Category Archives: D.I.Y.

Re-Energize Your Chi:: Does Your Diet Include Probiotics?



I am halfway through re-energizing my chi. I’m breathing better, my body is getting stronger and healthier. My mind and thoughts are becoming clearer. My natural supplements will run out soon and then I will rely fully on the choice of food that I put in my body. A new beginning.

Today we talk about probiotics and how they can help the body. Probiotic food is beneficial for health and capable of boosting immunity. Lisa Antao of The Times of India will tells you more about its growing popularity.

Does your diet include probiiotics?

Did you know there are over 400 distinct species of microorganisms inhabit the various regions of the adult human digestive tract, making up nearly two kg of total body weight? Few of these bacteria, such as lactobacilli species and bifidobacteria, are beneficial to our health and are capable of boosting immunity. In recent years, there has been a lot of curiosity and interest in probiotic foods because of their ability to benefit one’s health. The term probiotic means ‘for life’. There are two types of bacteria, good bacteria and bad bacteria. Harmful bacteria are those microorganisms, like yeast, fungi and parasites, that cause diseases. Probiotics are organisms that contribute to the health and balance of the intestine tract and are commonly referred to as the good bacteria. Continue reading

Re-Energize Your Chi:: Meditation



Feeling stressed and unable to focus? The tools to overcome this are actually in your possession. Using an ancient technique for a few minutes a day to calm mind chatter can give you immediate relaxation, greater mental clarity and improved well being and health.

Meditation is the most important thing to do when your re-energizing your chi. The mind controls the body, so a strong mind will result in a stronger body. Improve your whole health with meditation.

Meditation has been practiced for thousands of years, and is used in some form by most religions as a way of tapping into divine knowledge. Even if you’re not seeking spiritual enlightenment but just a little peace, meditation is the quickest and most available way to do this.

Thoughts are constantly flowing through our minds – by some estimates up to 50,000 thoughts per day. The busier we get, the more our head is abuzz, making it harder to calm down. Our mind can even continue producing thoughts during sleep, so while the body is resting the mind doesn’t get a break.

Our friend at TheLifeCo.com have some information on how to prepare yourself for a better mind/body experience. Make sure you stop by their site for more tips on how to live a healthier life.

Meditation health benefits

Without a rest, our mind becomes more exhausted, affecting our ability to think clearly and make decisions. Meditation gives your mind a chance to slow down and rest. When you slow down your thoughts, you find that you are able to direct them towards more positive and productive outcomes. After meditating, you feel calmer and can think more clearly, while your mood and the ability to concentrate improve.

The mind and body are intricately connected, and being able to quiet the mind brings relaxation to the body. By reducing stress, meditation helps the immune system work better, lowers blood pressure, reduces pain and the effects of allergies, and can improve anxiety and sleep disorders. By meditating for just a few minutes each day you can easily feel the positive effects on your well being.

How to meditate

The easiest way to start training your mind to meditate is to focus on your breathing. Breathing is something we all do, and by paying attention to the breath as it enters and exits your body and the rhythm it creates, you can easily get your mind to stay in one place.

1. Find a quiet space and get in a comfortable position by standing, sitting or lying down.
2. Close your eyes and take a moment to scan your body from head to toe. Notice what’s happening in your body. Relax or readjust any parts that are tense or uncomfortable.
3. Breathe deeply and slowly. Imagine your breath traveling down your spine as you inhale and back up as you exhale.
4. If your mind begins to wander to thoughts, sounds or feelings, gently bring your awareness back to your breath.
5. Continue for at least a couple minutes or longer if you wish.
6. Focus on how your body feels and slowly open your eyes.

If you find it hard to calm your mind at first, keep trying. Like most skills, meditation takes practice. Some days relaxation may be easier to achieve than others depending on your mood and energy levels – no matter how long you’ve been practicing. By making meditation part of your day, you are giving yourself a powerful skill to help relieve stress, improve concentration and mood.

Re-Energize Your Chi:: Exercise



Exercise is something we all can do. It only takes 5-10min worth a day to stay healthy.

Here are some tips from our friends at TheLifeCo.com on how to stay in shape. Make sure you stop by their site for more helpful tip on living.

Exercise and Flexibility

Our body is designed to move but our inactive modern lifestyle leads to many health problems. Discover how exercise and body therapies can improve your well-being.

Push Ups
Begin in push up position, on knees or toes. Perform 4 push ups, abs in and back straight. On the 5th push up, lower halfway down and hold for 4 counts. Push back up and repeat the series – 4 regular push ups and 1 halfway–5 or more times.

Pull Ups
The pull up exercise does require some basic equipment, or some creativity (go to a playground or find a low hanging tree branch, for example), but it’s a great, simple way to build upper body strength.

One-Leg Balance / Squat / Reach
Stand on one leg and hold it as long as you can. If this is too easy, add a slight squat motion. Still too easy? Place an object on the floor, several feet in front of you (a book, perhaps), and slowly squat down, and reach out with one arm and touch the object and slowly return to an upright position. Stay on one leg at all times. Repeat on the other leg after a minute or so.

Tuck Jump
The tuck jump exercise ranks near the top of the list for developing explosive power using only an athlete’s body weight.

Chair Dips
You’ll need two chairs, (or a bed and a chair or a counter, etc…) for this great tricep exercise. Place two chairs facing each other, about 3 feet apart. Sit on one chair with your hands palm down and gripping the edge of the chair. Place your heels on the edge of the other chair and hold yourself up using your triceps. Slide forward just far enough that your behind clears the edge of the chair and lower yourself so your elbows are at 90 degrees. Do as many repetitions as you can.

Re-Energize Your Chi:: Healthy Kitchen Tips



I’m still in the middle of re-energizing my Chi. This is the beggining of my third week and I feel good. Today we are going to go over healthy kitchen tips. Most people don’t know that great health starts with exercise and super good ingredient for you food.

Our friend over at TheLifeCo.com has put together a list of healthy kitchen tips that we all can follow. Make sure you cruise by their site to get even more healthy information.

Healthy Kitchen Tips

Stock up on fresh fruits and vegetables
If you have fresh fruits and vegetables in your kitchen, you are more likely to prepare healthy meals. If available, buy organic produce as it has more nutrients than non-organic. Keep lettuce and other vegetables on hand to easily make a salad. Cucumbers, carrots and celery also make quick, delicious, satisfying snacks.

Fresh fruits and vegetables are an important part of a healthy diet. But why organic?

Buy local
The healthiest fruits and vegetables are grown locally and in season. Local produce is fresher and has more vitality than produce shipped from other areas. Buying fruits and vegetables in season means they will have grown and ripened naturally, ensuring better flavor, and more vitamins and minerals.

Riper tomatoes
Ripe tomatoes are high in lycopene, a powerful anti-oxidant. If your tomatoes are not as vibrant as you’d like, store them stem-side down in a basket or bowl on your kitchen counter or table. They will continue to ripen, improving their flavor and texture. Don’t refrigerate tomatoes until they’re fully ripe. Cold temperatures stop the ripening process and reduce the flavor.

The secret to juicier citrus
Citrus fruits such as lemons, limes and oranges are alkaline-forming, high in vitamin C and refreshing to drink. You can squeeze more juice out of warm fruit than cold, so take fruit out of the refrigerator a couple hours before juicing. Press lightly with your hand and roll the citrus fruit back and forth on a counter top to break up the pulp and release its juice prior to squeezing.

Storing fresh herbs
Fresh herbs are an excellent addition to dishes because they have more flavor and nutrients than dried herbs. To store fresh herbs, rinse, pat dry and store in damp towels. If you’re storing fresh herbs with roots and/or long stems, submerge the roots in fresh water and store on a counter top or in the refrigerator.

Re-Energize Your Chi:: The Importance of Proper Breathing



The Importance of Proper Breathing

Take a deep breath and let go. Deep, relaxed breathing relieves stress throughout our entire body. However, most people do not breathe correctly. Shallow, restricted breathing robs us of oxygen and increases tension. Take a conscious step and breathe deeply to relieve stress and enhance well-being.

Deep, relaxed breathing is the natural state for our body. But tension causes us to breathe shallowly, causing a vicious cycle as insufficient oxygen intake aggravates the tension that causes it.

Oxygen

Oxygen is the most important element needed to sustain life and breathing is the best way to get it. We can survive for days and weeks without food or water, but only a few minutes without air. Deep and relaxed breathing delivers oxygen to all cells and facilitates efficient clearing of carbon dioxide.

pH

Our lungs are one of our body’s primary channels of pH control. Deep breathing introduces alkalizing oxygen and allows our body to eliminate acidic carbon dioxide, a waste product of cellular metabolism. Shallow breathing reduces this exchange, compromising optimal internal pH.

Ideal breath

Watch a sleeping baby breathe and see how its tummy rises and falls. Then observe what happens when that baby is upset. As it cries, its chest and shoulders heave as shallow breaths are drawn from the upper lungs. About 75% of a healthy breath should come from the diaphragm, the muscular band that separates the abdomen from the chest cavity, but many factors affect this.

Posture

Changes in posture will affect breathing as different muscles are utilized. When standing, the intercostal muscles between our ribs are more active and there is less movement in the abdomen. Lying down facilitates abdominal breathing, while sitting brings a balance between the two.

Environment

We are bombarded by unpleasant smells in our city environments. Pollution in its various forms affects our breathing. We are compelled to draw in deep, full breaths when in nature or when we find a nice smell, in traffic or when the rubbish truck drives by we breathe shallowly, trying to avoid those smells.

Mood

Stress affects our breath in a similar manner to that of the baby’s. It becomes shallower and rises into our upper lungs. This reduces oxygenation and pH which creates a vicious cycle that contributes to further emotional stress. We are able to relax both physically and emotionally in an alkaline, internal environment. Refocus and take a few deep breaths. The physical benefits will aid the mental shift in reducing tension and restoring a calmer state of mind.

Physical tension

Physical tension, especially in our chest, neck and shoulders reduces our ability to breathe deeply. This tension is further aggravated by our inability to inhale effectively to oxygenate, alkalize and relax. Stretching these areas will help relax the muscles and breathing deeply will improve oxygenation.

How to breathe

Like many things, breathing is a habit. Stress and tension often become the norm and taking the time to focus on breathing more fully will enhance your body’s ability to manage these stresses, lift your mood and improve overall health. Take a few minutes each day to practice your breathing.

Find a quiet, comfortable spot and lie down. Placing a book on your tummy will help you focus on deep healthy breathing as you feel it rise and fall.

Natural breath

By practicing this regularly, it will gradually become natural. It is how we were born to breathe.

1. Inhale slowly, allowing air to flow into your lower lungs, using your diaphragm and expanding the abdomen.
2. Pause briefly (1-3 seconds) then relax and exhale slowly. Your diaphragm will relax and release your breath naturally, letting the tummy fall. Pause momentarily then continue with this natural breath.

Complete breath

Here we concentrate on filling our lungs to maximum capacity then releasing fully. This enhances oxygenation and flushes acid wastes. It is great for calming the mind and provides a general overall tonic.

1. Inhale from your lower lungs like the natural breath, and then continue to fill the mid and upper lungs to fully expand your chest.
2. Pause briefly then release in the opposite manner, from the upper lungs, then the mid and finally the lower. The exhalation is complete when the abdomen pulls in and all air is released. Pause and continue with the complete breath.

Breathe deeply to restore and relax. A few minutes a day will quickly become habit and help your stress and tension melt away.

Re-Energize Your Chi:: Nutrition Tips



We continue our re-energize your chi series with the next chapter, Nutrition.

Our diet has the greatest impact on our well-being. Our friend at TheLifeCo.com are egar to help us discover delicious and simple things you can do to make your eating habits more vibrant. Make sure you stop by their site to get more heath facts to help with your re-energize plan.

It’s easy to make healthy nutrition habits part of your life. Incorporate these into your daily routine:

Nutritional Tips

Wonderful water
Water plays an important role in flushing impurities from our bodies, but most of us don’t drink enough. 2 liters per day is a good start, depending on the climate you live in and your activity level. Drink enough water to produce 8 to 10 copious urinations per day.

When possible, go organic
Choose organically grown and non-genetically modified produce, nuts and grains over conventionally grown food whenever possible. Organic food has more nutrients, fewer impurities and tastes better.

Avoid processed foods
Include more fresh fruits and vegetables in your diet and reduce the use of pre-packaged foods. Have a salad for lunch instead of a sandwich. Choose an apple or some carrots as a snack instead of cookies or a chocolate bar. Fruits and vegetables have more nutrients and fiber than processed foods.

Choose healthy oils
The purest, healthiest oils are cold-pressed, organic, extra virgin oils. Olive, flax, sesame, sunflower, assorted nut oils and hemp oil have more nutritional value than conventional cooking oils which are damaged from over-processing. They are known to improve skin tone as well as reduce the chance of heart disease. Heating any oil breaks down its structure and makes it rancid, so rather than cooking with them, enjoy these oils sprinkled over vegetables for added flavor.

Curb caffeine cravings
The caffeine in coffee or black tea may increase your energy, but soon afterward your blood sugar levels decrease, causing an energy crash. Begin to alternate these beverages with herbal teas and water. Drinking herbal teas or water instead can fulfill your emotional need to drink while helping cut your cravings for caffeine.

Re-Energize Your Chi:: Detox and Renewal



Monday I started my detoxification to re-energize my chi. This is the first step. I have to say that it’s going real well I feel good so far and I’m only 3 days in. I’m using CleanseSmart a two part detox kit. Day time pill to cleanse the liver, lungs, lymphatic system and kidneys. Then a night time pill that cleanses the skin, blood and bowels. Lots of water. Even a glass of vinegar water to start the day off.


I change my diet to mostly veggies allowing myself to have baked organic chicken, fish or turkey 3 times a week.To get the extra nutrition I need I take 2 Real Food Organics vitamins a day. I will take the supplements for 30 days then continue the diet and vitamins for another 30 day then we will be done.

Thelifeco.com has contributed some more detox tips so you can plan your own detox and renewal.

Cleansing wastes is a part of your body’s daily maintenance, and is important for rejuvenation and maintaining good health. Simple things you can do every day to boost your body’s detox efforts:

Detox Tips

Lemon lift
Drink lemon juice first thing in the morning to give your liver a kick start and stimulate detoxification. Squeeze the juice from one lemon into a glass and dilute with water. This tangy alkalizing drink is also a great way to get your daily intake of vitamin C.

Brush away toxins
A skin brush or loofah doesn’t just exfoliate your skin – it also stimulates your lymphatic system, draining wastes as they are expelled from your cells. Brush without water and before you bathe. Always brush in a clockwise circular motion and towards your heart where the central drainage point is located.

Get your heart pumping
Exercise helps our body detox in many ways. By increasing circulation, oxygen and nutrient rich blood are delivered to tissues while wastes are removed. Aerobic exercise 2-3 times per week is a great way to support your body’s detoxing efforts.

Cleansing chlorophyll
Leafy green vegetables are the best source of chlorophyll, nature’s way of making oxygen which supports and stimulates detoxification and healing on all levels. They also contain magnesium which relaxes our nervous system – another important element that helps detoxing. Eat as many leafy greens as possible – at least one serving a day.

Sweep up with fiber
Fiber is an important element of detox. Insoluble fiber acts as a broom through our digestive tract, sweeping away residues and speeding transit time. Soluble fiber attracts water, helps balance blood sugar and lowers cholesterol levels. Vegetables and pectin-rich fruits are good sources of both. Eat plenty of these to support your body’s detox efforts.

Re-Energize Your Chi For Spring



Well it’s almost Springtime and for me that means it’s time to re-energize my chi. Over the last year we have taken a lot of negativity into our bodies and soul wether we know it or not. Be it speaking with people or our own stressed out thoughts. Our body, soul and mind soaks these vibes up like a onion. These feeling alone can make us feel sick and sluggish. So I encourage myself and you to take a few months to re-energize your Chi.

Our new friends over at TheLifeCo.com will be helping us learn how to cleanse and refresh our body and Chi through detox, nutrition, exercise and meditation. Make sure you take the time to visit their site to get even more heathy living tips.

Re-Energize Your Body For Spring.

Spring is a time for growth and renewal in nature, and this is also reflected in our body and chi. Whereas winter is a period of slowing down and resting, spring is the season to build up our energy again. To help our chi flow freely we need to focus on two things – removing toxins that make our system sluggish, and supporting our immune system through the seasonal change.

1. Detox to get energy flowing

Spring is an ideal time to cleanse our body. In Traditional Chinese Medicine, spring is associated with the liver energy and detoxing will help energy flow better throughout the body. Join a detox retreat or try detoxing at home by juice fasting or eating only seasonal vegetables and fruits for a few days. Massage or dry skin brushing will help stimulate your lymph system, increasing energy flow and removing toxins.

2. Enjoy the season’s abundance

Spring’s bitter greens and astringent fruits and vegetables help the body cleanse while boosting the immune system. The delicate leaves that are briefly in season this time of year such as dandelion greens are excellent liver cleansers. Vibrant strawberries, cherries and apricots are rich in antioxidants which help fight off illness.

3. Renew your New Year’s resolutions

It’s actually easier to start your New Year’s resolution to exercise at this time of year – not in January! The longer days and warmer weather are calling you outside to go walking or hiking. Gardening is a great way to get back in touch with nature and get moving. Doing stretching exercises, yoga or tai chi will improve flexibility and help get your energy flowing.

4. Control the root cause of allergies

Contrary to popular belief, the reason for spring allergies is not pollen. When your immune system is overworked and weak, it sees seemingly harmless things like pollen or dust as dangerous invaders. Your body launches an inflammatory immune response, releasing chemicals like histamines that cause sneezing, coughing and itching. If you feel wheezy this time of year, cut out foods that may be taxing your immune system such as dairy and wheat products, processed foods and saturated fats. Reduce stress in your life by making fewer commitments and exercising and meditating more often. Using a nasal cleansing pot daily also helps flush irritants out of your nasal passages before they enter your body.

5. Wake up with the sun

Awakening with the day is a beautiful way to start your morning. If you don’t have natural light in your room, set your alarm clock and gently begin your day close to a window or outdoors. Enjoy this quiet time by eating a wholesome breakfast, meditating or exercising. You will kick off the day full of energy and in a great mood!

6. Tune into nature

At this time of year renewal and transformation are literally springing up from the ground. Nature is being reborn and you can benefit from this energy by tuning into the changes around you. Witnessing this annual rebirth is a sort of meditation that is calming, energizing and reminds you that you are a part of nature.

Last Chance:: GreenHeartShop.com – Ethical Valentine’s Day Gifts



Looking for a unique, ethical gift for your sweetie? Shop Greenheart and buy your valentine a handmade, fair trade gift.

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Match Passion with Action:: Philadelphia Engagment & Volunteer Service


“There is nothing more powerful than the time, energy and expertise of those extraordinary citizens who choose to serve in their community. I’m asking Philadelphians to work together and contribute their considerable talent and creativity as we collectively address the most challenging issues of our time,” -Mayor Nutter.

The Volunteer Impact Challenge kick-off coincides with the launch of www.SERVEPhiladelphia.com, a new, easy-to-use website that connects Philadelphians with non-profits and City agencies that need the support of volunteers to accomplish their mission. SERVEPhiladelphia is an initiative of the Mayor’s Office of Civic Engagement and Volunteer Service, under the leadership of Chief Service Officer Catherine C. Wolfgang.

Ten Volunteer Priorities for 2011:

1.Teach someone to read.
2.Become a Graduation Coach
3.Volunteer at a library or recreation center
4.Support your block captain (or become one!)
5.Tend a tree or community garden
6.Promote recycling
7.Organize an ongoing community clean-up
8.Serve on a board
9.Help Create a healthy Philadelphia
10. Donate blood

Click Here to find an opportunity or organization that fits your passion.

Register Your Organizations

We wholeheartedly welcome your organization to be part of Philadelphia’s coordinated strategy to harness and focus the energies of our citizens to the areas of greatest local need.

Get started and register your organization!