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Author: Ann Zimmerman

The Weekend Warrior

By Ann Zimmerman, LAc.

We have reached the time of year when we tend to do more than we “normally” would schedule on our calendar.  Somehow all the friends, family, camping trips, festivals, gardening, etc need to get squeezed into a few months.  The long days of light, warm weather, no school and the general energy of summer  bring forward a manic quality in most everyone.  We anxiously peruse our calendars looking for another way to take a Monday or Friday off or maybe even longer from work.  And if its not going to be a long weekend…..than we are willing to eek out everything we can for those 2 days. 

In Chinese medicine, summer is the season of the heart and the emotion that is associated with summer is joy.  In summer we have joy.  It almost feels like a mandate,  a must for surviving the other seasons.  A reward for the long winter and the busyness of spring.   Summer tends to swing our inner pendulum way past the middle place of balance.  This season tends to be a time of excess versus winter’s time of deficiency.  It’s the time of the year when you say, yes.

Yes…..I will paint my house, yes I will stay up all night dancing, yes I will travel across the country and visit 5 sets of friends, yes I will have another beer, yes you can stay at my house, yes I will be gone another weekend…………We naturally feel more energy and hopefully it will get us through the summer. Of course with excess comes the price of overdoing it.  We each know our unique way we overdo it in life.  

Over joy can often result from summer’s manic pace. The idea of over joy is unique to Chinese medicine, it certainly is not an american concept.  There can never be too much joy, right? Remember how you felt last September when you were finally ready to stay home and take it easy?  That is the effect of overjoy.  The drive for more and more joy tends to make our everyday jobs/chores feel mundane. This restlessness tends to build pushing us past when we would “normally” slow down.  

So the challenge here is to embrace the natural expansion of summer without pushing yourself into the excess of injury, compromised immunity, insomnia, anxiety, and overindulgence.  Good Luck!

Cell Phones: our new security blanket

By Clark Zimmerman, LAc.

When my teenage niece came to visit last year, she was shocked to find that our mountain home had no cell service. While we could have given her our wireless password, her dad had requested that we say we forgot it, so she could have a little vacation from her phone. Needless to say, she was not pleased. Though she could still use the internet to email friends, or look at social media, the fact that she couldn’t use her smart phone at our house caused several meltdowns. Though most of us don’t react as severely as my niece, it is becoming more and more common to see our phones as a sort of security blanket.

While technology provides many benefits, there also is a certain price that is becoming more apparent. The moments of stillness and quiet that used to exist between different parts of our day are disappearing; being replaced with more texts to return and more business to attend to. It is like we are all “on call” now. In my medical practice I have noticed the effect that this is having on most people. People feel more rushed, further behind and more anxious. I have patients who come in for an hour acupuncture treatment “to relax” who insist on having their cell phones on just in case there is an emergency. This way of thinking almost expects tragedy. The same technology that was supposed to make our lives easier, is now serving to make people less capable of being comfortable with a moment of silence. When we are expected to be readily available at any moment, this not only takes away from the little bits of downtime that we used to get, it makes us prone to feeling that if nothing new is coming in on our feed that we are somehow missing out on something.

Our grandparents could sit for half a day on the front porch and watch the birds, and now most of us can’t sit still for 15 minutes without some sort of stimulation. We have begun to collectively move away from valuing the reflective, quiet, contemplative time, and are choosing to replace it with constant stimulation, constant news, and constant conversation. It makes me wonder, what is daytime without night? What is summer without winter? What is activity without rest? Science says that if you go long enough without sleep that psychosis ensues. We are running a grand experiment, it will be interesting to see where this all leads…

Can American’s practice preventative medicine?

 

by Ann Zimmerman, LAc.

Preventative medicine is taking action toward improving your health before you have any symptoms of illness or responding to the beginning symptoms of your body being out of balance.  Every family has a health history and genetic tendencies toward weaknesses in certain areas of the body.  We also know that these genetic tendencies are highly influenced by the lifestyle we live. 

There is a famous saying, “If you continue to do what you have always done, you will continue to get what you have always gotten.”  If you are not feeling well, chances are that you could list off a few things  that you know could be improved in the way you manage your health. This speaks to the larger picture of paying attention to the choices we make and listening to the feedback our body is giving us.  In general our sense of wellness and health is a pretty fine tuned feedback loop.

As Americans we typically struggle with the idea of prevention.  Culturally we tend to satisfy ourselves in the moment and put other priorities before our health.  We like to see how much gluttony we can get away with before our symptoms are yelling loud enough to make us change our habits.  We tend to be very good at going to the extreme and doing even what could be healthy choices, such as exercise to excess.  Each of us have made successful changes at different points in our lives, each of us have fallen off whatever good routine we had going, and its likely each of us have a couple of ideals we still are striving for to improve how we feel.  

So what does it look like then to actually practice preventive medicine? I believe it is taking a honest look at how you run or react to your life.  It is also bringing awareness to what kind of quality of life you want to enjoy and expect from you day to day.  Perhaps, the expectations you have for your health are much higher than the amount of effort you are willing to put toward maintaining yourself or conversely you may have grown accustomed to having low expectations for ever really feeling good again.

What to do?  Meet yourself in this moment . Start paying attention to your the cause and effect of the choices you make.  Choose to notice how your actions and thoughts effect the way you feel.  It takes a lot of personal motivation and discipline to make changes in your life.  Try to look at your life from the prevention model versus reaction.  If you are having trouble shifting this paradigm in general or regarding something specific ask for help from a friend or a healer.  Each moment we are given another chance to do things differently.  

Cheers to preventative medicine!