How are you all doing?
I've got lots to report, from my personal perspective.
Let me begin with those beginning whopper headaches from the first days of giving up caffeine! Although it was tough to begin with, I am happy to report that I wake up refreshed and ready to go!
I have made the choice to leave caffeine out of my daily routine, post cleanse.
Giving up the animal products was not a big deal for me. It was tough to be on the road traveling while others were enjoying their hamburgers and such, but the salads were more than sustaining. I will remain animal free for a while as well.
I'll commit to staying gluten free for at least another month, as I have noticed such a wonderful flexibility and overall good feeling in my joints. I may even bake a loaf of gluten free bread to see what this is like!
Sugary items don't even sound good at the moment. I've started baking fruits, like apples and pears, adding ginger granules, and it has proven to be the "go to"snack when I am feeling like a treat.
The alcohol.... well a cold beer sounds very good about now!
Thanks for cleansing Evolving Yogi's!
EVOLVE 30 Day Yoga Cleanse Support Community. We Welcome You.... wherever you are on your journey...
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Meditation Break
Do It Now
Why not take a meditation break right now, wherever you're sitting? You don't need to do anything special to set the stage for your 5-minute vacation—just sit comfortably and move your focus inward. This contemplation meditation is an opportunity to focus your "thinking mind" on the mystery of being.
Here's how to try it: Sit back in your chair so that your back is completely supported. Face your hands on your knees with your palms facing, up to open your awareness, or facing down, to calm the mind. As you inhale, silently say "so" to yourself and as you exhale, say "hum." These words mean "I am that"—in other words, they are an affirmation of your existence.
Once you've established the "so hum" rhythm, begin to contemplate the source of your breath: Where is your breath coming from? Through visualization, contemplate the 5 billion human beings and countless creatures on Earth being fed by the same tidal rhythm of the breath.
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Saturday, May 4, 2013
Your Inner Monologue
Change Your Inner Monologue
If you observe your mind, there is always noise. It begins the moment you open your eyes in the morning and carries on every single second until you close your eyes at night. Perhaps this chatter prevents you from drifting off to sleep. And when you do finally doze off, it may make that rest fitful. When you examine your mental chatter, you will quickly discern that this unending noise has patterns. One of the most powerful and prevalent is your Voice of Judgment. Over time, negative judgments start to accumulate. Eventually they form a huge barrier that sits squarely in front of you on the path to your ideal life.
During the day, try carrying around a journal—or a file, notebook, or sheet of paper. Categorize the types of mind chatter that assault or beguile. Do this for at least two weeks. Are there wild flights of fancy? Elaborate escapist dreams? If so, try to be specific about exactly what types of accomplishments you fantasize about.
The very act of observing it changes your mental chatter. Shoplifting drops dramatically when department stores install surveillance cameras and post signs that they have done so. Similarly, your mental chatter is less able to take you down destructive paths when you become consciously aware of it.
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Tips on Deciphering Food Labels
Tips for Deciphering Food Labels, Part 1 The best way to approach a packaged food is with healthy skepticism, knowing that what you find on the package is intended to sell that product. At best it can be confusing; at worst, misleading. The claims often give consumers a false sense of eating healthy, which then leads to the consumption of more packaged food. Here are some of the big areas of concern:
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Friday, May 3, 2013
Society's Push for Alcohol
In time, due to the relentless push to drink alcohol, people can become convinced that social occasions simply must include alcohol, and the cues to drink can become overwhelming when parties are about to take place.
Providing alcohol at parties might be a traditional task, but alcohol also has some specific attributes that can make the drinks seem helpful in a party situation. For example, some researchers suggest that alcohol can numb the mind to such a degree that a user finds forgetting about common concerns and momentary crises relatively easy.
A researcher writing in the journal American Psychologistrefers to this phenomenon as “alcohol myopia,” suggesting that people who drink alcohol experience a temporary sensation of relief from anxiety and depression, and they may also feel more important and valuable. In a party situation, this can make some people seem more social and more pleasant to spend time with. People who have underlying depression issues or social phobias may developaddictions to alcohol as they attempt to self-medicate their conditions.
Alcohol can also reduce inhibitions, making people feel a bit more relaxed and able to share their innermost thoughts with people they meet at parties. People who have been drinking might feel more comfortable striking up conversations and maintaining the attention and interest of people they don’t know very well. People who have extreme social phobias or other social dysfunctions may find that alcohol is one of the only substances they know of that can help them to attend a party without feeling awkward and shy. This crutch usage can quickly become addictive.
Chemical Underpinnings
While it’s true that alcohol can be addictive due to the changes it can bring about in behavior, and the reinforcement people receive from others who observe this behavior, alcohol can also cause changes on a chemical level within the body, and these chemical changes can also be addictive.
Research
Research suggests that alcohol increases the production of endorphins, the brain’s natural painkillers. These same chemicals are also associated with pleasure and reward, and they tend to accumulate within the portions of the brain that have long been linked with addictive behaviors. An interesting study published in Science Translational Medicine found that people who drink heavily have higher spikes in endorphins when compared to people who do not drink heavily, meaning that alcohol seems to be reinforcing at extremely high levels.
The concept of reinforcement is important in addiction medicine, as using extremely large levels of a drug often causes severe damage that can lead to even more compulsive use. Alcohol does have some attributes that can stop people from using large amounts of the substance, including:
- Nausea
- Lack of muscle control
- Sedation
- Slow breathing and heart rate
Some people who drink heavily experience so many of these symptoms that they’re physically unable to keep drinking. They’re apt to be sleeping somewhere, instead of asking for another round. But those people who can drink heavily and who are able to do so while fighting off the intoxication cues the body might be pulling together are apt to feel an extreme chemical reward cue, and this could allow them to keep on drinking even when they simply should stop.
Recovering from Damage
It can be disheartening to read about addiction studies on alcoholism, especially as they seem to indicate that the substance is so very dangerous and hard to overcome without help. However, the more that researchers understand how alcohol works on the human body, they more they’re able to help people who are impacted by alcoholism.
Knowing that alcohol hijacks the brain’s reward center, for example, could allow experts to develop new medications that could ease the physical pain people feel when they attempt to stop using powerful drugs like this.
When it comes to alcohol, knowledge really is power.
Our Inner Merit
Hearts don't wear smart shoes. Lungs aren't draped in expensive jewelry. You can't tell a smart mind from a designer jacket, even if it does have padded shoulders. Our most fundamental functions are humble and invisible. We may preen and pose, play for position and push for power but there's no true test of any individual's inner merit.
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Thursday, May 2, 2013
Mind your Body
As we move forward in a healthful way, we continue to pay close attention to body, mind AND spirit.
Is there something you've been longing to be, or to do? Pay attention to the call from within. Your valuable life depends on it!
We had a beautiful time yesterday, practicing the more refined Yin Yoga. As we learn to be less busy, to sit in asana, and to observe our breath, while our thoughts come and go.
Did you notice and spaces between your thoughts?
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
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