WGP 005: Are You Getting Enough Sleep?

In this podcast I’ll be exploring Sleep:

  • I’ll explain why you need sleep and how it works for you
  • I’ll also talk about what happens when you don’t get enough sleep and how that works against you
  • Finally, I’ll share some simple and effective sleep rituals that you can practise for better health and wellness


CLICK HERE TO LEARN WHAT ARE THE BEST FOODS TO GET LEAN

In the previous podcast I talked about how oxygen is our primary nutrient. Well I believe sleep is our second most important nutrient or at least on equal footing with water, food, and movement.

Before we dig in let me make a distinction and explain the difference between what I cal quality restorative sleep (QRS) and long restless sleep (LRS).

So QRS is when you go through the usual five stages of sleep, which are stages one, two, three, four, and rapid eye movement (REM) and this is considered one sleep cycle before it goes back to stage one again. Each cycle lasts on average 90 minutes and you should have four to five sleep cycles every night, so around six to eight hours of sleep. If you are not getting four sleep cycles minimum per night or if your sleep cycles keep getting interrupted before going through all five stages you are potentially not getting the correct rest and repair you would normally get during sleep. I call this LRS where you might sleep for up to 12 hours, but if most of your sleep cycles were disturbed and if you only got three full cycles then you may well wake up feeling more tired and worse off than before you got into bed.

Now I will go through some of the benefits of quality restorative sleep and how it improves your life.

  • It gives you more energy
  • Sleep is when memory imprinting happens where short-term memory becomes long-term memory enhancing your memory skills
  • Allows you to think clearly increasing your ability to focus due to the detoxification processes in the brain that only happen while you sleep
  • Sleep also puts you in a very good mood (no matter which side of the bed you wake up on)
  • Improves your performance on the sportsfield and on the court, in the boardroom, as well as the bedroom
  • Helps you adapt to more stress and better manage yourself when stress happens
  • Keeps you looking youthful and full of vitality
  • Gives you a healthier body composition by keeping you lean

 
So how to get QRS? Your body has an internal clock a biological clock that runs on a circadian cycle, a natural rhythm of about 24 hours. Your circadian rhythm is based on the cycles of the sun and the moon, the day and the night.

Your body has light receptors not just in your eyes, but also on your skin. When you are exposed to light in the morning your body releases cortisol (a stress hormone) that is used to wake you up, to get you active, to get you alert and ready to play out your day. In the morning your cortisol levels should be high in order to help get you out of bed. As the day goes on your cortisol levels drop gradually and from the afternoon your cortisol drops big time because when you’re getting ready to wind down for the evening and to get ready to go to bed you don’t want to be full of stress hormones causing you to feel awake, active, and alert.

The hormone on the opposite end of cortisol is melatonin. This hormone deals with repair, rest, and sleep. In the morning melatonin should be at it’s lowest levels and as the day goes on and you expose yourself to sunlight during the day melatonin production begins to rev up. It doesn’t get released yet, but by getting daylight exposure you’re telling your body to start making melatonin. When night time comes and you’re no longer bathing in the sun sometime after six o’clock that’s when melatonin will begin to be released. This will help you to wind down, to relax, and get ready for awesome sleep. Now if cortisol is up in the evening melatonin is going to struggle to rise. Also blue light (which is the same as sunlight) and bright light exposure after sunset will prevent melatonin from rising at night. Also in the morning melatonin should be low and not be interfering with the rise in cortisol.

So we have two hormones here. One that wakes you up, gets you active and alert (cortisol). The other winds you down and prepares you for sleep (melatonin). Your circadian rhythm is driven by these two hormones, but the levels and the times at which these two hormones are released are determined by your exposure to sunlight, the day and night cycle, as well as the amount of stress that you perceive in your environment and the amount of hidden stress that is happening within your body. The more stress you have in the evening the higher your cortisol the lower your melatonin. When you have chronic stress, stress that is ongoing and neverending, your cortisol levels drop across the board meaning overtime eventually your cortisol levels will be low in the morning making you not want to get your butt out of bed and to start your day and when you do get up you’re like a muppet without a brain… a zombie… the walking dead. Chronic stress can also disrupt your daily cortisol output causing it to rise in the evening. Say goodnight to melatonin and awesome sleep if that happens.

Now in order to reset your circadian rhythm you need to manage how you deal with stress giving you a regular cortisol output high in the morning and low in the evening. Then you’ll need to expose your eyes and body to sunlight early in the morning and as much as possible throughout the day to get enough melatonin produced. Okay so to get enough melatonin released at night giving you better sleep you then need to remove exposure to blue and bright lights at night.

For QRS you want to aim to go to bed by 10.30p and get up around 6a. Now I know not everyone can do this and these are just general guidelines, but getting to bed before 11p and waking up 6-8 hours later is the ideal sleeping window for adults, a bit earlier and longer for children, and even moreso for teenagers. Sorry night owls you are not going to like this next part, but you’ll get more QRS for your body and mind if you go to bed around 8p and get up seven hours later around 3a then you would going to bed midnight and getting up eight hours later at 8a. Remember the saying:

“Every hour before midnight is worth two after.”

The main reason for this is your physical repair processes happen between the hours of about 10 in the evening and two in the morning. Now after 2a to when you wake up is when your immune and neurological repair processes do most of their work. So your body repair work happens before your mind repair work giving a preference to body maintenance over mind maintenance.

Also consistency with your wake and sleep times is crucial to resetting your circadian rhythm. Imagine having a clock that ran half the speed one day then twice the speed the next and then normal speed another day with your set alarms going off at random times. How would your ability to stick to a schedule be? If your wake and sleep times are all over the place this will throw of the timing of the production and release of your wake and sleep hormones and will severely upset your circadian rhythm.

Okay so let’s say you are going to bed consistently between 10p and 6a, getting blue light and sunlight during the day and reducing that light exposure during the night and that your hormones are in the correct levels at the correct times and your circadian cycle is in sync with the day night cycle what will that mean? It’ll mean you will reap all the previously mentioned benefits that sleep freely provides.

However, if you are constantly depriving yourself of QRS and getting LRS instead or just not getting enough sleep you are not going to like what I have to say next on how a lack of quality sleep affects your health and your life.

  • It increases your blood pressure
  • Increases your risk of heart disease and diabetes
  • Increases your risk of cancer

 
Cancer! Lack of sleep increases the growth of tumours in your body and your risk of cancer. I want to talk more about this one. How is this possible? Melatonin. Remember the amount of sunlight and blue light exposure you get during the day determines the amount of melatonin produced and the lack of blue light at night determines when and how much melatonin gets released. If your circadian cycle is out of sync with the day and night cycles you won’t have enough melatonin at the correct time to do the job it’s meant to do.

Now guess what melatonin does besides helping with repair, rest, and sleep? Melatonin stops the growth of tumours. That’s right, it stops cancer in its tracks! Not only that, but it also activates cell death. Cells in your body are continuously being created and destroyed. Cancer cells on the other hand are stubborn little buggers and won’t do as they’re told when it comes time for them to expire. Melatonin makes sure that cancer cells do as instructed when given the signal to die. Melatonin is also a powerful antioxidant. As an analogy picture chemical reactions in the body producing rust due to oxidation okay and melatonin cleans up that rust, shines it up real nice and does a really good job of it acting as an antioxidant. So while eating organic antioxidant rich foods and taking antioxidant supplements like vitamin C and vitamin E is one way to battle the rust in your body, you can just go outdoors during the day and bathe in the sunlight, keep blue light exposure to a minimum in the evening and for free you can have an antioxidant in the form of melatonin with phenomenal cosmic powers fighting the good fight on your behalf.

Oh! Another thing about melatonin. Melatonin comes from serotonin and a lot of people don’t know this, but over 90% of serotonin is produced in your gut, in your gastrointestinal tract, your intestines, mmm hmm. Also, serotonin comes from tryptophan, which is found abundantly in animal protein. So if you have an issue with your gut, if you’re eating the wrong foods, and if you’re experiencing stress (which can cause issues with the assimilation and absorption of nutrients in the gut) you will not be getting enough tryptophan leading to low serotonin meaning you’ll have very low melatonin, okay. Hippocrates the original gangster, the OG of MD’s himself said:

“All disease begins in the gut.”

He knew, that guy. He knew even way back when that a sick gut leads to overall sickness. Smart guy.

Okay where were we before that cancer tangent…? Hmm…

  • Lack of sleep creates a weakened immune system
  • You age faster — when you sleep is when the most amount of growth hormone is released in your body (besides doing high-intensity exercise) and without adequate growth hormone you are unable run growth and repair processes leading to more cell death than cell creation. So all your wrinkles and body parts starting to sag, yeah, get some sleep.
  • You get brain fog or foggy-headedness and can’t think straight
  • Your memory declines and you become forgetful — Mr Forgetful I used to call myself back in my unhealthy days. I mean that was all based on bad food choices creating gut issues that lead to sleep issues and then issues with my memory. It’s all connected it really is, the brain and the gut.
  • Your pre-frontal cortex shuts down affecting your mental health and yes I’ve been there myself
  • Increases your risk of death from any cause — sleep shorter, live shorter
  • Weight gain

 
Your hunger hormones increase while at the same time your feeling-full hormones decrease causing you to eat more without you even realising it. Not only that, but it has been shown that just one night of poor sleep can make you as insulin-resistant as a type 2 diabetic. Meaning the sugar stays in your blood longer than usual. You become diabetic for a day after only one night of sleep deprivation.

Insulin is a hormone that drives nutrients and sugar into cells. Problem is when you’re insulin-resistant your cells will no longer listen to insulin and take in that sugar and if there’s too much sugar in the blood there’s only three places in your body that sugar can be safely stored — your liver and muscles as glycogen (a form of glucose) and your fat cells as triglycerides (fat). However, now that you’re insulin-resistant your liver and muscle cells no longer respond to insulin leaving only one place left to store all that excess sugar in your blood (which has been broken down to glucose) — your fat cells. So the liver won’t store that excess glucose, but it will turn it into triglycerides and then insulin will store that fat into your fat cells. Also, when there’s too much glucose in the blood you get a lot of it sticking to cells and proteins causing damage and inflammation (like a fire) in your body. Bottom-line being insulin-resistant sucks hard so get more sleep!

Let’s see where was I… poor sleep can also lead to:

  • Parkinson’s
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Gastrointestinal tract disorders
  • Kidney disease
  • Behavioural problems

 
Now the last negative side-effect of bad sleeping habits I find very interesting.

The brain isn’t fully connected with the lymphatic system of the body. The lymphatic system is your sewage system where lymph fluid moves waste products around your body. Since the brain isn’t fully connected to the lymphatic system the brain has it’s own waste removal system called the glymphatic system. Now this glymphatic system works only when you sleep, well let’s just say it works a lot more when you sleep. It is barely active during the day, but when you sleep this system is in overdrive. The glymphatic system works by pumping cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) through your brain’s tissues flushing waste from your brain into your body’s bloodstream that then goes to your liver to be processed for elimination. It has also been found that your brain cells shrink about 60% which allows for more effective waste removal as the CSF flows more easily between the brain cells.

Okay so if you’re not getting enough QRS you’re not allowing your glymphatic system to switch on and to do it’s job of removing waste from your brain and your brain cells won’t be shrinking providing better removal of that waste.

But wait there’s more. Before I go more into how lack of sleep affects the brain I want to talk about dental health. Now we’ve all heard of dental plaque, right. Plaque on the teeth is formed by eating too much processed and refined sugary food-like products. Note I didn’t say food, they are pretend foods, okay. So processed and refined carbohydrates is the reason for plaque forming on your teeth. Why is that? Because sugar is a sticky substance. Ever heard of caramel, butterscotch and toffee. This causes a layer of bad bacteria to stick to your teeth. Now these bacteria thrive on sugar, they love sugar. When the bacteria eat sugar they produce acids and these acids eventually lead to tooth decay and gum disease.

Why am I talking about dental plaque? Your brain cells produce a protein called amyloid-beta and the majority of amyloid-beta is removed along with other brain waste products by your brain’s glymphatic system during the CSF flush while you sleep. However, with poor sleep causing you to become insulin resistant (meaning your brain cells won’t respond to insulin and take in excess sugar leaving the sugar to float around the brain) and poor sleep stopping your brain’s glymphatic system from removing amyloid-beta those amyloid-beta proteins will start to clump together and stick to each other and will build up overtime leading to the formation of amyloid plaques. Guess what’s found in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients? Amyloid plaques.

So if you’re not getting enough sleep, if you’re not removing the waste from your brain, and if you’re consuming, eating, drinking, thinking a diet high in processed and refined sugary pretend food-like products this is potentially one cause for the buildup of amyloid-beta proteins and amyloid plaques with Alzheimer’s being the end result. Now Alzheimer’s is a chronic health condition and is a symptom that takes many many years, decades before it rises to the surface. So while people will be diagnosed with it in their later years 60s, 70s, and 80s, you actually get Alzheimer’s in your 20s, 30s, and 40s. It just takes its sweet time to show up.

So that’s the downside. That’s what happens against you when you don’t get enough sleep.

Let’s now get into some sacred sleep rituals that you can use to get QRS and improve your health and vitality.

As I’ve already mentioned if you can get to bed by 10p and sleep for six to eight hours that would be ideal, with going to sleep from midnight onwards being the worst.

You also need to reduce the amount of stimulants in your system after 2p. So no caffeine and nicotine after 2p. If you’re really struggling with sleep you’ll also want to stop consuming processed and refined sugars and alcohol in the evening as well. Okay so some of you may be thinking, ‘oh, but alcohol helps me fall asleep’. Yeah, alcohol’s a good drug for knocking you the freak out buddy, but you’re knocked out you’re not technically sleeping. You don’t get all the stages of sleep the full sleep cycle. You don’t get memory imprinting. You don’t get your brain’s glymphatic system doing what it’s meant to do. Your melatonin is low instead of high. You are knocked out, you are not sleeping with alcohol. So get rid of the stimulants after 2p and if need be keep away sugar and alcohol as well.

Another stimulant you need to remove in the evening is blue light, which has the same effect on your body as sunlight. Yes you want to get as much of it as you can during the day to help with melatonin production, but if your body thinks it’s day time while you’re indoors in the evening that’s going to prevent enough melatonin from being released helping you fall asleep. So as the sun goes down you want to reduce your exposure to blue light in the evening as much as possible. Where do you see blue light? In fluorescent and extremely bright lights, television screens, computer and laptop screens, mobile smart devices, LEDs on alarm clocks and small indicator lights. So for a light source you want low wattage amber coloured emitting light bulbs or use candles or fire from your fireplace is perfect. That’s what our ancestors evolved alongside with right.

One tip to reduce your blue light exposure is to wear amber or orange tinted glasses. So I have these amber-tinted safety goggles that I wear after sunset. I call these my anti-cancer glasses. Why? Because with these on the photoreceptors of my eyes are not getting bombarded with blue light from TVs, lights, or mobile devices allowing my body to release melatonin in the evening. Now these goggles are not the coolest or most stylish looking forms of eye-wear around, but you gots to do what you gots to do. It’s definitely helped me with my sleep. You can find these at your local hardware store or online. I’ll put a link to the pair I wear in the show notes for this episode.

There are programs and apps you can install on your computer and mobile device to change the colour temperature of the screen. Flux or f dot lux works for computers and iPhones (after you jailbreak your iPhone that is) and can be found at justgetflux.com. I personally have an Android device so I use the Twilight app that you can find on the Google Play Store. These apps are free too. Just be sure to set your geographical location properly and it’ll match with your local sunrise and sunset times and as the sun sets your screen will automatically turn amber, orange, and red.

It has been shown that exercising in the morning produces a stronger drive for sleep in the evening, okay. So exercise in the morning gives you the best sleep. Afternoon exercise will give you good sleep. Exercise too close to bedtime is not the best. Try each one out and see which one works best for you though, we’re all different. If you do feel the need to move in the evening do low intensity stuff like walking or yoga.

Next thing is you want to turn your bedroom or the room you sleep in into a sacred place just for sleep and for sexy times as well. You want to make it your sleep sanctuary. No longer is it your office, your kitchen, your dining room, or your entertainment living area. It’s a room for only sleep and sex. By entraining yourself and making the bedroom a sacred place for sleep you won’t be tempted to bring in work, to bring in food, to bring stressful baggage, and anything else that isn’t related to sleep or sex. So sleep and sex, that’s what your bedroom is for from now on if you want to have better sleep. As I say:

“There’s no need to count sheep, if you have the big O before you sleep.”

Okay? That should help with that there, alright.

First thing to do for your bedroom is to have it go dark, completely pitch black. If you have street lights or external sources of light coming in through your windows even with the curtains and blinds you have get blackout curtains. They’re really thick and block almost all light from coming through. Switch off or turn away alarm clocks and cover little lights and LEDs.

Also you want to keep the temperature of the room between 16 and 20°C or 60 and 68°F. As you wind down heat is released from your body as it prepares for sleep. If your bedroom is too hot your body will not reach its ideal temperature, which may disrupt your sleep.

Now it’s time to remove electromagnetic fields (EMFs) from the room. These EMFs interfere with your own body’s energetic field, your aura. If you have a cell phone or computer or any other electronic device near your body while you’re trying to sleep your aura will get out of balance disrupting your sleep. So switch off your devices and if you need to use them as an alarm put them into flight mode. Unplug any unused appliances and switch off your power points at the wall. Finally, turn off your wifi. This is the major source of EMFs in homes and businesses today. If someone needs to use the Internet get them hardwired in. Plug in a network cable, because wifi signals have a significant impact on your biology including sleep.

You also want to manage yourself when it comes to stress. If you’re stressed throughout the day, if your nervous system is in a sympathetic state, if you’re in fight, flight, flee, or freeze mode all day it’s going to be very difficult to calm down and wind down in the evening. It’s not impossible, but unless you have a meditation or gratitude practise that calms you down at night it’s going to be very hard for your stressed out body and mind to get into a nice rest, digest, calm, and connect state in order to fall and stay asleep.

Eating the right food at dinner can help you improve your sleep as well. Adding more whole real food carbohydrates like sweet potato, kumara, plantains, white potato, as well as white rice, to your meal makes tryptophan from the meat and fish protein you eat more available to the body giving you more serotonin and melatonin. Without the correct amount of carbs not as much tryptophan is converted. Aim to finish eating dinner at least two hours before bedtime.

Another food tip is if you’re going to eat closer to bedtime then make it a light snack full of protein and fat such as almonds, cheese, or for the best choice try a cup of warm bone broth. Drinking powdered gelatin and collagen mixed in with some water is also another good choice. Too much carbs close to bedtime will make it difficult to fall asleep.

So remember carbs at dinner or no carbs with your before-bedtime snack.

Alright so those are my tips for getting QRS.

Remember sleep is an important nutrient. Get it in your holistic lifestyle diet. Having poor sleep once in a blue moon isn’t going to kill you. Chronic lack of sleep, ongoing poor quality and neverending LRS on the other hand is a recipe for a very unawesome life.

Sweet dreams y’all.

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WGP 004: How to Breathe for an Awesome Life

In this podcast I’ll be exploring Breath and Breathing:

  • I’ll explain what breath and breathing do for the body
  • I’ll talk about how the way you breathe determines the stress in your body and mind
  • Finally, I’ll give some practical tips on how to retrain yourself to breathe deeply and fully for optimal health and wellness


CLICK HERE TO LEARN WHAT ARE THE BEST FOODS TO GET LEAN

Breath is life. Air is life. Oxygen (O2) is your primary nutrient. You can last a few weeks without food, a few days without water, but you can only last a few minutes without oxygen.

When we breathe in we’re breathing in life and energy. The O2 we inhale nourishes our lungs, heart, blood, and finally the rest of the body. When we breathe out, when we exhale, we remove waste products from our body such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and even fat! Okay we don’t literally breathe out fat, but it has recently been shown that as we burn fat over 80% of the leftover products from fat burning becomes CO2, which we exhale, while the rest of it turns to water that is excreted and removed from the body with all the other bodily fluids. This doesn’t mean the more you exhale the more fat you will lose. Remember this is just getting rid of the fat that has already been burned for energy. So you need to train your body first to burn the fat before you can breathe out the fat. Luckily we cannot breathe in fat otherwise I might be sniffing in that butter, lard, and extra-virgin olive oil all day every day! I cannot get enough of that good stuff.

Okay back to breathing!

Breathing supports proper cell function letting those little guys do the work they need to do in order to keep your body moving, digesting, assimilating, metabolising, detoxifying, eliminating, growing, and repairing. Correct breathing helps move cerebral spinal fluid that surrounds your brain and spinal cord in order to nourish and move waste products from the central nervous system. Breathing also balances your blood pH levels. pH measures how acidic or alkaline something is. Your body prefers a neutral baseline of pH in the middle. When your body gets too acidic or too alkaline sickness and disease are not that far behind. So correct breathing keeps your pH levels in that nice neutral zone and in proper balance.

When you inhale O2 creates an electrical charge in the body that grows your aura. Yes I said your aura your being your essence your life force, the energy that lives inside of you and also surrounds you. When you exhale you are breathing out energy out to the environment and your aura shrinks a little. So not only do you need to breathe to keep your cells alive, to keep your body functioning, to keep your pH in balance, you need to breathe to support your energetic essence, your spiritual being, your qi, your prana, your life force. This energy grows when you inhale and shrinks as you exhale. Your aura is in constant flux, always changing, continually moving and in flow and if you’re not breathing correctly you can upset the balance of your energetic fields, internal and external, causing blockages leading to sickness and disease.

The way you breathe determines the way you think, feel, look, and perform. When you breathe through your nose there are little passages that spins, moistens, cools, warms, and filters the air. This is one of your first lines of defence against toxins in the air and your environment.

Breathing through the nose with your tongue resting on the roof of the mouth behind your top teeth also connects the meridian system or energetic system of the body. The network of meridian channels are how your life force moves and flows throughout your body. With the right breathing you will allow your energy to flow effortlessly around your body to where it’s needed the most. Also, with your tongue in this resting position it activates your cervical flexor mechanism (neck muscles), which works together with your abdominal mechanism (abs) and the hip flexor mechanisms (hips) providing extra strength and stability for your entire body.

There’s also little nerve endings in the nose that are directly connected to the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS), so breathing through the nose stimulates these nerve endings and activates the PNS. If you can recall from the podcast episode about stress the PNS deals with growth and sex hormones giving you proper digestion, elimination, growth, reproduction, and repair.

For athletes breathing through the nose increases stamina and endurance, reduces the need for water (as you’re no longer breathing droplets out of your mouth), it enhances recovery and healing, and there’s less strain on the heart.

Also breathing through the nose releases less CO2. Yes CO2 is a waste product, but it also has a calming affect on our body and it’s actually needed to help oxygen move out of the blood and into cells. So by breathing through your nose you’ll hold onto a bit more CO2, which helps keep you in a calm relaxed state while nourishing your brain, organs, and muscles.

Mouth breathing on the other hand doesn’t filter the air letting more toxins into your lungs, heart, and bloodstream.

Breathing from your mouth also activates the SNS that deals with your fight, flight, flee, or freeze response where your heart rate and blood pressure increase and about five sixths of your blood moves from your internal organs to your muscles and limbs. This is putting your body and mind into stress mode in order for you to deal with a perceived stress… even when there isn’t one!

Now breathing has an alkalising effect on the body, it lowers your acidity. Today the main reason people breathe through the mouth is because their bodies are too acidic so they have this feel this need to breathe in larger amounts of air, not knowing that what they’re actually trying to do is lower their acidity. The problem is while CO2 has a calming effect on the body oxygen has an energising effect and this can activate the SNS. So with your stress response switched on this can lead to even more mouth breathing as well as chest breathing and this continues to stimulate the SNS that then leads to more mouth and chest breathing. This is a vicious stress cycle.

So why are so many people more acidic today? Well the western diet today is made up mostly of two of the top acidic foods of all times: sugars and grains! Dairy can also have an acidifying effect in some people. Eating sugars and grains raises your acidity, brings about more mouth and more chest breathing, which switches on your stress response. Now this connection between breathing and food was found to be true way back in the day. There’s a book by George Catlin called Shut Your Mouth And Save Your Life (snazzy title) and this was published back in 1870. Here’s a quote from the book:

“Bread may almost as well be taken into the lungs, as cold air and wind into the stomach.”

What that means is that what you eat affects how you breathe and how much stress your body is under. So if you want to be in a more rest, digest, calm, and connect state you’re going to have to breathe through your nose and not through your mouth, but in order to stop your body wanting to get more air in and having to breathe through the mouth, you’re going to have to remove refined and processed sugars, grains, and possibly dairy from your diet.

Breathing through the mouth also causes postural issues. Because the jaw is always open people who mouth breathe tend to have a head down forward posture, which can cause neck pain and also lower back pain. As I said earlier when you breathe through the nose with your mouth closed and with the tongue resting on the roof of your mouth behind your top teeth you are anchoring the postural system. With the mouth closed and tongue in the correct resting position your neck muscles have a stronger platform to work from with much more stability.

Mouth breathers usually breathe through their chest and when you breathe in from the chest you’re not expanding your diaphragm or your belly. When you inhale through your nose and expand the diaphragm while pushing out your belly making yourself look fat what’s happening here is you’re allowing your internal organs to move. As the diaphragm expands above it pushes your internal organs downward while at the same time the ribcage expands sideways opening up more space for the organs to move around in. As your belly expands it gives way allowing your internal organs to move outward. So what’s happening here is the diaphragm is pushing the organs down, the ribcage is opening sideways, the belly is opening outwards, and this allows the organs to move into that extra space. This diaphragmatic belly breathing massages your internal organs giving them a little squeeze (a little love). This allows fluids to move more easily throughout your system. It allows venous blood (the blood that needs to go back to the heart to pickup more O2) to flow more easily meaning your body doesn’t have to use higher pressure to move the blood around.

Belly breathing also aids your lymphatic system. The lymphatic system is your sewage system and it moves toxins and waste products around the body. Lymph, however, doesn’t have a pump to move it around your body like the blood does with the heart. Lymph only moves when you move. As you belly breathe and stretch your diaphragm you are providing more movement of the lymph around your body compared to chest breathing allowing for more removal of waste.

Okay so here is a list of some common symptoms of breathing-related disorders like chronic mouth breathing from the book Breathe To Succeed by Tania Clifton-Smith:

  • Shortness of breath
  • Fatigue (extreme tiredness, weakness, exhaustion)
  • Muscle aches and pain
  • Sighing and yawning
  • Poor concentration
  • Headaches
  • Insomnia (inability to sleep well)
  • Chest pain or tightness
  • Feelings of panic or loss
  • Dizziness
  • Pins and needles and numbness
  • Gastric reflux (burning sensation in lower chest area)
  • Nausea
  • Bad breath
  • Bloating
  • Flatulence (farting)
  • Anxiety (I’m familiar with that one)
  • Electric shock feelings
  • Eye strain
  • Foggy head
  • Temperature changes in the body
  • Irritable cough
  • Racing heart

 
If you have any of these symptoms this could be because you are a mouth or chest breather.

Okay so how can you improve your breathing pattern and your ability to breathe through the nose and from your diaphragm? Well I’m going to give a few tips here.

Remember for a normal relaxed breathing pattern you want to be inhaling through the nose with your mouth closed at all times with the tongue resting on the roof or your mouth behind your top teeth. When you swallow your tongue will naturally go into that position. Don’t force or tighten your tongue to stay there. Keep it relaxed. You can exhale through your nose or the mouth.

Alright first technique is very simple because it’s just using your hands as guides. Place one hand on your chest and put the other hand on your belly. Now as you inhale through the nose the hand on the belly should move first during the first two thirds of the breath. On the last third of the inhale that’s when it’s okay for the chest hand to start moving as the chest pushes up and out. When you exhale both hands should move back to where they were. Exhale naturally.

Another way to retrain your breathing pattern is by using an empty water bottle. Fill it with a few centimetres or inches of water. Lie down on your back on a flat surface and place the water bottle on your stomach. As you inhale through your nose your goal is to move the water bottle up toward the ceiling. Remember the first two thirds of your breathe should get that water bottle moving while the last third your chest can come into play. Exhale relaxing your body naturally. Without tipping over the bottle.

Another technique you can use is one I learnt from Paul Chek a Holistic Health Practitioner and Physical Therapist. Grab a piece of string and while standing at rest exhale letting the air out of your body and tie the string around your waist over your belly button into a tight bow or knot. Now with the string around your waist every time you breathe in through your nose you want to expand your diaphragm increasing the size of your belly and you should feel the tightness of the string with every inhale. Exhale naturally. You can find more information on this technique and many other life affirming practices in Paul’s awesome book How to Eat, Move and Be Healthy!, which you can find in the Whole Guidance Book Reading Club at wholeguidance.com/brc.

A quick bonus tip for those dealing with stress and who have a racing mind with a million and one thoughts going through their heads this technique I’m about to talk about is perfect for calming you down, putting you from sympathetic mode into parasympathetic mode, from the need for speed to the flow of slow, and bringing you back into centre. This is a yoga exercise called Alternate Nostril Breathing or Nadi Shodhan Pranayam. While sitting or standing use one hand and block one nostril with your finger or thumb and breathe in through the other nostril (remember to belly breathe). Inhale for a count of between 4-8 seconds then exhale for the same count. Now alternate and block the other nostril and inhale and exhale as you did before. Aim to do 10 breathes each side. This exercise balances both hemispheres of your brain as well as your autonomic nervous system helping you ground yourself and bringing you back into this present moment. So for those stressing the freak out this technique is your new best friend. It’s free, it’s simple, and it’s effective medicine. I highly recommend it.

I will put a link to a YouTube video showing this technique in the show notes for this episode.

So breathing correctly as you can probably tell by now is really really really really important. It nourishes your body and mind, keeps the body moving and functioning properly, feeds and clears the nerves, improves waste removal, strengthens and stabilises your posture, balances your pH levels, reduces your stress, and enhances your life force energy.

Whenever someone asks me for advice on how to deal with stress or a difficult time in their life I have only two words for them: JUST BREATHE. And if they come back with a bunch of nonsense on how that’s sounds too easy or that they don’t have time to breathe I have another two words for them, but I dare not utter those words on this PG rated podcast.

Just breathe people… Just breathe.

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The Highly Sensitive Person

The Highly Sensitive Person – Elaine N. Aron PhD
(Buy from Amazon; Buy from The Book Depository)

Are you a highly sensitive person?

Do you have a keen imagination and vivid dreams?  Is time alone each day as essential to you as food and water?  Are you “too shy” or “too sensitive” according to others?  Do noise and confusion quickly overwhelm you?  If your answers are yes, you may be a Highly Sensitive Person (HSP).

Most of us feel overstimulated every once in a while, but for the Highly Sensitive Person, it’s a way of life.  In this groundbreaking book, Dr. Elaine Aron, a psychotherapist, workshop leader and highly sensitive person herself, shows you how to identify this trait in yourself and make the most of it in everyday situations.  Drawing on her many years of research and hundreds of interviews, she shows how you can better understand yourself and your trait to create a fuller, richer life.

In The Highly Sensitive Person, you will discover:
* Self-assessment tests to help you identify your particular sensitivities
* Ways to reframe your past experiences in a positive light and gain greater self-esteem in the process
* Insight into how high sensitivity affects both work and personal relationships
* Tips on how to deal with overarousal
* Informations on medications and when to seek help
* Techniques to enrich the soul and spirit

 

Disclaimer: This page contains affiliate links that may provide monetary compensation to help support the Whole Guidance Vision of Creating a Happy and Healthy Planet should you make a purchase. We very much appreciate and thank you for your support.

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WGP 003: How Stress is Making You Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead

In this podcast I’ll be exploring Stress:

  • I’ll explain what stress is and the different types of stress
  • I’ll talk about how stress affects the body
  • Finally, I’ll give practical tips on how to reduce stress in your life


CLICK HERE TO LEARN WHAT ARE THE BEST FOODS TO GET LEAN

Stress is defined as placing pressure or tension on an object. What most people don’t realise is that there is such a thing as good stress. This is called eustress, e-u-stress, eustress. The difference between eustress and stress (or distress) is determined by our own perception of the stress. For example imagine two people riding a rollercoaster. One person experiences stress and the other experiences eustress. While one person experiences pain, anxiety, and worry the other person experiences, pleasure, joy, and excitement. Same pressure. Same tension, but different experiences different perceptions of that stress. One has distress (or stress). The other has eustress.

My point here is that everything that happens to us is not good or bad until we make the choice to make it mean good or bad. So whatever type of stress you are experiencing, keep in the back of your mind that you do have the choice to see this stress as something positive something for you, eustress, or as something negative, distress.

There are three main types of stress and many subtypes of these stressors. The three types of stress are:

  1. Physical
  2. Mental and Emotional
  3. Biochemical and Physiological

 
Examples of the subtypes of these stressors include electromagnetic stress, nutritional stress, and thermal stress.

Now these three main types of stress can be broken down into two groups. External stressors such as being out in the sun, getting injured, or being exposed to toxic chemicals. Then there’s internal stressors such as having a disease and having an imbalance in your hormones. So an example of a physical stress would be working out at the gym. Having difficult relationships would be an example of a mental and emotional stress. An example of biochemical and physiological stress would be when you come down with the cold or flu and your immune system has to battle the bugs in order to bring the inside of your body back into balance.

So those are the three main types of stress. There’s physical stress, which is normally associated with external stress. There is mental and emotional stress, which can be either external or internal. Then there’s biochemical and physiological stress, which is an internal stressor.

Your body is made up of a system of nerves and the nervous system is broken down into different types. The Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) is the system that looks after your body automatically. It digests, it eliminates, it regulates blood flow, hormone production, temperature, etc. You don’t have to think about doing any of this stuff yourself. These are run by your ANS. Now as you live life and experience different events the ANS can go down either one of two pathways. One pathway is the Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS). The other pathway is the Parasympathetic Nervous System (PNS).

The SNS puts your body into a fight, flight, flee, or freeze state. When activated the SNS releases stress hormones which raise heart rate, blood pressure, and moves the blood from your internal organs to your muscles and limbs. These stress hormones also prevent fat mobilisation and fat metabolism. What does that mean? It means your body stops moving fat out of the fat cells, out of their homes, which means you will not be burning any fat for energy. So much for reducing your waistline hmm.

The PNS on the other hand puts you in a rest, digest, calm, and connect state. The PNS deals with growth, fat-burning, and sex hormones that help keep your heart rate and blood pressure in a healthy range and your blood remains close to your internal organs allowing for your digestion, elimination, growth, repair, and reproductive processes to function normally. Also your body becomes a fat-burning machine.

When you perceive or sense a stress your body goes into short-term breakdown mode (the SNS) in order to help you survive that stressor in that moment. When you perceive that you are safe and secure your body remains in long-term growth and repair mode (the PNS) helping you to live a happy and healthy quality of life.

Now back in the day our ancestors would have dealt with acute (short and sudden) stressors like running from a tiger, but most of their lives were pretty relaxed. Today, however, traffic jams, deadlines, exams, and difficult relationships, these are the tigers of our time. Unfortunately these are not acute experiences. These are chronic, these are ongoing so your body is in constant breakdown mode. Remember the SNS releases stress hormones to help you survive, but these stress hormones are breaking you down and causing you to store fat and when stress hormones are up your growth and sex hormones are down. If you can reduce the amount of stress that you perceive in your life the PNS can be activated more often so you can have your growth and sex hormones higher than your stress hormones. Giving you proper digestion, elimination, and repair, as well as more fat-burning.

Again be aware that any stress you encounter, whether it’s literally being chased by a tiger or being chased by your boss, your body is going to begin breaking down. Your body isn’t going to be able to digest your last meal. Your liver isn’t going to be able to detoxify your blood. Your bowels aren’t going to be able to eliminate the waste. Your mood isn’t happy. Your body isn’t growing or repairing. Your immune system isn’t able to fight off bad bugs. Your body will be storing fat instead of burning it. Your sex drive and your ability to have children is going to be pretty much zero, so no sexy time for you! But if you can reduce the stress in your life, reduce the stress hormones, increase the growth and sex hormones… sexy times are here again my friend.

So that’s how stress affects the body. It’s either going to break you down in order to help you survive or it’s going to help you grow and repair. So how much distress compared to eustress do you have in your life? Something to meditate on.

If you’ve got issues with managing your weight, digestion, elimination, getting over an illness, a nagging chronic pain, migraines, fatigue (if you’re always tired), fertility or sex issues, all of these symptoms plus much more come under too much stress, chronic stress in your life.

There are many ways to reduce stress in your life. There are whole books written on the topic. Two books I recommend are Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers and The Tapping Solution.

Personally I reduce stress in many different ways and one of them includes writing down every single perceived stress that I have in my life at the time and out of that list I pick one, just one to focus on and work on reducing its impact on my life. The one stress I pick is the one I think is the most stressing to me in that moment.

So prioritise, figure out what is your primary stressor. Write out a list of all your stresses right now and then pick the one that you think is stressing you out the most. Not the one you think you can deal to the easiest, but the one you perceive to be affecting you the most in your life right now. Highlight it, circle it, underline it, just get it in your mind’s eye. That is what you’re going to focus on.

Next thing I do is I write down all the things about that primary stress that’s actually causing me to stress. So, for example, right now I feel a lot of stress when it comes to time. I feel like there isn’t enough time. I’m unable to finish projects or to finish books that I’m reading. I don’t have enough time to prepare the food that I want to make. I’m feeling pressure and like I’m failing. So that’s what I write down. What is this stress causing me? What is it stopping me from doing that I’d like to be doing? What is it causing me to feel? The reason I do this is so I can understand exactly where I am and how I am doing in that moment. Remember this saying paraphrased from Alice in Wonderland:

“If you don’t know where you are going, any road will get you there.”

You cannot get from A to B if you don’t even know where A is. Your turn. Write down how your primary stressor is affecting you and your life. This is your A, this is where you are now.

Next thing I write down is if I didn’t have this stressor what would my life be like then. For example, if I had all the time in the world I’d finish the projects that I wanted to finish on time when I said I would finish them. I would finish the books that I wanted to read and I would have the time to prepare the food that I wanted to eat. Then I would feel awesome and accomplished. After this step I know now where I want to be and I know how I want to feel so I have a better idea of why I’m doing what I’m doing. This is giving me a why, a reason to manage myself better when it comes to time.

So write down for yourself what would your life be like and how would you feel if your primary stressor was no longer a perceived stress.

What I do next is to plan. How am I going to manage this stress practically and effectively? In terms of time it means making bookings in my Google calendar. I’m going to create separate bookings for project work, reading books, and for preparing meals. Then I have to stick to the calendar and take the necessary action when the booking comes up.

Create a plan for your particular situation. For example, if it’s trying to stick to a diet to reduce your waistline what is it that you’re not doing now that you can do in the future and what might your plan look like? Maybe it’s creating a meal plan and preparing and cooking meals in advance like cooking a whole week’s worth of meals in one day.

So in a nutshell:

  1. Write down all your stressors
  2. Identify your primary stressor
  3. Write down how it’s stressing you out, how it’s affecting your life, how it’s making you feel right now
  4. Then write down how your life would be and how you’d feel if you didn’t have this stress
  5. Make a plan
  6. Finally, be consistent and take action on that plan
    [click here to download the WG-Stress Reduction.pdf worksheet]

 
This is one way I deal with stress and it’s just that one thing, that one stress that I focus on. When I feel like it’s no longer stressing me then it’s back to the list and creating priority number one again.

Now along with this practise you have to be living a healthy holistic lifestyle. Without the right lifestyle factors in place the technique I just mentioned is like a house of cards and it’s only a matter of time before it all comes crashing down. A healthy holistic lifestyle brings stability and strength to every aspect of your life. I’ll go into more detail about what a healthy holistic lifestyle really means in later episodes, but I’ll sum it up here:

  • Get good consistent quality sleep
  • Move often throughout the day
  • Eat whole real foods
  • Drink plenty of quality filtered water
  • Breathe deep belly breaths and take time out to be with yourself and your breath, and just breathe
  • Leg go of resentment in relation to yourself and others
  • Get more exposure to Mother Nature especially the sun and the soil
  • Dramatically reduce your exposure to toxins

 
That about sums up living a healthy holistic lifestyle. If you can strive to do all of these things you will successfully reduce the stress in your life long-term.

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WGP 002: Being in an Attitude of Gratitude

In this podcast I’ll be exploring what it means to be in an Attitude of Gratitude:

  • I’ll explain what gratitude really is
  • I’ll also explain why everyone should be practising gratitude in their lives everyday
  • Finally I’ll talk about a few different ways to practice being in an attitude of gratitude


CLICK HERE TO LEARN WHAT ARE THE BEST FOODS TO GET LEAN

What is gratitude? Let me read what Professor Google says. The definition of gratitude: “The quality of being thankful; readiness to show appreciation for and to return kindness.” Alright so thanks and appreciation, sounds pretty standard.

Now I like to give these two quotes of what I think gratitude really means.

This is from Melody Beattie:

“Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend.”

And this from Wayne Dyer:

“Change the way you look at things and the things you look at will change.”

To me gratitude is about seeing things in a new light, in a different perspective and there’s different ways people express gratitude: blessing and prayer; showing appreciation to people; saying thank you and actually meaning it. Gratitude isn’t so much what you say, it’s how you’re being in that moment that you’re giving thanks and appreciation and being grateful and praying and blessing. I love to say “say what you mean and mean what you say.” You can say thank you and not mean it, but you can BE thankful and there’s no denying what you mean.

That’s what gratitude is. Gratitude is a life skill, a tool to reframe parts of our lives from not that much, from scarcity to more than enough and abundance.

Today we love in a world where everything is pretty much 24/7, plugged in all the time, non-stop. We live in the world of FOMO. FOMO means Fear Of Missing Out. Now I believe that everyone should be practising and dedicating a few minutes a day to being in an attitude of gratitude because that will get rid of your FOMO disease, your FOMO syndrome, your FOMO illness, okay. Remember gratitude is a reframing tool. It helps us s change our perception of things, so where there wasn’t enough now there’s plenty. What we have is plenty. By practising gratitude no longer do you have this fear of missing out because what you have is already enough and it takes time to see things this way, but that’s why you got to practise this. It’s a tool that you use to build a skill that then becomes a habit.

So being in an attitude of gratitude will help you disconnect from this 24/7 online world that we live in currently. Disconnect just enough to bring you into the present moment, to being more mindful and aware of how your thinking, how your feeling, how’s your body going, how’s your mind going, how’s your life going. Right now we are surrounded by so much stimulation that sometimes we don’t know whether we’re coming or going. Just taking time out to say thank you or to give a blessing or to have a prayer, just being grateful for five seconds will bring you to that moment in the present very mindful and aware of how you’re feeling. What sensations are you feeling in your body? What thoughts are running through your mind before you get into that attitude of gratitude and then what thoughts come after?

Gratitude, it’s not just being polite and saying thank you. It’s disconnecting yourself from the confusion that can appear around you. It’s removing the fear of missing out. It’s bringing you to the present moment, increasing your awareness and making you very mindful of how you’re feeling and how you’re doing in the moment. It’s nothing small, it’s quite huge. Grat-ti-tude. One word. Three syllables. Infinite amount of possibilities of how it can change your life.

Now there is no one way to practise being in an attitude of gratitude, okay. Now I like to leave every episode of the Whole Guidance Podcast in an attitude of gratitude. I explained in episode one how I do this personally. So, before bed I give thanks for one person I interacted with that day, one goal that I accomplished, and also another random experience. That’s how I personally do it. Right before bed and I give thanks for those three things.

Now you may want to set a timer, a gratitude reminder. You might want to book something in your calendar. You can set it for every hour. Maybe you can remind yourself to do this at every meal. You might want to do it first thing in the morning after you wake up. You might want to do it before exercise, after exercise, before meditation, after meditation, before bed. You have to find the time and the duration that works for you. My attitude of gratitude practise takes less than 5 minutes for example.

The way you practise gratitude whether it’s a blessing, whether it’s prayer, whether it’s saying ‘thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you’ a thousand times in front of a mirror, is up to you. As long as it brings you into the moment and puts a smile on your face you’ll know you’re doing what’s right for you. There’s no one way to do this.

Try this easy 10 second practise. In any moment you have the need to be grateful and this could be anytime it comes to mind (it doesn’t matter whether you’re waiting to cross the road, stuck in traffic, bored at work, stressed at home, waking up, brushing your teeth, taking out the trash) close your eyes if possible and think of someone you’d like to say thank you to and mean it and be sure to have an image of them clearly in your head. This could be a supernatural being or even yourself. Take a deep breath counting four seconds as you breath in and on the out breath say out loud or in your mind ‘thank you’. Also, let out that breath as a huge sigh of relief. Sorted. You just practised being in an attitude of gratitude.

So it doesn’t matter when you do it. It doesn’t matter how you do it. As long as you do it. As long as you can take time out to bring love in. Love? What’s that got to do with gratitude? Well, there’s this book called A Course In Miracles (it’s a pretty beast of a book). It’s about life. This is what ACIM says about gratitude:

“Gratitude goes hand in hand with love, and where one is, the other must be found.”

This has proven to be true time and again in my experience. So I could have called this podcast attitude of love, but it just didn’t sound as good off the tongue. When you’re being in an attitude of gratitude you’re bringing yourself back into love. What I’m saying is that if you can take time out to bring some love in you’ll find yourself feeling less stressful and a lot happier.

Now I would like to hear from you, the beautiful listener. How do you practise being in an attitude of gratitude? Is it weekly, daily, multiple times a day? Do you use prayer or give blessings or do you just say thank you to yourself, to others, to God, to the Universe? How do you do it? Leave your comments [in the comments section below] or leave your comments in an iTunes review. Either way I would love to hear from you.

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WGP 001: What is the Difference Between Conventional Mainstream Medicine and Holistic and Functional Health?

In this podcast I’ll be exploring two healthcare models — Conventional Mainstream Medicine (CMM — the main one that’s used in western societies today) as well as Holistic and Functional Health (HFH):

  • I’ll talk about how each model works and what they are
  • We’ll go over the negatives of each as well as the positives
  • Finally I’ll talk about which healthcare model you should use for particular health issues


CLICK HERE TO LEARN WHAT ARE THE BEST FOODS TO GET LEAN

CMM. This includes your standard medical doctor, surgeon, regular dentist and all the specialities in between such as cardiologist, neurologist, oncologist, immunologist, gynaecologist, and all the other specialists and experts that are involved in this model. This model you can really call a disease-care model instead of healthcare and the reason I say that is because it’s mainly focused on diagnosing and treating symptoms and diseases. If you go to your doctor with a problem they normally give you something or suggest surgery to remove the problem. There’s no further investigation. There’s no further discussion. It’s just ‘what’s the issue?’, ‘let’s get rid of it’. It’s really disease focused so I like to call this a disease-care model. That doesn’t mean it doesn’t have its place, but that’s how this particular model works. It’s really focused on diagnosing and treating your symptom and disease.

Now if we compare that with the HFH care models (this includes practitioners like naturopaths, chiropractors, functional medical doctors, holistic health coaches, acupuncturists, energy healers, holistic biological dentists, as well as shamans), these models are focused on you and they want to get to the root cause of the problem. You go to a HFH practitioner, you say you have a problem, and they say ‘well let’s investigate further to find out what’s causing the problem’. This model you can call a self-care model or a patient-care model. It’s really focused on you, the patient, the self, the person. The reason it’s more you focused is because they look at the holistic, the whole picture of you and your lifestyle. They look at movement, sleep, nutrition, hydration, your breathing, your connection with yourself and others, your exposure to outdoors and Mother Nature, and your exposure to toxins at work and at home.

The reason HFH practitioners like myself investigate further is because symptoms are not the problem. They are the result, they are the last thing to show up after a problem has already occurred. What we do is look and get to the underlying root cause of the symptom, of the disease. It’s not about treating the disease. It’s about treating you, the person, what’s happening in your life, your whole life — holistic right. That’s what HFH is all about. It’s a self-care model that gets to the root cause of the issue. We don’t diagnose or treat any specific symptom or disease you may have. We look at you holistically and support your lifestyle in order to have the symptoms and the diseases remove themselves from your life.

There you have the two healthcare models. One being a disease-care model focused really only on symptoms and diseases. The other one is a self-care model where it’s about educating not medicating you and focusing on the root cause of your problem. Because ultimately when you get rid of the root cause the symptoms and the diseases go away all by themselves.

Now let’s look into the negatives of each model.

Negatives of CMM. Well a major negative is that it doesn’t get to the root cause, it’s only treating the symptom and symptoms are like the tip of an iceberg. There’s a lot more going on underneath that CMM just doesn’t look at. If you’ve got an ongoing chronic issue you don’t want to treat what’s coming up to the surface. You want to look deep down and get to the root cause.

Another negative of CMM would be the time factor, wasting a lot of time waiting and stressing about the results and not knowing when you’re going to be seen. It’s a major stress on the body, on your mind and I had recent experience of this. I spent 11 hours, 11 hours in one day having to go to three hospitals seeing four doctors to find out whether my what I thought at the time was a slight swelling of my eye, but it turned out to be a really bad eye infection, possibly a really severe eye infection where I could have lost my vision and needed surgery. But thankfully it was not a really serious infection. It took 11 hours to get to that point to find out whether I needed surgery or stay overnight for observation or just go home with drugs, which is what I ended up doing. But 11 hours, three hospitals, four doctors… man… timewaster, but it had to be done.

Alright another negative, another downside to CMM — the side-effects of the medications and the surgery. The thing that people don’t realise is they go in with one problem, they’re given a drug or surgery, they take the drug or have the surgery and then they leave with another problem possibly more. I was watching this documentary I can’t remember the name, it’s about juicing, and the people who sign up they’re all reading the side-effects of the drugs that they’re currently on and this one guy whose reading his slip, it’s all in fine print, he’s reading it and one of the side-effects is death… DEATH! Oh man that was classic, but yeah so side-effects of the drugs you take.

Now on my recent journey into the CMM world seeing four doctors having to visit three hospitals and wait 11 hours (I’ll say it again!) is that I was injected with antibiotics. I was also injected with dye for the CT scan. I was injected with dye and I also had dye eye-drops in order for the doctors to see better what was happening inside my eye, they had to put dye, drops of dye in my eye. So dye in my eye, dye in my body, antibiotics in my body and I’ve been given antibiotic eye-drops and antibiotic pills. I’m all drugged up at the moment. I’m still finishing the pills and I don’t know how long it takes for that dye to get out of my system. I don’t know what side-effects I’m going to get from this, but I know the side-effects I’m getting from the antibiotics already. My thinking, just the feeling of, just feel there’s something a bit off about me. So side-effects people you got to think of it.

A quick summary then. The three negatives of CMM are not getting to the root cause, wasting a lot of time, and the side-effects of the drugs and the surgery.

Let’s go to HFH and the negatives of this model.

Number one I would have to say is it takes a lot of effort. Takes a lot of energy, desire, willpower, motivation, inspiration, you really have to want to get better in this model. Because in this model there’s no pill or cream or surgery that you can take that’s going to fix you. We guide you, we support you. We can show you the path, but you have to walk it, right. Here’s the door, only you can open it. It takes a lot of energy and effort and you have to want it. You really have to want it in this self-care model. Remember we educate we don’t medicate and the education is only as good as what you do with it. Bruce Lee said:

“Knowing is not enough, we must apply. Willing is not enough, we must do.”

So until you can put that knowledge into action, get your desire and willpower moving in the right direction this model is not going to do much for you.

Okay, the second downside to this model is that it is going to take time to heal if you have a specific health condition that you’re trying to get over. Normally for however many years you have had the health condition it will take that many months to heal it or to have the symptoms reduce dramatically. Okay, it’s going to take time. For example my suicidal tendencies I had those for 16 years. After following a HFH programme — 12 months — I was fortunate enough to get over those dark thoughts in 12 months. It could have taken 16 months, it could have taken 24 months. Whatever you’re dealing with it took a long time for you to get into that state and it is going to take you a long time to get out of that state. That’s one of the downsides, it’s going to take time to heal.

Another negative, last one I’ll speak of is the financial cost. Governments and insurance companies they don’t really support this health approach as yet, in the future that will change. Right now it’s cheaper to go to your local doctor than to see a HFH practitioner so you’ll have to put your money where your health is. If you look at it as an investment it’s not too bad, but it is more than you’re used to paying for your local GP (general practitioner). Just be aware of that.

There you have three downsides there of HFH. It’s going to take effort and a real want to achieve your goals. It’s going to take time to heal and it’s going to cost more than what you’re used to paying for your health.

Alright let’s look at the positive sides now of each of these models.

CMM positive number one, major one, obviously it saves lives. The doctors, the nurses, everyone involved, the technology, the drugs, the surgery, it’s all part of this massive machine that in the end saves lives every day. It saved my eye. My eye is healing. It’s still a bit red, but who knows what could have happened if I didn’t have any of that. There’s not enough chinese herbs, sunlight, and positive affirmations that would have got rid of my eye infection. Lets put it that way. CMM came to the rescue, saved my eye. Hallelujah, I’m very appreciative of that so there you go. Positive number one it saves lives.

Another positive would be the initial financial cost. Seeing your local GP, going to the emergency department the cost is low and as long as it’s just a one-off health issue that you’re dealing with, this one-off visit can cost you next to nothing. Especially compared to the HFH model. However, if you are sick for longer periods of time the cost does rise, but initially the good thing about this is that it’s a low cost way of getting your health issue looked at.

The last good thing I’ll talk about, this model is very accessible. It’s the mainstream and it’s called that because it’s popular. It’s on every corner almost. You got hospitals everywhere, clinics everywhere so it’s very accessible. It’s a lot easier to gain access to this model for most people because it’s more popular and it’s what people know. In time that will change, but for now it is the mainstream model, it is the one that’s easier to get to.

So there you have it. CMM saves lives. The initial cost is low and it’s really accessible for the majority of people.

Now let’s get into the positives for HFH.

Obviously the main positive here is that this self-care model gets to the root cause of the symptom or disease. Alright, we don’t treat the symptom or disease specifically. We investigate further. We dig deeper. We don’t worry about the tip of the iceberg, we want to see what’s happening underneath the water. Get a good picture of the entire iceberg and by doing so, by investigating further the root cause can be found and can be worked on. So that’s positive number one.

Another upside to the HFH model is the time that you get to spend with your practitioner. A good HFH practitioner will spend on average 45-60 minutes during their consultations with a client or patient. I spend 60 minutes during my consultations. What it allows is for each of us to get a better understanding of where you’ve come from and how you’ve got to be where you are and discussing and having a dialogue on where you want to see yourself in the future and what’s really happening that’s preventing you from getting what you want right now. It’s a great way to build a strong connection, a bond, friendships can be created over this time. Which is why this model does have a lot more positive outcomes, because it has a more community family friendly feel to it. So the time you get to spend with your practitioner that’s a huge plus here.

Another upside, another positive for the self-care model is the self-care part of it. It’s about teaching you right. It’s about education, not medication. It’s about giving you the knowledge and the power, empowering you to look after yourself for the rest of your life. So the education you receive in this model equals freedom! Because you’re no longer in front of a guy or a gal in a white labcoat bowing down to their all knowingness of what’s going on with you. Because really they don’t know. They’re just going by a book that someone else wrote. What we do in HFH is we don’t know about you either, but what we do is we work with you in those long consults over time to help you get to know you. We don’t want to know you. We want you to know you. Once you know who you are, once you know how you work then there’s no longer a need to go seeking knowledge about yourself through someone else. Isn’t it weird how we go to someone and ask them ‘what’s wrong with me, can you help me?’ and that’s fine that’s what coaches and teaches and people like that are for, but a good coach won’t say ‘I know exactly what’s wrong with you’. What they’ll say is ‘I know how to help you find out what’s wrong with you’ and that’s our role — educating, and the education you receive is priceless!

So there you have the three upsides of HFH. Get’s to the root cause. You get a lot of time to spend with your practitioner and the self education, the knowledge that you learn about you.

So how do you know which model you need to use for your health issue? Well, quite simply if you’re dying, if it’s life or death, if you have major trauma, major bodily harm, a major infection like I had recently with my eye, yeah CMM is where you want to head. Yeah you don’t want to be going to a holistic or functional practitioner like a naturopath if you’ve got exposed bone or if you’re bleeding internally I don’t think a supplement or chinese herb is going to stop that or heal you. So major trauma, major bodily harm, life or death situations, major infections, then you want to go the CMM route.

Now if you’re suffering from a chronic health condition, something that you’ve had for a long time that’s ongoing or if it’s just really annoying, these are health issues caused by living an unbalanced life. These are lifestyle problems. Things such as migraines, headaches, digestive issues, skin issues, depression, anxiety, back ache, muscle and joint pain, autoimmune diseases as well such as diabetes, Hashimoto’s and Graves’ disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and of course the major lifestyle disease of this century obesity. These have all come about because of a lifestyle that’s out of balanced and you don’t want to take medication from CMM just to get rid of the symptom because that’s not going to get rid of the imbalance of the way you’re living. So the HFH approach where we can teach you on how to balance different parts of your life to get to the root cause and to remove the symptoms that’s where you want to go. So for chronic health complaints, for issues that you just can’t get rid of, anything that’s not life or death basically, you want to go with the self-care model.

Now also you don’t actually have to be sick, fat, and nearly dead to see a HFH practitioner. Remember we educate you on how to live a healthy lifestyle that’s particular to your needs. You might be feeling okay, but you want to feel awesome. Or you might be an athlete who wants to perform better. You might be someone who works in an office, an executive. You might be someone who’s got a lot going on at home, a stay at home mum or dad and you just want to perform better. A HFH practitioner that’s what we do best. Whether you’re sick or not we will always help you find ways to perform better in life. You wouldn’t go to your medical doctor, there’s no pill a perform better pill (well for some guys it’s the blue one). No, you need support. You need coaching. You need mentorship and that’s where HFH really shine. So even if you’re not suffering from a health condition the self-care model is great for helping you find ways to improve your current lifestyle.

Okay, where do you find these HFH people? I’ll tell you where to find them. Actually there’s one talking to you right now. If you did want to work with me you can go to my website wholeguidance.com, go to the contact page, get in touch with me, see if we’re a good fit for each other, see if there’s a connection between us. No point working with anyone who you can’t relate to or don’t think they’re on the same page as you so make sure you do get that initial contact and find out more about the practitioner you’re thinking of working with.

Remember it’s your health it’s your life. You will always be the most interested in getting your life better, but the next person down should be your practitioner and if they’re just taking you on for a job, that’s not what you want. You want someone to take you on as a student. We educate so I want to teach, I don’t want to preach.

But that’s just me. You can go to these other websites where you’ll find HFH practitioner’s. First up we got chekconnect.com. Also fdnselfcare.com. Another good site to go to is primaldocs.com where you’ll find doctors that are primitive, these guys are primal, old-school. Old-school is the new-school right. Finally, functionalmedicine.org. Those four websites including my own you’ll be able to find HFH practitioner in your area or not in your area. Today a lot of consultations are done over the Internet. Skype calls, Google Hangouts it’s all done online. If the person that you’d like to work with isn’t local that is an option that is available thanks to technology. Not all technology is evil right. There some good parts to it

Okay so go to those websites, find someone, but remember have a dialogue with the person you want to work with. Make sure they’re on the same page as you. Make sure they see you more than just a number. Be sure to use your sixth sense, ‘does this person have my good intentions in mind’.

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The Big Fat Surprise

The Big Fat Surprise – Nina Teicholz
(Buy from Amazon; Buy from The Book Depository)

A New York Times bestseller
Named one of The Economist’s Books of the Year 2014
Named one of The Wall Street Journal’s Top Ten Best Nonfiction Books of 2014
Kirkus Reviews Best Nonfiction Books of 2014
Forbes’s Most Memorable Healthcare Book of 2014
Named a Best Food Book of 2014 by Mother Jones
Named one of Library Journal‘s Best Books of 2014

In The Big Fat Surprise, investigative journalist Nina Teicholz reveals the unthinkable: that everything we thought we knew about dietary fat is wrong. She documents how the low-fat nutrition advice of the past sixty years has amounted to a vast uncontrolled experiment on the entire population, with disastrous consequences for our health.

For decades, we have been told that the best possible diet involves cutting back on fat, especially saturated fat, and that if we are not getting healthier or thinner it must be because we are not trying hard enough. But what if the low-fat diet is itself the problem? What if the very foods we’ve been denying ourselves—the creamy cheeses, the sizzling steaks—are themselves the key to reversing the epidemics of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease?

In this captivating, vibrant, and convincing narrative, based on a nine-year-long investigation, Teicholz shows how the misinformation about saturated fats took hold in the scientific community and the public imagination, and how recent findings have overturned these beliefs. She explains why the Mediterranean Diet is not the healthiest, and how we might be replacing trans fats with something even worse. This startling history demonstrates how nutrition science has gotten it so wrong: how overzealous researchers, through a combination of ego, bias, and premature institutional consensus, have allowed dangerous misrepresentations to become dietary dogma.

With eye-opening scientific rigor, The Big Fat Surprise upends the conventional wisdom about all fats with the groundbreaking claim that more, not less, dietary fat—including saturated fat—is what leads to better health and wellness. Science shows that we have been needlessly avoiding meat, cheese, whole milk, and eggs for decades and that we can now, guilt-free, welcome these delicious foods back into our lives.

 

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Compost City

Compost City – Rebecca Louie
(Buy from Amazon; Buy from The Book Depository)

These days, everyone’s talking about compost.

Along with backyard chickeners, balcony beekeepers, rooftop farmers, and community gardeners, urban composters are part of a bumper crop of pioneers who are redefining the green space of crowded towns and cities.

You may think you need a big yard to compost. Think again. Compost City teaches you how to easily choose and care for a compost system that fits perfectly into your (tiny) space, (busy) schedule, and (multifaceted) lifestyle.

Whether you live in a cramped apartment or a sprawling town house, or you dream of composting in a shared space with a group of friends or colleagues, Compost City provides simple and effective indoor and outdoor composting options.

Packed with research, expert testimonies, and a healthy dose of humor, Compost City will help you:

• Compost your food scraps and yard waste with ease
• Ease your fears of backbreaking labor, obnoxious odors, big messes, and creepy crawlies (hint: you can compost successfully without any of the above!)
• Convince compost-wary family, friends, neighbors, and community leaders to green-light your compost dreams

Compost City serves all eco-curious citizens from casual hobbyists to staunch activists.

Put your compost cap on. Whether you compost one tea bag or whole honking barrelfuls of scraps at a time, you’re about to have a whole lot of fun.

 

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Measuring Tape

Measuring Tape
(view product page)

Measuring tape is the most basic of all biofeedback tools and is also a lot more informative than a bodyweight scale.

A bodyweight scale gives you a reading of your total bodyweight including fat, muscle, water, and bone. You may be happy to see the scale go down, but what if you lost muscle or if it turns out to be water loss only. On the other hand you may frown if the scale goes up, but what if you gained muscle or are retaining more water than usual?

A measuring tape on the other hand gives you a clearer picture on your body composition by way of being able to measure many different areas of the body. By measuring your height, hips, waist, legs, arms, and neck you can calculate whether it’s muscle or fat that is making up most of your body composition.

The best two measurements that help determine your risk for inflammation issues, diabetes, heart disease, or stroke include your height-to-waist ratio and your waist-to-hip ratio. To calculate height:waist ratio take your height in inches or centimetres and divide by your waist using the same unit of measure. To calculate waist:hip ratio take your waist in inches or centimetres and divide by your hips using the same unit of measure.

Ideally you want your ht:wst to be at least 2:1 and your wst:hp to be a maximum of 0.94:1.

 

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Thermometer

Thermometer
(view product page)

Most people use thermometers after sickness has already taken hold as a way to measure and monitor the healing process.

Another way to use a thermometer is to measure one’s potential metabolic rate and thyroid function.

By measuring body temperature upon waking for one week and taking the average value and comparing this to a normal body temperature of 37.0°C/98.6°F you can get a good indication of whether your metabolism is downregulated (below 37.0°C) or upregulated (above 37.0°C).

If below or above normal temperature and with other correlating symptoms of disease this can help better inform a decision to visit a health practitioner for proper thyroid hormone testing.

 

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