Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Sugar Addiction and Cravings: It's All About Your Brain...But It's Not Just In Your Head!

A patient came to my office recently, in tears. “I can't stop eating sugar!” she wailed. “I try and try but I just can't stop!”
I can't tell you how many times I've had this conversation with people in my office. There are several variations on the theme--”I crave sugar at night”/”I have sugar cravings after spicy meals”/”I'm craving sugar in the afternoon”--but the underlying message is the same: “I have a sugar addiction and I don't know how to stop.”
Sugar is in everything. It's all over. Even if you put a slice of lemon in your water, and test the water, the water will test positive for glucose. Glucose is the chemical building block of many foods—breads, dairy products, and fruits, for instance. Managing a sugar addiction isn't like quitting smoking; you can't just go cold turkey because sugar is in a lot of foods that are necessary for a well-balanced diet.
More importantly, sugar cravings are an indication that there's an imbalance, and the reason it's such a strong craving is because the imbalance is in your brain. Sugar is one of the three things your brain needs. The other two are water and amino acids (amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.) But your brain is just like you—when it's hungry, it wants food NOW. Sugar gets into the blood stream immediately. Therefore, your brain will never tell you, “I need some water,” or “I need some amino acids.” It will only ever tell you, “I need some sugar!” Therefore, staying hydrated by drinking water (not soda, not coffee, not tea) and eating sufficient protein at mealtimes will keep you from craving sugar.
“But I DO eat protein! And I drink TONS of water!” you may say. “My problem is that I am craving sugar after meals!” If you become obsessed with sugar after a meal, it may be an issue of what you're eating. Michael Macaluso, a nutritionist from New York, says that sugar balances strong flavors like peppers, and that eating a meal that includes strong pepper flavors (like Indian or Southwestern Mexican foods) can bring on a sugar craving because your body is trying to balance itself. By the same token, eating a meal with fatty meats, heavy sauces, or high salt content creates a need to balance those heavy foods with something lighter, like sugar. He also suggests eating a dark green leafy vegetables instead of something sweet because the dark green leafy vegetable will balance the heaviness in the same way that sugar will.
If, on the other hand, your sugar addiction doesn't fall into one of the above categories, there may be a deeper issue. Many healthcare professionals have noted sugar cravings when seratonin levels are too low. Seratonin is a neurotransmitter in the brain responsible for mood stability and appetite control. Although many people have attempted to control their seratonin levels with the latest class of antidepressants, the best way to moderate mood fluctuations is by balancing seratonin through allergy elimination. The root of the craving may be in your body's relationship with seratonin; however, more frequently, the real problem is in one of the seratonin precursors, such as 5HTP or Tryptophan.
So the next time you start craving sugar, take a moment, take a deep breath. Ask yourself, when was the last time I had a glass of water? Did I have enough protein at my last meal? Did I just eat something spicy or heavy or salty? Or is this an emotional pattern? Understanding the cause is the first step in controlling the symptoms, especially when it comes to cravings and sugar addiction.

http://www.quantumlinkwellness.com

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Staying Young

I never imagined that I would ever get old. It never occurred to me. I watched my parents age, I watched my friends get old and fat, but never thought it would ever happen to me.

Upon entering the fifth decade myself, I began to notice alarming signs that I was no longer as young as I used to be. It began with my eyesight—which was fine one day, but then suddenly my arms just weren't long enough—and ended with my waistline suddenly swelling like the top of a banana walnut muffin.

To understand how to stay young, you must first know what makes you old. Signs of agedness—grey hair, creaky swollen joints, loss of waistline (when the six pack degenerates into a keg), farsightedness, dry skin and bat wings—have a lot to do with what Chinese Medicine calls Jing Cycles, which are sets of years in which we grow, mature, age, and die. Here's a quote from the Su Wen (Simple Questions), written sometime around the Second Century BCE:

In a man, at the age of 8 the boy's kidney energy is abundant, his hair and teeth grow. At the age of 16 his kidney energy is even more abundant...and he can produce a child. At the age of 24, the kidney energy peaks, ...the wisdom teeth appear, and growth is at its peak. At the age of 32, tendons and bones are at their strongest, and the muscles are full and strong. At the age of 40, the kidney is weakened, the hair begins to fall out and the teeth become loose. At the age of 48, Yang Qi is exhausted, the face becomes darker, and the hair turns grey. At the age of 56, the liver energy is weakened, the tendons cannot move...and the body begins to grow old. At the age of 64, hair and teeth are gone.


In Chinese Medicine, we talk a lot about the Kidneys. The Kidneys store your Essence, also known as Jing. Jing controls your growth and development, as well as your sexual energy and fertility. As such, it is seen as a very important and precious substance.


Basically, in a nutshell, longevity is based on two main things: your pre-natal Jing (which you inherited from your parents) and your post-natal Jing (which is entirely up to you). There are two things that determine the state of your Jing:


1. The food you eat
2. The balance in your life


This is why we talk so much about balance in Chinese Medicine. Aging really can be controlled, but it takes a considerable amount of discipline. The more stressed out you become, the more you work overtime, the more alcohol you drink, the less you exercise, and the more double-ended burning you do on your candle, the faster you will age.


Luckily, the aging process is reversible, and it's relatively easy to do. Besides exercising regularly and eating healthily (which only you can do), regular acupuncture or BodyTalk treatments will bring your body back into balance. And you can eliminate your food, hormone, and enzyme sensitivities, which will repair broken energetic pathways and allow your body to function optimally, like it did when you were twenty. Honestly, it's the best preventive medicine available anywhere.

http://www.quantumlinkwellness.com/

Monday, May 11, 2009

Tapping: The Reset Button

Recently I ran into one of my former patients in a grocery store parking lot. When she asked me what I was doing these days, I told her that I'd incorporated BodyTalk into my practice. After a short description of BodyTalk, in which I mentioned that the Cortices technique in BodyTalk might help her son's asthma, she remarked with amazement that she recalled tapping on her own head as a child to stop her wheezing.
You might have noticed that some of the newer treatment modalities involve tapping: there's EFT, which works on emotions, there's NAET, best known for allergy elimination, and BodyTalk. Aside from the tapping, all three modalities seem very different.
Why do they all use tapping? Well, for starters, tapping has been around in indigenous cultures for centuries. Tapping wakes up the body and the brain and helps bring about healing.
Think about your spine. Inside your spine—and surrounding your brain--is cerebrospinal fluid which, according to osteopaths and craniosacral therapists, moves in its own rhythm. In NAET and BodyTalk, we are gently interrupting this rhythm to change our relationship with a substance or to call the brain's attention to something. The interruption of this rhythm is communicated to the brain and other places in the body via the cerebrospinal fluid and spinal nerves, which travel up and down the interior of the spine and emerge out of each vertebra.
We've all had a similar experience when we've contracted a case of the hiccups, which miraculously disappears when someone comes up behind us and startles us...and the hiccups miraculously disappear. We've just been reset, and our diaphragm no longer spasms with each inhalation.
It's like having a conversation with a friend, and just as you're in the middle of relating how your boss gave you so much work to do, someone runs up and interrupts you very loudly by shouting something in your face. Your mind goes blank. You can't remember what you were saying.
The same thing happens with tapping. As you tap on your head (or as your practitioner taps on you), causing a gentle interruption of the natural rhythm of the cerebrospinal fluid, your brain is surprised enough to be able to change its relationship with that substance, as in NAET. Or as in BodyTalk, your brain notices a lack of communication between your lungs and your spleen that has been causing coughing and phlegm for the past two weeks, and re-establishes the connection.