mind, Mood, and Micronutrients: Setting the Stage

Date: August 22

Episode Title:  Understanding Your Mind, Mood, and Micronutrients: Treatment Studies

 According to psychology researcher, Bonnie Kaplan, we are in a global mental illness epidemic. Indeed, scientists agree. In an article released July 24, 2013, Reuters reported that the rising costs of mental illness such as dementia, depression and addiction is overwhelming. Estimated costs of brain disorders in Britain alone are at more than $172 billion. Scientists are saying the same amount of funding is needed for research.

Bonnie Kaplan will say that independent peer-reviewed research on broad spectrum micronutrient treatment for mental disorders has already been conducted, and published.

Kaplan will be joining host Leslie Carol Botha for a two-part series on ‘Understanding Your Mind, Mood, and Micronutrients’. In the first interview Kaplan will explain the social/historical context of how society got to this point. In the second interview she will focus on the empirical data (including treatment studies) that links mental illness to inadequate nutrient intake.

 

Guest Bio

Bonnie J. Kaplan, PhD is a Professor in the Faculty of Medicine (Department of Paediatrics, Department of Community Health Sciences) at the University of Calgary, in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.  Originally from Ohio, she did all her training in the U.S. (Univ of Chicago, Brandeis Univ) in experimental and physiological psychology. Her interest in the biological basis of behavior led to postdoctoral training and then faculty research in neurophysiology at the West Haven (CT) VA Hospital Neuropsychology Laboratory, and Yale University Department of Neurology, until she moved to Canada in 1979. She has published widely on the biological basis of developmental disorders and mental health – particularly, the contribution of nutrition to brain development and brain function. Her nutrition-related studies have focused on 1) broad spectrum micronutrient treatments for mental disorders, and 2) the effect of intrauterine nutrition on brain development and maternal mental health.  

Leslie Carol Botha

Leslie Carol Botha, host of Holy Hormones on the VoiceAmerica Health and Wellness Channel, is a Women’s Health Educator and Internationally Recognized Expert on Women’s Hormones and Behaviors. She is the co-author of the highly acclaimed Understanding Your Mind, Mood, and Hormone Cycle, the first in a menstrual health education series that provides women with the education they never received about how their hormone cycle affects not only their minds, and moods, but their personal and professional relationships and their overall health and happiness.

Botha is a member of the Society for Menstrual Cycle Research, and an advisory board member for the Cycles Research Institute. In 2006, Botha received the Edward R. Dewey Award for her pioneering research on how women’s hormonal fluctuations affect their behaviors. The award was bequeathed by the Foundation for the Study of Cycles.

Her research is also featured in The World According to Cycles- How Recurring Forces Can Predict the Future and Change Your Life by Samuel A. Schreiner, Jr., published by Skyhorse Publishing, New York City. Schreiner has noted that Botha is “one of the most prominent twenty-first century natural cycle thinkers.”

Botha has been a radio broadcast journalist for over 30 years. Her message is loud and clear: it is time for women to reclaim their health, and her passion and drive is to provide information to assist women in making informed choices about their health and well-being.

 

Autumn Stringam: A Promise of Hope for Mood Disorders BY LESLIE BOTHA

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Autumn Stringam: A Promise of Hope for Mood Disorders BY LESLIE BOTHA

Holy Hormones Honey! The Greatest StoryNever Told! debuts on the VoiceAmerica Radio Network on Thursday August 8. The show will air live at 10 AM MDT on the VoiceAmerica Health and Wellness Channel.

The radio show  is dedicated to every woman who has ever experienced a hormonefluctuation, from menarche to menopause!  Sponsored by Truehope Inc., The Leaders in Brain Health, the focus of the show will be on addressing core biological issues that cause mood disorders and/or mental illness from a micronutrient support perspective. Because no one can make a sound decision unless their brain functioning is intact.

For decades, the power of women’s hormone shifts has been unrecognized and underestimated. In fact, women make up the majority of mental health diagnoses’ due, in part, to a lack of education about the endocrine system and how and why our hormones affect our minds, moods, and behaviors. For too many years women have been labeled as ‘mentally disordered’ if they struggle with their menstrual cycle. Women will be the portal to sharing this information with the men and children in their lives. Because when women thrive, everyone thrives. Now that is true hope.

Autumn Stringam lg edit

Join Leslie Carol Botha when she interviews Autumn Stringam â€“ a woman with a family history of severe bipolar disorder (her mother and grandfather committed suicide because of the disease – and her now 20 year recovery from medications and institutions because of her father’s dedication to saving her life.

If you are looking for hope  then you are in the right place. Autumn Stringam, author of “A Promise of Hope” will be sharing her incredible journey from the depths of bipolar disorder to becoming a beacon for thousands of others when she changed her ‘hopelessness to healing’ with the use of micronutrients.

In 1995, Autumn Stringam had been using 13 drugs in different combinations with multiple hospitalizations and therapy for several years, to no avail. Her bipolar symptoms were out of control.  One terrible hospitalization after another for Autumn finally led her husband, to seek family help. Autumn was no longer able to drive, care for herself or 3-year-old son, and the psychiatrist demanded assurances of 24-hour adult supervision for Autumn when she was not in the hospital.

Using the Truehope EMPowerplus micronutrient combination, Autumn was able to eliminate all of her psychiatric drugs in only two months.

Autumn grew up in a bipolar household, losing both her grandfather and her mother to suicide by the age of 21. At 19, Autumn was diagnosed with Bipolar I with rapid cycles and Schizophrenic tendencies and before long had tried 13 different drug combinations, to no avail. Hospitalization and regular emergency visits to the doctor for sedative injections were common when each of the drug combinations stopped working.

Since starting the micronutrient therapy in 1995, which finally resolved her symptoms, Autumn has become an author, magazine contributor, public speaker and political advocate for the rights of the mentally ill. She is a mother of four and has dedicated her life to breaking the cycle of illness that plagued her family. She is educating and supporting other people who want to find total healing from the aftermath of mental illness.

Autumn’s inspiring memoir, â€œA Promise of Hope” (HarperCollins, 2007) is available on Amazon.com

 

Leslie Carol Botha is host of Holy Hormones Honey! on the VoiceAmerica Health and Wellness Channel.  Botha is also a Women’s Health Educator and Internationally Recognized Expert on Women’s Hormones and Behaviors. She is the co-author of the highly acclaimed Understanding Your Mind, Mood, and Hormone Cycle, the first in a menstrual health education series that provides women with the education they never received about how their hormone cycle affects not only their minds, and moods, but their personal and professional relationships and their overall health and happiness.

Botha is a member of the Society for Menstrual Cycle Research, and an advisory board member for the Cycles Research Institute. In 2006, Botha received the Edward R. Dewey Award for her pioneering research on how women’s hormonal fluctuations affect their behaviors. The award was bequeathed by the Foundation for the Study of Cycles.

Her research is also featured in The World According to Cycles- How Recurring Forces Can Predict the Future and Change Your Life by Samuel A. Schreiner, Jr., published by Skyhorse Publishing, New York City. Schreiner has noted that Botha is “one of the most prominent twenty-first century natural cycle thinkers.”

Botha has been a radio broadcast journalist for over 30 years. Her message is loud and clear: it is time for women to reclaim their health, and her passion and drive is to provide information to assist women in making informed choices about their health and well-being.

 

What If There’s Nothing Wrong? By Dr. Alison J. Kay

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What If There’s Nothing Wrong?  By Dr. Alison J. Kay

Alison_sunrise

 

On Monday, July 29th, Dr. Alison J. Kay got interviewed by Trudy Thomas, host of “Living With Hope” on blog talk radio.  As she does in her new book, What if There’s Nothing Wrong?, Dr. Kay pointed to a more effective and efficient way to have health, vitality, longevity and well-being in our bodies and lives.  What if There’s Nothing Wrong? was written in the last of Dr. Kay’s 10 years spent living in Asia and studying subtle energy systems and practices, and she sees this as the missing link in America’s health care model.  We could have entirely different levels of health, vitality, well-being and longevity just simply by working within the mind-body connection, as there is now science to show how subtle energy is moved in our bodies based on how we’re feeling and what we’re believing.  Taking the “it’s just about positive thinking” or “its’ voodoo” or “it goes against my religion” out of the discussion entirely, and pointing to how our current medical model is based on out-dated science of an era we’ve now left, and how the subtle energy practices are based on a more basic and enduring acknowledgement of the driving force behind all life and how it has been wired into our bodies’ operating systems to be used for health and well-being, Dr. Kay brings this discussion to an entirely different level.

what if nothings wrong

Through balancing our physically geared western medical model with a more informed understanding of how subtle energy moves in our bodies, and the mind-body connection, Alison also points out why our medical model is not equipped to address progressive illnesses, chronic pain, or chronic issues without really offering any solutions other than living with medication and/or surgery, due to it being based on outdated science. Instead, Alison offers other ways to approach our health and vitality using her wisdom and knowledge from her 10 years living in Asia and studying subtle energy systems and how it moves in the human body, 17 years of energy healing, 12 years as a Chi Gong practitioner, Yoga Alliance Yoga teacher certification in India, 20 years of meditating, American Council on Exercise certification as a Personal Trainer, and PhD as a Holistic Life Coach.  Basically, it’s looking to the science that exists behind the mind-body connection about how the subtle energies move in our body, and either create vitality and life, or illness and suffering.  Dr. Kay works to help listeners see that it is just simply lack of exposure to other ways to do things that may keep us locked into limited choice, while possibly flippantly labeling what we don’t know as “foreign and so not to be trusted” with how to manage our own health, and why Americans might quit or not believe in it.  Thus Dr. Kay strives to present what else is possible in the field of full health, vitality and well-being.

 

 Alison J. Kay, PhD Holistic Life Coach & Energy Healer, is the host of “Create Your Best Life Ever”  on the VoiceAmerica 7th Wave Channel.  She has helped many understand and transform from their self-sabotaging behaviors and core energetic patterns behind their suffering – whether it’s physical illness, mental depression, emotional angst or spiritual crisis – into the Higher Self; a new and improved, lighter versions of themselves. She recently returned from living in Asia for the past ten years where she studied the longevity, health & wellness practices of the ancient cultures there, from their use of subtle energies. Alison has been a meditation practitioner for 21 years, a meditation teacher for 14 years, an India certified Yoga Alliance Registered (RYT-200) yoga teacher, and a successful energy medicine practitioner for 16 years blending 5 different modalities into a functional system to address the mind-body system, helping 99 percent of her clients attain the results they seek her for. Finally, to assist in her ability to ground the spiritual into the physical, Alison is also an ACE Certified Personal Trainer, with 20 years of vegetarian eating, and 25 years of endurance athleticism & weight training. This year, Alison published her first book with Hay House’s Balboa Press, entitled What if There’s Nothing Wrong? As Alison builds her platform between her radio show, book, clients, products & workshops, she’s asking “So if our minds didn’t find anything wrong, would we then create our best lives ever? What else is possible?” 

 

Working Through Fitness “t” and “n” BY WINSTON PRICE

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Working Through Fitness “t” and “n” BY WINSTON PRICE

Pic for #7 Fitness t and n

I know, I know.  There is only one “T” in fitness; however, this is me using poetic license.  If you do not know what I am going on about, go back and read the post from June 21, 2013.  I spell F.I.T.T.N.E.S.S. and yes I use 2 Ts.  The second “t” I state stands for Time Worthy and the “n” is for Necessary.  These two things are a must when it comes to developing the acumen of fitness.

First, of the two letters of the day, the fitness regimen you wish must be worthy of your time.  What this means is that you must have a respect for what it is you choose to do when it comes to the activities of the processes you use as tools in your development of becoming and being fit.  You have to note that what you are doing is actually efficient in moving through and past your challenges and aids you fully in bringing your thoughts and goals to fruition.  Now also note, I never state that you have to like it for it to be time worthy; however, it will help in the long run that you do like it.  There are many time worthy things that I just don’t like to do.  The one example that I will always bring up is running.  I had a joke after I finished my wrestling career, “I’ve done all the running I’m going to do, and I am not running any more”.  Any wrestler will tell you that joining a wrestling team is darn near close to joining a cross-country team (figuratively of course).  And to this day I vehemently dislike running; however. I respect the heck out of it because of what it helps me accomplish.  For my challenges and goals in physical-fitness running is extremely efficient, so, I have a tendency to note that and challenge myself to continue to run through my process.  Something that is not worthy of my time as it comes to my physical-fitness is hiking.  Some people get what they want in their physical-fitness from hiking. I am not one of those people, and I love hiking.  For my physical-fitness goals, hiking is not time worthy.  Now when it comes to my mental-fitness goals it is.  We will get to my fitness square in later posts, so when I speak of mental-fitness and physical –fitness I do not plan on defining those so much as of yet.  I later will, don’t you worry, unless you want to; however, I do advise against it.  Worry is no good for your fitness on any level.  It is definitely not time worthy, and is completely not necessary.

So, what is the difference between something being time worthy and something being necessary?   Time worthiness is based on what the activity does to help you to achieve your goals and work through your challenges; necessity is the reason why the activity is needed and should be done.  There are some activities that are necessary at one point and may not be necessary at another point.  Let’s look at running and weight lifting.  For someone that is looking to shed body fat running is very time worthy, the amount of running is what we look at when we look at necessity.  Unless one is looking to compete in long-distance running there is no physical need to run 20 miles a day, 7 days a week.   Also, if someone’s goal is to tone one’s muscles; it is no physical need for one to max-out in weight bearing lifts every day.  Now, where being able to run 20 miles non-stop in one hour and lifting all the weights in the gym are okay goals to have, that does not mean that they are necessary for you to work through your fitness challenges and reach your fitness goals.  Of course that is if your goals are not being able to run 20 miles non-stop in one hour and lifting all the weights in the gym.  

You have to make sure that the work you do suits and fit the goals and challenges you place in front of yourself.  That way, what you do will always be time worthy and necessary. 

 

For more information Winston’s his martial arts academy please visit Internal Magnification.  

Winston Price, Executive Producer, has over a decade and a half of marketing, advertising and public relations experience. He began his business career in 1995 and is a graduate of Indiana University Bloomington. Winston also is a master martial artist and personal trainer with over 2 decades of knowledge and experience. Winston runs his own school, Internal Magnification Martial Arts, where he focuses on helping people reach their personal goals of health and fitness via At-Home personal training with martial foci of Taekwondo, Tai Chi Ch’uan, Hapkido and Ba Gua Zhang. As an executive producer for VoiceAmerica, Winston utilizes his skills in business and personal training to help new and existing hosts maximize their opportunity with the VoiceAmerica Talk Radio Network by supporting his hosts with the business and personal aspects of creating and developing their show. Winston believes that each host brings their own flavor to the Network. By properly coaching and motivating his hosts, they are able to produce THEIR show with THEIR style and THEIR passion being at the forefront of every broadcast.  

 

What I Believe Fitness Should Be BY WINSTON PRICE

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What I Believe Fitness Should Be BY WINSTON PRICE

Fun

Interesting

Tough

Time Worthy

Necessary

Empirical

Simple

Satisfying

To be transparent, this is the first time I ever wrote this acronym out and these are the things that I tell people (in some way or fashion) every time they want to know what fitness is to me.  I rather enjoy this acronym for fitness.  It’s not all fluff and patronizingly soft.  It’s not all hardcore, in-your-face, stone-blooded “X-TREME” either.  I believe that is a reason why people stay as unfit as they are; they are not buying what people are trying to sell them.  Just as in everything I do, I don’t try to sell people on fitness and/or being healthy.  What I try to do when someone approaches me about fitness is get them to realize why they are truly talking to me in the first place.

Anytime I encountered a client that would come to workouts; however, would not train in a way to help them reach the goals they set for themselves, we would have a sit-down and talk.  Normally what would come up is that they were not completely with me in the beginning.  One of the first questions I ask is, “Why do you want to train”; and the responses I would get would always be the same: “I want to be healthy and fit”.  After I get that standard answer, I ask them another question, “Is that the truth”.  Normally they get upset and defensive and state that their reasons are true; then we train, then they don’t put forth the effort necessary and then we get to talk and that is when the truth comes out.

The truth is that being healthy isn’t a great motivating force for many people.  The truth is that we train not only to be healthy; however, also, we train to be sexually attractive, we train so our “Ex” sees what they lost, so that we look good in our bathing suits, so that we don’t die as early as our unhealthy friends and family members; even more to the point our doctor told us we were going to have a heart-attack and then we did.  Revenge, anger, fear, regret, depression, sadness, hopelessness are some truths that people never really want to face.  The shame of it all is that we are sold that those are the wrong reasons to want to train.  We are told they are shallow and/or judgmental.  However, what I state is that as long as it comes from a person with positive intent one’s reasons for wanting to be fit are valid and sound.

This is my intent for my posts.  To look at the truths out there and give my opinions and understandings.  I plan on sharing my story and my ways and reasons for training in hopes that others with become more introspective to find the truths that will ignite whatever fuel needs to be lit to get them moving in the direction and on the path they truly wish to follow.

My name is Winston Price.  What I do is let you know you have eyes that can open, ears that can listen and a mind that is capable of understanding and accepting truth, I also allow people the information that one of the main reasons we don’t know is that we don’t want to know.

Winston Price, Executive Producer, has over a decade and a half of marketing, advertising and public relations experience. He began his business career in 1995 and is a graduate of Indiana University Bloomington. Winston also is a master martial artist and personal trainer with over 2 decades of knowledge and experience. Winston runs his own school, Internal Magnification Martial Arts, where he focuses on helping people reach their personal goals of health and fitness via At-Home personal training with martial foci of Taekwondo, Tai Chi Ch’uan, Hapkido and Ba Gua Zhang.

As an executive producer for VoiceAmerica, Winston utilizes his skills in business and personal training to help new and existing hosts maximize their opportunity with the VoiceAmerica Talk Radio Network by supporting his hosts with the business and personal aspects of creating and developing their show.

Winston believes that each host brings their own flavor to the Network. By properly coaching and motivating his hosts, they are able to produce THEIR show with THEIR style and THEIR passion being at the forefront of every broadcast.

Bullying: A childhood issue or one that occurs throughout life BY DR. SURITA RAO

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Bullying:  A childhood issue or one that occurs throughout life BY DR. SURITA RAO

bullying, voiceamerica

Bullying seems to have become rampant in our society today. With the tremendous increase in access to ever more sophisticated technology , new ways to carry put this age old practice have emerged . Yet, whether it is the physical bullying between boys in the school yard, social media and cyber bullying by so called ” mean girls” in and out of school, or the supervisor at work who uses tactics of intimidation to create a culture of fear , they all carry some common underlying psychological and behavioral patterns. One person is seen as weak or due to certain circumstances ends up in a weaker position and another person or people use techniques, designed to humiliate and harm them. Sometimes this is done to get something the other person wants, but at other times the bully or bullies just seem to like the feeling of power that this behavior brings them.

Are bullying behaviors increasing among our young people today or were they always there and more focus is being put on the issue in our current world? Many people think of “girl bullying” behaviors such as excluding someone from a high school clique or constantly making fun of their clothes and fashion sense as being a “softer” version, maybe not quite as bad as physical violence. Yet, it can inflict emotional scars that impact the victim long into adulthood, sometimes through their entire life.

We want to teach our kids to be kind to each other, to share and help bring the classmate or playmate along that appears weaker but are we inadvertently sending them mixed messages as society as a whole values success and winning more and more. What kind of role modeling are we providing to them in the media, in our everyday lives, as we wait in line at the grocery store or drive in traffic or even compete for the promotion at work? Is there a way to raise children who will be successful and ambitious, yet be able to achieve their goals without kicking someone off the ladder behind them? Patterns of bullying or treating one family member or sibling badly,being constantly overtly critical of them can occur in families and often persist throughout life, even when people have grown up and have their own children. The victims in many situations often do not speak up in order to “keep the peace” or not to be rude.

These are questions that do not always have a clear cut answer. The more overt forms of bullying are still present, may be easier o identify as long as someone comes forward, either a victim or an observer. Those need to be dealt with in a decisive manner and a culture needs to be created in our schools and workplaces that allow people to come forward without fear. The situations that are not so easily resolved are when the intimidation is more in a grey zone.

Also, what about simple teasing? When is it good natured fun and when does it go too far harming another person? One way to set some clear stop signs is when the other person is getting upset or uncomfortable. Let us teach our kids to learn to put themselves in the other person’s shoes, think about what they are experiencing, empathize with them rather than always think of them as the other.

 

Surita Rao, M.D. is the physician leader of the Behavioral Health Services at Saint Francis Care and host of the show, Mental Health with Dr. Surita Rao on the VoiceAmerica Health and Wellness channel. She completed medical school at Bankura Sammilani Medical College in India and did her psychiatry residency training at St.Vincent’s Hospital in Staten Island, New York and the Yale University School of Medicine. She did her addiction psychiatry fellowship at the Yale University School of Medicine. She has been on the faculty at both Yale and Emory Universities. She is an Assistant Clinical Professor with the University of Connecticut School of Medicine.

Her clinical work has focused on addiction psychiatry, including both substance use disorders and dual diagnosis issues. She has worked with impaired physicians and other health care professionals.

Upon completing her fellowship training, she worked as the Medical Director of the methadone maintenance clinics at Yale University School of Medicine. She has been the Chair of Behavioral Health at Saint Francis since 2002 and is the President of the Saint Francis Behavioral Health Group.

Dr. Rao is on the Board of Directors for the American Society of Addiction Medicine and is co-chair of their national membership committee. She is also on the Executive Committee of the Connecticut Chapter.

Dr. Rao is chair of the physicians’ health committee at Saint Francis. She also serves on the Board of the Saint Francis Foundation and has been appointed as a Corporator for Saint Francis Care.

 

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