Divine Weight Loss Tip #1

Want To Lose Weight?

Choose Wellness

and

Other Divine Weight Loss Tips

A White Pine Wellness Romp at Debar Pond, NY

A White Pine Wellness Romp at Debar Pond, NY

Wellness Romp, with Nancy and Basil, at Debar Pond.

Wellness Romp, with Nancy and Basil, at Debar Pond.

So, I have heard this many times... "What would you know about weight loss, you don't have any weight to lose?'

I confess, this was not always the case. After growing up as a rail-thin child and teen, I flourished into my adult years thinking I could eat whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted.  This had always been my eating plan... why should I change?

By age 30, I weighed 20 pounds more than I do right now. (My sisters called me "Nanny with the Fanny") Now this is not such a horrible thing but how did I get here and how was I to not get any further on this weight gain path? Losing 20 pounds was tough, very tough for me. Remember, I grew up super skinny no matter what I ate. It's a tough deal, 30 years later, to need to learn how to lose weight. 

My concern: That 20 pounds had literally ambushed me. I never saw it coming.  I ate healthy (or so I thought I was eating healthy... a vegetarian, high complex carb eating plan) and I was concerned that if 20 pounds could overtake me in 4 years... where would I be in 20 years? 50 to 100 pounds overweight? Yikes!

I knew I needed to make some big changes in my life.  If not, where would I be today? 

Bottom line:

  • I changed my eating habits. I gave up vegetarian eating. My first pregnancy helped out here. Pregnancy had me dreaming, literally, of roast beef, chicken and dumplings, and pulled pork dinners.

  • My big breakthrough was choosing wellness over weight loss. Yes, click this blue link and remind yourself what this wellness choice means for you and your mind, body, spirit health.

  • When I stopped trying to lose weight, stopped focusing on my weight, and instead made lifestyle choices based upon what was best for my wellness... well, the weight loss was no longer an issue.

  • This is a self-responsibility choice. When we take responsibility for our health and healing, in all areas, our weight drops and our health soars, healing happens.

Stay tuned for more Divine Weight Loss Tips.  I have several more in store for you.

Be happy, be healthy, chose wellness!  Love, Paula

PS I have about 12 more tips and will post more frequently until I have polished off my list of wisdom around weight loss. Remember, it is my wisdom. Use your experiences and create your own wisdom around health, weight balancing, and healing.

Future Wellness Romp: Kayak down Debar Pond to Debar Mountain (You can see Debar Mt. at end of pond), bushwhack to Debar Mt, and climb to the top. Guess I will have to bushwhack back to my kayak and re-paddle the pond! This is a true wellness choice…

Future Wellness Romp: Kayak down Debar Pond to Debar Mountain (You can see Debar Mt. at end of pond), bushwhack to Debar Mt, and climb to the top. Guess I will have to bushwhack back to my kayak and re-paddle the pond! This is a true wellness choice that will entail burning a few calories and building muscle and vitality. 12/30/2018: no, I still have not accomplished this BUT I have climbed many, many ADK High Peaks in the 4+ years.

My Healing Yard, Take 2

Come along, time for another healing walk through the back yard.

A couple of weeks ago, the boys were mowing the lawn.  Suddenly the lawn mower quit. I immediately wonder: lawn mower ill or kids quitting when the job is not half finished? Jake yells to me:  "Mom, come over here, please."  I go over to see this nice sized patch of purple flowers he has neatly mowed around.  I was not sure what they were but glad he left them intact, knowing that next year the patch will be bigger!

So, my sister googled the image, a few days later, when I find some in my Mom's yard.  This purple beauty is Self-Heal (Heal All), a powerhouse healing plant from the Mint family!  Good for: sore throats and mouth sores, fevers, diarrhea, skin wounds and sores, a diuretic for kidney ills, and conjunctivitis.

This humble plant contains antibiotic, hypotensive (lowers blood pressure), and anti-mutagenic (think cancer) properties. Traditional Chinese Medicine considers it a cooling plant and uses it to treat the liver (inflammation) and aid circulation.

Thanks Jake for seeing these 'lil flowers in the lawn and knowing to protect them from the hungry lawn mower!

Self-Heal growing next to a friend, White Clover.

Self-Heal growing next to a friend, White Clover.

White Clover:  Colds, coughs, fever, and vaginal infections. Flower tea is used for arthritis and gout, health conditions in the same family.

White Clover

White Clover

Wild Strawberry leaves were once used as a nerve tonic, for bladder and kidney ailments, jaundice, scurvy, diarrhea, stomachaches, and gout. Fresh leaf tea was used for sore throats. Berries are eaten for scurvy and gout... something tells me to eat them just because they are yummy! Root tea was used to treat gonorrhea, stomach and lung ailments, irregular menses, and as a diuretic. What a humble little plant!

My yard is carpeted with Wild Strawberry plants. I have caught the cat's eating them on many occasions, bet they were self medicating their bellies!

My yard is carpeted with Wild Strawberry plants. I have caught the cat's eating them on many occasions, bet they were self medicating their bellies!

Rhubarb root is delightful for constipation as it stimulates the liver to release bile which promotes colon cleansing. The root helps lower cholesterol, is an antiseptic, relieves spasms, has anti-tumor effects, is a diuretic, and a general tonic for good health. 

Rhubarb stalks are a good source of calcium, anti-oxidants, are a laxative, and a purgative.  Rhubarb is high in dietary fiber, protein, vitamin C, vitamin K, B complex vitamins, potassium, manganese, and magnesium. Rhubarb is a rich source of polyphenolic flavonoids like beta-carotene, lutein, and zeaxanthin.  Hey, rhubarb is a "superfood" that does not have to be imported thousands of miles!

Caution: Do not eat the rhubarb leaves... TOXIC ALERT!  The triangular leaves are extremely high in oxalic acid, which can cause severe illness in people, resulting in the common belief that rhubarb is poisonous. If the plant is subject to extreme cold, the dangerous acid can migrate into the stalk, so be sure to store rhubarb in a warm or temperate space, just like the climate it normally grows in.

My Rhubarb patch, looking a little ill this time of year!

My Rhubarb patch, looking a little ill this time of year!

Bee balm: My patch is a mix of wild and cultivated.  I planted it to feed the hummingbirds and have found it attracts bees, dragon flies, butterflies, and various other flying insects!  It is Wild Bergamot! The leaf tea is used for colic, to expel flatulence (gas) and parasites, colds, fever, stomachaches, nosebleeds, insomnia, and heart troubles. It was used with measles to induce sweating and "fever" the virus out of the body.

Bee Balm

Bee Balm

Plantain: Here is a plant for your skin!  Got some pesky bug bites?  Chew up plantain leaves and put the chewed up "poultice" onto the bites.  Let them sit for a bit and soothe the bug bites.  This is back yard first aid!  Plantain is used to heal all sorts of skin issues, sores, and ulcers as it stimulates the healing process.

This plant is another healing powerhouse, used as a prominent folk cancer remedy - healing plant in South America. My yard is a cancer healing center!

Plantain is a confirmed antimicrobial.  This is what we should be making hand sanitizers out of, not toxic chemicals and over used and abused antibiotics.

Plantain's seeds (the seed stalks are an easy way to identify this plant) are mucilagenous and used to reduce cholesterol.

Plantain

Plantain

Wild Geranium: This fun little plant grows atop my septic tank.  I am not sure I would ever want to harvest it from this spot...

Wild Geranium's root is used for stopping bleeding, diarrhea, dysentery, hemorrhoid relief (seems to me it would be healing to varicose veins as well), for gum disease, kidney and stomach ills, and as a diuretic. The powdered root is used to heal canker sores, apply topically. Externally it is used as a cancer remedy.

Wild Geranium

Wild Geranium

Motherwort

Motherwort

Motherwort: This plant, hanging here on my front porch (above picture) was an awesome gift from Martha Pickard's farm, (Nourished Roots Certified Nutrition Specialist).  I am going to tincture it as Motherwort is a wonderful healing plant for the female reproductive tract: promotes and regulates menstruation, as an aid in childbirth, as a uterine tonic, and for menstrual cramps.  I would mix it with Red Raspberry leaf and Stinging Nettle leaf for an amazing uterine tonic and female reproductive tract healing remedy.

Motherwort is also used for asthma, as a sleep aid, for heart palpitations, for sciatica, fevers, spasm, nerve pain, and stomachaches.

Motherwort is equally awesome for the heart, nourishing and strengthening the heart muscle and its blood vessels. It is a remedy for most heart diseases and rapid heart rate (tachycardia).  I would blend it with Hawthorne Berry for heart-loving nourishment!

Below is the pint of Motherwort tincture I have brewing.  The Motherwort demands respect when handling, like Stinging Nettles.  It has sweet, little, biting blossoms whorling about the stem.  Handle carefully, lest you get picked!

Thank you Jane for always keeping a supply of organic vodka at Village Wine & Liquors, Potsdam.  Keeps my tincture "squeaky clean!"

Thank you Jane for always keeping a supply of organic vodka at Village Wine & Liquors, Potsdam.  Keeps my tincture "squeaky clean!"

Nettle tea gallon.jpg

I would be horribly remiss if I did not mention my best herb friend here... Stinging Nettles. Yes, that is a gallon jug of Nettle, Red Clover flower, and Strawberry leaf tea.  Thank you John Casserly for the big bag of dried Nettles.  What a gift!

Herbs ARE very healing to body, mind, and soul.  The herbs nourish the physical body with vitamins, minerals, and healing chemical constituents that we really do not need to know their every name... just know that they work.  Herbs heal the mind because of the thinking you do to learn about their healing properties. Learning about herbs is a mind soothing activity. You are taking self-responsibility for your own health and acknowledging, at a very deep level, that you are not at the "hands" of fate and genetics.  You can do something, everyday, to make yourself feel and function from a vibrant space.  Herbs heal the soul because... well, look at my friendly connections just in this post.  My sister, Ginny, googling Self-Heal and teaching me a new plant, Martha gifting me with Motherwort, John gifting me with Nettles, and Jane gifting me with always having organic vodka available. Every time I use these healing gifts, I will think of my dear friends.  Self-Heal will always flash my sister into my mind. Herbs keep me connected with the best people and that is very soul soothing!

Creeping Wood Sorrel: This is that fun plant kids pick to eat because it is sour tasting. I ate plenty as a kid! Perhaps it is a wise, intuitive, healing action for kids who need the vitamin C after a long winter in Northern NY!  

Traditionally, the leaves were chewed to relief mouth sores, sore throats, and nausea.  Fresh leaves are poulticed and used on skin sores and ulcers, as well as cancers. Leaf tea is used for scurvy, urinary tract infections, and fevers. Caution:  Large doses may cause oxalate poisoning (much like the rhubarb leaves above).

Creeping Wood Sorrel, notice the tiny yellow flowers.  When in full bloom, flowers will be all over them.  Maybe flowers are another characteristic that attracts kids.

Creeping Wood Sorrel, notice the tiny yellow flowers.  When in full bloom, flowers will be all over them.  Maybe flowers are another characteristic that attracts kids.

 

I hope I have helped you to look at the plants in your yard from a different perspective, a healing point of view.  I always feel so sad for the lawn that people try to mold and shape into nothing but pure grass by cutting down and digging up plants and applying toxic chemicals.  When we leave nature as it is, bio-diversified, we have a healing oasis right out our back door (front door too!).

If you sit on the lawn, so you are close to the ground, and look at just a 2 square foot space, you will be amazed at the biodiversity of plant life in just that small space.  Even more fun, try moving about your yard, sitting in different spots along your journey.  By the end of your adventure, I bet you can find 50 to 100 different species of plants!

Go ahead, take a walk and look into your grass. Sit down and really look.  I bet you can find many, tiny plants interwoven with the grass blades, struggling to come to life. That is your healing garden!

Blessings, Paula

Self-Heal... another pretty picture!  I see Wild Strawberry leaves, plantain, white clover, and wood sorrel intertwined in here!

Self-Heal... another pretty picture!  I see Wild Strawberry leaves, plantain, white clover, and wood sorrel intertwined in here!

Fleas!

This article was written, over time and with updates, for the Potsdam Food Coop's Newsletter.  I am re-publishing it here as I am so often asked how to avoid the toxic flea chemicals.  Keeping fleas at bay is the key.  So much of health is about prevention.  I have also realized that a zero flea policy is not realistic with animals.  Animals attract fleas!  If you want to avoid the harsh chemicals that cause cancer and are neurotoxins, a flea or two, here and there, should not be a cause for alarm.  I still comb my cats once or twice a week and manually kill the fleas that I find.  My lab, he will eat anything, gobbles up his daily doses of "Bug Check"! Another resource on flea chemicals.     http://www.apnm.org/publications/resources/fleachemfin.pdf

Fleas, Fleas, Fleas, and, well, MORE Fleas! Have I ever told you I HATE fleas?  I have had several pets over 20 years or so and never had to deal with fleas. 

I do not use chemical or pharmaceutical flea control of any kind, just a natural diet and garlic/brewer's yeast in the summer months. I am not sure what happened summer 2010 but the fleas took control!  I am still in shock, how could so many fleas exist in one area, on one poor infested animal?!  

I have 4 pets or should I say 'flea magnets'?  I am not sure how I survived so many weekly herbal flea baths over the past 2 summers. Basil, my lab, was the not so thrilled recipient of about 3 baths per week.  Halo Purely for Pets Cloud 9 Herbal shampoo works like a dream.  The fleas boil to the surface of the lather by the hundreds, dead, just like I like them!  Here or there one struggles to survive in the suds.  It gives me great pleasure to “snap” it to death between my fingernails.  So much for non-violent living!

Now for the cats, and I have 3, ever tried bathing them?  Any human being with a reasonable level of common sense would not try it more than once.  I, on the other hand, did!  The first bath a cat receives generally goes fairly well.  I think they are in shock.  After that bath, they wise up to the happenings!  My seemingly docile, loving fur balls turn into puffed out, hissing, scratching, and biting maniacs!  I can just walk by them with the shampoo bottle and the wild behaviors ensue.

So, of course, I decide I WILL have the upper hand here.  I purchase a mesh bag with a head hole, designed for the sole purpose of bathing a cat.  Advertising stated it was guaranteed to work, every time.  Have you ever tried shoving a cat into a Velcro closing mesh bag with just a head hole for freedom?  This was a feat in itself, leaving them in no mood for the bath to come.  We are back at that image of the hissing, biting, maniac cat, this time on her back in the sink clawing like crazy to bust free of the mesh bag.  Zero baths were given in that mesh bag.  If I had only videotaped the cat baths. A great You Tube that would probably have gone 'viral'!

I have gathered weapons of mass destruction, against fleas of course.  I have an arsenal of products, some designed to kill, others merely to repel.  There are many available from various natural pet catalogs and websites.   I have made some flea remedies myself from natural pet care recipes.

Let me attempt to fill you in on what works, what doesn't and where this all leaves me, my sanity, the fleas and my scratching pets. 

First, let me back up here.  I am certain someone is saying, “hello, have you ever heard of Frontline, Advantage...and a host of other pharmaceutical chemicals sold for the purpose of killing fleas and ticks”?  Yes, I have.  As an advocate of chemical free food and the land stewardship this entails, I am not fond of the idea of flea chemicals.   Whether I give my pets oral flea medications or put the chemicals directly on their skin, the products essentially do the same thing:  enter the pets’ blood stream and create a walking, eating, sleeping, chemical flea bomb.  I am not sure that sounds OK to me.  I do hate fleas though..............

Now with that said, let me tell you about the fun and adventures I have had with my various natural flea concoctions.  Sergeant's Pet Care Products have a variation of the 'squeeze on the skin' flea killer called Sentry Natural Defense.  The all natural product is made of a carrier oil and several essential oils with a touch of vanilla for olfactory pleasure.  Applied to the skin on a cat's neck and along the spine of a dog, it works to repel and kill fleas.  For a serious flea problem, forget this one.  Perhaps if the product is applied before the flea season gets overwhelming and is used every two weeks like instructed, it may do the trick.  I have used it over the winter on our long haired cat that still seems to harbor fleas.  It keeps the fleas to a bare minimum as long as I comb her twice daily, killing the fleas caught in the comb.  (For the record, I recommend combing while the cat eats.  My 'lil hisser seems to ignore me when there is food to be had!)

Essential to flea control is daily vacuuming.  Left to their own devices, the fleas would take over the house!  Borax, sprinkled on the carpets, seems to help.  Help is the operative word; it did not rid the problem.  Did I mention the problem was fleas?! I was given a cardboard container of iodized salt to use in the same manner.  A dear friend told me this was a flea remedy.  I plan to try this iodized salt trick, sprinkled on the pets and carpets, when flea season takes hold again.

I have used many sprays that are basically water, alcohol and essential oils.  Sun Feather's Bug Off spray works well too.  These sprays need to be applied daily, a daunting task over the entire flea season, especially with several pets!  The essential oils, much like in the shampoo, kills them dead on contact.  Oh the feeling of dead fleas! I tried a powder product whose ingredients were:  diatomaceous earth, brewer’s yeast, garlic powder and essential oils.  Seemed effective IF applied daily and worked in down to your pet's skin.  Not so hard with a dog but let me refer you back to the cat bath experience.  It seemed to be the same experience except powder flying everywhere, not water and suds! 

As for Basil, a lab, who lives near the river and swims several times daily, it is not easy keeping powder on this dog! I was constantly reminded of how easy the “one time application lasting 30 days” would be compared to constant bathing, spraying, powdering, combing............. But, alas, I did not give up.

On to electric collars:  these work by bouncing an electronic frequency from the collar to the ground and back to the pet.  Apparently fleas do not like this buzzing, bouncing electricity.  I, well my dog, did not get much relief.  Seems they work best when the animal spends most of its time on a hard surface, paved or concrete.  The collar company rep recommended I leave the dog in the garage for a few hours every day.  Great idea, I don't suppose a barking dog for 2 hours bothers this man.  Maybe I will try it..... someday!

I then moved to magnetic tags that attach to pet collars and repel fleas and ticks.  I think I have failed to mention that any “collar” trick is fine for dogs, but outdoor cats with collars are not a good mix.  Tree climbing cats are in great danger with collars about their necks.  Not an image I want to experience.  Even if the magnetic collar tag solved the dog's flea problem, there was still the cats' fleas to conquer!  Anyhow, with renewed hope, I tried the magnetic tags.  The fleas raged on!  I even spoke with people who swore by them for fleas, ticks, flies on horses, mosquitoes on humans... So the company sent me another tag, in case the first had lost its magnetic energy.  I will try it this coming summer, now if I can just remember where I put it......

In the end, I went back to my flea baths, daily combing and spraying, and a powdering here and there when I thought of it.  With flea season soon approaching, I am ready with my card board box labeled:  Flea & Bug Stuff.  In this box of magic is:  iodized salt, borax, shampoo, sprays of various concoctions, powders, brewer’s yeast, garlic powder, SunFeather's Bug Off, Sentry's natural squeeze on stuff, flea combs and brushes, and a bottle of Jack Daniels.  Oh yeah, the Jack Daniels is for me when I get sick of the fleas!

A local vet asked about the purpose of fleas replied with this, “to pay my kids tuition through college!”

I am certain, in the web of life, they must have some useful purpose.  I have yet to figure it out.

I would love to hear if any of my tried and not so completely true natural remedies have worked for anyone else or if you have some other fun suggestions for me to try.  I must confess, if the fleas are nasty bad in 2012, chemicals may finally reign in my home. 

Oh yeah, I was kidding about the Jack Daniels, although it might just work as an expensive flea spray!

Flea Update Summer 2012     As of June 1st, 2012  I am using a product called “Bug Check”, available through http://www.thenaturalvet.net.

Here is my experience:  I started using the powder in my pets’ food in early March.  Based upon weight, add a certain amount to your pet’s food twice daily.  I did.  This is what I have noticed:

1.   I do not have fleas in my house as of June 8th.   Last year I had fleas!

2.   My pets do not have fleas, last year we had plenty by now.  With this year’s early & warm spring, I would assume there would be many fleas by now.

3.   My long haired kitty harbored fleas all winter.  I would comb her twice daily, while she was eating, and generally killed 5-10 fleas daily.  Within 2 weeks of starting the “Bug Check”, I might have combed out 2-3 fleas a day. Within a month of starting the product, I may have combed out 2-3 fleas over several days.  After using “Bug Check” for 3 months, I no longer comb any fleas out of her long hair.  This is a gift, a flea free gift!  I cannot say definitively, as the heat of summer and “high” flea season have not hit yet, but the preliminary evidence is promising!!   I will keep you posted on our flea chronicles this fall. Maybe, just maybe, “Bug Check” will save me from chemical flea remedies and that bottle of Jack!

More Flea Updates, Fall 2012  Flea-less Frenzy!

Bug Check gets a huge OK from me.  The product was highly effective in keeping fleas off my pets, no toxic chemicals required. If used in a generous dose for the animals body weight, I hear other satisfied customers say Bug Check also keeps ticks at bay.  Next year I will up the dosage! Here are important things I discovered:

1.   The product has to be used consistently every day.  If you go away and no one is keeping up the Bug Check dosages, there will be minor outbreaks of fleas until you get back on track with the product.

2.   Cats are finicky and do not always eat it in their food.  This poses problems!  Next year I will encapsulate it and gently push it down their throats with a little help from butter!  I am certain this will turn into as much fun as giving cats a bath!

3.   Bringing new pets into the equation screws things up temporarily.  I brought home two new kitties in July.  They were flea infested, kitty bath time fun began!  In the interim two weeks to get the Bug Check into their systems and working, we had a slight outbreak of fleas.  I say ‘slight’ as it is almost not worth mentioning after our Summer 2011 war with the fleas on pets and in the house. By the way, I think I lost the battles!

4.   "Bug Check" must be used for 2 full weeks before flea season hits the North Country. My advice:  get started early in the spring as it is well worth the effort to have chemical free pets.

Happy Flea Ridding!!

http://www.thenaturalvet.net/Bug-Check-_c_34.html

UPDATE March 2013: The flea product I found at Agway in Potsdam, NY is:  Earth Animal Flea & Tick program by the Goldstein's Wellness and Longevity Vet care program. I am going to try it with my kitties as they are not so easy to convince to eat the Bug Check stuff!