Posts Tagged ‘meditation’

Wellness News: Exercise and Your Brain, How Natural Foods Fight Disease and More

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Here is a collection of recent health news you can use.  We’re focusing on whole-body health. Click on the links to read more about each topic.

Be active for better brain health: Perhaps you work out to keep trim and toned, but did you know that exercise also builds new brain cells? Recent research shows how physical activity stimulates the stem cells in our brains that make new neurons. Perhaps that’s one reason why people who are active in their younger years are at lower risk for cognitive impairment later in life. In a study of more than 9,000 women, those who had been active a teens had the lowest risk of cognitive impairment, but regular activity at any time in life lowered the risk. In other words, being active now means better brain health later.

Awareness has healing power: The mindfulness you develop in meditation and yoga can help your health in many ways. In one study, people who practiced mindfulness boosted the levels of immune cells in their blood. And in an Australian study, 12 women at risk for binge eating lost weight and had higher self-esteem after practicing yoga for 12 weeks.

Meditation is increasingly being recognized as a natural pain reliever. The U.S. Army  is adding yoga and acupuncture to its arsenal of pain treatments. In Britain, brain scans showed how meditation changes the way the brain anticipates pain. “Meditation trains the brain to be more present-focused and therefore to spend less time anticipating future negative events,” said the study author.

Natural foods guard against disease: Whole, natural foods are like treasure boxes filled with healing substances. For example, extra virgin olive oil may guard against breast cancer; researchers think substances in the oil help send death signals to cancer cells and protect DNA in the cell nucleus. Just pour it on. And replacing white rice with whole grains could reduce your risk of diabetes by 36 percent, say doctors at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Two or more servings a week of brown rice, whole-wheat berries and barley made the difference in the study.

Processed foods, on the other hand, can be damaging. So many processed foods contain added sugars and a recent study found that fructose makes kids’ fat cells bigger and less sensitive to insulin, setting them up for obesity and diabetes. Another reason to choose water and avoid drinks with added sugar!

To Turn Off Stress, Turn to Your Breath

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

by Woodson Merrell, M.D.
APOGEE’s Integrative Health Advisor

A new study shows that cancer cells migrate and thrive in the presence of stress hormones. Studies such as this reinforce what I tell my patients: Actively working to transform your reaction to stress is the single most important step you can make to take back your vital energy and improve your health.

Notice that I wrote “transform your reaction” and not “cut stress from your life.” It’s often hard to change the fabric of our lives. But you can turn down your reactions to life’s events and turn on a calmer way of being. Once you are calm, you can become aware and better choose how to respond to situations, further transforming your reaction to stress. Your health will benefit in many ways.

Our body has two nervous systems: fight or flight and calming. The hormones produced by your sympathetic nervous system during a stressful or fight or flight response are cortisol and adrenaline. Your body releases these when you react to something you perceive as stressful—whether it’s a traffic jam, a sick child, or a deadline at work.

Ideally, after the excitement, our fight or flight system turns off and the calming parasympathetic part of the nervous system takes over. But researchers are finding that today many people have high levels of cortisol all day; they’re constantly perceiving their environment as stressful. The result is chronic health problems, including high blood pressure, poor digestion, heart disease and general fatigue.

You can turn on your calming system and decrease the amount of stress hormones in your blood in one easy step: Focus on your breath. Just perform this simple in-and-out breath break anywhere and anytime: in a parking lot or on a train or bus, in your office, at home.  Studies of this technique show that it results in slower pulse, lower blood pressure, relaxed intestinal muscles and lower cortisol, adrenaline and blood carbon dioxide levels.

Breath Break

  • Sit up straight, close your eyes.
 Breathe in through your nose to the count of four, focusing on the sensation of the air moving through your nostrils.
  • Breathe out for a count of four, feeling the air as it leaves your nose. 
Pause for a beat at the end of your exhale before you breathe in again.
  • Continue for two minutes.

If an idea starts spinning through your brain during this breath break, just say to yourself, “breathing,” and gently bring your focus back to your breath. The idea is not to engage in thoughts—just to focus on your breath.

Ideally, you should take a breath break every two hours throughout the day. It’s an especially helpful exercise to do upon waking in the morning—just sit at the edge of your bed first thing in the morning, for 15 minutes if possible. Or, if you wake in the middle of the night and can’t get back to sleep, focus on your breath, gently moving aside intruding thoughts of your daytime life.

You can move this stress-reduction break toward traditional meditation by introducing a word such as “calm,” “peace,” “om”—or any other sound or word that works for you. As long as you focus on the word and not the thoughts that come unwittingly to mind, you are helping to turn on the calming systems in your body.

There are many types of meditation, including mindfulness meditation, during which you focus on thinking kind thoughts about objects or people in your life. There are also many resources where you can learn meditation techniques, including books, CD’s and downloads. But the simple breath-break skill that I’ve described here is a good place to start.

You will find, as millions have before you, that breath breaks and meditation are useful skills that can transform your response to stress and improve your health throughout your life.