Thursday, November 14, 2013

Best air-filtering houseplants

http://www.mnn.com/health/healthy-spaces/stories/best-air-filtering-houseplants-according-to-nasa

Best Air Filtering Plants
 

Teaching Your Child the Art of Happiness

http://www.ahaparenting.com/parenting-tools/raise-great-kids/emotionally-intelligent-child/happiness

Teaching Your Child the Art of Happiness

What makes a happy child who grows into a happy adult?  For many parents, raising happy children is the holy grail of parenting success. Since happiness is a by-product of emotional health, this whole website is about helping you raise a happy child, from meeting your infant's need to be held to helping your kids develop optimism. But let's talk specifically about what makes humans happy.
Photo: Phitar What do you need to be happy?  A winning lottery ticket?
The latest research on happiness gives us surprising news.  Happiness turns out to be less a result of luck and external circumstance than a product of our own mental, emotional, and physical habits, which create the body chemistry that determines our happiness level.

We all know that some of us tend to be more upbeat than others. Part of this is inborn, just the fate of our genes that give us a happier mood. But much of our mood is habit.
It may seem odd to have happiness referred to as a habit. But it's likely that by the time we're adults, we have settled into the habit of being happy, or the habit of being unhappy.

Happiness is closely linked to three kinds of habits:
  1. How we think and feel about the world, and therefore perceive our experiences.
  2. Certain actions or habits, such as regular exercise, eating healthfully, meditating, even -- proven in study after study -- regularly smiling and laughing!
  3. Character traits such as self-control, industry, fairness, citizenship, wisdom, courage, leadership, and honesty.

In practice, these character traits are just habits; tendencies to act in certain ways when confronted with certain kinds of situations. And certainly it makes sense that the more we exhibit these traits, the better our lives work and the better we feel about ourselves, so the happier we are.

Some of the habits that create happiness are visible, the ways Grandma told us we ought to live: work hard, value relationships with other people, keep our bodies healthy, manage our money responsibly, contribute to our community.
Others are more personal habits of self management that insulate us from unhappiness and create joy in our lives, such as managing our moods and cultivating optimism. But once we make such habits part of our lives, they are automatic and serve a protective function.
Photo: Rebecca HelenHow can you help your child begin to develop the habits that lead to happiness?
1. Teach your child constructive habits to control his mind and create happiness: managing our moods, positive self-talk, cultivating optimism, celebrating life, practicing gratitude, and appreciating our connected-ness to each other and the entire universe.
2. Teach your child the self-management habits that create happiness: regular exercise, healthy eating, and meditation are all highly correlated with happiness levels. But you and your child may have your own, more personal strategies; for many people music is an immediate mood lifter, for others a walk in nature always works.
3. Cultivate fun. The old saying that laughter is the best medicine turns out to be true. The more we laugh, the happier we are! So the next time you and your child want to shake off the doldrums, how about a Marx brothers movie marathon?
And here’s a wonderful tool: smiling makes us happier, even when we force it. The feedback from our facial muscles informs us that we’re happy, and immediately improves our mood. Not to mention the moods of those around us, and that feedback loop uplifts everyone.
4. Help him learn how to manage his moods. Most people don’t know that they can choose to let bad moods go and consciously change their moods. But practice in doing this can really make us happier.  Of course, we aren't talking about denial. The first step is always to acknowledge the bad feelings, and let ourselves feel them. So with your child, simply empathizing with her upset feelings will often allow them to dissipate.
But there are times when we just stay in a bad mood, rather than nurturing ourselves through the upset, or choosing to change it. So if you can practice monitoring your own moods and shifting them through self-nurture and self-management, you can teach this skill to your child.
Of course, the hard part is choosing to change our bad mood. You don't have to go from desolate to cheerful. Just find a way to help yourself feel slightly better. That empowers you to actually face what's upsetting you, and try to solve it. Sometimes just changing our the way we're thinking about a situation really shifts things. So, instead of "How can he be nasty to me like that, with all I do for him?!" you might try "It's normal for children to get angry at their parents."
How to help your child with her moods?  Sometime when she's in a good mood, talk with her about strategies for getting into a better mood: what works for her? Share what works for you. Then, when she’s in a bad mood, start by empathizing. After she's had some time to feel her upset, ask her if she wants help to change her mood.  Even if she’s able to choose a better mood only one out of ten times initially, she’ll soon start to notice how much better her life works when she does it.
5. Model positive self- talk. We all need a cheerleader to help us over life’s many hurdles. Who says we can’t be our own? In fact, who better? Research shows that happy people give themselves ongoing reassurance, acknowledgment, praise and pep talks.
6. Cultivate optimism, it inoculates against unhappiness. It’s true that some of us are born more optimistic than others, but we can all cultivate it. Click here for "How you can help your child become more Optimistic".
7. Help your child find joy in everyday things. Studies show that people who notice the small miracles of daily life, and allow themselves to be touched by them, are happier. Daily life overflows with joyful occurrences: The show of the setting sun, no less astonishing for its daily repetition. The warmth of connection with the man at the newsstand who recognizes you and your child. The joy of finding a new book by a favorite author at the library. A letter from Grandma. The first crocuses of spring.
As Albert Einstein said, "There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle." Children learn by our example what's important in life.

8. Help your child develop gratitude.
"We tend to forget that happiness doesn't come as a result of getting something we don't have, but rather of recognizing and appreciating what we do have." -- Frederick Keonig
Many people think they can't be grateful until they're happy. But look closely and you'll find that it's the opposite: people are happy because they are grateful. People who describe themselves as consciously cultivating gratefulness are rated as happier by those who know them, as well as by themselves.
Children don’t have a context for life, they don’t know whether they are lucky or unlucky, only that their friend Brendon has more expensive sneakers. But there are many ways to help children learn to cultivate gratitude, which is the opposite of taking everything for granted. The most obvious is modeling it.
9. Counteract the message that happiness can be bought. As parents, we need to remember that we are not the only ones teaching our children about life. They get the constant media message that the goal of life is more money and more things. Ultimately, what we model and what we tell them will matter more, but we need to confront those destructive messages directly.
10. Leave room for Grief. Life, as the Buddha said, is full of suffering, and we have daily reasons to grieve. Acknowledging our sad feelings actually gives us more range in feeling our happy ones, and doesn't cause lingering unhappiness. Choosing to be happy doesn't mean repressing our feelings. It means acknowledging and honoring our feelings, and then letting them go.
11. Help your child learn the joy of contribution. Research shows that the pride of contributing to the betterment of society makes us happier, and it will make our children happier too. Our job as parents is to find ways for them to make a positive difference in the world so they can enjoy and learn from this experience.
“Happiness is a by-product of character.
In people who are developing
a strong character, there is a dramatically higher
level of happiness than in those who live to chase
after the next good time.”
-- Pat Holt and Grace Ketterman, MD.

Cure to Whining

http://www.ahaparenting.com/ages-stages/preschoolers/Life-Preschooler/pre-empt-whining

The Cure for Whining

Should they get what they want by whining? Absolutely not. Should they learn that they can get their way by marshaling good arguments and making them in a reasonable, humorous, charming way that meets your needs as well as theirs?  Absolutely, if you want them to get anywhere in life. But how to help them make that transition?

Whining is common with toddlers and preschoolers.  Parents are usually advised to tell their kids to ask in a nice voice, because they can't hear the whiny voice.  But whining is a symptom of a deeper issue.   So if you want to eliminate whining, you have to address what's underneath. If your child's whining is driving you crazy, here are six parent-proven secrets to stop your child from whining. Which secret you use depends on why he's whining.

1. Whining because he doesn't have the internal resources to cope with what's being asked of him:
When humans feel overwhelmed, they get whiny. (As a toddler, he would have thrown himself howling to the ground, but by three or four he can often whine instead.) Meet his basic needs for food, rest, down time, run-around time, and connection with you, or you can count on whining. He may not tantrum as much as he used to, but he will certainly whine if you force him to endure that shopping trip while he’s hungry and tired.  Why create a negative situation from which he’ll learn and repeat?

2.  Whining because she needs more connection:
Be pre-emptive. Make sure that your child gets enough of your positive attention, unprovoked.  Pre-empt whining by giving attention BEFORE she gets demanding.  Anyone who's had to ask a romantic partner "Do you love me?" knows that attention given after you ask can never really fill the need. The secret is to take the initiative and give attention the child hasn’t asked for, often, so she feels your support and connection. And of course it's particularly important to give attention when she shows the first sign of needing your emotional support, before that quick downhill slide. (No, you're not rewarding "bad" behavior by giving her attention when she's whining. If she were whining from hunger, would you think you were rewarding that by feeding her?  It's our job to meet kids' needs so they have the internal resources to cope. That includes giving them our loving presence so they feel safe and loved.)

3. Whining because she doesn't like what's happening but feels powerless to get her way: 

Lawrence Cohen says, "When children whine they are feeling powerless. If we scold them for whining or refuse to listen to them we increase their feelings of powerlessness.  If we give in so they will stop whining, we reward that powerlessness. But if we relaxedly, playfully, invite them to use a strong voice, we increase their sense of confidence and competence. And we find a bridge back to close connection." 
Start by letting her know that you hear what she wants, and you see her point of view: "You really want to go to the playground, and you keep telling me that, and here I keep stopping at all these stores that you aren't expecting, and you're disappointed, right?"  Sometimes just feeling heard is enough to stop whining in its tracks.
Then, if she keeps whining, you can say playfully "You don't sound like yourself.  I wonder where your usual strong voice went?"
Express confidence that your child can use her "strong" voice and offer your assistance to help her find it, by making it into a game:  "Hey, where did your strong voice go?  It was here a minute ago.  I LOVE your strong voice!  I'll help you find it.  Help me look.  Is it under the chair?  No...In the toy box?  No....  HEY!  You found it!!  That was your strong voice!! Yay! I love your strong voice! Now, tell me again what you need, in your strong voice."
Finally, give her alternate tools by teaching her how to ask appropriately for something and negotiate with you.  Since whining is so often a function of powerlessness, helping your child to feel that she can get what she wants through reasonable measures will carry over into the rest of her life. 

In other words, you don’t want her to learn that she gets her way in life by whining or tantrumming, but you do want her to learn that she can get what she wants through managing her emotions, seeing things from the other person’s point of view and setting up win/win situations. (And of course, that's what you always try to model.)
So if you simply don't have time to go to the playground today, then don't.  Be empathic about his desire, and nurture him through the meltdown, as described in #4 below.   But if your objection is to his whining, rather than his request, and he manages to pull himself together and ask in a reasonable way for what he wants, then you'll be able to engage in the kind of conflict resolution that finds a win/win solution.

“Ok, you want to go to the playground, and I need to stop at the hardware store.  Let’s do this:  If we're really quick at the hardware store, we’ll have time to stop at the playground on the way home.  Think you can help me be quick? And if you are really fast about getting in and out of your car seat, we can stay even longer at the playground.” 
Are you "rewarding" whining?  No, you're empowering him by demonstrating that finding solutions that work for both of you is the way to get what he wants in life. 

4. Whining because he needs to cry: 

He has a lot of pent-up emotions about things that are stressing him -- the new babysitter you left him with on Friday night, that kid who grabbed the truck away in the sandbox, potty training, the new baby -- there's no end of stressful developmental challenges!  Toddlers let off stress by simply having a meltdown, but as they get older they gain more self-control, and begin to whine instead.  Be kind in response to his whining until you get home and have a few minutes to spend with him.  Then draw him onto your lap, look him in the eye and say "I notice you were feeling so whiny and sad, Sweetie.  Do you just need to cuddle and maybe cry a bit?  Everybody needs to cry sometimes.  I'm right here to hold you."

5. Whining because it works:
Don’t reward whining.  Don’t give in and buy the candy. But there is never a reason to be less than kind about it. Responding to his desire with empathy  ("You wish you could have that candy") helps him feel less alone with his disappointment.  And there's nothing wrong with finding something else that will make him happy, like a shiny red apple or a trip to the playground.  That teaches him to look for win/win solutions. If, by contrast, he feels like he only gets what he wants by whining, he’ll become an expert whiner.

6. Whining because you'll do anything to stop it: 
Change your attitude.  Why do parents hate whining so much?  Because whining is your little one's more mature form of crying.  She's letting you know she needs your attention.  And human grownups are programmed to react to whining as much as to crying, so the needs of tiny humans get met.  So the minute you hear that whine, you react with anxiety.  You'll do anything to stop it. 
But if you can take a deep breath and remind yourself that there's no crisis, you'll feel a lot better, and you'll parent better.  Don't let your automatic crisis mode of fight or flight kick in.  Don't feel like you have to do anything at all except love your child.  Just smile at your child and give her a big hug. Most of the time, the whining will stop.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Gummies gelatin

Homemade gummies. Great source of protein, vitamins and minerals. You can add probiotics and prebiotic. 

2 1/2 tablespoons gelatin powder (protein) 
1/2 cup fresh juice of your choice (vitamin and minerals) 
1 teaspoon lemon juice (vitamin C)
Raw honey to taste (prebiotic and healing properties)
You can use maple syrup or molasses (any natural sweetener if your choice)

Place the juice and gelatin into a pan on low heat and stir until gelatin dissolves (don't boil it)

Remove mixture from heat and add honey, lemon juice and any supplement to boost the nutrients and stir well. I added probiotics and vitamin C powder. 


Rana



http://butternutrition.com/what-you-dont-know-about-gelatin-may-hurt-you-5-things-you-need-to-know/

1) Eating too much or the wrong kind for YOU can causedigestive upset—> constipation, bloating & lack of appetite.

The primary amino acid- glycine in gelatin is needed in abundance to fuel detoxification in the liver, particularly phase 2. According to Peter Bennet in The 7 Day Detox Miracle Solution, “Glycine is a nonessendtial amino acid that the body uses for detoxification reactions in the liver.” Eating too much too quickly can overwhelm your body, and do more harm than good. Start with a small serving 1/2-1 tablespoon per day and slowly increase your dose every few weeks as tolerated. According to Ray, Peat, PhD, gelatin can make up to about to 30% of total protein intake, so for the average person that is about 3-6 tablespoons per day (1 tablespoon is 6 grams of protein).

2) Choose a type that fits your digestive abilities.

This is what I’ve found works best with my clients:

3) Dissolve it.

Both gelatin and collagen hydrolysate should be properly dissolved in fluid. This is especially important for regular gelatin which is only hot water soluble.

4) Eat it with carbohydrates and fat for the best digestion.

Since gelatin is a protein, it’s important to eat it with carbohydrates and fats to stimulate strong digestive juices and allow the body the fuel to use the protein properly.

5) Regular gelatin and collagen hydrolysate are NOT interchangeable.

They have a different chemical structure and serve different purposes in the kitchen. I get a lot of questions about substituting one type for another in recipes, and it’s not a good idea. This is why:
-Regular gelatin (red can) is hot water soluble, makes things gel, and is harder to digest. Only use this one in SMALL quantities- like making a dessert or something that gels (gummies, etc).
-Collagen hydrolysate (green can) is cold water soluble, does not make things gel, and easier to digest than the regular. This makes it a good choice for using like a protein powder.
what you don't know about gelatin may hurt you

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Vit D

Amazing Facts on Vit D:
  • Vitamin D really isn’t a vitamin at all but a crucial neuroregulatory steroidal hormone influencing more than 2,000 genes. That is one of the primary reasons it influences so many diseases (as seen in the table below).
  • It has become very clear that vitamin D deficiency is a growing epidemic across the world and is contributing to many chronic debilitating diseases. 85% of Americans are deficient.
  • Exposing your body to sun behind window or glass doesn't give you vit D because most of UVB rays are blocked by glass.

Where can you get Vit D from?

here are 3 sources of Vit D: Sun, safe tanning beds, pills. Sunlight gives UVB and UVA rays. Your body needs UVB rays from the sun to produce vit D. Vit D is not found in food, only in small amounts in a very few foods. You are not meant to eat vit D, you are meant to get it from the sun. Taking VitD tablets is also an option but there are 2 major disadvantages: first, you don't get all the benefits that you would get from the sun, but it's better than nothing. Second, you have to take care of the doses and do continuous blood checking to make sure you don't get overdose and suffer from toxicity and it also affects your calcium level. On the other hand, getting UVB from sunlight is balanced and metabolized by your body automatically so you don't have to worry about overdosing.


Notes to take into consideration when exposing yourself to the Sun:
  • don't use soap on the skin after exposing it to the sun before 1hour until vit D is absorbed by your bloodstream
  • the more skin you expose to the sun, the more efficient and greater amount of vit D absorption
  • the longer exposure to the sun, the greater amount of vit D absorption, don't worry about overdose, your body will do you need. Just be careful of sun burns

Testing Your blood for Vit D
  • Even if you are getting your vit D from the sun it's advisable to test your blood to make sure that you are getting the right sun exposure. So what do you test for? Ask to be tested for 25-hydroxy vit D3 not 125 Hydroxy D2, it's a common mistake among doctors to ask for the second test which doesn't reflect the real amount of vitD in your blood.
  • Results of the test: Deficient <40-50ng/ml      Optimal 50-65ng/ml     Cancer 65-90ng/ml    Excess>100ng/ml


The Truth about Sun Blocks:

Even though we live in the desert with year-round sun, we are not exposed to the sun and whenever we are, we wear Sun block which actually blocks 95-99% of UVB rays which are needed for our bodies to produce vit D. Surprisingly most sun blocks since the 80's are not only blocking the good UVB rays but also not blocking UVA rays (which are harmful and really need to be blocked). Plus sunscreens have alot of toxins and everything you put on your skin goes into your bloodstream. While the media and sunblock companies have been scaring us for years from skin cancer due to sun exposure, new strong research has been proving that actually sun light is crucial for preventing and curing skin cancer. Sun burn ofcourse is harmful but tanning and daily 30minutes exposure to sun is not only safe but crucial to your whole healthy body functions.



 
 Cancer
 Hypertension
 Heart disease
 Autism
 Obesity
 Rheumatoid arthritis
 Diabetes 1 and 2
 Multiple Sclerosis
 Crohn"s disease
 Flu
 Colds
 Tuberculosis
 Septicemia
 Aging
 Psoriasis
 Eczema
 Insomnia
 Hearing loss
 Muscle pain
 Cavities
 Periodontal disease
 Athletic performance
 Macular degeneration
 Myopia
 Pre eclampsia
 Seizures
 Fertility
 Asthma
 Cystic fibrosis
 Migraines
 Depression
 Alzheimer"s disease
 Schizophrenia