Victoria’s Read

10/05/2009 (12:37 pm)

The Month Of OCTOBER Is Vegetarian Month

Filed under: Women's Health

meatballs

NO MEAT BALLS

INGREDIENTS
-1 1/2 cups dry mashed potatoes
-1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese (4 ounces)
-1 cup chopped pecans or cashews
-1 cup chopped onion
-2 tablespoons soy sauce
-1 teaspoon dried basil leaves
-4 eggs, beaten

DIRECTIONS
1. Heat oven to 350°F.
2. Mix all ingredients in large bowl. Shape into 1 1/2-inch balls. Place in greased pan.
3. Bake meatballs uncovered 20 to 25 minutes or until brown.

 

burger

VEGETARIAN PATTIES

INGREDIENTS:
-1 (15 oz.) can kidney or pinto beans, drained, and rinsed
-Rolled oats (1 to 2 cups)
-1/2 C. all-purpose flour
-1 egg, beaten
-1/2 C. mushrooms, finely chopped
-1/2 C. onions or leeks, finely chopped
-1to2 carrot(s), shredded
-1/2 C. red bell pepper, chopped
-3 clove garlic, pressed or minced
-1 tbsp. soy sauce or Worcestershire
-1/2 tsp. salt
-Spices and herbs to taste

DIRECTIONS
1.Blend all ingredients (starting with one cup of oatmeal) in food processor or use a stick blender, until coarsely chopped. Add more oatmeal as needed, until patties hold together well.
2.Chill mixture for about an hour, then shape into smallish patties. Chill patties several hours or freeze and save until needed. If your patties want to fall apart, you’ll want to cook them in the oven.
3.Broil patties 4 to 6 inches from heat about 10 to 15 minutes until browned and heated throughout. If your patties hold together well, you can simply saute them in a skillet.
4.Heat a bit of olive oil and cook patties over med-high heat for 6 to 7 minutes a side, until crisp outside and cooked through.

Sources:
divinedinnerparty.com
bettycrocker.com

09/03/2009 (8:25 am)

Happily Ever After

Filed under: Women's Health

1. Which queen started the vogue for white wedding gowns?
-Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine
-Queen Marie Antoinette
-Queen Victoria
-Queen Elizabeth I

2. You’ll often see shoes tied to the bumper of the newlyweds car. Where did that tradition originate?
-Ancient Greece
-Mediaeval Germany
-Anglo-Saxon England
-Renaissance Italy

3. Where would you find a bride going from door to door to collect wedding presents in a pillow case?
-Canada
-Southern Italy
-Finland
-Wales
4. In rural areas in the Czech Republic, it is a tradition that the bride wear something made by her family and friends. What does she wear?
-A wreath of rosemary
-A lace kerchief
-Woolen stockings
-An embroidered apron

5. Where would you be if the bride came into the church with a lump of sugar in her glove?
-Ireland
-Russia
-Sweden
-Greece

6. Why does a traditional Japanese bride wear a triangular head band.
-To cover her horns
-To keep the hair off her face
-To honour her ancestors
-To signify virginity

ANSWERS

1. Until Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of Saxe-Cobourg-Gotha, royal British brides wore silver gowns on their wedding day. Victoria, always a girl who liked her own way, broke tradition and opted for white - and white has been the colour for wedding dresses in the West ever since.

2. Once the vows had been exchanged at an Anglo-Saxon wedding, the bridegroom would take off his shoe and smack the bride with it to symbolize that she was now under his authority.

3. It is an old Finnish rural custom. The bride is accompanied by an older male relative who holds an open umbrella over the bride’s head to signify protection. The bride receives a gift as well as a drink.

4. The wreath of rosemary is woven by the bride’s friends on the eve of the wedding, to signify wisdom, love and loyalty.

5. Greek brides slip a lump of sugar inside one of their gloves on their wedding day to ensure that their married life will be sweet.

6. Evidently, it was once believed that women have horns of jealousy and a bride wears a tsunokakushi to hide them on her wedding day.

09/03/2009 (8:21 am)

Returning to Balance- Core Conditioning and Strength

Filed under: Women's Health

tree pose

Almost everyone, has a desire to improve their life. Many of our aches, pains and orthopedic problems are a result of poor core strength, stabilization and poor core activation.

What is our core? Simply it is the muscles, ligaments and tendons that wrap around our abdomen from our ribcage to our pelvis. This structure is responsible for  allowing us to be the dynamic people we are.

The problem is our modern lifestyle has contributed to a chronic weakness in the core. It’s not uncommon to see an individual whose Transverse Abdominals rarely activate when they should or they activate very poorly. Place your hands on your waist with fingers pointing towards your belly-button. That is the location and direction of these muscles.

The other key muscle group that is chronically weak is the pelvic floor. This group of muscles stretches from your tail-bone to the front of your pelvis.  There are many factors in life that may affect your core strength. Some of these include child birth, abdominal surgeries like a C-section, prolonged sitting in work or your lifestyle. All of your core muscles must be strong and activate correctly of optimum health and wellness.

The good news is it’s never too late to return to balance. One of the best all around core strengtheners that’s suitable for every body is yoga. Yoga is thousands of years old and has evolved into one of the most efficient, inclusive systems of wellness. It’s not uncommon to see those who do yoga regularly overcome backache, digestive problems, constipation, breathing problems, stiff joints, posture problems, headaches and many other problems. We are dynamic beings and are meant to move.

Another simple step to a stronger core is to be conscious about activating your core in day to day activities and re-train it to work automatically. To begin, sit tall with your shoulders, back and above your hips. Place one hand in the small of your back and notice the gentle curve there. Place the other hand on your tummy just below your belly button. Gently tighten up your tummy underneath your hand and gently press your back slightly into the other hand. This is engaging your transverse abdominals. Now shift your attention to engaging your pelvic floor. You do this by tightening like you are holding back gas or the urge to urinate. Practice this seated or standing. Now that you are aware of what to engage, you can begin to consciously engage your core.

Enjoy life, stay well, stay strong… you deserve it.

©Darren Renaud, Natural Health Practitioner. Ohana Wellness Centre

08/08/2009 (3:34 pm)

Summertime acupressure point relief

Filed under: Women's Health

summer

Summer is a time when we shake off winters grasp and venture out into the sun.  With that comes pollen and dust exposure, tired muscles and digestive upsets from all the fun. The good news is there are acupressure points to help ease the discomforts.

Allergies often take the shine off of summer and there are a few points to help with symptoms. LI4 (in the web of the hand) is a main point for congestive issues and it also helps with constipation if your summer diet doesn’t agree with you. A good point to dispel heat and congestion is GV10 (on the spine in-line with the tips of the shoulder blades). Have someone tap this point for 3-5min. and you should notice that breathing eases and burning sensations decrease. For sneezing, tapping on BL2 (inside end of eyebrows near eye sockets) will help calm sneezing, relieve sinus headaches and helps clear heat.

Heat is a common issue and the above points that dissipate heat will help along with placing feet on a cool hard surface. In cases where heat is very uncomfortable an ice cube under each foot on KD1 (in the notch just between the ball of the foot and the arch on the center line) will help cool and calm the body.

Indigestion from cook outs, picnics or fast-food are also common complaints. Some points that will help are: CV16 (on the notch on the bottom of the breast bone), it will help calm and strengthen the stomach and loosen the chest. If diarrhea strikes SP6 (on the inside of the ankle three fingers above the ankle bone) will help calm the urges and are perfectly accessible while you sit and contemplate what you may have eaten. This point (SP6) is an avoid point for those pregnant.

Water, stay hydrated and make sure your urine output is roughly equal to your water intake daily. It should be clear and slightly yellow. A good rule for water intake according to the International Sports Medicine Institute is ½ ounce per pound of body weight if you’re not active (that’s ten eight-ounce glasses if you weigh 160 pounds) and 2/3 ounce per pound if you’re athletic (13 to 14 glasses a day, at the same weight). This far exceeds the 8 glasses commonly reported in the press! Also according to the Occupational Health Clinics for Ontario Workers, your body takes time to respond to dehydration. There is lag between water loss and thirst. In hot weather, this means that when you body “feels” thirsty, you are actually 16-18 ounces “down” at that point. Enjoy summer, stay well, stay strong… you deserve it.

Interested in these therapies and ways to help yourself? 
E-mail us at info@ohanawellness.ca  or visit us online at www.OhanaWellness.ca.

©Darren Renaud  Natural Health Practitioner

08/08/2009 (11:01 am)

Female Facts

Filed under: Women's Health

-In the original story, Cinderella didn’t wear glass slippers. She wore squirrel fur slippers. But the person who translated the tale from french to English confused pantouffles en vais with pantouffles en verre and glass it became.

-Those who track such things tell us that women break down into three categories of preferred method of leg hair removal. 50% like shaving, 25% go for waxing and 25% prefer depilatory creams.

-The bob haircuts of the roaring twenties gave the name to the hair clips used to hold them back….bobby pins.

07/01/2009 (1:09 pm)

Stress and Breathing

Filed under: Women's Health

med1

One thing is certain; stressors are in each and everyone’s life. The only thing we can change is our attitude towards them and the use of known methods to decrease the effects they have on our lives and health.

Stress can be seen as a motivator; after all it is the stress of the wind in the sails of a sailboat that moves it across the water, allowing us to get from point A to point B. What I would like to suggest, is that we learn to view stress in a similar way to help us to move out of anxiety to peace. It is always wise to discuss any new approaches that you are considering implementing for your health, with your MD, or Naturopathic Dr. Before you begin this exercise, monitor yourself on a scale from 1 to 10. How stressed are you feeling? Make note of it to refer to later on.

1) Sit comfortably with your hands in your lap.
Massage your jaw muscles gently, and place your hands back in your lap.

2) Check your shoulders. Are they tense? Drop them.

3) Now focus on your breathing.
Breathe in the nose and count 1 and 2 and 3 and 4. If four is too long, modify it to your comfort level.

Feel yourself draw the breath in slowly, right in to the upper part of your lungs. The upper chest expands. Then breathe out slowly to the count of 4. Repeat this for a few minutes. Review how you are feeling based on the scale you did at the beginning. Any change? Use this scale each time you do this exercise. Be patient; give yourself time to feel the cumulative effect of daily practice.

Five minutes daily can make a difference, and the effects on the nervous system are highly beneficial when used regularly.

-Always sit a few minutes after doing these breathing exercises before you stand up.

-Always get up slowly. If you have any questions call me at Ohana Wellness Centre, 752-0294.

Jacqui Tracy, Certified Master of Breatherapy. ®

med2

06/02/2009 (8:57 pm)

Tapping your Internal Pharmacy

Filed under: Women's Health

thy

When was the last time you were chased by a lion, paddled your canoe while a shark nosed at it or stretched out into a raging river to rescue a family member? The fact is our society has developed to the point where such threats are rare. We still have all of the tools needed to survive such events, but those tools often sit in the tool box unused.

Our bodies are remarkable and are capable far beyond what we do day to day. Take some time to get familiar with one of these ‘tools’, your thymus. In the above situations or similar or via other strenuous activities, your heart naturally stimulates the thymus from inside. Today, we rarely get this stimulation do to our lifestyles.

The thymus is a gland just behind your breast bone or sternum and is an integral part of your immune and support system and is a veritable, natural pharmacy for your body. It produces T-cells, critical for your immune response and from fetus till about twenty five years, contributes to the development of your secondary immune systems.

Some current western medical studies are just now investigating the many other hormones and chemicals produced by the thymus and well into your later years.

We can tap into this store house. Literally, in a technique called the thymus tap. It’s simple and it’s effective. Group all four fingers and thumb of one hand as if you were trying to pick up something very small, find the center of your breast bone, and tap.

Tap hard enough to hear a thump but not so hard that it causes pain. Repeat the ‘thumping’ for about 1 minute or so. This can be done anywhere, any time but before bed is a good time, as the thymus has been shown to be more active just after falling asleep.

This is just one way to help energize, revive and support your immune system. It’s simple, easy and one of many “do no harm” therapies you can do yourself.

©Darren Renaud – Natural Health Practitioner – Ohana Wellness Centre – www.ohanawellness.ca

06/02/2009 (8:50 pm)

June is Iced Tea Month

Filed under: Women's Health

 

pineapple

Pineapple Iced Tea

INGREDIENTS
1 quart water
7 tea bags
1 cup unsweetened pineapple juice
1/3 cup lemon juice
2 tablespoons sugar

DIRECTIONS
In a saucepan, bring water to a boil. Remove from the heat. Add tea bags; cover and steep for 3-5 minutes.
Discard tea bags. Stir in the pineapple juice, lemon juice and sugar until sugar is dissolved. Refrigerate overnight for the flavors to blend. Serve over ice.

 

 

rhu

Rhubarb Iced Tea

INGREDIENTS
10 stalks fresh rhubarb, chopped
2 cups white sugar, or to taste
1 quart water
 
1 quart water
8 black tea bags
1 tablespoon honey
1 cup white sugar

DIRECTIONS
Place rhubarb into a large pot with the sugar and 1 quart of water. Bring to a boil, then simmer over low heat for about 4 hours, stirring occasionally to prevent burning, until rhubarb becomes a thick paste. Cool, then spoon into ice cube trays and freeze overnight. Bring 1 quart of water to a boil. Pour into a pitcher over the tea bags. Stir in honey and sugar. Cool, then refrigerate until chilled. Serve cold ice tea with rhubarb ice cubes.

 

ginger

Ginger Iced Tea

INGREDIENTS
1 cup iced tea mix with lemon and sugar
4 cups water
2 liters ginger ale, chilled
ice cubes

DIRECTIONS
In a pitcher, combine the iced tea mix and water; refrigerate until chilled. Just before serving, add ginger ale. Serve over ice

allrecipes.com

05/02/2009 (11:37 am)

The Canadian Cancer Society’s Relay For life

Filed under: Women's Health

The Canadian Cancer Society’s Relay For life is more than just a fundraiser. It is an opportunity to get together and celebrate cancer survivors, remember loved ones lost to cancer and fight back against this disease. Walk with us in this inspirational 12-hour overnight event as we come together to raise funds and make cancer history. Your participation makes a difference.

Celebrate the lives of those who have had cancer. Remember loved ones and their battle against cancer. Fight Back against this disease that takes too many. Relay For Life is how we fight back against cancer. We Relay because we have been touched by cancer and desperately want to put an end to this disease. This is your opportunity to make a personal contribution and take action.

Register today as a:
Team Captain:
Gather 10 friends, family members, neighbors and/or co-workers to participate on your team.
Participant:
Join a team to raise money for the cause.
Volunteer:
Donate your time and make it an event to remember.
Company:
Sponsor the Relay For Life here in North Bay. Donate products or services and have your own company team.

Make a commitment to save lives by being a part of Relay For Life here in North Bay at the Canadian Forces Base Soccer Field on June 19th at 7:00 p.m. until June 20th at 7:00 a.m. You’ll never feel better about staying up all night.

For more information contact Susan Plamondon our office at (705) 472-9072 ext. 3733.

Join the biggest cancer event to make the biggest difference.
Registration is face, easy and secure at www.cancer.ca/relay
Ashley Lacoursiere

 

 

 

 

04/05/2009 (12:02 pm)

April is Woman’s Eye Health & Safety Month

Filed under: Women's Health

No one should take their vision for granted, but women need to be especially careful when it comes to eye health. Blindness and other conditions which cause visual impairment take a much more serious toll on women than men. In fact, two-thirds of all blind or visually-impaired people in the world are women.

Cataracts, which result when the lens of the eye becomes cloudy, are the leading cause of blindness worldwide. Certain types of cataracts, specifically the kind that affects the outside of the lens, are seen more often in women.
Trachoma can cause corneal scarring and if left untreated may lead to blindness. 75 to 85 % of people with trachoma are women. This disease is the world’s leading infectious cause of blindness and also the most preventable cause of blindness.

Dry eye syndrome can lead to corneal scarring and vision loss. It is often linked to autoimmune diseases such as Sjögren’s syndrome. This is a chronic disease in which white blood cells attack the moisture-producing glands. The hallmark symptoms are dry eyes and dry mouth. It is one of the most prevalent autoimmune disorders.

Since most autoimmune diseases are seen in women, female hormones probably play a role, but it is not yet clear how this works.

Because women tend to live longer, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a disease that blurs central vision and can lead to vision loss in both eyes, and diabetic retinopathy, a complication of diabetes that affects the retina and can cause blindness, become issues for woman to contend with.

Lifestyle choices may also play a role. It is now known that the same risk factors that cause premature death, such as smoking and obesity cause eye disease as well.

A yearly eye exam is recommended, especially for women over the age of 50. Women in their forties should have their eyes checked every two to four years. Women between the ages of 18 and 39 should have their eyes checked at least once a year and follow the doctor’s advice on the need for additional exams, if any.

www.womenshealthmatters.ca

« Previous PageNext Page »