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Blog: On Health. On Writing. On Life. On Everything.

Keep A Cool Head!

A study just out: Scientists built a cap with cooling water tubes to keep the brain temperature down. Turns out you sleep best when your head is at a little below 60 degrees Fahrenheit about 15 degrees Celsius. What – they spent research funds on that?? Insane. Why invent a machine for something that is available easily in nature? Then again: Natural Medicine tells us for more than a century now to sleep with the window open. For the reason that one doesn’t re-breathe ones stale reason. For a second reason: To keep a cool head. The only other proven across-the-board condition that helps people go to sleep is having warm feet. Is this neat? Cool head, warm feet! You find the absurd prescription of Wet Socks in my water book (I don’t have the time to write about it now) – absurd, but it helps. For today: Sleep with window open. Give it it try! Of course, we sleep with window open even in the coldest winter in Maine. You can start now - in summer weather. You don’t drink water that has once gone through your body and then been discarded. You shouldn’t re-breathe your used-up air either! Read More 
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Five-Minutes Meditation

This is the height of holiday stress. Here a fast stress reliever: • Choose a quiet corner • Turn egg timer on 5 minutes • Sit with crossed legs on the floor on a cushion; or on a chair • Keep your back straight - let the top of your head touch Heavens • Hands: palms-up and open on your knees • Closed eyes • Breathe in and out slowly – always start with exhaling (counting regularly might help the beginner) • Do not move at all except keeping your back straight • Empty your brain from thoughts and outside disturbances • Pay attention to your sensations: breathing, aches, itches, fears, etc.: • Let them happen. • Stop when the clock rings • Go on with your day with renewed energy and purpose. The Five-Minutes Meditation is useful when • you are stressed out • your emotions overwhelm you (anger, sadness, anxiety, jealousy, etc.) • you are tempted to binge out on food (perfect to do before each meal in obesity, for instance) • you suffer with sleeplessness - just do it before retiring to bed • you are listless and bored and procrastinating • you have high blood pressure • you have pains - instead of taking pills For really learning to meditate, there are good programs, groups, and courses available. Do not attempt to increase the time above 5 minutes. Citation "Meditation is not about feeling a certain way. It's about feeling the way you feel. It's not about making the mind empty or still, although stillness does deepen in meditation and can be cultivated systematically. Above all, meditation is about letting the mind be as it is and knowing something about how it is in this moment. It's not about getting somewhere else, but allowing yourself to be where you already are. If you don't understand this, you will think you are constitutionally unable to meditate. But that's just more thinking and, in this case, incorrect thinking at that." "But to stay at it for even five minutes requires intentionality. To make it part of your life requires some discipline. " (From: Jon Kabat-Zinn, Wherever You Go, There You Are). Read More 
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How the World Plays Your Brain

In the past, I have written about junk food that feeds the bad bacteria in your gut – and how this makes you think even more of unhealthy treats: You eat a hamburger, then suddenly you crave a donut (or a bag of donuts), and then you needs some twinkies and a soda to flush them down. I have likened this process to a computer virus: The bad gut bacteria send messages to your brain, sidetracking your best intentions for healthy eating. There are a few other players who fiddle with your brain, make you fatter and fatigued, and thus prevent you from reaching your goals in life. Too little sleep is one of those players. If you haven’t gotten the amount of sleep your body needs – and the individual requirements differ, usually between seven and nine hours. If you get away with five to six hours a night, chances are you are using up your bank account of health. Too little sleep produces stress hormones the next day, and stress hormones like cortisol make you eat more – ergo, weight gain. A day is made or broken the night before: Can you find into bed early enough – or are you staying up too late, get unrestful rest, and have a sleep-deprived hangover the next day? And here are two more players that wreak havoc with your brain: computers and TV. Both keep you busy and interested much longer than they should. Captivated as you are, you don’t heed your body’s little signals that it is time to go to bed. You go on working, watching, playing – and so the next day is spoiled because you have to run on less energy. Once you creep into bed, you have a hard time falling asleep. Or you wake up too early. Because staying up late disrupted your sleep-wake-cycle. Being tired produces more stress hormones. And those makes you eat more. The holiday season is a time of high stress and tons of running around because you want to bring joy to your loved ones. This year, try this sneaky little trick: No machines (TV, computer, electronic games) after dinner. Take a book, read, listen to music, ease into slumber time – between eight and ten o’clock. If you wake up in the middle of the night, don’t toss and turn. Take this gifted time for thinking what you want to do with your life, what is important to you. And snuggle back into the pillows. Next day, observe how you glow and function at your personal best! You regained your brain! Read More 
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