FitLife Fest!

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UCSD Recreation and FitLife present:

Free Classes!
Free Massage!
Free Food!
Drawings, Demos, and Giveaways!


Spice up your Spring Quarter at these amazing wellness events!

March 31, 12-2 pm
at the Main Gym
and April 1, 4-6 pm at RIMAC

Pilates, Cycling, Stretching, Zumba, Kickboxing, Yoga, and more!

Check out the flyer for specific schedules.

Therapy Fluffies!

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Wellness Journalism: On Your Honor

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Are you whacking yourself like a weed, or nurturing yourself like a flower?

You talk to yourself all day long, so if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all. Much like a 3-year old, the body believes what you tell it. If you tell yourself you are beautiful, healthy, and strong, the body will direct itself accordingly. If you tell yourself you are sick, ugly, or worthless, a world of suffering is created. Your body is built for health, but the mind is powerful…watch your language!

Actively loving and honoring the body is a dynamic process of call and response; a close and evolving interaction. Active honor stands guard and holds your body sacred. It prevents you from beating yourself up, literally or figuratively. It hears negative thoughts (I look terrible, I can’t do this, I’ll never get there) and discards them before the body can absorb and integrate them.

Actively loving yourself means that, in the event of X, you aren’t standing around slapping yourself in the face. When you make a mistake, you fully acknowledge it (and whatever else that entails), and then, you forgive. Self-criticism doesn’t pile up in your closet or under your bed where is disturbs your peace of mind. Remember the Princess and the Pea? It’s amazing that we sleep through the wad of crap we carry sometimes. Temperpedic-schmedic. Believe in yourself.

Loving and honoring yourself means you try your very best to listen to your body and do what it tells you: take a nap, go for a walk, eat vegetables, drink water, smile, stop smoking or drinking, stretch, play.

It’s not always easy. For example, put me in front of the right mango cheesecake, and I rebel. I’ll keep eating just to show my stomach that my brain is in charge. When my stomach screams, “Please…no…not another bite!” my brain insists, “Come on, baby, you know you want it.” In a testimony to how much my body loves my brain, my stomach does not hold a grudge but is very, very forgiving. My stomach is in the moment, digesting with due diligence. My responsibility, therefore, is simple: when faced with the physical torture resulting from the ingestion of mass quantities of sugary, non-nutritive substances, I love myself by putting down the fork.

Love and honor exists in the present moment.

Maybe you hold out on yourself because you haven’t gotten a high enough GPA or a low enough pants size. Maybe you say, “I’ll love you IF (fill in the blank).”

You deserve love from yourself now—as you are. Self-acceptance does not equal stagnation, in fact, it’s a natural accelerator. When you love yourself, you grow with joy!

Wellness Journalism: Cracking Caffeine

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This is a toxic world, and almost everything—from the construction materials in your home to the thoughts of the person sitting next to you—is loaded with impurities. Although you can’t control what is already created or the behavior of others, there are some things under your immediate jurisdiction: such as the substances you put directly into yourself.

Eating three donuts a day, chain-smoking, or shooting up hard drugs are quite obviously Bad Ideas. Some of the poisons we gobble down on a regular basis, however, are easily overlooked.

Such as caffeine.

I’m sorry to do this, folks, especially for us busy types who often stay up late and wake up early, and run around like chickens all day long. But I gotta make the call. Caffeine is damaging to the brain and body.

I started drinking coffee when I was 16 years old; working in an insurance office (everyone else was doing it). Being morning-challenged, the surge of energy was very welcoming—and it went well with my blueberry scone. Over time these types of “perks” would become a sort of staple in my day: a Monster here, a latte there, and most recently, chocolate covered espresso beans. I also discovered, to my lasting delight (6 hours, according to the label) the little, low-calorie Energy Shot.

For more than a decade now, whenever I have felt an annoying dip in energy, caffeine has been there. It has been a source of sustenance, endurance, and encouragement. However, my habit has been recently “put on blast,” thanks to National Caffeine Awareness Month and my lovely position here at the Wellness Center.

Information is insidious. It threatens to destroy my caffeine-induced bliss.

Here’s what I’ve learned.

Myth: Caffeine gives you a boost in energy
In fact: Caffeine does not increase your energy level. It only provides a chemical stimulation to your body. Caffeine increases the blood levels of stress hormones, which helps you overcome stressful or emergency situations. You may experience a brief "perceived" boost in energy, and then suffer from the side effects of such induced emergency state, including fatigue and irritability.
Myth: Caffeine gives you a lift in the mood
In fact: Caffeine gives you a short-term up lift in mood by increasing adrenaline in the body, but it will then make you more moody and irritable afterwards. Caffeine also results in stress that lasts throughout the day, anxiety, and even panic attacks or depression. It is like a short term blessing but a long-term curse.
Myth: Caffeine sharpens your mind
In fact: Caffeine constricts blood vessels in the brain, reduces oxygen flow to the brain by up to 30% and impairs memory retention.You may perceive yourself as being more alert, but your actual mental acuity and performance has deteriorated. Caffeine is also associated with hyperactivity, learning and behavioral disorders.

In addition, Caffeine:
• Increases blood pressure and blood cholesterol level , contributing to cardiovascular problems
• Has significant diuretic effects (excessive loss of water through urine), causing dehydration of cells—this results in premature aging (with wrinkles on skin), and impairment of the detoxification functions of the kidneys and liver.
• Affects the normal function of the gut lining, increasing ulcer risks
• Increases the loss of calcium, magnesium, zinc and other valuable minerals through the urinary and intestinal tracts. This results in higher risks of osteoporosis (the bones become less dense and more fragile), particularly among women.
• Impairs the absorption of iron from food, leading to anaemia due to iron deficiency.

The body has normal cycles of high and low energy during the day.
Learn to flow with these rhythms, rather than alter or avoid them.


I realize that, for many people, eliminating caffeine entirely is like catching a ball with no hands: Hard. I’m right there with you, my friends. Nonetheless, I truly want to be self-sustainable… to generate enough energy for the day without dependence on fossil fuels. Then there is the plain truth that caffeine is an addiction. And it costs money.

Perhaps the best I can do is to educate myself: truly digest the impact of caffeine on my health and peace of mind, and let awareness do the rest. Earlier today, while I struggled to stay awake during Spanish class, I contemplated the glory of a Chai Latte. Yet I also found myself considering the implications for my self-recovery. With this mindfulness, I let the craving pass without latching onto it, and moved on with my day. Only a short while later, I had energy again—clean, all-natural, with no harmful emissions.

DITCH CAFFEINE, GO GREEN!

Do You Mind?

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Eating is something we do so often that we take it for granted. It is habituated, automated. We eat while we work, talk, think, and worry. Yet considering that eating is essential and vital nourishment for the body, our greatest asset, might we want to pay more attention?

You are what you eat, and how you eat it. The practice of mindful eating improves your relationship with food, and therefore, with yourself! Bringing mindfulness and awareness to the table can transform your every bite, and your very being.

Here’s how: EAT. While you do, pay attention to your immediate experience. Engage with your food. Appreciate the texture, appearance, color, smell, and taste. Notice your chewing and swallowing. Your mental position should be curious, open, and accepting of thoughts, feelings, sensations, and urges. Create an internal space that is non-reactive, non-judging, not attached, not clinging, not avoiding. In short, don’t tamper with your experience. Observe the interaction. As you sit with yourself in this frame of mind, you will begin to get the picture.

What do you notice?

Patterns of behavior.
• What you choose to eat. How fast you are eating. How much you are eating. If you always clean your plate. If you are eating out of hunger or habit.

Patterns of thought and feeling.

• Rules/Mindgames with your food. Eating to avoid or soothe emotions. Guilt, craving, and desire, and denial.

The more healthy attention you pay to eating, the healthier your eating will become. Non-judgmental awareness brings patterns that have been operating in shadow out into the open… and from there, you can let them go. Allow eating to become the source of joy it is meant to be. You can make a formal reservation for yourself and eat mindfully in specific times and places, or you can practice mindful eating whenever and wherever you find yourself.

Tips.

One way to trick your brain into attention is to approach your food in a new or unusual way. Eat with chopsticks or your non-dominant hand, or chew a specific number of times.

Make your food last at least twenty minutes (slowing down helps identify patterns, and gives you more choices).

Notice your portion and plate size. Compare the amount of food on your plate to the amount of room in your stomach.

No Multi-tasking! If you’re eating, eat. Give the food your full attention.

Awareness is a powerful tool for change. Keep it sharp.


Check out Mindfulness at UCSD!

Wholy Moly!

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WHOLE FOODS to DONATE 5% of PROFITS
to the Price Center LIVEWELL Space!

Do you eat food?
Do you buy groceries?

If the answer to either of the above questions is "Yes,"
then get thee to Whole Foods on WEDNESDAY MARCH 10

5% of all sales for the day will be donated to the Price Center Livewell Space, coming soon! Support wellness programming without increasing your fees...and while filling your refrigerator.

WHOLE FOODS MARKET-LA JOLLA
8825 Villa La Jolla Dr
La Jolla CA 92037

Open from 7 am to 10 pm


Wellness Journalism: Getting Your Inner Beauty Rest

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It’s easy to stay up late watching a movie or an entire season of Heroes on DVD. Then there’s schoolwork, laundry, and long nights of socializing. It’s all par for the course of living, but if you’re running a sleep deficit, be warned. Sleeps restores your body and rests your mind—go without, and you’ll soon become dysfunctional.

When I haven’t gotten enough sleep, I gravitate toward large amounts of caffeine and sugar to get me through the day. Add this to the fact that I am staring off into space most of the time…
It’s not a productive picture.

If I want to make the grade, I gotta get the sleep: seven hours at least (in order to reap the benefits of the all-important REM cycle).

The facts: without adequate energy and power to operate effectively, a sleep-deprived person tends to be more restless, irritable, and impulsive. The body and mind are generally weakened, and more prone to physical sickness and/or depression. Sleep deprivation decreases motivation, concentration, attention, and coherent reasoning. It decreases memory, self-control, and speed of thinking while increasing the frequency of mistakes and stubbed toes. Why torture yourself?

Ever on the go, we grow accustomed to operating on minimal Zzzz’s. However, given its wide-reaching impact on health and happiness, satisfaction and success, it’s worth making sleep sacred. Here are some ideas for getting a better night’s rest:

• Give yourself a bedtime, and be ready for bed well before then.
• Make your room dark and turn everything off.
• Stretch.
• Have a journal near your bed. If your mind is full, empty it out. If you are thinking about what you need to do the next day, make a quick list of what you need to remember.
• Tidy up your bedroom. Clutter is not relaxing.
• Get enough exercise. Studies have shown that people who get their hearts pumping during the day sleep better at night.
• Avoid stimulation right before bedtime. This includes Facebooking or eating a bowl of sweetened cereal.
• Read a textbook.

Sleep tight!

Wellness Journalism: Eating Life

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You are what you eat. If you take this to heart, you won’t eat crap. (Or at least, you will keep it to a minimum.)

Here’s how it works: You eat food item. Food item enters your stomach and your body starts the task of digesting it. Digestion means absorption, which means that the food item is processed through your cells. If you’ve eaten something crappy, your poor cells are forced to deal with it (costing your body vital energy), while being starved of nutrients. If the food item is wholesome, however, your cells rejoice, creating vibrant health! The food you eat is critical to your bodily function. If you want to run a smooth ship, eat a wide variety of nutritious foods.

The Good Stuff

Whole Grains
  • Whole grains are a good source of B vitamins, Vitamin E, magnesium, iron and fiber, as well as other valuable antioxidants
  • It’s easy to find make whole grains part of your balanced breakfast: oatmeal, cereal, toast…it’s a quick and easy way to fill your tank and start your day.
  • Whole grain bread makes sandwiches taste better—it’s nutty and sweet and soft.
  • “Wheat” is not the same as Whole Grain.

Fruits and Vegetables
  • Check it out: Lower blood pressure; reduced risk of heart disease, stroke, and probably some cancers; lower risk of eye and digestive problems; and a mellowing effect on blood sugar that can help keep appetite in check.
  • Add baby spinach to just about anything, even smoothies- the flavor is mild and the nutritional value can’t be beat. Remember Popeye?
  • When you BBQ, throw some sliced green and yellow zucchini on the grill. Brushed on both sides with olive oil and sprinkled with your favorite seasonings or marinades, they are yum-yum delicious.
  • An apple makes a great snack. For that matter, so does a pear, an orange, or a banana…and they even come in their own wrapper!

Protein
  • The amino acids in protein are the building blocks of your body. You need ‘em.
  • Vegetable sources of protein, such as beans, nuts, and whole grains, are excellent choices, and they offer healthy fiber, vitamins and minerals.
  • The best animal protein choices are fish and poultry. If you are more carnivorous and need red meat, stick with the leanest cuts, choose moderate portion sizes, and make it only an occasional part of your diet.
  • Cutting back on highly processed carbohydrates and increasing protein improves levels of blood triglycerides and HDL, and so may reduce your chances of having a heart attack, stroke, or other form of cardiovascular disease.



The body is highly intelligent and adaptive…

It’s amazing how quickly your health will turn for the better when you eat wholesome food. And, thankfully, the body is forgiving when you just can’t turn down a second brownie. (Every once in awhile.)