Where’s the Sun?

As we enter into the holiday season, it is important to remember to take care of ourselves and those around us. Living in the Pacific Northwest has many wonderful benefits, but there’s also a trade-off: the doom and gloom of yet another rainy day! Seasonal Affective Disorder, (SAD), is a type of depression which many experts believe may be caused by a lack of sunlight. It is more common for people living in areas where days are very short or where there are big changes in the amount of daylight in different seasons. Group Health Cooperative has some very user friendly information and resources on SAD and depression. Also, be sure to check out their Self-Care Program, including the Self-Care Worksheets, a great tool for any stage of life, but especially when dealing with the stress of the holiday season.
Although you may not immediately think of massage as a tool in treating depression, I encourage you to consider massage as an option. One of the symptoms of depression is to experience physical body pain. Massage can help alleviate this pain, and re-establish a sense of connection to your own body. Massage is a great way to commit time exclusively to yourself, while also experiencing many of the benefits massage has to offer. I encourage you to schedule some time to focus on your own well being, and remember we, A Season To Heal, are here to help.

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Hello to All!

My name is Phoebe Agena and I am one of the new L.M.P.’s Jenna has hired at A Season To Heal. I am so excited to have the opportunity to be working for Jenna and I’d like to share with you some of my personal philosophies when it comes to massage

With the healing power of touch,
I bring self-awareness to my clients,
empowering them to improve their daily life.

I passionately believe in the importance of taking time out of our busy lives to nurture our own body and soul. Massage can be a great tool in the process of improving one’s quality of life.
With every massage, I believe change happens throughout the entire body. I work very intuitively in my massage and tune in to what my client’s tissue is saying and asking for. I encompass the whole body in every massage and listen to where my client’s tissue leads me. I work very specifically and sometimes very intensely, but never lose sight of my client as a whole. Because of this I pride myself in nurturing change. I look forward to beginning this journey with you!

I’d also like to share an article I read today that echoes my belief system and why massage adds so much value to our life! Here’s hoping you, too, can find your own vadiar. . .

What Brazilians Can Teach Us About Relaxation

It’s no secret that we live bombarded by ceaseless work and life demands, swept along engulfed by a tidal wave of information and stimuli. Our Puritan work ethic, industrious strength and need to be constantly “plugged in” have all formed a perfect storm, unleashing an unfortunate social conditioning which may cost our country hundreds of billions of dollars, and even more dangerously, threatens our very ability to live healthy, enjoyable and sustainable lives.

Is there no way to reconcile progress and productivity with balanced, healthy living? What if there was a product that promised to slow your heart rate, lower your blood pressure, increase blood flow to major muscles, reduce muscle tension and chronic pain, improve concentration and reduce anger? What if this product could balance and even catalyze our productivity and entrepreneurship? What if this product was free?

An inspired answer shines from the land of samba, Paulo Coelho, Carnival, açaí and Pelé. The Brazilian culture has achieved true mastery of the art of doing nothing, or as they phrase it “vadiar.”

vadiar: to lounge about (não trabalhar), to idle about (não estudar), to skive (perambular), to wander

Rather than spending their lives striving to be able to one day relax, the Brazilians build mechanisms for relaxation into their everyday lives. As a local Brazilian tale illustrates:

There was once a businessman who was sitting by the beach in a small Brazilian village. As he sat, he saw a Brazilian fisherman rowing a small boat towards the shore having caught quite few big fish. The businessman was impressed and asked the fisherman, “How long does it take you to catch so many fish?” The fisherman replied, “Oh, just a short while.” “Then why don’t you stay longer at sea and catch even more?” The businessman was astonished. This is enough to feed my whole family,” the fisherman said. The businessman then asked, “So, what do you do for the rest of the day?” The fisherman replied, “Well, I usually wake up early in the morning, go out to sea and catch a few fish, then go back and play with my kids. In the afternoon, I take a nap with my wife, and evening comes, I join my buddies in the village for a drink — we play guitar, sing and dance throughout the night.”
The businessman offered a suggestion to the fisherman. “I am a PhD in business management. I could help you to become a more successful person. From now on, you should spend more time at sea and try to catch as many fish as possible. When you have saved enough money, you could buy a bigger boat and catch even more fish. Soon you will be able to afford to buy more boats, recruit more fishermen and lead a team of your own. You can set up your own company, your own production plant for canned food and distribution network. By then, you will have moved out of this village and to Sao Paulo, and finally to New York City, where you can set up HQ to manage your other branches.”

The fisherman continues, “And after that?” The businessman laughs heartily, “After that, you can live like a king in your own house, and when the time is right, you can go public and float your shares in the Stock Exchange, and you will be rich.” The fisherman asks, “And after that?” The businessman says, “After that, you can finally retire, you can move to a house by the fishing village, wake up early in the morning, catch a few fish, then return home to play with kids, have a nice afternoon nap with your wife, and when evening comes, you can join your buddies for a drink, play the guitar, sing and dance throughout the night!” The fisherman was puzzled, “Isn’t that what I am doing now?”

Medical research supports what the Brazilians have long known. Studies revealing the hidden and obvious benefits of relaxation are popping up faster than iPhone applications. Relaxation has also been shown to lower blood pressure and cholesterol levels, as well as produce beneficial effects on the immune system. According to a report in the Journal of Behavioral Medicine, relaxation training in medical students during exams was found to increase the amount of helper cells that defend against infectious disease. A report by Health Psychology describes how a month of relaxation training increased the levels of natural killer cells and antibody titers, both indicators of resistance to tumors and viruses.

Rather than to grope about for a quixotic end to technology and progress, this is an appeal for balance, moderation and cultural permission to unplug entirely that we may return to our regular lives healthier and stronger than ever. Even if it is just for a few moments every day or week, lets bring a little Brazil into our lives.

Here are a few easy suggestions for bringing pure relaxation to your life with minimal time commitment:

1. Capture small moments to breath. Close your eyes and observe the natural flow of your breath. After several moments start to elongate your inhalation and exhalation breathing evenly, and listen to the sound of your own breath.

2. Find some yoga in life. Slow down, and work to be fully present with whatever you’re doing or whoever you’re with.

3. Turn off anything that has a plug and cord. If necessary, pre-warn friends and associates that you will be indisposed ahead of time. Or just “forget” or don’t charge your phone and laptop.

4. Find a hammock. Get in it and throw off your shoes. If reading a book, do not resist the siren call of a nap. If available listen to some wind in trees.

5. Lie in a field and take Walt Whitman’s lead: “I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass.” If possible stare at some clouds.

6. Travel and do not make any reservations. While you are here wander around for a moment without a map, and without a purpose. Get lost, amble about for a while and do not stress about it.

7. Listen to some Brazilian music. We’re partial to some Gilberto Gill, Angenor de Oliveira or Caetano Veloso, but there is a wide range of suitable bossa nova, samba and Brazilian-jazz that will transport you south and fill you with Brazilian “alegria.”

8. Read some poetry. Try works by storied lounger Keats, who pined away for “evenings steep’d in honied indolence.”

Stephen Dahmer, M.D. co-wrote this post with Daniel Cook. Dr. Dahmer will appear in this column as a guest writer on articles with a focus on health and well-being.

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Is your brain tired?

I don’t know about you, but my brain gets tired! We live in a world saturated with information, information that we are expected to receive and digest at the speed of light. I loved the article below because it gave some great suggestions about how to take better care of our brains. That said, ANOTHER great way to take care of our brains is to get a massage!

8 Ways to Unplug and Recharge Your Brain

Do you feel stressed, tired, fatigued, rushed, drained, zapped? Join the club. Add an economic crisis to multiple jobs, kids, elderly parents and a body-crushing lifestyle, and lots of Americans feel whacked-over-the-head overloaded.

What’s the antidote? Simple: use your body the way it’s built. If you want your brain to work well you first need to know how your brain works. Hint: it’s not a machine. It is a living, wondrously inventive, rapidly renewing organ. You see your hair grow, your nails grow, but do you see your brain grow? That’s what your brain does during rest — it’s your body’s rebuild and renew program. To get your brain to work better, here’s rule number one: rest for success.

Ask the rats at University of California, San Fransisco. Researcher Loren Frank found, as described in the New York Times, that rats sent out exploring need to stop and rest in order to develop long term memories. If you want to learn, you need to rest; and that’s not including people’s first definition of rest — sleep.

When I ask humans about rest improving their brains, I get different answers. One reporter in Dallas explained, “I can’t rest, I’m in the newsroom.” A news editor in Sacramento told me the opposite. She said she was so wiped by working early morning hours, two jobs and a two-year-old that she forced herself to rest for an entire weekend to really sleep, and not do any work. Afterward she felt rejuvenated, filled with new ideas and new energy. In other words, she felt rested.

So here are just a few simple ways to get your brain in full working order and have fun:

Walk It – Even a 20-30 minute walk can grow you new brain cells, in sleep, in memory areas. Can your computer do that? No. It’s you who gets to rebuild and rewire every day.

Sleep It — You need REM sleep and deep sleep to learn, and perhaps around seven to eight hours total to prevent heart disease and support a strong immune system. Like food, rest is required for your survival. Every sleep deprived animal eventually dies. If you know what you’re doing, like adding pre-dreaming to your pre-sleep rest time, you can improve brain function plus make sleep fun.

Get It Out in Nature — Cognitive psychologists still feel stumped as to why people learn better walking in nature rather than in a mall. They shouldn’t. Getting out in nature improves mood, resets immunity and increases vitamin D (through sunlight). And natural settings provide huge amounts of unconscious information the brain can then use to make better decisions.

Make It More Creative — New ideas often arrive by adding different experiences to the old ideas in our storehouse of memories. So stroll out of your comfort zone. Writers can read children’s books; teachers and parents can watch a group of playground kids handed a new toy; any cook can visit a grocery and try new vegetables and sauces.

Use Quick Active Rest Techniques — Very few know that spiritual rest techniques in under a minute can provoke senses of awe and transcendence. I believe that that there are four different kinds of active rest — physical, mental, social, and spiritual — and that they can be played together through the day like music, really cutting back on stress.

Use Your Body Clocks — Your computer doesn’t care if it’s 4 p.m. or 4 a.m., but you do. Short term memory is best in the morning, long term memory in the evening. Lots of people feel most creative in the morning, though overall alertness often peaks in the evening, a great time to visit with family and friends — asking them all kinds of sometimes far-out questions, which can boost your creativity.

Pay Attention to Attention — All your brain really has is attention, your ability to focus, concentrate and think. The brain only does one thing at a time. Distract it, overload it, do too many things at once and your productivity, mood and creativity will suffer. Take breaks or you’ll make mistakes.

Enjoy Sex — Walks can grow brain cells, but in rats, so does sex. What better way to grow new memory cells than to be with someone you love, who cares about you, who you feel understands you (sex is also a great way to obtain social rest, with its many benefits for heart, brain arteries, and mood.)

So don’t believe Woody Allen in the movie Sleeper when he says the brain is his “second most favorite organ.” Make it your favorite organ. Treat your brain as the creative, wondrously renewing center of your mind and it will treat you well, working better and letting you laugh a lot more. When you use your body the way it’s built you’ll change your appearance, your productivity, and your pleasure. Change your brain, change your life.

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Here comes the Light!

Happy Summer Solstice – though it doesn’t quite feel like full-fledged summer just yet!
My personal experience and philosophy is that the more we can attune to the cycles of nature, and then apply this same attunement to our own inner cycles (body, mind and spirit), the deeper the healing can go.

In that spirit, I offer the following….

More light means the potential for things to move from the shadow and be transformed. It means that we can burst beyond our limitations on a variety of levels.

“Nature’s cycles have to do with how the earth renews itself. The living things within an ecosystem interact with each other and also with their non-living environment to form an ecological unit that is largely self-contained. Sometimes this renewal process is gradual and gentle. Sometimes it is violent and destructive. Nevertheless, ecosystems contain within themselves the resources to regenerate themselves.” – from “Utah Education Network”

Thoughts to ponder:
Which cycle are you in?
What do you want to shed light on, to be transformed?
Is your cycle gradual and gentle, or violent and destructive?
How can we work together to remind your own inner resources that they can regenerate?

In the spirit of the seasons changing I offer you an invitation to increase and deepen your healing. I would be honored to support you in anyway I can.

SUMMER SOLSTICE SPECIAL
Book between June 21st and August 31st and receive $15 off*

Classes: As many of you know, it has been a goal of mine to begin teaching classes – and I have! For those of you who expressed interest in learning Reiki, I will be teaching a Reiki Level One class on Monday, July 19th from 4:30-8:30 pm. Space is limited so please respond ASAP. Cost is $150 which includes a manual. Feel free to call or email with questions.

Resources:
Kate McGill, Kate McGill Counseling
Kate has a private practice for individuals and couples in the South Lake Union neighborhood. Have you been wondering if perhaps you need some additional support? Do the questions above intimidate you? In our work together, have you noticed that some things have come up that would be helped by some additional processing? I encourage you to explore Kate’s website to get a feel for her approach. I especially like the “about Kate” tab.
312-493-5711

Cielito Pascual, Nutritional Cleansing with Isagenix
Cielito has a passion for passion! She is a customer & purveyor of Isagenix products and knows the simple secrets to help you shed those few pounds for summer in a healthy manner. She not only provides you with the products, she educates you and coaches you towards lasting success.
917-554-4849

Be well,
jenna

Referrals are the highest compliment you can give. If you have someone  you care about that you feel I might be able to assist, please pass this along.
*Limit one per person.

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