Battling and Beating Cancer — Coping With The Psychological & Social Aspects of Cancer Part 1
January 14, 2012 by HART 1-800-HART
Filed under STRESS, VIDEO
Battling and Beating Cancer — Coping With The Psychological & Social Aspects of Cancer Part 2
January 12, 2012 by HART 1-800-HART
Filed under STRESS, VIDEO
Remedy For Anxiety
January 12, 2012 by HART 1-800-HART
Filed under HEALTHCARE, VIDEO
The Best Exercise for LOWER ABS: Part 3 of 5
December 31, 2010 by HART 1-800-HART
Filed under Video: Exercise and Fitness Tips
I just found this health related video on YouTube … and thought you might enjoy it!
youtube.com/watch?v=LkZJ0GjOwr8%3Ff%3Dvideos%26app%3Dyoutube_gdata
The Best Way to Exercise with Doug Jones www.TheBestWayToExercise.com Part 3 of 5. This one looks so simple, but pulling against the tight butt muscles is a pain the in abs. http has the smartest and speediest solution to strength, stamina, stretching, and sustenance. Don’t forget to watch all of the other health and fitness videos on my channel, including exercises for: butt, thighs, legs, calves, glutes, back, arms, shoulders, chest, biceps, triceps, forearms, delts, traps, and, of course, abs, abdominals, obliques, and your sexy 6pack six-pack. 🙂 Stand Firm with Doug Jones
Tell us what you think about this video in the comments below, or in the Battling For Health Community Forum!
credit-n.ru/zaymyi-next.html
The Secret to a Healthy Weight
May 16, 2007 by HART 1-800-HART
Filed under OBESITY
By Wil Dieck
According to a recent article in Remedy Magazine, being a little overweight is not okay. After a ten-year study of more than 527,000 Americans between the ages of 50 and 71 scientists from the National Cancer Institute concluded that that overweight people (defined as having a body mass index (BMI) of 25 to 29) at age 50 can increase a person’s mortality rate by 20 to 40 percent. An obese person (defined as having a BMI over 30 percent) boosted that risk between 200 and 300 percent!
The article went on to cite another study from Korea that looked at 1.2 million people between the ages of 30 and 91. In a twelve-year period overweight non-smokers were between 10 to 50 percent more likely to die from heart disease or cancer than normal weight non-smokers.
What these and other studies show is that when you are overweight you increase your risk of high blood pressure, heart disease, and other illnesses. Achieving your desired weight through a healthy life style reduces your risk.
So how do you achieve your healthy weight? The answer, as we all know is to eat less calories than you burn, but this answer is much too simplistic. It’s too simplistic because dieting doesn’t work. Diets tell us to eliminate foods from what we eat regularly, for example fats. The problem with low fat diets is that our bodies require fat. Fat stores fat soluble vitamins A, D, E and K. Fat also helps the body produce testosterone, which is the hormone that contributes to muscle growth and the burning of body fat. In fact studies have shown that men with higher levels of testosterone were 75 percent less likely to be obese than men with lower levels. This is primarily due to the body’s tendency to store fat when it has low levels of testosterone.
Some diets tell us to eliminate animal protein. While eating fatty cuts of red meat definitely is not good for you, eating lean cuts of animal protein actually helps your body burn more calories than eating protein from soy products.
Other diets tell us to restrict carbohydrates. There while there are many studies that have shown lowering our carbohydrate intake can help us control our weight, eliminating them is absolutely suicidal. Carbohydrates are essential to good health. Fruits, vegetables, whole grains and beans help protect us against cancer and other diseases. So, as you can see, dieting doesn’t work.
Dieting in general doesn’t work because it revolves around restricting what we eat. Weight management is a long-term project. Most people who lose weight quickly by crash dieting or by some other extreme measure usually gain back all or more – of the pounds they lost. Why? Because in order to permanently lose weight and keep it off a person has to change their eating and exercise habits. You see, the best weight management strategies are those that you can maintain for a lifetime. So a better question is how can you change your habits?
We have all tried to lose weight through willpower, cutting down on the calories and/or increasing the exercise. Some of us lose weight by eating almost nothing while working out like crazy. Others lose weight using “crash” diets. The problem is these methods never work and can also be dangerous.
Now why doesn’t this work? It’s because our subconscious image overcomes our conscious goals. Since our subconscious sees us as an overweight person as we begin to “lose weight” our subconscious starts the process of bringing us back to our “correct” image, undermining our conscious efforts.
To really change we first have to change our mindset about “losing weight.” Nobody likes to think of themselves as a loser. To gain a healthy weight you need to stop trying to lose weight and focus on a goal that is positive rather than negative. That goal is to be healthier, look better, and have more self esteem and confidence. In other words you want to have a better image of yourself.
How can you create this better image? A great method is through visualization, reprogramming your mind’s image of your body. One of the best ways to use visualization is through hypnosis, either self-hypnosis, or using a professional hypnotist.
How does hypnosis help? In a study published in the Journal of Clinical Psychology, 109 people were divided into two groups for a nine-week study. The first group was offered changes in their diet and more exercises without the addition of hypnosis. The second group was given the same diet and exercise program and also given hypnosis for reinforcement. After nine weeks both groups lost weight. But an interesting phenomenon happened between the eight month and two year follow ups. The group that didn’t have the aid of hypnosis did not lose any more weight, and in most cases actually gained most of their original weight back. The hypnosis group continued to lose weight during both intervals and many actually met their long-term weight goals.
As mentioned before your body image is controlled by your subconscious. The key to helping you become healthier is to align your subconscious image with your conscious goals. That is how hypnosis can help because it goes directly to the subconscious and modifies it, aligning it with your positive conscious goals and making them possible.
Hypnosis teaches your subconscious the skills you need to help you control your appetite, while substituting your old diet for healthier foods and drinking water. It also motivates you to exercise. By visualizing your ideal body image you can anchor your eating and exercise habits toward achieving your imaged goal.
So that’s the secret. It isn’t magic, only good healthy habits adapted for a long healthy lifetime. Healthy eating habits coupled with a moderate exercise program anchored in your subconscious. So why not try hypnosis to change to a new, better image of yourself? It works!
Bio
Wil Dieck is a professional hypnotist practicing in San Diego, California.
For more information about Wil and his practice please go to www.e-hypnosisworks.com
Article Source: EzineArticles.com/?expert=Wil_Dieck
Hypnosis Ideas for Visualization After a Stroke
March 26, 2007 by HART 1-800-HART
Filed under HEART AND STROKE
By Seth-Deborah Roth
When a stroke strikes a person, the supply of blood to the part of the brain affected is interrupted, starving it of oxygen. Brain cells can be seriously damaged or die, impairing local brain function.
Within weeks of a stroke, new blood vessels begin to form, (one can visualize marching ants), newly born neurons migrate long distances to the damaged area to aid the regeneration process. We don’t know what the right cellular environment is, and what the cellular cues are for this process of regeneration and migration to take place.
In the Journal of Neuroscience, S. Thomas Carmichael, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor at the UCLA Geffen School of Medicine, reports that in the mouse model, this march of the neurons is the result of signaling from the newly blooming blood vessels, which links angiogenesis (the development of new blood vessels) and neurogenesis, (the birth of new neurons). They have identified what these molecular signals are! Hopefully, this is the beginning.
Stroke is a leading cause of adult disability. Much is known about the mechanisms of cell death in stroke, but little is known about the mechanisms of recovery after a stroke.
Research has revealed that in the adult brain, new neurons form in a region of the forebrain known as the subventricular zone (SVZ). In mice, after a stroke was initiated in a part of the brain, located far from the SVZ, the researchers,tracked newly formed neuroblasts (which are immature brain cells from which mature adult neurons form) as they traveled through healthy brain tissue to the stroke area. These immature neurons wrapped themselves around the immature vascular cells that were in the process of forming new blood vessels in the damaged area. The neurons were found to arrive at the site within the first two to four weeks after the stroke.
Researchers found that two proteins, stromal-derived factor 1 (SDF1) and angiopoietin 1 (Ang1), that are given off by these newly-forming blood vessels, are what trigger the thousands of immature neurons to the site of damage.
The SDF1 and Ang1 proteins are what link the two processes of neurogenesis and angiogenesis together by promoting post-stroke neuroblast migration. These two proteins, also appear to effect behavioral recovery as well. The researchers produced the stroke in an area of the brain that controls the mouse’s facial whiskers. When the mouse was infused by the researchers with Ang1 and SDF1, improvement in the function of the whisker’s was seen to the same levels as the control (non-stroke) mice.
I would suggest that possibly, one might consider using these biological facts as images to include when using guided imagery hypnosis for stroke clients. Our thoughts are known to produce chemicals in our bodies. Perhaps, with our thoughts about the mechanisms that should take place we can stimulate that very mechanism.
Seth-Deborah Roth combines over 30 years of medical knowledge as a registered nurse and nurse anesthetist with her knowledge of hypnosis. Seth-Deborah is a Certified Instructor and faculty member of the National Guild of Hypnosis.
She is also a member of the National Board of Certified Clinical Hypnotherapists, the International Hypnosis Federation, the American Board of Hypnosis and the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists. She is an instructor in Medical Hypnosis at the “Hypnotherapy Center” in Oakland California. She received the 2005 “Award of Excellence” in the category of Health Care from the International Hypnosis Federation (IHF). She has been featured on the Discovery Channel’s “Myth Busters” segment on hypnosis.
She has also written a book entitled “Medical Hypnosis – An Essential Guide” Hypnotherapy for Health (510) 690-0699 www.hypnotherapyforhealth.com read my blog site www.hypnotichealth.blogspot.com Order “Diet Is a Four Letter Word” cd
Article Source: EzineArticles.com/?expert=Seth-Deborah_Roth
