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Generally, the end of the year is meant to be a time where we start winding down and shut off from our normal stressors but often it’s just the opposite and can be a little stressful. Going back to basics and celebrating the simple things in life is a great antidote.
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FEAST ONALFALFA
3 fabulous dressings
EXAM ESSENTIALS
MEET OUR SUPPLIER LOW CARB ADAPT
ONE MIND CONNECTION
RAWCHEESECAKE cashew nut heaven
FAMILY MATTERS
your affairs sorted
+
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PREPARE FOR SUMMER
be more brainy
tune into shared thoughts
NOV 2015
R15 (incl. VAT)FREE IN-STORE WITH PURCHASES
Offers valid from Sunday 1 November until Monday 30 November 2015Selected items may not be available at certain stores. We reserve the right to limit quantities. E.&O.E.
tips to get you there
READYSummer
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Endura is a specialized formula featuring a unique blend of electrolyte minerals
found naturally in muscle cells. Endura includes these important electrolytes, as
well as magnesium glycinate and malic acid, in a formula designed to enhance
absorption of fluids and electrolytes to help prevent dehydration.
This unique rehydration support formula features a significant quantity of
magnesium, a key nutrient in energy production in the form of magnesium amino
acid chelate (bis-glycinate). This special form of magnesium allows for excellent
absorption—important for rehydration—without causing gastric discomfort.
Endura also delivers key electrolytes to help replace those excreted through sweat
during exercise, strenuous activities, and/or hot weather conditions. And it’s
available in two flavours (orange and lemon-lime).
Why Endura?
All electrolyte replacements are not the same. Endura is scientifically designed to:
• Help maintain energy and support rehydration
• Replenish key electrolyte minerals to help replace those excreted through sweat
during excercise and to help sustain high-performance
• Features malic acid, which may support the relief of muscle soreness
• Deliver magnesium—a key nutrient in energy production and rehydration—in a
form designed to be highly absorbable without causing gastric discomfort
• Naturally �avoured
Endura®
Energy & Rehydration FormulaReplenishes Electrolyte Minerals
® .
3
Endura is a specialized formula featuring a unique blend of electrolyte minerals
found naturally in muscle cells. Endura includes these important electrolytes, as
well as magnesium glycinate and malic acid, in a formula designed to enhance
absorption of fluids and electrolytes to help prevent dehydration.
This unique rehydration support formula features a significant quantity of
magnesium, a key nutrient in energy production in the form of magnesium amino
acid chelate (bis-glycinate). This special form of magnesium allows for excellent
absorption—important for rehydration—without causing gastric discomfort.
Endura also delivers key electrolytes to help replace those excreted through sweat
during exercise, strenuous activities, and/or hot weather conditions. And it’s
available in two flavours (orange and lemon-lime).
Why Endura?
All electrolyte replacements are not the same. Endura is scientifically designed to:
• Help maintain energy and support rehydration
• Replenish key electrolyte minerals to help replace those excreted through sweat
during excercise and to help sustain high-performance
• Features malic acid, which may support the relief of muscle soreness
• Deliver magnesium—a key nutrient in energy production and rehydration—in a
form designed to be highly absorbable without causing gastric discomfort
• Naturally �avoured
Endura®
Energy & Rehydration FormulaReplenishes Electrolyte Minerals
® .
A PROUD BRAND OF
REDUCES APPETITE
BURNS FAT
It’s what’s inside that sets us apart
10-Step Quality Assurance to ensure stability, composition and strength from raw material selection and testing, to final product quality and effectiveness.
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Collect your free booklet guide instore. For more assistance with products and conditions, call our healthline.
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PUBLISHER'S LETTER
EDITOR’S LETTER
Dear Wellness Readers
This year really seems to have flown by. At Wellness Warehouse, we’ve been keeping
ourselves busy over the last few months with a new store in Morningside, Gauteng, a new caf� at the V&A Waterfront and the relocation of our Gardens Store to a new location in the Gardens Shopping Centre. Over the next six months we’ll keep things ticking over and embark on renovations to our Kloof Store, which will improve the shopping experience and offering. We hope you’ll like our work when its done.
Keeping busy, makes time fly by fast. When that happens, there is a natural tendency to forgo making time to enjoy the present. So as we gear up for the festive season and end of year, it is also time to start to slow down ( just a little so you can smell the roses). Make sure you don’t get carried away with the end of year frenzy. Slow down, enjoy the moment and start the rejuvenation process.
I’m looking to make time to rejuvenate and reenergize by soaking up some of the suns vibrant energy. I had a blood test recently and found I was deficient in vitamin D. This was a shock, but Vitamin D deficiency is common and even more so after a long winter. Vitamin D deficiency is linked to a whole host of diseases, so I’m taking this seriously, supplementing with Vitamin D, and will make a concerted effort to spend more time outdoors. Exposure to sun allows the body to generate its own Vitamin D.
So as the festive season arrives, don’t forget to gift yourself with love, caring and attention to ensure you rejuvenate from the year past and gear up for the next.
Yours in wellness and sunshine
Dr. Sean Gomes
Co-founder
Summer Ready
I’ve been watching clips with refugees landing in foreign places with nothing but the clothes on
their backs; hearing Michael Meyer, scientist for NASA’s Mars Exploration Programme talk about water deposits on Mars and more evidence for the possibility of supporting life; listening to worrying stats that global suicide rates have increased by 60% in the last 45 years; and marveling at cases of spontaneous and miraculous healing.
We have access to so much information, and what we tune into has the ability to significantly shape our thoughts and feelings. It’s easy to get overwhelmed. Generally, the end of the year is meant to be a time where we start winding down and shut off from our normal stressors but often it’s just the opposite and can be a little stressful. Going back to basics and celebrating the simple things in life is a great antidote. Things like preparing a great meal from scratch using natural ingredients. We’ve added lots of recipes this month and great advice for living a life filled with practices that make you feel healthy. This issue intends to equip you for a relaxing and rejuvenating festive season. Whether you are winding down or gearing up we hope you enjoy reading our wellness advice, trying out our product suggestions and following our inspiration.
Yours in joy and abundance
Robyn
We are delighted to announce that the Wellness magazine is on sale at Starke Ayres in Rosebank, Cape Town.
PUBLISHER: Dr. Sean Gomes
EDITOR: Robyn Wilkinson
EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTOR: Cheryl Stevens
DESIGN & ILLUSTRATIONS:
Inge Smit, Lizanne Smit
DIETITIAN: Hayley Cimring
ADVERTISING & DIRECTORY ENQUIRIES:
Sue Dall, cell: 084 707 4477
PRINTED BY: Paarl Media Paarl
EDITORIAL
ADVERTISING
STORE LOCATIONS
Wellness Warehouse Kloof & Wellness Caf� KloofLifestyles on Kloof, 50 Kloof Street, Cape Town. 021 487 5420, 021 487 5440
Wellness Warehouse Cavendish Cavendish Square, Cnr. Dreyer & Main Rd, Claremont, Cape Town. 021 673 7200
Wellness Warehouse Cape QuarterCape Quarter, Somerset Road, De Waterkant, Cape Town. 021 425 7007
Wellness Warehouse PalmyraPalmyra Junction, Claremont, Cape Town. 021 671 2363
Wellness Warehouse Wembley Square Wembley Square, Gardens, Cape Town. 021 461 3775
Wellness Warehouse SeapointPiazza Da Luz Mall, Seapoint, Cape Town. 021 434 0460
Wellness Warehouse PlattekloofPlattekloof Village, Plattekloof, Cape Town. 021 558 7106
Wellness Warehouse GardensGardens Shopping Centre, Mill Street, Cape Town. 021 465 8787
Wellness Warehouse PaddocksThe Paddocks, Corner of Race Course & Grand Boulevard, Milnerton, Cape Town. 021 551 6335
Wellness Warehouse GlengarryCnr. De Bron & Fairtrees Road, Vredekloof, Cape Town. 021 981 2099
Wellness Warehouse HelderbergShop 16, Helderberg Shopping Centre, Centenary Drive, Somerset West. 021 851 1949
Wellness Warehouse Waterfront & Wellness Caf� V&AShop 6105, Ground Floor, V&A Waterfront, Breakwater Boulevard, Cape Town. 021 418 0175
Wellness Warehouse Flamingo SquareFlamingo Square, Cnr Blaauwberg Road and Study Street, Table View, Cape Town. 021 556 8008
Wellness Warehouse WelgemoedShop 5, Forum Shopping Centre, Welgemoed, Cape Town. 021 913 3000
Wellness Warehouse Village ViewShop 18b, Village View Shopping Centre, Bedfordview. 011 450 0000
Wellness Warehouse Morningside Shop L17, Inside the Morningside Pharmacy, Morningside Shopping Centre, Sandton
Wellness Warehouse Online Shop261 Bree Street, Cape Town. 021 003 3552
For more information on trading hours visit wellnesswarehouse.com
Wellness Support Office261 Bree Street, Cape Town
021 003 3552www.wellnesswarehouse.com
magazinehelping you live life well
WELLNESS magazine takes no responsibility for the content of the advertising material supplied directly by advertisers. We accept advertising in good faith and do not research advertising claims. Kindly consult a professional should you have any doubt as to the efficacy of any claims made.
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Wellness Magazine - 210 x 297mm - Skin, Nails and Hair Advert - PRINT FILE
11 October 2015 07:44:46 PM
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EAT WELL CHEESE CAKE CHALLENGE - Cheese cake proficiency is a social skill no one should be without. Here’s how to prepare an undisputedly delicious cheesecake that’s both raw and gluten free.
THE NEW WORLD OF FAT - Over the last fifty years, general nutritional wisdom recommends moderating the consumption of fat, but recent research turns this on it’s head.
FEAST ON ALFALFA - Sprouts and shoots are highly nutritious and if you grow your own you are certain to have an everlasting supply. Start with alfalfa. We tell you how.
BE WELL EXAM ESSENTIALS - Get your mind and body in study mode with clever tips that’ll not only boost your brainpower but give you the motivation to match.
TURMERIC, SPICE FOR LIFE - Curcumin a component of turmeric is a potent antioxidant with countless benefits. After reading this, you’ll want more of it in your diet.
LOOK WELL BODY OF EVIDENCE – How much of our lifestyle is reflected on our bodies and faces? Adam Nustedt debates the credo that beauty is only skin deep
SUN KISSED – Care for your skin and make your tan last with a beauty regime that includes buffing, scrubbing, super moisture and sun protection. BACK TO YOUR ROOTS – Using herbal hair dye will help reduce the chemical load on your body. We look at ingredients used throughout the centuries that are still effective today.
LIVE WELL ADD MORE COLOUR - Take notice and refresh your awareness of the colours around you, we show you how to increase the pleasure you get from your visual experience of life.
ONE MIND CONNECTION - Documented cases of shared thoughts and emotions show great evidence towards the concept of the ‘one mind’. We look at the science that supports this theory.
PREPARE FOR SUMMER - 21 tips will get you totally prepared for summer. Pack the perfect beach bag, get kids to play outside, throw an impromptu party, prepare for guests, make a party playlist… we’ll get you ready for the festive season.
MOVE WELL OVERCOMING CHALLENGES - After an accident left Gordon Stevens in a coma with multiple broken bones, he found a way to regain mobility and teach himself to walk again. We speak to him about courage, determination and getting back on track.
LOVE WELL FAVOUR FLAVOUR - The idea that babies should eat only bland food is a myth that has somehow become our cultural norm. Here are some excellent food choices with suggestions for added flavour.
FAMILY MATTERS - Get all your family affairs in order – from emergency numbers on the fridge to updating your will, having insurance, teaching kids their address and memorizing Mum’s phone number, follow a list and get it all done.
REGULARS Events - head out in NovemberEditor’s Choice - Summer celebration Meet our supplier – Adapt your Life presents a low carb lifestyle Read Well - Appreciate what’s happening in the world around you with a few good reads. Classified - lets you know what’s happening in your wellness community with workshops, retreats, therapies and more Summer feet – take off your shoes and feel the earth
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ON THE COVER
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MODEL: Stasjja Jacobs from Ice Model Management PHOTOGRAPHER: Anton Robert STYLIST: Rouxmia Bougas
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GALILEO OPEN AIR CINEMA 4 November - Cape TownGet yourself to Kirstenbosch Gardens to see the film ‘Cocktail’ in an open air cinema. ‘Cocktail’ features heart throb Tom Cruise demonstrating bartending theatrics in a classic romantic 80’s film.
The gates open at 18h00, and the film starts at 19h45. Tickets are R90 at the door or you can buy an online season ticket. Galileo Open Air Cinema runs until 28 April 2016 at venues around Cape Town, including the winelands. Contact: 071 471 8728 or email: [email protected]. Visit www.thegalileo.co.za for the full film schedule, and venues.
PLANTING SEEDS OF LIFE WORKSHOP 7 November - Pretoria Learn meditation, self hypnosis and other life changing techniques directly from the experts. Tibetan Buddhist Monk Ven.Gyalten Njima, Hypnotherapist Hendrik Baird and Life Coach Sandra Jansen van Rensberg help you explore and find balance in body, mind and spirit. This one day workshop is held at Roodevallei Hotel, in Kameeldrift East, Pretoria. It costs R1 350 per person and includes all refreshments and full buffet lunch. Contact Hendrik Baird on (012) 333 1067/ 072 629 4990 or email [email protected]
CONSTANTIA GIFT FAIR 4 to 8 November - Cape TownOriginal and inspirational Christmas gifts and innovative home and garden décor are all on display at Constantia’s Gift Fair. It’s a great outing for children who can have fun with face painting, and playing games in a magical space. Delicious delicacies from the deli pair superbly with fine wine and appeal to all connoisseurs and foodie enthusiasts. The gates open at 9:00am and adult entrance fee is R30. Free for under 18’s. It’s held at the SA Riding for the Disabled Association, Brommersvlei Road, in Constantia. Contact Carryn Wiltshire on 083 679 4495 or email: [email protected]
FRESHLY GROUND 14 November - Paul Cluver Wine EstateVibrant music act, Freshlyground opens up the Hope@PaulCluver 2015/16 Season with a blast of energy and feel-good tunes. Here you can see the Afro-fusion singing sensation set in a 600-seat amphitheatre amongst the apple orchards of Elgin. Pack a picnic, (sans alcohol) bring cushions and dress warm and comfy. Gates open at 17h00 and the main act is at 19h00. Tickets are R250. Get to Paul Cluver Wine Estate, along the N2 and take the Kromco turn off.Contact: 021 844 0605 or email: [email protected]
ASHRAM LIVE IN YOGA TEACHERS TRAINING COURSE 2 to 27 November - Kwa Zulu NatalLearn all about the Art of Yoga, its’ tradition, psychology and philosophy at the Pathways Country Yoga retreat founded and hosted by Jennifer Fitzsimmons. This month is a call for all yoga enthusiasts to check out the Ashram live-in Teachers’ Training Course. Find them at the Pathways Country Yoga Retreat, R603 Eston in Kwa Zulu Natal. Contact: Jennifer on 083 695 1360 or email [email protected]. For more info visit www.yogaretreatssa.co.za
Out & About In November 2015
If you have an event or happening you want to share with our readers email [email protected] and let her know.
helping you live life well
If you missed out on seeing the celestial super ‘blood moon’ lunar eclipse last month, don’t despair, the effects of an eclipse can be felt for months afterwards. And besides, we’ve got other super earthly events like the Galileo Open Air cinema where you get to sit under a blanket of a billion stars with your loved ones.
by Fran Kruger
MOVING INTO
One way to know it’s November is a growing number of moustaches. Movember is an annual campaign in 21 countries to ‘Change The Face of Men’s Health’. It started in Australia in 2003. Mo Bros start the month with a clean-shaven face and for the rest of November (Movember), grow their way into the annals of fine moustachery.
The Movember Foundation is fighting for men to live happier, healthier and longer lives by raising funds and highlighting men’s health issues, specifically prostate and testicular cancer as well as men’s mental health and physical inactivity.
Men often don’t talk about issues they are experiencing and concerns they may have, which impacts on early detection and essentially life expectancy. The Movember Foundation aims to create a world where men don’t need to suffer or succumb to diseases which are preventable or manageable if they are detected early enough.
This year’s theme is Shaped by Experience with the underlying message that if you choose to live well and follow a healthy lifestyle, and pay attention to your health and the warning signs, you can help shape your future,” says Garron Gsell, CEO and founder of the Men’s Foundation.
Movember is driving the message that early detection is key and annual health checks are vital. Another aspect to this years campaign is an option to sign up to move. This is a commitment to move for the 30 days of Movember. This means anything from a daily brisk walk or taking the stairs instead of the lift, to surfing, cycling or swimming.
For more information or to sign up as a Mo Bro or Mo Sista visit www.movember.com or download the Movember app on your mobile device. Follow Movember on social media: @MovemberRSA on Twitter or facebook/MovemberSouthAfrica.
Wellness Warehouse
Kloof Street Clinic is
offering a promotion on a
PROSTATE RAPID TEST during the month of
November. Bring your moustache
to Kloof street and get your
test done today.
Ask our clinic sister for more information or call 021 487 5430 to make an appointment. Available at
Wellness Warehouse Kloof, Lifestyle on Kloof, 50 Kloof Street, Cape Town.
Save R10 and get theprostate test for only R85.
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EDITOR’S CHOICE
Selected items not available at all stores. Items not listed at a particular store can be ordered for you or bought online at www.wellnesswarehouse.com
When the sun is shiningSummer is an excellent time to practice happiness. As Maya Angelou says, “If you must look back, do so forgivingly, if you must look forward, do so prayerfully, however the wisest thing you can do is be present in the present…gratefully.” When it’s a beautiful day and the sun is shining it’s so easy to feel grateful.
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Be Mentally PreparedWhy not get a little help and amp up your mind power. Whether you’re studying for exams or need a prompt to help remember things – taking a supplement is highly recommended. There’s been incredible research around an extract called Bacopa (traditionally used in Ayurvedic formulas) with results that show better memory recall and information retention, and reduced anxiety around learning. Bacopa has also been used to treat insomnia and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Keen Mind Now R244,99, Save R30
Make Picnics a Pleasure If mosquitoes like you, you’re going to love this spray. Unlike most mosquito products this one smells great. It’s a repellant that’s used in the harshest malaria zones. It has no alcohol or chemicals like DEET (diethyl-meta-toulamine) or Pyrethrins, or D-trans allerthrin. You can safely use it on exposed skin, on children, clothing, curtains, mosquito nets, and pillows. Take it with you on holiday, it’s 100% eco friendly, biodegradable and safe for toddlers. Proguard Natura R49,99
Naturally, a Good Choice Here’s every reason to switch to natural products. Lemongrass body wash implores you to ‘get naked and wash your body’. The smell is certainly zesty, with no chemical undertones, it feels nourishing and cleansing and it promises not to strip your skin of any of its natural oils. Natural Lab has a range of hand and body washes, deo’s and face cream all with the same guarantee. Natural. Natural Lab Get Naked Lemongrass Body Wash R59,99
No Ordinary Skincare It’s always so nice to know you’re buying a local product. The Ordinary Skincare range is made in Cape Town and that’s just one reason to support them. Don’t let the name fool you though. The Ordinary skincare range is a simple no-fuss range made from natural ingredients backed by years of research and experience in the aesthetic and beauty industry. This is a reliable, hardworking range especially for skin subjected to our climate and sensitive skin. It uses effective ingredients like aloe ferox, lavender, shea butter, primrose oil, grapeseed and more. Ordinary Skincare range
Chocolate Fan Forever And now for something really special. ...If, like me, you love a hot cuppa but don’t want to drink too much coffee – here’s the answer. It’s truly a luxury hot chocolate made with real cacao, (no refined sugar). It’s also got the calming effects of reishi. This is a healing mushroom that’s said to represent spiritual potency symbolizing success, well-being, divine power, and longevity. Added to that are chai spices like cardamom, allspice, cinnamon, ginger, cloves and nutmeg. Cacao stimulates the production of serotonin and dopamine in the brain, which means anti-depressant and mood-elevating properties. A slight sweetness from coconut blossom sugar rounds off the flavour. This is truly my new favourite drink. Sfera Hot Chocolate R119,99
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AVOCADO MOUSSE
Serves 4 generous portions
1. Put the chocolate in a small bowl over a saucepan of barely simmering water.
2. Stir for about 3 minutes until the chocolate is melted and smooth, then set aside to cool.
3. Place the melted chocolate, avocados, agave, cocoa powder,
almond milk, vanilla and salt in a food processor.
4. Blend until smooth and creamy, scraping the sides as needed.
5. Spoon into glasses and refrigerate until chilled then serve with berries.
healthy foodmarketeatwell
INGREDIENTS
1/2 CUP SEMISWEET CHOCOLATE
(TRY THE RAW VERSION AVAILABLE AT
WELLNESS WAREHOUSE)
4 VERY RIPE AVOCADOS, PEELED AND
PITTED
1/2 CUP AGAVE
1/2 CUP RAW COCOA POWDER
1/3 CUP ALMOND MILK
1 TBSP VANILLA EXTRACT
1/4 TEASPOON SALT
BERRIES TO GARNISH
helping you live life well
Cooking with ClaireUsing avocado in a chocolate mousse might sound a little off-beat but once you’ve tried it, you won’t want it any other way. Here’s a sterling recipe from Master Chef finalist Claire Allen that will satisfy your sweet tooth without using sugar.
COOKING WITH CLAIRE CONSCIOUSLY
Over the next few months join me for live demos, cooking tips
and tastings.
28th November 11h00-13h00 Picnics
4th December 11h00-13h00 Christmas Favourites
Seats are limited so make sure you [email protected]
Follow me:Facebook: MasterChef Sa Claire Allen Twitter & Instagram: Claireallen_sa
www.foodislove.co.za
#CookingWithClaire#FoodIsLove
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NOW OPEN
Shop 6105, Ground Floor, V&A Waterfront | 021 418 0175
INTRODUCING WELLNESS ON THE GO AT THE V&AVisit us for powerhouse foods, juices & smoothies on the go
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Yael and Glen Finkel are the owners of a new brand called Adapt. Yael
tells us the story behind the brand and why she is such a strong convert to a low carb lifestyle.
My husband and I have always led an active lifestyle. High on our priority list is regular exercise, healthy food and to have our kids do the same. Unfortunately for me, things weren’t always easy. While following the traditionally recommended high carb, low fat way of eating I picked up health complications that left me feeling lethargic and continuously ‘out of sorts’. During this struggle, I looked for answers and three years ago while training competitively in the lady’s cycling category, I discovered some brilliant nutritional work put out by Steve Phinney, Jeff Volek and Eric Westman co-authors of the New York Times best selling book The New Atkins for a New You published in March 2010. Professor Tim
Noakes also publicly accounts much of his conviction to the research from this team.
I started educating myself, read their books and obsessively delved into the benefits of the ‘Science of Nutritional Ketosis’. These include improved sporting and endurance levels alongside improved health, and weight loss. The more I learned, the more I realised how many of my problems directly related to my diet. The same diet that for years was recommended by nutritionists and doctors - the LOW FAT, HIGH CARB diet.
During 10 years of diligently having my annual full blood panel done, I noticed my HbA1c (three month blood glucose average) had been rising year after year, and was now at a pre diabetic level. My weight had also steadily increased despite 15 hours of weekly training and clean eating. The more I delved, the more I knew
helping you live life well
The ADAPT PROGRAMME is for health, for weight loss and for Sport and Endurance
MEET OUR SUPPLIER
integrative healthbewell
Investing in your heath is a mind-set! We need to do things differently to achieve different results. This is the motivating factor and driving force behind the ADAPT brand. Our one focus and one mission is to Educate, Inform and ADAPT your life.
did you know?The ADAPT programme has a
profound effect on your metabolic
system. There is actually a
physiological change in your
body. Your body adapts from using
glucose for fuel, to now utilising
fat for fuel. This process can take
between 3 days to a few weeks
depending on each person. This
way, your body can tap into its
own fat stores for the fuel it needs,
turning you into a “Fat Burning
Machine”.
AVAILABLE IN STORE
SOON
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something wasn’t right. It was impossible to have such bad markers when doing everything I was supposed to do. Months of research pinpointed that my ‘so called clean’ diet was the culprit. To improve this I knew I had to drastically change the way I ate. On my new journey, I quickly found out that my body (like so many others) functions optimally as a fat burning (ketogenic) machine. I immediately started a Ketogenic lifestyle and this is where the magic happened! I felt much better, and had more energy than ever before. My weight started stabilizing, my cravings went away and I hardly felt hungry.
After several months of feeling great, I checked my bloodwork and couldn’t believe the results: my HbA1c had dropped to normal levels. I was no longer pre diabetic. The relief I felt was immeasurable! As time went on, other health markers continued to improve, like asthma, acne and inflammatory conditions. It’s been three years following the ‘ADAPT’ lifestyle, and I have never felt better.
During my quest, I met Dr. Westman in person. He’s a brilliant man who changed my life. Not only was I privileged to work with him one-on-one, but Doc Westman and our family developed a close friendship. After many discussions and long nights chatting about this lifestyle with Dr. Westman, my husband and I knew we wanted to be a part of this revolution and educate as many people as we could. This is how, together with Dr. Westman, ‘Adapt Your Life’ was born.
The two of us and Dr Westman, formed a partnership, to develop an online platform giving people instant access to some of the most influential doctors, influencers and informants on low carb living.
ADAPT “THE SCIENCE”
The cornerstone behind the ADAPT programme and nutritional products begins with science. Dr. Eric Westman, Associate
Professor of Medicine at Duke University has written over 90 peer reviewed articles, written bestselling books and treated over 8000 patients with Obesity, Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome and other related conditions. He says “The science is overwhelming, more and more evidence showing the benefits of a low sugar, low carbohydrate programme continues to support our beliefs”. Dr. Westman has spent the last 20 years developing and refining the ADAPT programme. The Nutritional product range is a direct result of this refinement and continues to evolve.
ADAPT PROGRAMME
With the ADAPT programme working for so many people, we wanted an online platform for anyone around the world to easily learn, implement and track their progress. Dr. Westman was once asked in an interview, “If you could achieve one thing in your life, what would it be?” Without hesitation, he answered, “I have helped 8000 patients in 8 years, I want to help 800,000 people over the next 8 years.” For this reason, the online platform is FREE and helps members understand the science behind the lifestyle; follow the programme; and track and record their progress in real time.
ADAPT NUTRITION Over the years Dr. Westman has found it difficult to educate his patients on the right product choices… too many carbs, too many chemicals and additives and not enough essential fats and oils have always been the hurdles. For this reason he collaborated with leading food manufacturers for a range of products that comply with the ADAPT programme.
This has been a long road, but finally the full range is here. We plan on continually adding new products so customers have peace of mind knowing they are eating the correct protein to fat ratios.
Yael and Glen Finkel seen with their four children (below left) Dr Westman (below)
ADAPT BARS
Although the bars are in 20g portions, don’t be fooled by their size. The fibre and bulking agents are excluded, leaving you with a nutritionally dense bar.
Flavours: Strawberry, Lemon Cheesecake, Coconut, Chocolate
KEY FEATURES • 1.88g Total Carbs • 1.4g Net Carbs • No Added Sugar • No Polyols or sugar
alcohols • Gluten Free
ADAPT KIDS BARS
The ideal Kids lunch box snack or meal. Delicious too!
Flavours: Strawberry Cheesecake, Cookies and Cream, Chocolate Brownie
KEY FEATURES • 1.88g Total Carbs • 1.4g Net Carbs • No Added Sugar • No Polyols or sugar
alcohols • Gluten Free
wellnesswarehouse.com
integrative healthbewell
For more information on how to ADAPT YOUR LIFE, or purchase nutritional products,
please visit adaptyourlife.com
NutritionFactsServing Size 1 Bar (20g)Servings Per Container 1
Calories 100Calories from Fat 80
Total Fat 9g
Vitamin A 0%
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value*
Vitamin C 2%
14%
Cholesterol < 5mg1%Sodium 80mg3%
Trans Fat 0gSaturated Fat 9g45%
Total Carbohydrate 2gINGREDIENTS: Whey Protein Concentrate, Palm Kernel Oil, Coconut Oil, Coconut Flakes, MCT Oil, Butter, Lecithin (Sunflower), Artificial Flavors, Citric Acid, Lactic Acid, Salt, Steviol Glycosides, Beet Color
CONTAINS: Milk and Tree Nuts (Coconut)
Uber Nutrition: 32 Bosman Road, Ophirton, Johannesburg, 2091 Manufactured for Adapt Your Life (Pty) LtdMade in South Africa *Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.
Calcium 2%
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value*
Iron 0%
1%
Protein 5g10%Sugars 0gDietary Fiber 1g4%
2g TOTAL CARBS 1g NET CARBS
Net Wt. 0.71oz (20g)STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKEARTIFICIALLY FLAVORED
2g TOTAL CARBS - 1g FIBER = 1g NET CARBS
2g TOTAL CARBS - 1g FIBER = 1g NET CARBS
www.adaptyourlife.comStore in a cool dry placeProduct is heat sensitive & may melt. #Method of analysis of dietary fiber AOAC 991.43
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AYL_WRAPPER_ADAPTKIDS_STRAW.pdf 1 10/7/2015 9:47:54 AM
NutritionFactsServing Size 1 Bar (20g)Servings Per Container 1
Calories 100Calories from Fat 80
Total Fat 9g
Vitamin A 0%
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value*
Vitamin C 2%
14%
Cholesterol < 5mg1%Sodium 80mg3%
Trans Fat 0gSaturated Fat 9g45%
Total Carbohydrate 2gINGREDIENTS: Whey Protein Concentrate, Palm Kernel Oil, Coconut Oil, Coconut Flakes, MCT Oil, Butter, Lecithin (Sunflower), Artificial Flavors, Citric Acid, Lactic Acid, Salt, Steviol Glycosides, Beet Color
CONTAINS: Milk and Tree Nuts (Coconut)
Uber Nutrition: 32 Bosman Road, Ophirton, Johannesburg, 2091 Manufactured for Adapt Your Life (Pty) LtdMade in South Africa *Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.
Calcium 2%
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value*
Iron 0%
1%
Protein 5g10%Sugars 0gDietary Fiber 1g4%
2g TOTAL CARBS 1g NET CARBS
Net Wt. 0.71oz (20g)BERRY FLAVORARTIFICIALLY FLAVORED
2g TOTAL CARBS - 1g FIBER = 1g NET CARBS
2g TOTAL CARBS - 1g FIBER = 1g NET CARBS
www.adaptyourlife.comStore in a cool dry placeProduct is heat sensitive & may melt. #Method of analysis of dietary fiber AOAC 991.43
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AYL_WRAPPER_ADAPTBAR_BERRY.pdf 1 10/7/2015 9:36:10 AM
16
I made this cheesecake and served it to a bunch of people unfamiliar with
raw or gluten and sugar free eating. No one could believe how good it tasted. Of course it’s very nut dense but in my mind nut is just short for nutrient. That means you aren’t tempted to eat more than you should because your brain gets the message that you’ve had enough nutrients. It doesn’t set up cravings because it doesn’t have any sugar in it.
This recipe is a basic one that tastes incredible just as it is but you can always add variations like raw cacao or you can double up the crust and make it half crust and half creamy. You can add any type of topping - berries are the perfect addition. Be sure to factor in soaking times for the nuts and an hour to freeze the cake while it sets.
RAW CASHEW CHEESECAKE
rawwheat freegluten freedairy free
Makes 8 pieces
1. First make the crust. Once you have soaked the dates, drain off most of the soak water. Put the dates, almonds and salt in a food processor and blend together until crumbly. Your mixture should be able to stick together if you press a small amount into a ball. If not, add a tiny bit of water.
2. Tip the crust mixture into a round pan (18cm size). Press it down firmly and evenly packing it against the sides and bottom.
3. Now for the cake part. Melt your coconut oil and honey, you can do this on an extremely low heat in a saucepan. Mix them together thoroughly – try whisking them.
4. Put all the rest of your ingredients, cashews, lemon juice, vanilla together with the honey mixture and blend it on high. It should get very creamy.
5. Pour this onto the crust and then place in the freezer for an hour. This will make it set nicely.
6. Once it’s set, remove from the freezer and put it in the fridge. When you are ready to serve it, add berries on top.
This recipe was adapted from www.biobalance.co.nz
helping you live life well
healthy foodmarketeatwell
CRUST INGREDIENTS
FILLING INGREDIENTS
1/2 CUP RAW ALMONDS
1/2 CUP SOFT PITTED DATES (SOAK THEM
IN HOT WATER FOR 20 MINUTES BEFORE
USING)
PINCH OF SEA SALT
1 1/2 CUPS RAW CASHEWS, SOAK THEM
OVERNIGHT
JUICE OF 2 LEMONS
1 TSP VANILLA EXTRACT
1/3 CUP RAW COCONUT OIL, MELTED
(WARM GENTLY)
1/3 CUP RAW HONEY (OR USE AGAVE
NECTAR)
BERRIES TO SERVE WITH (RASPBERRIES
OR BLUEBERRIES)
Here is total proof that amazing desserts don’t need to be made from sugar or have ingredients that aren’t good for you.
RAW CASHEWCHEESECAKE
recipe
18
KALE CHIPS
Swap deep fried potato chips for these green goddess kale chips. The nutritional value of baked kale, is far superior to the average potato chip. With low amounts of calories, fat and sodium and high amounts of vitamins and minerals, kale chips are the perfect snack to next time you crave a crunchy treat.
Makes 1 batch
1. Wash the raw kale leaves and remove the woody stem. Tear into palm sized pieces
2. Dry thoroughly on a paper towel3. Mix olive oil, lemon juice and salt and
massage gently into leaves until well coated
4. Spread kale in a single layer on a baking sheet
5. Bake on 180° C for 5 – 10 minutes
Do not leave the kitchen. Keep a close
eye on the chips; it takes seconds to go from crisp bright green to burnt. Store in an airtight container or freeze them. They do not need defrosting and can be eaten a minute or two after taking out the freezer.
HAZELNUT SPREAD
This delicious sweet treat is full of natural ingredients that will give you a kick without the sugar rush – your very own homemade Nutella.
Fills a 500g jar
1. Preheat the oven to 200°C2. Bake the hazelnuts for about 10
minutes, and allow to cool3. Once cool, place in a food processor
and blend until it has a flour consistency and about to turn into butter
4. Add maple syrup and cacao and
blend more5. Gradually pour in 150ml water. Don’t
add the water until first 3 ingredients are properly mixed into a paste.
6. Pour into a glass jar to store.
NOTE: you need a powerful blender to make this into a smooth butter.
Tie a ribbon around the lid for a perfect gift. Enjoy it spread onto oat cakes or over hot toast. Use it as a dip for fruit or add it to warm almond milk for an evening hot drink. It’s so delicious you might want to just treat yourself to a spoonful all on it’s own.
helping you live life well
healthy foodmarketeatwell
Summer is here and you want to maximize your time outside. You need quick, easy light snacks to fill party platters, to add to a summer lunch or to give away as a thoughtful and loving homemade offering. Here are 4 ideas we know you will love.
Taste the Love by Cheryl Stevens
INGREDIENTS
INGREDIENTS
1KG KALE LEAVES
2 TBS OLIVE OIL
JUICE OF 2 LEMONS
2 TSP SALT375 G RAW UNSALTED HAZELNUTS
150ML MAPLE SYRUP
3 TBS RAW CACAO POWDER
150ML WATER
Opt for hazelnuts if you’re concerned about high levels of homocysteine, an amino acid which has been associated with heart problems as well as conditions like Parkinsons. Hazelnuts are a good source of folate, said to play a key role in keeping homocysteine within normal levels.
19
Optional extra’s:
• 1 cinnamon stick• 3 cloves• 5 to 6 coriander seeds• 3 to 4 black peppercorns• 1 bay leaf
PAN TOASTED ALMONDS
Eat this spicy snack any time of the day or night. Although almonds are high in (good for you) fat, they are highly nutritious and extremely nutrient dense. Turn up the chilli for more heat and serve warm as a healthy snack when visitors pop in for a festive season catch up.
Serves 8
1. Add olive oil and almonds to a hot frying pan
2. Fry and toast the almonds until golden brown, shaking the pan regularly to colour them evenly and accentuate their nutty flavour
3. Crumble in the dried chilli to taste and the sea salt
4. Toss over and serve warm
PRESERVED LEMONS
Try old fashioned preserved lemons for a wonderful festive season gift. Lemons are bright and citrusy fresh for summer. They’re beautifully bold and tart. The initial purpose of preserving lemons in salt and their own juice was to make this winter fruit last all year long, a pleasant result of salting them is that it mellows out their bold, tart flavour, and heightens their lemony essence.
Store for up to a year and don’t forget to use the delicious pickling juice in salad dressings and stocks to flavour dishes.
Makes a 500g jar
1. Soak the lemons in lukewarm water for 3 days, changing the water daily, to soften the skin (optional).
2. Slash the lemons in 4 (quarters) just across the top, but keep them whole and sprinkle salt on the exposed flesh, then reshape the fruit closed.
3. Place 1 tablespoon salt on the bottom of glass jar. Pack in the lemons and push them down, adding more salt, and the optional spices between layers. Press the lemons down to release their juices and to make room for the remaining lemons. Cover the lemons with freshly squeezed lemon juice (not artificial lemon juice or water). Leave some air at the top of the jar before sealing.
4. Let the lemons ripen in a warm place, shaking the jar each day to distribute the salt and juice. Leave to preserve for at least 30 days.
5. To use, rinse the lemons, as needed, under running water. A white mold may appear on the lemons and is harmless. Rinse off for aesthetic purposes before use.
6. No need to refrigerate after opening. Preserved lemons will keep up to a year.
Lemons are a great source of Vitamin C and are an excellent alkalinizer for the body. Keep yourself alkaline by starting your day with lemon water. Vitamin C helps keep the immune system strong and robust to combat any foreign bodies and maintain health.
healthy foodmarketeatwell
wellnesswarehouse.com
INGREDIENTS
INGREDIENTS
½ TBS OLIVE OIL
225 RAW PEELED ALMONDS
1-3 DRIED RED CHILLIES
2 GENEROUS PINCHES OF SEA SALT
5 LEMONS
1/4 CUP SALT, MORE IF DESIRED
FRESHLY SQUEEZED LEMON
JUICE, IF NECESSARY
NEW from Nairn’s!
20
Not only are pineapples reminiscent of summer holidays, they also have tons of health benefits and are high in vitamins, minerals and enzymes like:• Vitamin C • Antioxidants • Manganese• Bromelain (helps break down and
digest protein)
These last few working weeks of the year can be the most stressful - not only are you trying to tie up all the loose ends at work before the holiday breaks out, but you’re also getting your kids through their end of year exams, deciding which side of the family you’re going to spend the holidays with, and exercising like a machine to look your best in your summer bikini. Stressful? Just a little bit. So before you completely over steam, make a few adjustments, slow down the pace, and cool off with a delicious, guilt-free treat that will get you to your summer holiday sooner than you think.
TOASTED COCONUT & PINEAPPLE DAIRY-FREE ICE CREAM
BANTING-FRIENDLY
Makes 12
1. Place your chopped pineapple in the deep freeze and your coconut milk and cream in the fridge overnight. Be careful not to shake the coconut milk can, as you want the milk to separate into a layer of water and cream.
2. The following day, remove your frozen pineapple and chilled coconut cream and milk from the deep freeze and fridge. Allow the pineapple to thaw slightly. Preheat the oven to 180°C. Place a glass or metal bowl, whisk or eggbeaters in the fridge to chill.
3. Place 5 Tbsp of your desiccated coconut onto a baking tray and toast in oven until golden brown - about 5 to 7 minutes. Remove from oven and allow to cool.
4. If you don’t have ground xylitol, place your normal xylitol in a coffee grinder and grind into a powder-like consistency.
5. In a food processor, process your slightly thawed pineapple into a slush. Make sure you don’t over process it, you don’t want it to completely defrost and become watery.
6. Keep the coconut milk can upright, open it carefully, remove the the top layer of cream (about 200ml) and spoon into a chilled bowl. Add the chilled coconut cream too.
7. Using your chilled eggbeaters or whisk, mix the coconut cream until it thickens even more. Whisk in your ground xylitol and 3 Tbsp of toasted coconut. Set aside 2 Tbsp toasted coconut for serving. Add in the remaining 1 Tbsp untoasted coconut and whisk.
8. Remove your pineapple slush from your food processor and whisk in with the coconut cream. It’s as easy as that.
Serve right away with a sprinkle of toasted coconut. Or keep it in an airtight container in the deep freeze and serve the next day. Otherwise, spoon it into individual glasses and allow to set (without fully freezing) in the fridge overnight.
healthy foodmarketeatwell
INGREDIENTS
500G FROZEN CHOPPED
ORGANIC PINEAPPLE
(IF YOU ARE BANTING, 250G OF
PINEAPPLE WILL AMOUNT TO 25G
NET CARBS - 50G NET CARBS BEING
THE MAXIMUM AMOUNT YOU SHOULD
CONSUME WHEN TRYING TO GO INTO
KETOSIS)
400ML ORGANIC COCONUT MILK
320ML ORGANIC COCONUT CREAM
6 TBSP DESICCATED COCONUT
1/2 CUP GROUND XYLITOL
helping you live life well
If You Like Piña ColadasBy Roxane Hayward
Your summer holiday is closer than you think.
did you know?You can grow your own
pineapple plant in your home
by cutting the crown off a store-
bought pineapple, drying it for a
few days, and planting it heads
up. It might take up to two years
before you see any actual fruit
though.
This recipe was supplied by The Banting Blondes
www.thebantingblondes.com
22
Over the last fifty years, general nutritional wisdom recommends
moderating the consumption of fat, lowering the intake of saturated fats and cholesterol, and increasing the consumption of polyunsaturated fats and carbohydrates.
Recent research conducted by Credit Suisse in their ‘Global Fat in Nutrition’ report has turned much of this on its head. Most consumers’ and doctors’ perception on fat seem to be aligned with current official nutritional recommendations.
Yet, according to this new research, consumers around the world are clearly making new choices. Consumption of butter is growing globally at a rate of 2-4% a year, and in the first half of this year sales volumes of whole milk in the U.S. grew 11%, while skim milk shrank by 14%.
What is ‘Fat’? Fat is one of the three macronutrients of any diet; protein and carbohydrates are the other two. Macronutrients are the fuel that allows our bodies to produce energy and is widely present in much of the food we eat. It is the most efficient macronutrient we can eat because it’s easily absorbed and stored in our body for future energy needs – some of us know this a little too well.
Technically, fats are compounds of long chain organic acids. They’re made of carbon and hydrogen atoms. Saturated fats are generally solid at room temperature and are natural fats from animal or plant sources. Unsaturated fats are usually liquid at room temperature and found in vegetable oils. There are two main types of unsaturated fats, polyunsaturated (liquid in fridge too) and monounsaturated fats (solidify in fridge). Trans fats are created by processing other types of fats, giving them a different structure. For example the way margarine is made from oil.
Fat is an essential part of our diet, but it is not easy to determine precisely how much
fat or protein a person ingests daily. It’s rare that one would eat foods that are made entirely of fat or of protein. Most foods contain fat, protein and carbohydrates in varying proportions.
The key question remains; how much fat should we consume? Does it vary with age, gender or genetics? Do people in different countries benefit from eating different levels of fat? Contrary to what you might think, recent research is now suggesting we probably don’t consume enough fat; not enough saturated fat and too many carbs. The research found this particularly true in the western world.
Our New World So what will the new world of fat mean for us? The report has made a few predictions on what might happen to our food between now and 2030. The report suggests the substitution of saturated fat by sugar will reverse. Sugar accounts for around 9% of all the calories we consume today and this percentage is already declining. We’ll consume fatter milk, fatter dairy products and fatter cheeses.
The substitution of saturated fat with omega-6 oils or margarine should also reverse. Companies will typically use the cheapest source of fat available and vegetable oils do have a price advantage. Sales of margarine should continue to decline.
helping you live life well
healthy foodmarketeatwell
did you know?Itey, Queen of Egypt around 1490
BCE is depicted in carvings as
grossly obese. In one particular
carving she’s pictured standing
next to her diminutive husband
and a tiny donkey. Under the
donkey (in a delightful bit
of Egyptian humour) is the
inscription “This donkey had to
carry the queen.”
Right now there seems to be a global consciousness toward healthy eating and living; unmatched by any other time in modern history. The food science industry and the research emanating from this industry has a significant impact on how countries, companies and organisations choose to invest. This in turn, will impact how we buy and what we buy. It’s common for a new piece of popular research to significantly impact our buying and consuming behaviour. Just think Tim Noakes and the Banting movement and you get the idea.
The new world of Fat
Contrary to what you might think, recent research is now suggesting we probably don’t consume enough fat.
"
by Skye Forrester
23
Our predicted consumption of better meat, dairy and more fish will initiate an increase our daily intake of omega-3 overall. Meat consumption is expected to grow 23% over the next fifteen years and the report predicts red meat’s reputation for being a ‘bad’ source of saturated fat will improve. Chicken will still remain the cheapest source of meat.
The trend towards using natural oils will continue. As saturated fat becomes seen as a ‘good’ fat, coconut oil is predicted to be the fastest growing oil product on the market. Fish, nuts, butter and cheese are expected to make a big dietary appearance, too. The one food predicted to gain the most from this new research is eggs; they are an amazing source of both fat and protein. Egg consumption is expected to grow around 4% a year. By 2030, the report predicts each of us will be eating close to 300 eggs per year.
Key Take Outs So what will the new world of fat mean for us? The report has made a few predictions on what might happen to our food between now and 2030. The report suggests the substitution of saturated fat by sugar will reverse. Sugar accounts for around 9% of all the calories we consume today and this percentage is already declining. We’ll consume fatter milk, fatter dairy products and fatter cheeses.
Much of this research does a myth-busting job on some common-sense perceptions of how we’ve been eating and treating food. Contrary research findings seem to be the only constant prediction in the food and health industry; chiefly because each outcome depends on a variation circumstances specific to the test subjects’ context. This makes it difficult to draw up a concise ‘how-to’ guide on healthy eating for anyone and everyone. Perhaps the best thing we can learn to do is carefully listen to our bodies - they know best, after all.
healthy foodmarketeatwell
wellnesswarehouse.com
Polyunsaturated fats include: Omega-6 fats such as soybeans and oils, sesame and sunflower seeds, most nuts and their oils, corn oil, omega-3 fats found in fatty fish such as salmon, mackerel, trout, herring, sardines and tuna.
Monounsaturated fats include: Canola oil, peanut oil, olive oil, avocados and nuts like almonds, pistachios, pecans and cashews.
Trans fat: usually found in commercially baked goods, fried foods, frozen foods and processed foods like salty snacks, donuts and chocolate coatings.
Foods high in saturated fat include: full fat dairy products like butter, milk, yoghurt, cheese and cream, fatty cuts of meat and poultry skin and processed foods, such as pies, pastries, doughnuts, cakes and biscuits. Saturated fat is also found in tropical oils, like palm kernel or coconut oil.
Food & Their Fat
24
1. Put 2 tablespoons of seed in a large glass jar. 2. Fill half the jar with water and secure a piece of mesh over
the top using an elastic band. This is so you can drain the water without losing any seeds.
3. Soak the seeds overnight or for at least 5 hours, then drain the water completely by turning the jar upside down.
4. Keep the damp seeds in the jar in an airy place. After a day you will see little tails emerging from the seed.
5. Rinse your seeds twice a day with fresh water and make sure they don’t dry out.
6. After 3 days your sprouts should have developed enough to eat. Your jar will be almost full.
helping you live life well
livewelldo it yourself
Feast onalfalfa
Out of all the different seeds you can sprout, Alfalfa is one of the most popular, not just because they’re so fresh and delicious but because they sprout so quickly and easily. They’re also light, easy to eat and have the perfect crunch.
Keep an ongoing supply by sprouting them yourself. All you need is some seed, a glass jar and mesh for the top of the jar. When buying the seed, choose organic, you don’t want to be eating pesticides or chemicals.
STORING SPROUTS
Wash and rinse them thoroughly. Spread them out on paper towels and let them air dry. If you store them when they are too wet they will easily spoil. Layer them in a glass or Tupperware container with paper towels inbetween. Store them in the middle of the fridge and use them within four days. By then you should have a new fresh batch on the go.
did you know?Alfalfa is a member of the pea family and classed as a
legume. Expect a huge amount of nutrition, vitamin A, B, C,
zinc, calcium, magnesium and folate and fibre. They’re rich in
saponin (good for lowering cholesterol).
Add your sprouts to almost anything. Pack a
layer of them on sandwiches, fill your salad
bowl with them. Sprinkle them onto soup just
before serving. You can also have them plain
with olive oil and a bit of salt and lemon juice.
TIP
Follow these steps for a meal filled with sunshine and goodness.
25
CREAMY CASHEW
Serves 4 portions
Throw everything together into a blender and blend it well until it becomes a creamy smooth blend. It will last about a week in the fridge.
GREEN VEGAN
Makes 1½ cups
Add the whole lot into a blender and keep going until everything has combined and mixed together. It will last just over 3 days in the fridge. Keep it in a sealed bottle or container.
LIGHT LEMON
Makes 4 cups
Put everything into a blender (expect olive oil) and blend on medium. Slowly add olive oil a bit at a time. Once everything is blended well, it’s ready to use. This mixture will last for a week in the fridge. vz
livewelldo it yourself
Dress it upIt’s easy to eat a bowl of sprouts all on their own if you have a delicious dressing to go with them. Here are three winning recipes for salad dressing you can use on your sprouts or even on sweet potatoes, noodles, rice or grains.
INGREDIENTS
INGREDIENTS
INGREDIENTS
½ CUP RAW AND UNSALTED CASHEWS
(FEEL FREE TO SOAK THEM OVERNIGHT IF
YOU LIKE)
2 TBSP NUTRITIONAL YEAST
JUICE FROM 1 MEDIUM LEMON
2 TSP CAPERS
1 GARLIC CLOVE
1 TBSP DIJON MUSTARD
½ CUP WATER
VEGGIE SALT OR SEASONING OF YOUR
CHOICE
2 CUPS OF FRESH LEMON JUICE
3 WHOLE GARLIC CLOVES
3 TBSP SOY SAUCE OR BRAGGS AMINOS
3 TBSP RAW HONEY
1 ½ CUPS OLIVE OIL
½ CUP RAW TAHINI
½ CUP WATER
2 TBSP CHOPPED FRESH PARSLEY
2 TBSP FINELY CHOPPED GREEN ONIONS
½ TEASPOON HIMALAYAN SALT
½ GARLIC CLOVE
1 TSP BRAGGS AMINOS OR SOY SAUCE
½ FRESHLY SQUEEZED LEMON
2 TBSP RAW APPLE CIDER VINEGAR
Vertical_greens_wellness.indd 1 2015/10/12 11:19 AM
26 helping you live life well
integrative healthbewell
Exam EssentialsWith end of year exams looming, it’s time to set up a study routine that ensures the best marks possible. The key is not only hitting those books, but good nutrition, lots of sleep and a good dose of ‘down time’. Follow our tips to help you get through those long nights and stressful days more effectively.
by Cheryl Stevens
nutrition
sleep
manage stress
27
When you’re studying for finals, good nutrition often slides down
the priority list. It’s easy to think that by grabbing quick meals, studying ‘til midnight and drinking lots of coffee you will achieve the results you desire. But no, there is no better way to achieve top marks, than starting with top nutrition and feeding the brain what it needs. It’s a no brainer!
Plan your nutrition
• Stay hydrated. Signs of dehydration are fatigue and headaches which are not helpful when studying or writing exams. Keep a bottle of water on your desk and sip it through the day.
• Make breakfast your new best friend – the first meal of the day stimulates metabolism and signals the body to start using fuel, instead of hoarding fuel. According to the American Dietetic Association, children who eat breakfast perform better in the classroom, with better concentration and problem-solving skills.
• Eat at regular intervals. Eating regular meals helps keep nutrient and energy levels more stable, curbing the temptation of empty-calorie snacks in your study breaks. Big meals can make you feel sluggish. Consider 5 – 6 smaller meals through the day; try an apple with nut butter mid-morning and oat cakes with hummus or tuna mid-afternoon.
• Choose good quality carbohydrates like oats, to keep your energy levels stable over longer periods of time. Carbohydrates are important because the glucose from carbs are considered the source of fuel your brain uses to give you energy.
• Go bananas – they are a low glycemic carbohydrate, and will keep your energy levels constant. The natural sugars in fruit offer clean energy, so you won’t experience the crash that happens when you eat white refined sugar. Blueberries (which can be bought frozen in bags) contain powerful antioxidants and studies done in the USA suggest blueberries may be effective in improving memory or delaying short term memory loss.
Protein and Amino Acids
Protein is used to build and repair cells and chemical messengers in the brain. Protein-rich foods such as meat, poultry, fish, legumes and dairy provide amino acids, the building blocks your body requires to make brain enzymes, chemical messengers and other proteins. Most neurotransmitters are made from amino acids which come from the protein you eat in food. These amino acids (protein) are the building blocks of your brain’s network. Amino acids can excite or calm your brain as well as nourish your brain throughout it’s lifetime.
• Eat good quality protein like oily fish rich in omega-3 fatty acids – protein provides amino acids used to build most nuerotransmitters and are key for ongoing brain health.
• Gather simple recipes for nourishing meals. It’s easy to feed the brain well. No-fuss recipes let you eat to succeed, without taking too much time. Plan ahead to buy the ingredients for the week and cook enough for 2 or 3 meals at a time.
integrative healthbewell
wellnesswarehouse.com
did you know?Iron and B vitamins are especially
important in maintaining the
physical and mental energy
necessary to study well. Iron-
containing foods include red meat,
cereals and spinach. Foods that
contain B vitamins include whole-
grains, eggs and nuts. Fish and soy
are other foods that are said to
help boost your
brain by providing
the nutrients it
needs.
MUST HAVE
PRODUCTS
• Beat Food Cravings• Feel Full Sooner• Stimulant Free
• Can Be Taken At Night • Non Addictive• Prevents Binge Eating
Dr. BOXALL’s HOODIA 1000mg/servingVeg Caps 60’s
Tincture Drops 20ml
CRUSH CRAVINGS
Also available in drop form for additional fast acting on-the-go
support
BOXALL & CARMICHAEL FEMME or HOMME PLUS
750mg/servingVeg Caps 60’s
• Boost Fat Oxidation• Detoxify Fat Causing Steroids• Balance Hormones
• Detoxify Heavy Metals & Toxins• Combat Cellulite & Stubborn Fat
LIVER DETOX
New Premium Range!
Dr. BOXALL’s GREEN COFFEE BEAN EXTRACT VALUE SIZE
800mg/servingVeg Caps 60’s/120’s
• Boosts Energy • Enhance Stamina• Enhance Concentration
• Detoxify • Appetite Suppressant
AS SEEN ON DR.OZ
Also available in Green Coffee Bean with RASPBERRY
KETONES 1200mg
FEMME or HOMME PLUS
BOXALL & CARMICHAEL REBOOT
800mg/servingVeg Caps 60’s
• Rehabilitate Adrenal Function• Treats Burnout & Fatigue
• Boost Energy Metabolism• Boosts Vitality
ADRENAL SUPPORT
Rebuild the Adrenal Immune System
28 CLINICALLY PROVEN NATURAL MEDICINES
• Supplements are only needed if you are not getting the nutrition required from your daily food. There are study supplements avaialble but choose natural ingredients and watch out for caffeine and sugar in the ingredients.
The big No No’s
• Stay away from sugar, coffee and energy drinks. Spikes and dips in your energy levels will play havoc on your study time.
• Avoid emotional eating. If you react to stress by over eating or under eating, both can affect energy levels. It is common to crave sweets, soft drinks, fast foods and other high calorie low nutrient foods while studying. These foods provide quick energy but won’t sustain you through a long study session.
Stamp out Stress
• Manage your stress levels by fitting in some quiet down time everyday. Choose an activty you love; like walking, swimming, meditating or listening to music. Take at least 30 minutes a day to de-stress yourself and help keep your head in the game.
• Exercise is good for your overall health and fitness, but it also boosts your mental wellbeing. Exercise is believed to keep you calm during exams and research suggests it’s because of more oxygen getting to the brain. The brain is then more receptive to take in new things and store information.
• Use your study break wisely. Give yourself a break, away from your computer and desk and allow the mind to rest. Filling it with TV games and emails is not a break. Sit in the garden, walk around the block, hang out the washing or sit quietly and enjoy a herbal cup of tea.
integrative healthbewell
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29
Manage your sleep
• Sleep, sleep and more sleep. As exams get closer and closer, don’t start to pull all night study sessions to preprare. The loss of sleep during these all night sessions is actually detrimental to good performance. Not only is it impossible to retain information when you are overly tired, but it leads to binge eating or overdosing on coffee and energy drinks.
• Rather study throughout the term and set up study sessions at night. Prepare for exams by working in study slots (during your most alert time of the day). Get at least 8 hours of sleep the night before exams. Research shows memory recall and the ability to maintain concentration are improved when a person is well rested.
OUR TOP SLEEP TIPS• Turn all electronics off before bed to not disrupt your natural sleep pattern.• Commit to getting at least eight hours sleep a night – even during exams.• Don’t eat sugar snacks or stimulating drinks before bed.• If you sleep in a dorm use earplugs and eyemasks to drown out the light and
noise. You will be amazed how this can impact your sleep and your results.• If you nap, keep it to 30 minutes or less. You are better off studying during this
time and sleeping later in the night.• Exercise in the day will help you relax and fall asleep easier.
integrative healthbewell
www.sfera-nutrition.co.za E: [email protected] T: 010 220 5228
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Ideal for improving memory, can be used as a study aid and for alleviating mental and emotional stress.
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Body of evidence
Our actions and life story become etched on our bodies and faces for everyone to see.
Considerable debate surrounds the relevance of our material bodies, and much of this is quite contradictory. Many times you hear phrases like ‘beauty is only skin deep’ or ‘don’t be so superficial,’ and there is often good reason for these clichés. But follow another train of thought, and you find statements like: ‘at 19 you have the face you were born with, by 50 you have the face you deserve.’
helping you live life well
By Adam Nustedt
lookwell
31
Take an extreme example: when asked to identify a long-term
alcoholic from a person who has led a dedicated healthy lifestyle, most people would have no problem identifying who is the alcoholic. Addiction most often takes a noticeable toll on the body. We can do this with many conditions. Interestingly, most of these easily identifiable circumstances involve addictions, or what could be referred to as excessive attachments. Even if we try and hide the body of evidence, for instance with cosmetic surgery, eventually this can become another addiction and obsession that becomes all too evident in time.
Our actions and life story become etched on our bodies and faces for everyone to see. If you’ve had a sad or happy life it will usually be quite evident for everyone to see. If you eat too much or too little, in time, no amount of clothes can hide the evidence.
The body is an amazing biological form with huge potential for movement, flow, and energy, and yet so many people barely express a fraction of its potential and allow it to develop negative traits like sickness and obesity. Many people spend huge amounts on the vehicles they use to transverse the Earth, like cars and planes and take great care of them, regularly cleaning and maintaining them, optimising their performance, but take little care of the only vehicle we were born with - the human body. The difference is that when the body is out of synch, you feel it physically; it hurts and you can’t just buy a new one.
Of course, physically, some people are dealt better cards than others who might have genetic deformities or challenges with diseases. But the character and determination to overcome these challenges and setbacks also becomes etched on the visage. Look at the steel and determination of Stephen Hawking as he courageously battles motor neuron disease.
There are those that are not necessarily responsible for the visage they present; perhaps they’ve been victim to an accident or disease, violence, or war. None of these are necessarily a true reflection of the character of the body in question. They can perhaps provide evidence for society what the body has been part of. For instance, if you could go back in time you would see many people with pock-like scars from diseases like the
plague or small pox. These were often as a result of poor hygiene and sanitation. After World War One you saw many men without limbs and with burns, a reflection of the new industrial wars. This continues today in war zones throughout the world. There will still be aspects of the person that reflects their inner world and habits. Even in a face filled with scars you can have extremely beautiful light that shines from the eyes.
Knowing that your thoughts, habits and actions are recorded on your face is a great incentive to become more mindful of what you’re thinking and of auditing your daily habits and lifestyle.
wellnesswarehouse.com
GOOD THOUGHTS“If a person has ugly thoughts, it begins to show on the face.
And when that person has ugly thoughts every day, every
week, every year, the face gets uglier and uglier until you can hardly bear to look at it. A
person who has good thoughts cannot ever be ugly. You can
have a wonky nose and a crooked mouth and a double chin and stick-out teeth, but if you have good thoughts it
will shine out of your face like sunbeams and you will always
look lovely.”
Roald Dahl, The Twits.
lookwell
32 helping you live life well
A spice for life turmeric
Turmeric is an integral part of the religious traditions and customs of the Hindus and since the beginning, turmeric has been used in Ayurveda for a wide range of disorders, from anorexia to sinusitis. Commonly known as ‘the golden spice of life’, curcumin is a potent antioxidant that helps promote heart health, memory, and boost the immune system. It has the potential to deliver even more antioxidants than vitamins E and C and is said to deliver more antioxidant power than grape seed or pine bark extracts. It’s also tough enough to hunt the hydroxyl radical; considered the most reactive oxidant.
You’ve probably eaten curcumin a few dozen times if you’re partial to most East Asian cuisine; but the spice makes some pretty interesting desserts, too – like a delicious Lebanese turmeric cake that’s not overly sweet. Curcumin, cinnamon, honey and coconut milk make an incredibly soothing tea that’s great during illness, to help sleep, or as an everyday immune booster.
Women all around India have historically used turmeric in face creams and body scrubs to boost their body glow. If you have luminous skin; a sprinkle of curcumin or turmeric in tinted moisturiser can help you achieve the glow you’re after.
Believe it or not, you can also use the bright orange powder to brighten up your pearly whites. Curcumin has been used in toothpaste or sprinkled on regular toothpaste as a natural whitening agent.
.
This wonder molecule has proven itself time and again; it can be beneficial in almost every human disease condition. The beneficial effects of curcumin have been highlighted in four major diseases, namely, heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and Alzheimer’s disease.
The only downside? Curcumin is notoriously difficult for the body to absorb. It is, however, fat-soluble so to get the most of your curcumin, it’s best to eat it with a bit of fat. Sprinkle a little on your avocado, stir into olive oil and toss in some vegetables, or dissolve it in a tablespoon of coconut oil before adding it to a smoothie. It’s said that curcumin, up to 1000 mg, is best delivered with touch of pepper.
Research on this spice of life is exploding; putting curcumin in the spotlight in the Western World. So, if you’re going to add a spice to your life; make sure it’s turmeric!
did you know?Curcumin comes from the turmeric plant; a member
of the ginger family and naturally found in South
Asian countries. It’s a significant
ingredient in most curry powders
and has been used in cuisine for
centuries for its flavouring and
digestive properties.
by Skye Forrester
Culinary & Cosmetic
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integrative healthbewell
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34 helping you live life well
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Add more colour
It’s little wonder that colour acts as a powerful healing agent when we acknowledge vision as master of all the senses. Most of us take this magical effect for granted and hardly notice the colours around us anymore. Take notice and refresh your awareness of the colours around you, then see how much pleasure you get from your visual experience of life.
See how intensely you can see the colour in your home, your clothes, your garden, your food and even your speech. Cross over your senses and smell the yellow in sunflowers, taste the red in strawberries, hear the orange in indie music, feel the violet in velvet. This is a magical way to bring yourself into the present moment. Colour is everywhere, it’s free, accessible and fun.
• Make and drink solarised water. Take a glass of water, wrap a piece of cellophane around the glass in the colour you need and put the glass outside in the sunlight for 30 minutes.
• Create a rainbow on your plate. Include food in all colours in your diet. It is one of the most natural and effective ways to absorb the colour you need.
• Visualise your favourite colour when you feel anxious or stressed. You can also use it to meditate.
• High frequency colour oils are made by combining the resonances of colour, gems, sound, symbols, sacred geometry, aromatherapy and pranic energy. They are used for healing, and can be massaged directly onto aching parts of the body.
• Essential oils have different vibrations that correspond with specific colours. Find out what colours these are and when you add oils to your bath water or burner, visualise absorbing the loveliness of the colour.
• Get a rainbow massage with different colour oils on different parts of the body. This releases blockages on a physical, emotional, mental and spiritual level.
• Have a colour reflexology session with different colour oils for the different reflexes on the feet.
• Include more colour in your home with accessories in a colour you crave. Don’t be afraid to get totally colourful and paint a wall or two in different blends.
• Add to your wardrobe with scarves, accessories or clothing in every colour of the rainbow. Each day decide which colour energy you need and wear something to match.
• Carry coloured crystals in your handbag or pockets. Crystals give off powerful energy you can use to support and strengthen you.
• Write an affirmation or mantra, give it a colour and repeat it during the day. If you need to work with green, an affirmation like ‘I am open to giving and receiving love’, gets you to verbalise the deepest wish of your heart.
• Do a colour reading. A colour reading gives you instant insight into the current state of your physical, emotional, mental or spiritual health. did you know?
Half our brain’s resources
are dedicated to seeing and
interpreting what we see in
the world around us.
by Lien Potgieter
Use colour as a therapeutic way to heal body, heart, mind and soul. Here’s how:
Lien Potgieter is a colour coach based in Benoni, South Africa. She teaches women how to use colour as a tool for personal growth and development. She offers online colour readings and a one-of-a-kind
online programme Love in Full Colour to help single women attract and keep their life partner. Lien studied language practice, colour therapy,
metaphysics and transpersonal psychology. Visit www.thecolouroption.com and follow her on Instagram @LienLienPot.
36 helping you live life well
livewell
Connecting with one mindWe may be familiar with different subdivisions of the mind like the conscious, the unconscious, subconscious and preconscious but according to author Larry Dossey, there is another realm of the mind, another level of consciousness he calls ‘one mind’.
This is an infinite dimension of shared intelligence. It connects everyone through space and time. Dossey isn’t the only one to put forward this idea and in fact, emerging studies show that ‘one mind’ is a reality rather than a concept. There are countless documented cases of shared thoughts, emotions and physical sensations with a distant individual. Everyone has experienced this to some degree. You suddenly think of someone you haven’t seen for 10 years and they phone you out the blue. You have a dream about someone and you bump into them the next day. It often happens between humans and pets – you hear some worrying news and your dog doesn’t leave your side, just knows something is going on. Flocks of animals, herds and schools also behave in synchronised or co ordinated ways.
Dossey speaks about hidden or lost objects that are found not by looking, but by an answer that comes through the mind. There’s also the experience where information comes from someone who has passed away. In scientific terms this ‘universal mind’ is known as the ‘unified field’, in religious terms we think of the ‘all knowing’ as God and in spiritual philosophy we refer to it as Universal Consciousness.
As author of Mind Your Reality Tanya Kotsos says, “There is a single, intelligent Consciousness that pervades the entire Universe - the Universal Mind. It is all knowing, all powerful, all creative and always present. As it is present everywhere at the same time, it follows that it must also be present in you - that it is you. Your mind is part of the one Universal Mind. This is not simply a philosophical ideal passed down to us through the ages. It is an exact scientific truth.”
Kotsos believes we have access to all knowledge, known and unknown; access to an infinite power for which nothing is impossible; to the limitless creativity of the One Creator. All these attributes are present at all times in their potential form. By knowing this and applying it she believes life transforms in miraculous ways.
did you know?Our individual body is inherently connected to society; it
forms part of a greater body. This greater body connects
to other societies, and other species, and all this makes
up the world. Collectively this can be seen as a body, our
body. If you look at Earth from space it looks like one body.
Only with a high-powered telescope can we appreciate
separate components, much like with a microscope we can
appreciate separate components like cells within the human
body. Adam Nustedt
Simple things like smiling at people or doing
random acts of kindness ripples outwards and
effects many more people than we imagine.
TIP
38
SunkissedIf you’re not endowed with naturally
dark or olive skin, you’ll know the struggle to get the perfect tan complexion is all too real. Thankfully we know a great deal more about what keeps skin healthy than we did some twenty years ago. So, here’s how you can get the most of a natural tan and make it last, too.
The slower and more gradually you introduce this colour change in your skin, the longer it will last and the better it is on your skin. Start by spending no more than ten minutes a day in the sun a few weeks before your holiday. Increase this to twenty minutes and then thirty minutes each week before your trip. Ultimately, the secret to extending your tan is to create a simple tanning ritual that’s easy to maintain. It’s not too early to get going, so spend some time finding what works for you before you have to hit the beach.
Buffing & Scrubbing The sun stimulates the production of a pigment called melanin in your skin, which colours the top layer and gives you that bronzed tone. This layer of skin naturally sheds around every two weeks or so. This is why it’s a good idea to give your body a scrub and gentle exfoliation before you head
outside to ensure that all your skin cells are at the very start of their new cycle.
You don’t need to go all out with super fancy scrubs; some rock salt blended with a bit of honey, or brown sugar and almond oil will do the trick just fine – have a pair of exfoliating gloves handy. Apply your scrub in small, circular motions all over your body to remove those pesky dead skin cells and smooth your skin’s surface. This ensures a more even tan and helps make your tan last longer.
It’s important to give your body a weekly exfoliation (no matter the time of year) to help remove dull, parched surface cells and prepare the skin for the self-tanning to come. A gentle exfoliation after a long, hot bath is also said to stimulate blood flow around the body and can ease cellulite.
Super Moisture Keep moisturiser on hand during summer; if you’re heading for a holiday in the sun you should be moisturising at least twice a day and continuing the ritual for at least a week after your trip. This will keep your skin soft and supple while in the searing sun and increases the life-span of your tan. Regular moisturiser won’t quite do the trick alone so use a moisturising sun screen for
ultimate protection. Sun screens contain extra ingredients like Aloe Vera to soothe skin; and others have tan-enhancing ingredients that stimulate your melanin production to maintain your tan. Look out for natural one’s that don’t damage your skin.
Tan accelerators like tanning pills and drinks still require sun or UV lighting to work. The same moisturising rules apply here, too. Check the ingredients; you may be simply buying a multivitamin or supplement. In this case, you may as well buy a carton of carrot and orange juice and eat a steak to give your body the same supplements naturally - it would taste better too.
Canthaxanthin is used in tanning products. It is a dye similar to the chemical that makes carrots orange. It occurs naturally and can also be made in a laboratory. It’s also used as medicine.
“I know it sounds rather paradoxical but women with dark skin look gorgeous with a tan just as much as anybody else. The thing is, tanning brings out a beautiful glow to the skin.”Cacey Kunene
It’s almost that splendid time of year when worries melt away like lemon drops, salt water and sea sand beckon and the smell of coconut lingers in the air. Even if you’re not leaving home for the holidays, there’s one vital season must-have to imprint your holiday memories – a glorious sun-kissed skin, of course!
helping you live life well
lookwell
Nature’s vitamin D may increase
your levels of happiness, but the sun
can also increase your chances of
developing skin cancer.
39
Be careful about how much Canthaxanthin you put into your body, too much can have harmful side effects. What’s more, if you don’t like the colour the tan accelerator has turned your skin; it can take two weeks for your skin to turn back to its normal shade after you’ve stopped using it.
You can also use a bronzing lotion to help accelerate the look of a natural tan, instead. They include a light artificial colour to help while your real tan is building.
As well as moisturising skin from the outside, you also need to hydrate it from the inside. Dry skin gets flaky, this means it will shed sooner rather than later. The most important thing you can do is stay hydrated – this can’t be stressed enough. Increasing your water intake is paramount, especially in the sun when you lose more water through sweating. Hot baths can also dehydrate your skin, leading to faster peeling. If you are going to bath, add a teaspoon of coconut oil to it. Or, stick to cool showers – you can also use a moisturising shower oil to really lock-down your colour.
Sun ProtectionWhatever sun screen you chose to use, make sure it’s above factor 15 SPF protection. A higher SPF protection factor won’t stop you from tanning; it will simply help to protect your skin from UV damage, including drying, premature aging and even skin cancer.
Not all sunscreens are made equally so you will need to test out which ones work for you. It’s always best to check the cream ingredients and the expiration dates. In general, though it’s best to choose a broad-spectrum sunscreen that protects against UV-A and UV-B rays. If you’re worried about oily skin, don’t be! There are plenty of great water-based sun screens that will work with your tricky skin.
Contrary to what you might think, the higher the SPF, the smaller the increased benefit. SPF 30 isn’t twice as strong as SPF 15. While SPF 15 filters out 93% of UVB, SPF 30 filters out 97%; only a slight improvement.
CAUTIONBefore buying any skincare product check the ingredient list to make sure you aren’t putting anything unsafe on your skin. Look
for natural and non-irritating UVA/UVB filters like titanium dioxide or zinc oxide.
wellnesswarehouse.com
did you know?The term ‘tanning’ comes from the
colour tan when, in the Western
culture of Europe, it became
fashionable for young women to
seek a less pale complexion.
lookwell
1. Apply your sunscreen 15 to 30 minutes before you go out in the sun. Put the sun screen on any part of your body that might get exposed.
2. Don't forget the easy-to-miss spots; the tips of your ears, your feet, the back of your legs, and, if you have one, your bald spot. Since your lips can also get sunburned, use a UV-protective lip balm regularly.
3. No matter how long-lasting it's supposed to be, reapply sunscreen at least every 2 hours; more often if you're swimming or sweating.
4. Pay attention to the expiration date on the bottle. Sunscreen loses its effectiveness over time.
5. Wear sunscreen whenever you're out during the day and not just when it’s sunny. On a grey, overcast day, up to 80% of the dangerous UV rays still make it through the clouds no matter the season.
6. Certain prescription drugs can cause you to burn twice as fast. Check to see if your medication has contra-indications.
6 Tips for wearing
Sun Screen
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livewelllivewelldo it yourself
helping you live life well
These 21 tips will get you totally prepared for summer. Pack the perfect beach bag, get kids to play outside, throw an impromptu party, have a picnic and make a party playlist…we’ll get you ready for the festive season.
by Skye Forrester
1. PACK FOR THE BEACH Your beach checklist should include: a canvas tote, flip flops, big beach towel, sunscreen, sun glasses, lip balm, beach hat, granola snacks and water, wet wipes and camera.
2. PLAY OUTSIDETurn off all your mobile technology and take your little ones on an outing. Our children aren’t used to playing outside and sometimes aren’t sure what to do. Show them your favourite outdoor activities like jump rope, daisy chains, hula hoops, Frisbee, hide and seek or roller-skating.
3. IMPROMPTU PARTY The party doesn’t have to end on the beach; invite your friends over for some snacks and fun. Get your throw cushions and spare blankets and place them in a comfortable circle. Serve easy-to-eat food like pizza, finger sandwiches, chicken skewers, popcorn, humus and pita bread. Make a big bowl of punch (with alcohol or without) and a pitcher of lemonade, play your party playlist and enjoy!
21 TIPS FOR
SUMMER
42
livewelldo it yourself
4. HAVE A PICNIC
You can have a picnic in the park, on the beach, or in the comfort of your own back garden. Pack sandwiches, salads, nuts, cookies, iced tea and napkins into a basket – avoid foods that need cutting. Parchment and twine, lightweight serving bowls, and baking tins are environmentally friendly alternatives to plastic wrap and throwaway containers. Make sure you have a big blanket or table cloth to sit on.
5. PARTY PLAYLISTPick a mood, theme, or idea to help you organise your playlist. Make a playlist made of songs that all have “summer” in the title, a playlist of only 80’s songs, or songs you loved when you turned 18. Get creative and fun with it.
6. COZIER HOMELight and glass décor features are a big trend this summer. Let the summer light into your home with a few mirrors with arty frames, fill some coloured glass vases with bright summer blooms and spruce up bare walls with some delightful vinyl wall prints.
7. PREP FOR GUESTSYour overnight guest checklist should include: a spare house key, make the bed with fresh sheets, make room in the cupboard, keep spare toiletries handy, set out a spare towel, stock up on their favourite snacks, place a few books near the bed, leave important phone numbers and write down any security and household instructions.
8. SUMMER SALESIt’s easy to get lost in a summer sale. Shop smart, plan what you need and go out with a purpose. A light denim jacket, gladiator sandals and bold floral prints are a favourite this summer. Accessories are the best pieces to pick up on sale so plan ahead for these, too.
9. OUT WITH THE OLDIt’s almost time for a fresh year to begin so declutter your home and feel free to focus on you. If cleaning out the clutter is a daunting task for you, try throwing away one thing per day. Start with magazines, sample-sized toiletries, unused hangers, pens that don’t work, and delete email subscriptions from sites you don’t visit.
10. IN WITH THE NEWMake a list of things you need to revamp your summer wardrobe. Try things on before you before you buy them and take a friend shopping with you – we can be our worst critics! Before you buy something think about what you’ll wear it with. Give old clothes new life by taking them to a tailor.
11. FESTIVE DÉCOR
Take a look at your stored decorations and throw away broken lights or trinkets. Begin stocking up on decorations you might need before the festive rush but don’t haste to put them up; the first day of December is a perfectly acceptable day to begin decorating.
locally sourced | biodegradablewww.healingearth.co.za
it’s going to be abalmy summer
43
12. KEEP IT SIMPLELess is more; and that’s ever so true this summer season! Go light on the make-up with a tinted moisturiser, waterproof mascara, a small bit of blush and glossy lip care. Keep a translucent powder on hand.
13. SUMMER SPRITZ To fight the heat, keep a hydrating facial mist handy for a no-hassle way to instantly cool, calm and protect your skin. Mist your face to re-hydrate and freshen up your makeup, or hydrate your hair to soften any split ends.
14. TAKE PICTURESBeach selfies, group party pics, or panoramic views; capture your adventures with your camera or phone. It’s worth investigating a waterproof cover for either. When you get to your destination snap as many pictures as you like and then set your phone or camera aside and enjoy your time.
15. FIND A CLASSInstead of watching TV or lazing on the couch; get into a hobby. Find crafts classes, swimming classes, dancing classes, hula hoop classes or a chess club. Something you can enjoy all to yourself, or something the whole family can do together.
16. MAKE PLANSIf you have the luxury of going away this season, you may not be away the entire time you take off work. It’s important to make plans with your friends and family during the holidays and take full advantage of your time off.
17. GET INTO GEOCACHING
Join the world’s largest treasure hunt. It’s a pastime in which a container holding secret little treasures is hidden at a particular location for GPS users to find by looking up coordinates posted on the Internet. There are tons of geocaches near you, just waiting for you to find them.
18. FAMILY PHOTOSHOOTGone are the old family portraits of forced smiles and dorky poses. Natural family photoshoots are the in thing. Organise a family shoot in a beautiful setting and have fun together. Take natural shots of your family laughing and enjoying their time.
19. BE A TOURISTListening to a tourist visit it for the first time can make you fall in love with our own city all over again. How many of you have taken the cable car up Table Mountain, or gone bungee jumping at Jozi’s Orlando Towers, or checked out the amazing Umgeni River Bird Park in Durban? Go on, be a snap happy tourist in your own town this season and you’re guaranteed a story to tell!
20. HOME DIY Put those endless hours of browsing Pinterest to the test and make that beautiful book stand or wine rack you’ve been itching to try! You’ll get the satisfaction of having made something on your own and at half the price of the designer store.
21. PRACTICE GRATITUDE An attitude of gratitude can go a long way in keeping that smile on your face all the way through summer! Be mindful of the joyous moments and keep focus on those. You might even find an abundance of happiness you didn’t know you had.
livewelldo it yourself
DAILY ESSENTIAL
Down to Earth Revive MoisturiserMoisturiser is an all-important basic beauty care item but getting the right one is sometimes tricky. Sometimes they feel too greasy and other times too thin. The Revive Moisturiser from Down to Earth has the perfect consistency and feel on your skin. Shea, Avocado and Coconut oil moisturizes, Aloe soothes and calms, and Vitamin E combats ageing. Evening Primrose and Wheat Germ oil are regenerating and African Potato extract is healing and balancing. Expect a hint of lavender and geranium scent when you spread it on your face.
Walking Tour of
Tuscany MAY 24 9 nights
We begin in Sienna with 3-7 miles of easy to moderate walking each day. We listen to Gregorian Chanting at Abby Sant`Amtimo. San Gimignano, Via Francigena, Montalcino, Pienza. Visiting olive farms, cheese farms and vineyards. Wine tastings,
cooking class included. Most meals including wine.
Optional side trips in Italy
INDIA APRIL 4 19 nights
The sacred and the exotic Udaipur, one of India’s loveliest cities;
Haridwar, the Festival of Light on the Ganges; floating houseboats of Kashmir; through the
Himalayas to McClouganj, home of the Dalai Lama; and the Taj Mahal. Optional cooking class in Delhi. Optional white water rafting on the Ganges.
Thailand February 14 14 nights
The HighlandsBangkok; beautiful temples, wonderful food,
and the Emerald Buddha. Travel north to the Golden Triangle,
hill towns, hot springs, and elephant riding. We end in the beautiful city of Chiang Mai.
Jewel of Persia
IranSEPTEMBER
44
Back to your roots
Using herbal hair dye will help reduce the chemical load on your body.
Certain natural hair products have stood the test of time and come with us through the ages. Cath Price from Love My Hair spills the beans on products used in ancient times that are still effective today.
helping you live life well
lookwell
45
Squashed tadpoles and goat fat smeared into your locks may not
sound very appealing but these are hair dye ingredients that were commonly used in the Middle Ages and in Ancient Egypt.
Our ancestors also experimented with equally unpleasant chemical dyes. In the early 1600’s people lightened their hair with ‘Oyle of Vitrioll’, otherwise known as sulfuric acid, and ancient Greeks and Romans mixed lead oxide and calcium hydroxide to make black hair dye. When the lead proved too toxic this recipe was changed to incorporate fermented leeches.
Thankfully, plant extracts were also brought into the mix and 5000 years ago Egyptians and Indians were using a variety of botanical extracts to dye and condition their hair, including henna, indigo, amla, shikakai, turmeric and alfalfa. Ancient Babylonians believed henna had magical properties and attracted good spirits. The plant was widely regarded as a symbol of good luck and health and was used to enhance both hair and skin during celebrations.
Henna (Lawsonia inermis), indigo (Indigofera tinctoria), amla (Emblica officinalis) and shikakai (Acacia concinna) are still used as effective hair dyes and hair conditioners. It is now becoming more widely known that these plants not only colour and condition hair but also benefit the whole body. Perhaps the Babylonians were not far wrong.
Henna maintains the acid-alkaline balance of the scalp which helps prevent dandruff, itchiness and premature hair loss. It binds to the keratin protein in hair and colours hair by coating each strand in a protective film. This seals and repairs the hair cuticle, reducing breakage and giving hair a lovely shine.
Henna is not only good for hair though, it can be used to cool burns and sooth ringworm, eczema and fungal infections. An oil made from henna flowers is used in Ayurvedic medicine to relieve muscle aches, and the seeds are used in deodorants and to regulate menstruation.
The indigo plant is well known for the dye it’s used to manufacture. It’s also a well-known herb used in Ayurvedic treatments. For centuries it has been used to treat depression, respiratory problems and detoxify the liver. Modern research shows that a tincture of indigo helps remove carbon tetrachloride (found in cleaning agents and aerosols) from the liver. A paste made from the leaves helps heal sores and ulcers.
When henna and indigo are used together, they give hair rich shades that range from red to black.
Amla contains high levels of vitamin C, A and essential fatty acids. It promotes hair growth, helps prevent dandruff and makes hair shiny and smooth. Shikakai is anti-fungal, balances the pH of the scalp and makes hair glossy.
When it comes to dying our hair, going back to our roots has many advantages. Whether or not we choose to believe that using henna attracts good luck and health, there’s no doubt that plant extracts are a better option to reduce the chemical load on our bodies and the environment.
wellnesswarehouse.com
did you know?Henna and Indigo have been used
for over 5000 years to colour hair.
Both of them contain compounds
that nourish and rejuvenate both
hair and scalp.
lookwell
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natural hair colour
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46
Cape Fusion | Shane Sauvage Jacana
Cape Fusion is a gastronomical journey through the beautiful and innovative Cape. This is the third book from award winning Chef, Shane Sauvage. Breath-taking photographs of the food and Cape are taken by international award-winning photographer, Sarie Pretorious. Known as South Africa’s fusion father, Sauvage inspires even the most lacklustre cook to celebrate life through food. An interactive food and wine pairing chapter together with multi-award-winning winemaker Johann Fourie further your understanding on pairing great wine with delicious food. Available at selected bookshops and through Amazon.
Everyday Superfood | Jamie Oliver Penguin Random House
Jamie Oliver, aka The Naked Chef, has always put himself out to try and test the most nutritious food we can eat. He’s been a frontrunner in shifting the way schools think about food and nutrition in the UK and Europe. This time he’s sharing everything he’s learned in his twenty years of being a chef. As Oliver puts it; “Food is there to be enjoyed, shared and celebrated, and healthy, nourishing food should be colourful, delicious, and fun”. Colourful, delicious and fun is exactly what makes
this book the perfect sous chef in your kitchen. Jamie has done all the research on the nutrition front; so you can cook with ease knowing each recipe is designed with your best interests at heart. Available at selected bookshops and through Amazon.
The Big Fat Surprise | Nina Teicholz Simon & Schuster
Every once in a while a theory comes along that turns everything we think we know about food on its head. Recently there’s been much debate about what healthy eating really means. Nina Teicholz is a New York Times bestselling investigative journalist with a big fat opinion. In The Big Fat Surprise, Nina Teicholz reveals her research on how the low-fat nutrition advice of the past sixty years amounts to an uncontrolled experiment on the entire population, with disastrous consequences for our health. Delightfully well-written, her book overturns conventional wisdom with a ground-breaking claim that more (not less) dietary fat is what leads to better health and wellness. Available at selected bookshops and through Amazon.
Hardwiring Happiness | Rick Hanson Harmony
Rick Hanson unpacks a simple method to transform our brains into centres of calm and happiness. He explains how the brain has evolved along a negativity bias that makes us less adept at learning
from positive experiences but efficient in learning from negative ones. To overcome this innate challenge, he developed four HEAL steps of taking in the positive: “Have a positive experience; Enrich it; Absorb it; and if you like, Link it to negative thoughts and feelings to soothe and eventually replace them.”
It’s a book to practice from the heart and perfect for anyone who has ever felt less than amazing for a time. Good things are happening all around us, all the time – all you have to do is take in more good. Available at selected bookshops and through Amazon.
Dataclysm | Christian Rudder Crown
Imagine the detailed history we’re able to write in a time where we live our lives online. Analysing minute and granular data on billions of individuals around the world can reveal how we are living, what we like, what we search for and who we really are when we think no one is looking. That’s exactly what Christian Rudder reveals in Dataclysm. The book is much like Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner’s Freakonomics – it provides an illuminating and accurate picture of every facet in current human behaviour and details on a revolution in the making. Did you know that you tend to date more frequently and successfully if people either love you or hate you than if everybody just thinks you’re ‘kind of cute’? And what does it mean that women are more ‘race-loyal’ than men? Find questions and answers like this in this curiosity-inspiring read. Available at selected bookshops and through Amazon.
Please note these books are available on order from Amazon or from selected bookstores.
Book REVIEWS
helping you live life well
wellbook reviewsread
Our pick this month provides delicious food education, busts myths and analyses data. See and appreciate what’s happening in the world around you with a few good reads.
47
STAND A CHANCE TO
WIN!
Win three months’ supply of Patrick Holford’s Appestop, one of the products in his Low-GL diet range, by sending an
email to [email protected]
with Wellness Notes with Patrick Holford in the subject line by
30 November 2015
Sustained weight-loss with the low-GL dietFor those new to low-GL, it stands for low glycemic load and is a way to keep your blood sugar levels even. When your blood sugar levels rise, insulin is released into the blood to take the glucose (sugar) out. Some of it goes to the brain and the muscles, but if you have eaten more than you need, the remainder goes to the liver, which turns it into fat and stores it in the nearest place possible - starting with your waist. Insulin is, therefore, the fat-storing hormone. Once insulin kicks in, blood glucose levels drop and this triggers hunger and the release of stress hormones to get you ready to go hunting for more food. Your appetite, sugar and carbohydrate cravings kick in as a result.
The three golden GL rulesThe best way to achieve stable blood sugar balance is to control the glycemic load – or GL – of your diet. The reason I focus on the carbohydrate content of foods is that the other two main food types – fat and protein – don’t have appreciable e� ect on blood sugar. In fact, I recommend you always eat some fat and protein with your carbohydrate, because this will further lessen the e� ect the carbohydrate has on your blood sugar, thereby lowering the GL of the meal.
For balancing your blood sugar, there are only three rules:
Rule 1: Eat 40GLs a day to lose weight, 60GLs to maintain it
Rule 2: Eat carbohydrates with protein
Rule 3: Graze, don’t gorge
The third rule means eating little and often. So always, eat breakfast, lunch and supper – and introduce a snack mid-morning and mid-afternoon. This way you’ll provide your body with a constant and even supply of fuel, which means you’ll experience fewer food cravings.
A model low-GL mealHere’s a simple way to apply my low-GL principles to give you healthy, well-balanced and satisfying lunches and dinners. Protein should make up one-quarter of your meal. Protein foods include: � sh, meat, eggs or tofu, or a serving of beans or lentils (soya, pinto, borlotti and lentils have the most protein). Another quarter of your plate should have starchy carbohydrates, such as brown rice, potatoes, wholegrain pasta, wholegrain bread, quinoa and couscous. You can also include pulses such as kidney beans, butter beans or chickpeas split peas or lentils as your carb portion, because they contain carbs and protein, so this further lowers the GL of your meal. Half your plate should contain a variety of fresh, low-carbohydrate vegetables or salads.
To learn more about my low-GL diet principals and the importance of balancing your blood sugar levels for weight-loss visit www.patrickholford.com/advice/the-secret-to-successful-weight-loss
48
Perseverance, determination and willpower are words synonymous
with a vigorously active lifestyle. Anyone who frequents a gym or workout class will understand what it takes to get out of bed on a dark, early winter morning, put on your training shoes and head to the gym. It’s not easy; often the hardest thing about a workout is deciding whether or not to go through with it.
If this sounds familiar, you’ll also know the feeling of accomplishment, pride and the unmistakable rush of happy chemicals that comes from a great workout. This is, after all why you’re doing it.
Now, imagine you didn’t have a choice. Imagine you were stripped of the physical ability to exert your muscles and confined to your bed without the possibility of ever running or walking again. This was the challenge staring Gordon Stevens right in the face. Gordon, a previously skilled, motivated and super-fit personal trainer, had an accident leaving him in a coma for three and half weeks.
“When I woke up I was traumatised. My body felt broken all over.” Gordon had broken his collar bone, shattered both femurs, punctured a rib and kidney and was in critical condition for 10 days before the doctors induced a coma. A week after he woke up, he had a 9 hour long spinal and leg fusion surgery. “I remember it being 4am and I was lying wide awake not being able to move, with only my thoughts”.
Gordon’s preciously active lifestyle looked
like an impossible reality. “Doctors and specialists said I would never walk straight, or be able to bend over, or train other people and do any form of weight training”. What could have led to a bitter end, Gordon took as a chance to meet the challenge in front of him. “I could choose to be negative and not get better, or be positive and grateful to be alive and breathing. My faith and connection with God grew stronger - I didn’t have anything else.”
Mind Over Matter Gordon worked on himself a little bit each passing day and grew stronger and stronger in his determination. “I went from strength to strength and through hard times and obstacles; I didn’t give up”.
Recovering from a life-altering incident requires a huge amount of support from those around you. You’re not going to feel strong every day; so on those days you doubt yourself it’s good to have someone to lean on. For Gordon, it was his family – in particular, his mother, father and sister. “They have held me every step of the way. They taught me unconditional love and always believed in me.”
fitness, sleep & massagemovewell
Overcoming CHALLENGES
helping you live life well
After an accident left Gordon Stevens in a coma with multiple broken bones, he found a way to regain mobility, teach himself to walk again and get back onto a fitness regime. We speak to him about courage, determination and getting back on track.
No matter what challenges you might be facing, having a strong team behind you and a fit, positive mind is all you need.
"
did you know?Squats are an excellent way to
exercise. Do them properly and they
work the whole body. Studies show
squattings creates major functional
benefits like better mobility, faster
walking speed, bone strength and
core strength.
49
Two and a half years after the incident, he was reinstated as a trainer at Point Virgin Active – a dream that had seemed impossible. On Gordon’s return he had back-to-back client bookings and was fully booked for sessions within a month.
“Believe in the beauty of your dreams and surround yourself with people who do, too.”
Being good to those around him and believing in himself are two practices he takes very seriously.
Often life-changing events leave us with an epiphany and realisation about ourselves and life. Gordon has found purpose in inspiring others and sharing his journey. He has learned the importance of independence and, equally so, how important it is to have others lean on you. “Every day I live in the now and don’t take anything for granted… I’m grateful to be fully booked and to be able to help others every day, like those that have helped me through my recovery”.
Additive to Daily Life “Being inspiring and motivational to others is part of my goal. I want people to realise they can do anything they set their hearts on.” To this end, Gordon has developed a brand called TeamStevens300 where he is continuously expanding his team of personal trainers and promoting his method of training and diet. Giving back to society sees Gordon working with children at the House of Grace Orphanage in Durbanville. “I want to make a difference in not just my life, but those around me too”.
Starting a fitness journey when you don’t feel capable can be difficult. His advice is “don’t give up; consistency is key and it will be worth it in the end. Make sure you set realistic goals and have a plan to put into action. Have a reward system. It’s so important to treat yourself for achieving your goals.”
fitness, sleep & massagemovewell
FREE GROUP TRAINING SESSION IN CAPE TOWN (Valued at R120)
Join Gordon, Sujay and Kirsty, for a fat burning, toning, high intensity, full body weight functional group training session.
Meet any Saturday during the month of November at 7.50am at Green Point Park entrance
(opposite Virgin Active)
Bring water and a towel. All ages. All fitness levels
More info:Kirsty 0723483069, #Rockers300 session
wellnesswarehouse.com
50
Drinking a glass of warm lemon water every morning does wonders
for your liver, kidney and skin. Lemons help balance your bodies PH level, flush toxins from your intestines and they’re full of vitamin C, citric acid, and minerals. Because of these amazing health benefits, lemons are used to treat a variety of conditions from dandruff and chapped lips to gout and acne.
Lemons can be pricey when you find them in a store, but the good news is these hardy trees are pretty easy to grow, so long as you show them the love they need. Lemon trees are considered evergreen in hot climates and you can have a bountiful supply of nature’s miracle citrus fruit all year ‘round, even indoors dependent on the variety you choose. When you fall in love with lemons, you’ll use them every day. So, why not grow a lemon tree of your own?
GROWING OUTDOORS
Lemon trees grow best with all-day exposure to the sun and shelter from the wind. While these trees can tolerate even very poor soil conditions, they can’t stand to be freezing cold or have wet feet. Plant them in the highest areas of your garden to avoid exposing them to cold air that accumulates in low spots and to make sure the water drains.
Be sure to pick up twigs, fallen fruit and debris under the canopy of the lemon tree and get rid of it immediately. This keeps the area clean and discourages pests and disease infestations. It’s a good idea to water your outdoor lemon trees regularly – this keeps them healthy and maximises the quality of their fruit production. Keep newly planted trees evenly moist but not soggy or wet until they are well established in your garden.
livewelllivewellgrow your own
helping you live life well
When life gives you lemons; give thanks.
did you know?The lemon plant roots from Asia
and many believe the first lemons
come from Southern India, Northern
Burma, and China. Today, lemons
are found in myriad variations from
Genoa to Perth and this little yellow
sour fruit has had global influence
on our society from pop-culture
in idioms and slang, to ancient
alternative medicine and home
remedies.
Lemons have a great reputation as an essential immune booster, a great alkaliniser, fat-burning food and natural delight to the taste buds. They’re commonly used in food preparation because of their unique sweet and sour flavour which makes them one of the most versatile fruits in the world. If you’re planning on a daily dose of lemon juice, we think you should plant a lemon tree.
lemonsLong live
51
Water your lemon trees lightly throughout winter months to prevent damage to their roots from the cold.
Lemon trees are hungry plants so it’s important to fertilize these heavy feeders regularly with products formulated for citrus trees.
FEEDING:Feed nutrient deficient lemon trees (yellowing of the leaf) with magnesium Sulphate, Starke Ayres Nutrifeed or Trelmix. Lemon trees should be fed regularly with a slow release organic fertilizer high in nitrogen such as :1:5 Organic or Gorganic liquid fertilizer. Prune your outdoor lemon trees in the spring after all danger of frost has passed. They’re relatively well behaved so won’t require much pruning. Remove dead branches, any limbs that rub or cross each other and trim any damaged wood. Remove water spouts anywhere on the tree and look out for suckers that emerge anywhere below the bud union.
Allowing a lot of heavy fruit to stay on your lemon tree can damage the limbs. Pick the lemons as they ripen. Besides, you can never have too many lemons on hand.
GROWING
Growing a lemon tree is a genuinely fulfilling experience that requires a commitment of love, care and a little patience to yield the best fruits. It’s not a difficult task, even for beginners, so long as you serve the plant’s basic needs.
The first thing to remember when shopping for an indoor lemon tree is the size of your pot or container. Lemon trees need plenty of
room to stretch their roots. A 40 to 60 litre container should suffice, and under normal conditions, a lemon tree in a container that size can grow up to 2.4 meters.
Even though lemon trees aren’t too fussy about their soil, they prefer well-draining, slightly acidic soil. Keep the soil evenly moist and fertilize as needed. Your lemon tree needs lots of light to grow so make sure you pace it on a sunny patio, balcony or deck.
Your indoor environment will never be completely ideal for your lemon tree, so make some time in the spring and summer months to set your plant outside during the day. This will make sure it has the best chance to pollinate and bear fruits for you to enjoy.
LEMON PESTS
Your lemon tree will let you know when it’s not doing too well. You’ll notice anaemic, yellowing, or white frosted leaves, lumps and bumps or aphids on the stalk. Whiteflies, aphids, scales and mites are a problem for your lemon trees. They cause premature fruit drop and blemish your lemons. Horticultural oils are a great aid in getting rid of insects when they’re still in the larval phase of their lifecycle. Insecticidal soaps or neem oil sprays are fairly effective in controlling adult insects pests.
A cup of vegetable or canola oil mixed in 4 litres of water makes a great base for your natural lemon tree pesticide. The oil will suffocate tiny pests and prevent an infestation. Add cayenne, chili or garlic powder to deter bugs from making a home in your tree.
DIFFERENT TYPES OF LEMONS & LIMES locally available
LEMONS
Cape Rough - Winter lemon with a dark, rough skin and juicy fruit, with large seeds. Bears for up to 9 month. Very hardy variety.
Eureka - Year round bearer. Thin smooth skin, juicy and almost seedless fruit. Fruit mostly borne on outside of tree.
Lisbon - Year round bearer especially winter and spring. Juicy, seedless fruit with thin skin. Fruit mostly bourne on inside of tree.
Meyer - Winter fruit bearer.
LIMES
West Indian Lime Tree - Bears in Winter. Small fruit. Very popular with chefs. Small thorny variety but ideal for decorating a pot as subject.
Tahiti or Bearss Lime - Uniquely fragrant & spicy lemon. Nearly thornless tree. Small fruit approximately 6cm diameter. Popular in cooking. Fruit has excellent shelf life.
Kafre Lime - A dwarf citrus treeIdeal for pots & decks. Grown exclusively for the leaves used in Asian Cuisine. Fruit rind is often grated as well as they are very sour. Fruit is often frozen fresh in freezer bags for future use.
livewellgrow your own
wellnesswarehouse.com
Get all your garden essentials from
Starke Ayres Garden Centre supply plants, gardening products and landscaping services. They have a range of flowers and seed, and expert advice to help you with growing.
WIN WIN WINEach branch will give away 2 x lemon trees with a bag of Reliance Coarse Compost with each tree for purchases over R250. All you need to do is place your till slip into the box provided (slips should reflect purchases of R250 or over) and a winner will be drawn at the end of November. Don’t forget to write your details on the back of the slip. Winners will be notified by email or telephone end of November.
Starke Ayres Rosebank, 21 Liesbeek Parkway, Rosebank,Cape Town Tel: 021 685 4120Starke Ayres West Coast Garden Centre, West Coast Village Shopping Centre,Sunningdale, Cape Town Tel: 021 554 8450 WIN
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Despite knowing a lack of patience affects our quality of life, we still
find ourselves feeling exasperated with our family and annoyed by people we interact with. Even when we intentionally make time to meditate, impatience can still interfere: why am I so distracted? Why can’t I just focus on my breath? Why can’t I sit still?
At the Earthchild Project, patience is a core component of the work we do with children from under-resourced communities. The children experience violence, substance abuse, and poverty on a daily basis and this can result in behavioural difficulties. In these situations, patience is crucial for effective communication. We may enter a class with the best intentions, but without patience our efforts fall flat and can even be counter-productive. Patience protects the connection we work hard to establish with our Earthchildren, and with ourselves.
If you feel frustration mounting, it is possible to turn that feeling around by cultivating acceptance:
1. ACCEPTANCE of what is here in the present moment
2. ACCEPTANCE that everything changes
3. ACCEPTANCE that we are connected to everyone, that we are not islands
While these three principals appear simple, they can be complex concepts to grasp and internalise. While building your patience muscles, practice mindfulness so you can identify when you are feeling impatient.
When you find yourself rushing, breathing quickly and shallowly, clenching your hands and/or your jaw, take a few deep breaths and check-in with yourself: “Does this feel good? Will feeling impatient improve the situation?” The answer will generally be , “No”. Use the opportunity to relax your body. Impatience might be triggered by physical factors like dehydration or hunger. Make sure you’re drinking enough water through the day and eating regular meals.
Once you have identified a lack of patience, you can transform this into gratitude to the person for teaching you a profound lesson in mindfulness.
For more information about Earthchild Project: www.EarthchildProject.org
welllovecharity
Patience is a crucial component of well-being. It colours our relationships, influences our perceptions of experiences and has a direct impact on our health – countless studies indicate a correlation between impatience and coronary disease, high blood pressure, and other ailments. Impatient people often also make poor decisions, because they jump to conclusions or misinterpret situations.
Cultivating Patience
helping you live life well
NATURAL PET CARE By Paul Jacobson
Prevention is better than cureSpring and the beginning of summer is a beautiful season in South Africa but it can be a problematic time for pets, when fl eas and mites are rife.
Anticipating this issue goes a long way towards preventing it especially when you have a solution that has no negative side eff ects. Once you notice fl eas on your pet you can almost be assured that they’ve bought fl eas and eggs into your home aff ecting your carpets and furniture. You can prevent this easily. Khakibos has a proven track record of being an excellent fl ea and tick repellent. Many older folk have memories and stories of covering their carpets and curtains with Khakibos, to protect their homes from fl ea and pests. Unlike conventional fl ea poisons, Khakibos is safe and natural and can be sprayed directly onto your pet. That’s if they’ll let you – for pets who do not like to be sprayed (mainly cats), Khakibos is available in powder.
FLEA FACTS Fleas are ancient, they’ve been with us for 160 million years. Larvae feed on organic material then they weave a tiny, silken cocoon and pupate. Adult fl eas will spontaneously emerge from their cocoons when they sense a host animal. They take cues from things like increased carbon dioxide, temperature and vibrations. Fleas can jump up to 30cm – about 200 times their own size. They feed from animals like cats and dogs needing to feed on blood before reproducing. Females lay about 500 eggs. In optimum circumstances fl eas can go from egg to laying eggs in two weeks. They’re irritating and itchy for cats and dogs but are also associated with other diseases like skin allergies and tapeworm.
ADVERTORIAL
Paul Jacobson is the owner of Vondis Holistic Pet Nutrition www.vondis.co.za
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It’s odd to wipe toxic chemicals all over your oven, floors, counters, and toilets in order to get them “clean,” but that’s just what the majority of us do with conventional cleaners. Advertisers spent billions in 2011 to entice shoppers to buy more and more stuff. So it’s not surprising that our homes are full of things we don’t even use — or like. This stuff just so happens to be where a lot of toxic chemicals lurk. It’s the small changes that make the big differences over time. Cleaning products are necessary for maintaining attractive and healthful conditions in the home and workplace. In addition to the obvious aesthetic benefits of cleaning, the removal of dust, allergens, and infectious agents is crucial to maintaining a healthful indoor environment.
When considering natural cleaning in your home or office you should be thinking orange. Triple Orange are eco-friendly products that simplifies your life by providing you with a non-toxic solution to all your cleaning requirements.
With Triple Orange Wonder Gel doing all the hard work of cleaning and Triple Orange Bio-Det taking care of your laundry, you only need two things:
• Wonder Gel is an all-purpose cleaning gel that will clean your entire home, from windows to floors, dishes to bathrooms. Highly concentrated, dilute it with water and 1 tub lasts for ages.
• Bio-Det: a laundry soap (hot or cold water) machine or hand-wash. The combination of ingredients is gentle on your fabrics and will leave your clothing soft and smelling citrus fresh
Orange oil is the main ingredient, aside from the therapeutic benefits of orange oil it is also a powerful degreaser. Extracted from the peel of the sweet orange, orange oil breaks down grease naturally. Triple Orange products are pet friendly and eco-friendly, have not been tested on animals are biodegradable and formulated with, naturally derived ingredients that are hypoallergic and since oranges grow on trees are a renewable resource.
THE POWER OF ORANGE
Speak to our experts: 011 023 7208 • [email protected] • www.tripleorange.co.za
Save our planet, it’s the only one with oranges!
54
wellloveeco mom & baby
Traditionally, Western babies are fed pretty flavourless plain food. Research shows that this isn’t necessary and seasonings and spices will benefit early development. Breast milk is not necessarily bland either – it takes on the flavours of the food the mother eats. If you’ve just had a curry, your breast fed baby will be tasting something similar. Once you move your baby onto solids, feel free to add rosemary in with your gem squash, put paprika on your chicken and mix parsley in with your sweet potatoes. Even spicier options like ginger are good. Here are some excellent food choices with suggestions for added flavour.
Favour flavour
helping you live life well
“The idea that babies should eat only bland food is a myth that has somehow become our cultural norm. There’s absolutely no science behind it.” Susanna Block, Seattle paediatrician
"
55
Blueberries Blueberries have flavonoids called anthocyanins. These are reported to be good for babies eyes, brain and urinary system.
TRY THIS: Pour half a cup of boiling water to a quarter cup of blueberries. Once they’re mushy, remove the water. Mash them up then add some plain yoghurt and cinnamon.
YoghurtUse yoghurt from as early as 6 months. It boosts immunity, supports the digestive tract, and supplies calcium and vitamin D, which contributes to healthy bones and teeth. Buy yoghurt with live cultures and without added sugar or harmful preserving agents.
TRY THIS: Yogurt with pureed apple or squashed banana is delicious. You can add vanilla or cinnamon as well. As an alternative, mix it with mahsed avo sprinkled with herbal vegetable salt.
AvocadosCreamy, nutritious avos are the perfect food. Apparently the fat composition is similar to breast milk, says nutritionist Leanne Cooper. Babies need unsaturated fat and this is an excellent source.
TRY THIS: Mash an avo and blend it with yoghurt or raw cacao. You can even spread it onto apple slices. Avo mashed into sweet potato with a dose of seasoning is also a great option.
Gem SquashGem squash has a wonderful texture and is an excellent source of vitamin A and C. Boil it or roast it.
TRY THIS: Once it has been cooked mash it up and sprinkle on a small amount of cayenne pepper. You can also add parmesan cheese.
LentilsLentils are a great mainstay, they’re inexpensive and easy to cook. They’re filled with protein and fibre.
TRY THIS: Lentils can be mixed with veggies and rice. Cook your lentils with a bay leaf and add basil, oregano and lots of lemon juice.
BroccoliDietitian Kate Geagan, author of Go Green, Get Lean lauds broccoli for its folate, fibre and calcium content. First steam your broccoli; then cool or even chill it.
TRY THIS: After steaming, cool your broccoli down and chop finely. Add some tahini and lemon juice or hummus.
SPICE LIST
Experiment with flavours and spices like:
wellloveeco mom & baby
wellnesswarehouse.com
did you know?Exposing tots to the exciting flavors,
textures, shapes, and colours of
different foods sets them up to be
healthy eaters for life. Feeding babies
bland and processed foods may set
a predisposition for processed foods
over natural foods.
• vanilla • cinnamon • mint • nutmeg • anise • pepper • garlic
• curry powder • basil • rosemary • dill • oregano • lemon zest• ginger
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PRACTICAL HOME TIPS
• Put emergency contact numbers on the fridge. This includes the security company, police, ambulance, hospital, local GP, the neighbour and a close family friend or relative.
• Teach children Mum’s phone number, their address and make sure they know Mum’s full name.
• See that everyone in the house knows how to use the alarm system, (if there is one) or knows the security checks in the house and has emergency numbers on their phones.
• Put ICE entries (in case of emergency) on each family members phone – this means if your phone is lost or if you’re in an accident someone will know who to call.
• Check that kids and nannies know how to use the phone.
• Run through basic safety with children and include things like not opening the door to strangers.
• Make a will and keep it in a sensible place.
• Check insurance details once a year and keep payments current on medical, car and household.
• Let everyone know what to do in case there is an accident or emergency – which hospital to go to, which ambulance to call etc.
• Have a spare house key hidden somewhere on the premises – make sure it’s well hidden.
• Make duplicates of all the important papers like birth certificates, I.D documents, passports – scan them and keep them on a memory stick somewhere safe.
• Allocate a file for each family member, this is where you can store things like medical records, exam certificates and other important information.
• Back up everything on your computer including documents and photographs – put them on an external drive that’s locked away or at least in a different place to where your computer is normally kept.
• Jot down bank codes and bank account numbers and let a trusted person know how to get access to these for extreme emergencies or alternatively give someone power of attorney in case you end up in a coma or have an accident.
wellloveeco mom & baby
Running a family is a bit like running a business, there’s a lot of admin and structure to put in place. We’ve put together a list of constructive things you can do to feel more organized and secure. We also look at security from an emotional point of view. Get all your family affairs in order and double check the connection and communication in your family – see if it has a healthy basis.
Family matters By Georgina Vintin
helping you live life well
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EMOTIONAL SECURITY
As well as the practical aspects, children also need to feel emotionally secure. Many parents ask me how they can connect more on an emotional basis with their children.
I consulted with a father who admitted he had been fairly absent in his relationship with his two teenage children. Prioritising work and having to go overseas frequently, he didn’t allocate a lot of family time. He is now in the process of a divorce and asked me to help him develop a closer relationship with his children. He has the kids every second week, and he’s decided to work less and spend more time with them.
I met with Dad and daughter (aged 15) and asked them to show me how they normally communicate. They struck up a conversation and chatted away about a current concern while I sat and observed. During their interaction I saw something fairly typical in communication patterns between parent and child. With good intent, the father straight away started trying to fix or create a solution for the daughter
around the problem. Almost immediately I could see the daughter disengaging, losing interest and stopping eye contact. After a few minutes, I interrupted and asked the daughter to explain how the conversation felt for her. She said she’d heard it all before, it was like a lecture and it never helps.
With permission I started a conversation with the daughter around the same topic, with the father as the observer. I used very simple key skills like curiosity (from a ‘not knowing’ position) and I listened. Lots of questions allowed the daughter to delve deeper and deeper into the problem. Through our chat she came up with a solution. It was a solution she found and so she was able to own it. The outcome was a surprise to the father; it was something the father hadn’t imagined was at the core of the problem.
Someone once said:
“The biggest communication problem is that we don’t listen
to understand, we listen to reply.”
It sounds simple, but we often fail to do this. We need to be more curious and understanding. Parents can learn skills to help them connect with and understand what’s happening in the world of their children. What’s also important though, is that through our communication we send the message that we want to stay connected to them and understand their internal worlds. This will contribute to their emotional security.
To explore these ideas further, Georgina Vintin, Systemic
Therapist, works with Couples, Individuals and Families across
Cape Town. Her work is brief, up to 8 sessions, seeing
sustainable change fast. www.systemic-therapist.co.za.
wellloveeco mom & baby
Georgina offers psychotherapy for couples, individuals, children and families.
T: 0724778807 E: [email protected] W: www.systemic-therapist.co.za
Location: Cape Town Centre, Llandudno & Hout Bay Medical Centre
“Working and thinking systemically with the individuals, couples and families with whom I work means exploring peoples lives and how they are contextualised by the richness and complexities of the relationships within which they live. It is only by looking through our lives with this lens that we can begin to explore, connect, understand patterns, self-reflect, and most importantly, create change.”
Georgina Vintin, MSc, PG dip, Systemic Psychotherapy
marriage & relationship counselling | children | family & parenting | anxiety | depression | low self esteem | divorce | mediation
to see if I am the right therapist for you.
FREE SESSIONComplimentary
Georgina offers the first session FREE to all Wellness
Warehouse readers.
The supplement that ticks all the boxes
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We believe in empowering you to make the best decisions for your health. We’re always getting better so that you can, too. We don’t only believe in getting better, though. We believe in being and staying well. With this in mind, WellClinic has start-ed offering a few new services.
Check your Wellness status within minutes.
Ask our clinic sister for more information or call 021 487 5430 to make an appointment. Available at Wellness Warehouse Kloof, Lifestyle on Kloof, 50 Kloof Street, Cape Town.
Comprehensive wellness• Wellness Comprehensive
Screening (height, weight, BMI, girth, glucose test, cholesterol, blood pressure, haemoglobin)
• Discovery Vitality assessment• Wellness 360 Assessment
Stay well• Blood pressure• Blood glucose• Total cholesterol• Haemoglobin• HIV testing
Thyroid rapid test
Prostate rapid test
Uric acid test
pH test
Blood group
new
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kloof street clinic
Wellness basics: Family wellness• Pregnancy testing• Baby weighing• Baby wellness consultation
(breastfeeding/nutrition/teething advice)
• Baby immunisations
Get well• Basic consultation• Full consultation• Blood/specimen collection
for Pathcare• Woundcare (excl. dressings)• Injection administration
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210 x 297mm - Derma Doc - Welness Warehouse advert - FINAL - PRINT FILE
11 June 2015 10:05:29 PM
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Georgina offers psychotherapy for couples, individuals, children and families.
T: 0724778807 E: [email protected] W: www.systemic-therapist.co.za
Location: Cape Town Centre, Llandudno & Hout Bay Medical Centre
“Working and thinking systemically with the individuals, couples and families with whom I work means exploring peoples lives and how they are contextualised by the richness and complexities of the relationships within which they live. It is only by looking through our lives with this lens that we can begin to explore, connect, understand patterns, self-reflect, and most importantly, create change.”
Georgina Vintin, MSc, PG dip, Systemic Psychotherapy
marriage & relationship counselling | children | family & parenting | anxiety | depression | low self esteem | divorce | mediation
to see if I am the right therapist for you.
FREE SESSIONComplimentary
Carol Cheesman Clinical Psychologist/Psychotherapist Working with adults, couples, creative art groups Rosebank 021-689 3827
ARE YOU INTERESTED IN A CAREER IN THERAPEUTIC REFLEXOLOGY?
Accredited by the Allied Health Professions Council of South Africa
DISTANCE E-LEARNING DELIVERED IN MODULES
Our Reflexology Academy offers a DIPLOMA IN THERAPEUTIC REFLEXOLOGY
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Registered by the Department of Higher Education & Training (Registration certificate no. 2000/HE07/014)
0861– REFLEX (733 539) [email protected] www.reflexologycourse.co.za
WORKSHOPS AVAILABLE IN RIVONIA & CAPE TOWN
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Monday - 5:45-6:45pmTuesday - 5:30-6:30pm
Wednesday - 5:30-6:30pm
at Wellness Warehouse
Contact Sharni Quinn on [email protected] or 0719542816
www.followthesun.co.za
Intimate Group Yoga Classes
Be one of the ‘Follow the Sun’ Yoga Tribe and join us for grounding, nurturing and
happiness-inducing Yoga sessions
Once per week R90, twice per week R70, drop in R120
DIRE
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Sri Lanka Journey
2016
EatSUPYoga•With Sharni Quinn•
Sri Lanka’s untouched and endless beaches, radiant green rice paddies and vibrant culture will be our home for the next ‘Eat, Play, Yoga Journey’. However, this time ladies, we are adding SUP and surfing to the adventure!
Watch fisherman float on stilts above the waves and turtles crawl up onto moonlit beaches, snorkel across glowing coral reefs, let your senses explode with Indian inspired delicious meals, soak up Ayurveda massages and practice Yoga on the ivory-coloured sand beaches in the morning and sip cocktails at night.
Join us for this two week blissful holiday!Dates from the 18th February - 1st March 2016
Visit website for details.
SUP & Yoga holiday in Sri Lanka
For info or to book - [email protected]
CHANGE CAREERTrain to become aNatural Health Practitionerby studying CNH’sInternational Diploma in Natural Health
0861007824 www.collegeofnaturalhealth.co.za
COLLEGE OFNATURALHEALTHCNH
Attend a Free Open Evening at your nearest CNH college:Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban
T R A I N I N G S U C C E S S F U L P R A C T I T I O N E R ST R A I N I N G S U C C E S S F U L P R A C T I T I O N E R S
Short Courses also available
in a range of therapiesin a range of therapies
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www.yogalife.co.za Tel: 021 418 2884
Hot and non-heated yoga for all levels including Vinyasa, Bikram, Power & Sculpt
Changing the world one breath at a time
Offering one free week of yoga for new students to YogaLife. Cape Town residents only, with valid ID
Yoga special for travellers to CT, R250 for one weekLocated at 127 Waterkant Street, right next to the Old Cape Quarter
www.yogalife.co.za Tel: 021 418 2884
Hot and non-heated yoga for all levels including Vinyasa, Bikram, Power & Sculpt
Changing the world one breath at a time
Offering one free week of yoga for new students to YogaLife. Cape Town residents only, with valid ID
Yoga special for travellers to CT, R250 for one weekLocated at 127 Waterkant Street, right next to the Old Cape Quarter
www.yogalife.co.za Tel: 021 418 2884
Hot and non-heated yoga for all levels including Vinyasa, Bikram, Power & Sculpt
Changing the world one breath at a time
Offering one free week of yoga for new students to YogaLife. Cape Town residents only, with valid ID
Yoga special for travellers to CT, R250 for one weekLocated at 127 Waterkant Street, right next to the Old Cape Quarter
Yoga special for travellers to CT, R299 for one week
~ NOURISH & RESTORE ~ Join us for a weekend of Yoga, Pampering Treatments, Meditation, Delicious Vegetarian Meals
and Beautiful Surroundings.
Honour your being by allowing your mind, body and soul to rejuvenate and replenish itself while Nina Saacks and Nicole Angelika Panzer take on a magical retreat at this time of the year.
WHEN: 26. – 29. November 2015 – 2/3 nights WHERE: THE BLUE BUTTERFLY in TULBAGH
COST: R 2,570.00 –2 nights / R 3,450.00 3 nights
Investment includes shared accommodation, all meals (tea & biscuits incl.), Yoga classes and Meditation. Treatments (Spinal Massage with Nicole / Thai Foot Massage with Nina) will be charged additionally
YOGA ~ MEDITATION ~ TREATMENTS ~ NATURE WALKS ~ NOURISH ~ RESTORE
FOR MORE DETAILS PLEASE CONTACT YOUR FACILITATORS
Nicole Angelika Panzer -‐ 083 377 9248 / nicole@lila-‐healthandwellbeing.com / www.lila-‐healthandwellbeing.comNina Saacks -‐ 083 424 3889 / [email protected] / www.saacks.com
DIRE
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Summer feet
HEY, GOOD LOOKING Summer shoes are all about showing off your feet. Indulge in a professional or home pedicure to get your feet summer
ready. Just remember your skin absorbs the chemicals in the products you use, so go natural. Foot scrubs with tea tree oil are a good bet because tea tree oil is a natural antifungal. Peppermint aromatherapy oil is excellent for cooling hot, tired, feet. Apply a good moisturiser daily and use that time to do some self-massage. There’s plenty of information on pressure points online.
UNDER PRESSURE Having a foot massage is more than a luxury – it’s good for you. Try out a session with a reflexologist, who will focus on key
pressure points to benefit the whole body and improve emotional wellbeing. Millions of people around the world use reflexology to help with conditions like diabetes, anxiety, headaches and even PMS.
BE FLEXIBLE Feet can get tired. Wearing heels that are too high, or even sandals that are too flat,
can tire the feet out. If your feet are feeling the brunt of unkind shoes or too much walking, try this simple stretching exercise: Sit with one leg stretched out in front of you. Wrap a towel around the ball of your foot. Pull the towel back gently until you feel a stretch in your foot and calf. Hold for ten seconds. Repeat five times on each leg. This will stretch your Achilles tendons and plantar fascia (the tissue that connects your heel bone to your toes).
.wellnesswarehouse.com
LOSE THE SHOES Walking barefoot is known as ‘earthing’. It’s long been thought of as a little kooky and ‘hippy’ but science is starting to find it has health advantages. Walking barefoot on the beach exfoliates your feet naturally but the benefits extend beyond aesthetics, it’s also thought to be good for you because of the way your body interacts with electrons in the earth. Possible benefits include improved sleep and reduced inflammation.
Walk this way By Catherine Hayden