Dr. Oz’s New Green Drink

In a recent episode of The Dr. Oz Show, Dr. Oz explained to the audience how to make what he called his “new green drink,” which he created in order to get his family members to drink it. He added in some fruits, and even the audience members thought it tasted great!

So, of course, we had to share the recipe with our readers! Check it out, and let us know what you think. The great part is, he makes it on a Sunday, and then has it for the week!

Dr. Oz’s Green Drink

Ingredients
2 cups spinach
1/2 cucumber
1/4 head of celery
1/2 bunch parsley
1 bunch mint
3 carrots
2 apples
1/4 orange
1/4 lime
1/4 lemon
1/4 pineapple

Directions

Combine all ingredients in a blender. The recipe makes approximately 28 to 40 ounces, or 3 to 4 servings. Store in the refrigerator.

From Sluggish to Focused: The Top 5 Mood Boosting Foods

By Lindsey Smith

Let’s face it — we all know eating healthy and incorporating fruits and vegetables into our diet can make a huge difference in our overall health. From personal experience overcoming childhood anxiety, I have seen firsthand the impact of going from a processed-filled, sugary diet to a more whole foods diet. It can make a difference not only on one’s health, but mental state as well.

Mostly all fruits and vegetables have specific nutrient properties to help balance the body and give it the boost it needs. However, there are certain foods that have more mood boosting properties than others.

Here are the top 5 mood-boosting foods to enhance your mood and make you feel good:

1. Leafy Green Veggies (like Kale, Spinach, Collards): Greens are the number one missing food from the American diet. Adding greens can help boost your mood and lift depression.

2. Dark Chocolate: Aside from the taste and sexy feeling, dark chocolate also contains Phenylethylamine, which is a feel-good endorphin often released in the brain when people fall in love. You will not only feel more connected with yourself, but also more loving and affectionate towards others.

3. Walnuts: Walnuts along with most other nuts contain L-Arginine, an amino acid that improves blood circulation. This can help make the head feel clear and can enhance your confidence level.

4. Blueberries: This fruit not only helps your skin appear more youthful and radiant, but it also contains dopamine, which is a stimulatory neurotransmitter that helps control the brain’s reward and pleasure centers.

5. Pumpkin Seeds: These seeds contain tryptophan, which is an amino acid that helps your brain produce the stress reducing hormone serotonin. This will help make you feel more calm and relaxed.

Lindsey Smith, known as the “food mood girl” works with people who have a habit of looking to food for all the wrong nutrients: comfort, reward, fun and acceptance. Through speaking and coaching she motivates, equips and inspires people to sort out their relationships with food so they can live a healthy, balanced life. She is also the author of “Junk Foods & Junk Moods: Stop Craving and Start Living!” Connect with Smith via her Web site, www.FoodMoodGirl.com, on Facebook and Twitter @LindseySmithHHC.

Editor’s Advice: Staying (Not Straying) on the Spiritual Path

NOTE: I’ve finally joined Twitter, so in addition to following @ElevatedMag, follow me at @ElevatedTammy.

Once we begin a routine of meditation, yoga, affirmations, or other practices to retrain the body and mind to a more “elevated existence,” we may notice some benefits right away – like feeling calmer, more centered, happier, sleeping better, and feeling more focused during the day. But as the saying goes: “you don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone,” and this is true for our spiritual path and practices.

Whether we wake up late and decide not to meditate, miss a few yoga classes, or just allow the craziness of life to get in the way, suddenly we feel … well off. We feel funky, frustrated and even depressed. We start thinking negatively, concentrating on what is missing in our life rather than what we already have, and then wonder what in the world happened!

I’ve fallen victim of my own self-sabotage, as I’m sure you have too! Recently I found myself dealing with a wicked sinus infection – the kind that makes your head pound in places you didn’t know your head could pound! Now, if you read my January Editor’s Advice column, you know I’ve embarked on a year of self-care, and my poor body was in need of care! But in taking care of my physical body, I sort of put my mental self on the back burner.

Now, granted, I needed to recoup from the infection, but suddenly I wasn’t meditating, making my gratitude list every day, and, of course, took some time off of yoga. Since I was dizzy sitting upright, there was no way I was getting into a downward dog!

But after a couple days, when my body started to feel better, I realized my mind was not as centered and happy as it had been. Instead of the day flowing effortlessly, and me marking off my to-do list with ease, I started focusing on all the things I needed to do, and how there isn’t enough time in the day to get them done. Rather than being grateful for all the amazing things happening in my life, I started looking at what was missing. Luckily, I realized this pretty quickly, and took a step back.

What was different in my life that could be causing this? Why had my mood suddenly taken a turn for the negative, especially since my body was feeling better? When was the last time I felt centered and on track?

DING! The bell went off, and with it came a powerful lesson. I didn’t realize how much my daily practices were helping me, keeping me in a calm and loving place, and outright making me feel damn good … until they were gone!

I immediately got back on track with yoga, meditation, green juice (yeah, I stopped that too!), and my current practices like The Magic and “May Cause Miracles” (read my January column for more on them!), and I’m happy to report I’m feeling good – both physically and mentally – again!

We are all souls inhabiting a human body in this life, and sometimes the human side of us takes the lead. For me, straying from my path brought a powerful lesson about how much of a difference it actually makes in my life.

Straying happens to all of us sometimes, but I’ve come to find, the more I stay on course, the quicker I notice when I’ve veered to the left or right, and the quicker I get back to center!

Blessings and love to you all!

Tammy Mastroberte
Founder, Publisher & Editorial Director
Elevated Existence Magazine
Twitter: @ElevatedTammy

How to Use Affirmations with Success

By Keri Nola, MA, LMHC

Affirmations are statements generally used to confirm something’s truth. When used correctly, they can be powerful tools to assist in transforming circumstances and experiences into abundant realities. When used incorrectly, they can prove to be frustrating and unsuccessful. If you have been drawn to using affirmations but have not found them to be helpful, let me introduce you to a process I have developed called: Evolutionary Affirmations, designed to meet you right where you are and support you in moving forward with ease.

After working unsuccessfully with affirmations for years, I decided to discover the pitfalls and create my own model, which I am happy to say has been working for me and others successfully! As I mentioned above, Evolutionary Affirmations are designed to meet you right where you are with compassion and serve as a stepping stone to help you travel to where you want to be.

When we attempt to affirm something that is not believable to us, we actually create more internal conflict and disconnect from welcoming that which we desire. For example, if you want to affirm your beauty, but currently feel ugly and struggle with your body image, saying “I’m beautiful” a thousand times a day will only be annoying and conflicting to what you believe to be true.

An alternative would be to gently acknowledge where you are and develop a statement that meets you there rather than trying to be somewhere you are not.

The following prompts serve as sentence stems to build affirmations that resonate with you:

—        I am curious about…

—        I am willing to learn…

—        I am learning…

—        I am…

For example, if you want to affirm your beauty, but are not currently feeling very beautiful, you would first spend some time working with the initial affirmation prompt, “I am curious about my beauty.” Take as much time as you need stating this affirmation and as you feel ready, you can move into using the next one, “I am willing to learn I am beautiful.” As this one feels true, you can move to the next, “I am learning I am beautiful,” and lastly affirming, “I am beautiful.”

You may spend days, weeks, months, or even years working with each step. Affirmations are most helpful when they are believable and worked with consistently. Remember to honor yourself and do not rush the process and you can empower yourself to welcome what you deserve and desire!

Keri Nola is author of “A Year on Your Path to Growth: Daily Inspirations to Reconnect with Your Soul,” and founder of Path to Growth LLC, a Central Florida-based integrative healing center that blends traditional and holistic techniques for journeys to peace. As a Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Nola provides psychotherapy and facilitates therapeutic retreats for those seeking to reconnect with their inner wisdom, particularly after trauma or loss. She also offers heart-inspired business consultations for healthcare professionals. For more information visit www.pathtogrowth.com, on Facebook and Twitter @pathtogrowth.

NOTE: Picture of Keri Nola by Monica Alfonso

Dr. Fuhrman Shares “5 Epic Diet Disasters” on the Dr. Oz Show

Bestselling author of book “Eat to Live,” and “Super Immunity,” as well as his newest “The End of Diabetes,” Dr. Joel Fuhrman, believes in using food as medicine. He also believes in throwing away the food scales, frozen diet meals, fat-free foods and more, and shared what he calls five “epic diet disasters,” on a recent episode of The Dr. Oz Show.

1 – Don’t diet. Never go on a diet. “People go on a diet and they start cutting back on calories, and the amount of food they are eating and it just results in a disaster. They wind up heavier then when they started,” he said on the Dr. Oz Show.

2 – Diets Fuels Food Addictions. “Diets give people these gimmicks and tricks, but they don’t supply the full gamut of micronutrients the human body needs, and when you are micronutrient deficient you develop cravings,” said Dr. Fuhrman.

Some diets he discussed include going gluten free only to loose weight. “Gluten is only negative for less than 10 percent of the population, and many of the gluten-free flours have high insulin levels and promote weight gain,” he said.

Another diet many people choose is high protein, but this can cause weight gain in the long run, and can worsen diabetes in those suffering from it, said Fuhrman. “It promotes the hormone IGF 1, or Insulin like growth factor 1, that could promote certain cancers like breast cancer. High protein and low carb is a dangerous long term diet and disruptive to your health,” he noted.

Also, fat-free diets can work against the body because the body can’t lose fat if we are not eating it. “We need fat to absorb the micronutrients that have anti-cancer effects, and it could lead to more cravings and actually slow down fatty acid oxidation,” said Fuhrman.

3 – Counting Calories. Dr. Fuhrman said counting calories – and in essence, reducing calories – is a proven formula for dietary failure. “The American diet is already micronutrient deficient, and by reducing calories further it exacerbates the micronutrient deficiency and makes [people] want to crave food even more and overeat,” he told Dr. Oz.

4 – Six Small Meals a day. Believe it or not, Dr. Fuhrman said eating six small meals a day has been show to cause people to eat more calories in the evening or end of the day, which stops the body from detoxing. In the catabolic phase of the digestive cycle, the body breaks down food and this is when the body repairs itself. “People are inhibiting that by putting food in all the time, so it’s not good for their long-term health either,” said Dr. Fuhrman.

5 – Toxic Hunger. Dr. Fuhrman called toxic hunger the No. 1 epic diet failure. Have you ever had a growling stomach, light-headedness, headaches or irritability, and think it means your hungry? Dr. Fuhrman refers to these symptoms as toxic hunger, which are actually withdrawal symptoms from a diet that is inadequate.

“It’s actually addictive withdrawal. The body dumps waste products into circulation for removal by the liver and kidney … you feel fatigued, irritable and have headaches,” said Fuhrman. “They are signs there is something wrong with the way you are eating, and it drives people to overeat food. It keeps them addicted.”

With an inadequate diet lacking the proper nutrients – or micronutrients – these symptoms cause people to eat more in order to get rid of the symptoms. “When you try to stop eating it, you feel sick because the body is trying to repair the damage caused by that substance, so you have to keep eating that food. Toxic hunger means they have to consume more calories then the body needs,” he said.

The only way to break this cycle is to eat more of the right foods – those high in nutrients, antioxidants and phytochemicals to remove the toxins, free radicals and oxidative stress. “Then you no longer feel shaky and fatigued between meals. You don’t have to stop the detox because you don’t feel bad,” said Dr. Fuhrman. “Then you get connected with what real hunger feels like. You don’t have to diet, measure or weigh, you just eat when you feel like eating, and you will feel like eating the right amount of food.”

The Secret to Losing Weight & Keeping it Off
True hunger is not felt in the stomach with growling – it is actually felt in the neck, throat and chest area, said Dr. Fuhrman. Once we begin to introduce the right foods into the body, we will actually enhance our taste buds, and food that is good for us will begin to taste amazing.

“There are a lot of taste buds in the tongue. In toxic hunger you overwhelm the taste buds, and they start to go dull on you. The first bite of food tastes differently than the last, but with true hunger we turn this around,” he told Dr. Oz. The taste buds become more sensitive, and each bite of food tastes the same once we begin eating right.

We can actually eat as much food as we want, as long as it’s the right foods – foods that don’t raise the insulin and glucose, he said. Here are five that can’t rid the body of toxic hunger, help it to lose weight, and keep it off for good!

1 – Pomegranates. These are full of a nutrient called punicalagin, which lowers the blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar. It also helps reverse diabetes, doesn’t raise insulin, and may have anti-cancer effects, said Dr. Fuhrman, who told Dr. Oz he eats the seeds. When they are in season, he buys extra, removes the seeds, and stores them in bags in the freezer. His method for de-seeding? Cut around the fruit like an avocado and twist it open. Bang on the back of it with a wooden spoon, and all of the seeds will fall out.

2 – Cocoa Powder. There is no sugar in cocoa powder and it’s full of antioxidents and flavanols. Dr. Fuhrman recommends buying all natural and unsweetened.

3 – Adzuki Beans. These beans are a dieters best friend because not only are they low in calories, but they are also not broken down entirely, so some of the calories pass through and are not digested. This can speed up fat loss, burn fat faster, and help us to lose weight.

4 – Squash. These contain the right type of carbohydrates that don’t raise insulin response and have anti-diabetic effects to keep sugar down and allow us to feel full, Dr. Fuhrman said on the show. “They have pectins that lower your cholesterol, lower your blood glucose, and help modulate insulin to make you more non-diabetic,” he explained. Other carbs in this category are beans and cauliflower.

5 – Cashews. “We want people to get most of their fat intake from nuts and seeds because when you take oil instead of nuts and seeds for the fat, the oil absorbs within minutes, but for nuts and seeds, it takes hours to break down the fat, and your body burns it for energy, and it increases fatty acid oxidation,” said Dr. Fuhrman. He also offered a four-ingredient recipe for a dressing with cashews to replace oil:

Cashew Dressing

Ingredients

2 Navel Orages
½ cup cashews
¼ cup of unhulled sesame seeds
¼ cup of white wine vinegar
a squeeze of Lemon

Directions: Combine all the ingredients in a blender and process.

For more on Dr. Fuhrman, visit www.drfuhrman.com.

Mindfulness Meditation May Reduce Stress-Induced Inflammation, Study Shows

Those suffering from chronic inflammatory conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and asthma, where psychological stress plays an important role, may benefit from mindfulness-based stress reduction, a form of meditation, according to a study by University of Wisconsin-Madison neuroscientists with the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at the Waisman Center, Scienceblog.com reported.

Mindfulness-based stress reduction, which is designed for patients with chronic pain, has practitioners continuously focus attention on the breath, body sensations and mental content, while either seated, walking or practicing yoga.

The study compared two methods of reducing stress: a mindfulness meditation-based approach, and a program designed to enhance health in ways unrelated to mindfulness.

The other group participated in the Health Enhancement Program, which included nutritional education; physical activity, such as walking; balance, agility and core strengthening; and music therapy, the article stated.

Both groups had the same amount of training, the same level of expertise in the instructors, and the same amount of home practice required by participants.

“In this setting, we could see if there were changes that we could detect that were specific to mindfulness,” Melissa Rosenkranz, assistant scientist at the center and lead author on the paper, which was published recently in the journal Brain, Behavior and Immunity said in the article.

Using a tool called the Trier Social Stress Test to induce psychological stress, and a capsaicin cream to produce inflammation on the skin, the researchers took immune and endocrine measures before and after training in the two methods. While both techniques were proven effective in reducing stress, the mindfulness-based stress reduction approach was more effective at reducing stress-induced inflammation.

The results show behavioral interventions designed to reduce emotional reactivity are beneficial to people suffering from chronic inflammatory conditions. The study also suggests mindfulness techniques may be more effective in relieving inflammatory symptoms than other activities that promote well-being, the article stated.

“This is not a cure-all, but our study does show there are specific ways that mindfulness can be beneficial, and that there are specific people who may be more likely to benefit from this approach than other interventions,” Rosenkranz said in the report.