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Friday, January 29, 2010

Tips for a Healthy Body

If you want to be healthier, there are several keys to having more energy and a healthy body. Here are some tips to help you life a healthy lifestyle. Incorporating these ideas into your daily life will give you an increase in energy, stamina, and may even increase the age you live to.

-Drink more water

Most people are dehydrated because of the caffeine they consume in coffee, tea, and soda. Drink at least 8 glasses of water per day, but try to get up to one gallon of water per day, particularly if you drink coffee, tea, or soda during the day.

-Cut out sugar

Eat as few refined foods as you can. If one of the first three ingredients in a product is sugar (such as high fructose corn syrup), don't eat it.

-Eat whole foods

Eat lots of whole grains and green, leafy vegetables. These will give you the vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants that you need to have energy and for disease prevention. Not only will whole foods give you more energy and help you to live longer, but they will help you feel better, promoting a healthy digestive system and helping your body in other ways so you can operate at peak performance.

-Eat breakfast

Try to incorporate eggs, oatmeal, or whole grain cereal (with fiber) into your morning routine. You'll gain more energy in the morning that will continue throughout the day.

-Eat five small meals per day

Along with a healthy breakfast, lunch, and dinner, eat two to three small snacks during the day to keep your energy levels up and your metabolism going. Make sure your snacks are healthy food, such as nuts, fruit, whole wheat crackers, or vegetables. You can combine ingredients to make a great snack, such as ants on a log (peanut butter and raisins on celery), apples and peanut butter, hummus and crackers (or celery), rice cakes, hard boiled eggs and fruit (such as oranges), or anything else that combines some protein with a healthy fruit or vegetable.

-Lose weight

Your body has to work harder when you are overweight, which can cause a range of health problems including headaches, high blood pressure, and even heart disease.

-Eat your vitamins

Since most of us don't eat a perfect diet every day of the year, taking a multivitamin can help us get the vitamins and minerals we may be missing from our diet.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Stressed?

Stress-Related Conditions

If we don’t have to run or fight like our caveman/cavewoman ancestors, the fight or flight chemicals don’t serve their original purpose. They can have andwill have a negative effect on your body. So while you stand at the check-out feeling angry and frustrated, or you fume at your spouse for leaving clothes on the floor, or you bellow at the grand children repeatedly to turn down the TV, or you lose it because the dog tracked mud over the carpet -we promise you - you are not doing your system any good. When these chemical reactions - like the adrenalin flowing- happen often, we can easily develop stress related diseases and complaints. There are many, many conditions likely caused by stress.

Far too many of us suffer from things like:

  • heart disease
  • chronic fatigue
  • anxiety attacks
  • mood swings
  • psychological distress
  • depression
  • sleep problems
  • high blood pressure
  • eating disorders
  • peptic ulcers
  • poor immune function
  • chronic pain
  • colds
  • flu
  • viruses
  • headaches
  • migraines
  • alcoholism
  • smoking-related respiratory aliments

Medical research is seeing a direct link between diseases and stress. Some estimates say 40 - 80% of all visits to doctors may be directly related to stress. Ask yourself, where do you fit in this picture? Do you have illnesses or conditions brought on by stress or made worse by it?

Are We Better Off These Days?

While it is true we are now living longer than we ever have, are we living better, healthier, than before? Modern medicine with its wonderful pills and incredible technical advances for treatments and operations- means diseases and conditions are being dealt with incredibly well. But do we have a higher quality of life? Are we healthier than 100 years ago when the life expectancy was lower or are we just here longer? Is it quantity verse quality? Could stress management change that?

In bygone years, heart disease and cancer would kill us off quite quickly when they developed, are we now living much longer with these diseases? We can be treated now, cured sometimes. But is our health as good as it should be? Could lowering our stress levels have a direct impact on that? We believe it can. How many bottles of aspirin and other pain killers go over the counter and into your medicine cabinet? How many packages of Tums, bottles of Pepto-Bismol, laxatives, sleeping aids, allergy medicines, diet aids, tonics and supplements, cold remedies and immune boosters get bought yearly - not counting thebillions of prescribed drugs taken? Pain killers, barbiturates and mood altering drugs are frequently prescribed medications.

Yep, we are indeed living longer, but thanks to our reactions to negative stress, we may not be living better, healthier.

The good news is - each of us can live healthier- if we make a concentrated effort to invest in our health by learning to identify bad stress and choosing healthy strategies to overcome a lot of the negative side effects.

Benefits of Stress Management

Ideally, stress management needs to begin when we’re young so that we don’t have battered, scarred trunks when we reach mid life and beyond. But, the reality is, most of us never consider stress as damaging …until we’ve been reacting to it for a long time. The good news about our amazing bodies is that once we identify the stressors and make some definite life style changes, we can often reverse a lot of the damage. Sort of like being able to get some wood filler, apply it to the nicks on the tree trunk, then sand it down to recreate a smooth finish on your trunk. Stress management can really promote better health.

What are some of the benefits of stress reduction?

  • Better immune function
  • Less illnesses and physical complaints
  • More energy
  • Feeling more relaxed
  • Sleeping better
  • Better digestion
  • Calmer mood
  • More focused, more positive

Case Example: Elaine

A housewife named Elaine suffered from dreadful panic attacks. She would be in a state of great agitation. She was sure she was having a heart attack, terrified she would die, despite the fact that she had no heart disease and was just 45 years old. Twice she rushed to the emergency room for help. She was suffering acute chest pain, sweating profusely and nauseated. Her heart was pounding, her breathing was shallow and rapid, her hands shook and she had diarrhoea. Real symptoms. The emergency room medics examined her carefully and told her she was reacting to stress and suggested she see her family doctor.

Her family doctor checked Elaine over, sent her for a series of tests to rule out disease and prescribed . . . exercise. Whenever she felt acute anxiety symptoms, she was to jog or run or get on her exercise bike until the attack passed. His notion was that to get rid of the bad chemicals, it was imperative to replace them with good chemicals. After a few weeks of doing that …it worked. She was able to control the panic and anxiety with exercise. With a lot of practice, she also learned to do relaxation techniques and deep breathing so that Elaine can take control of anxiety whenever she feels over-whelmed at times when she’s unable to exercise. No pills or magic, just using the body and mind to cure itself.

Case Example: Allen

Allen was a firefighter for many years. When he had been to a fire, he would come back to the fire station all keyed up and be unable to relax. The adrenalin he needed to fight the fire was still pumping - hours after he was out of the “fight” mode. The “tiger” was gone yet seeing flames destroy people’s property bothered him emotionally. When people were hurt or died in the fires, he was even more keyed up and anxious. He felt sad. Soon he had high blood pressure and was prescribed medication.

Realizing he had to take action, try to reverse what he was feeling, he started running on the tread milling once he got back from a fire. His family had a history of heart disease, he was determined not to sick. He gets on the treadmill for 30 - 45 minutes while watching TV or listening to relaxing music. He also learned to meditate which took weeks to master. He does tai chi several days weekly. Within just 4 month his blood pressure was under control and he was able to come off the medication. He actively changed his bad stress chemicals to good stress chemicals.

How stressed are you?

Put a check mark beside each of the following symptoms of stress that you have experienced in the past 2 weeks.

Muscle pain
Uptight feelings
Clenching teeth
Scared nervous
Skin breakout
Scary thoughts
Migraines/head pain
Short-tempered
Numbness in limbs
Depressed
Upper chest pain
Turned off romance
Stomach upset
Feeling mad
Feeling exhausted
Feeling helpless
Racing heart
Drinking too much
Fast pulse
Smoking too much
Sweating a lot
Over spending
Bowel trouble
Sleeplessness
Tummy pain
Losing things
Chewing on nails
Thoughts in a jumble
Nervous movements
Not able to settle down
Dry mouth
Can’t concentrate
Feeling sickly
Teary, weepy
No get up & go
Run down, sick more
Eating too much


How many items did you put a tick beside? Perhaps you need to sit and evaluate how stressed you are.

Are you happy in your relationships, is your job right for you, do you have a solid friendships to turn to? What changes can you make in the short term, what changes might you need to make for the long haul? Look carefully at where your stress comes from and maybe make some beginning changes there.

Where is your stress coming from?

This checklist will help you identify the where part. If for instance you are having symptoms because you are (unhappy at work) you may need to confront that issue. Ask yourself, is this something I can change? If so, get a plan to do that. If, on the other hand, it is caused by someone/ something over which you have no control and it’s temporary, you need to somehow put it on the back burner until the situation changes.

If a person is the cause and he/she is not going to go away and you aren’t in a position to get mediation - then ask yourself how long you are willing to put your health at risk? What price will you pay? The work environment can be emotionally toxic if you react negatively again and again. Sure, you need to earn a living but is it necessary to seriously jeopardize your total well being?

Put a check mark beside each of the following areas of stress in your life.

Death of loved one
Conflict with co-workers
Health concerns
Problems at work
Worries about money
Burn-out
Upset with spouse
Inability to get along
Upset with kids
Mood swings
Worry about parents
Concern about aging
Upset over other relatives
Not enough self-time
Upset with friends
Too much idle time
New house
Concerns with appearance
Major home renovations
Boredom
Too much house work
Other

Becoming Stress Resistant

Get a checkup to rule out medical conditions

If you know you’re under a lot of stress and are experiencing stress symptoms, your first important step is a trip to your doctor for a thorough check-up. He/she will order some routine tests and do a full physical at your request. You may need to ask for extra time when you make the appointment. Make sure your doctor thinks it is ok for you to begin an exercise program, should you decide to do that.

Examine where your stress is coming from

Clear some time for yourself and take a long, hard look at how you are doing. You’ve taken the stress tests and quizzes. Now is the time to make a commitment to over-coming your stress symptoms and generally learning how to handle stress in a healthier way.

Put YOU first! Make a commitment to yourself

The strategies we teach, work. The more you use them, the more they work. Decide which ones are most likely to suit you and your lifestyle, then design your personal “de-stress” action plan.

It will mean putting yourself first, at least for a portion of your day, every day It may mean juggling tight schedules, setting you as a priority. It will mean saying no sometimes - to demands being made on you by others. Most likely you were brought up to believe being selfish was bad, get over it. When it comes to your health and well-being, selfish is not only good for you, it is exceedingly wise. You may need to have a critical look at cutting back on some of your responsibilities to create “me time”. Do it.

Learn to say “NO”

Learn to say no at work and at home.

If your standards of housekeeping dictate that you dust weekly and clean your entire house most weekends, rethink it or get some help. Nobody is ever remembered fondly as a great housekeeper, it’s not what they’ll put on your headstone after you’ve gone. Whether we choose to be cremated when we die, or are buried and take a slower route, we all end up as some version of ashes, as dust. What a pity to waste a lot of joyous living time on something as ordinary as dusting.

Enjoy your life

Lighten up, smell the roses, wear purple, dance with your husband, wife, friend, or your cat more often … while you leave the pots in the sink more often. Your time is valuable, investing in you is having self-savvy. Time spent de-stressing is worth a fortune. Your good health and longevity depend on it.

Move Your Body, Remove Your Stress

Most of us know exercise is important to staying healthy. Researchers at Duke University Medical Centre in North Carolina recently reported that the mental ability of middle aged and elderly people showed improvement after as little as 16 weeks on a regular 30 minute, 3 times weekly aerobic program. People in wheelchairs and others with disabilities likewise have been shown to benefit from exercise.

Research has also shown exercise can be as effective as drug therapy in treating depression. When you exercise at a level where you force your heart rate up and work up a sweat for thirty minutes or more, three days weekly or more, you are going to have chemical reactions that can act like an antidote for stress. You’ve heard of runners’ high - where endorphin, a chemical produced in the brain, flows when you exercise. Exercising gives you a terrific, empowered feeling. Exercise increases the release of endorphins - happy brain chemicals! Exercise also rids the body of by-products of stress, such as adrenaline. And because it exercise helps reduce fatigue, exercise increases the body’s capacity to cope with stress.

And we are not talking of training to run the Boston Marathon! We are talking a regular person walking fast or treadmilling or dancing, whatever, for 30 minutes three times a week or more to get healthy. Even if you are not fit, within a few short weeks, you’ll start to reap the benefits. You will feel healthier, you’ll handle stress better. In terms of general health, getting a good cardio work-out three or more times a week and doing some weight training to build and maintain muscles, makes great sense. If you are seriously seeking a way to reduce stress, exercising, with your doctor’s approval, is a very, very smart choice.

Note - make sure you get a decent pair of running shoes. It’s important that your feet be well supported.

Also, you may want to exercise with a friend, or a group of friends. It helps to keep motivated when you have at least one other person work out with. Once you get into exercising, your body will work better, feel better, be better. When stress happens, you’ll ward off the negative effects more rapidly. Your bounce back will be superior.

In addition to the aerobic workout, it is equally important to think of making the best of the rest of your body and limbs. If you are strong, toned, and well muscled, you will enjoy increased flexibility and not suffer the limitations that can prohibit your independence and mobility. An excellent book on strength training is by Dr. Miriam Nelson who researches at Tufts University. It’s called “Strong Women Stay Young”. It will give you scientifically proven, yet simple exercises that can reverse bone loss, improve energy and balance and replace fat with muscle. For men, these exercises are equally good for you.

Exercise is a key strategy in achieving and maintaining physical and mental well-being. When you’ve had an argument with your partner, been hassled by the bank, just driven 30 miles on an icy road, jump on the treadmill or a bike or go for a swim or a walk. The tension will lessen considerably. Every time you realize you are in a state of stress, exercise. Don’t say you don’t have time. Make time. It will stop the nicks being taken from your “tree trunk” it will retard the aging effect of bad stress, it will give you more energy, more focus, more health!

Some More Exercise Ideas

Finding the right exercise fit may take time. Some people do well in a gym or at aerobic dance classes, while others fare better at home. The key to finding your exercise niche is to look at your habits, your lifestyle and maybe try different things until you discover a good fit. Consider your body rhythms to fit exercise into the best slot for you - early in the day or later - depending on whether you’re an a.m. or p.m person. It may mean getting up an hour earlier or rearranging things at lunch or suppertime.

If you’re easily bored, you may need to vary the routine to maximize staying committed. However you manage, getting fit and staying fit is one of the best investments in self you’ll ever make! You need not spend a lot of money. Walking is free, gym memberships can be as cheaply as $2 a day. Second-hand treadmills and exer-cycles and other equipment are for sale in daily papers. Money spent to get healthy is a smart investment.

Many folks do Yoga. A form of exercise that is good for the mind while improving strength, flexibility and circulation, yoga is highly relaxing. Practised for centuries, yoga may be an exercise choice in addition to cardio/strength training. Tai Chi is another excellent type of work -out - it focuses the mind while exercising the body. People of all ages enjoy Tai Chi and Yoga. If you can’t get to a class to learn, there are excellent books and videos available in your library, bookstore or on the Internet.

In summary, try these ideas:

  • Walk with a friend.
  • Join a gym.
  • Sign up for an aerobics or step class.
  • Try yoga or Tai Chi.
  • Dance, dance, dance!
  • Buy an exercise video for home.
  • Look for guidebooks at the library.
  • Surf the Internet for workout plans.

These days, people of all sizes and shapes are getting fit, there’s no magical right age either. If you are 45 or 65 or 80 and your physician says it’s ok, you can reap all the benefits. The days of the jocks and the spandex Barbies being the only folks in the gym are gone. You may look like Delta Burke or Dr. Ruth, it doesn’t matter one hoot. Fit makes everyone feel and look great. It’s an incredible weapon in your personal wager against stress.

Laughing Our Worries Away

  • “Always laugh when you can. It’s cheap medicine” - Lord Byron
  • “A smile is a curve that sets everything straight.” - Phyllis Diller

Many times in our hectic lives we fall into the habit of taking things … life, far too seriously. We don’t stop and rate the real importance, we don’t take the time to put things that happen to us into perspective. We certainly don’t always stop and smell the roses or the lilacs or even the dandelions. We react. We stress our bodies, ourselves, we damage our essence. We don’t ask ourselves, when confronted with something stressful, will this matter 2 days from now, or 2 weeks or 2 months from now?

It is NOT worth getting your knickers in a twist, not worth straining your artery walls for. We can choose not to react, not to freak, not to worry, not to fret. The ball is always in our court. We must take the time to pause and put things into perspective.

Laughter is a good drug. The chemical benefits from smiling and laughter are the same, whether they are real or fake. Your body still pumps out the endorphin when you grin at yourself, or force a laugh. You reap what you sow, it’s amazing. Believe in laughter, it heals.

Problem is, we don’t laugh nearly enough….

What Makes You Laugh?

How do you find laughter? What about if nothing feels funny? What do you do? Need some suggestions?

  • As much as possible, avoid negative people and gravitate towards happy, upbeat or happy and serene people. They are good for you!
  • Check out numerous laughter sites on the Internet, books and tapes on humour, joke books.
  • Watch funny, upbeat sitcoms, old movies like the Pink Panther, or funny plays.
  • Invest in comedy props like whoopee cushions and clown noses.
  • Visit stand-up comedy clubs and light-hearted destinations.

When you need to feel silly:

  • Why not spend an hour at a toy store?
  • Spend time in the humour section of a bookstore or library.
  • Go for a swing in a kids’ play ground.
  • Paint a picture.
  • Make a Playdough figurine.
  • Try on crazy hats.
  • Take clowning lessons.
  • Learn some crazy jokes.
  • Buy yourself a prize or an ice cream.

When was the last time you bought cracker jacks to get the little prize or acted like a kid or hung out with kids? Kids know how to laugh, how to be happy and giggle. They aren’t uptight and self-conscious about being silly. Bless them, they offer up an excellent example. Like zebras, little kids don’t get ulcers! Do something totally silly and out of character every once in awhile. Remember this quote:

“You don’t stop laughing because you get old …you get old because you stop laughing”

More Practical Suggestions

Learning to identify, rate and handle your stress is important. As we have stated over and over, it is critical to your good health. It is a vaccination against ill health and disease. As someone said, don’t sweat the small stuff cause … it’s all small stuff.

Here are more ideas for de-stressing:

  • Spend more time with friends who make you feel good.
  • For every negative statement you make, make two positive statements to counteract the negative.
  • Be quick to forgive, slow to judge harshly.
  • Don’t gossip.
  • Drink lots of water. Often we feel weary when in fact we need to hydrate our bodies more.
  • Break up tasks up so you can deal with them one piece at a time.
  • Reduce noise in your life. Turn off the phone, cut back on email, leave the TV off.
  • Have long hot showers or fill the tub, surround it with candles and soak away your stress.
  • Get some sea monkeys or a gold fish, walk a dog.
  • Simplify your surroundings. Get the clutter out of your life, and your work place. Clutter can stress so needlessly. If something doesn’t work, fix it or throw it out. If you haven’t worn it in 2 years, give it to the Salvation Army. You need peaceful surroundings to be stress free.
  • Make a wish list. Start to do or get those things on your list.
  • Find a joke to tell. Laugh more.
  • Count your blessings daily. Write them down, count them … instead of sheep.
  • Be free with compliments, call an old pal and catch up on what they’re doing.
  • Pamper yourself. Buy yourself flowers or house plants, or jewellery, a new outfit, or chocolates, a rich dessert or fun appliances. Regularly.
  • Make new friends, talk to strangers in the supermarket, compliment the guy at the gas bar or tell the check-out girl she’s doing a great job.
  • Barbecue in the middle of winter - complete with marsh mellows toasted for dessert.
  • Have a massage, a pedicure, a manicure, a sauna, a facial, a bubble bath with candles around, get your hair done -not because it needs a cut or colour, just because your due a treat.
  • Try aromatherapy, get music of waterfalls, or gentle classical relaxation music. Mozart is soothing. Music can have an enormous impact on your mood. Wake up to Marvin Gaye singing “Heard it on the Grape Vine”. You’ll smile immediately. Dance around the house.
  • Don’t get all stressed and say “yes” to a request you don’t want to do. Unless it’s at work and part of your job, say simply, “I can’t”. If pressured, just repeat, “I can’t do it” until the message gets across. DO NOT feel guilty or make excuses. Unless you’ve committed a crime or hurt somebody, guilt is a wasted emotion, it serves no purpose.
  • You forgive others, right? Now, forgive yourself.
  • Treasure self time. Every day. Give yourself a compliment daily.
  • When you start the day, say aloud, “today is going to be a good day!” It will be. Sit on the edge of your bed every morning and do this - it sets up the expectation!
  • Smile at yourself in the mirror, tell yourself you’re gorgeous.
  • Consider failure for what it is - an opportunity to learn something new.
  • Be as kind to yourself as you would be to your best friend. Be as non-judgmental too.
  • Don’t fall for unwelcome peer pressure, at any age.
  • Praise yourself more, worry less.
  • When you wake up at 4 a.m. and you’re worried and fretting, get up, write down a couple of lines about the issues, get a glass of warm milk and get back to sleep. Remember, the mind can play tricks in the dark of night. Defer the problems until you get up. Then, defer them again. Pick a time when you can indeed focus on your troubles, let’s say between 9 and 10 p.m. Every time worrisome things start to stress you, put them into the “worry time slot” and mentally force positive, pleasant thoughts into your mind instead. It takes practice to undo old worry patterns but it can be done successfully; you’ll feel so much healthier, so much calmer and more in control, when you do. They say 90% of the things we worry about never happen. And usually they don’t, or at least not as badly as we imagined them.

Abdominal Breathing

Let’s try an exercise together. Begin by closing your eyes and focusing on your breathing. Are you:

  • breathing rapidly or slowly?
  • taking deep breaths or shallow breaths?
  • feeling the breath in the center of your chest, or down around your abdomen?

Most people tend to breathe in a slightly abnormal way, they tend to hold in their stomachs, make little use of their diaphragm, and breathe using the muscles of their upper chest, neck and shoulders. This is not the most effective way to get the needed oxygen to our brain and muscles. If you watch babies or animals breathe, you will notice that they breathe with their whole bodies, their bellies rise and fall with each breath. For some reason, we stop doing this when we outgrow diapers. No one really knows why.

The good news is that we can relearn how to breathe properly - learning to breathe using our abdomens. This can help us control our feelings of stress. In fact, abdominal breathing is the single most effective strategy for stress reduction! A person’s normal breathing rate is 8-12 breaths per minute. But if someone is stressed, or having a panic attack, they tend to breathe faster (up to 20-30 breaths per minute) and more shallowly. Although we may seem to be breathing more when this happens, we are not actually get much oxygen in, and the breathing is not as effective as it could be.

Abdominal breathing means breathing fully from your abdomen or from the bottom of your lungs. It is exactly the reverse of the way you breathe when you’re anxious or tense, which is typically shallow and high in your chest. If you’re breathing from your abdomen, you can place your hand on your abdomen and see it actually rise each time you inhale. You’ll find that abdominal breathing will help you relax any time you are feeling anxious.

To practice abdominal breathing, follow these steps:

1. Place one hand on your abdomen right beneath your rib cage

2. Inhale slowly and deeply through your nose into the bottom of your lungs. Your chest should move only slightly, while your stomach rises, pushing your hand up.

3. When you’ve inhaled fully, pause for a moment and then exhale fully through your mouth. Purse your lips and imagine that you are blowing on a hot spoonful of soup. As you exhale, just let yourself go and imagine your entire body going loose and limp. It should take you twice as long to exhale as it did to inhale.

4. In order to fully relax, take and release ten abdominal breaths. Try to keep your breathing smooth and regular throughout, without gulping in a big breath or exhaling suddenly.

Meditation

According to the Oxford dictionary, to meditate is to engage in contemplation; to plan mentally. Meditating is sometimes referred to as a workout for the soul, a source of mental cleansing. It is a personal time out, an exercise in finding inner peace and quietude.

Meditating has been around a very long time and was practised in Eastern countries like India at least 5000 years ago. Traditionally, the purposes and benefits of mediation have been spiritual in nature - becoming one with God, attaining enlightenment, achieving selflessness. While many people practice meditation today for spiritual purposes, just as many practice simply as a way of relaxing.

Meditation was introduced into North America in the mid-1960s as Transcendental Meditation. In Transcendental Meditation, an instructor selects a mantra (Om). You are then instructed to repeat that sound mentally, while sitting in a quiet place. You must concentrate completely, but not forcefully, on the mantra while letting any distractions just pass through your mind.

In the 1970s, noted U.S. cardiologist, Hubert Benson conducted research on Transcendental Meditation, and published a book called the “Relaxation Response”. It’s an excellent read, we highly recommend it.

There are many benefits to be gained by meditating. People who meditate regularly report a lowering of their stress reaction, a feeling of serenity. They report it is a process where you feel healed mentally, while being rejuvenated. Just as a good night’s sleep has restorative powers, many people say meditating leaves you feeling rested and refreshed.

Immediate benefits of meditation:

  • Decrease in heart rate
  • Decrease in blood pressure
  • Decrease in oxygen consumption
  • Decrease in lactic acid in the blood (lactic acid is associated with stress)
  • Increase in smooth blood flow

Long-term benefits of meditation:

  • Sharpened alertness
  • Increased energy level and productivity
  • Decreased self-criticism
  • Increased objectivity
  • Decreased dependence on drugs and alcohol
  • Heightened self-esteem

It is not difficult to learn. It gets easier and seems to have greater health effects, the longer and more regularly you do it. Benefits may be obvious right away or may take weeks or longer. Don’t put time lines on learning.

Next we will provide simple instructions. Or, you can purchase books, tapes or sign up for classes. Whilst you need a quiet environment to learn it, once you are well practised, you’ll be able to meditate, even in the midst of a crowd - when you have the desire to chill out and retreat into a place of quietude.

To practice meditation, follow these guidelines:

  • Turn off the phone, tell people you’re not to be disturbed. Find a quiet spot and sit comfortably, with your back supported. You may also choose to lie down, although this will increase the likelihood that you fall asleep.
  • Close your eyes and focus on breathing deeply (abdominal breathing). Pay attention to your breath as it goes in and out of your body. Breathing deeply is key. Feel your body relax, feel the tension subsiding. Breath deeply and slowly. Feel your limbs get heavy.
  • Choose a simple word or phrase to repeat as you relax. It doesn’t matter what the word is (for example, “peace”, “relax”, or “one”). Don’t force it, just let it come.
  • Repeat the word or phrase each time you exhale. You may repeat the word quietly aloud or in your mind.
  • Gently return to the word or phrase when you find your mind wanders. This is normal. Some people use candles or a firelight or some other dim light source, to aid the process.
  • Allow your thoughts to flow freely, to come and go. Don’t try to control them, just gently bring yourself back to the word or phrase or light source when needed.
  • Try to meditate for at least 20 minutes. Beginners might wish to start with 5-10 minutes. Don’t set a clock, though you may glance at a clock. Basically, your body will tell you when you’re ready to stop. Trust it.
  • When you are finished your meditation session, slowly come back to normal awareness. Give your limbs a gentle stretch, roll your head and shoulders, ease back into full consciousness. Get up slowly and savour the feeling.
  • Tell yourself, “That was good, I am good. I am refreshed.”
  • Meditate daily, twice daily if possible. Perhaps early morning, when you wake up and later in the evening. The more you practice, the easier it becomes to relax your mind and body.
  • If you feel uncomfortable sensations, or strong unpleasant feelings coming from a longer meditation session, simply stop meditating and try to relax by using deep breathing techniques.

Guided Imagery and Visualization

Have you ever caught yourself drifting off at a meeting or in church - reliving a pleasant episode - daydreaming about a happy event past or future? It feels good. Visualization, or imagining yourself to be someplace wonderful and free, is a method of stress relieving that can be very beneficial. The wonderful, peaceful scene can be anywhere you want it to be, a quiet beach, a calm lake, or a cozy fire on a cold winter night, for example.

To achieve tranquillity from visualisation exercises you need to perfect the exercise by practicing. You may choose your own scenario or change the imaginary scenes from time to time. The important part is to visualize the scene in sufficient detail so that it completely absorbs your attention. The more absorbed you are, the deeper your state of relaxation.

To practice visualization, follow these guidelines and try imaging the scene described below. You may even want to tape-record yourself reading the scene, so that you can play it back as you drift off to sleep.

  • Lie down, or sit in a very comfortable chair in a quiet room. Close your eyes, breath deeply. You may want to do a series of deep abdominal breaths until you’re really feeling relaxed.
  • Now, pretend you have all the time in the world, no pressing needs, no aliment or hassles of any kind. You are feeling healthy, your body is calm, open to pleasure and relaxation.
  • Imagine you are on a knoll of lovely sea grass, overlooking a long, wide sandy beach by a calm, sapphire-coloured ocean. The tide is a long way out. The gentle waves are rhythmically breaking on the shore. The temperature is about 75 degrees, there is no wind and the sun is shining. Tiny, puffy white clouds drift by occasionally, a few sea gulls float about the perimeter of your vision. You are completely alone, no other soul is near by. There are no insects, no such thing as sunburn, nothing to disrupt this idyllic place. It is a safe haven of beauty and tranquillity. Negative thoughts and worries have no place here.
  • Imaging you are walking across the knoll, down onto a wide set of wooden steps. They are warm and smooth under your bare feet. You walk down to the beach where you stretch out on the warm, fine white sand. You close your eyes and breath deeply. Feel the warm air coming in and out of your body. You feel your body getting very, very heavy. It feels almost as though you are sinking into the warmth of the sand. Your limbs feel relaxed, your mind feels free, peaceful, serene, happy. The sun beats down in a healing, leisurely pattern, your body feels very much at one with the elements that have come together to pleasure and heal you. You have an overall feeling of warmth and comfort. You feel utterly calm, utterly content. You open your eyes only to watch the lazy sky- trolling of the gulls as they soar about in slow joyous arcs. You are feeling rejuvenated and healed, you are at peace. You may drift into a light sleep.
  • When you wake up or decide to come back from your visualization, do so slowly. Walk yourself back up the warm steps, back to the world above the beach oasis. Feel the peace in your limbs, in your torso, in your mind.
  • Validate, maybe by speaking out loud, how good you feel. Take some deep breaths, stretch and relax your hands above your head and welcome your daily life back.

Progressive Muscle Relaxation

Progressive muscle relaxation is a systematic technique for achieving a deep state of relaxation. It was developed by Dr. Edmund Jacobson more than 50 years ago, and he wrote a book entitled “Progressive Relaxation”. Jacobson discovered that a muscle could be relaxed by first tensing it for a few seconds, and then releasing it.

Progressive muscle relaxation involves tensing and relaxing, in succession, different muscle groups in your body. The idea is to tense each muscle for about 5 seconds, and then to let go of it suddenly. Then you give yourself about 10 seconds of relaxation, and notice how the muscle feels when it is relaxed in contrast to how it felt when it was tensed. Maintain your focus on how your muscles feel.

Progressive muscle relaxation is especially useful for people whose anxiety is strongly associated with muscle tension. These people may experience chronic tightness or tension in their neck and shoulders. Other symptoms that respond well to progressive muscle relaxation include tension headaches, backaches, tightness in the jaw, muscle spasms, high blood pressure and insomnia.

The following guidelines will help you make the most of progressive muscle relaxation:

  • Practice at least 20 minutes per day. Two 20-minute periods are preferable.
  • Find a quiet location where you won’t be distracted. Assume a comfortable position. Your entire body, including your head, should be supported. Lie down or sit comfortably in a reclining chair that completely supports your body. Make sure to loosen any tight clothing.
  • Make a decision not to worry about anything. Give yourself permission to relax.
  • It is recommended that you do the exercises with your eyes closed.
  • Before you begin, take 3-5 abdominal breaths. As you exhale, imagine that your body tension is flowing away.
  • For each muscle group, hold the tension for about 5 seconds, then relax for 10 seconds. Notice the difference between the tension and the relaxation. Use this same time interval for each muscle group.
  • Repeat the exercise for each muscle group at least twice before going on to the next muscle group.

Follow these steps to relax each major muscle group in your body:

  1. Make a fist with your right hand. Focus on the tension in your lower right arm. Hold it (for 5 seconds). Now relax (for 10 seconds). Notice the difference between tension and relaxation. Repeat.
  2. Make a fist with your right hand and raise it towards your shoulders to tighten your biceps. Focus on the tension in your arm. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  3. Make a fist with your left hand. Focus on the tension in your lower left arm. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  4. Make a fist with your left hand and raise it towards your shoulders to tighten your biceps. Focus on the tension in your arm. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  5. Focus your attention on your face. Raise your eyebrows as far as you can. Hold it. Now relax. Imagine your forehead muscles becoming smooth and limp as they relax. Repeat.
  6. Tense the muscles around your eyes by clenching your eyelids tightly shut. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  7. Clench your jaw. Bite your teeth down. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  8. Direct your attention to your neck. Push your chin down to touch your chest. Feel the tension in the front and back of your neck. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  9. Tighten the muscles in your neck by pulling your head way back, as if you were going to touch your head to your back. But be gentle. Focus on tensing the muscles in your neck. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  10. Tighten your shoulders by raising then up as it you were going to touch your ears. Feel the tension in your shoulders. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  11. Tighten the muscles in your shoulder blades by pushing your shoulder blades back as if you were going to touch them together. Hold the tension. Now relax. Repeat.
  12. Focus your attention on your chest. Take a deep breath. Hold it. Feel the tension in your chest and stomach. Let go, exhale completely. Relax. Repeat.
  13. Focus on your abdomen. Tighten your stomach muscles. Focus on the tension in your stomach muscles. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  14. Focus on your hips and buttocks. Imagine you’re about to sit on something very delicate. Tighten your hips and buttocks. Hold it. Focus on the tension. Now relax. Repeat.
  15. Tense both calves and thigh muscles by raising your heels. Feel the tension in your legs. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  16. Focus your attention on your feet. Tighten your toes by curling them downward. Feel the tension in your feet. Hold it. Now relax. Repeat.
  17. Take 3-5 abdominal breaths.
  18. Imagine a wave of relaxation slowly spreading throughout your body, starting at your head and gradually penetrating every muscle group all the way down to your toes.
  19. Count backwards from 5 to 0.
  20. When you get to zero, open your eyes and stretch a bit.

Booster Shots

If you have worked through this program, you’ll hopefully have committed to getting the stress out of your life, to putting more joy and peace back in. To rebuilding your health. There are many, many strategies to relieve stress. We’ve covered a large number of them, you may find others. While your resolution and enthusiasm is high, you may well practice stress relieving strategies and feel better, develop a better sense of calm and control. However, life today is fast paced, demands are high and it’ll be a challenge not to slide back into your old, stressed-out habits. To say it again, stress damage is not usually obvious right away, it’s a layering thing, it build up silently. It is bad for your well- being.

Take the date of your birthday each month to reflect inward, to revisit how you are looking after you. It’s hard to put self first, it’s difficult to pace yourself all the time, but it is critical to really work on an ongoing “health-for-me” plan. You’ll reap the benefits, all the people who care about you will too. You could well live significantly longer, certainly you’ll feel better. You can do this! You’re worth it! Don’t just be here for a long time, be here for a good and joyful time.

Further Reading

  • Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers by Robert M Saplosky
  • The Relaxation Response by Robert Benson
  • Relax, You May Only Have few Minutes Left by Loretta LaRoche
  • Strong Women Stay Young by Miriam E. Nelson

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Does Smoking Scare you?

Does Smoking Scare you?

Does smoking scare you? Well it certainly should! Know this… It will eventually kill you? If that doesn’t scare you, then you are probably a smoker and your brain is playing tricks on you by suppressing common sense. If you need a brief reminder on all the scary stuff that smoking can do keep reading this page.

Make sure you scroll all the way down!

Government health campaigns in Australia use television images of fatty deposits being squeezed from an aorta to convince people to stop smoking.


Neck Tumor

Lung Cancer X-Ray

Buergers Disease is Nasty!

You could end up just like him. Are you? Not you…. right? Well unfortunately it very easily could be you if you don’t stop smoking. This guy didn’t think it could happen to him, but by the time his toes started to tingle because of the lack of circulation caused by this disease, he was already addicted and too stubborn to quit smoking.

This is pure insanity! He had is 4 limbs amputated because of tobacco smoking and he still puffing away. What’s going through your head right now? Are you thinking “Right on Brother!”? I doubt it. You are probably thinking how pathetic he is and you would never let it go that far. Hold on to that thought for a second….

Right now you are somewhere along the line between living a healthy life and loosing your 4 limbs or some other nasty slow death due to tobacco smoking. If you are not going to let it go this far then… when are you going to quit smoking? How about now? Not a good time? OK… How about now?

When is a Good Time to Quit Smoking?

When is a good time for you to quit smoking? Would that be sometime before doctors drill a hole in your throat so you can breathe? A week before it happens? A month? A year? Why not now?

Right now you are somewhere along the line between living a healthy life and breathing through a hole in your throat (or some other nasty slow death due to tobacco smoking). If you are not going to let it go this far then… when are you going to quit smoking? How about now? Not a good time? OK… How about now?

Happy Father’s Day… R.I.P.

Do you have kids? Lets leave the effects of second hand smoke for another slide because you are such a good parent that you have always smoked outside and away from your children. Now your dead! Should your children thank you? I guess it’s like saying “Thank you for not killing me as you were killing yourself Dad.”

People who die from tobacco smoking or other tobacco related are really poisoning themselves. You could call it suicide.

Right now you are somewhere along the line between living a healthy life and spending Father’s Day in a pine box due to tobacco smoking. If you are not going to let it go this far then… when are you going to quit smoking? How about now? Not a good time? OK… How about now?

Someone has 8 Seconds to Live…

Every year, over 440,000 people die of smoking and tobacco related diseases. That’s an alarming 1 person that dies from a preventable cause every 8 seconds.

During any typical week, smoking and tobacco kill more people by Thursday then the number of people that died on 9-11. With so many people getting killed by tobacco every year… Why is not the UN enforcing sanctions against the tobacco companies? Why is not the President declaring war on tobacco and sending in troops to take down the tobacco regime? Why is Homeland Security ignoring the hundreds of thousands of dead bodies piling up in our homeland killed by the poisons in tobacco smoke? Smells like a conspiracy to me…. Someone call Michael Moore!

Don’t wait for the government to do what is right. Protect yourself from the terrorist enemy attacking you in your own home by quitting smoking right now.

Quitting smoking is the best thing you could do for yourself, your health, and your children. If you’ve failed to quit before, try to quit again. Keep on trying to quit smoking until you succeed. You can quit this horrible habit… and you will quit!

Slow Death by Smoking

The thing about smoking is that it doesn’t kill you quickly. Smoking tobacco can cause a variety of cancers including the one shown on the left. Unfortunately many people do not realize that this stranger with the strange neck tumor could be someone they love. I’m sure that his loved ones who may have been smokers before he got cancer, quit after they saw him die a very painful and slow death.

Don’t wait until it is too late for you or a loved one to quit smoking. Learn from this picture and give meaning to his death by quitting smoking or stopping a loved one from smoking.

It says Impotent not Important!

Isn’t it ironic how many of us started to smoke to feel important or to be cool? Guys! How cool is a limp penis?

If you can’t read the small print to the left, let me spell it out for you. “Cigarettes may cause sexual impotence due to the decrease blood flow to the penis. This can prevent you from having an erection.”

Forget dying from cigarette smoking…. what’s the point of living if you can’t do it?

Smoking While Pregnant… Very Sad!

If this was a newspaper article from the 60’s or even the 70’s it would still be sad but you could write it off as ignorance. Notice the date at the top left corner of the article. For any expecting mother to be smoking through their pregnancy these days is blatant stupidity!

If you are an expectant mother or if you know someone who is and they are still smoking…. I IMPLORE YOU! Please stop smoking or reason with the woman you know who is still smoking and do whatever is in your power to protect the unborn child from the effects of tobacco smoke.

You know what can happen to the unborn child. Don’t play Russian roulette by smoking while pregnant. The risk is TOO high!

You know you want to quit. So do it now! If not for yourself then for the sake of your children’s health.

Smoking… Monkey See… Monkey DO!

You are older and wiser now. You are wise enough that you wouldn’t go out and buy your 8 year old a carton of cigarettes. You probably are wise enough to want to quit and tell your children that starting to smoke cigarettes was one of the biggest mistakes you have ever made and that they should never start to smoke.

Unfortunately, smoking in front of your children exponentially increases the chances that they will become a smoker later on in life. Do as I say and not as I do doesn’t work with children. Monkey see… Monkey do… however is very powerful.

You know you want to quit. So do it now! If not for yourself then for the sake of your children’s health.

Which is worse… Cigarettes or Heroin?

The first answer that you probably thought of was that heroin is worse than smoking cigarettes. Sorry to have to break it to you but cigarette smoking kills way more people every year. However unlike the other, cigarette smoking is legal, and taxed by the government in most places.

There are studies that say that cigarette smoking is even more addictive than heroin.

Never in the history of this planet has there been a substance that has killed more people than smoking cigarettes.

Bryan’s Story - Learn from it!

Bryan Lee Curtis 33yrs old

Bryan Jr. 2yrs old

March 29th


2 MONTHS LATER…

Bryan with his wife Bobbie and son Ryan Jr.

June 3rd, the day he died from smoking.

Notice the picture he is holding

I don’t care how tough you are… If this story or the 2 pictures on the left don’t bring a tear to your eye or at least give you a huge lump in your throat, you’re not human.

Bryan Lee Curtis is proof that it can happen to you. Bryan started smoking when he was 13 and was dead before he was 35. Plenty of time for that, he figured. Older people got cancer. Not people in their 30s, not people who worked in construction, as a roofer, as a mechanic.

Just 2 months before his death, Bryan was a muscular, healthy and good looking 33 year old father who thought about quitting smoking cigarettes but never did anything about it. Before he got sick, Bryan was more worried about his mother, 57, who had smoked since she was 25, than himself. He would say, “Mom, don’t worry about me. Worry about yourself. I’m healthy,” his mom Louise Curtis remembers. “You think this would happen later, when you’re 60 or 70 years old, not when you’re his age.” she adds.

Bryan knew, a few days after he was diagnosed that he wanted to try to save at least one kid from the same fate. He sat down and talked with Bryan Jr. and his 9-year-old daughter, Amber, who already had been caught once with a cigarette. But he wanted to do more. Somehow, he had to get his story out.

When Bryan was too weak to leave the house anymore, his children would come up to his room and stare at him because they thought he looked so strange. His mother him telling his children “This is what happens to you when you smoke.”.

Parents, get your children, and show them these pictures and tell them this story as it was Bryan’s dying wish and mission to let young people know that it can happen to them too.

Look at these pictures and keep reading the story until it sinks in. The chances that you will die from smoking cigarettes are too high to bet against. Quit smoking now before it is too late for you too. You don’t have a lot of time left. Stop putting it off.

Noni’s Story - It Can Happen to You!

March 16th, 1999

Noni Glykos with her 3 month old son.

Noni was diagnosed with lung cancer

just one month ago.


3 MONTHS LATER…

Noni falls into a coma and dies on June 24th, 1999

Noni Glykos’ lost battle with the lung cancer that was caused by smoking cigarettes is another tragic story that could have been prevented. Noni was a beautiful glowing new mother who at 33 should have been in the prime of her life but alas it was cut short because of smoking cigarettes.

It can happen to you and your loved ones just as it did to Noni. It can happen so fast that you will barely have time to say goodbye. Smokers who think they can quit tomorrow or next month can easily get caught by the grim and voracious cancers that can appear out of nowhere and take your life away before you know it.

Noni’s son was just 6 months old when his mother died. For him life will never be fair. He will never understand why such an evil as tobacco smoke could have been allowed to take his mother’s life. He will never know all of the things that his mother could have taught him. He will never remember her face except from pictures.

Noni had many dreams. She had many dreams that will never come true because of cigarette smoking. Her dream of her and her husband building their own home died with her. Her dream of having at least 2 children died as well.

Noni started to smoke at the age of 14 and died at the young age of 33 Years, 3 Months, 11 Days. How long have you been smoking? How long do you think you can continue to smoke cigarettes and avoid getting lung cancer or one of many other terrible disease caused by tobacco products?

Look at these pictures and keep reading the story until it sinks in. The chances that you will die from smoking cigarettes are extremely high. Quit smoking now before it is too late for you too. You don’t have a lot of time left. Stop putting it off and do it now.

No Smokes for Kids!

Debi started smoking at the age of 13. Now she must breathe through a hole in her throat. The reality of the dangers of cigarette smoking have hit home for Debi. What will it take for them to hit home for you? Hopefully it is before you are having to gasp for every breath you take through a hole in your neck.

If get throat cancer, you may have to undergo surgery to create a hole in your neck called a tracheostomy, which is to help you breathe more easily. If the muscles you need for swallowing have been removed, you’ll also need surgery to create a hole in your abdomen called a gastrostomy so that you can receive food directly into your stomach through a feeding tube.

Debi doesn’t think that smoking is so cool anymore. She really wishes she hadn’t started at 13. She also wishes that you never start smoking and if already smoke cigarettes, Debi wishes with all her heart that you quit smoking.

Which Are Your Lungs?

On the left is a lung from an otherwise healthy non-smoker. On the right of that is a lung from a cigarette smoker who died of lung cancer after years of poisoning himself with the toxic chemicals found in tobacco smoke.

If you have been smoking for at least 2 years which picture do you think best resembles your lungs? Barring the tumor of course, your lungs very closely resemble the one on the right. Many people think that unless they have been smoking for 40 years, their lungs are still a pretty pink and that they haven’t done much damage. The truth is that damage begins with the first cigarette you smoke and will continue to increase until you quit smoking.

Don’t wait until it is too late and cancer moves in to stay.

Your Baby’s Lungs

“You are 2 months old. Your lungs are this tiny. You spend day after day around second-hand smoke. You breathe it in. You cough. You hack. You wheeze. Your lungs clog up with sticky fluid and thick mucus. You get bronchitis or pneumonia.

If you have asthma, it will likely get worse. All together, up to 300,000 babies end up getting sick every year; 15,000 of them could end up hospitalized, simply from being exposed to cigarette smoke.”

- A message from the babies of the world. -

Children don’t have a voice of their own. It has always been up to the parents and guardians to make the right decision for their children. Don’t make the wrong choice when it comes to your child’s health. Keep cigarette smoke away from your children. Smoke travels and lingers throughout your home. Smoke outside or better yet, quit smoking cigarettes altogether. You child will thank you.

No More Killing

Lets compare the actual real numbers and have a look to see if dying from tobacco consumption could be an actual problem.

Let’s add up the total number of people who died from the flowing causes of death in the United States alone and in the year 1998. The number of people who died from AIDS, Alzheimers, Auto Accidents, Bike Accidents, Breast Cancer, Diabetes, Drowning, Drug Reactions, Falls, Fires & Burns, Gun Accidents, Hepatitis, Illegal Drugs, Leukemia, Lightening, Liver Disease, Meningitis, Murder, Pedestrians, Poisoning, Prostate Cancer, Snake Bites, Suffocation, Suicide, Syphilis and Ulcers is:

381,420

The number people who died just from tobacco in the US in 1998 is:

418,690

You do the math. All those so-called common causes of death don’t even add up to the number of people who die from smoking or consume tobacco in other ways. Don’t wait until it is too late and you die. You know you want to quit. So do it now!

Source: Does Smoking Scare You?

Monday, January 11, 2010

Healing Energy Link Video

Here is a wonderful video that explains energy based healing from a physics background.

The Healing Universe Free Videos

All I can say is that this video is WOW!!!

PLEASE DON'T IGNORE THIS VIDEO IT COULD HELP YOU SO MUCH...

Radiation Side Effects

Radiation Side Effects

The radiation side effects experienced by the normal body tissues during and after radiotherapy can be loosely divided into Acute and Late effects.

Acute radiation side effects constitute the acute reaction occurring during radiation and in the immediate weeks and months following treatment.

Acute Radiation Side Effects

Radiation treatment is painless and without sensation, with the exception of some mechanical sounds produced by the treatment machine associated with the start and finish of the treatment. Many patients receiving radiation therapy will experience very little reaction, but in most the normal tissues will develop some degree of radiation reaction. This varies in amount and type, depending on the part of the body treated and the amount of normal tissue included in the radiation treatment.

The degree to which individuals experience reaction varies considerably, but this section will deal with some general principles of radiation reaction. Where large areas of a patient are treated, such as the whole abdomen or chest, the reaction experienced will be mainly of a general nature. When small areas are treated the reaction will be confined to that area of the body that is radiated and to the individual tissues included in the treatment volume. Any general reaction will be much less or absent altogether.

General Side Effect Symptoms

Radiation Nausea. The degree to which patients experience nausea following treatment is very variable. Some people will experience hardly any at all, whereas others will be troubled by nausea or vomiting during the early part of the treatment and, in some instances, throughout the treatment. If it occurs, nausea is likely to be worst from two to several hours after treatment. The patient should be encouraged to maintain fluid intake.

The following dietary steps may prove helpful:

1.Salty foods or ice cold drinks help control nausea
2.Avoid greasy foods, strong-smelling or overly sweet foods
3.Small, frequent meals eaten slowly

If insufficient, anti-nausea medication may be prescribed. In most patients nausea improves as the treatment progresses.

Hair Loss. Hair loss will only occur within the radiation field. Scalp hair will only be affected if the head receives radiation.

Fatigue / Malaise. Some degree of tiredness and lack of energy is often experienced. This will not prevent most people from working or undertaking normal duties but, in some, reduction in activities during treatment and immediately afterwards will be advised.

Low Blood Count. Reduction in certain elements of the blood is often seen following radiation therapy. This results from radiation exposure of bone marrow, and to a lesser extent, direct damage to lymphocytes in the blood stream and lymph nodes.

The white cell count will be reduced, particularly the lymphocyte count, and the number of platelets will be reduced. These drops are seldom enough to cause clinical problems, but if they are, an interruption in treatment for a few days is usually sufficient to allow recovery. Reduction in red cells does not occur to any degree in radiation treatment, but may occur from blood loss due to bleeding.

Changes in the peripheral blood count are much more marked in patients who have also received chemotherapy.

Organ Specific Side Effect Symptoms

Localized reactions will occur in any tissues exposed to radiation treatment. The acute reactions expected for different treatments will be considered later, but in general acute reactions result from radiation of skin, mucous membranes and accessory glands.

Skin. Where the skin receives a significant dose of radiation a reaction will develop which progresses through erythema to dry desquamation and moist desquamation. The reaction may only progress part way through these steps and healing occurs through the same steps in reverse. If desquamation has occurred, crusts will form which protect the re-epithelialisation occurring underneath and will only come away and not reform when the skin is healed underneath.

The reaction develops two or three weeks after the initiation of treatment and may take four to six weeks to heal. It is best managed by:

  1. Avoiding irritation from clothing, deodorants, perfumes, heat, dust and trauma
  2. Best of all, leaving the area open to the air
  3. Using non-stick dressings
  4. Opinions vary about moisture. If the area is bathed, dry carefully, do not rub or inflame with soaps, and dust with corn starch
  5. Steroid creams may help
  6. Hair loss may be temporary or permanent, depending on the amount of radiation. Hair loss only occurs in skin exposed to radiation treatment
  7. Avoid direct sunlight on the treated area
  8. Have patience, the reaction will heal

Mucous Membranes. Wherever mucous membranes are included in a radiation field similar reactions will be experienced: Whether in the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, trachea, bowel, bladder or rectum, mucositis may develop.

As with the skin, the mucosa is reddened at first but then may be covered with a plaque-like fibrin similar to crusting of the skin. The mucous membrane remains moist and the surface covered by fibrin until the underlying mucosa is healed, when the fibrinous plaque is lost and the reaction healed.

The symptoms resulting from the inflammation, irritation and dysfunction caused by the mucosal reaction depend on the site of the reaction. There may be discomfort and dysphagia or cough, hoarseness and tracheitis, or dysuria and frequency, or diarrhoea and abdominal cramps. The management varies from site to site, but depends on the same principles as the care of skin reaction.

  1. Avoid irritation by keeping food or stools soft and preventing trauma of any kind.
  2. Local analgesic mixtures, antibiotics where indicated, and steroids may help.
  3. Maintain hydration by encouragement and intravenous fluids if necessary.
  4. Low fibre diet for those with bowel reaction.
  5. Best of all, have patience, the reaction will heal.

Accessory Glands. The acute effects of radiation will be felt by accessory glands producing saliva and mucous for example. This leads to a degree of stickiness, leading to oral discomfort, dryness and change in taste, irritating cough and discomfort, and urinary or bowel symptoms, depending on the site of radiation.

Management consists of providing replacement lubricants such as frequent small drinks, adequate urinary and bowel fluid, cough suppressants, soothing creams or lotions and patience.

Late Radiation Side Effects

The late effects of radiation treatment develop gradually over several months or years. The changes that result may be sufficiently slight as to cause no clinical symptoms, or so rare as to present minimal risk to the individual. Nevertheless, the late changes that do occur warrant notice and care in all patients who have received radiation treatment. In those few individuals with serious late effects (generally less than 5% of patients who have received high-dose radiation) the results are often disastrous and treatment extremely difficult.

Scarring. Radiation treatment results in increased connective tissue, fibrosis and scarring often associated with atrophy of accessory tissues. This leads to some increased rigidity of tissues, less suppleness and less resistance to injury.

In addition, the walls of small blood vessels may be thickened and distorted, leading to reduction in blood supply to some tissues. This particularly leads to less ability to deal with injury or trauma such as that resulting from infection or surgery.

Any area of the body that has received radiation treatment should be treated "gently" for the rest of the patient's life.

Carcinogenicity. Radiation is one of the causes of cancer. Very rarely leukemia may result some five to twenty years after radiation exposure, due to bone marrow cells being damaged during radiation therapy. Similarly cancer can result in the area treated twenty or more years later.

The chances of either of these occurring are very small indeed.

The patient's risk of dying of the original disease, unless successfully treated, are much higher than the risk of developing cancer from the treatment.

Nevertheless, the risk is there and is one of the reasons why benign diseases are not treated by radiation unless absolutely necessary.

Genetic Effects. Exposure of the gonads to radiation increases the risk of abnormal mutations and genetic changes. Most chromosome damage from radiation results in a failure of conception and not an abnormal child. Even if both parents have been exposed to radiation, the risks of abnormal children being produced are so small as to be almost negligible. Late genetic effects in the individual are much less important than the increased risk of inducing cancer or the late vascular changes produced by radiation treatment.

IMMUNIZATION DURING CANCER TREATMENT (e.g. radiation)

  1. When a child or adult has cancer and is receiving treatment which may be suppressing their immune system, such as whole body irradiation, "live" vaccines should not be given until six months after treatment is completed- "Killed" vaccines may be given although it is unclear as to their effectiveness in the immunosuppressed patient.
  2. Immunosuppressed cancer patients should avoid changing diapers of infants or children for six weeks, who have recently been immunized with live (oral) polio vaccine. Immunosuppressed grand-parents are particularly at risk if they have never been immunized for polio. The risk is eliminated if the polio vaccine is given by injection (killed vaccine).
  3. There is no risk from "flu" vaccines as they are not live vaccines.
  4. Advice should be sought from the Infection Control Service or the Transplant Service of the Children's or Vancouver General Hospitals or family physician.
  5. Travel Immunizations: The same rules apply as in 1-2 above.

obtained from BCCA Information Database

Read other related Cancer Treatment Side Effects

What causes cancer?

What causes cancer?

This page tells you about what actually causes cancer. There is information about

The many causes of cancer

There are about 200 different types of cancer. They can start in any type of body tissue. What affects one body tissue may not affect another. For example, tobacco smoke that you breathe in may help to cause lung cancer. Overexposing your skin to the sun could cause a melanoma on your leg. But the sun won't give you lung cancer and smoking won't give you melanoma.

Apart from infectious diseases, most illnesses are 'multifactorial'. Cancer is no exception. Multifactorial means that there are many factors involved. In other words, there is no single cause for any one type of cancer.


Cancer-causing substances (carcinogens)

A 'carcinogen' is something that can help to cause cancer. Tobacco smoke is a powerful carcinogen. But not everyone who smokes gets lung cancer. So there must be other factors at work as well as carcinogens.


Age

Most types of cancer become more common as we get older. This is because the changes that make a cell become cancerous in the first place take a long time to develop. There have to be a number of changes to the genes within a cell before it turns into a cancer cell. These changes can happen by accident when the cell is dividing. Or they can happen because the cell has been damaged by carcinogens and the damage is then passed on to future 'daughter' cells when that cell divides. The longer we live, the more time there is for genetic mistakes to happen in our cells.


Genetic make up

There need to be a number of genetic mutations within a cell before it becomes cancerous. Sometimes a person is born with one of these mutations already. This doesn't mean they will definitely get cancer. But with one mutation from the start, it makes it more likely statistically that they will develop cancer during their lifetime. Doctors call this 'genetic predisposition'.

The BRCA1 and BRCA2 breast cancer genes are examples of genetic predisposition. Women who carry one of these faulty genes have a higher chance of developing breast cancer than women who do not.

The BRCA genes are good examples for another reason. Most women with breast cancer do not have a mutated BRCA1 or BRCA 2 gene. Less than 5% of all breast cancer is due to these genes. So although women with one of these genes are individually more likely to get breast cancer, most breast cancer is not caused by a high risk inherited gene fault.

This is true of other common cancers where some people have a genetic predisposition - for example, colon (large bowel) cancer.

Researchers are looking at the genes of people with cancer in a study called SEARCH. They also hope to find out more about how other factors might interact with genes to increase the risk of cancer. Information about this study is on our clinical trials database.


The immune system

People who have problems with their immune systems are more likely to get some types of cancer. This group includes people who

  • Have had organ transplants and take drugs to suppress their immune systems to stop organ rejection
  • Have HIV or AIDS
  • Are born with rare medical syndromes which affect their immunity

The types of cancers that affect these groups of people fall into two, overlapping groups

  • Cancers that are caused by viruses, such as cervical cancer and other cancers of the genital or anal area, some lymphomas, liver cancer and stomach cancer
  • Lymphomas

Chronic infections or transplanted organs can continually stimulate cells to divide. This continual cell division means that immune cells are more likely to develop genetic faults and develop into lymphomas.


Bodyweight, diet and physical activity

Cancer experts estimate that maintaining a healthy bodyweight, making changes to our diet and taking regular physical activity could prevent about one in three deaths from cancer in the UK. In the western world, many of us eat too much red and processed meat and not enough fresh fruit and vegetables. This type of diet is known to increase the risk of cancer. Drinking alcohol can also increase the risk of developing some types of cancer. There is more information about this in the page on diet causing cancer.

Sometimes foods or food additives are blamed for directly causing cancer and described as 'carcinogenic'. This is often not really true. Sometimes a food is found to contain a substance that can cause cancer but in such small amounts that we could never eat enough of it to do any harm. And some additives may actually protect us. There is more about food additives in the page on diet causing cancer.


Day to day environment

By environmental causes we mean what is around you each day that may help to cause cancer. This could include

  • Tobacco smoke
  • The sun
  • Natural and man made radiation
  • Work place hazards
  • Asbestos

Some of these are avoidable and some aren't. Most are only contributing factors to causing cancers - part of the jigsaw puzzle that scientists are still trying to put together. There is more about this in the page on causes of cancer in the environment.


Viruses

Viruses can help to cause some cancers. But this does not mean that these cancers can be caught like an infection. What happens is that the virus can cause genetic changes in cells that make them more likely to become cancerous.

These cancers and viruses are linked

  • Cervical cancer, and other cancers of the genital and anal area, and the genital wart virus, HPV
  • Primary liver cancer and the Hepatitis B and C viruses
  • Lymphomas and the Epstein-Barr Virus
  • T cell leukaemia in adults and the Human T cell leukaemia virus
  • HPV also probably leads to oropharyngeal cancer and non melanoma skin cancers in some people

There will be people with primary liver cancer and with T cell leukaemia who haven't had the related virus. But infection increases their risk of getting that particular cancer. With cervical cancer, scientists now believe that everyone with an invasive cervical cancer has had an HPV infection beforehand.

Many people can be infected with a cancer causing virus, and never get cancer. The virus only causes cancer in certain situations. Many women get a high risk HPV infection, but never develop cervical cancer. Another example is Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). These are some facts about EBV

  • It is very common - most people are infected with EBV
  • People who catch it late in life get glandular fever and have an increased risk of lymphoma
  • In sub-Saharan Africa, EBV infection and repeated attacks of malaria together cause a cancer called Burkitt's lymphoma in children
  • In China, EBV infection (together with other unknown factors) causes nasopharyngeal cancer
  • In people with AIDs and transplant patients EBV can cause lymphoma
  • About 4 out of 10 cases of Hodgkin's lymphoma and a quarter of cases of Burkitt lymphoma (a rare type of non Hodgkin's lymphoma) seem to be related to EBV infection

Bacterial infection

Bacterial infections have not been thought of as cancer causing agents in the past. But studies have shown that people who have helicobacter pylori infection of their stomach develop inflammation of the stomach lining, which increases the risk of stomach cancer. Helicobacter pylori infection can be treated with a combination of antibiotics.

Research is also looking at whether substances produced by particular types of bacteria in the digestive system can increase the risk of bowel cancer or stomach lymphomas. Some researchers think that particular bacteria may produce cancer causing substances in some people. But research into this issue is at an early stage.

If bacteria do play a part in causing cancer this could be important in cancer prevention. Bacterial infections can often be cured with antibiotics, so getting rid of the infection could be a way to reduce the risk of these types of cancer.