Archive for January, 2009

Detox – A Load of Old Tosh?

January 7, 2009

This is the same response I gave 2 years ago when, funnily enough, the same media stories were out then…

 

“You – and millions of others – can’t fail to have seen all the detox bashing that’s been going on in the media since Christmas. Not sure where the basis of this has come from, but I thought it might be helpful if I added my two penny-worth!

 

So, is detoxing a waste of time and money? Well, yes, actually, in the vast majority of cases! If that sounds like heresy, then let me explain. Most of the detox stuff around is a complete waste of money as, in my opinion, it won’t work. This is mainly because they aren’t strong enough, they will give only a tiny boost, if any, to eliminatory organs and they aren’t done for long enough. Many of the creams and potions around are in toxic bases, so what’s the point of that? The jury is out on the detox foot pads – some patients have told me they’ve helped them, but so far I’ve not worked out if or how they do.

 

Detox has become a trendy marketing word and doesn’t really mean much. Consequently, it has been really easy for product manufacturers and therapists to invent detox stuff to sell to us.

 

Detoxing to us at the clinic is a very different thing and is based on scientific research. The argument doing the rounds is that the body is very capable of detoxifying itself quite nicely thank you after a Christmas binge. Well, yes, it is – or should be. We have wonderful bodies that cope with toxic by-products of everyday cellular function plus all those chemicals we take in on a daily basis from air, food, water, creams, smoking, alcohol etc. But, to achieve this detoxification via the cells, liver and kidneys takes an awful lot of nutrients – and the simple fact is, in my opinion, that most of us don’t have the resources to do it to optimum level. Add to that the massive increase in the number of chemicals we now take in. We are consequently generally more toxic than we should be.

 

We give patients – as many of you know! – a full cellular detoxification, which can be pretty life-changing. To detoxify properly, the body has to be able to oxidise or conjugate the toxin. Without getting too technical, this simply means that a chemical can be oxidised and changed into a derivative of the original chemical to enable it to be broken down properly. Or, it is attached to another molecule called a ligand to lower its toxicity and enable it to be broken down – this is conjugation. However, this is completely dependent on what are called Phase 1 and Phase 2 detoxification enzymes, which themselves are totally dependent on nutrients such as vitamins, minerals and amino acids. Therefore, to detoxify effectively – in the true scientific meaning of the word – you need to feed the body the right nutrients. 

 

It is relatively simple to help bowel matter (toxicity) move outward and this is helped by herbs etc eg. in colon cleanses or herb tinctures, and it’s again quite easy to repopulate the gut with probiotics, although this takes time. But most people eating a western type diet and living a typically stressful lifestyle will be taking in far more chemicals than they can effectively process and nowhere near enough nutrients to support the detoxifying organs and enzyme systems. These toxins do damage (and there is scientific proof of this) and often end up in cells – especially fat cells! – as they have to be stored somewhere. The more toxic you are, the more fat and water you carry.

 

The detox diet and lifestyle we give you is to get you to change the amount of chemicals you are taking in both during the detox phase but more importantly to help you identify what you should be doing for the rest of your life! As always, our advice is to give your body a rest from the foods, chemicals, drinks and habits that can do you harm, drink more water, skinbrush, do a full cellular detox once a year or take an excellent multivitamin and mineral, fatty acids and probiotics throughout the year. That way, your toxicity level will remain low as you have given your body a lighter load to deal with but at the same time, you have ensured the nutrients needed to keep pace. 

 

Homeopathy can also achieve detoxification from an energetic level. If we feel the body needs more energetic help or simply isn’t ready to use a biochemical detox (as above), a homeopathic detox is really useful and gets great results, but from a different perspective. It doesn’t alter the need for nutrients which would still have to be given when the body was ready, but sometimes we feel the homeopathic detox is more suitable initially, especially if someone is blocked, cellularly weak (as in chronic fatigue), very young, very old or pregnant. We will also use homeopathy to encourage the detoxification of heavy metals.

 

Lastly – a word on body treatments. Massage will always help lymphatic flow and therefore encourages your body to drain more effectively, thus making it less toxic generally. The lymph system doesn’t have a pump like the blood circulation system, so exercise, skinbrushing and massage all help to keep it moving. However, beware using non-organic oils, creams etc as you are then simply adding to the lymph’s toxic load rather than helping it. Creams that include caffeine, seaweeds etc will increase circulation or encourage lymph drainage to a small amount and can help if you combine them with diet change, massage, skinbrushing and lots of water, but used on their own have limited use.

 

I hope that helps to clear up a few of the myths being banded about! Any questions, please ask! If anyone wants to read more on this, ask us for a free copy of Lawrence Plaskett’s Detoxification Newsletter, which explains it in a lot more detail than I have. ”

 

Did You Know?

January 5, 2009

That lung cancer researchers in New Zealand reckon cannabis is 20 times more carcinogenic than tobacco? Or to put it another way they believe one joint is equivalent to smoking a pack of 20 cigarettes. Shocking!

 

That whizzing air into a smoothie rather than having it flat, so to speak, will make you feel fuller without adding any extra calories? Takes longer to drink and fills you up more, but, OK, may make you more windy!

 

That nearly a third of Facebook and over 40% of MySpace members are aged 35-54? And you thought social network sites were the preserve of the yoof! Bebo has an over 40s ‘grown-ups’ section and mychumsclub.com is a more cultural networking site. Have a look – it’s a chance to ‘meet’ new people, develop a new hobby and have a chat.

Bombay Potato Pittas

January 5, 2009

I don’t know about you, but at this time of year I love something warm and spicy in my pitta bread (non wheat, of course!) How about this – great as a side or main dish too with some rice? Boil some spuds and wilt some spinach. Fry a teaspoon each of turmeric, ground coriander, mustard seeds or simply some garam masala with a teaspoon of easy or fresh ginger and a little Pure spread or olive oil. Add a little chilli or harissa oil if you want a kick. Then dice the potatoes and mix with the spices, add some chopped tomatoes and the spinach and cook for a few minutes until everything is nice and warm. Pop into a warmed pitta bread and enjoy. Add a spoonful of natural or soya yogurt if you like and some fresh coriander. Yum. This is a traditional Indian breakfast too – so have it whenever you fancy!

Nuts Whole Hazlenuts – Great For Belly Fat Loss

January 5, 2009

More on nuts here…A study recently assessed the effects of three diets on people with metabolic syndrome (that is, high cardiovascular and diabetes risk): a low-fat diet, a Mediterranean diet supplemented with olive oil (1 litre a week) and a Mediterranean diet including 30 g of mixed nuts each day. The nut mix was 50% walnuts, 25% hazlenuts and 25% almonds, all unsalted, unroasted and fresh, of course. The study lasted for a year.

At the end of the year, the researchers discovered that 2 per cent of individuals eating the low-fat diet had reversed their metabolic syndrome to the extent that they no long appeared to it. However, those eating the Mediterranean-based diets fared significantly better: rates of metabolic syndrome fell by about 7 and 14 per cent in the olive oil and nut supplemented groups respectively. Compared to eating the low fat diet, eating the Mediterranean diet enhanced the chances of reversal of metabolic syndrome by 70 per cent. In short, in this trial of treatments for metabolic syndrome, the Mediterranean diet plus nuts was the winner, and the low-fat diet the loser.

Why should nuts be seemingly so beneficial for individuals with metabolic syndrome? Well, for a start nuts are generally very undisruptive regarding blood sugar levels. But then again, so is olive oil, and the diet enriched with this did not perform as well as the one enriched with nuts. Looking more deeply into nuts we know that they are rich in certain nutrients that olive oil may not offer. The stand-out nutrient that is likely to have relevance is magnesium. This nutrient plays a part in blood sugar balance and insulin function in the body, amongst many other things. 

(John Briffa Dec 08)

 

Cracking Nuts – Not Just For Christmas!

January 5, 2009

It’s a shame that we only tend to get the nutcrackers out at Christmas, because freshly shelled nuts contain loads of nutrients. Take walnuts, for example. Making them part of a balanced diet can help counteract the damage to arteries caused by fatty food as they contain a nutrient called arginine that helps the body produce nitric oxide, essential for keeping blood vessels flexible. Walnuts also contain a form of omega 3 essential fatty acid not found in olive oil.

Other nutritious nuts include Almonds (high in protein, iron, calcium, vitamin E, zinc, and vitamin B2). Brazil nuts are one of the richest natural sources of selenium, vital for healthy thyroid hormone metabolism. Hazlenuts are high in fibre, calcium, magnesium, and vitamin E2. Remember, though, that nuts are quite high in fat, albeit good, so don’t go too mad! (Nat Health News Dec 08)

Two ways to keep eyesight sharp

January 5, 2009

 WDDTY December 2008

Your eyesight doesn’t have to fail as you grow older.  Researchers have discovered two simple things you can do to protect your sight well into old age, and ward off the worst effects of age-related macular degeneration (AMD).

After reviewing the lifestyles and vision of 4,753 participants aged 65 and over, researchers found that those who took antioxidant supplements such as vitamins A, C and E – and who kept out of direct sunlight – were more likely to have good sight as they grew older.

AMD is a common problem among the elderly, and it has been regarded as a natural consequence of aging, but the researchers have found that those with high levels of antioxidants were up to four times less likely to develop the problem.  The researchers also recommend people to either wear sunglasses when there is a strong sun, or to stay in the shade, as this may also help protect good eyesight.

Ed’s note: Use Vision Support or add Network Synergy (now renamed Antioxidant Synergy) to your daily supplement routine to cover this.

Online Home Study Weight Loss Course

January 5, 2009

Many of you have asked me in the past to set up a weekly weight management meeting (like Weight watchers etc), so you can have weekly support and motivation. But now I’ve gone one better! I will shortly launch a modular home study weight loss course online so you can do it wherever you are and with my support as and when you need it.

 

The course will have several modules that you read through at your own pace. It is packed with information I’ve gleaned over the last 20 years in natural medicine and is based on the successful Stop Dieting & Lose Weight course I designed and taught a few years ago (and haven’t had time to do again since with the clinic!) Each module ends with a set of tasks to complete which will mean you start to implement a weight management plan customized for you as you go along. It’s as if I were sitting next to you guiding you through, but this way, you can do it as quickly or slowly as you like. Each module stands on its own but added together will lead you through the whys and wherefores of managing your weight.

 

I haven’t yet finished the whole thing, but I know some of you are raring to go with your weight loss plans this new year and that’s why I’m telling you about it now. The first 3 modules, each about 20 pages, are available: Why Diets Don’t Work, Hunger, Insulin & Body Fat and Are You Intolerant?

 

You can read all about the course and individual modules shortly on the website (as soon as I have time to get it on!) Each module costs £10 and includes email support for questions and motivation as you need it (a darn sight cheaper than a £47 consultation fee to see me, although I’m here for that too, of course!)

 

I’m telling you about this now so you know what is there to help if you’re thinking of managing your weight better this new year! I should have it finished by the end of Jan.

A Brand New Year – A Chance To Change?

January 5, 2009

Happy New Year to you all! I hope you had a lovely festive break. Personally, I am raring to go again now – there are only so many days I can watch TV, eat chocs and socialise before I’m itching to get back to work!

 

I hope that’s how you feel about your work life. If it’s not, why not think this year about what you are going to do to change things? We only continue down the same path we’re on in life most often because we think we have to. But we really don’t. Take courage. Consider what makes you happiest and resolve to work towards getting more of that into your daily life this year. It’s a no-brainer isn’t it, but so few of us actually do it.

 

Life is a choice. If you don’t like where you’re heading, take a different path. I always think of a new year as a fork in the road really; and you can choose which way to go. Will it be the same path this year or a completely different one? Most importantly, if you choose to stay on the same path, be it in a relationship, at work or whatever, are you going to drag yourself down the path muttering and chuntering as you go, or are you going to lift your head up high and walk down it with purpose, knowing you’ve made a choice and welcoming it. Perhaps you should skip down it, happy in the knowledge you’ve made your decision and free from the worry of not knowing what to do.

 

I hope this is making some sense! I simply mean to remind you that life is full of choices. We are where we are because we have made choices and have put ourselves in a particular position. We can equally make other choices to change it again; life evolves, it is not static. If you can’t change everything or a major thing, change some smaller stuff; you’ll be surprised how even seemingly tiny changes will add up to a whole new way of doing things.

 

Most of all, change the way you think – life is just an attitude, a way of thinking really, and we have the power to change that most of all! Sure, things happen all the time, but the way it affects us is controlled purely by the way we choose to think about it, by the attitude we take towards it. Goodness knows, I’m not a saint and sometimes I can’t see the positive in something and inevitably some things get to me, but overall, I am trying to recognize when it’s just my approach to something that’s causing the stress. Once you know that, it is real power to control your life and deal with what life throws at us. Change your attitude and you’ll change your life! Glib, perhaps, but oh so true! Enough of the new year lecture – have a great 2009 and make it count for you!

 

I Resolve To…

 

I know a lot of people don’t make new year’s resolutions and that’s mainly because they already think they’re going to fail. What a shame. I always do – if only because it makes me think about what I may want to do or change this year. Here are a couple of the resolutions I have made – why not join me?

 

  1. Stop Worrying

 

I ended 2008 in a state of worry, like most people. I worried about what’s happening in the world, to our economy, our planet. I worried about the changes we’re making to our business and what the future might hold. I worried about why my waist seemed to disappear 2 weeks after I hit forty and why I can’t seem to get it back as easily as I used to! I worried about my health since 2008 seemed to be a difficult one for my allergies and immune system.

 

But I resolve to stop worrying about it. I realise I am worrying more about the economy, planet etc because I am inundated with media stories about it. You can’t move for bad news at the moment, can you? I know it’s there, but I don’t want to swim in negativity, so I resolve to stop watching the news and reading the papers again. I did this for years but have slipped back into it. If it’s bad enough, I’ll hear about it. But for now, I resolve to surround myself with more positive things.

 

Business worries? I am daft. I think I’m good at my job. I love what I do – it’s a vocation and lifestyle, not a career choice. I resolve to believe that if people know and feel that when I deal with them, they will stick with me. Even the experts are saying that businesses who offer a great service will be fine through this recession, and I know I’m blowing my own trumpet a bit here (and why not?!), I think our service is superb: great knowledge, expertise, products and all given with joy. Don’t feel sick – it’s true!

 

Waist worry? I resolve to accept I am no longer twenty and the 200 sit ups a day I did then that could get me into any LBD I fancied no longer works quite as well! I resolve to do more exercise which is related to the next worry…

 

Health worries. Part of the reason for the worry above is that I haven’t been exercising and getting out and about as much as I did because I haven’t felt as well as I did. This is simply because I am not looking after myself as well. As many of you know, I became a medical nutritionist because I was poorly and what I would term ‘pre- ME’ in my early twenties. I will always need to watch what I eat, how much exercise and rest I get. I feel SO much better than I did then, but it has slipped because I got complacent. So, I resolve to start looking after myself better, making sure we have good food in, that I cook more instead of working late all the time, that I get out for a walk every day (the post office run for your orders is helping here – thanks!) and that I include more things that make me happy like reading, writing, seeing my friends and family, playing with my business, doing facials and being with animals (Philip not included!).

 

  1. Dance More

 

This will help with the waist worry above, but most importantly, it is hard to feel negative when you’re dancing, isn’t it?! There is a reason why Strictly Come Dancing has become the most popular light entertainment show on TV this year and that’s because dancing is such as positive, life-affirming, optimistic thing to do. It’s great in the face of a global down turn and all that means. There’s not a fat lot we as mere mortals can do about that, but we can keep ourselves positive and fit! Doesn’t matter if you dance around at home unseen, or you go to a class. I know at least two people who dance at home: one lady writer puts on her favourite records after writing her murder mysteries for a couple of hours because it makes her move and cheers her up, another puts loud music on when she’s tidying up or just because she fancies it, and dances round the room like a looney. What a wonderful thought. I resolve to do it (no peeking at the windows!!)

 

  1. Donate My Chocolate Money

 

I admit to having a penchant for chocolate. I have a blood sugar condition (PCOS) and sometimes it’s the only thing that will pick me up quickly enough, although I know an apple will do it too, so I’m kidding myself there! I’m not resolving to give it up completely as I know that would be unrealistic, but this bit of research has given me an idea….A recent survey showed that in these economic times, two thirds of us are spending more on sweet treats than a year ago. World Vision found 63% of us are choosing chocolate. True comfort eating! It’s probably the increase of tryptophan which comes in chocolate that helps to boost serotonin levels.

 

In harder times, I think that is the best time to count your blessings. Things may be tougher than they were, but how much harder is it for other people? In developing countries, for example, the price of a chocolate bar could make all the difference to a hungry child. Or closer to home, there are loads of people and animal charities which need our support even more. Charity giving tends to go down in recession, unsurprisingly. That means they suffer more. If you choose to give something up that’s not good for you anyway eg. for me the cost of a newspaper and the regular Green & Blacks chocolate bar, and then donate what you would have spent, you help yourself, but you also help others too. It can be a great motivator for you, but also brings such a positive feel to them as they get extra help, and you because you’re giving it. Something positive from a negative: a win: win.

 

If you think that the average newspaper/chocolate bar/sweet treat costs about 50p and you multiply this up, say for 5 days a week, 50 weeks of the year, that adds up to £125 per year. World Vision says sponsoring a child costs just 60p per day, for example. But just think what you would like to help. I resolve to get a jar and every time I do my normal shopping and would have bought a paper or some chocolate, I will put the money in there instead and donate it at the end of the year. I’ll let you know how I’m getting on – why not join me?  

 

Anyway, enough about me, although I hope you enjoyed it! Let’s get on with the rest of the newsletter….

 

And Finally…

January 5, 2009

 

A collection of inspirational quotes for you to end 2008 with and welcome in 2009. I hope they inspire you…

 

There is only one way to happiness, and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will.
Epictetus

There is only one person who could ever make you happy, and that person is you.
David Burns, Intimate Connections

When one door of happiness closes, another opens, but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one that has been opened for us.
Helen Keller

First say to yourself what you would be;
and then do what you have to do.

Epictetus

HRT COULD RAISE HEART ATTACK RISK BY 25%

January 5, 2009

A study of 700,000 women found HRT increases the chance of a heart attack by almost a quarter in women aged between 51 & 54.  Using it for over 4 years could raise the risk by 59%.  The research was carried out by Ellen Lokkegaard at Rigshospitalet in Denmark and was published in the European Heart Journal.   NB: It was not found to raise the risk significantly in older women.