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Sankalpa is a holistic centre that works with people who are seeking support to detox off methadone.

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Posts Tagged ‘healing addiction’

The power of juicing

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

The Power of Juicing by Tatia Nelson M.H., Iridologist – Utah

Celery juice or pain killers?  If asked this question today, Al Godsey would say, “I’ll take the celery juice any day!”  For a man who was once crippled with severe and painful arthritis, his story is one we can all learn from. The year was 1959 aboard the USS Ticonderoga, Al was a Navy Structural Mechanic who could hardly walk after 13 months on the ship, due to pain and deformities in his feet.  He was moved to the Oakland Navel Hospital in California for medical care where he was diagnosed with a debilitating case of arthritis.  In just over a year of service,  his athletic running feet had developed heel spurs, an extreme high instep and “hammer toes”.  The bone spurs felt like knives cutting into the flesh of his heels causing bad enough pain that he was confined to bed rest for three weeks.

One day, while gazing out the hospital window, he felt a strong impression that changing his diet would heal him.  When he asked his doctor about nutrition, the young lieutenant, fresh out of medical school, quickly rejected the idea that a diet change could help.  Surgery was advised, but other patients who opted for surgeries said their condition never improved and their doctors “just kept cutting” with no results.  Opting out of surgery, he took a prescription for pain of 5 aspirin, 4 times daily.  With pain numbed, he moved to a wheel chair, then crutches, and finally used only a cane, but his condition never got better, just manageable with pain killers.  After a couple of months in the hospital, his time of service was up, so he went home, still walking with a cane.

At home, Al took a 180 degree turn with his diet and his healing process finally began.  He ditched the aspirin and turned to whole foods.  He switched to whole grains and cut out white sugar, white flour, and other processed foods.  He ate at least three pounds of green and yellow fruits and vegetables daily.  For protein he enjoyed nuts and seeds and if he ate meat, it was very sparing.  No pork was consumed and meat choices were very lean, fish being a favorite.  For probiotics, he consumed fresh, homemade yoghurt or bought it with live cultures at the health food store. He read books by alternative doctors to find ways to improve his health.  Many wrote about juicing live foods for health.  So, he got a juicer and began juicing daily.  His favorite juice combinations included: Carrot, celery & apple, apple & parsley, apple & beet, and other mixtures including lots of alfalfa sprouts, watercress, wheat grass, spinach, etc.  Al first experienced a dramatic change in his health after a juice fast consisting of a quart or more of juice a day for 6 weeks.  Celery juice offered the most pain relief, so most of his recipes consisted of 1/3 to 1/2 celery.

Within a couple more months, he stopped using a cane, and his bone spurs were gone.  He was once again running the full track of 2.7 miles around Green Lake near his home in Seattle, pain free! Al is my father, and now at the age of 73… he is still juicing!  He bottle fed me fresh juices and taught our large family to juice daily.  My dad is most grateful for celery juice, because after 52 years, the pain in his feet has never come back!

Tatia Nelson is a certified Iridologist and a Master Herbalist – graduate of The School of Natural Healing. Tatia currently consults in Utah, teaches in the community, and writes for local health food stores.


Visit www.herballegacy.com for more information

Aromatherapy for Addiction

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

Aromatherapy can be very helpful in giving up an addiction.  Our nasal cavities are in close proximity to our brain, and various smells can open neutral pathways, lift moods, give our brains a delightful treat, and promote beneficial states of consciousness.  Here are 8 oils that may help!

Anise improves relaxation and sleep and helps relieve stress caused by overwork.  Use it to curb sugar and chocolate cravings.

Bergamot helps relieve anxiety, depression, and compulsive behavior.  It’s effective for treating sugar, food, alcohol, stimulant, and sedative addictions and withdrawal.

Chamomile is a traditional antidepressant.  It calms anxiety and hysteria, helps relieve suppressed anger, and aids sleep.  It also helps dispel addictive cravings.

Eucalyptus is relaxing.  Use it to dispel alcohol cravings.

Fennel is stimulating.  It helps dispel cravings for alcohol, sugar, and chocolate.

Frankincense enhances spirituality, perception, and states of higher consciousness.  It encourages release from the past.  Use it for sugar, sedative and other addictive cravings.

Geranium is a balancing remedy that relieves anxiety, depression, and stress.  Use it for sedative and stimulant addictions.  It can be helpful during withdrawal.

Lavender calms nervousness and relieves exhaustion and depression.  It can help dispel alcohol cravings.  It can be helpful during withdrawal.

Caution: Essential oils should not be taken internally, applied to the skin, or put near the eyes.  Essential oils should be avoided during pregnancy unless suggested by a professional aromatherapist.

Gratitude

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Gratitude is the sense of having benefited in some way without necessarily having worked for it.

We are grateful for gifts and favours, and we don’t have to give something in return. It’s not one that quickly springs to mind when we think about emotions, but it may be important in our sense of well-being and in keeping us connected to others.

Robert Emmons and Michael McCullough did some research, starting in 2003, on gratitude. They asked a group of people to list five things each day they were grateful for, and found that those people were much happier that those who didn’t make lists. People who kept making the lists for a long time even started exercising more!

Here at Sankalpa we did our own version of the experiment, and found that keeping the list of good things helped some people to score lower on tests for depression!

Some scientists believe that gratitude helps us to form communities and relationships. When you feel grateful, you are more likely to do something nice for someone else. Then they feel grateful, and they are more likely to do something nice for someone else. Then THEY feel grateful…..well, you get the picture! Doing things for each other without asking for anything in return creates a sense of dependence in a positive way – we learn to rely on each other.

To try this out for yourself, get a small notebook and start writing! List five things each day you are grateful for. You’ll be surprised how quickly you start noticing more and more things that are making you happy.

Can something so simple really make us happier? Tell us what you think!

For further information, see http://psychology.ucdavis.edu/labs/emmons/ or check out “Thanks!: How the New Science of Gratitude Can Make You Happier” by Robert Emmons.