Chronic Fatigue? Try These Natural Remedies

Chronic fatigue syndrome comes with a wide-range of symptoms – from fatigue, muscle pain and insomnia, to a recurring sore throat, headache and swollen lymph nodes. While there is no test to identify it, symptoms can persist for years, and many people suffering from it remain undiagnosed, according to an article on Emaxhealth.com.

A new review, published in BMC Complementary & Alternative Medicine, evaluated the results of 26 randomized controlled trials, involving a total of 3,273 individuals participating, using complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) techniques including mind-body medicine (qigong, meditation, distance healing), massage, tuina (a type of Chinese manipulative therapy) and tai chi, homeopathy, ginseng, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH), and dietary supplements, the report stated.

Results included the following:

– Qigong and meditation were helpful for fatigue.
– Massage helped fatigue, depression, pain and insomnia.
– Tuina provided positive effects.
– Most of the supplements did not show any benefit except for magnesium and NADH.

The reviewers concluded that given the lack of effective treatments from the conventional medicine realm, and the relative safety of natural remedies, those suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome may find relief from these options, according to the report.

 

New Handbook to Help Stressed College Students

The Institute of HeartMath released its new “College De-Stress Handbook” to help college students recognize and self-regulate high stress.

Incorporating the Institute of HeartMath’s (IHM) more than 20 years of researching stress, emotions and how we learn, the methods and techniques in the book have been proven in numerous fields, clinical and independent studies, to be effective strategies for reducing stress, test anxiety, insomnia and problems stemming from digital overload, and improving relationships, time management and decision-making, according to the company.

“Today’s college students are experiencing higher education much differently than their parents’ and previous generations,” Jeff Goelitz, co-author, educational specialist and program developer for IHM said. “Students are told college can be a fun and memorable time, but today’s students are undergoing a surprising amount of stress and can benefit from resources to help them cope with stress in healthier ways.”

“The College De-Stress Handbook” takes students on an 82-page journey where they learn about the mechanics of stress and techniques to reduce it while improving health, cognitive ability, decision-making skills and natural balance. Personal stories and tips address common student issues such as problems sleeping and time management.

Goelitz and co-author Robert A. Rees, Ph.D., a former dean at the University of California, Los Angeles and former director of Education and Humanities at IHM, wrote the handbook to help students understand how stress affects learning and their mental, emotional and physical states and offer effective techniques and how-to’s for developing skills to manage the stress associated with college life.

The College De-Stress Handbook is available in paperback for $12.95 and will soon be released in e-book format for $6.95 so students can access it on computers and other electronic reading devices, according to the company. Currently it can be purchased at www.heartmath.org, but will be available via online retailers in the coming months.

 

Thich Nhat Hanh Talks Mindfulness to NY Crowd

The Manhattan Center in New York City is known for hosting a variety of events, including music concerts with artists such as Jay-Z, Bob Dylan and Lenny Kravitz. But on Friday night, Oct. 14, 2011, it was so quiet you could hear a pin drop.

On the stage, Buddhist monks and nuns sat in meditation, and behind them a banner hung with the words “Open Mind, Open Heart,” as the audience awaited the arrival of Buddhist monk, teacher, poet and best-selling author Thich Nhat Hanh, who spoke about global ethics for the future to kickoff a weekend event by the Omega Institute, which included a Dharma Talk on Friday night and a full Day of Mindfulness on Saturday.

“Our suffering inside reflects the suffering of the world,” Hanh said addressing the audience at the beginning of the evening. “Many of us don’t want to go home with ourselves because we don’t want to get in touch with stuff inside of us. We block it with music, magazines and television so we can’t get in touch with the nature of our suffering to understand it. But with understanding, compassion will arise, and compassion has the power to heal and transform.”

After the audience relaxed and practiced mindful breathing while listening to the monks and nuns on stage as they chanted, Hanh spoke of their work teaching parents and school teachers techniques of Applied Ethics, as well as how to breath mindfully and release the tension in the body to remove pain and generate a feeling of joy and happiness; how to handle a painful feeling coming from the body; how to handle strong emotions; and how to practice loving compassion, and kind and loving speech.

“Young people don’t know how to handle strong emotions,” Hanh noted. “You hear of them killing themselves. Why do we have to die because of one emotion? There is a practice that can help us handle strong emotions.”

Hanh spoke about the 5 Mindfulness Trainings, which he believes can help us heal and transform ourselves and our society. They can be practiced whether someone is a Buddhist or non-Buddhist (for the full list and explanations visit the Plum Village Web site here):

  1. Reverence for Life
  2. True Happiness
  3. True Love
  4. Loving Speech and Deep Listening
  5. Nourishment and Healing

Additionally, Hanh explained the Diamond Sutra, a popular text in the Zen tradition, to communicate the essence of Buddhist ethics. “It advises us to remove four ideas or notions from our lives,” he said. “Then we can be free of discrimination, and without discrimination there is no longer any fear or violence.”

First Notion Remove the notion of ‘self.’ Hanh explained that many of us believe we have a separate self, but if we look deeply enough, we realize we are actually made up of non-self elements, and are all inter-connected.

“To believe we can exist by ourselves is not true,” he said. “We have to inter-be with everything in the cosmos. To be is actually to inter-be. When a father looks at his son, he can see the nature of inter-be. When you look at the son, you also see the father and the mother. The son is made up of non-son elements. The suffering of the father is the suffering of the son, and the happiness of the father is the happiness of the son.”

Hanh also used the example of the flower to illustrate this concept. “Without a cloud to produce the rain, a flower cannot grow. You can’t see the cloud or even the sunshine when you look at a flower, but we know these non-flower elements are there,” he said.

Second Notion Remove the notion of ‘man.’ “When you look into the creature of man, you see only non-man elements. We have human ancestors but also animal and mineral. In order to protect man, we have to learn how to protect non-man elements,” Hanh said.

Third Notion Remove the notion of living being. We need to remove the notion of mortals versus God or Buddha, or whatever we refer to as our higher power, Hanh explained. We have a tendency to compare ourselves to God or Buddha, thinking we are suffering beings, and they have no suffering in them.

“We think we are nothing, and God or Buddha is everything, but this notion should be removed,” he told the audience, relaying a story from when he was a 16-year-old monk. “My teacher gave me a verse to memorize and say before bowing to the Buddha. ‘The one who bows and the one who is bowed to are both by nature empty,’” he said. “Before you bow to the Buddha, you have to look inside him and see he is made of non-Buddha elements, including suffering despair, anger and hate. A Buddha is someone who is able to handle the suffering. When you look at a Buddha and don’t see the suffering in him, you
have not seen a true Buddha.”

Fourth Notion – Remove the notion of lifespan. We believe we are on earth for a short time, but this notion should be removed, said Hanh. Our true nature is of no birth
and no death. “To die according to our thinking is to pass from being to non-being, but science says you cannot create or destroy energy,” Hanh noted. “You can transfer it, but nothing is born and nothing dies. There is only continuation into another form.”

Return to the Present
Before ending the night, Hanh spoke about the importance of bringing the mind home to the body through mindfulness and mindful breathing. In fact, throughout the talk, one of the nuns on stage, Sister Pine, would ring a bell periodically to signal the audience to take a few silent, mindful breaths.

“By concentrating on your breath, in three or four seconds you can bring your mind home to your body in the present moment,” said Hanh. Our civilization is organized where the mind spends more time in the past and future then the present moment. We think we will finally find happiness at some point in the future, but we can be happy in the here and now, he said.

“Establish yourself in the here and now with mindfulness,” Hanh explained. “If we were to write down all of the conditions we need for happiness, we will soon find that one, two, three pages and more are not enough to fit them. But mindfulness helps us realize what there is to be happy about in the now.”

Something as small as focusing on our eyes and being grateful for our ability to open them and see all the colors of the paradise surrounding us can bring happiness, he said. Many do not have this ability.

“There are many conditions of happiness around us, yet many of us believe there are no conditions to be happy about in the now. We run away from the present moment, but that is all there is.”

VIDEO: HBO’s Delves Into Spirituality With ‘Enlightened’

Picture this: a woman has a nervous breakdown at work. She goes away to a rehabilitation center in Hawaii where she experiences a spiritual awakening, and discovers meditation and the importance of communication. After a couple of months, she returns home … to real life … the life that caused her to have a nervous breakdown to begin with.

This is the premise of HBO’s newest original series, “Enlightened,” with new episodes on Monday nights at 9:30 p.m., starring Laura Dern, Luke Wilson and Diane Ladd. (See video below for a recap from the pilot episode).

Now, while many of us have not had a nervous breakdown, we can certainly relate to the struggle of maintaining newfound serenity in the midst of, well, life!

Dern plays Amy Jellicoe, who when she returns home from Hawaii, sets out to continue with meditation, improve communication with her mother (played by her real-life mother, Diane Ladd), and create a healthy relationship with her ex-husband (played by Luke Wilson). But this turns out to be more difficult that she thought!

Have you seen the show? Let us know what you think!

New Bob Doyle Book Hits the Mark on Law of Attraction

The law of attraction is operating all the time – whether we are aware of it or not. What we say, do, think and feel is creating the conditions that surround us.

In his new book, “Follow Your Passion, Find Your Power: Everything You Need to Know about the Law of Attraction,” Bob Doyle reveals a step-by-step plan for us to harness this law so we can begin attracting positive things into our lives.

“Living in a state of passion automatically puts you into vibrational resonance with exactly what you want … and you don’t even have to think about the Law of Attraction if you don’t want to,” Doyle says in the book. “This is why you’ll see many people who live amazing lives who have no knowledge about the Law of Attraction. They simply spend most of their time in a vibrational state that naturally attracts the good stuff.”

Doyle not only explains how the law of attraction works, but also reveals the concept of resistance, and how it can interfere with attracting the things we want in life. There is a chapter dedicated to techniques for releasing resistance and another to the concept of visualization.

The book also features a chapter answering the most commonly asked questions that come up when someone begins to consciously apply the law of attraction.

This is one of the best books on Law of Attraction that we have come across in a while!

Meditation More Powerful Than Morphine to Relieve Pain

New research published in the Journal of Neuroscience shows meditation produces powerful pain-relieving effects in the brain, according to a report by Sciencedaily.com. In fact, meditation proved to be more helpful in pain reduction than morphine.

“This is the first study to show that only a little over an hour of meditation training can dramatically reduce both the experience of pain and pain-related brain activation,” Fadel Zeidan, Ph.D., lead author of the study and post-doctoral research fellow at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center said in the report “We found a big effect – about a 40 percent reduction in pain intensity and a 57 percent reduction in pain unpleasantness. Meditation produced a greater reduction in pain than even morphine or other pain-relieving drugs, which typically reduce pain ratings by about 25 percent.”

For the study, 15 healthy volunteers who had never meditated went to four, 20-minute classes to learn a mindfulness meditation technique called focused attention, where people are taught to pay attention to their breath and let go of distracting thoughts and emotions. And before and after meditating, participants had their brain activity examined using an ASL MRI or arterial spin labeling MRI.

The scans taken after meditation training showed every participant’s pain ratings were reduced, with decreases ranging from 11 to 93 percent, Zeidan said in the report. Also, meditation significantly reduced brain activity in the primary somatosensory cortex, an area involved in creating the feeling of where and how intense a painful stimulus is, ScienceDaily reported.  While the scans taken before meditation training showed activity in this area was very high, when participants were meditating during the scans, activity in this pain-processing region could not be detected.

The research also showed meditation increased brain activity in areas including the anterior cingulate cortex, anterior insula and the orbito-frontal cortex, which shape how the brain builds an experience of pain from nerve signals, Robert C. Coghill, Ph.D., senior author of the study and associate professor of neurobiology and anatomy at Wake Forest Baptist said in the report.

“Consistent with this function, the more that these areas were activated by meditation the more that pain was reduced,” he explained. “One of the reasons that meditation may have been so effective in blocking pain was that it did not work at just one place in the brain, but instead reduced pain at multiple levels of processing.”

As a result of the study, Zeidan and colleagues believe meditation offers great potential for clinical use since there is not much training required to product dramatic results. “This study shows that meditation produces real effects in the brain and can provide an effective way for people to substantially reduce their pain without medications,” Zeidan said in the report.