According to traditional Chinese medicine, emotions play a large role in our digestion process. Learn more about how emotions affect digestion with tips from an acupuncturist and herbalist in this free video on TCM.Expert: ROBERT LINDE Contact: www.acuherbals.com Bio: Robert Linde has been practicing tai chi for 13 years. As an acupuncturist and registered herbalist, he’s studied herbs since 1975 and practiced traditional Chinese medicine for over 6 years. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
Posts Tagged ‘Medicine’
Traditional Chinese Medicine Dietary Therapy : Traditional Chinese Medicine: Emotions & Digestion
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010Traditional Chinese Medicine Dietary Therapy : Traditional Chinese Medicine: Emotions & Digestion
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
According to traditional Chinese medicine, emotions play a large role in our digestion process. Learn more about how emotions affect digestion with tips from an acupuncturist and herbalist in this free video on TCM.Expert: ROBERT LINDE Contact: www.acuherbals.com Bio: Robert Linde has been practicing tai chi for 13 years. As an acupuncturist and registered herbalist, he’s studied herbs since 1975 and practiced traditional Chinese medicine for over 6 years. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
Traditional Chinese Medicine Dietary Therapy : Traditional Chinese Medicine: Emotions & Digestion
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
According to traditional Chinese medicine, emotions play a large role in our digestion process. Learn more about how emotions affect digestion with tips from an acupuncturist and herbalist in this free video on TCM.Expert: ROBERT LINDE Contact: www.acuherbals.com Bio: Robert Linde has been practicing tai chi for 13 years. As an acupuncturist and registered herbalist, he’s studied herbs since 1975 and practiced traditional Chinese medicine for over 6 years. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
11. How Tension & Stress is Relieved? (Energy Medicine, Yuen Method, Hypnosis, NLP)
Saturday, July 3rd, 2010
ChineseEnergetics.com Basic Instructions on Energy Medicine for Tension & Stress Relief. Feel Lighter. Yuen method with Reiki, EFT, and Hypnotherapy is powerful to relieve stress and tension. If you are an Acupuncturist, Chiropractor, Holistic Practitioner, Life Coach, Psychologist, Nurse, you will gain cutting edge natural healing techniques for stress management and relieving tension. Chinese Energetics synergizes the best practices from Yuen Method, Tai Chi, QiGong, NLP, EFT, Reiki, Hypnotherapy, Quantum Physics, Matrix Energetics, and Reconnective Healing.
Energy Medicine for Women : Aligning Your Body’s Energies to Boost Your Health and Vitality by Donna Eden and David Feinstein and Christiane Northrup
Saturday, June 19th, 2010
Hot Flashes. In this long-awaited new book, Eden speaks directly to women, showing them how they can work with energy to tackle the specific health challenges they face.
Laughter is One of the Best Medicine for Stress
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010Laughter has been known to be very useful for our body and that’s fine. It was found that two hours of sleep without pain is added for patients with ankylosing spondylitis exposed to ten minutes of comedy. The statistics are very interesting and they clearly show that laughter can actually be indeed the best medicine. Before even trying to get more statistics, how do you feel when you laugh? The feeling is hard to describe but one thing is certain, an enjoyable experience which enables us to reach the heights of happiness and joy. This is the perfect recipe to eliminate stress. If you are able to laugh your way through situations, you have the ability to resist any make you immune against the harmful effects of stress. Researchers have been at the forefront of studying exactly what happens when the laughter occurs and how our immune system is better protected and laugh. Two researchers at the University of Loma Linda, California, have published their study on how laughter affects the immune system. They are Dr. Lee Berk and Dr. Stanley Tan and their results and conclusions are as follows. Laughter has been found to reduce blood pressure, it has also been found to reduce stress hormones. This will ensure that the effects of stress will be a thing of the past for you. Laughter has also been found to increase the flexion of the muscles that control the functioning of muscles. So laugh, there was an increase in infection fighting T cells. The discoveries were many and they will make you want to laugh all day and the problem is to find a good joke. laughter contributes to the production of natural painkillers in the body that are called endorphins. Also there will be production of antibodies fight against the disease. When you breath you laugh more and thereby improving your breathing and this is particularly recommended for patients who suffer from respiratory diseases like emphysema. So there are more gains when it comes to laughter and even before you suffer from stress, you must take and follow through with it and advise it to everyone. Some people have a problem, while finding jokes to laugh. It’s totally not the case and is an excuse that people do to justify their stress. You will find a joke that makes you laugh and it might be boring to another, therefore, the humor tends to be a little taste, but there are jokes that almost everyone and the first thing you need to do is find a comedy programs that are popular and to experience what it would be the point. There are also performances of comedy that you can attend. You can choose to go down memory lane and remember some things that you love so much. There is no doubt you’ll be smiling and that is all that is necessary to escape the stress.
How Vibrational Medicine Helps to Reduce Chronic Stress
Wednesday, March 10th, 2010Chronic stress, many of us are experiencing it in today’s fast paced and rapidly changing society. So much has been written about it lately, and for good reason . Chronic stress is being named as the # 1 cause for many of today’s degenerative dis-eases. Why is stress so bad for us? What can we do on a daily basis to not only feel and perform better, but to also effectively counteract the deleterious effects of this silent killer?
Chronic stress can be defined as an unpleasant state of emotional and physiological arousal that people experience in situations that they perceive as dangerous. The word stress means different things to different people. Some people define stress as events or situations that cause them to feel tension, pressure, or negative emotions such as anxiety and anger. Others view stress as the response to these situations. This response includes physiological changes – such as increased heart rate and muscle tension as well as emotional and behavioral changes. However, most psychologists regard stress as a process involving a person’s interpretation and response to a threatening event.
Stress is a common experience. We may feel stress when we are very busy, have important deadlines to meet, or have too little time to finish all of our tasks. Often people experience stress because of problems at work or in social relationships, such as a poor evaluation by a supervisor or an argument with a friend. Some people may be particularly vulnerable to stress in situations involving the threat of failure or personal humiliation. Others have extreme fears of objects or things associated with physical threats – such as snakes, illness, storms, or flying in an airplane – and become stressed when they encounter or think about these perceived threats. Major life events, such as the death of a loved one, can cause severe stress.
If not managed appropriately, chronic stress can lead to serious problems. Exposure to chronic stress can contribute to both physical illnesses, such as heart disease, and mental illnesses, such as anxiety disorders.
The field of health psychology focuses in part on how stress affects bodily functioning and on how people can use stress management techniques to prevent or minimize disease. A person who is stressed typically has anxious thoughts and difficulty concentrating or remembering. Stress can also change outward behaviors. Teeth clenching, hand wringing, pacing, nail biting, and heavy breathing are common signs of stress. People also feel physically different when they are stressed. Butterflies in the stomach, cold hands and feet, dry mouth, and increased heart rate are all physiological effects of stress that we associate with the emotion of anxiety.
When a person appraises an event as stressful, the body undergoes a number of changes that heighten physiological and emotional arousal. First, the sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system is activated. The sympathetic division prepares the body for action by directing the adrenal glands to secrete the hormones epinephrine (adrenaline) and norepinephrine (noradrenaline). In response, the heart begins to beat more rapidly, muscle tension increases, blood pressure rises, and blood flow is diverted from the internal organs and skin to the brain and muscles. Breathing speeds up, the pupils dilate, and perspiration increases. This reaction is sometimes called the fight-or-flight response because it energizes the body to either confront or flee from a threat.
Another part of the stress response involves the hypothalamus and the pituitary gland, parts of the brain that are important in regulating hormones and many other bodily functions. In times of stress, the hypothalamus directs the pituitary gland to secrete adrenocorticotropic hormone. This hormone, in turn, stimulates the outer layer, or cortex, of the adrenal glands to release glucocorticoids, primarily the stress hormone cortisol. Cortisol helps the body access fats and carbohydrates to fuel the fight-or-flight response.
Researchers have clearly identified stress, and specifically a person’s characteristic way of responding to stress, as a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. The release of stress hormones has a cumulative negative effect on the heart and blood vessels. Cortisol, for example, increases blood pressure, which can damage the inside walls of blood vessels. It also increases the free fatty acids in the bloodstream, which in turn leads to plaque buildup on the lining of the blood vessels. As the blood vessels narrow over time it becomes increasingly difficult for the heart to pump sufficient blood through them.
Stress also appears to influence the development of cancer, but the relationship is not as well established as it is for cardiovascular diseases. There is a moderate positive correlation between extent of exposure to life stressors and cancer – the more stressors, the greater the likelihood of cancer. In addition, a tendency to cope with unpleasant events in a rigid, unemotional manner is associated with the development and progression of cancer.
What can we do on a daily basis to effectively counteract this silent killer?
There are several things that can be done. Not in any particular order, these are exercise, meditation, talking to someone about chronic stress seems to help. You can also look into using proven vibrational medicine techniques to reduce chronic stress 24/7.
We cannot avoid stress. It is a daily reality. Yet, when your mind/body is consistently placed in a vibrationally balanced state signalization frequencies (vibrational medicine methods), you are able to deal with and effectively counteract the many negative effects of daily stress. Stress seems to almost roll off of you.
A Simple De-Stressor (Energy Medicine for Women)
Sunday, February 14th, 2010
To help them reduce stress and strengthen focus, author Donna Eden shows women a pressure-point technique from her new book, ENERGY MEDICINE FOR WOMEN.


