Post Holiday Stress? Relax by 'Tapping'...

Emotional Freedom Technique, or EFT, is a unique method of healing that I was first introduced to during college. My Mind/Body Health course professor introduced both EFT and NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming) as ways to better manage stress and emotional health. I practice and experience great results from both of these modalities. Watch the brief video below and follow along with Brad Yates, the guru of EFT, and check it out for yourself.

Share your results with me, I’d like to hear about your experience!: tiffany@andersontherapeutics.com

Be Well! ~Tiffany

Upcoming Surgery? Searching for a Holistic Recovery Guide?

  • Seeking alternative options to better manage post surgical pain?

  • Curious about combining alternative and Western therapies before, during, and after surgery?

  • Want to feel more empowered, take charge, and avoid feelings of helplessness while facing surgery and recovery?

  • Do you want to care for yourself and/or a loved on in a more holistic way?

  • Want inspiration and motivation to help you focus on rehabilitative exercise and a nutritious diet?

  • Are you prepared and able to ask your doctor, surgeon, and medical team informed questions about surgery? It’s time to better understand and engage with your healthcare providers!

Get this Valuable & Inexpensive Resource Guide

Companion Website with FREE Tips & Tools

Weekly Wellness Blog

Dr. Leslie Peterson, ND writes that advice in this resource guide is, “relevant for most any type of surgery”, and Lynn Little, RN says, this book “belongs in every doctor’s office and every patients’ home.”

Butternut to Bionic: A Resource Guide for Hip Replacement Surgery is written from the patient perspective and includes suggestions that can help nearly everyone. Readers young and old will find tips, resources, tools, and advice applicable to a wide variety of surgeries. As an educator, alternative healthcare provider, patient, and author I write in a conversational style and guide readers step-by-step to prepare for and recover from surgery. Patients, caretakers, family members, and healthcare providers will find this book intriguing, insightful, and useful.

Still not convinced? Learn more about me, my publisher, and why I wrote the book here. Plus, check the following reviews, recognition, and my credentials. Butternut to Bionic achievements include…

I offer patient advocacy and encourage personal accountability. Anderson Therapeutics and my book exist to inspire and empower others to improve their quality of life. Partner with me, get the guide, and become an active participant on your journey to improved health.

Be Well! ~Tiffany

“It’s better to look ahead and prepare, than to look back and regret.” - Jackie Joyner-Kersee

“It’s better to look ahead and prepare, than to look back and regret.” - Jackie Joyner-Kersee

Stressed Due to the Holiday Hustle & Bustle? Feel Better Now Tips...

FYI - Long post! Low on time? Scroll down for feel better tips and follow links for videos and a free fitness download. Happy Holidays!

December may or may not be your favorite time of year. Regardless of which holiday you celebrate, family and friend circumstances, possible financial constraints, and health problems can make the holiday season feel a bit overwhelming for even the most avid fans. I personally celebrate Solstice and Christmas. I look forward to the return of longer and brighter days after Dec. 21st, especially here in Utah where our gloomy winter sky and polluted inversion blankets the valley for weeks, even months. Christmas time for my family is about exchanging gifts, playing games, laughter, and sharing a meal or two. We enjoy decorating, seeing the lights, and then promptly cleaning up and putting decor away once Christmas is over. As an empty-nester with a very successful and independent son I don’t experience financial constraint since the ‘Santa Claus’ pressure of gift giving days are long gone and I favor keeping it simple by exchanging a gift or two. I have one grand kitty and am very grateful to be in a good place in my home and career, though that hasn’t always been the case. I know for many that the holidays can be a lonely and depressing time, push buttons emotionally, exacerbate stress, and burden wallets. Those of us with chronic conditions might feel especially tired, experience more pain, and on edge as we set boundaries declining invitations and/or making our way through activities when we would much rather stay home resting. I’ve found that honest, direct communication is the best way for me to take care of myself and let others know what I am and am not able to do. Cold weather tires me, adds extra pain in and around my artificial joints, and the darkness is gloomy and depressing for me. This means that December requires extra planning to ensure I receive my self care and health maintenance needs.

Over the course of my career as a Professional Massage Therapist I hear the same complaints time and time again. Prior to beginning a massage, or coaching session I ask a client if there are specific concerns, injuries, or illnesses that I need to be aware of. The most common range from neck/shoulder/back pain and tension, lack of sleep, high stress, inflammation, joint pain, depression, and anxiety. Therapeutic massage, Reiki, Reflexology, and other forms of bodywork are ideal methods to manage each of the previous mentioned symptoms. I work within my scope of practice and can facilitate and assist - of course massage is not ‘fixing’ and certainly not ‘diagnostic’. During and after an appointment I make suggestions and recommendations as ‘homework’ to help my clients better manage their health. Below are some of my favorite tried and true tips that work for both me and many of my clients. As with any health related tips, consult with your physician before implementing changes that could affect your health.

Enjoy the season and take good care of you!

Be Well! ~Tiffany

  • Neck & Shoulder Tension (especially when due to poor posture/working at a computer/belly sleeping, etc.) - Shoulder shrugs, neck rolls, and deep breathing help to soften muscles and improve posture. Apply a gel ice pack on the tense muscles in the evening for 5-15 minutes before bed…this decreases inflammation and quiets nerve pain. I use a wrap that rests along my neck and shoulders - after a full shift of bodywork this helps me relax and decreases any numbness or tingling I may feel in my wrists and hands due to over exertion.

  • Tension Headaches - Lie on your back, placing a pillow under your knees and try a technique called ‘Palming’. (Palming is also useful for tired, dry eyes.) Add a few minutes of slow, deep, belly breathing and rub a drop of peppermint essential oil at your temples. Keep the peppermint away from your eyes - it stings!

  • Dry, Dull Looking Skin - Exfoliate often, ideally daily with dry skin brushing (this method also encourages lymph flow to ease swelling and boost immune function). Also, increase your intake of whole grains, starches (like potatoes, brown rice, corn, oats) and brightly colored fruits and vegetables…choose seasonal favorites like pomegranates, citrus fruit, purple yams and purple cabbage. Antioxidants and fiber in these foods help improve the health of our skin.

  • Muscle Aches & Joint Pain - Exercise regularly, stretch often, and soak in an Epsom salt bath at least once a week. Our bodies are meant to move. Find a fitness routine that you like - speak to a trainer and your physician to decide on exercises that are best for you. I strength train by lifting weights and following an isometric routine 3 times a week, I stretch daily, and fit in at least a 30-minute cardio routine daily…for me cardio is walking either outside or on a treadmill.

“The body is essentially self-healing and the task of a health care provider is to assist the healing process.” - Lewardowsky

“The body is essentially self-healing and the task of a health care provider is to assist the healing process.” - Lewardowsky

Gift Yourself - A "Final Act of Generosity"

In my December 6th, 2018 wellness blog I discussed estate planning and end of life care. Some may find this topic a bit inappropriate during the holiday season, though I disagree. What better time to have candid discussions with those closest to you? Families and friends, some though not all, tend to spend more time together this time of year. Plus, depending on your spiritual and/or religious beliefs…this is a time that the acts of birth, death, and renewal are on the minds and hearts of many.

The last task I completed on my estate planning to-do list this year was to finalize what will happen after I have passed away. I decided to donate my body to science, specifically, to the University of Utah medical school anatomy lab. I am an alumni of the University of Utah, have very strong feelings towards the importance of research, and received some of my own training in a cadaver lab. Coincidentally, the December 2018 edition of the University magazine Continuum included a 6-page article discussing the importance and purpose of the body donor program. The article speaks of this type of donation as a “final act of generosity”, and I wholeheartedly agree. My family and I know that I am providing future health practitioners a vehicle to learn from. In exchange I receive free embalming, cremation, and made the choice that my ashes are returned to my son after the work my body provides is complete. This option is a decision that may or may not be a fit for you. If you are interested and wish to learn more, follow this link:

https://continuum.utah.edu/features/a-virtuous-circle/

Be Well! ~Tiffany

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Free Webinar, Thursday Dec. 13th - Register Now!

I first learned about Dr. John McDougall while watching the film Forks Over Knives. Soon after I read Dr. McDougall’s book, The Starch Solution, and I decided to adopt his whole foods plant based no oil way of eating. Within 10-days I felt an enormous difference, my life and state of health was transformed. I rid myself of expensive prescription medications within just a few months. How you might ask? With diet alone I lowered my cholesterol, significantly reduced arthritis and joint replacement pain, and stabilized my blood pressure. Plus, I have lost, and kept off, over 25 pounds! Prior to this way of eating I had followed many different ‘diets’…gluten free, Paleo, eat for your blood type, the Mediterranean diet, fasting, Atkin’s, the list could go on and on. Each of those plans failed miserably for me. The Starch Solution has been my solution!

Have you wondered how a plant based diet might help you? Skeptical? Curious? Have questions? Meet Dr. McDougall for yourself this Thursday during his bimonthly webinar series. Register here. If you can’t make the live broadcast you can also register for the replay.

Title: Dr. McDougall interviews Neal D. Barnard, M.D., F.A.C.C.,

Description: Dr. Neal D. Barnard is a physician, clinical researcher, author, and an adjunct associate professor of medicine at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.

Be Well! ~Tiffany

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A Gift of Reassurance - Estate Planning

Prior to my first hip replacement, my surgeon took the time to discuss worst case scenarios with me…such as the possibility that I might have bone cancer, I could experience rejection due to metal allergies, will always be at a high risk for dislocation, and how dangerous an infection could be. Facing these topics was challenging and helped me understand the severity of my condition. I also entered surgery knowing that my doctors and family had a copy of my Living Will. Having candid discussions about your state of health and end of life care with your loved ones is a gift everyone will appreciate.

My son and I have had conversations about my chronic conditions and end of life wishes for many years now. Death and dying is an inevitable time. As a caretaker and mature woman I have mourned the loss of many loved ones over the years, and know my time will come. Estate planning is my responsibility that ultimately helps my son and provides me with peace of mind. These discussions aren’t easy, and sadly, many people avoid talking about end of life concerns. You can find templates to help you write your wishes and guide you through those challenging conversations surrounding end of life care. Stanford University’s Letter Project offers a template for those in good health and one specific for those of us with chronic conditions.

Be Well. ~Tiffany

https://med.stanford.edu/letter/letters-in-other-languages.html

http://dearfamily.dear-doc.appspot.com/html/sickletter.html

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Managing and Understanding Inflammation

For many of us, myself included, inflammation is common. I’m especially prone to swollen ankles and puffiness around my eyes. To alleviate these complaints I typically reach for ice. I also elevate my legs and feet daily, and of course, watch my diet. Inflammation is a response from our body. It shows up from a variety of factors such as injury, chronic conditions, infections, medications, and certain ‘trigger’ foods that can cause bloating. Rather than reaching for another pill, I opt for natural remedies to avoid and manage inflammation.

Inflammation is a reaction we have a great deal of control over. The article Inflammation 101, written by Andrew Beauchesne who received his master’s in Nutritional Epidemiology from Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, describes the mechanics of inflammation and how to better manage it. Follow the link below to read the article.

Be Well! ~Tiffany

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