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Category Archives: health coaching

Tips for Detoxing

Detoxification to improve your health and lose weight.
Detoxification to improve your health and lose weight.

Detoxing, for the uninitiated, can feel daunting. Where do I start? Which type of detox do I do? What’s the difference between a juice fast and a proper detoxification? There’s a ton of “fad” detoxing out there and a bunch of unhealthy ones, too!

I personally prefer a proper, protein and healthy food filled detoxification. Sure, juicing for a few days here and there can be good, but if you really want to rid yourself of toxic substances in your body, you’re going to need more support than that. You will also need more protein and supplements to fortify you in your detoxification so that you are functioning well and feeling good.

When you get started, you’ll want support—from me, your loved ones, your friends — so ask for it. Most importantly, for this adventure, you need to build your internal muscles of self-love. Ya gotta love yourself right through this. And you can do it. Isn’t it about time?

It can be challenging to start the detox program (or anything new for that matter). Quite honestly, most people don’t have the guts for what you’re thinking of doing—improving yourself by thinking (and eating) outside the box.

Here are some quick guidelines to make the first few days more exciting than daunting:

  • You can do anything for a day. Just think, “Today.” And then another day. And then you can do anything for just 2 weeks. And then hopefully 3 — and so on. It’s not a death sentence and it’s not for the rest of your life. And you shouldn’t be hungry! Just take it a day at a time. Remember: you chose this for yourself. You chose to get healthier once and for all. Once you get past the first couple of days, cravings will subside dramatically then completely evaporate. Your blood sugar will normalize and you will start to have more energy and feel balanced throughout the day.
  • Go shopping for what you need. Ideally, you’ve done some of this already. If not, get on it! You don’t want to be tempted by junk or non-negotiables (like gluten, dairy etc.) in your house because you didn’t take the time to plan. Also, if the cupboard is bare, you will be more tempted to go out for a “quick fix,” and chances are that won’t be ideal. Shop. Stock up on goodness.
  • Don’t skip meals. Let me repeat that: DON’T skip meals. Your body will hold on to fat and start storing things because it’s afraid it’s starving, even if it’s only a 5 or 6 hour gap in nutrition. Have your healthy snacks in between your meals. If you plan and eat— shake, snack, lunch, snack, dinner (or shake) you should not be hungry.
  • Create a mantra for yourself. That might be something like: “I am getting healthier by the day” or “I take good care of myself because I am worth the effort.” Or maybe it’s like this: “I have faith that I can do whatever it takes to feel vibrant and healthy” or “I’m so excited to feel healthy and vibrant.”
  • Take an extra few minutes in the morning — and whenever you hit a rough patch — to repeat your mantra to yourself.

Remember, you’re creating new habits. Habits take about 3 weeks to become really wired in your brain and therefore in your life. Every day and every moment you follow through on taking care of yourself, following the detox protocol, is another moment and day that counts toward a habit change — of having healthy choices be your default!

Happy detoxing, and let me know if you’d like to try my detox plan — which contains a medical food shake, excellent supplements, a good, healthy diet and a ton of support! It’s affordable and it can change your life. Read what Tana said:

I am no longer a Type-II diabetic!! My hemoglobin A1C is down, cholesterol down nearly 100 points, blood sugar is stable and I’ve lost 60 lbs! (nb: after 6 months)  I started to feel amazing after just a week of the detox. I felt so good, I just kept going! It really wasn’t that hard after I got the hang of it, and now I feel so much better, I’ll never go back to eating the junk that made me sick again

If you would like to learn about my detox plan and to see if it’s right for you, email me at Teri@TeriGoetz.com

 

The Power of Herbs Part II: The herbal medicine of culinary spices

powerful-oregano2People mistakenly lump herbs in with culinary spices. But herbs are more than just leaves we use to flavor our food. They are also powerful medicine. Herbs contain volatile oils, acids, polysaccharides, vitamins, minerals, and more, all of which pack them with countless health supporting qualities. The fresher the ingredients, the stronger the benefits. Making a tea (or “soup” in Chinese medicine) from herbs and spices generally pulls the powerful elements out of them more strongly than if you were to use them dried or ground.

This week let’s look at two common culinary herbs, sage and oregano, and see what benefits we can gain from them… aside from great poultry seasoning or something no Italian grandma would ever leave out of her sauce!

Sage (Salvia officinalis)
The adjective “sage” means wise, and the word can also refer to a person of profound wisdom—someone who in many cultures would be a teacher and healer. It has always occurred to me that sage the herb is rightly named, for it is a wise healer in its own right.
Medicinally, sage:

helps with gastrointestinal issues

• shows improvement in mental illness

• high in antioxidants

• helps with Alzheimers

• improves memory and brain function

• anti-inflammatory

• protects oils from oxidation

Believe it or not, sage is in the mint family, along with oregano, lavender, rosemary, thyme, and basil. It has a long history of medicinal use for everything from mental illness to gastrointestinal issues. Like many of these herbs, sage contains rosmarinic acid, which has been shown to be anti-inflammatory in the gut, especially, as it is readily absorbed.

Sage also acts as an antioxidant. The leaves and the stems (which is why I just throw the whole bunch in the tea) contain antioxidant enzymes, and when combined with the phenolic acids and flavonoids, give the herb a unique capacity to prevent oxygen based cell damage. Because it’s high in antioxidants, sage can help protect the body from free radicals. It has also been studied in extract form and been shown to decrease agitation and increase cognition in early to moderate Alzheimer’s patients. Studies show that it can improve memory in healthy young adults, as well. Pharmacological Biochemical Behavior published research demonstrating clearly improved cognitive function in a double-blind, placebo cross-over study.

If you know anyone with Alzheimer’s, do some research on “dan shen” or Chinese sage. The research has been very strong showing it as a good option to pharmaceutical AChE inhibitors.

Oregano (Origanum vulgare)
Oregano is a gloriously fragrant Mediterranean powerhouse of a culinary herb that even my great aunt, who always cooked from cans, had (dried) in a jar in her cupboard. It has been a “go to” herb for cooks (of all abilities) for centuries. But what Aunt Evelyn didn’t know, and you might not either, is that oregano has amazing healing qualities. It is:

anti-bacterial

• high in vitamins and minerals

• antiseptic, antiviral, anti-parasitic

• immune stimulating

• high in Omega 3s

• high in antioxidants

• useful for skin conditions

• anti-inflammatory

• calming to allergies

• helpful with menstrual/menopausal issues

Oregano has been getting a lot of press lately for its incredible anti-bacterial quality. It is high in vitamins such as A, C, and E, as well as minerals like zinc, magnesium, iron, calcium, potassium, copper, manganese, iron, and niacin.

For health purposes, it can be used as an oil, but beware of the very strong taste. I usually mix the oil into other things or take it by capsule. The oil is also considered antiseptic, antiviral, anti-parasitic, and immune stimulating. Additionally, oregano oil is high in Omega 3s (which I found interesting), and, like sage, antioxidants. In a study at

Georgetown University1 oregano oil was also found to be a great treatment for drug resistant bacteria and fungus. For example, it can be used for skin conditions and athletes foot in addition to its internal use during infections. One study published in Journal of Food Protection2 found that oregano provided complete inhibition of Listeria, Staph, E coli, Yersinia enterocolitica, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Lactobacillus plantarum, Aspergillus niger, Geotrichum, and Rhodotorula. Other studies have revealed that it has a positive effect on colitis. And as if all that were not enough… it lessens inflammation, calms allergies, helps with menstrual and menopausal issues, and is a digestive aid.

Is your head spinning? Mine is. If that many health benefits are to be found in just two very common herbs, imagine how great we could all feel if we just boiled some water, steeped some herbs, and sipped away all day. Next week I’ll tell you more amazing, mind-blowing information about some of the herbs in my Powerhouse Tea!

1 http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/10/011011065609.htm
2 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11456186

Be Kind and Love your Body – Be the fierce goddess you are!

You know how I say we are all born with the seeds of divine work within us? Well, I was born ass first (literally, frank breech) and have been wiggling around since then. I have always wondered how that entrance into the world has affected me (and the occasional births of breech babies I used to watch as a doula .) I think it is simply that I like to do and think about things differently. And while my different approach got me in a lot of trouble growing up, I think in my adulthood, it has opened doors into places others might not go.

I was a wild young woman, and somewhere along the way, I learned to behave.

And while, sometimes, it meant I learn the “hard” way… I don’t want to behave any longer. I want to rekindle that seed of feminine power and harness it to help not just myself, but other women as well.

Growing up, I always wanted to move and twist myself into pretzels. I’m told I was always upside down as a kid, and hence nicknamed “monkey” by my dad.  (Was this a seed from being born breech?) I’ve also been practicing yoga since I was a kid, when my aunt had me doing poses as a 7 or 8 year old. I fell in love with the practice and, with a hiatus here or there, for the most part, yoga has been my main form of exercise.

As I appreciate the feminine strength more and more in my life, especially on this trip of love, I realize I did all exercise with a masculine focus. I played softball with a male coach who used to scream at us when we made mistakes, make us run laps forever after losing a game or make us hit his fastest pitches in the dusk. It was fairly abusive, and at one point I quit the team because of it. (The good news is, my leaving caused a stir so that things changed a bit, and I came back).

I learned to exercise and treat my body as a man would, with the motto: no pain, no gain.  Because I was strong and big muscled, I would lift weights to the point of hurting joints. I ran until my knees made me stop with excruciating pain.   Even in yoga, I pushed myself so hard that I injured myself several times. At first it was small joints, then it became more serious as my hips were so overstretched that the pain could no longer be ignored. So one day I was doing scorpion pose (see photo! that’s what it looks like) and the next, I couldn’t sit cross-legged.

Scorpion Pose - Vrschikasana by Barry Stone
Scorpion Pose – Vrschikasana by Barry Stone

And I was furious.

I was a health care provider, for goodness’ sake. Why couldn’t I figure this out? And, I knew a heck of a lot about yoga. I tried everything I could to find out what was wrong. I saw physical therapists, worked out with trainers and weights to build the “capsules” around my joints, took private yoga lessons, had x-rays. No one could tell me why I was in so much pain. Each time I went back to yoga, I ended up injuring myself. I was convinced yoga was over for me. And then, I was sad.

Yoga was so many things for me. It was a connection to spirit; it was dance and movement rolled into strengthening postures. I felt like yoga fed my soul, gobbled up my stress and gave me a strong, lithe body.  Yoga is a mix of give and take, releasing and trusting. So many wonderful things!

If I’d get a little amped up at home, my girls would say, “Mom, why don’t you go take a yoga class” and I’d come home blissed out. But, like many things in my younger years, I overdid it!

Recently, I saw a YouTube video (see link below) of a veteran who’d been pretty crippled as a paratrooper. He was in a wheel chair and using crutches. Finally, he found a yoga instructor who would help him, and he videotaped the trials and tribulations of getting healthier and stronger. It is truly inspirational. I thought, “Damn. If he can do it, I can do it. But I’m going to do it in my own way.” Of course I am.

So, I’m back on the mat. I’m not trying to keep up in some level 3 hot yoga class doing the impossible. I’m dancing my way through yoga, doing the poses that feel right, the ones that make me stronger without hurting me, the ones that are right for an aging female body. By the way, yoga was designed to burn off young boys’ sexual energy so that they could sit in meditation. So, women doing some poses, mostly designed for a man (or boy’s) body doesn’t make much sense, does it?

So, I’m adapting. I have wider hips than a boy, so I make my stance differently. Sometimes I feel like moving in a pose, so I do. I’m creating my own version of yoga that makes me love my body, combining things I cherish: yoga, dance, meditation, and music.  And I feel pretty fierce doing it!

IMG_3669 IMG_3693 IMG_3706

I have to thank my friend, Jonathan Fields, for the inspiration for this personalized yoga, though because I can be stubborn, it has been years in the realization. I used to take Jonathan’s classes before he sold the studio.  He would show up in jeans and a t-shirt, and talk us through yoga in a way that did not have a no-pain-no-gain attitude. He talked about limitations, acknowledging where your body was. He played awesome music and I adored his classes. He used to joke around saying, “Make sure you’re doing the pose better than your neighbor.” Ha ha. I had a little blind spot around that. I didn’t totally listen to the irony in his voice. I still saw my neighbor doing a pose “better” and my ego told me to push myself, and I did.

So, while I was convinced I was going to be that 80 year old in yoga class doing “wheel,”  I’m now thinking I’m a divine goddess, doing yoga that is right for my divine body. Maybe I’ll work back into some of the other poses, but NOT without awareness of where my body is in this moment. I am doing yoga with deep appreciation, deep focus and a sense of presence. That is how I’m falling back in love with my body.

Hating your body makes you do stupid things. So, learn from my stubbornness…and don’t do stupid things to your beautiful body. (read that tongue-in-cheek, ok?)

Amazing what Italy can do, isn’t it?

AFFIRMATION OF THE DAY:

Today I begin the process of falling back in love with my body. I appreciate it for all the things it has done for me, and will do for me. I embrace my inner fierce goddess more and more every day.

 

 

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