Apr 192012
 

With a challenging economy, there is an inclination to try to save money wherever possible.  One area of your life you can easily save money is on house cleaning.

The most obvious way to save money if it applies to you is to stop paying someone else to do it for you.  There are many way to efficiently clean your house and save money at the same time.  As a bonus, you will be burning more calories and losing weight.

Here are some tips to get you started with saving money on your house cleaning:

 

  • Use mild dish soap or water for general cleaning around the house.  Mild dish soap can clean most areas of your home such as your kitchen and carpet stains.  Hot water also works well on carpet stains.
  • Buy in bulk and use store coupons.  Being a member of a warehouse club like Costco or Sam’s Club can help save money on cleaning products.  It is ok to buy cleaning products in bulk since they have a long shelf life.
  • Clean regularly to avoid having bigger messes that are harder to clean later.  As soon as you see a spill or mess, clean it up.
  • Use reusable cloths whenever possible.  When clothes become unusable, cut them up to use as rags around the house rather than using paper towels.  Use dish cloths for wiping counters and spills instead of paper towels.
  • Simplify your supplies by buying products that can do double duty.  Maybe a cleanser can clean the kitchen and bathrooms including the toilet bowls, tubs and sinks.
  • Reuse grocery plastic bags as liners for your trash cans.  You are also helping the environment by reusing any plastic bags.
  • Wash your laundry in cold water and line dry whenever possible.  This will save money on utilities.
  • Run the dishwasher only when it is full.  This will save on your utility bills and make the process of taking dishes in and out of the dishwasher more efficient since you will do it less often.
  • Make your own cleaning supplies using items you have around the house like baking soda and vinegar.  Baking soda can also be used to reduce odors anywhere by placing some in a small glass jar half full.
  • Reduce clutter.  When you have less stuff, you have less stuff to clean and maintain, saving you time and money.  Buying less stuff also saves your money.  Selling some of your current stuff also brings in more money!
  • Have your kids help.  Your kids learn responsibility and you save money on hiring cleaners!

How to avoid getting sick this winter

 Finding balance, Fitness, Self-Care  Comments Off on How to avoid getting sick this winter
Dec 262011
 

One of the best tips to follow to avoid getting sick this winter is to focus on prevention.  That means building up your immune system as much as possible.  Other than building up your immune system, you must avoid contracting the viruses that can make you sick.  Following are steps to make sure your immune system is in the best condition and to avoid those germs.

1.  Keep your hands clean!

Make sure to wash your hands whenever possible and keep sanitizer handy.  Even when you are getting together with friends and family instead of going to the mall, you still need to make sure you keep your hands washed frequently and before eating.

2.  Stay hydrated!

Keeping your body hydrated with plenty of water keeps your system less susceptible to viruses.  Water is necessary for our body and mind to function at optimum level and most people don’t get enough.  It is an easy fix!  Always have some with you.

3.  Get enough sleep

Getting at least 6-7 hours of sleep will allow your body to repair itself better and fight sickness.  Make sleep a priority and do what you need to make sure you get enough.  This might mean you need to cut down on alcohol, caffeine or sugar to sleep better.  Make certain your environment and bed-time routine enables you to get the best sleep.  Make sure to get enough sunshine daily to help your body have enough melatonin to help sleep.

4.  Eat healthy

Eating a healthy diet will ensure that your body is getting all the supplements it needs to be healthy and have all the supplements it needs.  It never hurts to take supplements such as vitamin c and zinc as insurance, but keep in mind they do not replace eating well.  The holidays can pose a challenge to our efforts to eat well.  This might mean you need to eat healthy prior to an event or make a commitment to eat small portions of foods that do not help your immune system.

5.  Get enough exercise

Exercise reduces stress and maintains a stronger immune system, making you less prone to illness.  Get out there to burn some calories and boost your spirits at the same time.  Try yoga at home or partner up with a friend to take an aerobic class at your local gym.

More reason to exercise

 Fitness  Comments Off on More reason to exercise
Dec 022011
 

We’re in the midst of the holiday season and peak time for the most fattening cooking.  I’m certainly guilty with my home-made chocolate fudge and chocolate chip bars made within the past week.  I’m also aware of possibly the greater need for exercise at this time.  A recent article from the New York Times provides even more reason to go to the gym or find other ways to burn those excess calories.

November 30, 2011, 12:01 am

How Exercise Benefits the Brain

By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
Does exercise strengthen your brain while it builds muscle?Adam Weiss/Getty ImagesDoes exercise strengthen your brain while it builds muscle?
Phys Ed

To learn more about how exercise affects the brain, scientists in Ireland recently asked a group of sedentary male college students to take part in a memory test followed by strenuous exercise.

First, the young men watched a rapid-fire lineup of photos with the faces and names of strangers. After a break, they tried to recall the names they had just seen as the photos again zipped across a computer screen.

Afterward, half of the students rode a stationary bicycle, at an increasingly strenuous pace, until they were exhausted. The others sat quietly for 30 minutes. Then both groups took the brain-teaser test again.

Notably, the exercised volunteers performed significantly better on the memory test than they had on their first try, while the volunteers who had rested did not improve.

Meanwhile, blood samples taken throughout the experiment offered a biological explanation for the boost in memory among the exercisers. Immediately after the strenuous activity, the cyclists had significantly higher levels of a protein known as brain-derived neurotrophic factor, or BDNF, which is known to promote the health of nerve cells. The men who had sat quietly showed no comparable change in BDNF levels.

For some time, scientists have believed that BDNF helps explain why mental functioning appears to improve with exercise. However, they haven’t fully understood which parts of the brain are affected or how those effects influence thinking. The Irish study suggests that the increases in BDNF prompted by exercise may play a particular role in improving memory and recall.

Other new studies have reached similar conclusions, among both people and animals, young and old. In one interesting experiment published last month, Brazilian scientists found that after sedentary elderly rats ran for a mere five minutes or so several days a week for five weeks, a cascade of biochemical processes ignited in the memory center of their brains, culminating in increased production of BDNF molecules there. The old, exercised animals then performed almost as well as much younger rats on rodent memory tests.

Another animal study, this one performed by researchers in the Brain Injury Research Center at the University of California, Los Angeles, and published in September in the journal Neuroscience, showed that if adult rats were allowed to run at will for a week, the memory center of their brains afterward contained more BDNF molecules than in sedentary rats, and teemed with a new population of precursor molecules that presumably would soon develop into fully functioning BDNF molecules.

Perhaps the most inspiring of the recent experiments is one involving aging human pilots. For the experiment, published last month in the journal Translational Psychiatry, scientists at Stanford University School of Medicine asked 144 experienced pilots ages 40 to 65 to operate a cockpit simulator three separate times over the course of two years.

For all of the pilots, performance declined somewhat as the years passed. A similar decline with age is common in all of us.

Many people find it more difficult to perform skilled tasks — driving an automobile, for instance –  as they grow older, says Dr. Ahmad Salehi, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford and lead author of the study.

But in this case, the decline was especially striking among one particular group of men. These aging pilots carried a common genetic variation that is believed to reduce BDNF activity in their brains. The men with a genetic tendency toward lower BDNF levels seemed to lose their ability to perform complicated tasks at almost double the rate of the men without the variation.

While the pilot experiment wasn’t an exercise study, it does raise the question of whether strenuous exercise could slow such declines by raising BDNF levels, thereby salvaging our ability to perform skilled manual tasks well past middle age.

“So many studies have shown that exercise increases levels of BDNF,” says Dr. Salehi. While he notes that other growth factors and body chemicals are “upregulated” by exercise, he believes BDNF holds the most promise.

“The one factor that shows the fastest, most consistent and greatest response is BDNF,” he says. “It seems to be key to maintaining not just memory but skilled task performance.”

Dr. Salehi plans next to examine the exercise histories of the pilots, to see whether those with the gene variant, which is common among people of European or Asian backgrounds, respond differently to workouts.

In people who have the variant and less BDNF activity, “exercise is probably even more important,” he says. “But for everyone, the evidence is very, very strong that physical activity will increase BDNF levels and improve cognitive health.”

Greek-Style Quinoa Burgers

 Cooking, Fitness, Recipes  Comments Off on Greek-Style Quinoa Burgers
Oct 252010
 

Healthy, low-fat quinoa burgers

Quinoa is a protein-rich super grain and comes in many colors.  It is a new discovery for me and I’ve been trying to use it more.

In a pot, bring 3/4 cup water to boil, add 1/2 cup rinsed quinoa.  Cover and reduce heat.  Cook until liquid is gone – 12 minutes.  Add 1 shredded carrot, 3 thinly sliced green onions, 2 cups canned (or cooked dried) white beans, 1/4 cup dried bread crumbs, 1 egg, 1 tsp. cumin and 1/2 tsp. each salt and pepper.  Mash well.

Form mixture into 4 patties.  (If needed, dip hands in water to prevent sticking; and if too soft, put in fridge for 5 minutes to firm.)  In skillet, cook patties in 4 tblsp. oil – 8 minutes on each side.

Quinoa burgers cooking

Serve in pitas topped with a spoonful of plain non-fat yogurt or low-fat sour cream, sliced cucumbers and sliced green onions.

Top foods for Spring

 Fitness  Comments Off on Top foods for Spring
Apr 122010
 

These food choices can improve your body in and out.

Great foods for your:

  • liver:  dandelions – in salad or as tea – increases bile production
  • kidney:  ginger – helps remove toxins, also an anti-inflammatory
  • brain:  blueberries – lots of antioxidants
  • heart – flax seed: omega 3 fatty acids and protein
  • skin:  avocado – for a youthful glow
  • eyes:  spinach
  • hair:  broccoli – helps production of sebum, making our hair glossy
  • teeth:  celery – cleans teeth fights bad breath
  • sinus issues:  jalapeno
  • mood booster:  sunshine (and for vitamin D)

Stay away from processed food and keep it colorful!

Source:  The Doctors

Learning to live balanced – literally

 Finding balance, Fitness  Comments Off on Learning to live balanced – literally
Apr 072010
 

Goodbye slip-on heeled shoes!

We all have to learn to keep living our lives as balanced as we can.  Women and Moms in particular can get caught up in multi-tasking and a juggling act that takes over our lives at our expense.  While we may be aware of needing to learn to slow down to maintain balance in our lives in general, we may not think of being balanced in a literal sense.  I was not thinking about it when I lost balance on a step, fell, and fractured a hand, requiring surgery.

Now I am recovering and going through challenging physical therapy.  The experience has made me more aware of safety.  I would not be in this situation if I had taken off my slip-on heels before going down the steep steps to the basement or chosen different shoes.  Since my accident, I’ve been drawn to observing the shoes women are wearing.  I imagine that as the weather gets warmer, more heels will be worn.

I’ve debated what to do with the shoes I fell in.  I thought I might keep them and just be more careful – they were my favorite pair, a treat from Nordstrom.  I looked them over and noticed they were somewhat worn and realized I’d never really looked at how worn my dress shoes are getting.  I bet this is common for women – we normally have many pairs that we occasionally wear and don’t think we are wearing them out.  We certainly wouldn’t think of a potential safety concern from a worn heel.  Mine ended up with some ridges that got caught on Berber carpeted stairs.

I decided to donate my shoes and am now giving more thought to the shoes I plan to wear in the future.  I’ve heard of vague concerns regarding heels being damaging and decided to do some research.  I came across a Washington Post Article with diagrams showing the effect of heels on the body.  Not surprisingly, there is nothing positive.  For myself, I am planning on steering away from heels.  Perhaps what I will gain from literally losing my balance and getting injured is healthier feet and legs for the long-term.

Top 3 Alternative Secrets to Adopt

 Alternative Medicine, Fitness  Comments Off on Top 3 Alternative Secrets to Adopt
Mar 222010
 

The top 3 alternative secrets to adopt as per the top 3 pioneers of alternative medicine are:

  1. A Cleanse – once or twice a year.  Give your body a chance to detox f0r 21 days to reboot.  Give up: sugar, alcohol, caffeine, gluten, and animal products.  There is plenty left, such as beans, legumes, whole grains, vegetables, and fruit.
  2. Omega 3 Fatty Acids – important for cardiovascular disease, joint health, and infant brain development.
  3. Meditation – A simple process:  have your feet on the ground, hands open on your lap, close your eyes, watch your breath, be aware of your body, don’t have expectations or worry about noises or thoughts, surrender to the moment.

Source:  Dr.Oz

Stop Emotional Eating

 Finding balance, Fitness, Personal Growth, Weightloss  Comments Off on Stop Emotional Eating
Mar 102010
 

Emotional eaters get a high from eating that is short-lived. Eating takes control of them and there is a loss of control over their behavior. They continue to engage in the same behavior over and over despite knowledge of the consequences.

Steps to Stop Emotional Eating
1. Stop Hiding: Be accountable to yourself, food, and family. Don’t have “secret” meals.
2. Be Mindful (vs. Mindless): This refers to slowing down your eating and appreciating your food with all your senses. Do a raisin experiment – put one on your tongue and focus on how it feels. Then chew and swallow while noticing and appreciating it as it goes into your digestive system. Eating mindfully has been shown to help people eat less and gain less weight.
3. Feed yourself without food: Feed yourself emotionally. Reach out to others and spend time with them.
4. Make a safety plan: This refers to what you’re going to do instead of eating, such as calling a friend, going for a walk, or taking a warm bath. Using peppermint oil helps invigorate the senses and helps connect with your mood. Most importantly, the safety plan starts before entering the kitchen.

Exercise and love yourself!

Source: Dr. Oz