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Thursday, October 27, 2016

Foods you should never eat - Dr. Axe

5 Drinks that Leave Pumpkin Spiced Lattes in the Dust

Drinks that leave pumpkin spiced lattes in the dust - Dr. Axe As the cool breezes and gusty winds of autumn set in, there’s no doubt grabbing a pumpkin spiced latte at a local coffee chain sounds like a great idea. But maybe you’ve been warned about the one pumpkin spiced latte ingredient you always need to avoid. Or maybe you’re already aware that a typical 16-ounce pumpkin spiced latte contains a whopping 50 grams of sugar. Luckily, we’ve got a list of drinks that leave pumpkin spiced lattes in the dust. And they’re much healthier than what you’re getting in typical coffee chains or convenience stores. Cheers to that!

5 Drinks that Leave Pumpkin Spiced Lattes in the Dust

Homemade Chai Tea
Forgo toxic chemicals and artificial sweeteners and flavors with this simple recipe. Real spices loaded with antioxidants are the stars of this recipe. The best part? You don’t need to turn to refined sugars to make it a crowd-pleaser.
Drinks that leave pumpkin spiced lattes in the dust - Dr. Axe
Forget added sugars. We let the powerful, antioxidant-rich spices like clove do the work in this recipe. You’ll also get a healthy dose of blood sugar-regulation, thanks to the health benefits of cinnamon.
Drinks that leave pumpkin spiced lattes in the dust - Dr. Axe
Turmeric Tea Recipe
Popular in Asia and often referred to as “liquid gold,” this tea is full of turmeric benefits, mostly due to an active compound called curcumin. If you’re looking for a warm, nourishing, anti-inflammatory drink, this rich, creamy, slightly sweet beverage is it.
Drinks that leave pumpkin spiced lattes in the dust - Dr. Axe
Beef Bone Broth
Bone broth was the go-to warming tonic back in your great-grandparent’s day. And it’s making a huge comeback. In fact, it’s selling for $10 a cup in big cities.
Not only does it hit the spot during bouts of cold weather, but benefits of bone broth include healing arthritis and digestive symptoms, too. It’s rich in nutrients like gelatin and glycine. These help to heal your leaky gut and even your skin.
Drinks that leave pumpkin spiced lattes in the dust - Dr. Axe
Real Pumpkin Spiced Latte Recipe
Get the benefits of drinking coffee, without all of the liver-damaging refined sugars found in most commercial pumpkin spiced lattes. The healthy fats in the coconut milk will help you feel full and satisfied, too.
Drinks that leave pumpkin spiced lattes in the dust - Dr. Axe

Final Thoughts on Drinks that Leave Pumpkin Spiced Latte in the Dust
  • Most pumpkin spiced lattes sold in chains and convenience stores contain dangerous levels of sugar and sometimes other toxic ingredients, including food dyes, fake flavors and carrageenan.
  • Luckily, you can make your own nourishing, health warm fall drinks at home using our recipes.
  • Drinks based in turmeric and even bone broth can provide anti-inflammatory benefits and even help heal your digestive tract.

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Pumpkin Pie Body Scrub

This luxurious body scrub is sure to get you in the spirit of the season. Brown sugar buffs away dead skin. Pumpkin is packed with vitamins A, C, and E; alpha hydroxy acids (AHAs); beta-carotene; zinc; and potassium to improve tone and texture. Jojoba oil moisturizes and helps relieve dry skin. Cinnamon and nutmeg create a wonderful warming sensation—that feels magical. Ginger helps delivers detoxifying benefits. Allspice is rich in youth-boosting vitamins A and C. Vanilla essential oil is widely used in aromatherapy for its uplifting aroma.
Ingredients
  • 1½ cups organic brown sugar
  • ⅓ cup pumpkin puree (preferably fresh, but canned works too)
  • 3 tablespoons jojoba oil
  • 3 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice (cinnamon, ginger, allspice, and nutmeg)
  • 3 drops vanilla essential oil

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Ayurvedic Rituals To Help You Stay Grounded & Embrace Change This Fall

Ayurvedic Rituals To Help You Stay Grounded & Embrace Change This Fall Hero Image
 
According to Ayurveda, as the seasons change and fall arrives, Vata Dosha increases. Fall is a time of change, instability, and sensitivity, and keeping your Vata Dosha in check is key to staying healthy through fall and winter.

What is Vata Dosha?

Vata has many positive aspects. The combination of air and space is mobile, creative, light, airy, great for communication between people as well as the communication with the internal environment inside our body. Vata is what makes our systems move and flow. It's the poetic phrases of the writer and storyteller. It's the fantasies of the artist that are expressed through paintings, collages, or metal. It is the cool breeze and dry deserts.
But everything in moderation. When Vata increases excessively, it dries out our tissues. It creates wind in our bowels, manifesting as constipation and bloating. There may be a lack of appetite, too — either from the digestive upset or because the creative mind has become too anxious and worried to eat. People with deranged Vata can feel unstable, unbalanced, and ungrounded. People with deranged Vata are the daydreamers who cannot connect to daily life with the people and environment they live in. They become flighty and changeable, maybe unable to sleep.
Although some people have more Vata Dosha, air, and wind in their constitution, we are all susceptible to an increase of Vata in fall. Fall is the season of change — just like Vata. It shares the same air and spacelike qualities. And fall is indeed changeable — one day there's rain; on the next there's sunshine, it's windy, and we observe the season change from summer to winter. The leaves of the trees change color.
We cannot change our external environments, but we can balance our internal environment through our daily routines, diet, and herbs.
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Vata is dry, light, irregular, rough, mobile, cold, quick, and changeable. To reduce Vata, we reduce those qualities in our daily lives and routines. We can also start to complement with opposites to calm any excess. The dry, rough, and light qualities can be reduced with oils, ghee, and milk.

Here's how you can find balance

Diet:

Reduce any dry, light, and cold foods. This includes raw salads, fresh juices, and cold foods straight out of the fridge. Many cereals share the dry, light, and rough qualities of Vata when eaten with cold milk as breakfast.
Instead, start eating warm, cooked meals. Nourishing foods such as kitchari, casseroles, or soups are perfect Vata-reducing foods. They are easy to digest, too, for the sensitive Vata digestive system. Add warming herbs such as ginger, cumin, cloves, and cinnamon. Adding ghee or oil to your meals is an excellent way to reduce the dry qualities of Vata. These ingredients oil up the digestion and any dry skin.

Lifestyle:

The spontaneity and excitement of Vata can have many benefits, but an excess increases Vata Dosha. Too much traveling, movement, and change increase the quality of mobility and change. Especially air travel. We can consider how we choose to travel, and if we can, find ways to do so in nature with the feet on the ground. Internet surfing, social media, and emails all increase Vata.
Fall is a good time to reduce those activities — or at least do them during the earlier part of the day so they don't influence your sleep.
Start waking up and going to bed at the same time. One of the best Ayurvedic ways to calm and nourish excessive Vata is with Abhyanga, or self-massage. Use a warming oil such as sesame or a specific Vata-reducing massage oil. Apply it firmly to the body before your shower. If you can't make the time for a full-body massage, apply the oil to your feet before bedtime.
The oil counteracts the dry, rough qualities of Vata. When applied to the skin, the skin gets soft and smooth. But the qualities enter the Dhatus, our tissues, and our whole being. Massaging your skin also grounds and calms down an anxious mind, moistens cranky joints, and soothes a sensitive Vata digestion. To stay grounded, get out in nature, put your feet on the ground, and breathe.
Living Ayurvedically simply means to live in balance with our internal and external environments. We learn to listen to our bodies and how they respond to the time of day, the seasons, our food choices, and our lives in general. Take time to check in with yourself, breathe, and enjoy staying in the flow of continuous change.

Friday, October 7, 2016

Going Off the Deep End

When our beloved dog Mira died, there were those who walked with us, honoring the truth of where we were, no matter what had brought us there. These were the compassionate. And there were those who felt our grief from a distance, though they were puzzled at the depth of our loss, given that she was only a dog. These were the sympathetic. But there were those who thought our heartbreak too wide and deep, and they grew impatient when we didn’t repair in what they thought was a reasonable length of time. For them, the depth of our heartbreak and the rawness of our feelings brought them to the edge of their comfort zone. Their fear of walking in this rawness with us made them minimize the nature of our loss. They thought we were too sensitive. They thought we’d gone off the deep end.
It doesn’t matter what splinter the Universe gives us to stop us in our tracks. It doesn’t matter if those around us, near or far, think that our pain or fear or sadness is out of proportion to what punctured our world. It really doesn’t matter what triggers us into the depth of life, only that we swim there. And it’s no one’s place to judge or say that what unhinges us doesn’t make sense or that our heartbreak is too much or that our grief is lasting too long.

There are infinite ways we can trip into what matters. Life simply and harshly demands that we dive into the depth of what we’re given, meeting life, not avoiding it. All that matters is that we finally stand on the ground of things in the heart of the Mystery. There’s no point in questioning the legitimacy of whatever breaks us open or the capacity of those who are broken open to meet what is opened. All that matters is that we walk through that opening. And love demands that we sweetly and bravely go there together.

The truth is that we are here precisely to go off the deep end—the way a diver opens up completely before entering the water—so we can be baptized in the Mystery of Life and renewed by the aliveness that only meeting life in its depth can offer. The test of love and friendship is the degree to which we can go there together, without judging or pushing each other; not letting each other drown in the deep or rescuing each other from the baptism of soul that waits there.

Love demands a soft patience, when a friend doesn’t get that second interview and it crushes them. Or when your partner can’t recover from the harsh criticism of a stranger that cuts too deep. Or your aunt gets depressed when she breaks her favorite mug. From outside the experience, a part of us wants to say, “It was only a job. It was only words. It was only a mug.”

For sure, we can make things bigger than they are. But how we face and absorb the rearrangement that rises out of loss is a very personal journey that can’t be compared to anyone else. Our work, alone and together, is not to minimize the pain or loss we feel, but to investigate what these sharp incidents are opening in us. It’s not helpful to tell ourselves or each other to get over it, but rather to encourage and help each other to get under it.

A Question to Walk With: Look closely into the field of feeling that was stirred by a recent experience that stopped you, hurt you, and opened you more deeply than the incident seemed to warrant. Describe what you see there and your history with such feelings.




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