The Hemp Connection:
peace

  • Additional Thoughts on Grief, and an Introduction to a Mini-Series on PCOS-Related Grief

    Additional Thoughts on Grief, and an Introduction to a Mini-Series on PCOS-Related Grief

    A recent inCYST post on grief really resonated with me. Perhaps it’s because I’m a Certified Bereavement Facilitator, so a lot of the work I do is directly related to grief, particularly “out of order” deaths such as suicide, homicide, and miscarriage loss. Or perhaps it’s because there’s so much sadness and loss surrounding chronic illness that, for me, the issue of PCOS cannot be addressed without looking at the issues of loss. In any case, I want to introduce a commonly used model for grieving, since I’ll be talking in more detail about it over the next few weeks, and relating the elements back to PCOS.

    Elizabeth Kubler Ross was a physician who worked with terminally ill patients. The model was first described in relationship to terminal illness, and the process that patients go through as they struggle to reach acceptance of their situation. It has come to be applied extensively to grief therapy work. The model is known as DABDA, which stands for denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. I’ll be devoting a post to each of these five items.

    The first thing to know about grieving is that grieving is a non-linear process, with unpredictable timelines and variables, and that no two people grieve the same way. It’s estimated that most people grieve adequately and appropriately on their own, but about 30% would benefit from the assistance of a professional grief counselor. All of those phases of grieving – denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance – may occur in order, out of order, simultaneously, repeatedly, in an overlapping fashion, or perhaps not at all before you finally reach a state of peaceful resolution around the loss.

    Also, the “normal” grieving process may go awry if you have multiple losses, too many losses occur in a short period of time, or you’re not permitted to grieve openly. For example, your mother dies, and then three months later your sister and brother-in-law are killed in a car crash. Or you’re close to 40, and end up having five IVF cycles in the space of eight months, and five miscarriages. Then you have something called “complicated bereavement.” Complicated bereavement typically needs some outside help to work through.

    Grieving doesn’t just take place in the context of death or a diagnosis of terminal illness. Grieving can occur in relationship to chronic illness, loss of finances, sexuality, spouse, freedom of movement, employment, and even in response to seemingly positive situations, such as the birth of a child, which also means leaving something else behind. There may be grief associated with graduating from school, leaving a job or a neighborhood, or a myriad of other situations.

    In reference to PCOS, losses may include loss of femininity, loss of reproductive capacity (infertility, miscarriage), loss of health or the illusion of health, loss of freedom (all of the things you can’t or shouldn’t do if you want to be healthy), finances (the money spent on non-covered health practitioners, supplements, special dietary items, personal trainers, etc.), sexuality, relationships, and many other things. There is often a great deal to be grieved, which contributes to the chronic low-level sadness that accompanies many PCOS patients. You may not have labeled what your feeling as grief, but that may in fact be precisely what you’re feeling and doing.

    Gretchen Kubacky, Psy.D. is a Health Psychologist in private practice in West Los Angeles, California. She has completed the inCYST training. She specializes in counseling women and couples who are coping with infertility, PCOS, and related endocrine disorders and chronic illnesses.

    If you would like to learn more about Dr. HOUSE or her practice, or obtain referrals in the Los Angeles area, please visit her website at www.drhousemd.com, or e-mail her at AskDrHouseMD@gmail.com. You can also follow her on Twitter @askdrhousemd.

  • Internet radio highlights PCOS

    Internet radio highlights PCOS

    Tomorrow, Wednesday, February 18, 2009, 7 pm CST/8 pm EST, Ellen Reiss Goldfarb, RD, will be interviewed on the Peace, Luv, and Lipgloss Hour. This is an Internet radio program so you can access it anywhere you can use your computer.

    For more information go to this link:

    http://www.blogtalkradio.com/peaceloveandlipglosshour

    Good luck, Ellen!

  • Following the Unknown Path – Gifts, Trip-Ups, and Payoffs

    If you don’t know where you’re going, how will you know when you get there? This post is about following the unknown path, the one that’s scary, mysterious, and potentially full of rewards as well as challenges. There are many gifts, trip-ups, and payoffs to pursue the uncommon option.

    There are many known paths – you go to school for a certain amount of time, complete a certain amount of units, and you get a bachelor’s degree. You pass a test, and you get a driver’s license. You say “yes” to the proposal, and you end up getting married. You sign up for a trip, pay your fees, and off you go to Italy. Those things are relatively predictable. There’s a prescribed series of steps, and a pre-ordained outcome.

    But what about the rest of it – the pursuit of peace, freedom, wealth, happiness and health? There are a lot of courses that seem predictable that turn out to be not so predictable. You go to graduate school and get a Ph.D. and discover you still can’t get a job. You have unprotected sex for a year, and you’re still not pregnant. You start a surefire business and the concept goes out of fashion before you’re even open. You take all of the prescribed medications, and still your diabetes gets so bad you have to take insulin. You buy a quiet little house in a quirky neighborhood, and discover that it’s not so quiet after all. Then what do you do?

    Instead of freaking out and stopping dead in your tracks, I propose that you pause, examine the trip-ups, and then look at the gifts and pay-offs of the experience, and re-orient yourself along a new path. Maybe in retrospect you realize that you didn’t plan adequately, your market research was incorrect, or you were unrealistic about your physical condition and the impact of your chronic disease. These realizations are lessons in how to better prepare yourself for success when you make your next moves.

    Take some time to consider the pay-offs of what you’ve done so far, even though, ultimately, you didn’t get the result you were looking for. Maybe you’ve got an education that serves well as background for another profession, you learned a whole lot more about how real estate or entrepreneurship works, or you have gathered information that’s useful to your doctor in helping you chart the best course of action. Maybe you gained new friends who love and support you, or you learned that you really hate being in charge or meeting daily deadlines. Those weren’t the original goals of your project or pursuit, but they’re gifts (pay-offs) nonetheless. Time spent going down “the wrong path” is not necessarily wasted, unless you fail to extract the lessons of your experiences.

    The other thing that often ends up feeling like failure is taking the failed outcome and treating it as if it’s a dead-end, instead of a turning off point for the next experience, choice, or path. By continuously reevaluating your choices and experiences, and treating them as valuable information sources, rather than failures, you’ll be able to move forward with more ease, feeling enriched by your experiences, rather than robbed of time or resources.

    Gretchen Kubacky, Psy.D. is a Health Psychologist in private practice in West Los Angeles, California. She has completed the inCYST training. She specializes in counseling women and couples who are coping with infertility, PCOS, and related endocrine disorders and chronic illnesses.

    If you would like to learn more about Dr. HOUSE or her practice, or obtain referrals in the Los Angeles area, please visit her website at www.drhousemd.com, or e-mail her at AskDrHouseMD@gmail.com. You can also follow her on Twitter @askdrhousemd.

  • Acupuncture and PCOS

    Acupuncture and PCOS

    I recently received a newsletter from one of our network members that I wanted to share with you. Karen Siegel, in addition to being a registered dietitian, is a licensed acupuncturist and herbalist. Her practice is located in Houston, Texas. She writes a wonderful newsletter entitled,"Qi Mail", which some of you might really enjoy. I am pasting the contents of her most recent newsletter for you to sample. Karen's contact information is listed below, if you'd like to schedule an appointment, or sign up to personally receive these wonderful newsletters. The actual layout is much more beautiful than what I can reproduce here, I can only paste the content in Blogger's format. As many of you are likely rushing around this weekend to get the last few holiday gifts, foods, and details taken care of, I thought this topic was especially pertinent. Enjoy!

    REST, RESTORE, REVITALIZE

    In nature, winter is the season where all living things slow down, conserve their energy and prepare for the outburst of new life and energy in the spring. Our bodies are instinctively expressing the fundamental principles of winter – rest, restoration and revitalization.

    The Nei Ching, one of the earliest surviving medical books on acupuncture, advises:
    “During the winter months one should refrain from overusing energy. Retire early and get up with the sunrise, which is later in winter. Desires and mental activity should be kept quiet and subdued, as if keeping a happy secret.”

    Eating warm hearty soups, dressing warmly, and refraining from cold and raw foods is also recommended.

    Element: Water
    Nature: Yin
    Organs: Kidney, Urinary Bladder, Adrenal Glands, Ears and Hair
    Emotion: Fear and Depression
    Flavor: Salty

    Seasonal acupuncture treatments in winter serve to nurture and nourish kidney Qi (the organ associated with winter) which can greatly enhance the body's ability to thrive in times of stress and aid in healing, preventing illness, and increase vitality.

    Call now for more information or to schedule your seasonal tune-up

    De-stress this Winter with Acupuncture

    While optimal health and well-being in the winter season calls for rest, energy conservation and the revitalization of body and spirit, your holiday activities may have a different agenda. This year can be filled with a mad scramble of visitors, family get-togethers and frantic shopping trips. Compound the usual seasonal pressures with the constant barrage of bad economic news and you may find this to be one of the most stressful times of the year.

    Stress, frustration and unresolved anger can cause a disruption in the flow of qi or energy through the body. These energetic imbalances can throw off the immune system or cause symptoms of pain, sleep disturbances, mood changes, abnormal digestion, headaches, and menstrual irregularities, and, over time, more serious illnesses can develop. Acupuncture treatments can correct these imbalances and directly effect the way you manage stress.

    Studies on Acupuncture and Stress

    Numerous studies have demonstrated the substantial benefits of acupuncture in the treatment of stress.

    A 2008 study published in Anesthesia & Analgesia found that acupuncture point alleviated preoperative anxiety in children while a 2003 study conducted at Yale University showed that ear acupuncture significantly lowered the stress level of the mothers of children that were scheduled for surgery.

    A German study published in Circulation found that acupuncture significantly lowers both systolic and diastolic blood pressure. The extent of the blood pressure reductions by acupuncture treatments was comparable to those seen with antihypertensive medication or aggressive lifestyle changes, including radical salt restrictions.

    Another study from the University of New Mexico measured the affects of acupuncture on 73 men and women with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The researchers found the acupuncture treatments to be as helpful as the standard treatment of cognitive behavioral therapy.

    Needless to say, if the stress in your life is throwing you off balance, consider acupuncture therapy to regain peace of mind, regulate your immune system and stay healthy.

    Miso Soup with Scallions

    Did you know that Miso Soup with Scallions is actually an ancient herbal remedy for colds?

    In 300 AD famous herbalist, Ge Hong, writes about Miso Soup with Scallions in a book called, Bei ji zhou hou fang or Emergency Formulas to Keep Up One’s Sleeve.

    The soup is indicated for the onset of a cold when a person is just beginning to feel a headache, stuffy nose and a slight fever. So, the next time you feel a cold coming on, be sure to have your miso!

    Miso Soup (Serves 4)

    Ingredients:

    * 6 cups water
    * 3-4 Tablespoons Aka Miso or red soy bean paste (usually sold in the refrigerated section)
    * 3-5 green onions stalks, chopped

    Directions:

    * Dissolve the miso in a little bit of boiling water (about 2 tsp.)
    * Bring water to a boil in a saucepan and add the miso & scallions.
    * Simmer for 5-10 minutes.
    * Remove from heat top with green onions and serve.

    Variations: you can add various other ingredients to make a more substantial soup, such as tofu, seaweed, fresh mushrooms, cooked shrimp, snow pea sprouts, cooked rice noodles, or paper-thin slices of fresh ginger.

    Be a Good Friend
    Refer someone you know for acupuncture and get $10 off your next acupuncture treatment.

    Stress Busting Foods

    The foods that you eat play a crucial role in your overall well-being as well as your ability to handle stress.

    Over 1400 chemical changes occur as stress hormones, such as cortisone, sap important nutrients such as B vitamins, vitamin C and magnesium from the body.

    Here are three foods that can replenish your supply of these nutrients and enhance your ability to manage stress:

    Cauliflower – Cauliflower and other cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli, cabbage, and kale are chock full of stress-relieving B vitamins. Cauliflower is also one of the very best sources of vitamin B5 or pantothenic acid.

    Pantothenic acid helps turn carbohydrates and fats into usable energy and improves your ability to respond to stress by supporting your adrenal glands. Fatigue, listlessness, numbness and tingling or burning pain in the feet are all indications that you may need more vitamin B5 in your diet.

    Salmon – Salmon is a healthy and delicious way to get your dose of B vitamins and omega-3 fatty acids. Vitamin B12 supports production of red blood cells, allows nerve cells to develop properly and is essential to the synthesis of the “happy” brain chemical serotonin.

    Among the many benefits of omega-3 fatty acids, a 2003 study published in Diabetes & Metabolism found that a diet rich in omega-3 fatty acids significantly reduced the stress response and kept the stress hormones cortisol and epinephrine in check.

    Blackberries – Blackberries are jam packed with Vitamin C, calcium and magnesium. Vitamin C has shown to be a powerful stress reducer that can lower blood pressure and return cortisol levels to normal faster when taken during periods of stress.

    Magnesium and calcium act together to help regulate the body's nerves and muscle tone. When there is too little magnesium in your diet, nerve cells can become over activated and can trigger muscle tension, muscle soreness, muscle spasms, muscle cramps, and muscle fatigue.

    Blackberries have more than double the amounts of vitamin C, calcium and magnesium than their popular cousin, the blueberry.

    Karen Siegel MPH, MS, RD, LD, L.Ac.
    9660 Hillcroft, Suite 202
    Houston, TX 77096
    713-721-7755
    karensclinic@gmail.com

  • Coping With Pre-Surgical Fears

    Coping With Pre-Surgical Fears

    As you’re reading this blog post, I’ll be heading off to my long-time gynecologist/surgeon for a pre-surgery briefing, signing of consent forms, and preparation instructions for an outpatient surgery to remove a cyst from my left ovary the following week. For some of us, it’s regrettably routine, and for others, the idea of having surgery is very frightening. The fear may be constant or fleeting, depending upon your history.

    In my case, I would ordinarily not be afraid, but I had surgery two years ago and ended up with a deep and painful pelvic infection that took months to truly resolve. To say that I was terrified of returning to the same hospital would be putting it mildly – I think I had a near-hysterical reaction initially. Here’s what I did to calm myself, which I hope will be useful to you as you face your medical fears.

    Identified alternatives – I considered another hospital (but my doctor is only on staff at this one), another surgeon (no, thanks, I need someone who knows me well and whom I trust implicitly), delaying the surgery (again, no thanks, as this has become a chronic pain situation over the last few months), or not having the surgery at all (this didn’t seem viable either, for the aforementioned reasons).

    Researched/gathered information – in addition to talking extensively with my physician, I spent a fair amount of time with my nose in some books, and talking to my medical practitioner friends, as well as reading research and opinions on the internet. I always say, knowledge is power. But in this case, I may have scared myself unnecessarily by being a little too well-informed.

    Consulted with other experts – I consulted with a physician/friend who knows the surgeon, an infectious diseases expert about how to ensure that I don’t get another infection, and people who have been through scary medical procedures themselves.

    Took my time – I took my time, partly because of my schedule, partly because of my doctor’s schedule, and partly because I really don’t want to have surgery, and I was hoping the matter would resolve on its own. I tried a lot of alternative approaches, which helped, but I’m now confident that surgery is the right choice.

    Considered risks, benefits, and outcomes – the risks include loss of the ovary, potential infection, or of course death (they put that on all the consent forms). Benefits include relief from pain, restoration of normal and comfortable functioning, and relieving my body of some diseased and dysfunctional tissue. Given the precautions I’m taking, along with my choice of highly esteemed surgeons, I expect the best possible outcome.

    Came to peace with an imperfect decision
    – I really, really, really don’t want to have surgery! And I don’t want to go back to that hospital, and I don’t want to lose my ovary. But I also know that I can’t reasonably continue dealing with the level and frequency of pain I’ve endured for the last few months, the surgeon is excellent, the hospital’s outpatient department is better than its inpatient services, pharmaceutical treatments aren’t containing it or remedying it, and alternatives work well for a bit, but aren’t a permanent solution. I’m okay with my decision, regardless of the outcome. I’ve done the best for my body and my peace of mind, and that’s all I can do.

    Gretchen Kubacky, Psy.D. is a Health Psychologist in private practice in West Los Angeles, California. She specializes in counseling women and couples who are coping with infertility, PCOS, and related endocrine disorders and chronic illnesses.

    If you would like to learn more about Dr. HOUSE or her practice, or obtain referrals in the Los Angeles area, please visit her website at www.drhousemd.com, or e-mail her at Gretchen@drhousemd.com. You can also follow her on Twitter @askdrhousemd.

  • Amber's Journey — Note from the copilot

    Amber's Journey — Note from the copilot

    I thought that while Amber is blogging her journey, I'd follow up with posts explaining my part of the discussion.

    Regarding the"hubs" story. This is not at all uncommon and I'm so glad Amber shared that changing her own behaviors is going to involve relationship change as well. When you decide to do ANYTHING differently in your life, you create change for others. Understanding the psychology of social change is important for long term success in change of any kind, if you plan to maintain it.

    My favorite analogy for any kind of social system, be it a family, work environment, club, church…whatever, is that it is exactly like a pile of pick up sticks. Remember that game? The goal is to gradually remove a stick from a pile without disrupting the structural integrity of the pile.

    Before you decided to make changes on behalf of your PCOS, you were a pick up stick in one, two, maybe several different piles. Your attitudes, your routines, and your choices…all supported the structure of those piles of sticks. When you decided to make changes…in essence, you pulled yourself out of the pile, which rendered the structure of that pile a lot more fragile and susceptible to collapse.

    The remaining"sticks" in the pile, when you decide to no longer be part of the support, have two choices: (1) they can shift to create a new structure of support, (2) they can pull you back in to your original position to support the old way of doing things.

    The knee-jerk reaction in a system where one but not all"sticks" have identified a need to change…is number 2. It's the quickest way to reduce awareness of the nonproductive nature of the system. Get the changer to stop changing, just do things the comfortable way, and we can all live in peace, right?

    Bottom line, many of us are in comfort zones where we don't really think too much about what we're doing. Because if we did, how it would feel to be aware of our choices and taking responsibility for them…would totally suck.

    (I see it all the time on our Facebook page, anytime I post a statement likely to create awareness that part of the dilemma of PCOS may be due to unproductive personal choices, we lose followers. So why do I keep at it? Because it's at the point of the discomfort of awareness that opportunity for true change is most likely to occur. I fail our fans if I only tell them what they want to hear just to keep our numbers high.)

    How many of you allow yourself to be pulled back in to an unhealthy system, just to keep the peace?

    Another point of awareness when someone in a system decides to make a change, is that the person who has been identified as the"problem" needing to be"fixed", is no longer allowing that kind of finger pointing to happen. Awareness is created that it takes a village to create, and maintain, unproductive living choices. Systems like this often have one identified person on who all of the problems within the system are channeled into one point of focus. It's so much easier for a family or a group of friends to look at, analyze,"help" a person who is struggling with their weight, than it is to look at some of the less concrete problems with the system.

    How many of you allow your weight to be the focus of family conversations?

    I've been doing this work for 30 years. It's almost a given part of the process. Someone decides to make changes…they get a"diet" from me, they start to follow it and see success…and then they disappear from my office. If I track them down and chat about where they've been, it almost invariably has to do with not having the energy to push back against the spouse who's bringing home ice cream, the family member who makes a fuss when seconds are politely declined, the friends who are not willing/able to create social activities based on interests other than food.

    If your choice is to be alone and healthy…or amongst loved ones and living with PCOS, I can, for the most part, understand, why many of you have trouble changing.

    Hang in there. Look at what Amber said. The changes were resisted at first, but hubs eventually came on board and is actually enjoying the process.

    Just because the old pile of pick up sticks worked, doesn't mean it was the best way to pile the sticks. I mean, if staying in that pile means you increase the risk of collapsing it altogether because your mortality pulls you out of the pile…for good…in a way that you can no longer be a part whatsoever…

    Research shows that people who hang with healthy people are healthier themselves. Maybe the reason the old pile of pickup sticks needs to collapse is so you can create a new one with new players. There's never going to be room for it if you hang on to the old one.

    …I think it's worth it to negotiate TV eating, exercising, all the things you need to do for your family as well as you, to keep your system alive and healthy for many years to come.

  • When the Mahareshi Mahesh Yogi Hit “The Big Tomato”

    When the Mahareshi Mahesh Yogi Hit “The Big Tomato”

    It was 1975, and my father had a powder blue polyester double-knit “leisure suit,” a weight-loss plan disguised as a plan to single-handedly re-roof our house, and a keen interest in alternative nutrition and well-being. The latter took the form of upside-down eating, in which we had our smallest meal at dinner and our largest meal at breakfast. My friends thought it was very strange that we ate steaks and pork chops for breakfast, along with huge salads.

    We were also eating texturized soy protein, roughly ground grains made into coarse earthy breads, spoonfuls of lecithin, mung bean sprouts, and a whole lot of strange things that you could only get out of the bulk food barrels at Elliot’s Natural Foods. We had a copy of “The Whole Earth Catalog” on the coffee table, and there was also a well-worn copy of my dad’s new bible, Adelle Davis’ “Let’s Eat Right to Get Fit.” There was some new thinking going on in this middle-aged straight-laced German guy, and I was curious about it. Extremely curious. I read the books, and ate whatever weird stuff I was supposed to be eating.

    Things got even more curious when my father signed the entire family up to learn Transcendental Meditation (TM), which was developed by the Mahareshi Mahesh Yogi in the 1950s. Although it started elsewhere, by the 1970s, it had penetrated as far as “The Big Tomato,” my hometown of Sacramento, California. He went to a couple of introductory lectures, and the next thing we knew, all five of us were learning TM! It sure seemed exotic at the time, but it’s a technique I have practiced off on and on for over three decades. It’s so simple, I find it the easiest place to return to when I’m most stressed.

    TM is a mantra-based meditation technique that has been scientifically validated for stress reduction, blood pressure reduction and, most recently management of the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress in veterans. The National Institute of Health has spent in excess of $20 million validating the benefits of TM. It increases mental clarity, creativity, and overall health, and decreases stress by decreasing the activation of the sympathetic nervous system. When the sympathetic nervous system’s activity decreases, so do adrenaline, noradrenaline, and cortisol levels. Therefore, it is quite effective for stabilizing mood and even controlling appetite, because your appetite tends to go out of control when you’re feeling stressed.

    Technically, it must be taught through an authorized trainer (see www.tm.org), but a great deal of introductory information can be gleaned online. I’ve written previously here about the benefits of meditation, and I’d love to introduce you to this technique.

    Simply sit quietly and comfortably. This is essential to all forms of meditation. The mantra would be assigned by your teacher, but you can choose a syllable or sound with no inherent meaning (other forms of meditation might focus on a word with a meaning, such as “love” or “peace.”). The act of focusing on the mantra draws your mind out of its normal state of anxiety, chatter, and activity. If your mind drifts, return your attention to the mantra gently and repeatedly, for a period of 20 minutes per day. Results have been verified with as little as eight weeks of consistent daily practice. Optimally, practicing twice a day for twenty minutes each time is the goal, but benefits can be derived from as little as five minutes a day.

    Gretchen Kubacky, Psy.D. is a Health Psychologist in private practice in West Los Angeles, California. She specializes in counseling women and couples who are coping with infertility, PCOS, and related endocrine disorders and chronic illnesses. If you would like to learn more about Dr. HOUSE or her practice, or obtain referrals in the Los Angeles area, please visit her website at www.drhousemd.com, or e-mail her at Gretchen@drhousemd.com. You can also follow her on Twitter @askdrhousemd

    References:
    Dillbeck M.C. and Orme-Johnson D. W. Physiological differences between Transcendental Meditation and rest. American Psychologist 42:879–881, 1987.
    Jevning R., et al. The physiology of meditation: a review. A wakeful hypometabolic integrated response. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 16(3):415-24, 1992.
    Orme-Johnson D.W. and Walton K. W. All approaches of preventing or reversing effects of stress are not the same. American Journal of Health Promotion 12:297-299, 1998.

  • Identifying and Overcoming Hopelessness

    What is hopelessness? Simply, it is a loss of hope and optimism, and a failure of belief that the future will be brighter and better. Hopelessness takes your energy and trashes it. It contributes to and even defines depression to a great extent. When you’re feeling hopeless, that’s often a point at which you give up trying to do anything, and it all gets worse. Sound familiar?

    Life in general is pretty stressful. We’ve all got a giant list of “shoulds” in our heads already, about family, romantic partners, children, work, religious and social commitments, and a myriad of other things. We’ve got bedrooms to paint, dinners to make, children to shuttle around, bosses to satisfy, cars to wash, craft projects to complete, vacations to plan, and chin hairs to pluck! My goodness, we are busy! The list is endless.

    Add PCOS to all of that, with the reminders about proper eating, exercise, supplementation, fertility enhancement techniques, stress reduction, and everything else, and you’ve got a big old heap of overwhelm festering in your brain. That’s your brain, by the way, that’s already over-taxed by the hormonal imbalances caused by PCOS – so it’s a double whammy. You may already be feeling sluggish and lethargic mentally, and now there’s even more you’re supposed to read, understand, absorb, interpret, and apply. And it’s feeling like you can’t possibly master this condition, or ever really have a perfect plan (or even a half-way decent plan that’s effective) for managing it.

    I want you to know that PCOS doesn’t just feel overwhelming, stressful, and depressing – it actually is overwhelming, stressful, and depressing. It’s entirely normal to get overwhelmed by it, be angry at it, ignore it, hate it and everything associated with it, and just want to wake up and find that it’s disappeared. It’s also normal to be bored, irritated, and not want to cope at all. And it’s normal to struggle with it, find some peace and balance, and then struggle some more.

    In the struggle, you may find a place to focus on that actually has some positive aspects to it, and that will allow you to shift your attitude, and shift out of hopelessness. Your mind is a powerful thing, and a source for positive thoughts as well as negative ones. It’s pretty clear that focusing on negative thoughts produces more negative thinking – but the same is true of positive thoughts. That’s why it’s often recommended to focus on what’s good in your life, as a way of starting the shift toward the positive. In support of that concept, next week’s “Mental Health Monday” post will be about the upside of PCOS.

    Gretchen Kubacky, Psy.D. is a Health Psychologist in private practice in West Los Angeles, California. She specializes in counseling women and couples who are coping with infertility, PCOS, and related endocrine disorders and chronic illnesses.

    If you would like to learn more about Dr. HOUSE or her practice, or invite her to speak at your event, please visit her website at http://www.drhousemd.com/, or e-mail her at Gretchen@drhousemd.com. You can also follow her on Twitter @askdrhousemd

  • Are you in a military family? Omega-3 fatty acids may be especially important to you

    Are you in a military family? Omega-3 fatty acids may be especially important to you

    Last week Dr. Doug Bibus honored us with a webinar on the science behind his blood omega-3 testing. His statistics regarding the many correlations between poor omega-3 status and health problems were profound. What particularly got my attention was how this issue may, in some interesting ways, be singling out military families.

    Dr. Bibus shared that omega-3 fatty acids have become the subject of intense interest with the Department of Defense, given the fact that military suicides doubled between 2005 and 2008. If you think about it, the majority of deployments during this time have been to Iraq and Afghanistan, where seafood is not a staple on the menu.

    Have you ever seen or eaten a military ration (aka MRE?). Many moons ago, my neighbor found some at a military surplus store, and for fun, we organized a dinner party around them.

    Just look at that photo to the left. It is what our military eats, day in and day out. I don't see any omega-3's and I do see sugar and pro-inflammatory fats. The focus of these meals, understandably, has been to provide a concentrated source of calories (1250 per meal and 36% fat on average) in a small volume. And that need for calories has been a great dumping ground for surpluses of corn and soybean oil, industries subsidized by our own government.

    Expose yourself to that kind of diet, stress, and sleep deprivation, day in and day out, for months on end…it's no wonder the incidence of suicide skyrocketed. I'm glad the DOD has decided to start to figure out how to fix it.

    Zoom back over to Virginia Beach and San Francisco, where inCYST seems to have strong pockets of interest. As I sat there and listened to Dr. Bibus talk about the mental health aspects of omega-3 deprivation on our military, I couldn't help but wonder if these infertility pockets are somehow related.

    These military couples aren't just dealing with infertility. They have very short windows of opportunity to do something about it. And if the hubs is coming home omega-3 deprived, it's likely not going to be something that's going to resolve, even with supplementation, in his short time at home.

    Because those MRE's are so high in calories and fat, and because omega-3 health is all about ratios, it's going to take a pretty high dose of fish oil to overcome that imbalance.

    Seems to me that one of the very best things any infertile couple also managing a military deployment might do…is be sure that somehow, some way, omega-3 fats are a priority. It's going to take the military awhile to figure out how to reconfigure those MRE's, let alone politically negotiate all that subsidized surplus pro-inflammatory fat out of them. You don't have to, and you shouldn't…wait for that. Be sure you figure out how to get your fish oil to your loved one.

    For his peace of mind and your future family.

    Just sayin'

  • Healthy Splurging: An Oxymoron?

    Healthy Splurging: An Oxymoron?

    Today is National Splurge Day, a concept I absolutely love. While I believe in adhering to schedules and having as much consistency in our lives as possible (it eases stress, creates predictability, and soothes the PCOS brain), I think there’s not only space for splurging in our lives, but a mental health necessity for it as well. Splurging is a verb defined as: 1. To indulge in an extravagant expense or luxury. 2. To be showy or ostentatious. 3. To spend extravagantly or wastefully. Personal definitions of what constitutes a splurge may vary widely. If you’ve got an Oprah-sized budget, maybe nothing in the world qualifies as a splurge anymore. If you’re pretty prosperous, it might mean flying first class everywhere you go, even though business class is more than adequate. And if you’re kind of average, it might mean buying berries when apples are the most fiscally prudent fruit choice, or springing for tickets to the play-off games for a once-in-a-lifetime experience. For some, splurging can be a dangerous lifestyle – they buy whatever they want, whenever they want. They don’t worry about saving for the future, or how bad their credit card debt might be. They indulge all the time. Not only are there financial risks to this approach, there are the risks of burning out, of having the splurge lose the quality of the splurge, and becoming mundane and unsatisfying. Don’t you appreciate your $5 latte a whole lot more when it’s a payday treat instead of an everyday indulgence? On the flip side, we have the under-splurgers. They’re so frugal, you can hear the pennies squealing as they pinch them ever-tighter. They risk food poisoning on a regular basis because they don’t want to waste anything that’s looking or smelling a little questionable. They wear their clothes far past the point of fashionability, and into a state of disrepair, even when they can afford to replace them. Or they can’t imagine ever spending THAT kind of money on themselves, for a treat. Even the idea of eating a meal outside the home may seem to reek of over-indulgence. I find that a lot of us are feeling stressed, overworked, and overwhelmed most of the time. We don’t take time for rest and relaxation. We don’t allow ourselves enough time to get to place from place in peace, or to plan for and cook homemade meals. We end up engaging in minor indulgences on a daily basis, or even multiple times a day. No time to check e-mail at home? No problem, get a data plan for your phone. No time to make coffee in the morning? No problem, grab a cup at your favorite gourmet coffee place. No time to stop by the store and try on a shirt? No problem, pay $13.50 in shipping charges – both ways if it doesn’t work out. We don’t think of these things as indulgences, but they are. They’re indulgences in the wrong way, indulgences that have become necessities. We think we can’t exist without them. But they degrade the true meaning of indulgence, which is to treat yourself or someone else to something memorable, special, desirable, and pampering or self-nurturing. I think we can’t get enough self-nurturing. It doesn’t have to come in the form of money we spend, although that’s one way to get it. And I don’t think we have to be wasteful with our money to define it as a splurge. We can be prudent, yet achieve great satisfaction. That being said, if you want to do something wasteful on this National Splurge Day, go for it. Maybe it means you actually get enough sleep, for once (and wasted time you could have used for housework – hmph!). Maybe it means that you take yourself out to lunch, instead of skipping it altogether. Maybe you treat yourself to fresh cut flowers, just because you can. Those would all be great splurges that affirm that you like having fun, you like beauty and pleasure, and you like yourself enough to practice a little shameless splurging. It’s a great way to say, “I’m worth it, and I deserve it,” and when you give yourself those messages in an external way, you reinforce them internally as well. Gretchen Kubacky, Psy.D. is a Health Psychologist in private practice in West Los Angeles, California. She has completed the inCYST training. She specializes in counseling women and couples who are coping with infertility, PCOS, and related endocrine disorders and chronic illnesses. If you would like to learn more about Dr. HOUSE or her practice, or obtain referrals in the Los Angeles area, please visit her website at www.drhousemd.com, or e-mail her at AskDrHouseMD@gmail.com. You can also follow her on Twitter @askdrhousemd.

  • Ways to keep from losing your mind

    Ways to keep from losing your mind

    My post a few days ago about the effects of PCOS on the brain seems to have created some discomfort. We lost a few Facebook fans, and those who did respond, said that learning that PCOS was taking its toll on brain tissue and function was somewhat depressing to take. Theories of behavioral change state that until you know a problem exists, you will not act to change. So while the news can be uncomfortable to live with, the good news is, now you know why you need to make changes. You can't talk yourself out of those changes by convincing yourself that you're at peace with your body type, or that maybe you can live without having a baby. You're fighting for your cognitive life, and only you can make the changes that can make a difference. Here is a list of things you can do to help preserve brain and nervous system function. 1. Get sleep. You may think it's a badge of honor to cut yourself short in the sleep department. But it takes its toll. It is when you sleep, that your brain cleans out all the crud from the day before…spit shining neurons, so to speak. If you go too long without sleep, it's like you're letting rust accumulate all throughout your brain. Make it a habit to get to bed at an hour that allows you to get at least 7 hours of sleep a night. 2. Reduce stress. Every little thought, behavior, chemical reaction, that gets you through a day, requires a series of neurons to coordinate that activity. Every time a neuron is asked to work, it uses glucose to do so. Every time a neuron burns a molecule of glucose, it uses oxygen to do so. More neurons = more glucose = more oxidation. Make it a priority to give up the small stuff…and if you can't completely give it up…learn how not to sweat it so much. 3. Manage mental health issues. Most mental health diagnoses affecting PCOS (anxiety, bipolar disorder, PTSD, OCD, ADHD), involve processes that overwork the brain and nervous system. People with these disorders are fairly high energy, and that means they are using more neurons, more often, with far more intensity, than people who don't have to live with these conditions. Get counseling. If you need medication, take it. Health means MENTAL as well as PHYSICAL conditioning. Take it seriously. Do what you need to do. Slow down those neurons in any (legal) way available to you. 4. Exercise. Research is showing that regular physical activity slows down the development of brain diseases like Alzheimer's and helps to maintain brain tissue. How many times have you struggled with a problem at your desk, put it down, walked over to the post office, and had an inspiration while moving your body? Muscles and neurons are best friends. Be sure to give them plenty of play dates.

    5. Eat less carbohydrate. Because your brain uses glucose, and because it's going to want more glucose when it is stressed, you're going to want to eat more carbs when under pressure. Remember what I said in number 2. The more carbs you eat, the more oxidative stress you impose on your brain. The more easily your brain rusts out and breaks down. I want you to think of this picture every time from this point forward you see a donut, order of french fries, or bottle of soda. Look less appetizing? Good. That was my point. 6. Eat antioxidants Antioxidants, those chemicals with the funny names nutrition experts love to impress people with in their blogs…hate oxidation. Eat them. Don't worry if you can pronounce their names, just know if the food in your hand (1) doesn't have an ingredient label, (2) has color, (3) and rots if left too long in your fridge, it's good for you. Put it on your plate and into your body. 7. Use fish oil. Fifteen percent of the dry weight of a healthy human brain is DHA, one of the primary omega-3's found in fish oil. It has to be fish, it can't be nuts, or flax, or greens. Eat the fish or take the capsules. I don't care if they come up a little bit. You have a choice…burps or brains. Just do it. 8. Reduce omega-6's. All those oils beginning with the letters"s" and"c"…break down brain tissue. Read labels. Get them out of your diet. Two exceptions. Organic canola is fine and coconut oil is fine, provided you're not eating it by the tablespoonful. 9. Yoga. Yoga tones the nervous system. It chills you out. It improves circulation in your spinal column. It improves your flexibility. It helps to manage mental health issues. It pretty much takes items 1 through 8 and makes them work even more effectively for you. It's worth the time. 10. Cut the high-fructose corn syrup. Recent research suggests that HFCS affects memory. Get it out of your diet!

Random for time:

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  2. Mailbag Time : On Mistaken Identities , BDM 102, Gay Handles, and the Timex Run
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  4. Knowledge Channel KaRUNungan2 2010
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  7. Resorts World Grand Fiesta Run - Win a Trip to Resorts World Singapore!
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  10. Fun Run For Better Education