Adrenal Burnout Syndrome - tips to heal yourself
Adrenal Burnout Syndrome
[Editor's Note: Many thanks to Brian Schaefer <[email protected]> of Australia for forwarding this important essay on Adrenal Burnout by Dr. Lawrence Wilson. Brian was trying to get me to read this essay as far back as November 2004. He sent me yet another e-mail on April 11, 2005 and I finally tuned in long enough to print it out and read it. Now I know why he wanted me to read it so badly. Many people suffer from adrenal exhaustion and they don't know it- including yours truly. Study the symptoms. If the shoe fits, follow the recomendations to restore adrenal strength. It takes about two years to come back, so don't look for a quick fix. If you need more help, contact me privately by e-mail .Ken]
By Dr. Larry Wilson <[email protected]>
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/adrenalb ... pr05.shtml
Posted April 19, 2005
Thousands of people suffer from constant fatigue, unrelieved by rest and sleep. This is the main symptom of adrenal burnout syndrome. Other symptoms may include a craving for sweets, low blood pressure and blood sugar, irritability and depression. Low energy impairs every system of the body. Secondary symptoms range from impaired digestion to infections. Toxic emotions accumulate with adrenal burnout. The world looks bad, people are evil, and a hopeless attitude is not uncommon.
The condition is also called adrenal hypofunction, adrenal exhaustion or adrenal insufficiency. Unlike fatigue, one’s energy does not return after a good nights rest. Burnout is a more serious derangement of the body’s energy system.
The adrenals are the major glands the body uses to respond to stress. Its hormones raise the blood sugar and blood pressure, and promote energy production. Adrenalin (or epinephrine) is used for emergencies. The longer-acting anti-stress adrenal hormones are cortisone and cortisol. Aldosterone, another adrenal hormone, retains sodium and increases the blood pressure. Related closely to the sympathetic nervous system, the fight-or-flight response it is called. When the adrenals become depleted, the body is unable to handle stress.
Most physicians do not diagnose adrenal burnout syndrome. Rarely, if enough tests are run, it may be called Addison’s disease, which doctors consider incurable. Recovery from adrenal burnout, however, is definitely possible. The condition affects both men and women, and even children as well. Some children are born this way and never experience plenty of energy.
Burnout may develop slowly or be caused by a single trauma. John F. Kennedy experienced burnout during World War II. A Japanese destroyer rammed his patrol boat late one night, killing most of the crew. He never recovered from the shock. For the rest of his life, he needed replacement adrenal hormones. If he had found the right practitioner, perhaps they would not have been needed.
Causes of Adrenal Burnout
Excessive stress, an important cause of burnout, can be from many sources. Chemical toxicity and nutritional depletion are among the physical causes. Mental, emotional or spiritual stress may be a major factor. Financial, family or other stress may also contribute to burnout.
Any excessive stress can deplete the adrenals, especially when weakened by poor nutrition. Working too much or emotional stress are two common causes. Excessive stimulation, especially for children, is another cause. Fast-paced, high-stress, fear-based lifestyles are a sure prescription for adrenal burnout.
Other stressors in cities are noise and electromagnetic pollution. Cell phones, microwave towers and appliances like televisions, microwave ovens and computers give off strong electrical fields.
Nutritional Deficiencies are a common cause. When under stress, the need for nutrients is much greater. Carbohydrates, when excessive in the diet, stress the adrenals. Diets low in protein may also create deficiencies. Inadequate or poor quality water affects oxygenation of the tissues.
Most diets are low in nutrients required by the adrenals. These include B-complex vitamins, vitamins A, C and E, manganese, zinc, chromium, selenium and other and other trace elements. The reasons for this begin with how food is grown. Most food is grown on depleted soils. Processing and refining further deplete nutrients. Habits like eating in the car or while on the run further diminish the value derived from food. Also, allergic reactions to foods such as wheat and dairy products can damage the intestines and reduce the absorption of nutrients. Toxic metals and chemicals often play a large role in adrenal burnout. Everyone is exposed to thousands of chemicals in the air, the water and the food. Other sources are dental materials and skin contact with chemicals. Over-the-counter and prescribed medications add to the body’s toxic load.
Toxins may also be generated within the body due to impaired digestion. When food is not properly digested, it either ferments or rots in the intestines, producing many harmful substances that are absorbed into the body. Chronic infections, of dental and other origin, also contribute to the toxic load. In most people, the organs of elimination do not function at an optimal level. As a result, toxic substances slowly build up in the body, leading to adrenal burnout and many other health conditions.
Stimulants damage the adrenal glands. They whip the adrenals. Caffeine, sugar and alcohol are among the most common stimulants. Less obvious stimulants include anger, rage, arguing, hatred, loud music, the news and movies full of suspense. Vigorous exercise, sexual preoccupations and other thrills may also act as stimulants.
Stimulant use, however, can also be a result of adrenal burnout. Stimulants are attractive to one in burnout to provide temporary energy. This is an appeal of the drug culture, both legal and recreational.
Unhealthy responses to stress are another cause of adrenal burnout. These include habits of worrying, or becoming angry or afraid. Don’t worry, be happy is a great prescription for adrenal burnout. This applies particularly to high-strung, nervous individuals and those with very active minds, as they are especially prone to adrenal burnout.
Many children today are born with weak adrenals due to their parents’ nutritional deficiencies. By age three or four, these children are in burnout. They are often sick, depressed and have difficulty in school.
Symptoms of Adrenal Burnout
Low blood sugar and allergies result from low levels of cortisol. Joint and muscle pain are other common symptoms. Multiple chemical sensitivities is an extreme allergic condition associated with adrenal burnout. Low blood pressure and low body temperature may also result. Later blood pressure rises as toxic substances build up in the arteries and kidneys.
Elevated copper and low zinc related to adrenal burnout impair the immune system. Chronic infections may develop. The stage is also set for the development of degenerative conditions. Cancer, heart disease, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases are end-stage results of toxic accumulation and energy depletion. Often secondary to adrenal exhaustion are glandular imbalances, hyperthyroidism and more often hypothyroidism. The adrenal glands produce oestrogen and progesterone. They are the main source of these hormones after menopause. Premenstrual syndrome and hot flashes often have to do with weakened adrenal glands.
Depression and apathy are common in adrenal burnout. One may lose interest in friends, family and work. Unsure if there is energy to get through the day, anxiety may occur. Irritability is common as one is less able to handle even minor stress. Unfortunately, many with adrenal burnout function on anger and resentment. These act as adrenal stimulants, providing a negative energy with which to function. Most of the world, in fact, functions on the negative energy of anger.
Compulsiveness and OCD [Obsessive Compulsion Disorder] is associated with adrenal burnout. One may become addicted or very attracted to excessive exercise, sex, loud music or other forms of excitement. The unconscious goal is always the same, to stimulate the adrenals into activity.
When the adrenals are weak, copper builds up in the body. Elevated copper enhances emotions. Panic attacks, bipolar disorder, mood swings and schizophrenia are related to copper imbalance. As one’s energy level declines, other toxic metals build up as well. Mercury, cadmium, lead, arsenic, beryllium and others contribute to hundreds of physical and emotional symptoms.
Myths about Burnout
Myth #1: Burnout is psychological.
Burnout is a breakdown of the energy system of the body. Vital minerals are depleted or burned out and replaced by toxic metals. Psychological stress may be a cause and burnout can affect one’s emotions and behaviour. However, burnout itself is biochemical. Recovery may involve improving emotions and dealing with psychological issues. However, it also involves rebuilding body chemistry because it is a physical condition as well.
Myth #2. People in burnout have no energy and cannot work.
Many in burnout hold full-time jobs. They may appear in good health. However, they are often tired or stressed. They may require stimulants in order to keep going. Some bury themselves in their work to forget how tired they feel.
Myth #3. Vigorous exercise is good for burnout.
Vigorous exercise can be attractive to those in burnout. Exercise temporarily makes them feel better. While it may provide a boost, in the long run vigorous exercise further exhausts their bodies. People in burnout need to reduce exercise, often to a minimum in order to conserve their energy and allow their adrenals to rebuild. Exercise requires energy and adrenal reserves that people in burnout do not have.
Myth #4. A vacation, a diet, or a nutritional supplement will cause recovery from burnout.
Most people never recover from burnout. Recovery requires a strong commitment to healing. A number of natural therapies are often required. Recovery takes at least several years. If one recovers faster, one was not in adrenal burnout.
Myth #5. Burnout occurs mainly in men. In fact, it is more common in women.
This is due mainly to lifestyle changes in women. Many women now work outside the home, and raise the children as well. Many are in single-parent homes or both parents work just to pay the taxes. Women have more sluggish oxidation rates to begin with, so burnout may be less apparent in women, but it is just as common or more so than in men.
Myth #6. Burnout only occurs in those in high-stress jobs.
Burnout occurs in all groups, regardless of occupation, income or educational level. In fact, many homeless people are burned out. This helps account for why they may give up hope or be incapable of holding a job or supporting a home.
Myth #7. Burnout occurs only in adults.
In fact, it is common today in children and even babies. Children are being nutritionally depleted and toxic as a result of the ill health of the parents. This can be measured with mineral analysis. Minimal brain dysfunction, chronic ear or other infections, crib death, failure to thrive, ADHD and anti-social behaviour may all be symptoms of burnout in children.
Myth #8. Burnout affects only physical health.
Burnout affects every area of life. Family and work are often affected. Relationships often suffer. One may lose interest in everyone and everything. There simply is not enough energy available for others or for activities beyond those required for survival. Friends, family and employers are often unaware of what is occurring, which only worsens the situation.
Myth #9. A hectic lifestyle causes burnout.
This may be one cause. However, a hectic lifestyle can also be a result of burnout. Excessive activity, overwork and a very busy life can be a way to stimulate one into action, a compensation for feelings of exhaustion. When such a person stops working and running around, they will feel just how exhausted and perhaps depressed they really are.
Myth #10. Overwork for years causes burnout.
This is possible. However, it can occur due to a single shock or just a few traumas that occur together. It may also not be related to any single trauma or activity. Often a combination of factors causes burnout. Whether one goes into burnout from an illness, accident, divorce, overwork or other stress depends very much on one’s ability to handle stress, rather than the absolute amount of stress.
Myth #11. Burnout is an overused term without a scientific basis.
Just because burnout doesn’t show up on x-rays or standard blood tests does not mean it is not real. Burnout can be measured and quantified using tissue mineral testing. The term is not overused. In fact it is greatly underused. A large percentage of the population is in burnout and it would be helpful if physicians understood it better, even if they have no cure.
Myth #12. Plenty of sleep will take care of burnout.
Unfortunately, this is not so. The body is unable to regenerate its energy during sleep. Waking up tired after 8-10 hours of sleep is a primary symptom of burnout. Like a dead battery, the body does not recharge itself during sleep. An interesting principle of health is that one can only regenerate during sleep in proportion to the energy one has. Those in burnout are overtired which interferes with the restorative power of their sleep.
Myth #13. Cleaning out toxins will take care of burnout.
The accumulation of toxins that occurs as the body can no longer remove them properly contributes to burnout. Exposure to toxic metals or chemicals can be an important factor in burnout. Eliminating them is helpful. However, energy is required to release toxins. If the energy system is weak, just fasting or detoxifying will not be enough. One must rebuild the entire energy system by balancing body chemistry and providing nutrients as well. A one-month or even six-month cleanse is nowhere near adequate. It can take a year just to replenish one mineral. For those in burnout, extreme detoxification programs such as fasting, raw foods or even chelating agents can be dangerous. This is because the body lacks the vitality to properly eliminate toxins, the eliminative organs are compromised and toxins may be redistributed in vital organs. A gentle, complete program of rebuilding and nourishing the body must accompany any efforts to eliminate toxins. In fact, as vitality improves, toxin elimination will proceed on its own.
Myth # 14. One will come out of burnout when one changes whatever factor or behaviour caused the burnout.
This is not how it works. As one goes into burnout, vital minerals become depleted and toxic substances replace them. They become part of the structure of enzymes and body organs and glands. Although one changes one’s diet, lifestyle, attitudes or behaviour, the toxins remain.
Often, burnout does not even set in until several years after a trauma, illness or injury as depleted and damaged cells proliferate. Though many change their diets and get over their traumas, most people never recover from burnout, or make only a partial recovery.
Myth #15. To recover from burnout just re-establish close communication with those who are close to you.
This is the prescription for burnout in one popular book. However, this is not enough. Communication is also difficult when one is in burnout. Burnout can greatly affect one’s attitudes, outlook and perceptions, making real communication very difficult. Low energy by itself can impair communication. Lack of understanding of the problem by partners, friends and others can also impair communication.
Myth #16. To get out of burnout, one needs to get back in touch with oneself.
This is not enough for recovery. Also, getting in touch is difficult due to toxins in the brain. These produce odd feelings, low self-esteem and negative attitudes that often accompany burnout. Many people in burnout become overly introspective, which can make them worse as they get in touch with all their problems.
Myth # 17. One can recover from burnout in matter of months.
It takes at least two years and often longer. Layers of adaptations and compensations must be undone. Each adaptation uses up energy so that when one begins correction, there is little energy to work with. This slows progress and is one reason correction takes several years.
Also, twenty or thirty minerals must often be replenished, a time-consuming process even assuming that one is ingesting all needed nutrients. Eliminating toxins that have become integral parts of the organs and glands also takes time, like rebuilding a house. If the process occurred too rapidly, one would become very ill.
If one recovers in months, one was not in burnout. Often, a small recovery can feel like a cure when it is not. Those in burnout need an overhaul, not a tune up. One needs to commit to doing whatever it takes and devoting a few years to healing. This needs to become one’s primary occupation or job for a while, allowing all other interests and activities to become secondary to the commitment to healing.
Myth #18. Burnout is not an important medical problem unless the stress of burnout causes high blood pressure or another symptom.
Burnout is degenerative exhaustion. It sets the stage for all degenerative diseases, because energy is a common denominator of health. All illnesses start with fatigue. The body is like a newer car with power steering, power brakes and power windows. The entire car stops working right when the power goes down. Burnout is a serious medical problem, although symptoms may be vague and unrelated to a specific disease.
Myth #19. Burnout is new phenomenon. In fact, burnout is as old as humanity.
It can even help understand the rise and fall of civilizations. Nations often change over time. Repressive traditions can in time lead nations into burnout. Constant wars as occurred in Europe can contribute to burnout. Toxic exposure like lead water pipes can contribute to burnout. Vegetarian diets or destructive religious ideas, as in countries like India, can be a factor. Oppressive economic systems can contribute in some nations.
The process can be cumulative because children born to burned out parents continue the pattern until the entire group goes into burnout. Melting pot nations like America have an advantage in this regard. New immigrants are often the more ambitious ones that are in better health and can help rejuvenate the population. Also, nations that emphasize freedom and individual rights allow people to devise better ways of coping and maintaining their health.
Recovery
Recovery from burnout is certainly possible. It takes several years and usually requires a change in diet, improving one’s lifestyle, nutritional supplements, detoxification procedures and attention to one’s emotional and spiritual health. Addressing all these aspects is the way to assure success.
Diet
Diet is an important factor for everyone. Eat protein with every meal. Eggs, natural meats and poultry are the best sources of protein. Toasted almond butter, goat cheese and nuts are other good sources. Avoid vegetarian diets. At lunch and supper, have three cooked vegetables. Rotate your proteins and your vegetables so you don’t eat the same thing every day.
You may have complex carbohydrates, but not wheat and spelt. Some people are also sensitive to gluten found in rye, barley and oats. Excellent starches are root vegetables (turnips, parsnips, rutabaga, carrots, onion and celery root), blue corn, brown rice, quinoa and others. Organic blue corn chips are fine.
I recommend everyone avoid wheat, spelt, sugar and cow’s milk dairy products except butter. If other food allergies are present, avoid these foods for a while. Avoid Isolated soy protein as it is of poor quality and contains many anti-nutrients. Reduce all sweets, eat very little fruit and avoid all junk food. Avoid all vegetable oils except for olive oil. Avoid all juices. They are too yin, most are too sugary and they can concentrate food toxins, upset blood sugar and weaken the adrenals. Use sea salt rather than table salt. Eat regular meals of excellent quality. Make the switch to organic food, whenever possible.
Excellent are green foods like kelp, barley grass powder and various coloured vegetables. Cooking with coconut oil is excellent and helps as well with weight loss, Candida albicans infection and energy. Drink high quality water, not from the tap. Distilled or spring waters are best. So-called drinking water or reverse osmosis are often not good as the filters used to make them may be dirty. Good quality water is an excellent investment in yourSelf.
Avoid all extreme diets. Your body needs a variety of nutrients. Restriction is not a good idea. In my experience, strict vegetarians will never recover from burnout. Follow good eating habits with regular, sit-down, relaxed meals.
Nutrients and Lifestyle for Recovery
Food supplements are necessary. Kelp granules and nutritional yeast are excellent supplements for most people. They are rich sources of nutrients and kelp assists detoxification. Other nutrients that are very important for adrenal activity are vitamins A, B, C, E, pantothenic acid (Vit. B5) and adrenal glandular substance [extracts] . Calcium and magnesium are often needed. A digestive aid is always needed. I prefer pancreatin and ox bile. Zinc is frequently needed. Other nutrients may be needed depending on one’s level of toxic metals and other symptoms or deficiencies. I use hair mineral testing along with symptoms to assess these needs.
Rest and sleep are extremely important. Plan on nine hours of sleep for at least a few years. At times, more may be needed. Sleep is not a waste of time. There is no substitute for adequate rest. Also rest after meals, at mid-morning and mid-afternoon.
Gentle walking is beneficial. Vigorous exertion depletes the adrenals. Deep breathing and stretching, yoga or Tai chi do not deplete the body. Exercise to relax rather than to build muscles.
Cleaning up your environment assists health recovery. Replace toxic chemical products used around the house. Non-toxic alternatives are available for cleaning and as solvents. Pesticides and herbicides are often extremely toxic. Chemical hair dyes, shampoos and toxic skin care products need to be replaced.
Ventilate your house and purify the air if needed. Often very toxic is new construction. At work and at home avoid toxic exposure. Turn off televisions and computers when they are not in use. Sleep away from these appliances. Use cell phones only when absolutely needed.
Spend some time in the sun each day. Contrary to some propaganda, half an hour of sunshine daily will not hurt you. It is a nutrient and assists health in many ways. Sit in front of a window if it is too cold to go outside.
Detoxification
Sauna therapy in particular will greatly enhance and speed up recovery. The best type is an infrared electric light sauna. One can put together a light sauna for under $300.00. Click to read about these and how to build or purchase a kit. If you are in adrenal burnout, use the sauna daily for no more than 30 minutes. Once or twice a week is excellent for prevention.
Other detoxification procedures are also very good. Coffee enemas are excellent to assist detoxification through the liver. Brush your skin whenever you bathe with a skin brush or loofah. Colonic irrigation and herbs for the liver and kidneys can help improve elimination.
Chiropractic, massage and reflexology can help reduce stress. Many natural therapies help realign and rebalance the body. Making these part of your lifestyle will enhance recovery.
Mental, Emotional and Spiritual Health
Often it is necessary to grow out of burnout. A key to recovery from burnout is improving values and attitudes. They play an important part in every single case. Negative thinking is a bad habit that eventually tears down the body. Worry, fear and anger place added stress on the glands. Many techniques there are to help shift one’s thinking. Inspirational books and tapes, seminars and therapies there are many. There is no single answer right for everyone.
Searching for love outside of yourself depletes the body’s energy. Find the love inside yourself first, and you will find the right activities and companions. Burnout may result if you are awakening spiritually. Your present work and lifestyle may simply be inappropriate. Consider different employment or work arrangements if you suspect your stress comes from your work.
Relationships can cause a lot of stress. When one partner goes into burnout, the other often does not understand. Many couples become energetically incompatible. This has nothing to do with love or caring. It is important to listen to the wisdom of the body, and not be blinded by fixed ideas.
Many methods can help one relax and tune in to the wisdom of the self. In addition to traditional therapy, meditation and visualization exercises may be most helpful. Slowing down is often necessary if you live a busy life. It can take great courage to realize that by doing less you can accomplish more. By staying home more, you can relate better with others. By resting more, you can be more creative and productive. Change often requires overcoming guilt, shame and feelings of laziness.
For spiritual orientation, I highly recommend A Course in Mastery, A course in Miracles, Love Without End by Glenda Green, Journey Beyond Words and The Other Voice by Brent Haskell and The Real Self by this author. These and other books and tapes can help one rethink who am I, what is life about and why am I here.
The Blessing of Burnout
Adrenal burnout is always a wake up call. Some area of life is out of alignment. For a deeper exploration of self, it is often the starting point. Rather than just existing as a programmed zombie, adrenal burnout may be the beginning of real living.
Dr. Larry Wilson
Dr. Larry Wilson is a Fellow of the International College of Bionutrition and Board of Examiners and has authored many papers and books on health and nutrition. Visit his inpressive web site at http://www.drlwilson.com/
I get burnt out from writing or reading too much but it's temporary. I can recover in a few hours to a day.
It's probably because my medication releases neurotransmitters that would not fire on their own and when it happens I can't always regulate what I do with all that focus and energy.
I was really tired and often called lethargic as a child but.
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Its a very well written article, and also relevant to AS and the associated stresses in our lives.
Interesting to note the recommendation of meat, in the support adrenal function
Thank you for sharing this. It's important to bring awareness to this debilitating illness.
I wish that the cure outlined in this article wasn't so daunting (and impractical) on many levels. In order to gain access to a lot of what has been listed (such as spring water or all organic food) you need money. If you don't have money, you can't get good doctors to help. You can't buy spring water (or move to a place where you can collect it). You can't buy organic food. Even if you have the luck to live in a place with space to grow organic food, it will be hard to garden (energy issues plus depression) - catch 22. The most frustrating thing is, even if somehow you can do everything on the list, there is no possible way to avoid environmental toxins. You will be affected. As for the cutting of sugar from the diet, what's the point if you can't have one enjoyable thing? Sweet foods are way cheaper (and safer) than the psychotropic drugs regularly pushed for depression.
I wish that the cure outlined in this article wasn't so daunting (and impractical) on many levels. In order to gain access to a lot of what has been listed (such as spring water or all organic food) you need money. If you don't have money, you can't get good doctors to help. You can't buy spring water (or move to a place where you can collect it). You can't buy organic food. Even if you have the luck to live in a place with space to grow organic food, it will be hard to garden (energy issues plus depression) - catch 22. The most frustrating thing is, even if somehow you can do everything on the list, there is no possible way to avoid environmental toxins. You will be affected. As for the cutting of sugar from the diet, what's the point if you can't have one enjoyable thing? Sweet foods are way cheaper (and safer) than the psychotropic drugs regularly pushed for depression.
Its not that impractical.
Choosing to eat well saves you money if that is an issue. A bag of carrots, spuds a cabbage, some meat, aint expensive. I use hydrogen peroxide to wash the produce in the sink, and distill tap water to drink and cook with.
The hard ones to escape are electromagnetic stresses and air quality. Getting a TV out of the bedroom aint hard
Choosing not to be a gamer or watch action movies my seem impractical if thats been your life. I avoid both, but can really wind up like nothing else, when the waves are good and I am fit and healthy.
Adrenal well being is dependant on general physical, mental and spiritual health.
Surfman you are a legend! Have you seen my thread on Oxytocin? Much of what you listed is what I was getting around to describing. But your very qualified friend gave it all much needed creedence. I have lived quite an intense life and have beene xperiencing burnout the last three years. It has taken me about a year focussing on my Oxytocin levels almost exclusively , improved by much of what you listed above, to get to the point where I can see the light again.
I'm very interested to see how this thread goes. Are you interested in complementary therapies, Chinese medicine etc?
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Choosing to eat well saves you money if that is an issue. A bag of carrots, spuds a cabbage, some meat, aint expensive. I use hydrogen peroxide to wash the produce in the sink, and distill tap water to drink and cook with.
The hard ones to escape are electromagnetic stresses and air quality. Getting a TV out of the bedroom aint hard
Choosing not to be a gamer or watch action movies my seem impractical if thats been your life. I avoid both, but can really wind up like nothing else, when the waves are good and I am fit and healthy.
Adrenal well being is dependant on general physical, mental and spiritual health.
I eat natural and healthy as possible, although I can't always have organic. I use a filter for water.
Yes, electromagnetic fields are hard to escape. I personally have felt a weird pulling disorienting feeling as an electric powered light rail train passed by (past experience waiting for train). I never have TVs in the bedroom. I watch little TV in general, and the TV is far from me.
I game very little. I read quite a bit and most of the reading involves using computers. If I could I would cut down computer usage to a minimum. I need to use the computer for my primary social activity (like this forum).
I would prefer to live in a place where I can be outside most of the time and hiking. This is not my reality currently (I live in the city) and I don't see it happening anytime soon unfortunately.
I agree with the holistic approach to wellbeing. Still, from the experience of making healthy changes over the years, it's not easy. Environment (at least for me) seems to be the biggest obstacle.
I'm very interested to see how this thread goes. Are you interested in complementary therapies, Chinese medicine etc?
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I have just been into the forum and seen your posts. Sounds very similar, especially with meat being recommended as supportive for both glandular imbalances.
Yeah I live in an alternative healing hot spot of a community, ayurvada, chinese, all sorts of therapies abound!!
Years ago I had chronic fatigue in my early 20's. I'm certain that cellular medicine with homoeopathy had by far the best affect on me, though that was after many years of relying on retreat, liver herbs and therapy.
Cellular medicine has been far reaching for me, as a constitutional change has now occurred, I became more resilient to stresses. An intensive approach to pesticide accumulation was spread over a 2 year period. Before every meal I had 7-9 different vials. The practitioner measures by different meridian's residence with an ohmmeter, while introducing potential culprits into the circuit to find the offending substance, then targeting it specifically. I also received intravenous vitamin C, oxygen while in a divers decompression chamber!
Eventually I no longer had chronic fatigue, and my overall residence to stress/toxins/bad diet is markedly much stronger. I am now tougher
None of the other alternative's are designed to work at that deep level.
Last edited by Surfman on 07 Oct 2011, 5:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Holistic health is a fascinating topic in general and I hope that this isn't derailing the thread too far. I think medicine in general is way off the mark (definitely conventional but alternative as well). Too much tinkering going on. Kind of reminds me of a mechanic. This approach doesn't work well with living things. Maybe I'm simplistic, but I see it this way... The body gets it's nourishment in three ways that I'm aware of - oxygen, food, water. The body is designed to add things to the internal chemical balance via food, water, and air (I've learned recently that the genes get affected by foods eaten - if you eat rice for example, it becomes part of you). If you take a look at any of the other species, you will see that they take their remedies direct from the environment, unadulterated. When a parrot gets stomach upset, he will go and find lime chalk on the cliffs and ingest it.
I like to use food direct unprocessed (herbs sparingly - always do your research first before consuming them, respect them, and more is not always better) to deal with health issues. I have a couple of books that teach which foods have needed vitamins, minerals and their particular healing benefits.
I'm more than a bit wary of docs that want to measure, poke, prod, and inject. Had enough of that as a kid and certainly don't want to go through more (don't need to get into the myriad sensory and emotional reasons). I know this path isn't easy. It probably takes way longer to experience beneficial effects (especially for burnout/chronic fatigue syndrome), but I feel it's safest (and least expensive). Hope this helps.
Yes Ayurveda is my system of choice. You are very fortunate to live in such a place. Is it Colorado? Is Chinese medicine your preferred system of medicine Surfman?
"Holistic health is a fascinating topic in general and I hope that this isn't derailing the thread too far. I think medicine in general is way off the mark (definitely conventional but alternative as well)."
Really? Can you elaborate?
"Kind of reminds me of a mechanic."
I am quite new to "alternative" forms of medicine so am still learning and perhaps not able to be so objective but I personally feel it is mainstream medicine which reduces the human body to it's component parts and attempts to seperate the symptom and it's associated part and apply a pharmaceutical drug, with little or no consideration for the effects on other parts of the body.
"This approach doesn't work well with living things."
I agree wholeheartedly.
"I see it this way... The body gets it's nourishment in three ways that I'm aware of - oxygen, food, water. The body is designed to add things to the internal chemical balance via food, water, and air (I've learned recently that the genes get affected by foods eaten - if you eat rice for example, it becomes part of you)."
I agree. We don't materialise out of thin air. The matter in and of our bodies are made of something. We are not exclusively human. We do not eat humans. The matter has to come from somewhere.
"If you take a look at any of the other species, you will see that they take their remedies direct from the environment, unadulterated."
Organic.
"I like to use food direct unprocessed (herbs sparingly - always do your research first before consuming them, respect them, and more is not always better) to deal with health issues."
Is that not medicine? Isn't that what Chinese practitioners administer? I know herbs are a central aspect of Ayurveda.
"I know this path isn't easy. It probably takes way longer to experience beneficial effects (especially for burnout/chronic fatigue syndrome), but I feel it's safest (and least expensive)."
By definition, "Wholism" or "holism" means: "In primary care the term "holistic," has been used to describe approaches that take into account social considerations and other intuitive judgements. The term holism, and so called approaches, appear in psychosomatic medicine in the 1970s, when they were considered one possible way to conceptualize psychosomatic phenomena. Instead of charting one-way causal links from psyche to soma, or vice-versa, it aimed at a systemic model, where multiple biological, psychological and social factors were seen as interlinked".
What you describe is very important and certainly very effective for your specific set of psychosomatic symptoms. It appears there are innumerable factors leading to ASD's so it makes sense that there is going to be many opportunities for healing. Isn't that great!
I share your ethic of simplicity. That is what I am motivated by. I am still learning and have settled on what is one aspect of the human system which I can see has been depleted in my own body/mind. While I was learning more about Oxytocin I was concurrently studying ways to increase it naturally and and simply and cheaply as possible. I am a great advocate for "less is more" also. This idea is not widely supported in the Western cultures but we are getting there with practices like meditation, yoga, downsizing, treechanging and people opting to save their pennies these days.
Sorry I hope I don't write too much. I think I can overload people with the written word just as I get overwhelmed by the spoken word.
Basically, it is my current purpose in life to learn and share widely accessible ways of improving our health.
_________________
"If you can, help others. If you cannot, do no harm".
The Dalai Lama
Really? Can you elaborate?
I will attempt to do so best I can. Caveat - I'm not a doctor, I'm interested in nutrition, health, and nature in general.
I've seen and heard of some weird things happening in the name of alternative medicine such as chelation therapy, iridology, reflexology, acupuncture, moxibustion, etc. Now this seems to be a similar "parts" approach that conventional medicine takes, but now it's okay because it's "natural." Instead of eating a whole orange to obtain vitamin C, some holistic practitioners will recommend vitamin supplements (most vitamin supplements are synthetic and even if you can find a whole food supplement, I don't think it's necessarily good to consume large quantities of a concentrated food like green algae for example to fix things). I wonder how separating a specific vitamin or mineral from food itself and then consuming large amounts is going to be beneficial. Would seem to put stress on the liver. Also, the body if given the proper conditions heals itself. I think all the hands on stuff I mentioned (like the acupuncture) is largely unnecessary. I will acknowledge that there is probably a benefit for some (falls into placebo effect). Also, some people will respond positively to another person taking time to give attention to them and their health concerns.
I support most therapies, few are bunk, most have healing validity and the difference is often just geographic.
The main issue is that lay people often take the wrong supplement, herbs or therapy, and the diet can usually be much better anyway.
I have a great respect for correct intensive therapies like fasting/cleansing, and certain practitioners are definitely worth the money, the Chinese or Indians, Mexicans or Germans, will take your money, just like any other therapist too!!
So the patient must choose wisely.
The key is to identifying weaknesses correctly, and taking the appropriate course of action.
Removing highly toxic residues from the cells of your body is always a good start, as well as inherited diseases that 'ride' on the DNA at birth, things like your grandmother used to have....
Currently, the Naturopath is like a GP or family doctor, and recommends therapies and supplements. However, this recommending is seldom as comprehensive as is ideal.
Traditional healers lived closely with their patients, over many years, and had much more of an intimate understanding of their patient
This again highlights the need for a patient to remain active in their own healing, and what is going on with their body and mind.
The rub is that a big chunk of living needs to be put aside for health concerns, in the modern world of polluted bodies
Twolf, like you I am just an ordinary person interested and pro-active in my own health. I can only speak of my own experience with any true authority. I have experienced varying degrees of success with the first list of therapies, with the exception of chelation.
As for synthetic supplements, I have no time for them whatsoever. There are however a few on the Australian market which are derivatives of a combination of plants. No artificial additives. I tend to have more faith, though not blind faith, in liquids.
Surfman I'm with you on the concept of fasting and cleansing. It makes sense to me to begin to build oneself up again as a healthier individual AFTER cleansing ones body/mind of toxins and accumulated nasties.
And I think you raised a very important point that I would not have considered that the ancient systems would have been practised under the most ideal circumstances with people placing much more emphasis on health and prevention than applying a bandaid when stress on the body gets to the stage of illness.
And agreed that we should all take more interest in our own health. That is the beauty of the "old ways" yes?
_________________
"If you can, help others. If you cannot, do no harm".
The Dalai Lama
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