It’s that time of year again! Colds and flus are back in season!

Bring out the heaters, big wool jumpers and water bottles. It’s coming into Winter and already we’re experiencing low temperatures, freezing nights and cold chilly winds during the day – Australia wide.

In this weather, it is easy to become susceptible to contracting colds and flus. Is it possible to prevent this or is it just the case of dealing with it, because it’s that time of year? Send your comments in Maria!

Have you managed to avoid the wintry colds and flus? What’s the longest you’ve gone without getting a cold or flu? Let us know, and better still tell us your secret! Simply send your comment to Maria and we will post it up straight away!

Want to know the difference between a cold and the flu? Click here

Reflexology is a science that deals with the principle that there are reflex areas in the feet and hands which correspond to all of the glands, organs and parts of the body.  Reflexology is a unique method of using the thumb and fingers on these reflex areas.

Foot and hand Reflexology includes, but is not limited to, these uses:

  1. to relieve stress and tension
  2. to improve blood supply and promote the unblocking of nerve impulses.
  3. to help nature achieve homeostasis

Approximately 75% of today’s diseases are attributable to stress and tension. Various body systems are affected in different ways and to varying degrees.  One person may exhibit cardiovascular problems, another gastrointestinal upset, anorexia, palpitations, sweating, headaches etc. to mention but a few of the myriad of bodily reactions to stress.

A short circuit is often caused by tension putting pressure on a vital nerve plexus or even a single nerve structure supplying a vital organ.

As tension is eased, pressure on the nerves and vessels is relaxed, thus improving the flow of blood and its oxygen rich nutrients to all parts of the body.

So do yourself a favor and treat yourself to a Reflexology experience this month.

Good nutrition is plain old common sense, especially when cold & flu symptoms kick in. But a basic look at our regular diet can reveal a few holes. Those of us who run on a half empty tank the rest of the time may need to delve a little further.

Iron deficiency (which causes anaemia, or decreased red blood cell levels, in more severe cases) is cited by the Victorian Government as the most common dietary deficiency worldwide. Adolescent girls, pregnant and adult women are at the highest risk of iron deficiency. Iron is an important mineral for transporting oxygen around the body, especially in those who undertake regular or strenuous exercise.

The links between iron levels and immune function are widely debated. The role of iron, combined with other nutrients, is outlined in this article. However, nutritionists and dieticians agree on one thing- iron is an essential nutrient that should not be overlooked as part of a nutritious diet. And the fatigue caused by moderate and severe iron deficiency has an undoubted effect on those who suffer frequently from colds or the flu.

If you have been feeling fatigued or generally lack lustre on a regular basis, iron deficiency may be a very likely suspect. First thing is first- as iron is a mineral that is stored in the body (not excreted like other nutrients such as Vitamin C), it should never be taken in supplement form before seeking the advice of a nutritionist or your GP. A simple blood test can check your body’s iron levels and determine the presence of a deficiency.

In the case of mild iron deficiencies, a few iron-rich foods added to your regular diet could have you feeling more energised. However, if you fall in to one of the higher risk groups mentioned above, or your iron levels are quite low, a supplement may be the answer. Your GP or nutritionist may recommend one, but they will most likely want to ensure your intake of iron from food sources is optimum. Vegetarian and worried about your iron intake? Take a look at this list of iron-rich vegetarian options.

They are a simple and natural method of healing through the use of certain wild flowers.  The remedies, which treat the personality disorders of the patient rather than the individual physical condition, were discovered in the 1930’s by Dr Edward Bach.  After many years of practice in conventional medicine as well as homeopathy Edward Bach was led to the realization that what characterized the physical disorders of different people was not so much the many categories of disease but the psychological conditions - which led him to find in each case an appropriate remedy.  The remedies were found in the flowers of the field and the trees of the countryside – in nature’s God-given healing power.

According to Bach, certain flowers are of a ‘higher order’ and hold a greater power than the ordinary medicinal plants that heal the body from a biochemical level.  The true healing plants, he believed, address disharmony within the mental and spiritual aspects of our being.  They transmute negative emotions such as fear, melancholy, and hatred into courage, joy and love; and in this manner, they correct the cause of our ills.

Rescue Remedy is a well known remedy and is usually for emergency situations, though it can be used as a long term Remedy. It is world famous for quickly restoring inner calm, control and focus helping you manage your daily stresses and get on with your life.  R.R. is a unique combination of five Bach Original Flower Remedies all working on emotional imbalances associated with daily stressful situations.

Rock Rose                   -           for terror and panic
Impatiens                    -           for irritation and impatience
Clematis                      -           for inattentiveness and to counteract faintness
Star of Bethleham        -           for shock
Cherry Plum                -           for irrational thoughts and lack of self control

The Bach Flower Remedies are a complete system of 38 flower remedies that can help us rediscover the positive side of ourselves.

The word healing has its roots in the Greek word ‘holos’, the same word that has given us ‘whole’ and ‘holistic’.  Healing is the expression of wholeness, health is wholeness.  The experience and expression of this quality can only come from within the individual, it never comes from an outer source such as a therapist or teacher.  Just as all paths of spiritual development tell us to look within, so for our healing we must look to our inner selves.

Health is also the expression of integrated being that a person embodies.  The emotions, thought-life and spiritual flow are as important to health as is the state of organs and tissues within the body.  Whether we are concerned about being healthy, regaining health or moving to a greater health, the whole of the being is involved.

The person who is ‘ill’ is in fact the healer.  Aid can be sought from ‘experts’, whether allopaths or herbalists, psychotherapists, nutritionists or witch doctors, but the responsibility for healing can never be truly handed to anyone other than the person desiring healing.  Healing comes from within, from truly embracing the life that flows within us.  Herbs will aid in this process, but healing is inherent in being alive.  It is our gift and our responsibility.  This may come as a surprise to most of us, conditioned as we are to hand our power over to ‘experts’, whether they are doctors or politicians.  In healing as in all life, we are free, and we are the divinely empowered authority for the process of our unfolding lives.

Healing is rarely an act of consciously harnessing inner energy and light, but is always a release and expression of this inner power.  Whilst the healing process is unique, an expression of life in a person, this miraculous event can be facilitated by various tools and techniques.  Numerous therapies have been developed throughout the unfoldment of human culture which have much to offer as healing arts.  However, these do not heal.  They can only aid the body with its own innate healing power.

A key to all self-healing is compassion.  Expressing compassion for oneself creates an inner ease and clear perspective from which much can change and heal.  Compassion grows in an openness to spirit in one’s life.  The form is not important.  The ineffable must be part of one’s experience or subtle, must be actively present in one’s experience and expression.  This may take the form of meditation, prayer or whatever works for each of us.  The form is irrelevant, the content and attitude crucial.  Openness to the experience of soul and spirit is healing, and affirms wholeness of being.

Some material referenced from The New Holistic Herbal, David Hoffman

Your body needs an absolute minimum of six to eight glasses of water a day.  Alcohol, coffee, tea, and caffeine-containing beverages don’t count as water.

The best to times to drink water are: one glass one half hour before taking food – breakfast, lunch and dinner – and a similar amount two and one half hours after each meal.

Thirst should be satisfied at all times.  With increase in water intake, the thirst mechanism becomes more efficient.  Your body might then ask you to drink more than the above minimum.

Adjusting water intake to mealtimes prevents the blood from becoming concentrated as a result of food intake.  When the blood becomes concentrated, it draws water from the cells around it.

Water is the cheapest form of medicine to a dehydrated body.  As simply as dehydration will in time produce the major diseases we are confronting now, a well-regulated and constantly alert attention to daily water intake will prevent the emergence of most of the major diseases we have come to fear in our modern society.

The body is under a constant drive to retain salt to keep water inside the system.  It will take a gradual increase in urine to pass the excess salt out.  Water will do it if its intake is increased very gradually.   Salt is a most essential ingredient of the body.  In their order of importance, oxygen, water, salt and potassium rank as the primary elements for the survival of the human body.  Pliny, around 75AD, called salt “foremost among human remedies.” About 27 percent of the salt content of the body is stored in the bones in the form of crystals.  It is said that salt crystals are naturally used to make bones hard.  Thus salt deficiency in the body also could be responsible for the development of osteoporosis.  Salt will be taken out of the bones to maintain its vital normal levels in the blood.

Low salt intake will contribute to a build-up of acidity in some cells.  High acidity in the cell can damage the DNA structure and be the initiating mechanism for cancer formation in some cells.  Experiments have shown that quite a number of cancer patients show low salt levels in their body.

The precaution to keep in mind is loss of salt from the body when water intake is increased and salt intake is not.  After a few days of taking 6, 8 or 10 glasses of water a day, you should begin to think of adding some salt to your diet.  If you begin to feel muscule cramps at night, remember you are becoming salt-deficient.  Cramps in unexercised muscles most often means salt shortage in the body.  Also, dizziness and feeling faint might be indicators of salt and water shortage in the body.  If such occasions arise, you should also begin to increase your vitamins and minerals intake – particularly if you are dieting to lose weight or do not eat properly, including vegetables and fruits for their water- soluable vitamin and mineral content.

Rule of thumb for daily salt intake.  For every 10 glasses of water (about two quarts), one should add to the diet about half a teaspoon of salt per day.  Make sure that the kidneys are producing urine.  Otherwise the body will swell up.  If you sense your skin and ankles are beginning to swell, do not panic.  Reduce salt intake for a few days, but increase your water intake until the swelling in the legs disappears.

Carrots (for their beta-carotene content) are an essential dietary requirement.  Beta-carotene is a precursor for vitamin A and absolutely essential for liver metabolism, apart from its need by the eyes.  Some orange juice for its potassium content should also be added to the fluid intake of the body.   For further information visit www.watercure.com.au

Intestinal disorders such as an insufficient bowel movement or the retention of faecal matter causes the blood to become affected by metabolic toxins.  It is important that we help our bodies clean out these toxins before they manifest as disease.

Going on a juice diet once a week helps improve regularity, counteracts the slow process of deterioration in the body and gives the bowels a good cleanout.

Start the day with a cup of herbal tea – fenugreek, nettle and red clover (drink 3 – 4 cups a day) and juice the following vegetables: Beetroots, Carrots, Celery, Cabbage, Apple

Sip 100ml early morning, mid morning, midday, early afternoon and late afternoon.

Acidophilus Bifidus 1 capsule morning and night

1/4 cup Aloe Vera juice morning and night

1 teaspoon Glutamine morning and night

Coconut oil has been used for centuries as a vital source of food for health and general wellbeing in traditional communities of tropical regions.  Recent research verifies traditional beliefs that the coconut palm is “The Tree of Life” and that, just like any other pure, whole food, coconuts and virgin coconut oil have a significant role to play in a well balanced, nutritious diet.

Research shows that replacing other cooking oils with virgin coconut oil generally creates a more favorable HDL/LDL ratio.  This oil has antiviral, antibacterial, antimicrobial, and antiprotozoal properties and, like all whole foods, contains nutrients for a healthy body.

Coconut oil is not only the highest source of saturated fats (92%) but included in this is the highest source of saturated medium chain triglycerides (62%) of any naturally occurring vegan food source.  Furthermore, around 50% of these MCT’s are made up of lauric acid, the most important essential fatty acid in building and maintaining the body’s immune system.  Apart from coconut oil, the only other source of lauric acid found in such high concentrations is in monther’s milk.

Coconut oil is highly heat resistant and will only oxidize at temperatures above 198 degrees Celsius due to its high concentration of saturated fats.  Coconut oil is therefore a healthy oil to cook with.

A recommended consumption of coconut oil is 2 – 4 tablespoons per day.  You can add it to smoothies, cakes, bread and muffins to name a few.

Click here for a coconut oil morning smoothie recipe!

Losing weight can be just as hard as lifting the actual weights. Getting the motivation to go and work out is difficult for many people, despite the end goal that is hoped to be achieved. American fitness guru, Denise Austin, has another strategy to get you back into the gym and into shape.

Rather than making our overall goal to lose weight, she suggests adding smaller goals to increase your stamina and endurance. If you’re only able to do 18 sit-ups one week, try for 20 the next week. Developing routines and keeping things simple will make your goals easier to achieve. In addition, you’ll be improving your body as you lose weight, rather than decreasing muscle tone with the unhealthy methods that fad diets can provide.

There are many tests to take to see how fit you are and to benchmark your progress. They test the different measures of fitness such as flexibility, strength and endurance. Taking the test every few weeks can show your progress. If you get some friends to take it with you, you can motivate each other together - which should keep you motivated, and keep you fit.

  • Nuts and Seeds – rich in beneficial oils, fibre and protein
  • Sprouts, Spirulina and Wheat grass – a nutrient boost and detoxifer
  • Raw Honey – kills bacteria, soothes sore throats, induces sleep
  • Dark Chocolate – Antioxidants
  • Goji, Acai or Pomegranate – Antioxidants
  • Avocados – beneficial oils, high protein content
  • Beans and lentils – high protein
  • Onions and garlic – stimulates the immune system and fights infections
  • Chillies – stimulates your metabolism
  • Yoghurt – kills bacteria, prevents and treats intestinal infections
  • Seaweed – Immune booster, kills bacteria,