ImageForNN
N O U R I S H I N G    N E W S
  June 2008
In This Issue
Finding Balance
This Months Pick, Chard
Client Spotlight- Beyond Weight Loss
Quick Links
Debbie Sarfati, HHC



Guided Health Food
 Store Tour

colored logo


Vitamin Cottage
Mon. June 23, 6:30pm

A guided and educational tour, offering detailed explanations of the nutritional benefits of foods and demystifying many food-fictions. Learn how to shop for fresh seasonal produce, read nutrition labels, select home and body care products, get money saving tips for shopping, and so much more.

View class information and details.
Natural Foods Cooking Classes
colored logo


Fresh from the Garden
Wed, June 25, 6:00pm

Learn to cook nourishing meals that are easy to prepare and taste delicious! Recipes focus on seasonal vegetables and foods rich in antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals. All classes are hands-on so you can learn just how fun and simple healthy cooking can be!

View class information and details.

Our Amazing Whole Body Cleanse
adjustcup

Next Cleanse:
TBA

If joining us for an upcoming cleanse interests you, view the information on our  April Cleanse and see what they are about!

Our "cleansers" are still talking about last years!


Join our list
Join Our Mailing List
Welcome to Nourishing News, a free monthly newsletter designed to help you live life more deliciously!

Thanks for reading! As always, if you like this newsletter, please forward it to anyone you think will enjoy or benefit from it.

Yours in health,
Debbie Sarfati, HHC   
The Whole Scoop
Finding Balance

A few years ago, I worked with a woman named Rachel. The reason that Rachel came to see me was that she wanted to deal with her "addiction" to sweets. Before we met, she shared over the telephone that she couldn't deal with the overwhelming cravings she had for ice cream (that was her favorite) and other sweets as evening rolled around. Rachel was a stay at home mom with four children and she didn't have the energy she wanted, which is what prompted her call to me.
 
To be honest, I thought Rachel's case was going to be a "no brainer". I was sure that once I looked at the highly processed diet that I assumed Rachel was eating, my job would be to educate her about why processed food and refined carbohydrates were fueling her love of sweets. Once we removed the bagels and pasta from her day, Rachel's sugar craving would surely dissipate, right?
 
Then I met Rachel.  Rachel was a very educated woman who knew a fair amount about food and nutrition, even before we began our work together. As I looked at her diet, there were no obvious foods that Rachel was eating that would later cause such intense cravings. She didn't have a lot of sweets or refined carbohydrates in her diet (as I had suspected) and was doing quite well with eating sufficient vegetable, fruits, whole grains, and lean protein.
 
I was a bit baffled as Rachel explained how every evening when her husband came home from work she would head straight for the freezer. Her love of ice cream spoiled her appetite for dinner and made her incredibly tired afterwards. It was a big problem for her family-but especially or Rachel. She felt she lacked control and willpower. She felt guilty that she didn't have the energy for her family in the evening.  
 
As the weeks went on, I thought more and more about Rachel and her difficulty with sweets. It had to be about more than food. One session, I asked Rachel about what her days were like.  Like many moms, she spent much of the day tending to the needs of everyone else. She raced around taking the kids from one commitment to the next. She broke up their arguments, soothed tantrums, and tended to their needs. She said that most of the day she felt as though her body was in a "knot". She loved her kids dearly but often felt tense and frustrated.  Tears erupted as she spoke. At that moment, a light went on in my head.
 
According to the principals of Chinese Medicine, our body strives to be in balance. You may already be familiar of the concepts of Yin and Yang, or at least can visualize the symbol. Yin and Yang are opposite forces which ultimately balance each other out. Examples of yin and yang include such things as night and day, good and bad, dark and light, expansive and contractive.
 
According to Chinese Medicine, foods are also considered to possess yin and yang characteristics. Yin foods are those that are light and uplifting for our body. These include leafy vegetables, raw vegetables, fruits, and fruit juices. In their most extreme form, yin foods include sugar, alcohol and caffeine.
 
Yang foods are more warming and grounding foods. These foods include cooked vegetables, whole grains, and animal proteins. Salt is the most contracting, or yang food, according to Chinese Medicine.
 
According to this theory, when or body is in a state of tightness or contraction (think stress; can you picture being stuck in traffic on your way to a meeting; we hunch forward and clench the wheel, as if that will get us there faster!), we crave things that will allow us to become more relaxed or expansive.
 
Have you ever said, "I need a drink" after coming home from a stressful day at the office? Quite possibly you have, because alcohol is a common way to relax the body, to help a yang state to become more yin. For Rachel, her ability to relax came in a bowl of Chunky Monkey rather than a glass of Merlot.
 
What I explained to Rachel was that the ice cream she craved nightly was not the problem. It was actually the solution to the problem of tension and frustration that she felt all day. Food was the only way she had learned to alleviate those uncomfortable feelings. However, the ice cream wasn't helping Rachel anymore; in fact it was now causing her other problems.
 
Over the weeks, Rachel and I talked about and made lists involving the non-food ways that Rachel could alleviate tension. For her, these included long walks, baths, talking with close friends, and doing more nurturing things for herself throughout her day.
 
Rachel shared her list with her husband and together they came up with a plan: each night when he arrived home from work, he would give Rachel time for herself. She used these hours to unravel, unwind, and de-stress. Rachel would take a bath, go for a hike, go to the gym, or get a massage. It was her time to do whatever she wanted to do.
 
Amazingly, as the weeks went on, Rachel noticed that her need for ice cream had nearly vanished. She still enjoyed ice cream from time to time, but she did not yearn for it in the same way she had been attracted to it in the past. She had found other ways to allow her body to unwind that did not make her feel bad afterwards. She was no longer trying to use food for something it was not--no longer giving sweets the responsibility of relaxing her. Once she was able to recognize that need and get it in another form, ice cream was once again only ice cream, an occasional treat.
Healthy Bites
This Month's Pick: Chard

Chard is an offshoot of the beet family that was developed from wild leafy strains of beets found in the Mediterranean region. In the sixteenth century, a Swiss botanist described yellow chard as Swiss chard- a name that has stuck and is commonly used to identify the vegetable today. (Roehl, Whole Food Facts)
 
Chard leaves can be eaten as a salad green or cooked as a side dish. When cooked, they are very similar to spinach.  Among the most versatile greens, chard can be prepared in numerous ways: lightly wilted, sautéed, braised, in soups, casseroles and more.
 

 
Food For Thought
Client Spotlight- Beyond Weight Loss

So, the major question is what did I want to accomplish when I started this whole nutrition "thing"?  Well, the major answer is weight loss.  And while although, this is happening slowly, but surely, along the road I have come up with new goals.  And I think that's sort of the point of this whole nutrition bit, or at least it is with Debbie's nutrition bit.  In slowly altering my eating habits and incorporating new and better foods into my diet I am also changing my life, myself.  The goals have become more about "whole living" and not just eating better and losing weight.
  
What do I mean when I say this term "whole living"?  Well, essentially I mean thinking about all aspects of my life as being intertwined.  My schedule relates to my eating, which relates to my school work, which relates to my career search, and on and on.  Not a single part of my life is unaffected when I change aspects around.  And through seeing that I can change my nutrition I gain the ability to change other aspects of my life that need improving.  With Debbie's help I am improving my life, myself.  The mantra has become one of "I can do it", and let me tell you it certainly is worth doing.

 Amber S.

YOURS IN HEALTH,
                                logo
          Debbie Sarfati, HHC
          Whole Nourishment
          www.wholenourishment.com
            Whole Foods
~ Whole Living ~ Whole Nourishment


Please Note: The information provided in this newsletter is presented for educational purposes only. This information is not intended as a substitute for diagnosis and treatment by a licensed professional.