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September 2015 | South Jersey Edition | nasouthjersey.com FREE Ageless Mind, Body and Spirit Forever Young the Natural Way Yoga as Medicine Research Proves Health Benefits Spreading the Love Kula For Karma Brings Hope and Healing Making an Impact A Small Farm with a Big Mission HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET feel good • live simply • laugh more

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Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015: Yoga as Medicine

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Page 1: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

September 2015 | South Jersey Edition | nasouthjersey.com

FREE

Ageless Mind, Body

and SpiritForever Young the

Natural WayYoga as MedicineResearch Proves Health Benefits Spreading

the LoveKula For Karma

Brings Hope and Healing

Making an ImpactA Small Farm

with a Big Mission

H E A L T H Y L I V I N G H E A L T H Y P L A N E T

feel good • live simply • laugh more

Page 2: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

2 South Jersey nasouthjersey.com

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Page 3: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

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5 newsbriefs

10 healthbriefs

12 globalbriefs

15 ecotip

20 zenspiration

21 farmersmarkets

30 fitbody

32 calendar

37 classifieds

38 yogaguide

39 resourceguide

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HOW TO ADVERTISE To advertise with Natural Awakenings or request a media kit, please contact us at 267-664-3236 or email [email protected]. Deadline for ads: the 10th of the month.

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contents

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Natural Awakenings is your guide to a healthier, more balanced life. In each issue readers find cutting-edge information on natural health, nutrition, fitness, personal growth, green living, creative expression and the products and services that support a healthy lifestyle.

16 AGELESS BEING Staying Vibrant in Mind, Body and Spirit by Kathleen Barnes

22 MAKING AN IMPACT A Small Farm With A Big Mission by Kate Morgan

24 SURF TO TURF U.S. Farmed Seafood That’s Safe and Sustainable by Judith Fertig

26 SPREADING THE LOVE Kula For Karma Brings Compassion, Hope and Healing To Populations In Need by Susan Bloom

28 GREENING AMERICA’S GAMES Major Leagues Sport More Sustainable Stadiums by Avery Mack

30 YOGA ENTERS THE MEDICAL MAINSTREAM Research Proves its Health Benefits by Meredith Montgomery

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Assistant EditorsLinda Sechrist

S. Alison Chabonais

Design & ProductionKent Constable

Stephen Blancett

Multi-Market Advertising239-449-8309

© 2015 by Natural Awakenings. All rights reserved. Although some parts of this publication may be reproduced and reprinted, we require that prior permission be obtained in writing.

Natural Awakenings is a free publication distributed locally and is supported by our adver-tisers. It is available in selected stores, health and education centers, healing centers, public libraries and wherever free publications are generally seen. Please call to find a location near you or if you would like copies placed at your business.

We do not necessarily endorse the views expressed in the articles and advertisements, nor are we responsible for the products and services advertised. We welcome your ideas, articles and feedback.

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Natural Awakenings is printed on recycled newsprint with soy- based ink.

contact us

letterfrompublisher

Publisher/EditorMichelle Vacanti1351 Rt 38W B3

Hainesport, NJ 08036ph 267.664.3236fax 866.295.6713

[email protected]

September is National Yoga Month and as a yoga practitioner and in-structor I’ve taken great pleasure in

assembling this issue for you encompassing a variety of yoga-related topics. Many of the briefs originated from individuals that have inspired me in my yoga journey.

With this issue we are also introducing a new Yoga Resource Guide be-cause I am passionate about supporting local studios that aspire to uphold the tradition of yoga as it was intended. Many readers may have heard of or even experienced some of the evidence-based benefits of yoga that are highlighted in Meredith Montgomery’s article “Yoga Enters the Medical Mainstream.” Still, the list is staggering. Physical and emotional balance, strength, flexibility and stress reduction only scratch the surface.

I am a living testament to yoga’s diverse good effects. I first found my-self drawn to the practice in the midst of a traumatic life event. In starting out, I treated yoga as another element in my workout routine, aiming to reap celebrated physical benefits such as endorphin release, tone, flexibility and strength. Yes, I increased my overall fitness level, but as my practice became more regular, I also noticed subtle changes gradually emerging that transcend-ed the physical realm.

I began responding differently to external events that would have caused anxiety in the past. To my amazement, I was instead able to pause, breathe and “be”. I owned a sense of centered calmness that could be accessed in the midst of emotional storms. What followed for me was a sense of deeper con-nection to what I would term Source and others might refer to as God, Yaweh, Allah or Universe.

It seems that sages through the millennia have been onto something time-less. I frequently remind my students that integrating yoga postures, mindful-ness and controlled breathing works on an ethereal level, whether you accept the yogic philosophy or not. It’s why individuals may suddenly find their emotions welling up in class while holding a deep hip opener or inversion. Emotional blocks are deeply stored in our cellular makeup and the practice has a way of bringing them to surface if we allow the experience.

I also often share with those that hold misconceptions about yoga that it is not a religion. Contrarily, I have found it can coexist, complement and even enhance existing faith. The combination of mindful movement and conscious breath work with openness to a set of philosophical principles can transform one’s individual life experience.

I encourage you to remain steadfast in your yoga practice if you are already on this path, or try a class if you’ve always been curious about yoga. My studio, Sol Yoga, is discreetly located in the back of Vacanti Jiu Jitsu & Mixed Martial Arts Fitness School, in Hainesport. It’s not a trendy studio, just a tranquil, tucked away place where people can be real and practical in discov-ering how this approach can help access pathways to inner calm. I invite you to come in and explore the possibilities with us, or visit the new guide (in the back of the magazine) to find a local yoga center.

In peace,

Michelle Vacanti, Publisher

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newsbriefsSaving Seeds Presentation in Cherry Hill

The Horticultural Society of South Jersey will host Saving Seeds: From Your Garden to the Global Vault, a free

presentation by Jeff Quattrone, at 7 p.m., September 8, at the Carmen Tilelli Community Center, in Cherry Hill.

An artist by accident and a seed advocate by choice, Quattrone uses his creativity

and decades of communications and marketing experience to discuss the state of seeds and encourage others to join the conversation.

Quattrone has established two seed libraries and is working on a third. He is a community seed organizer with Seed Savers Exchange and Seed Matter’s Community Seed Resource Program and has done work for Rodale Institute’s Organic Allentown program and Slow Food’s National School Garden program.

Location: 820 Mercer St., Cherry Hill. For more information, call Gwenne Baile at 856-816-8505 or visit hssj.org.

Audubon Studio Offers Ayurvedic Yoga Teacher Training Program

Live in Joy Yoga, in Audubon, will offer a 200-hour Ayurve-dic yoga certification program, beginning next month, for

practitioners interested in teaching or those that would like to deepen their practice.

Allowing students to delve deeply into living and experienc-ing the many layers of yoga and Ayurveda, this program provides an intense level of understanding of the foundational teachings. The natural healing system of yoga that dates back more than 5,000 years in India, Ayurveda deals integrally with bringing balance and wholeness to the body, mind and spirit.

Through this interactive and experiential course, stu-dents will learn to practically integrate the fundamental essence of yoga and Ayurveda into a daily lifestyle, as well as how to effectively lead group classes and private sessions. The course covers the fundamentals of Ayurveda, teacher techniques, anatomy, physiology, Sanskrit, Vedic philosophy, lifestyle, mantra, meditation and more.

Cost: $2,875, $300 discount available if registered by Sept. 5. Location: 118 W. Merchant St., Audubon. For more information, call 856-546-1006 or visit LiveInJoyYoga.com.

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Page 6: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

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newsbriefs Prenatal Yoga at Yoga Center of Medford

The Yoga Center of Medford is offering prenatal yoga classes for expectant moms from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.,

Sundays. Taught by Prenatal Yoga Specialist Karin Otto, the classes offer a multifaceted approach to exercise that encour-ages stretching, mental centering and prana (focused breath work), all helpful tools for pregnant women and their babies.

Studies suggest that prenatal yoga can improve sleep, relax the mind, body and spirit. The practice also reduces stress and anx-iety; increases strength, flexibility and endurance of the muscles needed for childbirth; decreases lower back pain, nausea, head-aches and shortness of breath; and provides a sense of community, introducing women in the same phase of life to each other.

“I love honoring the space of mother and growing baby through all the stages and helping women prepare their bodies and minds for the journey of labor and motherhood,” explains Otto. “It’s an opportu-nity for moms to bond deeply with their baby and take care of themselves in the quiet, conscious space of a yoga practice. Moms share their worries, fears, joys and celebration with each other—it’s the gift of prenatal yoga.”

Location: 417 Stokes Rd., 2nd Flr., Medford. For more information or to register (required), call 606-654-9400 or email [email protected].

Still Point Yoga Center Offers Reflexology Course

Still Point Yoga Center, in Laurel Springs, will offer a 110-hour course of study in reflexology beginning in

October. Taught by Doctor of Educa-tion Corinne Corcoran, a member of the National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork (NCBTMB), and Licensed Massage Therapist Liz Jordan, also a member

of NCBTMB, the course will provide the foundation of practice required for reflexology professionals today.

The CORE curriculum used in the program includes best business practices, anatomy and physiology, aromatherapy and spa treatments for reflexology, as well as three levels of theory and practice in reflexology. Supervised clinical practice will take place throughout the program and graduates will be eligible to sit for The American Reflexology Certification Board Exam.

A holistic modality that works specific points in the hands and feet that correlate to every system, organ, gland and structure of the body, reflexology has been practiced for hundreds of years in other countries. The benefits of the modality include stress reduction, improved circulation and relief from chronic and acute conditions.

Location: 1 Kelly Drivers Ln., Laurel Springs. For more information, visit StillPointYogaCenter.com.

Yoga by Robin Offers Yoga in the Workplace

Yoga By Robin, in Marlton, is offering an At Your Place yoga program that brings certified yoga instructors

into the workplace, helping to improve productivity and worker satisfaction.

“Our staff of expe-rienced registered yoga instructors has developed a customized program that can be brought directly to your place of business

before, during or after work,” explains Registered Yoga Teacher and studio owner Robin Soll.

“A feeling of joyful aliveness begins to permeate the workplace while employee relations improve and flour-ish,” says Soll of the program. “Some of the immediate benefits to the employees are better sustained concentra-tion throughout the day, improved physical comfort on the job, deeper and more restful sleep patterns, increased immunity to contagious infections and decreased symp-toms of anxiety and depress.”

For more information, call 609-440-0824 or email [email protected].

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Page 7: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

7natural awakenings September 2015

The Sanctuary for Yoga Expanding

The Sanctuary for Yoga, in Medford, is set to expand with the addition of a second studio in October. The new

space will also include an addition-al room for Reiki Master, Registered Yoga Teacher and founder Tricia Heiser to use for Reiki sessions and private consultations.

“We are excited to be able to add specialty classes to the schedule, such as specific classes for golfers, other athletes and Mommy & Me classes,” says Heiser. “We are also looking forward to hosting and pre-senting workshops to help people find their inner strength, wisdom and reduce stress.” Additional offerings include channeling sessions, workshops to increase intuition, medita-tions, sound healing, conscious parenting and more.

The Sanctuary for Yoga strives to empower students with tools to draw upon inner wisdom and strength through the regular practice of yoga, workshops and Reiki. “We are looking forward to the expansion as it will allow us more opportunity to improve the overall health and well being of our students,” explains Heiser.

Location: 43 S. Main St., Medford. For more information, call 609-953-7800 or visit TheSanctuaryForYoga.com.

The Animal Welfare Association Launches Planned Giving Campaign

The Animal Welfare Association (AWA) of Voorhees is launching a planned giving campaign to help their an-

imals. Donations can be given in many forms, including wills, annuities

and trusts; life insurance and retirement plans; and gifts of appreciated property.

Executive Director Maya Richmond says, “Supporting AWA through planned giving allows us to effectively carry on our mis-sion of saving the lives of our community’s animals for years to come. Many people choose planned giving because it provides a financial advantage and allows people to make a larger gift than they otherwise could and it is easier than you think.”

“When I walk around our property, I am so grateful for the generosity of donors like Robert K.,” continues Richmond. “He worked as a night watchman for RCA and lived a simple life. He had a signifi-cant pension, however, and left part of it to AWA. Because of Robert’s compassion for animals, we were able to address our outdated clinic and build a new and larger low-cost spay/neuter and wellness clinic, which will help our community’s animals for generations to come.”

To make a planned gift, call Richmond at 856-424-2288, ext. 109 or visit awanj.org/ways-to-help/planned.

Honoring and Empowering the Divine Feminine through Thermography

Thermographic Diagnostic Imaging will present Honoring and Empowering the Divine Feminine with the Use of

Thermography, a free lecture at the Mind Body Spirit Expo by Dr. Philip Getson, at 11 a.m., October 4, in room seven of the Greater Philadel-phia Expo Center, in Oaks.

“Ladies, you have a choice and now is the time to use your individual and collective voice,” says Board-Certi-

fied Thermographic Technician Liesha Getson. “Join us for this educational and informative talk and be a part of the quest to bring about changes in the current medical paradigm.”

Thermography utilizes infrared imaging to look at the breast from a physiological standpoint and the potential exists for early intervention of a proactive nature to facili-tate the best possible outcome. A completely non-invasive procedure with no compression or radiation, thermography allows women to maintain their dignity and empowers them on every level: mind, body and spirit.

Location: 100 Station Ave., Oaks. For more information, call TDI at 856-596-5834, email [email protected], visit tdinj.com or visit MindBodySpiritExpo.com.

Annual Jersey Fresh Fundraising Dinner at Old Pine Farm

Old Pine Farm Natural Lands Trust, in Deptford, will host its annual Jersey Fresh Fundraising Dinner and

the first pawpaw tasting September 13.

Festivities begin with a presentation about how to grow North America’s largest native fruit and free seeds at 3 p.m., fol-lowed by live ole timey and Irish music from 4 p.m. until sunset. Guest speaker Walt Whitman will be interpreted by Rocky Wilson at 6:30 p.m., charming guests with a full-length performance about the Good Grey Poet.

Old Pine Farm is a nonprofit group that provides stew-ardship for more than 50 acres located mostly on Big Tim-ber Creek, in Deptford Township. The organization is in the process of acquiring the 300-year-old house that will become an organic gardening and environmental center.

Donations accepted. Location: 340 Pine Ave., Deptford. For more information or to RSVP (requested), call Sally at 856-889-4160 or visit OldPineFarm.org.

Dr. Philip Getson

Page 8: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

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Free Hands-On Fall Craft Eventin Cherry Hill

Sustainable Cherry Hill’s Art Task Force will kick off the autumn season with a free hands-on fall craft event from

10 a.m. to noon, September 26, at Croft Farm Barn, in Cherry Hill.

Attendees will use upcycled waste materials to create a T-shirt bag and a beautiful home decorative item.

Location: 100 Bortons Mill Rd., Cherry Hill. For more information, visit SustainableCherryHill.org.

Kids Jiu Jitsu Program in Hainesport

Vacanti Jiu Jitsu School, in Hainesport, is now offering a Kids Brazilian Jiu Jitsu class from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.,

Tuesdays and Thursdays. The class will focus on

anti-bullying behavior and education, as well as tech-niques students can use to defuse aggressive behavior. Participants in the class will expel a great deal of energy during these exercise-inten-sive classes.

A Team Balance affiliate, Vacanti Jiu Jitsu is run by Pat Vacanti, a Black Belt under Phil Migliarese and Relson Gracie. The school opened in 2008 and features authentic Gracie, Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, Mixed Martial Arts Fitness and Yoga classes.

Location: 1351 Rte. 38, Hainesport. For more information, email [email protected] or visit VacantiJiuJitsu.com.

newsbriefs

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Page 9: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

9natural awakenings September 2015

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healthbriefs

Yoga Boosts Brain Gray MatterResearch from the Brain Imaging and Analysis Center at

Duke University Medical Center has found that a reg-ular hatha yoga practice increases gray matter within the brain, reversing the loss found among those with chronic pain. The researchers tested seven hatha yoga meditation practitioners and seven non-practitioners. Each of the sub-jects underwent tests for depression, anxiety, moods and cognition levels, along with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans. The scientists found that the brains of the yoga medita-

tion practitioners contained significantly greater gray matter by volume in key brain regions, including the frontal, temporal and occipital cortices, plus the cerebellum and the hippocampus, compared to the non-yoga subjects. The yoga meditation practitioners also had more gray area in the prefrontal cortex regions that are involved in decision-making, reward/consequence, con-trol and coordination.

Yoga Helps the Body Cope with CancerIndividuals with a cancer diagnosis face stress in

many forms. The emotional stress of the news, the physical stress of the disease on the body and the pressure of managing personal relationships during this time can put the body’s sympathet-ic nervous system (SNS) into overdrive, causing difficulty with sleep, digestion, elimination, growth, repair and cell reproduction. Yoga acts as a counterbalance to this stress, allowing individuals to relax, breathe, meditate and clear the mind.

Practicing yoga alters the chemistry of the body. The blood pressure and heart rate go down and students feel more relaxed, clear-headed and self-as-sured. These are all hormonal changes triggered by the increase in the produc-tion of endorphins, dopamine and serotonin that yoga encourages. Endorphins help reduce anxiety and tension and serve as natural painkillers. Dopamine controls blood pressure, insulin production and neural functioning and serotonin helps with sleep.

Yoga also helps to lower cortisol levels in the body, helping relieve inflam-mation. The gentle pressure on the bones that yoga provides also helps the body combat osteoporosis, a common problem for cancer patients and survivors.

In addition to stress reduction, yoga and exercise help to tone to the mus-cles and develop the strength needed for functional movement when disease, surgery or treatment creates an imbalance. The energy of the asanas and the improved balance provides a sense of accomplishment that stays with yoga prac-titioners long after they leave the mat.

When properly done, a yoga practice can help promote a positive outcome and provide a better quality of life.

Source: Lin Goldkrantz, Certified Cancer Exercise Specialist, registered yoga teacher, certified personal trainer and holistic nutritionist. For more information, email [email protected].

Strengthen the Recovery Process with Yoga and MeditationTo say that the journey of recovery can

be challenging is an understatement. Staying clean and/or sober while learning to deal with emotions, relationships and life situations, which in some cases have been avoided for years or even decades, can be a harrowing process. Yoga and meditation can help individuals in recovery successful-ly navigate these new experiences.

Andrew J. Assini, licensed addictions counselor, recovering addict and founder of Samma Vayama Well-Being, is familiar with the positive benefits that yoga and medi-tation can have for recovering individuals. “Especially in early recovery, the mind is going a thousand miles an hour in a million different directions. Even a little bit of yoga or meditation can help bring some peace and quiet to a very challenging and chaotic time,” he explains.

Research shows that yoga and medita-tion are associated with a wide variety of positive outcomes, including decision mak-ing, impulse control, decreased reactivity—all issues at the heart of addictive behavior.

“If a recovering person can do some-thing that gives them just an extra second to pause and think before acting, that second could make all the difference,” shares Assini. “We know now through research and brain science that practicing yoga and meditation can help develop self-awareness and strengthen areas of the brain associated with slowing or stopping unconscious be-havior patterns. This is crucial for someone travelling the road to recovery.”

For more information about Assini or Samma Vayama Well-Being, visit svwb.org.

Page 11: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

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GREEN TEA, APPLES AND COCOA PROTECT AGAINST CANCER AND ARTERIAL PLAQUEResearch published in Molecular Nutrition & Food Research

has found a new mechanism that may provide the key to why some foods are particularly healthy. The researchers found that epigallocatechin gallates, a class of polyphenols contained in green tea, apples, cocoa and other herbs and foods, blocks vascu-lar endothelial growth factor, or VEGF, which is implicated in the buildup of plaque in the arteries, as well as cancer growth. Blocking VEGF helps prevent angiogenesis—when tumors form new blood vessels that help them grow. The researchers, from the Institute of Food Research, in Norwich, in the Unit-ed Kingdom, tested the polyphenols, as well as human cells, in the laboratory.

Plants Absorb Second-Hand Smoke, TooNon-smokers

aren’t the only ones to suffer from passive smoking. New research from the Technical University of Braunschweig, in Germany, has determined that plants can also absorb nicotine from cigarette smoke, soil and pesticide sprays. The data showed that many plants yield higher quantities of nicotine residues from periods when pesticides used contained nicotine. Plants that were mulched with tobacco leaves also absorbed nicotine into their leaves. “Tremendously elevated nicotine levels were detected after fumigation with cigarette smoke,” says Dirk Selmar, lead author of the study.

Daily Exercise Adds Five Years to LifeResearch published this year in the British Journal

of Sports Medicine has determined that just 30 minutes of exercise, six days a week, can result in a reduced risk of early death by 40 percent, regardless of the intensity of the exercise. The researchers followed nearly 15,000 men born between 1923 and 1932. The men’s exercise and sedentary levels were measured along with the number of deaths that occurred during two 12-year study periods. In the second 12-year period, the researchers followed almost 6,000 of the surviving men. The research-ers compared those men that were sedentary with those that exercised either mod-erately or intensely and found that moderate to intense exercise increased their average lifespan by five years. This improvement was comparable to the difference between smoking and non-smoking, according to the researchers. The data comes from the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, in Oslo. The scientists’ finding confirms that public health practices for elderly men should include efforts to increase physical activity, along with efforts to reduce smoking.

Muscle-Building Supplements Linked to Testicular Cancer

New research published in the British Journal of Cancer has found that taking muscle-building

supplements can increase the risk of testicular cancer by up to 65 percent. The study monitored 356 cancer patients and 513 control subjects, all from Connecti-cut and Massachusetts. The case-control study was conducted by re-searchers from the Yale School of Public Health and

the Harvard School of Public Health, and tested for testicular germ cell cancer. About 90 percent of testicular cancers originate from germ cells. The researchers found the subjects that used multiple musclebuilding supple-ments and those that began using the supplements when they were younger had the greatest risk of developing cancer.

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Page 12: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

12 South Jersey nasouthjersey.com

globalbriefsNews and resources to inspire concerned citizens to work together in building a healthier, stronger society that benefits all.

Bottomless WellDe-Salting Water Could Help Drought-Stricken AreasA team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Jain Irrigation Systems has devised a method of turn-ing brackish water into drinking water using renewable energy. This solar-powered machine is able to pull salt out of water and disinfect it with ultraviolet rays, making it suitable for both irrigation and drinking. Electrodialysis works by passing a stream of water between two electrodes with opposite charges. Because the salt dissolved in water consists of positive and negative ions, the electrodes pull the ions out of the water, leaving fresher water at the center of the flow. A series of membranes separate the freshwater stream from increasingly salty ones. The photovoltaic-powered electrodialysis reversal system recently won the top $140,000 Desal Prize from the U.S. Department of Interior. “This technology has the potential to bring agriculture to vast barren lands using brackish water,” says Richard Restuccia, Jain’s vice president of landscape solutions. The prize was developed to supply catalytic funding to capture and support innovative ideas and new technolo-gies that could have a significant impact on resolving global water demand. Among 13 desalination projects under consideration along the California coast, the Carlsbad Desalination Project will be the largest in the Western Hemisphere once it is completed in the fall.

Source: EcoWatch.com

Breeze PleaseA Third of U.S. Power May Be Wind by 2050According to a new study by the U.S. Energy Department (Tinyurl.com/EnergyDepartmentWindReport), wind power could provide more than a third of the nation’s electricity in a few decades, while posting a net savings in energy costs. Undersecretary for Technology and Energy Lynn Orr, Ph.D., states, “With continued commitment, wind can be the cheapest, cleanest option in all 50 states by 2050.”

Wind power has tripled since 2000, and now supplies nearly 5 percent of the country’s electric power. The report says that it could dramatically reduce air pollution and go a long way toward meeting the country’s goals of slowing climate change. Meanwhile, Spanish engineers have invented the Vortex Bladeless wind turbine, a hollow straw that sticks up 40 feet from the ground and vibrates when the wind passes through it. Instead of using a propeller, the Vortex takes advantage of an aerodynamic effect called vorticity. The result is a turbine that’s 50 percent less expensive than a bladed model and is nearly silent. It’s not as efficient as conven-tional turbines, but more of them can be placed in the same amount of space, for a net gain of 40 percent in efficiency. Plus, with no gears or moving parts, mainte-nance is much easier and they are safer for bats and birds.

Source: Wired

Embracing InvasivesRethinking the Balance of NatureEnvironmental journalist Fred Pearce, author of the new book, The New Wild: Why Invasive Species Will Be Nature’s Salvation, traveled across six continents and ecosystems from remote Pacific islands to the Unit-ed Kingdom and the Great Lakes to reveal some outdated scientific ideas about invasive species and the balance of nature. Pearce argues that mainstream environmentalists are correct that we need a rewilding of the Earth, but they are wrong if they believe it can be achieved by reengineering eco-systems. He thinks that humans have changed the planet too much, and nature never goes backward. But a growing group of scientists is taking a fresh look at how species interact in the wild. According to these new ecologists, we should applaud the dynamism of alien species and the new ecosystems they create. In an era of climate change and widespread ecological damage, it’s crucial that we find ways to help nature regenerate. Embracing this new ecology, Pearce proposes, is our best chance, maintaining, “To be an environmentalist in the 21st century means celebrating nature’s wildness and capacity for change.”

Source: Earthtalk.org

You can’t help getting older, but you don’t have to get old.

~George Burns

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Secular SocializationToday’s Young Adults Are the Least Religious Ever

Researchers led by San Diego State University Psy-chology Professor Jean M. Twenge, Ph.D., found that millennials are the least religious generation of the last six decades, and possibly in the nation’s history. They analyzed data from 11.2 million respondents from four nationally representative surveys of U.S. adoles-cents ages 13 to 18 taken between 1966 and 2014.

Results published in the journal PLOS One conclude that recent adolescents are less likely to say that religion is important in their lives, report less approval of religious organizations and find themselves feeling less spiritual and spending less time praying or meditating. “Unlike previous studies, ours is able to show that mil-lennials’ lower religious involvement is due to cultural change, not to their being young and unsettled,” says Twenge, who is also the author of Generation Me. “Millennial adolescents are less religious than Boomers and GenXers were at the same ages,” she notes. “We also looked at younger ages than the previous studies. More of today’s adolescents are abandoning religion before they reach adulthood, with an increasing number not raised with religion at all.”

Source: San Diego State University

Fossil FreeChina Tests Hydrogen-Powered Mass TransitChina has started testing the world’s first hydrogen-powered tram. Although hydrogen fuel cells have been around for a while and are currently being used and tested in a variety of vehicles, including buses, the country is the first to master the technology for trams.

Hydrogen is extremely abundant and can be extracted from a variety of sources, both renewable and non-renew-able. Hydrogen-fuel cell vehicles produce zero emissions, only water. One tank lasts for about 60 miles and takes three

minutes to refuel.

See the vehicle in action at Tinyurl.com/ChineseHydrogenTrain.

Spring CleaningConnecticut Initiates Mattress RecyclingConnecticut has introduced the nation’s first-ever mattress recycling program to get old beds off the curb and into the renewable waste stream via Park City Green, a cavernous warehouse in Bridgeport where mattresses go to die and get reborn. One of only two mat-tress recycling facilities in the state, it employs workers that manually break down bedding parts, separating the materials into giant piles of foam, mounds of cotton and tall stacks of metal springs. All this gets shipped off to junk dealers to be recycled and reclaimed for later use in the metal industry or as backing for carpets. The city had been paying hundreds of thousands of dollars per year to pick up mattresses on trash day and break them apart for disposal, but that figure is expected to drop to zero and create jobs at the same time. Connecticut’s program is voluntary, so municipalities don’t have to participate. But because it’s already being paid for by consumers and the mattress industry, state officials expect the program to grow. Already, more than 60 Connecticut communities are participating.

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globalbriefs

Supreme HopeOnline Summer of Peace Program Continues

Designed by The Shift Network as “the largest virtual peace event on the planet,” a free, online three-month global movement program, The Summer of Peace, continues through September 21. It promises to inspire participants by teaching ways to heal conflicts within oneself, in relationships and in the world using peace, instead of conflict, as the new baseline. Featured thought leaders include Deepak Chopra, Ervin Laszlo, Grandmother Agnes

Pilgrim, Karen Armstrong, Lisa Garr and Congressman Tim Ryan, plus messages from the Dalai Lama, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Jane Goodall. Programs include The Subtle Activism Summit: Inner Dimensions of Peace Building from September 8 to 10, and 11 Ways to Transform Your World from September 11 to 21, concluding on the United Nations International Day of Peace. “You’ll discover more personal ease, joy and well-being with techniques to connect more profoundly to the deep peace within yourself and the latest in the science of compassion,” says Garr, host of The Aware Show and Being Aware and bestselling author of Becoming Aware. She also attests that participants will find the best practices for citizen engagement and conscious activism to help accelerate the shift to a world of peace.

For more information or to register, visit SummerOfPeace.net.

United in UtahParliament of World Religions GatheringThe 2015 Parliament of the World’s Religions, regarded by organizers as the oldest, largest and most inclusive gathering of all faiths and traditions, will be held from October 15 to 19 at the Salt Palace Convention Center, in Salt Lake City. International spiritual leaders will come together to share wisdom and best practices in dealing with critical global issues, especially climate change and care for creation; income inequality and wasteful consumption; and war, vio-lence and hate speech. Leading speakers include the Dalai Lama, Karen Armstrong, Tariq Ramadan, Mairead Maguire, Jim Wallis, Oscar Arias Sanchez, Eboo Patel, Vandana Shiva and Michael Bernard Beckwith. Attendees can also participate in a Women’s Assembly and Program Initiative; training in dialogue, interfaith activism, fundraising and organizing; musical performances and film showings; breakout sessions; and net-working opportunities.

Cost: $200 to $550, based on date of registration. Discounts and housing options are available for families, groups, organizations and students, along with schol-arship and sponsorship opportunities. For more information or to register, email [email protected] or visit ParliamentOfReligions.org.

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Happy Eco-Birthday!Parties that Celebrate Life and the PlanetThe most memorable birthday parties make us feel good, and going green makes them feel even better.

YoungstersLocation matters. Consider a park or beach as a setting to promote exercise and time outdoors. Chil-dren’s museums and wildlife centers frequently host kids’ birthday parties. Other “experience parties”, as suggested at Tinyurl.com/GreenChildPartyTips, include

pottery making, tie-dyeing organic T-shirts or touring a local fire station.

Forgo traditional trappings. Rather than using paper materials, consider decorating an old sheet as a festive tablecloth, utilize recycled computer or other repurposed paper to print custom placemats, and personalize cloth napkins found at estate sales or made from old clothes with guest names written with fabric pens for a unique and reusable party favor. Find details on these and other tips at Tinyurl.com/PBS-Green-Party-Ideas.

Sustainable gifts. PlanToys makes its toys from rubberwood, a sustainable byproduct of latex harvesting, and non-formaldehyde glues. For preteens, gift a subscription to the National Wildlife Federation’s Ranger Rick magazine or a birdhouse or bird feeder.

Make a maestro. Presenting a gift card for introductory music lessons can launch a young musician. A recent study by the National Association for Music Education notes that early exposure to music develops language, reading, math and memo-rization skills; improves hand-eye coordination; builds confidence and a sense of achievement; and promotes social interaction and teamwork when performing with others. Or, give tickets to introduce a child to classical, pops or jazz concert-going.

AdultsHealthy drinks and eats. Serve or bring organic, locally made beer and wine and pure fruit juices. Have the party catered by a health food restaurant or store, or order organic takeout.

Do-good gifts. Antique and consignment shops are filled with items rich in culture and history. Museums, art centers and specialty gift shops offer fair trade creations handmade by overseas workers that all purchases assist.

Family ties. Work beforehand with a partner or family member of the birthday celebrant to showcase family photos at the party and spark sharing of nostalgic stories among guests.

ecotip

Dark ActProtect Truth and Transparency in GMO Food LabelingOn July 23, the U.S. House of Representa-tives voted in favor of H.R. 1599, known by supporters as the Safe and Accurate Food Labeling Act and dubbed the “Deny Ameri-cans the Right to Know (DARK) Act” by opponents. The bill removes the require-ment that foods containing geneti-cally modified organisms (GMO) be labeled as such, preventing consum-ers from the right to know whether or not the foods they purchase contain potentially harmful ingredients. If it becomes law, H.R. 1599 will pre-empt state labeling requirements, including the pioneering Vermont GMO labeling law scheduled to take effect next year. First, a companion bill will have to clear the Senate. No date is set yet for this and the time to let our sen-ators know that we want to protect truth and transparency on food labels and encourage them to oppose the DARK Act starts now.

Make the people’s voice heard by contacting local state senators, call 202-224-3121 and visit Tinyurl.com/ContactYourSenatorToday.

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In a nutshell, that’s the philosophy of visionary women’s health expert Dr. Christiane Northrup, of Yarmouth,

Maine, as explored in her latest book, Goddesses Never Age. “We’re long overdue for a para-digm shift about how we feel about growing older,” says Northrup. “You can change your future by adopting a new, ageless attitude that will help you flourish physically, emotionally, mental-ly and spiritually. We don’t have to buy into modern medicine’s promotion of the idea of the pathology of aging.” One of Northrup’s primary admo-nitions: “Don’t tell anyone how old you are. Another birthday means nothing.”

Maintain a Sound MindOur Western society fosters a belief system that we will become decrepit,

frail and mentally feeble at a certain age. “When my mother turned 50, her mailbox suddenly filled with ads for adult diapers, walkers and long-term care insurance,” Northrup quips. The point is well taken. Think vibrant, healthy, gorgeous and yes, sexy Sandra Bullock, Johnny Depp, Chris Rock and Brooke Shields—all 50 or old-er—as the targets of ads for Depend. We’re living and working longer, and many of us are feeling, looking and staying young longer. So is 60 the new 40? Yes, say State University of New York at Stony Brook researchers, and further note that we’re generally leading longer and healthier lives. Centenarians are the fastest-grow-ing segment of the U.S. population. In the 2010 census, 53,364 people had surpassed their 100th year, an increase of 40 percent over the 1980 census,

and more than 80 percent of them are women. The National Institute on Aging projects that this number could increase tenfold or more by 2050. What we think of as “old” has changed. Many baby boomers refuse to buy into the mythology of aging, bristle at being called senior citizens and especially dislike being called elderly. Their position is backed by science. Stem cell biologist Bruce Lipton, Ph.D., author of Biology of Belief and currently a visiting professor at the New Zealand College of Chiropractic, in Auckland, is best known for promoting the concept that DNA can be changed by belief, for good or ill. Lipton explains that we all have billions of stem cells designed to repair or replace damaged—and aging—tissues and organs. “[These cells] are profoundly influenced by our thoughts and percep-tions about the environment,” Lipton explains. “Hence our beliefs about aging can either interfere with or enhance stem cell function, causing our physiological regeneration or decline.” “Yes, we are destined to grow older, but decrepitude and what we call aging is an optional state,” Northrup adds. “Our genes, nutrition and environment are under our control far more than we may have thought.” More, she says, “Words are powerful. Don’t talk yourself into be-lieving your brain is turning to mush just because you are over 40.”

Take Control of the Body“Manage the four horsemen of the ag-ing apocalypse,” encourages nutrition and longevity expert Jonny Bowden, Ph.D., a Los Angeles board-certified nutritionist and author of The Most Effective Ways to Live Longer. He says the aging process, including disease, loss of physical or mental function and the general breakdown of systems, is caused by one or more of four factors: oxidative damage (literally rusty cells); inflammation; glycation (excess sugar, metabolic syndrome); and stress. “Collectively, they damage cells and DNA, wear down organs and systems, deeply damage the vascular pathways that deliver blood and oxygen to the entire body, and even shrink brain size,” explains Bowden. While it may seem like a tall order to make lifestyle changes that vanquish

AGELESS BEINGStaying Vibrant in Mind, Body and Spirit

by Kathleen Barnes

Agelessness: Engaging in and experiencing life without

fear of falling, failing or falling apart.

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these four horsemen, Bowden says they can be broken into manageable elements by employing an arsenal of healthful weapons: whole foods, nutrients, stress-reduction techniques, exercise, detoxification and relationship improvement. “All of these actually do double duty, battling more than one of the four processes that can effectively shorten your life,” he reports, based on his 25 years of study.

Oxidative Damage Consider what rust does to metal. That’s what free radical oxygen molecules do to cells. Over time, they damage them and cause aging from within. “Oxidative damage plays a major role in virtually every degenerative disease of aging, from Alzheimer’s to cancer to heart disease and diabetes, even im-mune dysfunction,” says Bowden. His recommended key to destroy-ing free radicals is a diet rich in antiox-idants, including lots of fresh fruits and vegetables and healthy fats, nuts, grass-fed meats and organic dairy products. Avoid environmental free radicals that show up in toxic chemicals by eating as much organic food as possible and avidly avoiding residues of the poison-ous pesticides and herbicides sprayed on crops eaten by people and livestock. InflammationLong-term inflammation is a silent killer because it operates beneath the radar, often unnoticed, damaging blood vessel walls. Like oxidative dam-age, inflammation is a factor in all the degenerative diseases associated with aging, says Bowden. His suggestion: First, get a C-reac-tive protein (CRP) test to determine the levels of inflammation in our body. A CRP level over 3 milligrams/liter indi-cates a high risk of a heart attack. An-ti-inflammatory foods like onions, garlic, leafy greens, tomatoes, beans, nuts and seeds have all been widely scientifically proven to reduce chronic inflammation. Glycation This is the result of excessive sugar that glues itself to protein or fat molecules, leaving a sticky mess that creates ad-vanced glycation end (AGE) products that damage all body systems and are

acknowledged culprits in the dreaded diseases associated with aging. Bowden’s basic answer is to mini-mize intake of sugar and simple carbs; anything made with white flour or white rice. Also avoid fried dishes and any foods cooked at high temperatures that actually skip the glycation produc-tion in the body and deliver harm-ful AGEs directly from the food. He advises taking 1,000 mg of carnosine (available in health food stores) daily to prevent glycation. StressThe long-term effects of physical, men-tal or emotional stress are tremendously damaging to the human physiology. Sustained exposure to the stress hor-mone cortisol can shrink parts of the brain, damage blood vessels, increase blood sugar levels, heart rate and blood pressure and contribute to chronic inflammation, according to well- established science recorded in the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Bowden warns, “Stress manage-ment is not a luxury.” In its many forms, including prayer, meditation and breathing exercises, it should be part of any agelessness program. Deep, restful sleep is as vital a component as ending toxic relationships, having a nurturing circle of friends and doing familiar, gentle exercise such as yoga or tai chi. Overall, Bowden adds, “Rather than thinking of such endeavors as an-ti-aging, I strive to embody the concept of age independence. I admire former Supreme Court Associate Justice John Paul Stevens, who resigned from the court when he reached age 90 because he wanted to play more tennis.” Bowden recommends embracing the concept of “squaring the curve”, meaning that instead of anticipating and experiencing a long downhill slope of poor health leading to death, “I look at a long plateau of health, with a steep drop-off at the end.” Wellness guru Dr. Michael Roi-zen, chair of the Cleveland Clinic’s Wellness Institute, contends that al-though our chronological age can’t be changed, “Your ‘real age’ [calculated from data he collected from 60 million people] is the result of a wide variety of factors that are within your control. Dietary choices alone can make you 13 years younger or older than your actual age.” Roizen adds uncontrolled portion siz-es, tobacco use and physical inactivity to the list of life-shortening lifestyle options.

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Align with Spirit“If you don’t have some kind of spiritual foundation, literally, God help you,” says Northrup. “God isn’t con-fined to a book or a church, mosque or synagogue. Divin-ity is the creative loving, vital flow of life force that we’re all part of and connected to. Our bodies are exquisite ex-pressions meant to embody, not deny our spirits.” Touch, pleasure and sex can be part of it, too. Individuals that have the most fulfilling sex lives live the longest, according to researchers conducting the University of California, Riverside’s Lon-gevity Project. “Pleasure comes in infinite forms,” says Northrup. “It can mean the exquisite taste of a pear or the sound of an angelic symphony, the kiss of sun on skin, the laughter of a child, spending time with friends or creating a pastel landscape. When you experience pleasure, God comes through and you become aware of your divine nature. You’ll find that joy comes in ways that are unique to you.” Connection with the natural world is an essential element of

agelessness, says Northrup. “The human body evolved to walk on the Earth, drinking its water, breath-ing its air and basking in its sunlight.” The bottom line is, “Agelessness is all about vitality. Taking all the right supplements and pills, or getting the right proce-dure isn’t the prescription for anti-aging,” says this renowned physician. “It’s

ageless living that brings back a sense of vibrancy and youthfulness.” We could live to be well over 100 years old and, as Northrup likes to paraphrase Abraham Hicks, of The Law of Attraction fame, “Wouldn’t you rather have your life end something like this: ‘Happy-healthy, happy-healthy, happy-healthy, dead.’ Isn’t that a lot bet-ter than suffering sickness, decrepitude and frailty for years?”

Kathleen Barnes is the author of numer-ous books on natural health, her latest being Food Is Medicine: 101 Prescrip-tions from the Garden. Connect at KathleenBarnes.com.

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Page 20: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

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Seeds for Change

zenspiration

A devotee of the master ap-proached one day and ex-plained, “Master I am bored.”

He replied “Be useful.” Another dev-otee approached and said, “Master I feel lonely.” He replied, “Be Useful.” A third approached and said, “Master I don’t feel loved.” He replied, “Be the greatest Lover that ever lived.”

Let me get right to the point. The world is never going to change wait-ing for someone else to change it. It’s entirely up to you. Become the change you want the world to be, and watch how your life will change. Authentic spirituality is far from easy; it requires a willingness to change everything you thought was so. We are witnessing today nothing more than a very old

and worn carpet being pulled out from under all of us.

SMALL STEPS WITH GREAT POTENTIAL:

• Be Helpful. You can’t be bored or feel lonely when you are being useful. So help yourself to a longer life, get out and be helpful wherever you can.

• Smile. Smile even when you are cleaning the toilet. Whatever you do, do it with gratitude and excellence. This practice cultivates confidence and the ability to see the sacred everywhere. No need to look for God or Buddha, they are within us, and are best realized in how we do whatever we are doing.

• Eat only the foods that say, “I Love You”. The Buddha said, “You, yourself, as much as anybody in the entire uni-verse, deserve your love and affection.” • Think about, Talk about, and act only on what is Necessary. Think for a moment about all the things we think about, talk about, and invest our energy into. Now consider how much of that is really necessary. Now consider how much more you would achieve when you focus on only what is necessary. Think about all of the stuff in your house. Now how much of it do you really require or need. Then think about how much money you would have today if you only purchased what you really needed. When you focus on only what is necessary, you make room for what is essential for your life, what is most important to you.

• Always Love, Always Forgive, Always Learn. The three essential ingredients for what Buddhist call, “The Supreme Meal”. Your Life. Always love yourself and others. Whenever you’re not loving yourself and others, you’re robbing yourself of the best things in life. Al-ways forgive yourself and others. Say to yourself the next time you are criticiz-ing yourself or another person, “Just another lie.” None of us have a clue, so why pretend you do. Always be learn-ing. “In the beginners mind there are many possibilities. In the experts there are few.” According to science, learning something everyday also adds years to our life.

I believe in you, still.

Seijaku Roshi is the founder of The Zen Society and Abbot of Jizo-an Monastery/Pine Wind Zen Community in Shamong, NJ, where persons of all faiths and religions have travelled to learn to live a more meaningful life, what he calls a “Zen-inspired Life”. For more information, call 609-268-9151 or visit TheZen Society.org.

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Page 21: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

21natural awakenings September 2015

FARMERS’ MARKETS

Be a Locavore —Support Your Local Markets!

Buy Fresh, Buy Local!

Burlington CountyBordentown City Farmers’ MarketJune 3-September 23, Wednesday’s 4pm-duskCarslake Community Center, 207 Crosswicks St, Bordentown, NJ

Burlington County Farmers’ MarketMay 16 - October 31, Saturday’s 8:30-1pm500 Centerton Road, Moorestown, NJBurlcoAgcenter.com

Columbus Farmers’ Market 2919 Route 206, Columbus, NJOpen Year-round Thursdays - 8am-8pmFridays, 10am-8pmSaturdays, 8am-8pmSunday’s 8am-5pmColumbusFarmersMarket.com

Medford Farmers’ Market June 4 - Oct. 8, Thursdays 3-7pmCity Hall Mall, behind City Hall17 N Main St, Medford

United Communities Farmers’ Market Every Thursday from June - September 10am-2pmPatriot Park, Corner of N. Bolling and W. Castle Dr., McGuire AFB, NJ 08641Find us on Facebook!

Camden CountyBerlin Farmers’ MarketSat & Sun, 8am-4pmRte 541 at Clementon Rd.BerlinFarmersMarket.com

Blackwood Farmers’ MarketJune 27 - Sept. 26, Saturdays from 9am -1pmBlackwood Library parking lot, 15 S. Blackhorse PikeBlackwoodFarmersMarket.webs.com

Collingswood Farmers’ MarketMay 21 - November, Saturdays 8am-12pmBetween Collins & Irvin Avenue, CollingswoodCollingswoodMarket.com

Gloucester City Farmers’ MarketMay 10 - November 22, Every Sunday 10am-2pmKings St & Jersey AveGloucester City Marina

Haddonfield Farmers’ MarketMay 16 - Oct 25, Saturdays 8:30am-1pmKings Court - Center of town, Haddonfield HaddonfieldFarmersMarket.org

Haddon Heights Farmers’ MarketMay 3 - Oct 25, Sunday, 9:30am-1pm Station and E Atlantic Ave

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Harry and Valerie Behrens don’t have any real farming expe-rience. Nevertheless, their

property produces a huge yield of fresh fruits and vegetables, all of which ends up on dinner tables around their hometown of Buena. This year, they produced about $30,000 in tomatoes, lettuce, zucchini, corn, peppers and other veggies in just seven weeks. And then they gave it all away.

The Behrens run Impact Harvest, a community farm and nonprofit organiza-tion they founded seven years ago. They oversee the farming of about 10 acres of land, both in Buena and Hammonton, and the weekly distribution of its yields to about 200 families—for free.

“We sold our house and gave away almost everything we owned to go on a mission trip to Louisiana after Hurri-cane Katrina,” says Valerie, 39. “After that, we came back to Buena, and it was quickly apparent that people needed our help here, too. One day, we saw an

elderly woman walking past our house carrying groceries. The nearest grocery store is more than five miles away. Harry went and offered her a ride home. A few months later, we saw her again. This time, when he gave her a ride, she welcomed him into her home.

“She had no heat, no running water. She was living on a fixed income, and only received about $40 per month for groceries. I started to stop by her home and take her to the store when she need-ed food. I noticed she wasn’t buying any fruits or vegetables.”

Valerie and Harry decided they’d start a garden in their backyard, to feed both their family and their new friend. When they asked a farmer friend for advice, he offered to donate some extra plants.

“Well, he showed up with about 800 heads of lettuce, ready to be plant-ed,” Valerie laughs. “That first year we grew so many vegetables. It was obvious our family would never eat that much,

so we were determined to give it away.”For the first two years, the couple

filled their pickup truck with produce and drove out to impoverished areas of Vineland and Millville, where they’d simply hand out the vegetables.

“Now, things have become a little more organized,” Valerie says. “We have a direct link to the families we serve, and they receive regular weekly pro-duce delivery during the season. There are about 150 families that get a bag of produce every Monday, and more who show up for first-come, first-serve distribution on Thursdays. In all, we’re feeding about 200 families a week.”

Valerie says Impact Harvest meets the needs of a community that might not be able to get the help they need elsewhere.

“In Cumberland County, 17 percent of people are food insecure,” she says. “That means they get about one meal a day, and generally that doesn’t include any fruits or vegetables. People who really need to stretch a dollar are more likely to buy processed foods, because they’re cheaper and have a longer shelf life. A lot of the people we work with are single moms, or elderly people on a fixed income. Most people we serve are not on welfare. They’re just on the cusp of where the government thinks they can make it on their own, but they can’t—not in a healthy way.”

The operation has grown too big for the couple to handle on their own—even with the help of their two sons, ages 14 and 9. They rely on the help of dedicated volunteers; co-workers, members of the community and often, people Impact Harvest have served.

“About half of our volunteers are children,” Valerie says. “And many of them are members of families we’ve served. We find that most of the people who receive help don’t want it for free. They want to earn it. Most come out here and help, even after they’ve gotten to a more secure place in their lives. Many come several times a week. The whole goal of what we do is to love our neighbors, and we want people to be inspired to share in that goal.”

For more information including donating to and volunteering for Impact Harvest, call 856-690-9397 or visit ImpactHarvest.org.

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consciouseating

With the demand for seafood outpacing what can safely be harvested in the wild,

half the seafood we eat comes from aquaculture, says Kathryn Sullivan, Ph.D., administrator for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra-tion (NOAA). Yet, farmed seafood has a repu-tation for uneven quality and ques-tionable farming practices. A primary reason is that much of what Americans buy comes from Asia, where aquacul-ture is less stringently managed. Mean-while, domestic aquaculture provides only about 5 percent of the seafood consumed here, according to NOAA.

Safe Seafood SolutionsIf we want to eat safer, sustainable, farmed seafood, there are two solutions. One is to purchase farmed fish raised in the U.S., says Sullivan. The agency’s FishWatch consumer information service assures: “If it’s harvested in the United States, it’s inherently sustainable as a result of the rigorous U.S. management process that ensures fisheries are continuously moni-tored, improved and sustainable.”

Whole Foods Markets have found that farming seafood (aquaculture) can provide a consistent, high-quality, year-round supply of healthy and delicious protein. Accordingly, “When it’s done right, aquaculture can be environmen-tally friendly and offer a crucial way to supplement wild-caught fish supplies. On the other hand, poor farming practices such as the overuse of chemicals and antibiotics and those that cause water pollution and other negative impacts on the environment are bad news.” A second solution is to consult with a trusted fishmonger that has high standards for flavor, health, safety, sus-tainability and environmental concerns.

The Green Fish FarmerChefs like Rick Moonen, who owns RM Seafood, in Las Vegas, are getting behind U.S. aquaculture farms that do it right, raising healthy, sustainable and delicious fish. Moonen recently became a brand ambassador for True North Salmon, a farm system that integrates the way nature keeps fish healthy and fresh. “They have a salmon farm near a mussel farm near a kelp farm, mimick-

ing the way these three species interact in the wild,” says Moonen. The best seafood farms take what geography and climate offer—ocean inlets, a natural spring and a natural de-pression in the land or indoor controlled freshwater tanks—and use clean feed. With no antibiotics, non-GMO food (free of genetic modification) in the right ratio, good water quality and creative ways to use the effluent, they employ green farming practices to raise fish and shellfish that, in turn, are healthy to eat. The Atlantic coasts of Maine and Canada are where families have been making their living from the sea for cen-turies, says Alan Craig, of Canada’s True North Salmon Company. “The fish are fed pellets made from all-natural, non-GMO sources with no dyes, chemicals or growth hormones added. Underwa-ter cameras monitor the health of the fish to prevent overfeeding.” True North Salmon follows a three-bay system, similar to crop rotation on land. Each bay is designated for a particular age of fish: young salmon, market-ready fish and a fallow, or empty, bay, breaking the cycle of any naturally occurring diseases and parasites. Robin Hills Farm, near Ann Arbor, Michigan, offers vegetable, meat, egg and fruit community supported agricul-ture, U-pick fruit and a pair of stocked farm ponds. Farm Manager Mitzi Koors explains that the ponds are a way to leverage natural resources, add another income stream and attract visitors. “We first discovered a low-lying area that would become a beautiful pond with a little work,” Koors relates. “We then expanded to two close ponds that don’t connect, to keep the older fish raised on at least six months of non-GMO organic feed separate from the newer fish. The ponds are spring fed, providing a great environment for trout.” In northeastern Nebraska, five generations of the Garwood family have traditionally raised cattle and produced corn and tomatoes. To keep the farm thriving and sustainable, they have had to think outside the row crop. Today, they’re growing some-thing new—barramundi, or Australian yellow perch. They built a warehouse that now holds 18, 10,000-gallon fish tanks full of growing fish. A Maryland company provides old-fashioned cow

SURF TO TURFU.S. Farmed Seafood That’s

Safe and Sustainableby Judith Fertig

Wild-caught fish from pure waters is the gold standard of seafood, but sustainable populations from healthy waters are shrinking. That’s one reason why fish farms are appearing in unusual places—barramundi flourish on a Nebraska cattle ranch, shrimp in chilly Massachusetts and inland tilapia in Southern California.

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Judith Fertig blogs at AlfrescoFoodAnd Lifestyle.blogspot.com from Overland Park, KS.

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Once considered an “alternative” therapy, a wealth of scientific re-search continues to confirm the

benefits of yoga on reducing stress, elevat-ing energy levels and mood, enhancing the quality of sleep, improving flexibility and promoting the healing process for those suffering from a range of chronic illnesses. Understanding the power of this practice first-hand based on the positive impact it had on her own life, Geri Topfer founded Kula for Karma—named after the Sanskrit word for ‘community”—in 2007 to extend the benefits of therapeutic yoga and meditation to people of all ages in need throughout the greater metropolitan area. She was soon joined by Kula for Karma Executive Director Penni Feiner on a journey that’s since touched thousands with a healing message of love and hope. We sat down with Topfer, 54, and Feiner, 63, to learn more about the spirituality behind their creation of Kula for Karma and how this groundbreaking, nonprofit organization is positively impacting the many communities it serves.

NA: Tell us about your background and what brought you to practice yoga.Topfer: I worked in the publishing industry for many years, but when I had my three children I found it difficult to balance work and family. I began pursuing other interests, including acting classes and the teacher recommended

that I take yoga to help calm the anxiety I felt performing in front of people. When I first started yoga, I remember feeling like I’d come home—I loved the people, the music and the philosophy. I threw myself into yoga classes of all styles and eventu-ally took many teacher trainings.Feiner: I worked in the management of our family’s custom sheet metal fabrica-tion business for over 30 years and was looking for a way to calm my over-active mind when a friend suggested yoga. Though I found it hard to relax at first, I kept attending and noticed that the stretches of calmness I felt in class lasted longer and longer; I was able to be still, centered, and mindful for the first time. My mind had always been filled with self-judgment and criticism and yoga re-ally helped me to soften around that and love myself despite the imperfections.

NA: Why did you launch Kula for Karma and who have you reached?Topfer: Though I was teaching, I felt I needed to be doing something more with my yoga, though I didn’t know what that would look like. Then a yoga teacher of mine described how she was helping chil-dren in Ecuador and I realized that there was a lot of work to be done right here in our own backyard. Feiner: Geri started the program by offer-ing yoga to children at a studio in Bergen County once a week. I heard she was

looking for volunteers to teach a group of teenage girls who had been abused and I volunteered to teach that class. We both recognized the power of yoga and how important it was to offer effective tools to these populations. After that, our pro-grams blossomed as the name got out and the need was recognized. Today, we have over 600 volunteer yoga teachers in our network and currently have 50 to 60 active volunteers teaching 70-plus programs for everyone from young chil-dren and at-risk teens, victims of domestic violence, and veterans struggling with PTSD to oncology and cardiology patients at Hackensack, Englewood, Valley, Saint Barnabas, St. Joseph’s, Mount Sinai and Bellevue hospitals. We’ll soon be launch-ing programs at Holy Name Medical Center in Teaneck, NYU Langone in New York City, and Yale New Haven Hospital in Connecticut.

NA: What do your programs aim to do?Topfer: We provide a hopeful, heartfelt approach to creating community and a safe environment for people to be their most vulnerable selves while working to give them portable tools to manage pain, anxiety, depression, and trauma. The practice of therapeutic yoga real-ly hits home on so many levels and is so important to the holistic integrative approach to healing. For us, it’s about love and the understanding that we’re all one thread away from the populations we’re serving. We’d ultimately love to bring our programs to operating rooms and medical schools to help physicians and surgeons be more mindful, too.

NA: Since launching Kula for Karma has society become more open to yoga?Feiner: Absolutely. At Hackensack Hospital, for example, our flagship and first hospital program, we used to offer therapeutic yoga to cancer patients in a small conference room and the class got more and more traction. When the hos-pital unveiled its beautiful John Theurer Cancer Center in 2010, it featured a special yoga room, which reflects their recognition of the value of this practice to their patients. This remains one of our proudest achievements.Topfer: People are definitely looking for these integrative options and the medical profession is increasingly advocating for it—it’s the perfect storm.

Kula for Karma brings compassion, hope and healing to populations in need

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Page 27: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

27natural awakenings September 2015

We hope to help make the practice of yoga even more mainstream so that one day it’s not considered “alternative”, but just “healthcare”.

NA: How personally rewarding has Kula for Karma been for you?Feiner: I wake up every day inspired and challenged by the work that we do; it’s just magic. I feel so much joy, richness and fulfillment from reaching out to more populations and being part of creating a wave of wellness.Topfer: To be able to tap into your pas-sion, turn it into action, create a platform for volunteerism and make a difference in the lives of others is extraordinary, and I feel so lucky to have Penni as my partner and to share something with someone who allows you to be your best self every day. Looking ahead, we hope to create greater awareness of the benefits of therapeutic yoga to integrative health care and to continue doing what we’re doing in a bigger, brighter way to reach even more people in need.

For more information on Kula for Karma or to become a volunteer, call 888-545-9642 or visit KulaForKarma.org.

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the help of the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC) to begin a persistent push to their goal of going green. Today, the NRDC publishes the Greening Advisor guidebooks on green operating practices for all pro-fessional teams in Major League Base-ball, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, the National Hockey League and Major League Soccer, plus the U.S. Tennis Association, and has expanded to include college sports.

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Food Stadium food has always been part of the fan experience, but it’s possible to eat sensibly and well with options like the roasted turkey sandwich at AT&T Park, in San Francisco, where concessionaires source locally and compost leftovers. Veggie burgers, vegan cheesesteaks and sushi have also found their way onto game-day menus to add a change of pace for fans, says Julianne Soviero, author of Unleash Your True Athletic Potential. The growing interest shown by the sports industry in composting offers enormous potential benefits, and not a moment too soon, says Allen Hersh-kowitz, Ph.D., co-founder of the Green Sports Alliance and director of the NRDC Sports Project. Using recyclable containers counts—New York City’s venerable Yankee Stadium reduced its trash load by 40 percent by switching to biodegradable cups and service ware. PepsiCo supported the upgrade by ex-changing its conventional plastic bottle for a bio-based version made from agricultural waste.

LightsAt New York’s Oncenter War Memorial Arena, the American Hockey League’s Syracuse Crunch pro team skates under LED lights. “They make the arena brighter. It’s easier to see the puck,” says defenseman Joey Mormina. “The fun light show that follows goals adds energy for the crowd and players.” LED lighting provides improved clarity in TV transmissions and sports action photos and doesn’t create soft spots on the ice, like traditional lights. “Utica and Binghamton teams switched to LED after playing in our arena,” comments Jim Sarosy, chief operating officer for the Crunch.

Water “The Crunch is the first pro hockey team to skate on recycled rainwater,” Sarosy adds. “It’s collected from the roof, stored in three central reservoirs in the basement and pumped into the Zamboni machine for resurfacing the ice.” The practice also diverts rainwater from overworked sewer systems. The first pro football stadium to earn a Leadership in Energy and Envi-ronmental Design (LEED) Gold Certifi-

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29natural awakenings September 2015

cation, the San Francisco 49ers Levi’s Stadium features a 27,000-square-foot rooftop garden to help control water runoff. Home to the Los Angeles Lakers, Clippers and Kings, the Staples Center has swapped out 178 flush urinals for waterless models, reducing annual water usage by 7 million gallons. Like the Eagles, the Florida Mar-lins pro baseball team, in Miami, now uses 50 percent less water via low-flow plumbing fixtures. Also, the stadium’s upgraded landscape design lessens outdoor irrigation needs by 60 percent. The University of Georgia likes keeping its grass green, but hates waste-ful water dispensers. Its football field is now watered via an underground irriga-tion system that saves a million gallons a year. Soil moisture sensors indicate when watering is needed.

More Creative PracticesLincoln Financial Field, home to the Philadelphia Eagles, now boasts more than 11,000 solar panels and 14 wind turbines that combined, generate more than four times the energy used for all home games in a season. The staff uses green cleaning products and has increased recycling more than 200 percent since 2010. Most creatively, the carbon costs of team travel are offset via mitigation by financing tree plantings in their home state and pur-chasing seedlings for a wildlife refuge in Louisiana. The Seattle Mariners Safeco Field’s new scoreboard uses 90 percent less power than its predecessor and the Arizona Cardinals pro football team provides bags for tailgating fans to use for recycling. Five NBA arenas have achieved LEED certification—Phillips Arena (Atlanta Hawks), Toyota Center (Hous-ton Rockets), American Airlines Arena (Miami Heat), Amway Center (Orlando Magic) and Rose Garden (Portland Trail Blazers). The goal of a cleaner, healthier planet is achievable with systemic shifts like these as more pro and colle-giate sports teams score green points.

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After practicing internal medicine for 10 years in Boston, Dr. Timothy McCall became a

full-time writer, exploring the health benefits of yoga. As the medical editor of Yoga Journal and the author of Yoga as Medicine: The Yogic Prescription for Health and Healing, he says, “In the late 90s, the conveyor belt of patient care continued to speed up and I got frustrated. There was less time to form relationships with patients, which is essential to providing quality care without excessive tests and drugs.”

Initially, McCall found that most of the documented research on yoga was from India, and notes it was low in quality from a Western perspective (though it is now excellent). In the West, the first notable scientific yoga article was published in 1973 in The Lancet on combining yoga and biofeedback to manage hypertension. According to the International Journal of Yoga, the surge in yoga’s popularity here finally gained academic interest in 2007, and there are now more than 2,000 yoga titles in the National Institutes of Health PubMed.

gov database, with 200 added annually. Initially, yoga teacher and econo-mist Rajan Narayanan, Ph.D., founded the nonprofit Life in Yoga Foundation and Institute to offer free teacher training. Within a couple of years, the foundation’s focus shifted to integrat-ing yoga into the mainstream health-care system. “We realized that to make a real difference, we needed to teach doctors about yoga and its scientifi-cally proven effects,” he says. Medical providers can earn credits to keep their licenses current by attending courses by Life in Yoga, the only yoga insti-tution independently certified by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education. Currently, even if physicians don’t practice yoga, it’s likely that many of their patients do. “You now see it every-where from major medical centers to mainstream advertising,” says McCall, who notes an increase in doctors, nurses and therapists attending the Yoga as Medi-cine seminars he and his wife Eliana teach internationally and from their Simply Yoga Institute studio, in Summit, New Jersey.

Mounting Evidence“Yoga may help prevent diseases across the board because the root cause of 70 to 90 percent of all disorders is stress,” says Narayanan. Yoga increases the body’s ability to successfully respond to stress by activating the parasympathetic nervous system, which slows the heart and lowers blood pressure. That in turn suppresses sympathetic activity, reducing the amount of stress hormones in the body. Studies collected on PubMed.gov demonstrate that yoga has been found to help manage hypertension, osteoporosis, body weight, physical fitness, anxiety, depression, diabetes, reproductive

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therapies. The Principles and Practices of Yoga in Healthcare, co-edited by Sat Bir Khalsa, Lorenzo Cohen, McCall and Shirley Telles and due out in 2016, is the first professional-level, medical textbook on yoga therapy. “Yoga has been proven to treat many conditions, yet yoga teachers don’t treat conditions, we treat individ-uals,” says McCall. “Yoga therapy is not a one-size-fits-all prescription because different bodies and minds, with differ-ent abilities and weaknesses, require individualized approaches.” While medical research is working to grant yoga more legitimacy among doc-tors, policymakers and the public, McCall says, “I believe these studies are systemat-ically underestimating how powerful yoga can be. Science may tell us that it decreas-es systolic blood pressure and cortisol secretion and increases lung capacity and serotonin levels, but that doesn’t begin to capture the totality of what yoga is.”

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functions and pregnancy, among other issues. Studies at California’s Preven-tive Medicine Research Institute have tracked amelioration of heart disease. A growing body of research is validat-ing yoga’s benefits for cancer patients, including at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. A small study at Norway’s University of Oslo suggests that yoga even alters gene expression, indicating it may induce health benefits on a molecular level.

Cultural Challenges“For yoga to be effective, a regular practice must be implemented, which is challenging in a culture where people can’t sit for long without an electronic device. It’s more than just popping pills,” says Narayanan. McCall says, “Even if people can commit to just a few minutes of yoga practice a day, if they keep it up the benefits can be enormous.” “There are no sales reps telling doc-tors to use yoga therapy like there are for pharmaceuticals,” remarks Narayanan, and until yoga is funded by health insur-ance, it will be challenging to gain full acceptance in mainstream medicine. Another barrier is certification stan-dards. The International Association of Yoga Therapists (iayt.org) and the Council for Yoga Accreditation International (cyai.org) are both beginning to offer certifi-cations for therapy training programs and therapists. Narayanan is hopeful that certification could lead to yoga being covered by insurance. Medical school curricula have started shifting to embrace complementary approaches to wellness, with many textbooks now including information on mind/body

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1Bike Maintenance Basics: Level 1 – 6:30-8pm. Routine bike maintenance keeps you riding smoothly and prolongs the life of your bike. Join us for this introductory class to help you take care of your bike. Free. REI Marlton, 501 Rte 73 S, Marlton. Register: 856-810-1938, rei.com/stores/marlton.html.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2Getting to Know your GoPro: GoPro Basics – 6:30-8pm. Will focus on the camera’s user inter-face, video capture, image settings and accessories. Free. REI Marlton, 501 Rte 73 S, Marlton. Reg-ister: 856-810-1938, rei.com/stores/marlton.html.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4Half-Price Reflexology Day – Enjoy a 1-hr re-flexology session for relaxation, detoxing, and bring your body back to health and balance. For an appt, Spirit To Sole Connection: 856-834-0883.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5Weekend Retreat – Sept 5 & 6. 7am-9pm, Sat; 6am-12pm, Sun. Introducing the most important aspects of Zen training with an exploration of the meaning of life and death, student/teacher relation-ship and more, including meditation and private session with Seijaku Roshi. Meals and lodging in-cluded. $115/full weekend, $65/daily. Pine Wind Zen Center, 863 McKendimen Rd, Shamong. Reg-istration required: 609-268-9151. PineWind.org.Burlington County Farmers’ Market: All You Need for the Labor Day Weekend – 8:30am-1pm. Along with local fruits and vegetables, look for artisan breads and cheeses, and farm-raised chicken, lamb and beef for those get-to-gethers. Cooking Demo, 10am, Allie O’Brien, a healthy, fun and hands-on programs. Live music all morning with the John Byrne Band. 500 Cen-terton Rd, Moorestown. BurlCoAgCenter.com.

Email [email protected] for guidelines and to submit entries.

calendarofevents

Meet Us at the Deptford Mall – 11am-4pm. Stop on by and meet some of Voorhees Ani-mal Orphanage’s wonderful adoptable animals, and show your support and help donate so we can continue to rescue and find homes for more awesome cats and dogs. Deptford Mall, 1750 Deptford Center Rd, Deptford. Facebook.com/events/464803633680782.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6Community Yoga – 9am. The 1st Sun each month our center offers a community yoga class. Class embraces all levels. Bring your bodies and minds into greater peace. Newcomers welcome. Families encouraged. Free/members, suggested $5 donation for guests. Yoga Center of Medford, 417 Stokes Rd, Medford. 609-654-9400. Yoga CenterOfMedford.com.Interpretive Trail Hike – 1-2pm. Join an RNC naturalist for an interpretive hike through our varied habitats. Pace is easy and suitable for adults and teenagers. Free/member, $4/person, $10/family. Rancocas Nature Center, 794 Ran-cocas Rd, Westampton. Pre-register: 609-261-2495, RancocasNatureCenter.org.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7Jersey Fresh Wine Festival – Sept 7 & 8. 12-5pm. Featuring wineries throughout the state. Burlington County Fairgrounds, Rte 206, Springfield Twp. NewJerseyWines.com.Yoga of Divine Love – 7:30pm. Asha Jyoti, a lifelong practitioner, discusses Bhakti Yoga. $5/general, Free/SVWB Sangha Members. Samma Vayama Well-Being, 12 Girard Rd, Glassboro. Registration required: 856-863-3549. svwb.org.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8Saving Seeds: From Your Garden to the Global Vault – 7pm. Horticultural Society of South Jer-sey monthly meeting. Presenter: Jeff Quattrone,

a Community Seed Organizer with Seed Savers Exchange and Seed Matter’s Community Seed Resource Program. Free. Carmen Tilelli Com-munity Center, 820 Mercer St, Cherry Hill. More info, Gwenne Baile: 856-816-8508. HSSJ.org.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9Lightweight Backpacking Basics – 6:30-8pm. Join an REI backpacking expert who will pro-vide excellent tips on lightweight backpacking techniques. Free. REI Marlton, 501 Rte 73 S, Marlton. Register: 856-810-1938, rei.com/stores/marlton.html.Positive Self-Relationship – 7:30pm. Christine Hopkins discusses the most important rela-tionship we have—with ourselves. $5/general, Free/SVWB Sangha Members. Samma Vayama Well-Being, 12 Girard Rd, Glassboro. Registra-tion required: 856-863-3549. svwb.org.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10Meeting Your Self: Becoming your own Best Friend – 6:30-8:30pm. With Jen Perry. Are you treating others better than you are yourself? Learn techniques designed to cultivate true ac-ceptance, compassion and friendliness towards yourself. $399/8 classes. Bring a friend: $299 each. The Center, Life in Balance, 43 S Main St, Medford. 609-975-8379. TheCenterLifeIn [email protected] Medicine for Modern Times: Focus on MS and Autism – 7pm. Come hear world-re-nowned Ayurvedic physician Dr. Marianne Teitelbaum. With over 20 yrs experience, Dr. T gets to the root of diseases such as Autism and MS by focusing on a healthy diet and us-ing herbs that are processed according to strict ayurvedic standards. Sponsored by De Coti-is Chiropractic Wellness. Free. Hosted by the Women’s Wellness Connection of South Jersey at Lourdes Care, 1 Brace Rd, Cherry Hill. Space limited; RSVP: Judy, 609-221-2285 or [email protected]. Eden Energy Medicine Study Group – 7-8:30pm. Learn Donna Eden’s Daily Routine and other techniques to keep your energies balanced and healthy. Based on Eden’s Energy Medicine book, led by Elsie Kerns and Paula Anderson, EEM Advanced Practitioners. $15. No prior experience needed. Acu-Health Center, 100 W Camden Ave, Moorestown. More info, Paula: 856-222-9444 or Acu-HealthCenter.com.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11Become a Professional and Certified Reflexolo-gist – 7-9pm. Also Oct 9. Still Point Yoga Cen-ter is hosting a state of the art curriculum in The Art and Science of Reflexology this fall. Come to our Open House and find out about The CORE of Reflexology Education. Explore this effec-tive and holistic way to help the body and mind through the feet and hands. Still Point Yoga Center, 1 Kelly Drivers Ln, Laurel Springs. 856-227-0999. StillPointYogaCenter.com.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12Burlington County Farmers’ Market: Support Your Local Farmers – 8:30am-1pm. Lots of sea-sonal produce, baked goods, cheeses, honey and prepared foods. Free Cooking Demo, 10am, in the farmhouse with David Frank, our honey ex-pert. Lve music with Anthony Friedlander. 500 Centerton Rd, Moorestown. BurlCoAgCenter.com.

For more information visit us at www.co.burlington.nj.us/parks or call 609-265-5858

Individuals requiring special accommodations are requested to give two weeks advance notification

FREE ANNUAL FESTIVAL CELEBRATING ~ A FUN-FILLED DAY FEATURING ART FOR ALL AGES ~Music • Theater • Dance • Fine Arts • Crafts

Funding is made possible in part by the NJ State Council on the Arts/Dept. of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts from a grant to the Burlington County Board of

Chosen Freeholders, Department of Resource Conservation, Division of Parks.

Historic Smithville Park, 803 Smithville Road, Eastampton, NJ 08060SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 • 10:30 AM – 4 PM

PARKARTS INTHE

THE BURLINGTON COUNTY BOARD OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERS presents

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Karlee’s Fight Fundraiser Psychic Fair – 11am-4pm. 5 available readers each with their own unique style of guidance. $25 for 15 minutes. A New Vibration. 22 N Black Horse Pk, Black-wood 856-227-1111. ANewVibration.com.Yoga Teacher Training Informational Meeting: Introducing New Weekend Certification Sched-ule – 11am. Enrolling for 2016 graduation. Our 200-hr Teacher Training Program is open to those who are dedicated to yoga practice, as an upcoming yoga teacher or to deeply enhance a personal practice. The requirements for joining the program, the incredible offerings from our talented teachers, and the wonderful YCOM community unveiled. Come early for a free class. $50 registration fee waived if application is received by Sept 15. Yoga Center of Medford, 417 Stokes Rd, Medford. 609-654-9400. Yoga CenterOfMedford.com.The Deeper Studies of Yoga & Meditation – 12pm. Join us for our 9th year. Share what you love. 200-hr Teacher Training free Q&A. Still Point Yoga Center, 1 Kelly Drivers Ln, Laurel Springs. 856-227-0999. StillPointYogaCenter.com.Ayurvedic Cooking Class: Fall Harvest – 1-3:30pm. Excite your palate. Fall offers us an abundance of flavors to keep ourselves ground-ed as we transition into the season. Will make chickpeas Masala as well as creating spice blends for each constitution to use throughout the fall and winter season. $35. Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness, 118 W Merchant St, Audubon. 856-546-1006. LiveInJoyYoga.com.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13Angel Day with Kristy McAdams & Susan Drummond – 9am-2:30pm. Three ways to make contact with the angels: Angel Medita-tion with Singing Crystal Bowls, $20; Angel Healing Mandala, $20; Angel Gallery Reading, $20. Take your choice or do all three, $50. The Center, Life in Balance, 43 S Main St, Medford. Registration required: 609-975-8379. TheCenter [email protected] HU Song – 10-10:30am. Come learn about, experience and share the spiritual insights and upliftment gained by singing HU, a love song to God. Open to all spiritual back-grounds and faiths. Free. Acu-Health Center, 100 W Camden Ave, Moorestown. More info: 609-261-0019. Arts in the Park – 10:30am-4pm. Music, theater, dance, fine arts, crafts. Historic Smithville Park, 803 Smithville Rd, Eastampton. Co.Burlington.nj.us/parksEckankar Worship Service – 11am-12pm. Cele-brate the experience of the Light and Sound of God through the Eckankar Worship Service. Service in-cludes a reading, singing HU, followed by a discus-sion on month’s topic: Past Lives: A Key to Spiritual Freedom. Acu-Health Center, 100 W Camden Ave, Moorestown. More info: 609-261-0019.Yoga on Horseback – 11am-12pm &/or 1-2pm. Yoga on a mat is great, but yoga on Horseback is awesome. The experience is indescribable, when you get “spiritually” connect with the horse through yoga. Must preregister: 609-231-6706 or MajakaYoga.com. Live in Joy Yogic Book Club Begins – 1-2pm. Yogic book club facilitated by Devpreet Kaur begins with the book, Untethered Soul by Mi-

chael A. Singer. Donation. Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness, 118 W Merchant St, Audubon. 856-546-1006. LiveInJoyYoga.com.Channeling Session with Lisa Miliaresis – 1-3pm. Join Lisa, medium and author, as she channels in a gallery setting. Embrace the oppor-tunity to connect to loved ones on the other side. Limited seating available. $45. The Sanctuary for Yoga, 43 S Main St, Medford. Register: 609-953-7800 or TheSanctuaryForYoga.com.Comprehensive Chakra Workshop – 1-4pm. Learn what areas of life are affected and rep-resented by each chakra, signs of unhealthy chakras, tools to clear and heal chakras. Use of colors, crystals, meditations, tonings, mantras, sound and more. Includes a binder with an ac-tion plan. $45. Moorestown. For more classes & info: 856-437-0430 or Restoration-You.com.Paw Paw Tasting & Old Pine Farm Jersey Fresh Dinner Fundraiser – 3pm. Taste North Ameri-ca’s largest native fruit sitting in the shade of a paw paw patch while listening to a talk about paw paws and growing them you your own back-yard. Free seeds offered. Old Pine Farm Natural Lands Trust, 340 Pine Ave, Deptford. Reserva-tions, Sally: 856-889-4150. nj.com/south-jer-sey-towns/index.ssf/2015/08/old_pine_farm_holds_paw_paw_ta.html.Group Clearing and Light Grid Activation – 6-8pm. With Lisa O’Brien. Gathering as a group to relax and receive an energetic clearing of our human filters/programs. As we release these denser energies from the system we can also heal karmic and past life issues, as well as, family lineages. $20/pre-registered; limited space. Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness, 118 W Merchant St, Audubon. 856-546-1006. LiveInJoyYoga.com.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14Meditation and Messages through Mediumship – 5:30pm. Also Oct 5. Alchemy exists with medium, Alaine Portner, E-RYT, in combination with medita-tion, messaging and harmonic sounds. She commu-nicates with the energies of loved ones and receives symbolic messages, both personal and purposeful to you. Limited to 8 participants; pre-registration required. $65. Skype sessions available. Yoga Cen-ter of Medford, 417 Stokes Rd, Medford. 609-654-9400. YogaCenterOfMedford.com.

Hands-On Bike Maintenance: Drive Train – 6:30-8:30pm. Join our certified bike techs to learn about your drive train as well as how to inspect, maintain and adjust front and rear de-railleurs to make sure your ride is as smooth as possible. $45/member, $65/nonmember. REI Marlton, 501 Rte 73 S, Marlton. Register: 856-810-1938, rei.com/stores/marlton.html.

Marketing Strategies for Private Practice Own-ers and Freelance Professionals – 6:30-9pm. Monthly seminar. Acu-Health Center, 100 W Camden Ave, Moorestown. $25. Info & to reg-ister, Miriam: 609-230-1079. CreativeBusiness Practices.com.

W Jersey/Philly Holistic Moms Monthly Meet-ing – 6:45-8:45pm. Presentation by Stephanie Dodd. Topic: Conscious Nighttime Parenting. Learn about energy techniques to get more sleep and wake up feeling refreshed, use EFT tapping to clear blocks to sleep and more. Whole Foods, 940 Rte 73 N, Marlton. For more info, Veronica Krul-ish: [email protected].

Spirit Speaks – 7:30pm. Psychic Medium Kym Durham discusses her connection and ability to communicate with spirit. $5/general, Free/SVWB Sangha Members. Samma Vayama Well-Being, 12 Girard Rd, Glassboro. Registra-tion required: 856-863-3549. svwb.org.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15Understanding Intuition & Psychic Awareness – 7:30pm. Psychic Medium Deidra Solis discuss-es intuition, energy and psychic awareness. $5/general, Free/SVWB Sangha Members. Samma Vayama Well-Being, 12 Girard Rd, Glassboro. Registration required: 856-863-3549. svwb.org.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16Spiritual Discussion Class – 3-4pm. Learn tech-niques to open your awareness of your spiritual life beyond the physical. Join us in this month’s topic: Spiritual Guides in Our Lives. Free. Moorestown Community House, 16 E Main St, Moorestown. For more info: 609-261-0019.

Yoga Teacher Training Informational Meeting: Introducing New Weekend Certification Sched-ule – 7pm. Enrolling for 2016 graduation. Our 200-hr Teacher Training Program is open to those who are dedicated to yoga practice, as an upcoming yoga teacher or to deeply enhance a personal practice. The requirements for joining the program, the incredible offerings from our talented teachers, and the wonderful YCOM community unveiled. Come early for a free class. $50 registration fee waived if application is received by Sept 15. Yoga Center of Med-ford, 417 Stokes Rd, Medford. 609-654-9400. YogaCenterOfMedford.com.

Refresh Your Run – 6:30-8pm. Whether you are just starting or are getting back on track, this class will help you get in the groove and pro-vide training and technique insights to get you back in shape and/or prepare for your upcoming 5-10K or more. Free. REI Marlton, 501 Rte 73 S, Marlton. Register: 856-810-1938, rei.com/stores/marlton.html.

Beginner’s Mind Circle – 7-9pm. Includes in-structions on meditation, liturgy and Dhar-ma teaching. For the beginner as well as the more seasoned student. Donations appreciated. Pine Wind Zen Center, 863 McKendimen Rd, Shamong. 609-268-9151. PineWind.org.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17

GMO Labeling at Risk: The DARK Act & What We Can Do About It – 6:30pm. Join GMO Free NJ to explore the status of GMO labeling in the U.S. Over 60 other countries label or ban genetically engineered foods; will we ever catch up with the rest of the world? Explore the current status of GMO labeling which is now being threatened by the DARK Act. Find out what you can do about it. Also featured, special guest and Congressional candidate Alex Law who will answer questions about how our legislators can support us in getting these foods la-beled. Free. Collingswood Library, 771 Had-don Ave. RSVP: [email protected]. Learn more: GMOfreeNJ.com.

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Chakras Workshop – 7:15pm. Your chakras take on the energy of everything and everyone. Healthy chakras keep us physically and emo-tionally strong. Learn about chakras in depth and balance your energy. Medford. More info: 609-509-3772 or [email protected].

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18Ladies Night of Pampering – 6-9pm. Healthy snacks, herbal product samples, herbal tea tast-ing, giveaways. All services $1/min: reflexolo-gy, Reiki, chair massage, well-known readers. Bring friends and have an evening of pampering, then take your friends to the Blue Monkey or the other lovely restaurants in town. Spirit To Sole Connection, 23/27 N Centre St, Merchantville. 856-834-0883.

Restorative Yoga – 7:15pm. Deep relaxation through gentle yoga stretches and supported pos-tures. With the soothing sounds of Crystal Bowls to accompany us, we will free ourselves from long held tensions in the body and mind, and create a healing and spiritually uplifting space. $17/preregistration, $20/at door. Yoga Center of Medford, 417 Stokes Rd, Medford. 609-654-9400. YogaCenterOfMedford.com.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19Burlington County Farmers’ Market: Autumn is Knocking – 8:30am-1pm. Heirloom to organic local produce, fresh chicken pot pies and arti-san breads, mushrooms, local honey, jams, arti-san cheeses and chocolates and locally inspired crafts and art. Free Cooking Demo, 10am, with Cara Griffin, making French Macarons. Live mu-sic all morning with The Genies. 500 Centerton Rd, Moorestown. BurlCoAgCenter.com.

Free Plant Clinic – 9am-12pm. Last clinic of the year. Get answers to your gardening ques-tions. Bring plants or a piece of a diseased plant for identification and suggestions on how to treat. Bring a sample of any insect in your gar-den you need identified. Camden County Envi-ronmental Center, 1301 Park Blvd, Cherry Hill. For more info: 856-216-7130, [email protected] or Camden.njaes.rutgers.edu/garden/eventsforpublic.html.

Animal Energy Healing Level I Workshop – 9:30am-5pm. Make a deeper connection with your animal, learn energy healing for dogs, cats, horses and all animals. $80; $15/manual. Register for Level I & II (Oct 24) classes to-gether and receive a discount. Waterford. Reg-ister: 856-220-3667 or MindBodyAndSpirit WellnessCenter.com.

AAC Annual Dog Walk – 10am-1pm. Get ready to lace up those sneakers and grab your favorite 4-legged friend for a great cause. Tim-ber Creek Pooch Park, Monroe Dr, Blackwood. FirstGiving.com/7424/2015-aac-dog-walk.Reiki I Attunement – 12-5:30pm. Taught by Maureen (Parvati) Heil. $75/general, $55/SVWB Sangha Members. Samma Vayama Well-Being, 12 Girard Rd, Glassboro. Registration required by Sept 11: 856-863-3549. svwb.org.Crystal Chakra Clearing & Cosmic Sound Massage – 1-3pm. With Devpreet Kaur. A trans-formative afternoon with singing bowls specif-ically tuned to each chakra’s frequency as they clear the chakras and associated organs. Handout included. $25/advance, $30/at door. Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness, 118 W Merchant St, Audubon. 856-546-1006. LiveInJoyYoga.com.Building a Strong Core Yoga Workshop – 1:30-3pm. Workshop is all about learning the muscles of the core and how to access and use them. Will start with where you’re at physically and give you the tools you need to begin building up core strength on and off your mat. $25. Acu-Health Center, 100 W Camden Ave, Moorestown. Reg-istration required: 609-410-7264. [email protected], Today and Tomorrow: An Evening with Seijaku Roshi – 7-9pm. Seijaku Roshi in-vestigates the anatomy of today and how it is full of yesterday with clear insights on how to create a healthy and fulfilling tomorrow. $15/individu-als, $20/spouses, partners. Pine Wind Zen Cen-ter, 863 McKendimen Rd, Shamong. 609-268-9151. PineWind.org.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 20Concord Pets Adoption Event – 12-3pm. We will have some adorable critters looking for their new families. Concord Pets, 10 Barclay Farms Shopping Center, Cherry Hill. 856-429-1690.Autumn with the Animals – 12-4pm. Help welcome the fall season with hikes, crafts, food, entertainment, music and educational demon-strations and programs. A day of fun for the whole family. Woodford Cedar Run Wildlife Refuge, 4 Sawmill Rd, Medford. 856-983-3329. CedarRun.org.Bars Swap – 1-4pm. Have you participated in one Access Consciousness Bars Class? Would you like to swap bars? Join us for re-freshments and connections. $15/at door. Moorestown. For RSVP & more info: 856-437-0430. Restoration-You.com.

Walk in the Wild: Vultures & Eagles – 2pm. A leisurely ramble along the trails on the Old Pine Farm Natural Lands Trust. Meet in the parking lot at the end of Rankin Ave, Deptford. 856-579-4441. OldPineFarm.org.

Candlelight Restorative Yoga – 6-7:30pm. With Nicole DeSantos & Linda Sheehan. Let go, look in and center yourself. Go deep with gen-tle supported poses using bolsters, blankets and pillows. Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness, 118 W Merchant St, Audubon. 856-546-1006. LiveIn JoyYoga.com.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23Free Holistic Health Webinar – 7-8pm. Ther-mographic Diagnostic Imaging/Health Through Awareness presents Leo McCormick, DC. Dr. McCormick will explore the various alternative modalities available to cancer patients. He will discuss the components of the healing process and what is necessary to heal yourself from can-cer. Webinars held the 4th Wed. For more info or to register: 856-596-5834 or TDINJ.com.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24Katz JCC Lifelong Learning Institute: Medi-umship and Meditation – 7-9pm. Messages of Guidance with Alaine Portner. If you like the Long Island Medium, you’re going to love the Medford Medium. Spiritual education, medi-tation, messages offered. $10/JCC members, $15/general. Katz JCC Center, 1301 Springda-le Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-424-4444. Katzjcc.org. AlainePortner.com.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25Women’s Circle: Juice Up Your Life – 7-9pm. Are you ready to create a full, rich, juicy, au-thentic life? Would you like to feel more joy and vitality? Come join us for a fun experien-tial journey into discovering how to create more juiciness and excitement in your life. $20. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26Girl Power Tween Empowerment Workshops – A fun, interactive, curriculum-based program that empowers tweens (10-13) with great life skills needed for self-love, self-confidence and self-acceptance. Teach healthy coping skills that promote positive self-esteem and reduce stress to make great choices in life. $69. Yoga for Liv-ing, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

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retreatsplan ahead

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10Women’s Silent Retreat – 1:30-6:30pm. A gentle quiet space in which to unwind, de-stress and be nourished. Reconnect and recharge. A women’s Ayurveda treatment is included to help unwind the tensions. $95. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. Pre-registration required: 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11Bimini, Bahamas Dolphin Yoga Adventure – Oct 11-17. Only 5 spots left. With Alaine Port-ner, medium and yogi. Create your human pod of like-minded sea seekers on this yoga retreat to Bimini, Bahamas. Discover the retreat of a lifetime. Release your own boundaries of ad-venture. Yoga, mediumship, breathwork, dol-phin magic, Atlantis, energy transformation. The trip always fills to capacity. More info, Yoga Center of Medford: 609-654-9400, Yoga CenterOfMedford.com or WildQuest.com.

OCTOBER

200-Hr Ayurvedic Yoga Teacher Training – Oct-May. Become a yoga instructor or deep-en your own practice. Study and experience of the fundamental teachings of Ayurveda and yoga in this 200-hr certification pro-gram. Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness, 118 W Merchant St, Audubon. 856-546-1006. LiveInJoyYoga.com.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3

Gloucester County Animal Shelter Open House – 11am-4pm. Celebrating our 25th anniversary. 1200 N Delsea Dr, Clayton. 856-881-2828 . G louces t e rCoun tyNJ .gov/ depts/a/shelter.

Woofstock 2015 – 11am-4pm. Voorhees An-imal Orphanage’s 19th annual shelter festi-val featuring crafts, demonstrations, exhib-its, gourmet food court, live music, raffles, and fun for the entire family. Connolly Park, Voorhees. 856-627-9111. vaonj.org.

Neck and Shoulders Workshop: Unraveling the Knots Together – 2-5pm. With Yoga Therapist Rhonda Clarke. Feel the neck and shoulder ten-sions melting away as we release the stress that gets us all knotted up. Learn effective move-ments you can do at work or home. $40. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) – Sundays, Oct 4-Nov 22. 8-wk course with Linda Townshend. MBSR, is potentially life changing. This structured course teaches how to strengthen their ability to be present in the moment that helps create a more peaceful, less reactive, balanced life. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24Animal Energy Healing Level II Workshop – 9:30am-5pm. Animal Level I prerequisite. Incorporating long-distance healing plus other modalities and various techniques to assist ani-mals with their healing. $110; $15/manual. Reg-ister for Level I (Sept 19) & II classes together and receive a discount. Waterford. Register: 856-220-3667 or MindBodyAndSpiritWellness Center.com.

Holistic Health Extravaganza – 9:30am-5pm. Exceptional vendors desired. New Egypt. 609-752-1048. Siobhan@NextStep StrategiesLLC.com.

Burlington County Farmers’ Market: Kids’ Day – 8:30am-1pm. Lots of interactive activi-ties for kids, lots of fun and food. Free hands-on Cooking Demo for our favorite little people with Michelle Kearns, 10am. Fun music all morning with April Mae & the June Bugs. 500 Centerton Rd, Moorestown. BurlCoAgCenter.com.

“Hoot, Waddle and Stroll” 5K Trail Run & 1-Mile Stroll – 9am. A fun-filled, family-orient-ed event to support Woodford Cedar Run Wild-life Refuge. 4 Sawmill Rd, Medford. More info & schedule: 856-983-3329 or CedarRun.org.

Sustainable Cherry Hill’s Art Task Force – 10am-12pm. Kicks off the autumn season with a free hands-on fall craft event using upcycled waste materials. Create a fun T-shirt bag and beautiful home decorative items. Croft Farm Barn, 100 Bortons Mill Rd, Cherry Hill. To reg-ister: SustainableCherryHill.org.

PPA’s Fall Native Plant Sale – 10am-2pm. A wide variety of trees and shrubs will be for sale during our first-ever fall native plant sale. Pine-lands Preservation Alliance, 17 Pemberton Rd, Southampton. More info, Ryan Rebozo: 609-859-8860 x 26 or at [email protected].

Build your own Natural Medicine Cabinet and First Aid Kit Workshop – 1:30-3pm. Learn how to build a safe and effective medicine cabinet for the whole family with remedies for common ailments as well as for first aid. Topics: herbs, essential oils, teas, tinctures, antibacterial and antibiotic solutions, and more. Make an all-pur-pose antibacterial salve for cuts, scrapes and burns. $40. Acu-Health Center, 100 W Camden Ave, Moorestown. Registration required: 609-410-7264. [email protected].

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27Satsang Community Gathering – 9-10:30am. Let’s meditate, do some singing, chanting and sharing, and bask in peace and healing as one. Visit your inner light and be warmed by its glory. Donations appreciated. Blissful Yoga, 43 S Main St, Mullica Hill. 609-505-0323. BlissfulYogaMullicaHill.com.Postural Alignment: Foundation for Health Workshop – 3:30-5:30pm. Join Postural Align-ment Specialist Deb Freeman to learn and ex-perience how you can improve your posture through gentle, corrective exercises optimizing your health and well-being. Includes a photo posture assessment. $50. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. Pre-registration re-quired: 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30Mindfulness Training: Managing the Chaos of Modern Life – Sept 30, Oct 7 & 14. 7-8pm. Learn four types of mindfulness meditation. Class suit-able for beginners or intermediates. Includes two bonuses: recordings of the meditations; a private Facebook Group for extra support. Instructor: Marilyn Eppolite. $65. Acu-Health Center, 100 W Camden Ave, MoorestownJ. RSVP: 856-222-9444 or [email protected] with Crystal Energy – 7:15pm. Learn to connect with this amazing natural healing energy of life. Each crystal has its own purpose that correlates to our emotional, physical and spiritual bodies. Medford. Info: 609-509-3772 or [email protected].

Brett Passarella609.707.1096

Therapeutic Massage

www.bpassarella.comEmail: [email protected]

State Certified• Deep Tissue• 

Neuromuscular• Cranial Sacral• 

Shiatsu• Reflexology• 

Swedish• Chair Massage• 

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36 South Jersey nasouthjersey.com

Email [email protected] for guidelines and to submit entries.

$99 Unlimited Yoga Classes – 2 months. Yoga by Robin, 25 E Main St, Marlton. 609-440-0824. RobinSollYoga.com.

Yoga for Your Back – If you are looking for an effective therapy for back pain discover Svaroo-pa® Yoga. A therapeutic and gentle style of yoga that relieves tensions and stress from the spine. 6 classes offered/wk. Rhonda Clarke, Yoga Thera-pist and Advanced Svaroopa Yoga Teacher. $15/class. Private classes & sessions also available. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

Sundays on Station with Sustainable Had-don Heights – Thru Oct. 9:30am-1pm. Each week the group will be having demonstrations on various aspects of sustainability and garden-ing. Stop by the table after you make your pur-chases at the market. For each reusable bag you have used, receive an entry into the weekly con-test. 600 block of Station Ave, Haddon Heights. SustainableHaddonHeights.org.

Meditation – 10:30am. Joyful Gathering Spiri-tual Center, 215 Highlands Ave, Ste C, Haddon Township. 856-780-5826.

Kundalini Yoga – 11am-12:30pm. Kundalini Yoga is known as “The Yoga of Awareness” due to its powerful inward focus on awareness of body, mind and spirit to provide a deep feeling of peace, happiness and well-being. It encompass-es all eight limbs of yoga into a single practice. Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness, 118 W Merchant St, Audubon. 856-546-1006. LiveInJoyYoga.com.

mondayNia – 5:30-6:30pm. A cardio dance group fitness class that incorporates empowerment with mar-tial arts, joy of movement through dance arts and healing arts with yoga stretches. $13, $8/senior/, student. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

Yoga Mix – 6-7:15pm. With Lisa O’Brien. Com-bines light cardio, light weights, yoga, meditation and breath work for an all around approach to weight loss, toning muscles, strengthening bones, flexibility, stress relief and more. Bring 2-5-lb weights with you if you would like to enhance upper body strength. All-levels class. Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness, 118 W Merchant St, Audubon. 856-546-1006. LiveInJoyYoga.com.

Group Hypnosis & Discussion – 6:30-8pm. 2nd Mon. While in a relaxed state, your subconscious is coached to accept new positive and uplifting

sunday

ongoing events

dailythoughts about yourself and your life and filled with thoughts of hope and trust, opening your mind to infinite possibilities. $15. The Center, Life in Balance, 43 S Main St, Medford. 609-975-8379. [email protected].

Monthly Meditation/Mini-Workshop – 6:30-8:30pm. 1st Mon. Explore meditation, energy ed-ucation/topics and Reiki. Please arrive on time so the meditation is not disturbed, and refrain from alcohol the day of the workshop. $15. The Center, Life in Balance, 43 S Main St, Medford. 609-975-8379. [email protected].

Marketing Strategies for Private Practice Own-ers and Freelance Professionals – 6:30-9pm. 2nd Mon. Acu-Health Center, 100 W Camden Ave, Moorestown. $25. Info & to register, Miriam: 609-230-1079. CreativeBusinessPractices.com.

tuesdayHatha Yoga – 8am. All levels with Lisa O’Brien, or 6:30pm, vinyasa flow with Dawn Ciallella. $15/drop-in or ask about unlimited monthly member-ships. Halo Wellness Center, 968 Rte 73 S, Marl-ton. 856-574-4433. ElevateYourHealth.com.

Walk this Way – 6:30pm. Weekly walking group with Haddonfield Running Co. and Chan-dler Wellness Care. 121 Kings Hwy E, Haddon-field. Info/register: 856-874-8194 or Chandler WellnessCare.com.

Postural Alignment Class – 6:45-7:45pm. With Deb Freeman. Strong and balanced posture is the foundation for health. Gentle corrective exercises return your body to proper alignment, function and balance. $13, $8/senior, student. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

wednesdayDawn Meditation – 6-7am. Wed-Fri, Sept 9-30 except week of Sept 21. Join us for a healthy mental breakfast that nourishes and prepares you to meet the day’s challenges. No registration re-quired. Donations appreciated. Pine Wind Zen Center, 863 McKendimen Rd, Shamong. 609-268-9151. PineWind.org.

Mid-Day Meditation – 12pm. Also held Fri. Join us for a 10-min meditation. On Wed the focus is love; on Fri, peace. Each week we raise the love and peace vibration personally and globally. Treat yourself to a mid-week refresher. The Center, Life in Balance, 43 S Main St, Medford. 609-975-8379.

Creative Writing – 2-3:30pm. Course designed to be a true creative writing class. If you have ever wanted to write, now is the opportunity to try doing it within an accepting circle of writ-ers. Class ongoing and will become a way for you to finally find your voice and to tell your story. Eilandarts Center, 21 S Centre St, Merchantville. [email protected]. Eilandarts.com.

Beginner Yoga Series – 5pm. Ashtanga with Linda Naulty, 6:15pm. $15/drop-in or ask about unlimited monthly memberships. Halo Wellness Center, 968 Rte 73 S, Marlton. 856-574-4433. ElevateYourHealth.com.

Sustainable Cherry Hill’s Green Drinks – Sept-June. 6-8pm. 1st Wed. Networking focused on creating a sustainable South Jersey communi-ty. The Farm & Fisherman Tavern + Market, 1422 Marlton Pike E, Cherry Hill. 609-238-3449. SustainableCherryHill.org.

$8 Community Yoga – 6:15pm. An active class designed to build strength and flexibility while re-ducing stress. Sol Yoga at Vacanti Jiu Jitsu, Bruni Square, 1351 Rte 38W (rear), Hainesport. 267-664-3236. SolYogaNJ.com.

Metaphysical Development Circle – Begins Sept 9. 6:30-8:30pm. Higher awareness, meditation, mindfulness, spirit communication, dowsing and more. Medium and author Robert Egby. Drop-ins welcome. Donations appreciated. 13 Wynwood Dr, Pemberton. Seating limited: 609-351-5878. Check “Bulletin Board” at Robert-Egby.com.

Meditation – 7-8pm. All are welcome. Experi-ence the many benefits of regular meditation. Free. 911 N Broad St, Woodbury. 856-848-5500. WoodburyWellnessCenter.com.

Lettering Arts – 7-8:30pm. With Maureen Peters. All skill levels welcome to learn the art of cal-ligraphy and to create unique pieces using brush work, resists, embossing, stamping and more. Supplies provided. Free. Woodbury Public Li-brary, 33 Delaware St, Woodbury. 856-845-2611. WoodburyLibrary.org.

Yoga Nidra – 7:15-8:15pm. With Lori Wallch. The deepest possible states of relaxation you can obtain while still maintaining full consciousness. It is per-formed in savasana; there is no movement during class, just deep relaxation through listening to the teacher’s instructions. Regular class rates apply. The Sanctuary for Yoga, 43 S Main St, Medford. 609-953-7800. TheSanctuaryForYoga.com.

thursdayYogaBlaast – 9:15-10:15am. With Lauri Andre-acchio. A heart pumping blend of yoga and kick boxing. The perfect complement to your yoga practice as it adds in that cardio that we all need. Regular class rates apply. The Sanctuary for Yoga, 43 S Main St, Medford. 609-953-7800. TheSanctuaryForYoga.com.

Qigong: A Mindful Moving Meditation – 10-11am & 8:15-9:15pm. With Christina Kanefsky. An ancient Chinese health care system that inte-grates physical movement, breathing techniques and focused intention. All levels welcome. Chairs provided. $13/drop-in, $8/senior. Yoga for Liv-ing, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

Mindful Movement and Meditation – 10:30-11:45am. With Lori Volpe. A slower-paced yoga class inviting you to explore the sensations of the body and how movement affects the body. Meditation techniques taught and explored. Regular class rates apply. The Sanctuary for Yoga, 43 S Main St, Medford. 609-953-7800. TheSanctuaryForYoga.com.

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37natural awakenings September 2015

classifiedsFee for classifieds is $1 per word per month. To place listing, email con-tent to [email protected]. Deadline is the 10th of the month.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

IN THE CENTER OF BEAUTIFUL VICTORIAN MERCHANTVILLE – 600-sq-feet of open concept rental space to teach class, workshops and hold affairs. Space offers tables, chairs, kitchenette and restroom. Call 856-834-0883.

LOOKING FOR LICENSED AND IN-SURED PROFESSIONAL – To use our space 1-4 sessions weekly. South Jersey. Chandler Wellness Care: 856-874-8194 or Chandler WellnessCare.com.

FOR RENT

CHERRY HILL WELLNESS CENTER – Beautiful 900-sq-ft studio with hardwood floors for workshops, yoga and more. Counseling rooms available for individual therapy, body work or massage. Very reasonable monthly, daily and hourly rates available. Great location off 295, plenty of parking, local restaurants next door. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. Pictures: YogaForLiving.net.

M O O R E S T O W N A LT E R N AT I V E H E A LT H C E N T E R – Looking for heal-ing energy practitioners. Two large rooms available. Great Location, plenty of parking, minutes from Rte 38 & 295. Call Barbara at Angel’s Hands LLC: 609-760-8410.

MOORESTOWN HOLISTIC HEALTH OFFICE – Beautiful rooms for rent. Room

available full time, includes utilities. Main road, high visibility, parking on premises. For more info, Paula: 856-222-9444 or Info@Acu-Health Center.com.

SERENE AND TRANQUIL – 600-sq-ft space conveniently located on Rte. 38 in Hainesport. Yoga, Massage Therapy, Energy Therapy, Workshops, etc. Call 267-664-3236

HELP WANTED

PART-TIME POSITION IN HOLISTIC DENTAL PRACTICE HADDON TOWN-SHIP –We have a unique opportunity for the right person. We are seeking a person for a part-time position in a dental office like none other you’ve probably seen. Not only do we perform state-of-the-art general dentistry, but we also specialize in dentistry with a ho-listic approach. If you have knowledge of the use of holistic medicine, are willing to learn, and to acquire an X-ray license, this position should be of great interest to you. Before you go any further or before you decide to reply, please go this website: BiologicalDentistsof NJ.com it will be of great help to you in un-derstanding what we do. You would be working Mon, Tues and Wed, 20-25 hours weekly. Commensurate with experience. If you feel this is the type of position that would be a good fit, email your resume to [email protected] and we will get back to you to chat.

Vinyasa Flow – 6:15pm. With Rose Saunders. $15/drop-in or ask about unlimited monthly mem-berships. Halo Wellness Center, 968 Rte 73 S, Marlton. 856-574-4433. ElevateYourHealth.com.

Mindfulness Meditation Class (MBSR) – 7-8pm. Research shows that mindfulness meditation practice can restore emotional balance, reduce stress, and greatly improve health .With practice one can discover new relaxed ways of responding to life’s challenges. $13/drop-in, $8/senior, stu-dent. Yoga for Living, 1926 Greentree Rd, Cherry Hill. 856-404-7287. YogaForLiving.net.

Evening Meditation – Sept 10 & 17. 7-8:30pm. Includes a brief instruction along with periods of seated and walking meditation. Donations appre-ciated. Pine Wind Zen Center, 863 McKendimen Rd, Shamong. 609-268-9151. PineWind.org.

Yin/Vin Flow – 7:15-8:30pm. With Liz Monaghan. A fusion of yin yoga and vinyasa flow. Blend balances the yin and the yang, so-lar and lunar, strength and receptivity, leaving you feeling clarity, whole and deeply peaceful. Regular class rates apply. The Sanctuary for Yoga, 43 S Main St, Medford. 609-953-7800. TheSanctuaryForYoga.com.

Yoga Meditation – 7:30pm. With Lisa O’Brien. $15/drop-in or ask about unlimited monthly mem-berships. Halo Wellness Center, 968 Rte 73 S, Marlton. 856-574-4433. ElevateYourHealth.com.

fridayMid-Day Meditation – 12pm. See Wed listing. The Center, Life in Balance, 43 S Main St, Med-ford. 609-975-8379.

saturdayCollingswood Farmers’ Market – Thru Thanksgiving. 8am-12pm. Rain or shine. Be-tween Collings & Irvin aves along Patco. CollingswoodMarket.com.

Burlington County Farmers’ Market – Thru Oct 31. 8:30am-1pm. Rain or shine. Locally grown produce, prepared foods, artists, weekly cooking demonstrations, family-friendly entertainment. 500 Centerton Rd, Moorestown. BurlCoAgCenter.com.

Free Plant Clinic – Thru Sept. 9am-12pm. 3rd Sat. Sponsored by Rutgers Master Gardeners of Camden County. Get answers to gardening questions. Bring plants or a piece of a diseased plant for identification and suggestions on how to treat. Bring a sample of any insect for iden-tification. Camden County Environmental Cen-ter, 1301 Park Blvd, Cherry Hill. 856-216-7130. [email protected]. Camden.njaes.rutgers.edu/garden/eventsforpublic.html.

Vinyasa Flow – 9:30am. With Dawn Ciallella. $15/drop-in or ask about unlimited monthly mem-berships. Halo Wellness Center, 968 Rte 73 S, Marlton. 856-574-4433. ElevateYourHealth.com.

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Come in for a test drive and mention Natural Awakenings, and receive The Dining Out Card. This card offers you 25% off in restaurants in the South Jersey/Philadelphia Area.

Cutting edge in 1997, cutting edge now!www.TheDiningoutCard.com

Page 38: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

38 South Jersey nasouthjersey.com

Yoga Guide

A holistic based facility which focuses on your individual needs.Offering a variety of services to help you achieve a higher level of health and wellbeing.• Unique massage therapy including Reiki and Shiatsu • Far Infrared Sauna & Vitamin D Light Therapy• Yoga classes• Health coaching

Ask about our new membership programs!Tues-Fri 10am-7pm ~ Sat 9am-5pm ~ Sun: By Appointment

968 Route 73 South, Marlton, NJ 08053

856-574-4433ElevateYourHealth.com

Home to the onlyHimalayan Salt Room

in South Jersey

Home to the onlyHimalayan Salt Room

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Mention this ad when booking and receive 20% off!

Alleviate:• Allergies • Asthma• Colds• Flu• Psoriasis and much more! ~ One time use – cannot be combined with any other specials or discount ~

AUDUBONLive in Joy Yoga118 W. Merchant St.856-546-1006LiveInJoyYoga.comWe offer Ayurvedic, Hatha, Kundalini & Vinyasa Yoga group & private classes, Rei-ki, Thai Massage, Inspirational workshops, Ayurvedic Skincare & much Joy!

CHERRY HILLYoga for Living1926 Greentree Rd.856-404-7287YogaForLiving.netYoga, Mindfulness Meditation, Ayurve-da, and a variety of classes, workshops and retreats.

GLASSBOROSamma Vayama Well-Being (SVWB)12 Girard St.856-863-3549SVWB.orgSVWB offers weekly yoga and meditation classes. Please visit website for more information.

HAINESPORTSol Yoga1351 Rte. 38W267-664-3236SolYogaNJ.comAll Levels Vinyasa Flow, Gentle and Re-storative, Meditation, Workshops.

LAUREL SPRINGSStill Point Yoga Center1 Kelly Drivers Lane856-227-0999 or 856-627-7048StillPointYogaCenter.comYoga Classes - All Levels & Styles, Prenatal, Kids, Self-Inquiry Meditation, Massage, Workshops, Trainings - 200-hr Yoga Teach-er, Kid’s Yoga, 110-hr Reflexology.

MEDFORDThe Sanctuary for Yoga43 S. Main St.Medford, NJ [email protected] true sanctuary where students find peace, love, and balance. Offering tools to draw upon inner wisdom, strength and stress reduction through regular practice, workshops and Reiki.

The Yoga Center of Medford417 Stokes Rd.609-654-9400YogaCenterOfMedford.comA Variety of Styles and Class Levels, Medita-tion, Mediumship, Retreats, Teacher Training. MOORESTOWNTemenos Center720 E. Main St., Ste. 1A856-722-9043TemenosCenter.comYoga Therapy, Individual and Group, Krishna- macharya Lineage, Mindfulness classes; Psychotherapy, Yoga for anxiety, depression and PTSD, Mindful eating, Stress reduction.

MULLICA HILL Blissful Yoga43 S. Main Street609-505-0323BlissfulYogaMullicaHill.comSurrender and Endure - Our ‘Inner’ Asanas. Yoga isn’t just about the body. Let Blissful Yoga lead you in.

WILLIAMSTOWNMajaka Yoga377 S. Main St.609-231-6706MajakaYoga.comAll levels yoga, Kids yoga, Meditation, Reiki, workshops.

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Sleep healthy with a Chemical-Free Savvy Rest Organic Mattress

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Page 39: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

39natural awakenings September 2015

community resource guideConnecting you to the leaders in natural health care and green living in our community. To find out how you can be included in the Community Resource Guide email [email protected] to request our media kit.

ADDICTION / SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELING

ANDREW J. ASSINI, MA, LCADCConscious Contact12 Girard Rd., Glassboro, NJ 08028856-863-3549ConsciousContact.org

Assini is a Licensed Clinical Alcohol and Drug Counselor (LCADC) and recovering addict with over nine years c lean whose approach effectively synthesizes ancient wisdom traditions with modern evidence-based interventions. Consc ious Contac t provides

substance abuse counseling and spiritual guidance services. See ad, page 31.

ALLERGY & HEALTH SOLUTIONS CENTER CARYLANN BAUTZ, CNC, CMT “Naet” 24-Hr Allergy Elimination Therapy Crystal Light Bed Healing609-654-4858FeelLikeUs.net

30 years in business. NAET allergy elimination technique. Results in 24 hours, no needles. Natural solution for allergies and sensitivities, detox and weight loss. Balance the system naturally. Lose weight, feel and look younger. Special packages available. See ad, page 17.

AYURVEDIC HEALING PRACTITIONER

JANET WATKINS, RYT, CRM Ayurvedic Healing PractitionerRegistered Yoga Teacher Live in Joy Yoga & Wellness 118 W Merchant StAudubon, NJ 08106856-816-4158

Utilizing the principles of Ayurveda, nutrition, yoga, meditation, and herbs for natural healing and self-care to support your body in returning to its natural healthy function. Reiki session, ayurvedic cooking classes, restorative yoga and private yoga sessions. See ad, page 25.

ALLERGIES

ACCESS CONSCIOUSNESS

RENEÉ ROBERTSON, LICENSED MASSAGE THERAPISTRestoration-You Inc.720 E Main St, Ste 1-DMoorestown, NJ856-437-0430Restoration-You.com

What if there was a much easier way to deal with stress and anxiety? Have your Bars run, gentle touch on 32 points on the scalp that starts a flow of energy and erases years of fixed points of view, judgments, negative feelings and limiting beliefs that hold us back. Sessions include powerful

tools to use in everyday situations. Energetic Massage and Bodywork for Women.

ACUPUNCTURE

FRANCHESCA ISAAC, LAC, DIPL.AC., HHCAcupuncture, Holistic Health Coach860 Rte 168, Ste 104Turnersville, NJ 08012856-401-9550

Franchesca Isaac is a nationally New Jersey licensed Acupuncturist and a certified holistic health counselor. Acupuncture is known to help a wide variety of conditions including; migraines, back pain, neck pain, digestive issues, allergies, menstrual symptoms , and menopausa l

symptoms. Schedule a complimentary consultation to learn how acupuncture can help.

MELISA SKYRM, MAC, DIPL AC, LICENSED ACUPUNCTURISTRegenerate Health and Wellness2 Sheppard Rd, Ste 500, Voorhees609-332-1324RegenerateHealthAndWellness.com

Acupuncture, Advanced Allergy Therapeutics (AAT), cupping, detoxification, nutri t ion, and relaxation techniques for acute and chronic pain, stress, concussions, overuse injuries, digestive and immune conditions, and more. AAT offers a non-invasive and effective

approach in treating allergy and sensitivity symptoms. See ad, page 13.

BIOFEEDBACK

INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE & BIOFEEDBACK CLINIC813 E Gate Dr, Ste BMount Laurel, NJ [email protected]

We specialize in a wide variety of conditions, some of which include: ADD/ADHD, POTS, fibromyalgia, chronic migraines, headaches, insomnia and other sleep disorders, anxiety, autism spectrum disorder,

OCD, ODD, stress management, depression, constipation, chronic pain, and so much more. See ad, page 23.

INSIGHT TO YOUR WELLNESS18 Serenity CtSouthampton, NJ 08088856-834-2344

Adriana Lefkowitz is a holistic nutritionist and a Certified Bionetic Practitioner. She uses a SpectraVision scan to identify stressors. All your supplements are tested to ensure proper absorption by your body. Using data from the scan she balances your body with homeopathy and low

laser light therapy to achieve health and wellness. See ad, page 5.

BLENDED (STEP) FAMILY& TEEN LIFE COACH

CHRISTINE PETERSONBlended Family Formula’s Life Coaching, LLC856 761 4471 (text/call)[email protected]

Every Family has their own Formula. Christine has over 3 decades of experience with blended step families. She works with families to create harmony within their homes by addressing fear, anger, sense of loss and sadness. Christine also works with teens and empowers them

to recognize emotions/actions and teaches them awareness of the bigger picture of life.

BIONETIC HEALING

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CHIROPRACTOR

DECOTIIS CHIROPRACTIC WELLNESS30 W Holly AvePitman, NJ [email protected]

Dr. DeCotiis specializes in wellness-based Chiropractic care: helping the body to function at its personal best while reducing internal and external stresses. We individualize care to optimize performance of body systems by reducing nerve damage, improving spinal alignment, posture,

ergonomics, sleep habits, hormone balance and improving overall health through exercise, weight loss, detox and supplementation.

DR. SYLVIA BIDWELLBIDWELL CHIROPRACTICThe Strawbridge Professional Center 212 W Rte 38, Ste 100Moorestown, NJ 08057856-273-1551DrSylviaBidwell@verizon.netBidwell-Chiropractic.com

Dr. Bidwell is dedicated to providing patients the best possible spinal healthcare including chiropractic adjustment, massage, electrical muscle stimulation, ultrasound, hot and cold therapy, cervical and lumbar t rac t ion , and s t re tching and strengthening exercise instruction.

Her adjustments techniques consist of diversified, activator, arthrostim, SOT blocking, craniosacral work, active release technique, and PNF stretching. See ad, page 18.

COLON HYDROTHERAPY

ALLERGY & HEALTH SOLUTIONS CENTER CARYLANN BAUTZ, CNC, CMT “Naet” 24-Hr Allergy Elimination TherapyColon Hydrotherapy, Crystal Light Bed Healing609-654-4858FeelLikeUs.net

30 years in business. The only closed system in the area. Safe and sanitary. Professionally trained therapists perform procedure. See ad, page 17.

CONSULTING

MIRIAM STAVOLA609-230-1079Business or Marketing Consultant to Private Practice Owners & Freelance ProfessionalsCreativeBusinessPractices.com

Combining her extensive training, teaching and practice in metaphysics with years of business administration, Miriam applies spiritual principles to management and market ing . Focusing on professional growth through personal development, she guides clients to uniquely tailor their

services for optimum exposure and expansion.

ENERGYWORK

ALAINE PORTNER, E-RYTExperienced Medium, Spiritual Educator, Author417 Stokes Road Medford, NJ 609-654-9400 AlainePortner.comAlaine@YogaCenterOfMedford.comYogaCenterOfMedford.com

A gifted medium, yoga teacher, spiritual guide and guardian of the Yoga Center of Medford. The Center has enriched the lives of the community for over a generation. During the course of her professional journey, Alaine has fine-tuned her ability as a medium and then fused it

with her love of meditation to offer a unique and transformative experience. Individual and group sessions are now available. See ad, page 34.

LISA O’BRIEN, E-RYT, CRMExperienced Energy Intuitive and Yoga Teacher856-261-0554BlissBodyNJ.com

Lisa O’Brien is an experienced yoga teacher, Reiki Master and energy intuitive offering private and group sessions. She specializes in clearing blockages and negative programs out of the energy system for healing and advancement on one’s path.

MARILYN EPPOLITE The Wisdom WithinEnergy healing, flower essences, akashic readings and spiritual counseling856-236-5973New website: video meditations and tips on living a balanced emotional life. TheWisdomWithin.net

A balanced energy system is the foundation of health. Marilyn, a graduate of the Barbara Brennan School of Healing and a certified flower essence therapist, guides you to an experience of a balanced energy f ield as the secret to emotional balance and in finding

solutions to the challenges of life. Children, teens, adults. In-person or phone/Skype sessions.

FENG SHUI & ENERGY WORK

KARIN HIRSCHLotus Living Space Feng Shui, Physical Radiesthesia, Energy Therapy, Shamanic [email protected]

A healthy body, mind and spirit need a balanced and positive environment. Karin is a certified Feng Shui Master and Professional Dowser for Geopathic Stress, Electromagnetic Frequencies, Energy Intrusions and Product Sensitivities. She also offers IET®, Shamanic Healing and

Psychopomp work to heal mind and spirit.

HEALING MODALITIES

SARAH OUTLAW, CBHC, MH, NRT Natural Health Improvement Center of South Jersey1050 N Kings Hwy, Ste 200Cherry Hill, NJ 08034856-667-6805NHICSouthJersey.com

Safe, natural solutions for many health problems. Get to the root of your symptoms and heal your body w i t h N u t r i t i o n R e s p o n s e Testing™. Sarah Outlaw is a Master Herbalist and Advanced Nutrition Response Testing Practitioner offering a non-invasive, advanced

form of muscle testing for food sensitivities, chemical and metal toxicity, and immune system issues for all ages. Individualized, targeted nutrition programs designed for every client. See ad, page 11.

A photographer gets people to pose for him. A yoga instructor gets people to pose for themselves.

~T. Guillemets

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HEALTH COUNSELING

LIESHA GETSON, BCTT, HHCHealth Through Awareness100 Brick Rd, Ste 206, Marlton856-596-5834HealthThroughAwareness.com

Liesha Getson is a Board-Certified Thermographic Technician, Holistic Health Counselor, a Reiki Master and Energy Practitioner. Liesha is a founding partner of Health Through Awareness in Marlton, a cooperative wellness center that provides a variety of alternative services to

facilitate healthy living including nutrition and lifestyle counseling, Reiki, thermography, infrared detoxification and biopuncture. See ad, page 6.

HYPNOTHERAPY

BRIAN STEMETZKI901 Rte 168, Ste 103, Turnersville856-266-4983ABetterTomorrowCounselingServices.com

Brian Stemetzki is a licensed LCSW, NBCCH and a level 2-trained EMDR clinician. He provides a wide variety of treatment methods such as Hypnotherapy, EMDR and EFT that can help you reach your goals quicker and easier. See ad, page 34.

DR. JAIME FELDMAN, DCHChairman, Medical & Dental Division, International Hypnosis Federation 214 W Main St, Ste L4, Moorestown, NJ 08057856-231-0432 • [email protected] PartsTherapy.com

Dr. Jaime Feldman, one of the pioneers in an advanced technique called “Advanced Parts Therapy,” has been able to unlock the subconscious and remove unwanted behaviors: stop smoking (guaranteed), weight loss, stress, depression, pain and anger management, and more. Outstanding

success in curing phobias and deep-seated trauma, and treating the immune system to put cancer into complete remission. See ad, page 27.

ROBERT EGBY, CH, DHPHypnosis Healing & Beyond13 Wynwood Dr, Pemberton, NJ 08068609-351-5878Robert-Egby.com

Hypnoanalysis and Sound Healing can be of great help with stress and anxiety relief, memories, limitations, blocks, fears and obsessions. We rebuild positive values including self-confidence, self-worth, living now and imaging goals. Help provided with mindfulness and self-hypnosis

training, higher self and spirit communication. Appointments: days, evenings, weekends.

INTEGRATIVE/HOLISTIC MEDICINE

CHANDLER WELLNESS CARE Khayriyyah Chandler, DO25 A Tanner St, Haddonfield, NJ 08033856-874-8194Fax: 877-876-2833ChandlerWellnessCare@gmail.comChandlerWellnessCare.com

Direct Pay family practice in down-town Haddonfield. 24/7 access to Dr, 30-min visits, house calls, skype and telemedicine visits. Integrative medicine. Osteopathic manipula-tion. Weight loss management. Shop

with Dr. Vitamin Injections. Postpartum and youth services. Tai chi and Education Series. Weekly walking group on Kings Hwy, Tuesdays, 6:30pm. Book online.

DR. STEVEN HORVITZ Institute for Medical Wellness110 Marter Ave, Ste 408, Moorestown, NJ856-231-0590 DrHorvitz.com

Board-Certified Family Medicine blending traditional family care with a holistic focus and preventive, nu-tritional and integrative approach. We look for causes and triggers for dis-ease before reaching for the prescrip-tion pad. Same and next day appoint-ments are available. See ad, page 2.

PHILIP GETSON, DOHealth Through Awareness 100 Brick Rd, Ste 206, Marlton, NJ 08053 856-596-5834

Health Through Awareness takes a holistic approach to health and well-being. Dr. Philip Getson is a Board Certified Family Physician and certified by four Thermographic Boards. He specializes in thermography, an early diagnostic tool for many health conditions including breast health. With the mission of providing a balanced

approach to wellness, the center offers diet and lifestyle counseling, thermography, the area’s most unique infrared detox sauna (The POD), Reiki, a smoking cessation program, physician standard supplements and ongoing wellness classes. See ad, page 6.

LAW OF ATTRACTION COACH

DAVID BARTKY, LOACCPhone Coaching At Its [email protected]

I am an experienced and certified Law of Attraction Life Coach. Are you ready to start attracting what you want instead of what you don’t want? The first phone session is free.

MASSAGE THERAPYENERGY PRACTITIONER

BARB HIBSMAN, LMT, CRM, MEMBER AMTABody work, Energy Healing, Space Clearing Moorestown & Mercerville 609-240-3699

Barb has over 17 years of experience helping the body heal itself through modalities such as Integrative Massage, Raindrop, Reflexology, Reiki/IET, Chakra Balancing and Removing Energy Blockages. For home and office energy balancing, she is certified in space clearing through dowsing.

MINDFULNESS TEACHER & LIFE COACH

JEN PERRY, MA, MSED [email protected]

Ready to live life from your heart? Learn mindfulness and heartfulness techniques to skillfully work with fears, stress, blocks and self-defeat-ing behaviors and unlock the power of your heart to live an authentic, joy-filled life. I work with parents, children, teens and adults individu-

ally and in classes.

NATURAL MEDICINE

SEAN CHRISTOPHER INSELBERG, ACN, NET, NRTNutritional Wellness Center of South Jersey1 Cinnaminson Ave, Palmyra, NJ 08065856-499-2160NutritionalWellnessNJ.com

Sean Christopher Inselberg is an Advanced Clinical Nutritionist Practicing Nutrition Response test ing and Neuro Emotional Technique. He uses non-invasive testing to uncover the root cause of symptoms and d i sease . The techniques are clinically proven to

help restore the body back to optimal health. Using an advanced form of applied kinesiology, the testing shows any structural impairments, nutritional deficiencies, hidden infections and emotional stressors that can all become barriers to achieving good health. See ad, page 5.

Wrinkles should merely indicate where smiles have been.

~Mark Twain

Page 42: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

42 South Jersey nasouthjersey.com

NUMEROLOGIST

TRACI ROSENBERG, MANumerologist & Empowerment Coach609-417-4526 [email protected]

Join the region’s leading numerologist as you discover your life’s purpose. Encoded in your name and birth date are your lessons, talents and desires. Traci will help you realize your full potential.

NUTRITIONAL COUNSELING

JAMIE MOUNT, CHHC, BSEDOh How Healthy!Nutrition and Wellness Coaching21 Haines Mill RdDelran, NJ 08075856-630-1249OhHowHealthy.com

Trying to lose weight? Gain energy? Make smarter food choices for yourself and your family? Jamie Mount helps create balance by offering guidance and inspiration to help clients shift their behavior to healthier habits by making step-by-step changes to diet and lifestyle.

DONNA WOODCertified Nutritionist Health Haven, 1381 New Jersey Rte. 38Hainesport, NJ 08036609-346-7696HealthHavenInc.com

Donna Wood, a certified nutritionist, focuses on nutritional counseling and dietary guidance. Disease does not occur without a cause or imbalance. Discover the “root” of your imbalance. Learn to make better food and lifestyle choices. Gain self-awareness through our services. Call

for an appointment. See ad, page 25.

PARENT COACHING

ERIN TAYLOR, MAPCI CERTIFIED PARENT COACH©

It Takes A Village Parent Coaching, LLC609-605-3844Erin@VillageParentCoaching.comVillageParentCoaching.com

For two decades, Erin has helped parents get to know themselves better, rediscover their deepest-held values, find their inner compass, and create deeper, more fulfilling relationships with their children. Erin works with parents of all kinds who have children of all ages.

PSYCHOENERGETIC COUNSELING

HEALERS UNIVERSEAndrea Regal, Subtle Energy [email protected] HealersUniverse.com

Want to know where you Source from? What role you play in the Earth’s evolution? What are the Soul Purposes underlying the greatest issues and challenges of your life? “Discover the Universe Within” sessions can allow you to truly “Know Thyself” and

create the life you dream. Or 75-/90-min Earth/Galactic Alignment sessions to set you back on course. 30+ years experience in counseling and teaching the energetics of mind, body and soul connection.

REAL ESTATE

SHERI SMITH, CRS GRI ABR SFR, LIFE COACHBroker Associate, BHHS Fox & Roach41 S Haddon Ave, Haddonfield NJ [email protected]

Smith Real Estate Solutions was created with the idea in mind that there is a large stress factor involved in finding one’s home from the fear of the unknown (the process) to not having a source to have simple housing questions answered. Taking a holistic approach, ultimate goals

are taken into consideration along with knowledge of the market to help clients understand and achieve their pathway whether buying, selling, renting or simply needing some guidance. See ad, page 29.

SHAMANIC HEALING

DANA REYNOLDS, MA/M.ED.Mount Meru Holistic Pranic and Shamanic HealingCherry Hill/Medford area856-993-1786MtMeruHolistic.com

Healer/clairvoyant with 30 years experience. Qi pranic healing involves a shamanic method of bodywork and channeling Qi (Chi o r Ki ) , wh ich t aps in to the energetic ancestral consciousness to powerfully address disease, chronic illness and imbalance at

all levels. Revitalizes, rejuvenates cells, expels toxins, balances hormones and powers up immunity. Tackles all disorders of the body, mind and environment.

WELLNESS CENTER

THE CENTER…LIFE IN BALANCE 609-975-8379TheCenterLifeInBalance@gmail.comTheCenterLifeInBalance.com

Awareness Coaching, with Maryann Miller, and Intuitive Guidance, with Susan Drummond, are

offered at The Center and as private sessions in your home or over the phone. If you are feeling out-of-sorts, have a free consultation to determine the unique approach for your unique journey. See ad, page 30.

YOGA

YOGA FOR LIVING1926 Greentree Rd856-404-7287YogaForLiving.net

Yo g a , M i n d f u l n e s s Meditation, Ayurveda and a variety of classes, workshops and retreats. See ad, page 15.

ZEN LIFE COACHING

SEIJAKU ROSHIPine Winds Zen CenterCherry Hill & Shamong locations [email protected]

A unique opportunity to work with an American Zen Master. One-on-one private sessions with one of today’s most popular pioneers and expert in the field of human potential and Mindfulness Meditation Stress Reduction Training (Zen Training). Adults, couples, families, executives,

professionals, caretakers and clergy. Stress management, relationships, grief, loss, mindfulness in the workplace. See ad, page 20.

THE CENTERLife in Balance

Real peace is always unshakable... Bliss is unchanged by gain or loss.~Yogi Bhajan

Page 43: Natural Awakenings South Jersey September 2015

43natural awakenings September 2015

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