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CHEROKEE WISDOM

September 11th, 2008 velvetfont Posted in Daily Tips, Emotions, General, Global Consciousness, Lifestyle, Mind, Spirit, Spiritual Afterlife, Spiritual Health, Uncategorized, biodiversity, consciousness, culture, earth, global awareness, sustainability | No Comments »

One evening an old Cherokee told his grandson about a battle that goes on inside people.

He said, “My son, the battle is between two wolves inside us all.

One is Evil. It is anger, envy, jealousy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, and ego.

The other is Good. It is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith.”

The grandson thought about it for a minute and then asked his grandfather: “Which wolf wins?”

The old Cherokee simply replied, “The one you feed.”

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Think Before You Drink! plastic, no bueno

August 24th, 2008 velvetfont Posted in Daily Tips, General, Global Consciousness, Global News, Hot Show Topics, Lifestyle, Mind, Sustainable Resourse, Uncategorized, Weekly Features, biodiversity, consciousness, culture, earth, global awareness, health, sustainability | No Comments »

Hopefully if you’re at this site and reading this you are well aware of the alternatives to using disposable bottles and recycle the ones you do. The advent of bottled water sent our already wasteful consumer culture into pollution overdrive and it’s a tremendous task to put the brakes on the momentum of this waste. Here is a list of plastic bottle fun facts that put the magnitude of this pollution into scope.

  • Plastic bottles take 700 years to begin composting
  • 90% of the cost of bottled water is due to the bottle itself
  • 80% of plastic bottles are not recycled
  • 38 million plastic bottles go to the dump per year in America from bottled water (not including soda)
  • 24 million gallons of oil are needed to produce a billion plastic bottles
  • The average American consumes 167 bottles of water a year
  • Bottling and shipping water is the least energy efficient method ever used to supply water
  • Bottled water is the second most popular beverage in the United States

Although it can be easy and convenient to pick up bottle beverage products the end cost to the environment is staggering. So be mindful when you drink…and remember, friends don’t let friends drink from disposables!

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Maria Teresa Valenzuela: ancient prophecies

August 11th, 2008 velvetfont Posted in Daily Tips, Death, Emotions, General, Global Consciousness, Global News, Integrative Medicine, Lifestyle, Mind, Spirit, Spiritual Afterlife, Spiritual Health, Weekly Features, Women, consciousness, culture, earth, global awareness, healing, health, sustainability | No Comments »

Coming to Know: Enter into a Conscious Relationship with the Prophecy
with
Maria Teresa Valenzuela and Luzia

September 11, Palm Desert, CA, 7 pm

 Maria Teresa

Becoming the Prophecies
with
Maria Teresa Valenzuela and Luzia

September 12-14, Palm Desert, CA(Friday & Saturday 8:30 - 10 pm, Sunday 8:30 - Noon) 


Thursday night, Maria Valenzuela will give voice to the Indigenous people.  Indigenous people of ancient and modern times have always had a KNOWING in how this time in history would possibly be a time of great spiritual and technological progress or time of war, turmoil and cataclysm for humanity.  In this talk Maria Teresa, in the indigenous voice, shares the concepts of the Indigenous Prophecies in a way of understanding the challenging times in which we live and offers spiritual wisdom in ways that individuals and communities can find balance.  The Maya Prophecy and other Indigenous Prophecies from Mesoamerica will be discussed as well as coming to know our personal relationship with these prophecies.  In addition, Luzia will share her wisdom on the present role of plants of wisdom in the progression from the past, and present the future by bringing forth a new prophecy for humanity.  

This will be a weekend to reconcile where you are in your psycho spiritual development and take steps in the evolution of your personal cosmology.  We offer B.R.E.T.H.E. work sessions, Body Work, Amazonian Flower Remedies, Group Sharing, a Fire Ceremony and White Table works with the option to use a sacrament.  White Table is a work in the Alan Kardec spiritist tradition to explore our connection to the spirit realm, develop our mediumship and offer charity to those in need.   

Cost of the weekend is $325 per person if registered before September 1, 2008. Weekend includes Thursday’s talk, hearty lunches and light dinner and is limited to 15 people. For full class description, please visit our website or call 760-773-5870. The Center will be closed from August 13 -21 while Renee is on a short holiday, but online registration is available.


Maria Teresa is an indigenous spiritual teacher and healer from an enduring lineage of shamanic healers and curanderos in the Sierra Madre of Chihuahua, Mexico. Taught the shamanic medicine way by her grandmother and father, she brings to her work a wealth of knowledge in Mesoamerican wisdom, myths, and traditional forms of indigenous medicine and healing. Drawing on her indigenous heritage, career as a registered nurse, life experiences, and traditional training as a “Mujer de la Medicina,” Maria Teresa serves as a unique bridge across traditions and cultures. She travels throughout the United States, Mexico, and Central America sharing her healing gifts and wisdom.

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TCM:1,000 years of history

June 1st, 2008 velvetfont Posted in Body, Daily Tips, Emotions, Food as Medicine, General, Global News, Herbal Products, Integrative Medicine, Lifestyle, Mind, Spirit, consciousness, culture, diet, global awareness, healing, health, sustainability | 1 Comment »

Chinese medicine sometimes referred to as TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine) or CCM (Classical Chinese Medicine) has a rich history dating back to thousands of years B.C. Based on the philosophies of the Tao and classical Chinese beliefs, these two variations of Chinese medicine differ from each other in that CCM strictly adheres to roots of the ancient Chinese medicine; and TCM is a more accepted form of alternative medicine that has become more “Westernized” in conjunction with modern terms.

Broadly taught throughout China, TCM is also offered through a number of Chinese medicine or acupuncture schools in North America as well. Teaching holistic principles that demonstrate how all things are connected (mind, spirit, and body); future Chinese medicine practitioners learn how to prescribe herbal prescriptions relative to the patient. The belief is to treat the “whole person,” not the disease.

Chinese medicine aims to balance the yin (water and earth) and yang (fire and air) of the body’s life force (Chi or Qi); and is a highly evolved medicine in that it approaches healthcare on the foundation of the meridian system (energy channels of the body). Unlike conventional medicine in the West, Chinese medicine places an emphasis on the body’s elements, and their interrelation with the body’s individual systems.

If you visit a Chinese medicine practitioner, you will discover an entirely different form of diagnostics. In addition to observing a patient’s face, these holistic health practitioners perform a pulse diagnosis (palpation of the radial artery pulse), body palpation, and other unique non-invasive diagnostic measures.

Once a Chinese medicine practitioner has formulated his observations, and has come to a conclusive treatment method, some of the many holistic medicines that he might offer include Chinese herbal medicine, acupuncture, holistic nutrition advice, moxibustion, cupping, Tuina (Chinese medical massage), Qigong, or Tai Chi, among others. Some specialized practitioners may administer auriculotherapy (ear acupuncture) as a health treatment.

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Ethno-Environmental Protected Area: envira river

May 30th, 2008 velvetfont Posted in Daily Tips, Death, General, Global Consciousness, Global News, Hot Show Topics, Lifestyle, Mind, Spirit, Spiritual Health, Uncategorized, Weekly Features, biodiversity, consciousness, culture, earth, global awareness, healing, sustainability | No Comments »

Fri May 30, 12:07 AM ET RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - One of Brazil’s last uncontacted Indian tribes has been spotted in the far western Amazon jungle near the Peruvian border, the National Indian Foundation said Thursday.

The Indians were sighted in an Ethno-Environmental Protected Area along the Envira River in flights over remote Acre state, said the Brazilian government foundation, known as Funai.

Funai said it photographed “strong and healthy” warriors, six huts and a large planted area. But it was not known to which tribe they belonged, the group said.

“Four distinct isolated peoples exist in this region, whom we have accompanied for 20 years,” Funai expert Jose Carlos Meirelles Junior said in a statement.

The tribe sighted recently is one of the last not to be contacted by officials. Funai does not make contact with such tribes Indians and prevents invasions of their land to ensure their autonomy, the foundation said.

Survival International said the Indians are in danger from illegal logging in Peru, which is driving tribes over the border and could lead to conflict with the estimated 500 uncontacted Indians now living on the Brazilian side.

There are more than 100 uncontacted tribes worldwide, most of them in Brazil and Peru, the group said in a statement.

“These pictures are further evidence that uncontacted tribes really do exist,” Survival director Stephen Corry said.

“The world needs to wake up to this, and ensure that their territory is protected in accordance with international law. Otherwise, they will soon be made extinct.”

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Spring Salad with a comtemporary twist

May 8th, 2008 velvetfont Posted in Body, Daily Tips, Food as Medicine, Herbal Products, Lifestyle, Mind, Recipes, Uncategorized, Weekly Features, Women, diet, earth, healing, health | No Comments »

      Here is a contemporary twist on the traditional three bean salad; it calls for fava, flageolet and Anasazi beans. Fava beans, also known as broad beans, are rich in nutrients. Look for favas in pods that are not full to bursting, an indication that the beans are old. If fava beans are unavailable, use blanched haricot verts or edamame (fresh soybeans). Flageolet beans are tiny, tender French kidney beans while Anasazi beans are speckled red-and-white beans; you can use navy or white kidney beans in their place if necessary. Add brown rice, barley or quinoa to this salad and you have a complete vegetarian meal.

1 cup shelled fava beans
3/4 cup flageolet beans, soaked for 2 hours or overnight and rinsed
3/4 cup Anasazi beans, soaked for w hours or overnight and rinsed
1/2 cup minced red onion
1 cup seeded diced tomato
1/4 cup finely chopped fresh basil
1/4 cup finely chopped fresh parsley
4 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 teaspoon kosher salt, optional
1/4 cup calendula petals, optional

1. Bring a small pot of water to a boil and prepare a bowl of ice water. Immerse the fava beans in the boiling water for 1 to 2 minutes, drain and plunge into ice water for 30 seconds to stop the cooking process. To remove the fibrous outer shell, make a small incision with your fingernail on one end of the shell, pop the bean out and discard the shell. Transfer the beans to a bowl and set aside.

2. Drain the soaked flageolet and Anasazi beans. Place each variety into separate pots and pour 3 and 1/2 cups of water into each; bring to a simmer and simmer for 40 minutes, or until the beans are just tender to the bite. Drain the beans, saving any excess cooking liquid; set aside to cool.

3. Combine the fava beans, flageolet, Anasazi beans, red onion, tomato, basil, parsley, and olive oil in a mixing bowl; mix well. Stir in 1/2 cup of the saved cooking liquid and season the salad with salt and black pepper. Cover and refrigerate for 30 minutes. Garnish the salad with calendula petals, if desired.

Makes 8 servings.

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Food Intolerance Or Allergies?

May 5th, 2008 velvetfont Posted in Body, Daily Tips, Food as Medicine, General, Global Consciousness, Herbal Products, Hot Show Topics, Integrative Medicine, Lifestyle, Mind, Recipes, Spirit, Uncategorized, Weekly Features, Women, consciousness, culture, diet, global awareness, healing, health | 5 Comments »

 


By Becky Schimpff / www.radishboy.blogspot.com

First, thanks to everyone who has been reading this blog. I really enjoy your comments, and I find comfort knowing others who creatively face similar struggles with food allergies, celiac disease and gluten intolerance.

I get many questions about how my family came to be gluten free and I thought I would share our story.

I have two sons, Ben and Bruno. Ben is in Kindergarten and will be six in June. Bruno will turn three in May.

My husband and I were living and working in Tokyo when Ben was born. From the very start he was a challenging baby. He was either nursing or crying. He didn’t sleep well. He would scream for hours. At the time I thought all babies were like this. In retrospect, I realize that he was having an allergic reaction to the foods I was eating, but I didn’t know that at the time.

About six weeks after Ben was born, he developed eczema on his cheeks that spread to his upper body and behind his elbows. We took him to his pediatrician who confirmed that it was eczema and gave us a kind of steriodal cream to control outbreaks. The doctor did say that eczema is frequently caused by food or environmental allergies, however, there was no reliable way to test an infant and that he would likely outgrow the eczema around the age of three.

At this point I knew very little about allergies, but I did know that I wasn’t happy with using any kind of steriods. I knew that steroids only masked the symptoms and didn’t address the underlying cause. Around that time, I found an article on the La Leche League website about incompletely digested cow milk proteins passing intact through breastmilk, and causing reactions, such as eczema, in infants.

I gave up dairy right away, and within two weeks there was a dramatic improvement in Ben’s skin and his temperment.

Hopeful to identify other food intolerances, I started keeping a food journal of everything that I ate. I didn’t do an elimination diet, instead I did a rotation diet where no single food was repeated for four days. With the food journal and rotation diet I was able to pinpoint that Ben was also reacting to wheat and egg. The process took about three months, but once we completely eliminated dairy, wheat and egg from my diet, Ben’s skin completely cleared.

When Ben was about a year old we moved to Los Angeles from Tokyo.

Bruno was born just before Ben turned three.

When Bruno was around a month old he also started to develop eczema. I had been eating some dairy, wheat and egg while I was pregnant, so I stopped eating these right away. It helped, but it wasn’t enough.

I again started to keep a food journal and a rotation diet. This time, in addition to wheat, dairy and egg, we identified rye, kamut, corn, soy, chocolate, citrus, strawberries, tuna, lentils and rice. It took a long time to find these, probably six months. Once we got all of these out of his diet, his eczema cleared.

In addition to the eczema, Bruno had infrequent bowel movements, and the poo would be largely undigested. Although he was almost nine pounds at birth, he quickly dropped to the 7th percentile in weight by his sixth month checkup, and below the 5th percentile by his nine month checkup. He wasn’t growing.

Our pediatrician was very supportive. We tried allergy testing but it was inconclusive. Eventually, I found a naturapathic doctor who suggested, among other things, to supplement Bruno’s diet with probiotics, digestive enzymes, essential fatty acids and glutamine. This helped tremendously.

During this time we were not eating gluten containing grains such as wheat, barley, rye, spelt, and kamut. We were, however, eating oats. Oats did seem to cause eczema so we didn’t think it was a problem. However, although oats do not naturally contain gluten but, they can be cross-contaminated during processing. We decided to eliminate oats to see what would happen.

I swear Bruno grew three inches in the next month.

From then on we have been totally gluten free. Over time, the elimination of problem foods and supplementation with probiotics and digestive enzymes has helped to heal Bruno’s digestive tract. After about a year we were able to re-introduce most of the problem foods with the exception of gluten, dairy and egg. Bruno no longer reacts to corn, soy, chocolate, citrus, strawberries, tuna, lentils or rice. This is huge for us.

After seeing the benefit of probiotics and enzymes, we started to look for foods that provided the same effect naturally. We really started to focus not just on what we were eating (or avoiding) and really examined how we were eating.

Food allergies and intolerances are caused by the body’s immune system reacting to the proteins of incompletely digesting foods. The body sees these proteins as foreign ‘invaders’ (such as a virus) and fights against it. This causes different reactions in different people, however, eczema is a relatively common reaction.

 

To stop the reaction it is necessary to strengthen digestion so that food proteins are completely digested and at the same time strengthen the immune system so that the body can deal with any incomplete proteins that ‘sneak’ through the digestive process. This is the purpose of avoiding the allergenic foods and supplementing with probiotics and enzymes, which naturally help the body digest and break down foods.

We had already removed pretty much all processed, packaged and refined foods, mostly because they contained an ingredient that Bruno couldn’t eat.

We started to incorporate foods into our diet that contained high levels of probiotics, enzymes and essential fatty acids, as well as foods that were vitamin and mineral dense.

Fermented foods such as pickles, sauerkraut, kimchi, miso, natto, tempeh, naturally leavened sourdough bread, raw cheese, yogurt, kefir and kombucha are teaming with beneficial probiotic bacteria and enzymes. The proteins in these fermented foods are already partially broken down by the probiotic bacteria and are therefore much easier to digest. In addition the probiotics colonize our gastrointestinal tract and help our bodies digest and break down foods, and in the process produce important vitamins such as B12 and essential fatty acids.

Many cultures eat fermented foods with every meal. The Japanese eat natto (fermented soy beans), miso and many kinds of pickled vegetables. Koreans eat kimchi. Traditional European cultures thrived on yogurt, kefir, raw cheese, sourdough bread and sauerkraut. In many parts of Africa the staple diet is comprised of porridge made from fermented millet.

As Bruno reacted strongly to rice, corn and all gluten containing grains, we started to look at ways to partially break down the proteins by soaking the grains before cooking. Traditionally, grains were almost always soaked, sprouted or fermented before eaten. Bread was carefully cultured and fermented over a long period of time before being baked. Many cultures soak whole grains before eating. For example, every Japanese housewife knows to rinse and then soak her rice before cooking.

Soaking and sprouting the grains starts the germination process by neutralizing phytic acid. Phytic acid is an enzyme inhibitor that binds the minerals and proteins within the grain until the conditions are right for the grain to sprout. Consumption of unsoaked grains can lead to poor absorption of the nutrients in the grain, and the undigested proteins can irritate the intestines, and this is what was happening with Bruno. By neutralizing the phytic acid, the protein, vitamins and enzymes are released, allowing nutrients to be more readily absorbed during digestion.

It sounds complicated, but really it’s not. It has meant some time in the kitchen, and some changes to our diet. We’ve added fermented foods to our diet, mainly in the form of raw cultured vegetables. We now soak grains overnight before cooking. We’ve added essential fatty acids, such as flax seed oil, to salad dressings, hummus and other foods. We’ve incorporated more enzyme rich raw foods, such as big salads, to our meals. We focus on foods that have nutrient density.

What started as a way to help my son with his allergies has turned into quest for health. We have learned so much on this path about what it really means to eat healthy and to be healthy. We have made so many changes for the better. There is no going back !

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Radish Boy: it’s a gluten free blog

April 21st, 2008 velvetfont Posted in Body, Food as Medicine, General, diet, global awareness | No Comments »

I found this great blog Radish Boy that has easy to follow gluten free recipes. These are gluten free oat matzoh, that I made for our seder tonight. Matzoh is unleavened bread eaten on Passover, the holiday that celebrates the escape of the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt.

According to Jewish law, matzoh must be made from one of the five grains traditionally eaten in Egypt that could become leavened. These grains are wheat, barley, rye, spelt or oats. It is made quickly, so that the grains don’t have time to ferment and leaven the bread. No more than 18 minutes can pass from the time that flour and water are mixed together to the time that the bread is finished in order for the bread to be considered matzoh.

Unfortunately for those with celiac disease or gluten intolerance, it is difficult to find gluten free matzoh, and it can’t be made from alternative grains such as rice, buckwheat or quinoa. There are several companies that sell gluten free oat matzoh, made specifically for Passover.

So in an attempt to follow the rules, I made gluten free oat matzoh using oat flour and water, and following the 18 minute time limit.

Here’s the process:

2 cups gluten free oat flour
1 cup water

Preheat the oven to 475 degress. In a bowl, mix the flour and water. Spread a thin layer of oat flour on a board and then knead the dough until it becomes a workable, about 5 minutes. Roll the dough into a snake and cut into inch size pieces. Roll each piece into a thin circle, and prick all over with a fork. Bake for 7 minutes or until lightly browned around the edges. Make sure that the entire process takes only 18 minutes from start to finish. These matzoh will be very crisp and have a delightful, nutty taste.

Technically, these are not Kosher for Passover because the oat flour I used was not supervised by a Rabbi to ensure that it did not ferment or become contaminated during processing. But I think it is a good substitute to teach our kids about the meaning of Passover, without being too strict about the law.

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