Receiving soothing massages for eight weeks after the death of a loved one can provide much-needed consolation during an intense, stressful period of grieving, according to a study in the April issue of the Journal of Clinical Nursing.
Eighteen people who had lost a relative to cancer took part in the study. Participants ranged from 34 to 78 years of age and included widows, widowers, daughters and sisters. Nine chose foot massage, eight chose hand massage and one asked for both. Only three had previous experience of soft tissue massage.
"Details about the massage study were included in an information pack provided by the palliative care team when people's relatives died" says lead author Dr Berit S Cronfalk from the Stockholms Sjukhem Foundation, a Swedish palliative care provider.
Relatives were offered a 25-minute hand or foot massage once a week for eight weeks and could choose whether the sessions took place at home, work or at the hospital.
"Soft tissue massage is gentle, but firm" explains Dr Cronfalk, who carried out the research with colleagues from the Karolinska Institutet. "This activates touch receptors which then release oxytocin, a hormone known for its positive effects on well-being and relaxation.
"In this study the hand or foot massage was done with slow strokes, light pressure and circling movements using oil lightly scented with citrus or hawthorn.
"The relatives were then encouraged to relax for a further 30 minutes."
Baseline data was collected on the participants during a 60-minute interview before the programme started and a further 60-minute interview was conducted a week after the massage programme finished.
The interviews with the participants, which have been published in the Journal's annual complementary therapy issue, showed that they derived considerable benefits from the program.
Finding Inner Peace, LLC has provided yoga teacher certification, Reiki Certification and Cymatron Sound Healing training since 1995. Over 700 yoga teachers have successfully graduated from the school and teach locally and nationally. We use a comprehensive and well designed curriculum, which includes learning objectives, weekly lesson plans, weekend intensive modules, reading assignments and quality supporting faculty and textbooks. www.findinginnerpeace.com
Monday, March 29, 2010
Seniors Yoga Teacher Certification April 24-25, 2010
Seniors Yoga Teacher Certification April 24-25, 2010
Faculty:
Susan Thomas, LMT, RYT, Personal Trainer,
Specializes in teaching yoga to seniors
Pat Harpell, RYT, Owner and Director of Acton Yoga, Seniors Yoga Teacher
10:00pm-5:00pm
Location: Adam’s Inn – Best Western Hotel, Neponset Circle, N. Quincy
Fee: $195.00 includes training materials 10% discount for Graduate of Finding Inner Peace, Mass Yoga and South Shore Yoga Network members ($175.50)
In this training, you will learn how to lead a chair yoga class, which is a gentler, slower pace of yoga designed for people of varying ages and physical ability. Yoga provides gentle, stabilizing, and strength building postures enhancing mental clarity. Seniors enjoy the group activities and socialization. They develop more confidence in a casual, nurturing, and fun environment. Yogic breathing increases levels of vitality and enthusiasm and enhances their spirit. Various class sequences will be presented: using yoga props, using the wall, standing poses with the chair and other ideas for group activities.
At the completion of this certification training, the student will be able to:
* Describe the aging process and its' effect on muscles, bones and vital organs.
* Describe age-specific postures which are beneficial for seniors.
* Describe common health conditions in the senior population.
* Describe postures for seniors that can done at the wall.
* Sequence a chair yoga class for seniors using yoga props
* Sequence a chair yoga class for seniors using seated and standing poses
* Sequence a regular gentle yoga class for seniors
To register, contact yogareikisound@yahoo.com or call Maureen Spencer, RN - 781 864-2130
Faculty:
Susan Thomas, LMT, RYT, Personal Trainer,
Specializes in teaching yoga to seniors
Pat Harpell, RYT, Owner and Director of Acton Yoga, Seniors Yoga Teacher
10:00pm-5:00pm
Location: Adam’s Inn – Best Western Hotel, Neponset Circle, N. Quincy
Fee: $195.00 includes training materials 10% discount for Graduate of Finding Inner Peace, Mass Yoga and South Shore Yoga Network members ($175.50)
In this training, you will learn how to lead a chair yoga class, which is a gentler, slower pace of yoga designed for people of varying ages and physical ability. Yoga provides gentle, stabilizing, and strength building postures enhancing mental clarity. Seniors enjoy the group activities and socialization. They develop more confidence in a casual, nurturing, and fun environment. Yogic breathing increases levels of vitality and enthusiasm and enhances their spirit. Various class sequences will be presented: using yoga props, using the wall, standing poses with the chair and other ideas for group activities.
At the completion of this certification training, the student will be able to:
* Describe the aging process and its' effect on muscles, bones and vital organs.
* Describe age-specific postures which are beneficial for seniors.
* Describe common health conditions in the senior population.
* Describe postures for seniors that can done at the wall.
* Sequence a chair yoga class for seniors using yoga props
* Sequence a chair yoga class for seniors using seated and standing poses
* Sequence a regular gentle yoga class for seniors
To register, contact yogareikisound@yahoo.com or call Maureen Spencer, RN - 781 864-2130
Childrens Yoga Teacher Certification April 10-11, 2010
Childrens Yoga Teacher Certification
April 10-11, 2010 Saturday-Sunday
Faculty: Suzanne O'Daly,RYT, Special Education Teacher, Color Me Yoga Certified Teacher – teaching yoga to autistic children
Michelle Fleming, RYT, Owner, Sanctuary of Plymouth Yoga Studio
Kristin Collins-Dooner, RYT Childrens Yoga Teacher
Location: Adams Inn – Best Western, Neponset Circle – North Quincy
Times: Sat 10:00am – 5:00pm and Sun 10:00pm – 5:00pm
Fee: $195.00 includes course materials and certificate (10% discount for graduates of Finding Inner Peace, Mass Yoga and South Shore Yoga Network Members)
Yoga helps fine tune motor coordination and can help a child gain more control over a developing body. Many yoga poses massage organs and glands and help them to stay healthy and active. The best part of all is that yoga classes for children are fun! We will teach you how to incorporate games and music to help keep the children engaged. Children who do yoga have an advantage. For example, yoga helps children become
more self-confident and self-aware, as well as more physically fit. And that's just for starters. Yoga has been known to help with many medical conditions, such as asthma, insomnia, digestive problems, ADD and learning disabilities, to name a few.
At the end of the course, the student will be able to:
Describe the benefits of yoga for children.
Describe the class structuring for ages 3-5 yrs, 6-9 yrs and 10-13 yrs
List at least 20 poses that can be used in a childrens yoga class
List at least 5 activities that can be used in a children's yoga class
Describe the class structure for a Mommy and Baby Yoga Class
To register, contact yogareikisound@yahoo.com or call Maureen Spencer, RN - 781 864-2130
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Day of Renewal - March 7, 2010 - Pembroke
March 7, 2010, for the Fifth Annual day of celebration to balance the body, mind, and truly re-awaken your spirit! The intent of the day-long celebration is to renew the physical, mental, and spiritual body by the ancient practices of yoga, qi gong, meditation, chanting, and inspirational music in order to reconnect to universal oneness. Practices are gentle and suitable for all levels.
Located at balancepoint studios
at The Healing Path
31 Schoosett Street, Suite 506
Pembroke, MA 02359
Cost of A Day of Renewal 2010 is $50.00 per person. Feel free to come for the whole day or just the portions that resonate with you. All proceeds will be donated, 50% to Mwokoeni School and Children's Center in Bombolulu Village, Kenya and 50% to VPS.
REGISTRATION
Contact Robin Killeen at (781) 706-6373 to pre-register for the event.
Cost of A Day of Renewal 2010 is $50.00 per person. Check must be
received by February 26, 2010 and made payable to: A Day of Renewal.
Space is limited to 70 attendees.
For more information visit
www.balancepointstudios.com
Located at balancepoint studios
at The Healing Path
31 Schoosett Street, Suite 506
Pembroke, MA 02359
Cost of A Day of Renewal 2010 is $50.00 per person. Feel free to come for the whole day or just the portions that resonate with you. All proceeds will be donated, 50% to Mwokoeni School and Children's Center in Bombolulu Village, Kenya and 50% to VPS.
REGISTRATION
Contact Robin Killeen at (781) 706-6373 to pre-register for the event.
Cost of A Day of Renewal 2010 is $50.00 per person. Check must be
received by February 26, 2010 and made payable to: A Day of Renewal.
Space is limited to 70 attendees.
For more information visit
www.balancepointstudios.com
Monday, March 1, 2010
A Critical Look at "Dr." Robert Young's Theories and Credentials
http://www.quackwatch.org/11Ind/young3.html
Dr. Stephen Barrett has a website called Quack Watch that I read often to stay balanced about traditional medicine versus complementary therapies/medicine. I found this review of the pH Miracle Diet fascinating and worth mentioning. As you will see described in this section about maintaining acid-base balance - the use of 1/2 tsp of baking soda will do exactly what expensive super greens and other hyped products will do. Another one I use if simple liquid chlorophyll - 2 tablespoons a day - called "Chlorofresh". Go to the above link for the whole story and here is a section from it:
Irrational Theories
Young and his wife claim that health depends primarily on proper balance between an alkaline and acid environment that can be optimized by dietary modification and taking supplements. But Benjamin Abelow, M.D. who authored the highly respected textbook, Understanding Acid-Base, has concluded that their understanding of biochemistry is deficient. After reading their 2000 book, Sick and Tired?: Reclaim Your Inner Terrain, he wrote:
I read with special care the part of the book that purports to explain the fundamentals of pH to the non-scientist. This section contains basic errors that suggest to me that Dr. Young is not very knowledgeable about this area; his understanding of basic chemistry seems limited. His definitions of fundamental terms such as "hydrogen ion" are poor, and his explanation of what table salt (NaCl) is and how it dissociates in water is incorrect. He gives the same pH values for blood that comes from arteries and veins; in reality, venous blood is more acidic than arterial blood.
The manner in which Dr. Young writes suggests a religious fervor that has nothing to do with science. I saw no footnotes that support his extreme views; in fact, judging by the titles of the journal articles he cites, I saw no citations in either this or another book by him that pertain specifically to the effect of pH on disease. Further, Dr. Young does not describe any of his own experiments that might lead one to think he has a valid scientific basis for his ideas. He makes many extreme statements without any supporting evidence.
From what I can see, Dr. Young does not have any interest in actually *testing* whether his ideas are correct. For example, the simple way to test his assertions about the effects of pH on disease would be to give sick people a couple of teaspoons of baking soda per day mixed with water. Baking soda (NaHCO3) is a base and will alkalinize the person's blood at least as well as any of the dietary manipulations Dr. Young suggests. But he appears not to have done this, or even to have studied the medical literature to see if others have [11].
The same observations apply equally to The pH Miracle, which contains so many dubious passages that it would take a book to respond to them all. Young bases his notions about alkaline nutrition on the writings of Antoine Bechamp (1822-1895), and Gunter Enderlein (1872-1968), who held that microorganisms do not have fixed structures but arise from smaller entities that are always present but shift their form and function in response to environmental influences. The Youngs refer to the alleged entities as "microforms" or "microzymas." Page 21 of The pH Miracle states that "all cells evolve from them to begin with" and that "red blood cells . . . can de-evolve and then re-evolve into any cell the body needs." They also state that "morbid changes in microforms" are spurred by body acidity and that "harmful pleomorphic organisms do not, and cannot evolve in healthy (alkaline) surroundings." They further claim to have videotaped transformations from bacteria to yeast, fungus, and mold and back again. Page 32 of the book claims that "acidification and overgrowth of negative microforms in the body are the root cause of every symptom, illness and disease." However, the notion of pleomorphism is unfounded and was abandoned by the scientific community long ago.
The book advises readers to check their pH, "cleanse" for several days, eat a vegetarian diet that emphasizes vegetables, and take various supplements, including colloidal silver. The foods to avoid include all dairy products, meats, eggs, corn, peanuts, and foods that contain sugar (including most fruits). The food recommendations are based on their supposed effect on body acidity and alkalinity and whether or not they contain "toxins."
The idea that dietary modification can change the acidity of the body is silly. Homeostatic mechanisms keep the acidity of the blood stream within a narrow range. (The degree of acidity or alkalinity is expressed as "pH.") Certain foods can leave end-products called ash. Alkaline-ash foods include fresh fruit and raw vegetables. Acid-ash foods include all animal products, whole grains, beans, and other seeds. These foods can change the acidity of the urine (but not the body as a whole), but that's irrelevant since your urine is contained in your bladder and does not affect the pH elsewhere in the body [12]. Thus, even if "body pH" were a primary cause of disease, the strategies the Youngs propose would not influence it in the way they claim.
Dr. Stephen Barrett has a website called Quack Watch that I read often to stay balanced about traditional medicine versus complementary therapies/medicine. I found this review of the pH Miracle Diet fascinating and worth mentioning. As you will see described in this section about maintaining acid-base balance - the use of 1/2 tsp of baking soda will do exactly what expensive super greens and other hyped products will do. Another one I use if simple liquid chlorophyll - 2 tablespoons a day - called "Chlorofresh". Go to the above link for the whole story and here is a section from it:
Irrational Theories
Young and his wife claim that health depends primarily on proper balance between an alkaline and acid environment that can be optimized by dietary modification and taking supplements. But Benjamin Abelow, M.D. who authored the highly respected textbook, Understanding Acid-Base, has concluded that their understanding of biochemistry is deficient. After reading their 2000 book, Sick and Tired?: Reclaim Your Inner Terrain, he wrote:
I read with special care the part of the book that purports to explain the fundamentals of pH to the non-scientist. This section contains basic errors that suggest to me that Dr. Young is not very knowledgeable about this area; his understanding of basic chemistry seems limited. His definitions of fundamental terms such as "hydrogen ion" are poor, and his explanation of what table salt (NaCl) is and how it dissociates in water is incorrect. He gives the same pH values for blood that comes from arteries and veins; in reality, venous blood is more acidic than arterial blood.
The manner in which Dr. Young writes suggests a religious fervor that has nothing to do with science. I saw no footnotes that support his extreme views; in fact, judging by the titles of the journal articles he cites, I saw no citations in either this or another book by him that pertain specifically to the effect of pH on disease. Further, Dr. Young does not describe any of his own experiments that might lead one to think he has a valid scientific basis for his ideas. He makes many extreme statements without any supporting evidence.
From what I can see, Dr. Young does not have any interest in actually *testing* whether his ideas are correct. For example, the simple way to test his assertions about the effects of pH on disease would be to give sick people a couple of teaspoons of baking soda per day mixed with water. Baking soda (NaHCO3) is a base and will alkalinize the person's blood at least as well as any of the dietary manipulations Dr. Young suggests. But he appears not to have done this, or even to have studied the medical literature to see if others have [11].
The same observations apply equally to The pH Miracle, which contains so many dubious passages that it would take a book to respond to them all. Young bases his notions about alkaline nutrition on the writings of Antoine Bechamp (1822-1895), and Gunter Enderlein (1872-1968), who held that microorganisms do not have fixed structures but arise from smaller entities that are always present but shift their form and function in response to environmental influences. The Youngs refer to the alleged entities as "microforms" or "microzymas." Page 21 of The pH Miracle states that "all cells evolve from them to begin with" and that "red blood cells . . . can de-evolve and then re-evolve into any cell the body needs." They also state that "morbid changes in microforms" are spurred by body acidity and that "harmful pleomorphic organisms do not, and cannot evolve in healthy (alkaline) surroundings." They further claim to have videotaped transformations from bacteria to yeast, fungus, and mold and back again. Page 32 of the book claims that "acidification and overgrowth of negative microforms in the body are the root cause of every symptom, illness and disease." However, the notion of pleomorphism is unfounded and was abandoned by the scientific community long ago.
The book advises readers to check their pH, "cleanse" for several days, eat a vegetarian diet that emphasizes vegetables, and take various supplements, including colloidal silver. The foods to avoid include all dairy products, meats, eggs, corn, peanuts, and foods that contain sugar (including most fruits). The food recommendations are based on their supposed effect on body acidity and alkalinity and whether or not they contain "toxins."
The idea that dietary modification can change the acidity of the body is silly. Homeostatic mechanisms keep the acidity of the blood stream within a narrow range. (The degree of acidity or alkalinity is expressed as "pH.") Certain foods can leave end-products called ash. Alkaline-ash foods include fresh fruit and raw vegetables. Acid-ash foods include all animal products, whole grains, beans, and other seeds. These foods can change the acidity of the urine (but not the body as a whole), but that's irrelevant since your urine is contained in your bladder and does not affect the pH elsewhere in the body [12]. Thus, even if "body pH" were a primary cause of disease, the strategies the Youngs propose would not influence it in the way they claim.
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