Archive for the ‘Healthy Living’ Category

Some non chemical bathroom products

Saturday, September 1st, 2007
  • Essential oils: A few drops of essential oil in your bath are a cheap non-chemical alternative to bubble baths that is chemical free and won’t dry out your skin. As an added bonus, different oils have different properties to match your mood – lavender is calming and relaxing, lemon stimulating and invigorating.
  • Thyme Bath Bags: A refreshing herbal bath to soothe the skin and relax aching muscles. Place dried thyme in an 8-inch square of cheesecloth, add a little raw oats to soften the water. Tie with string and either hang from the tap as bath runs or let it float in the water.
  • Steaming: This is the most thorough, deep-cleansing method of cleansing your skin and is beneficial to all skin types. Once a week normally, less often if skin very dry, daily if very greasy lean over a bowl of boiling water, cover your head with a towel and make a tent around the bowl. Stay one to two feet away from the water surface and add herbs or essential oil to the water for even more benefit. Use lavender, thyme and rosemary for a stimulating cleanse. 
  • Muslin face soak: Soak a muslin cloth in warm water laced with several drops of essential oil such as rose or lavender. Wring out and press to your face, inhaling the calming properties. The heat oxygenates and the cloth loosens dead skin cells.
  • Oatmeal skin scrub: Take 1 tsp of finely ground oatmeal (available from health food shops) in the palm of your hand, mix with a little water and wash your face with the paste.  
  • Avocado Mask: Mash and sieve an avocado and add a few drops of lemon juice to stop it discolouring. Add 1tsp liquid honey, mix together and apply to skin, leaving on as long as possible. It counteracts the drying effects of the sun, softens, moisturises and nourishes the skin. 
  • Skin smoothing spritz: Boil dried chamomile flowers with mineral water. When cool, add a drop of lavender oil and decant into a spray bottle and use as a skin smoothing spritz.
  • Lemon Hair Rinse: Use diluted lemon juice in your final rinse when washing fair hair to increase shine. (1 part lemon juice to 8 parts water).
  • Hands: Never throw a squeezed lemon away without first using it to rub over yours hands and elbows. It softens, cleans and bleaches them. Rinse fingernails and hands daily in a lemon rinse. 
  • Camomile Eye Freshener: After a cup of camomile tea, don’t throw the bag away – squeeze out excess water and put over your eyes for ten minutes. Reduces puffiness and refreshes tired eyes. Thin slices of cucumber placed over closed eyes are also refreshing and soothing and can relieve eyestrain, pink eyes and sunburn.
  • Herb Deodorant: Grind:
    • ½ tsp cloves
    • 1 tsp myrrh
    • 1 tbs coriander seeds
    • 1 tsp cassia
    • 2 tbs lavender flowers
    • 1 tsp thyme
    • With a pestle and mortar. Use under arms as a deodorant. Some skins are sensitive to dried herbs so test a little first.
  • Teeth: Rubbing sage leaves across the teeth cleanses them and sweetens the breath. Mix 2 tbs salt with 3 tbs of bicarbonate of soda and use as a toothpaste. Chew cloves to sweeten the breath.

Disease fighting foods for women

Wednesday, August 1st, 2007

It’s well known that cranberries can help protect against cystitis but there are other foods for women with disease fighting properties:

  1. Papaya. This tropical fruit packs about twice the vitamin C of an orange. After analyzing the blood of over 13,000 people, scientists from the University of California, San Francisco, found that women who had lower levels of vitamin C were more likely to have gallbladder illnesses. One medium papaya (about ten ounces), with its 188 mg of vitamin C and a mere 119 calories, is a good source of the vitamin. The once exotic fruit now can be found in most supermarkets.
  2. Flaxseed. Rich in oestrogen-like compounds called lignans which are a potential weapon against that lady killer breast cancer. You can add flaxseeds (also called linseeds) to cakes and bread, but the easiest and healthiest way to get the beneficial lignans is to sprinkle a few tablespoons of ground flaxseed on your morning cereal. Look for the seeds in health food stores or in supermarkets and buy organic ones. They’re easy to grind in a blender or coffee grinder or you can get them ready ground in a vacuum pack and then store them in the fridge. Buy the seeds if you want the lignan-effect as there are no lignans in the oil.
  3. Tofu. Foods high in soya protein can lower cholesterol and may minimize menopausal hot flushes and strengthen bone. Isoflavones, plant chemicals in soya beans that have a structure similar to oestrogen, may be the reason. A half-cup of tofu contains about 25 to 35 mg of isoflavones. Other beans like lentils, chickpeas, kidney beans etc are a good source of isoflavones too.
  4. Collard Greens. This humble vegetable may help fight osteoporosis, which afflicts many women late in life. In addition to getting adequate amounts of calcium and vitamin D, some studies suggest that vitamin K may have a bone-protective effect as well. Based on data from one of the largest studies of women, the Nurses’ Health Study, researchers discovered that women who ate enough vitamin K-rich foods (at least 109 micrograms of the vitamin daily) were 30 percent less likely to suffer a hip fracture during ten years of follow-up than women who ate less. The researchers stated that dark-green leafy vegetables — Brussels sprouts, spinach, broccoli — are all good sources of the vitamin. But collard greens, with about 375 micrograms per half-cup, are among the best.

Disease fighting foods

Sunday, July 1st, 2007

The food you eat doesn’t just provide you with energy it can have a powerful impact on your body’s ability to fight off heart disease, cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure, stroke, and weak bones. Study after study has shown that a diet high in plant-based foods — fruits, vegetables, beans and grains — is the body’s best form of defence against poor health. Here’s a round up of what research has to tell us about the disease-fighting power of food.

The cancer fighters

Study after study has consistently shown that approximately 30 to 40 percent of all cancers could be avoided if people ate more fruits, vegetables, and plant-based foods and minimized high-fat, high-calorie foods with little or no nutritional value. Although researchers are still not completely sure they’re beginning to focus their attention in particular on two components –antioxidants and phytochemicals.

The antioxidants (carotenoids, such as beta carotene and lycopene, and vitamins C and E) found in fruits, vegetables, and other plant-based foods fight free radicals, which are compounds in the body that attack and destroy cell membranes. The uncontrolled activity of free radicals is believed to cause many cancers. The carotenoids, in particular, which give fruits and vegetables their bright yellow, orange, and red colours, are now gaining recognition as cancer fighting super stars and numerous studies have also extolled the virtues of lycopene (the carotenoid that makes tomatoes red and also found in such foods as watermelon and red grapefruit) in preventing cancer.

The phytochemicals present in fruits and vegetables protect the body by stunting the growth of malignant cells. Phytochemicals, naturally occurring substances, include indoles in cabbage or cauliflower, saponins in peas and beans, and isoflavones in soy milk and tofu. Investigators aren’t really sure how phytochemicals work but they do believe that you can get enough anti-cancer nutrients by eating at least five servings a day of fruits and vegetables with seven or more starchy or protein-rich plant foods such as grains, peas and beans.

Note: Supplements can help you get some of the benefits of these substances, but they are no replacement for real food. This is because when you take a supplement, you’re getting specific vitamins and minerals, but not the thousands of potentially life saving phytochemicals that might be present in fruits and vegetables.

Heart savers

What you eat, and choose not to eat, can have a dramatic effect on your risk for high cholesterol, high blood pressure, heart disease and stroke. Saturated fat, found mostly in meat and full-fat dairy products, is the major culprit in raising blood cholesterol, the main ingredient of artery-clogging plaque. Overindulging in these foods raises the risk of developing heart disease. But you can lower this risk by shifting the emphasis so that nutrient- and fibre rich foods such as fruits, vegetables, and grains make up approximately two-thirds of what you eat each day.

Plant-based foods contain very little fat and provide complex carbohydrates as well as vitamins and minerals. Because they’re rich in indigestible fibre, they take up space in the intestines, which can help you control your appetite, your weight and, most important of all, your risk of heart disease.

Fibre comes in two forms, soluble and insoluble. Soluble fibre, found in fruits, vegetables, brown rice, oats, and barley, lowers blood cholesterol levels (and your risk of heart disease) and slows the entry of glucose into the bloodstream, an important factor in preventing or controlling diabetes.

Insoluble fibre, found mainly in whole grains, fruit and vegetable peels, keeps your digestive tract in order by soaking up water and adding the bulk that pushes possible cancer-causing substances (carcinogens) out of the intestine.

Studies show that simply adding two servings a day of oats or other cereals high in soluble fibre can reduce cholesterol levels by almost 3 to 4 percent. Although the reasons aren’t entirely clear, it may be that soluble fibre combines with intestinal fluids to form a gel that binds to fat or prevents it from being absorbed into the bloodstream.

The bone builders

Research has shown that a diet low in calcium can increase the risk of osteoporosis. Leafy green vegetables and seeds like sesame are excellent sources of calcium, the mineral that keeps your bones strong. Your body uses calcium for more than keeping your bones strong. Calcium permits cells to divide, regulates muscle contraction and relaxation, and plays an important role in the movement of protein and nutrients inside cells.

If you have a more acidic diet, your body’s demand for calcium will be high as your body will have to take calcium from your bones to neutralise the acid. So by eating a more alkaline diet with fruit and vegetables and less animal protein, especially red meat and cheese, you are not only giving yourself more antioxidants but also protecting your bones. (For more information on acid/alkaline balance for bone health see my book ‘Osteoporosis – the silent epidemic’).