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The Healthy Planet February 2015. St. Louis Green & Healthy Living Magazine.
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TheHealthyPlanetSt. Louis’ Green & Healthy Living Magazine Please Read - Then Recycle
Healthcare Careers page 5 • Relationship Advice pages 6-7 • A Gift For Your Heart page 9
TheHealthyPlanetFebruary, 2015
Our HealthyOur Healthy && Happy Heart EditionHappy Heart Edition
Mandala Art by Linda Wiggen Kraft
2 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February 2015
ou know what they say, “Love makesthe world go round.” “Love is a manysplendored thing.” “All you need isLove.” “Tis better to have loved and
lost than to have never loved at all.” It’s clear thatLove has many faces, meanings and interpretations.The bards have spent countless ink and candle waxdeciphering the secret code of love. Songwritershave made a living on love. Dr. Suess says “Youknow you’re in love when you can’t fall asleepbecause reality is finally better than your dreams.”He must be serious, because nothing in that quoterhymed! Love can create agony and ecstasy. Lovecan be crazy, wild and yet calmly comforting. It issafe to say, Love has multiple-personality syndrome.Stephen Chbosky, author of The Perks of Being AWallflower, says “We accept the love we think wedeserve.” So our ability to love someone else, startswith how much we love ourselves. So true, so true.Self love does not have to be narcisitic, just a strongsense of self. A confident person is more likely toattract a confident relationship with self-assuredlove. We all experience love at our own pace, in ourown time and by our own rules. No matter the expe-rience, the rationale or the expert advice, Love isoften in charge and we follow Love’s lead like mothsto a candle. “It’s so beautiful.” And yet there doesseem to be someone for everyone. Bob Marley says,“Love hard when there is love to be had. Becauseperfect guys don’t exist, but there’s always one guy
that is perfect for you.” And so we do love hard, fallhard, and sometimes it takes the heart years to over-come love lost. Why do some people get over lostlove so much easier than others? Some people burnthe candle for a dysfunctional length of time.Perhaps that is the part of Love that is caustic. Lovesinks a barb into you and never lets go. “In vain haveI struggled. It will not do. My feelings will not berepressed. You must allow me to tell you how ardent-ly I admire and love you.” writes Jane Austen inPride And Prejudice. As painful as love can be, italso can lift us up to the highest peaks of pleasure.Married people live longer than single people.Lovers smile more hours per day. Mahatma Gandhisaid “Where there is love there is life.” And so it is.Love is the blueprint of life. From the time we areborn we love. We are nurtured and therefore nurture.We are loved and therefore love. But we must alsotry to realize the nature of love. Love is not stone.Albert Einstein said, “Gravitation is not responsiblefor people falling in love.” And sometimes we musttake a chance with love and see if love’s measure istrue. Kahil Gibran said, “If you love somebody, letthem go, for if they return, they were always yours.If they don't, they never were.” Easier said thandone Kahil. Love helps to build us up and break usdown. Perhaps this balance that love creates is goodfor our soul and our psyche. Lady Gaga says, “Loveis like a brick. You can build a house, or you can sinka dead body.” One thing we know, Love is fickle andfolly at times. And yet we continue to seek it out likean oasis in the desert. Truth is, we live to love and beloved. It’s the hardest thing to master and easiestthing to misplace. And yet sometimes it’s rightbefore us hidden by anger or ignorance. There is nogreater words to hear than, “I love you.” Perhaps wedon’t say it enough to those we love. And to thosewho are still waiting to hear it. Paul Simon says,“Some people never say the words ‘I love you’, forlike a child they’re longing to be told.” Tell someoneyou love them and start the Love train rolling. Yourseat is reserved, so get onboard!
Love Ya, J.B. Lester; Publisher
PUBLISHER’S CORNER
Love
Has
Many
Faces
YPLANET PEOPLE
Publisher/Editor: J.B. LesterLifestyles Editor: Denise Christen
Arts Editor: Michelle “Mike” OchonickyGreen & Growing Editor: Linda Wiggen Kraft
Associate Editor: Niki LesterSocial Media Editor: Natalie Petty
COLumNisTs: Environment: Heather Navarro, Jean Ponzi
Food & Drink: Kari Hartel, RD, LD,Crystal Stevens
Animals & Nature: Teresa Garden, DVM; Ava Frick, DVM, Dr. Doug Pernikoff, DVM,
Pat Tuholske, NaturalistmArkETiNg
Denise Christen, Linda Wiggen Kraft, J.B. Lester,Michelle “Mike” Ochonicky, Natalie Petty
BOOkkEEPiNg & AdmiNisTrATivEAlicia Martin - 314-962-7748
Printing: Breese Publishing
©2015 The Healthy Planet, LLC
send all correspondence to:The Healthy Planet magazine,
20 North gore, ste. 200, st. Louis, mO 63119
Phone: 314-962-7748 • Fax: 314-962-0728
www.thehealthyplanet.com
EdiTOriAL POLiCy:
The Healthy Planet magazine invites articles and
calendar items from environmental groups, charitable
organizations, community action and other not-for-profits
to be published as a community service at no charge.
For-profit businesses can inquire about marketing
programs by calling 314-962-7748.
The Healthy Planet is printed on recycled newsprint witheco-friendly, soy-based ink.
The Healthy Planetmagazine
®
Vol. 18 No.10
be kept free from any other text or graphics to ensure the signature stands out in any environment.
> Color
3
Read Us Online at TheHealthyPlanet.com
by Rick Hotton
February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 3
atricia Laspino, contemporary Americanpainter and founder of the “Orchid AllianceProject-Bridging Art & Science”, will beshowing recent paintings in a solo exhibition
entitled, “Orchids in the Realm of the Sublime” in theMonsanto Hall Gallery at the Missouri BotanicalGarden through March 8, 2015.
Laspino’s provocative large scale oil paintings
will highlight orchids subjects found in some of the35 countries and six continents where the Garden isactively engaged in research. The Missouri BotanicalGarden is a National Historic Landmark and one ofthe world’s leading research centers for plant science,conservation and education, with a strong commit-ment to the arts and humanities. The artist will alsounveil two new paintings created specifically for theGarden representing orchid species found in SouthAfrica and Madagascar.
Laspino’s exhibition coincides with the Garden’sannual orchid show, whose theme this year is“Orchids and their Pollinators”. The artist viewsorchids as a flagship plant family or ambassador totell stories about the interconnectedness of humanityand the natural world.
Laspino’s thirty-five year career has been inspired
by the beauty and diversity of the natural world andthe orchid’s extraordinary influence on art and cul-ture. The artist uses orchids as metaphor, to explorecultural and biological evolution, biodiversity andenvironmental stewardship. Her paintings uncover thefundamental attractive shapes and designs of naturewhere symmetry, color and pattern all play importantroles on nature’s grand stage of attraction. The artist’ssignature style interweaves 60-80 layers of transpar-
ent oil color over atextural groundworkof fossilized botanicalimpressions. Herpainted surfaces cap-ture light and are ani-mated from within toachieve vibrancy,luminosity and drama.
The exhibit isincluded withMissouri Botanical
Garden admission of $8 for adults and free for chil-dren ages 12 and under. St. Louis City and Countyresidents enjoy discounted admission of $4 and freeadmission on most Wednesday and Saturday morn-ings until noon. Missouri Botanical Garden membersare free.The Missouri Botanical Garden is located at4344 Shaw Blvd. in south St. Louis, accessible fromInterstate 44 at the Vandeventer exit and fromInterstate 64 at the Kingshighway North and Southexit. Free parking is available on site and two blockswest at the corner of Shaw and Vandeventer.
For general information, visit www.mobot.org orcall (314) 577-5100 (toll-free, 1-800-642-8842).
Follow the Garden on Facebook and Twitterat www.facebook.com/missouribotanicalgarden andhttp://twitter.com/mobotgarden.
Orchid Artist Solo Exhibition
At Missouri Botanical Garden
P
4 The Healthy Planet magazine • Thehealthyplanet.com February, 2015
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nterest in health and fitness seems to
spike in the new year as people resolve
to replace holiday goodies with health-
ier choices. Of course, health and well-
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ple not only want to stay healthy themselves,
they want to help others live healthier lives.
If you’re interested in preparing for a
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paths you could pursue – including Fitness
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Missouri College can help you get started.
Their programs put you in settings that
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experience what the workplace is really like.
Through hands-on learning activities, clinical
experience, and supportive, knowledgeable
instructors, you can develop essential skills,
empathy and confidence in your judgment and
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Significant growth is expected in health-
care fields between 2012 and 2022. The need
for Occupational Therapy Assistants is pro-
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Missouri College has been helping people
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The college is located at 1405 S. Hanley
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like to learn more about the programs men-
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classes that will start March 2nd.
*www.bls.gov/ooh/healthcare/occupation-
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a n d - s e r v i c e / f i t n e s s - t r a i n e r s - a n d -
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ove. The quintessential four letterword. Confounds everyone, can feelquite elusive at times, and yet seemsto be the underlying desire that moti-
vates most people in their lives, that is, to feelloved by someone. The desire to experienceunconditional love is so strong that many peopleexpend vast amounts of time, money, and psy-chic energy to acquire this most elusive of trea-sures. It becomes, for many, like trying to catchone’s shadow that is always just a step out ofreach, and yet tantalizingly close enough to con-tinue to hook them in pursuit.
The instinct to look outside of ourselves tomeet this experience of love, is a common andunderstandable misconception reinforced repeat-edly by our culture, the media, and fairy talesfrom our youth. To be sure, we have had itingrained in us from early on, that we are the cre-ators of our own world, and to seek happinessthrough our choices in our outside worlds. Howoften have we heard statements such as “if onlyhe loved me enough he would have known” or “Icannot believe she did not know that about me?”We project our deepest emotional needs ontoanother person, and then become upset or angry,and even depressed when that significant othercannot fulfill our need to feel cared for and loved.How many relationships have we seen come to acrashing halt because of unowned wounds thatwe somehow make another person responsiblefor in our present day lives? Believing that sure-ly if the relationship were “right”, we wouldn’tbe in conflict with this special someone, and all
our emotional needs would be automatically metwithout having to express them out loud.
As a child, this was a fair and reasonableexpectation as part of a parent’s job is to helptheir child learn about their own needs, desires,interests, values and self, and to give them thisprimal experience of unconditional love. But asan adult, we can no longer look outside of the selfto get these needs met. We cannot expect anoth-er person to know our deepest needs and desires,when we do not even know them ourselves.When we do, we are placing all our power to behappy or whole in the hands of an external sourcethat has its own set of needs, wants, and desiresin this world. If we are to truly experience thekind of love we seek at our deepest level, we firsthave to love ourselves in the very way that we arehoping for from another. And this requires thatwe be willing to invest the same kind of time,effort and energy into discovering and learning tolove ourselves, as we would another. This is thesource of love that everyone is seeking, and whenfound can never be lost.
For more information on guided imageries,meditations, classes, and upcoming programsvisit Kate at: www.kateschroederlpc.com.
You can contact Kate at:Transformation Counseling, LLC 8084 Watson Road, Suite 226 Saint Louis, MO 63119 (314) 761-5310 [email protected]
A Word To The Wisewith Kate Schroeder, M.Ed, LPC, NCC
What’s Love Got To Do With It?
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We Specialize in Treatment of Neuro-Immune Disorders
Neuro-Immune Disorders result from causes that affect the nervous and immunesystems. Common Conditions Resulting from Neuro-Immune Disorders:
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"Where People Come To Get Well"
Q: If I already take a calcium supple-
ment that contains magnesium, should I take
additional magnesium?
A: That depends on a number of factors. A
majority of the population is low on magne-
sium. The RDA for magnesium is 300-420
mg. per day, although 500-600 mg. per day is
recommended if there is a deficiency. This is a
very important mineral as it helps run almost
all of your bodily processes. Someone with a
magnesium deficiency may experience fatigue,
weakness, nausea, loss of appetite, numbness,
confusion and even high blood pressure. Most
people at risk are diabetics, the elderly, preg-
nant women, and people under a lot of stress.
Also, certain drugs can deplete magnesium
levels. Magnesium has been shown to help
with bone and heart health as well as to help
prevent migraines.
When taking a supplement, look for mag-
nesium citrate, which is inexpensive and easily
absorbed by the body. Foods which contain
magnesium are kelp, wheat germ, almonds,
cashews and molasses.
Q. Help! I'm 22 years old and my periods
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usual heavy periods. It is a great female tonic
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You can purchase red raspberry in capsule
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This herb information is for health educa-
tion purposes only. It is not intended to replace
the services of licensed health practitioners.
Consult with a physician for any condition that
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Do you have questions about herbs or vita-
mins? Send them to Cathy Schram, CNHP and
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What About Calcium
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Cathy Schram
February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 7
To find out more about me or my services, Iinvite you to take a look at my website:www.ChristineKniffen.com. I look forwardto seeing you at the March 29 Healthy PlanetNatural Living Expo!
e can all have very strong feelingsabout this particular day in mid-February. Some think it silly, but Ithink it sweet. Some take it far tooseriously, as it becomes the kin-
dling for fights fueled by unmet expectations drivenby hyped up commercialism. Valentine’s Day shouldrepresent a sweet reminder of the love you feel foranother, whether romantic or otherwise. In order tohave a successful Valentine’s Day try to keep a fewthings in mind. Don’t let the commercial aspect setyou up for disappointment through unmet expecta-tions. Don’t use it as a make-up day for all that youhave neglected to do throughout the rest of the year.And, lastly, learn to articulate to your partner what heor she can do to make you feel special and importantfor the evening.
Like many things in this country, commercialismand consumerism can ruin the simple sweetness thatoriginally accompanied this special day. On February15th, women across the offices of America are eitherbragging about what their man did for them or arescurrying about the day breathlessly trying to avoideye contact, praying that no one will ask them abouttheir night, as they fear complete humiliation due towhat did not take place. I think all too often the com-petitive element takes over and Valentine’s Day getsturned into bragging rights or a source for discontent,as the expectations that were artificially propped up bythe endless Hallmark commercials were not realized.The pressure of this day to be romantic, perfect and
magical can be made worse if you don’t do enough toshow you care throughout the rest of the year.
Don’t make Valentine’s Day a make-up day. Weshould be continually doing little things throughoutthe year to let our partners know how special andimportant they are to us. The less you do this, under-standably the greater the pressure and expectationswill be on Valentine’s Day to demonstrate this to theirsatisfaction. However, if you are starting with adeficit even a great big gesture on this particular daycan seem far less significant. Relationships begin tofall apart when people no longer feel connected. Wehave all probably been somewhat guilty for becomingslightly lazy and complacent in our relationships, tak-ing them for granted. We stop giving these small, buthighly significant gestures of affection. But, we needto be diligent and put energy into our relationships ona regular basis. We all have different needs. Moreimportantly, these needs are met in different ways fordifferent people.
Make sure you are having the “needs conversa-tion” in your relationships. What can he or she do thatwill actually symbolize or convey to you that you arespecial and loved? I have seen couples that have beentogether for many years that have yet to have that con-versation with each other. If she says she needs flow-ers and a romantic card on her birthday, then give it toher. It doesn’t matter that you would not need thatback. It is about each person stating what he or sheneeds to feel loved. Likewise, you will have amuch better Valentine’s Day if you have discussionsbeforehand on what types of things you would like tosee happening for a fun, romantic evening. Try thisand you will see just how sweet the night can be.
Christine Kniffen, LCSW is a Relationship Coachand Therapist. For a free consultation, call 314-374-8396.
The Art of Relating
Christine Kniffen, MSW, LCSW
Valentine’s Day SuccessAmerican Heart Association
few good choices can help you feel betterand stay healthier!
Getting diagnosed with health problems such ashigh blood pressure or high cholesterol is a wake-upcall that it’s time to make major lifestyle changes.
The good news is, a few simple changescan help you avoid such a diagnosis in thefirst place.
By focusing on seven key health factorsand behaviors – what the American HeartAssociation calls Life’s Simple 7® – you cankeep your heart healthy, lower your risks of heartdisease and stroke, and improve your quality of life.This is the first in a series on Life’s Simple 7. Theseries will cover each one of Life's Simple 7 keys toprevention with steps you can take to live a healthi-er lifestyle.
“We’re all born with a large stock of goodhealth; it’s up to us to protect it with good choicesabout our health,” said Donald M Lloyd-Jones,M.D., professor of Preventive Medicine andMedicine-Cardiology, chair of the Department ofPreventive Medicine and Senior Associate Dean forClinical and Translational Research at NorthwesternUniversity Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.
Life’s Simple 7 focuses on the seven factors andbehaviors that have the biggest impact on your hearthealth, both on their own and taken together. Theyare:
* Lose weight/maintain healthy weight* Eat better* Get active* Manage blood pressure* Reduce blood sugar* Stop smoking* Control cholesterolMaking positive changes in any one of these
areas can make a difference in your health, said Dr.
Lloyd-Jones, a volunteer with the American HeartAssociation. And emerging research shows theresults are much more dramatic when the seven fac-tors work together.
“Small changes matter,” he said. “If you can loseweight, or maintain a healthy weight, you can reduceyour risk of diabetes, high cholesterol and high
blood pressure.”Making changes before you develop a
chronic condition such as high blood pres-sure or high cholesterol is critical. While
medication may reduce your risk for a heartattack or stroke, it can’t eliminate the risk.“There’s a price to pay for having developed the
condition,” Dr. Lloyd-Jones said. “We can reduceyour risk, but we can never restore you to low-risk.”
By focusing on Life’s Simple 7, people may beable increase the number of years they feel healthy,rather than managing chronic disease, Dr. Lloyd-Jones said.
“A stroke can be absolutely devastating and takea toll on a person’s quality of life,” he said. “In addi-tion to avoiding those, we want to preserve a per-son’s healthy longevity.”
An American Heart Association survey of U.S.adults showed most people don’t connect importantrisk factors, such as poor diet and physical inactivi-ty, with heart disease and stroke.
The first step to doing that is getting a full pic-ture of your health by knowing your Life’s Simple 7numbers. Some measures, such as blood sugar andcholesterol, will require a trip to the doctor for ahealth screening. Others, such as blood pressure andweight, you may be able to measure at home or yourlocal pharmacy.
“It’s never too late,” Dr. Lloyd-Jones said. “Eachone of Life’s Simple 7 is modifiable and control-lable. All you need are the tools and the understand-ing that you can change it.”
For more information visit www.heart.org.
Getting Heart Healthy One Step At A Time
A
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8 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
Early Detection of Breast Cancer, Stroke, Thyroid...available at Medical Thermography of Metro St. Louis
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in your body. This clinical test is supported by
30 years of research and over 8,000 published
medical studies. The procedure takes less than
30 minutes, requires no physical contact, there
are no liquids to drink and it is 100% safe with
no radiation and is FDA approved . You will
see “bio-markers” that can reveal how effi-
ciently your organs are functioning.
Your thermal patterns are assessed by stan-
dards set by doctors at Johns Hopkins
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tem, colon, stomach, liver, gallbladder, thyroid,
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February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 9
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by Dr. Rosa Kincaid, MD
s Valentine’s Day fast approaches, most
of us will be rushing to make that last
minute purchase for that special signifi-
cant other in our lives. It could be a
wife, husband, girlfriend, boyfriend, mother, father, sib-
ling or close relative or friend. Whom ever that special
person might be and whether you give that special per-
son a card, flowers, chocolates, jewelry or some other
treasured present, the card most likely will say some-
thing similar to this: “A Valentine’s Day Gift From My
Heart”
However, with all the Valentine’s Day activities sur-
rounding the heart, few of us have ever thought about
giving your own heart a special Valentine’s Day gift.
Yes, your own heart that works tirelessly day and night
pumping the lifeblood throughout your entire body,
every second, every minute and every hour of the day.
Even when you are sleeping your heart is still working
pumping life through your body that enables you to
wake up in the morning ready to meet the challenges of
a brand new day. We often take this miracle for grant-
ed not giving it a second thought, coupled with the
assumption that the same thing will happen tomorrow
and the day after tomorrow and will continue indefi-
nitely well into the future.
But unfortunately, for so
many, that assumption will
turn out to be incorrect as
more and more Americans are falling victim to
Coronary Heart Disease or CHD. As the medical com-
munity debates the significance of today’s contributors
to CHD, it has been scientifically established that stress,
poor diet, anger, emotional anxiety, marital and rela-
tionship challenges all are contributing factors in bring-
ing about the onset of Coronary Heart Disease.
This Valentine’s Day give your heart a special gift.
Come in and get a “SphygmoCor” Examination to
determine what affects today’s stressful living has had
on your heart. The “SphygmoCor” is a non-evasive
procedure that is done right in my office, that will also
enable you to detect early signs of CHD which often
times can be a silent killer. The good news is that we
can evaluate your results and begin to immediately put
you on the Kincaid Wellness Program that will begin to
reverse any conditions that would put you at risk for
Coronary Heart Disease. This Valentines Day, let your
chart read: “A Valentines Day Gift For my Heart” I got
the “SphygmoCor” Examination.
For more information, contact Rosa Kincaid, M.D.,
Kincaid Medical Associates, P.C., 3016 Locust, Suite
104, (314) 531-0008. Or visit online at www.drrosakin-
caid.com.
A
a Valentine’s Day gift For Your hEart
ur office move occurred in the dead of winter.The transit from a quiet tree-green suburban
neighborhood to stark concrete city left me feelingshocked and grim. I hated being there, deprived of anyhint of nature.
Then one workday’s sunset hour, a swoop of darkshapes caught my attention. Winged clouds of big bodies,black against the flaming sky, swarmed past my deskwindow, swirling westward toward the sun.
From that day until spring buds revealed real life in aman-made wasteland, I watched crows fly in almostevery twilight. They carried me through a desolate sea-son, and helped me make peace with a big move.
Crows are intensely social creatures, and they areclever opportunists. They’ve learned to thrive on thefoibles of human society.
Throughout fall and winter nights, crowds of crowsroost together in cities. The heat sinks of our buildingsand pavement keep urban centers warmer than the outly-ing open regions crows prefer for daytime doings. Theslimmest strips of treetop shelter along our well-lit park-ing lots offer vigilant crows a lookout advantage over anypredators.
Year after year, generations of crows use the sameflight paths and roosting grounds, where abundant humantrash and food scraps turn these mass roosts into BlackBird Bistros. Flocks of crows – hundreds of birds - arriveat dusk, wheeling and careening as they did the day myspirit joined them. They chatter, preen, feed, fight andPAR-TAY into the evening. Before dawn, they dispersealone and in small family groups to far-flung foraginggrounds, where their motley natural diet includes roadkill, insects, small frogs, lizards, snakes, seeds, and theeggs and young of other birds.
Members of the family Corvidae - including crows,jays, ravens, rooks and magpies - are second in intelli-gence only to parrots, among all birds. Studies haveshown crows to be as smart as dogs! Amateur and pro-fessional crow-fanciers share observations of crowbehavior at www.crows.net, where a working hypothesisthat crows are a cognitive species with fully developedculture and language has documented 25 different crowcalls.
One summer afternoon, as my friend Laura was sun-ning alone by the lake on her farm, she heard what shethought were people conversing in another language.
Startled, she called out: “Hello?” Then she saw it wastwo crows, chattering in a nearby tree.
Crows combine communication with communalhabits to overcome predators, such as owls, hawks, rac-coons and opossums. Mobbing is a cooperative defense.A crow that spots a threat will give an assembly call, thenevery crow in earshot will fly in and mob the intruder. Adefense call from a crow under attack will bring manyother crows flapping and cackling to its aid.
Intrepid crows like the highest places. A sailor’sobservation spot is a ship’s Crow’s Nest. In the first win-ter months my husband and I lived in our city home weobserved hosts of these phantom neighbors, well estab-lished on our turf. One violently gusty, snowy night, Istood at a window to watch the storm. The white-nightsnowfall aura reflected up into the forms of bare trees.Silhouetted across the thinnest, topmost branches, dozensof crows were riding the wind-whipped bend and sway.
Corvids have the largest birdbrains in relation to theirsize. A species with a bigger brain is more adaptable, butcrows and their cousins are vulnerable too. Mosquito-born West Nile Virus, causing inflammation of brain tis-sue, is fatal to birds in this family. Mid-continent trendstoward hotter, wetter summers and milder winters sup-port mosquito proliferation. After the country’s first birdviral victims were identified in 1999, corvid populationsdrastically declined from east coast to Midwest.
Crows are easy to identify by their size, cocky bear-ing and coloration. Crow features are entirely black –beak, eyes, feet – and their feathers flash iridescent vio-let in strong light. After several summers of disease, theybecame conspicuous in their absence. In that sad time, Iwatched for crow flights through each fall, hopeful at myoffice window as the sky blushed red, but there were noswirling flocks of crows. They recovered, because anysurvivors passed immunities on to their descendants, butthis region’s crow revival took long years to restore sucha wild presence.
Driving home from work now, I like to take differentroutes, sometimes city streets, sometimes the highway. Ikeep one eye on the sky, scanning the blue and scarletclouds, peering westward toward the sun. Some dayswhen I spot that flow of black forms flying, I turn andtrack ‘em.
I open the car windows to hear that crow language -squawking, shrieking, raucous! “Where’s the party,boys?” I holler. Up on roof edges or in scraggly wintertreetops, black dots across the skyscape rollick in thechilly breezes.
Jean Ponzi hosts the weekly environmental talk show“Earthworms.” Listen live Mondays, 7-8 p.m. on FM-88KDHX or pick up a podcast anytime atwww.kdhx.org/ondemand.
Earthworms’ Castingswith Jean Ponzi
as the Crows Fly
O
10 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
Live Music, Free Health
Screenings, Food & Drink
Samples, Free Tote Bags
& Much More!
njoy the beginning of Spring as TheHealthy Planet, St. Louis’ Green &Natural Living magazine, hosts its29th Natural Living Expo Sunday,
March 29, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at theWebster Groves Recreation Center, 33 EastGlendale Road (I-44 at Elm Avenue) inWebster Groves.
This popular event will include more than55 exhibit booths offering a variety of eco-friendly, healthy and natural products, servicesand information. There will be numerous foodand product samples to enjoy including craftbeer by Schlafly and wine tasting by Edg-ClifFarms & Vineyard. Eco-Friendly businessesand organizations will be on hand to show youhow you can live a “greener” and sustainablelife at home, in your yard, garden, and yourcommunity. Get a free health screening, a chairmassage, and learn more about living a health-ier life for yourself and your family. Livemusic will be provided by guitarist Carol Ederand harpist Terri Langerak.
“We have been hosting these expos formore than 17 years,” said J.B. Lester, Publisherof The Healthy Planet magazine. “Each onehas its own great energy and the crowds arealways large and enthusiastic. I think peopleare very interested in finding the resourcesthey need to live greener and healthier livesand this is the place to do just that. Not to men-tion all the great samples and giveaways at theexpo. Between the free chair massages, freehealth screenings, live music, food and bever-age samples and other giveaways, our visitorsgo home feeling like they really got theirmoney’s worth!”
The first 400 paid visitors will take home acomplimentary eco-friendly, reusable tote bagcourtesy of Dierbergs, Schnucks & WholeFoods Markets. Chipotle is offering free foodcards to expo visitors throughout the day.
The Healthy Planet Natural Living Expohas something for everyone. Enter a free draw-ing for a family weekend at Trout Lodge
YMCA of the Ozarks ($600 value), or Amtraktrain Tickets. If you are interested in living ahealthier and “green” life, then don’t miss thisevent! The first 100 paid visitors receive FREEpasses to Missouri Botanical Garden, too!
Adult admission is $8.00, children under
16 are free! Two for one tickets are inside this
issue of The Healthy Planet and online,
www.thehealthyplanet.com. For more informa-
tion please call The Healthy Planet magazine
at 314-962-7748 or email [email protected].
Exhibitor space is still available. The Expo is
sponsored by St. Louis Composting.
E
Healthy Planet Magazine To Host Spring Expo March 29 In Webster Groves
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If you would like tohave your camp orsummer opportunitylisted, please call
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February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 11
By Simon Yu, MD
o you have life-timechronically ill, profes-sional patients that sim-ply aren’t healing no
matter what you do? Or may appear tobe improving but don’t really get well?What is missing in your medical evalu-ation and treatment plan? The parasites and den-tal problem might be a missing link.
Over the last 30 years of my medical practice,I have developed a specialized use of a medicaltool that can assist doctors in detecting the rootcauses of illness when conventional medicinefails. Isn’t this something you would want toknow about? It is called Acupuncture MeridianAssessment (AMA).
(The following is written for Medical andDental Practitioners. However, if you are apatient who has been sick for many years with-out obvious causes and, according to your med-ical doctors you have incurable medical condi-tions, but you feel there must be another expla-nation that can lead to healing, then, please helpspread the word about this training. Simply for-ward this information to medical and dental prac-titioners. Maybe one of them will find a way tohelp you.)
I have been incorporating AcupunctureMeridian Assessment as part of my medical eval-uation for almost twenty years. It has led torather unique accidental discoveries of parasitesand dental related medical problems, among oth-ers, that are often overlooked by conventionaland alternative medical doctors. However, whenthese are addressed, conditions that are difficultto heal often get resolved.
I want to share this information so we, asmedical doctors collaborating with dentists, canincrease the chance of healing of what was onceconsidered, Incurables. Therefore, it is my sin-cere attempt to conduct a special training formedical and dental professionals on how toquickly obtain information through the use ofAcupuncture Meridian Assessment. My AMAmethod is a simplified, modified version of EAV(Electro-Acupuncture according to Dr. Voll) andshould not be confused with classical GermanEAV or Electrodermal Screening (EDS).
My primary focus is teaching practitionershow to check a few essential acupuncture pointsto look for disturbances which might be an indi-cation for possible parasites or dental problems.I will cover many clinical case histories that willamaze you with the healing results that occurwhen prior numerous doctors and specialistsfailed to succeed.
Over the years, I also developed a simpleenhancement to AMA that includes a Color andFrequency Therapy to create a Phase Contrast touncover hidden medical/dental problems. Thisaddition has shown excellent results for un-cloaking difficult cases.
We cannot make a final diagnosis based onAcupuncture Meridian Assessment alone but itcan be a valuable tool to assist your clinical deci-sion making. It offers a quick insight –a PatternRecognition- into initiating treatment as well asfor monitoring the progression of healing. AMAcan be applied in conjunction with standard med-ical/dental evaluations.
The class consists of lectures and lots ofhands on boot camp drills for two and a half days
on March 27-29, 2015. This class will besmall, hands on, somewhat experimental,and spontaneous. There will be two addi-tional instructors from Canada, Dr.Robert Cass representing Avatar EAV andGordon Johnston representing KindlingEAV.
Dr. Cass has been practicing success-fully with EAV for 41 years. He is the
director of the Academy of InternationalBioEnergetic Sciences which offers 100 HourCertification EAV courses and EAV MasterClasses throughout the USA, Canada, Europeand the Far East. He is also the formulator ofPhysica Energetics hand crafted Spagyric botan-icals, homeopathics and matrix nutritionals.
Doug Cook, DDS, will also join us for a spe-cial training for the dental elements of AMA. Hehas over 50 years of experience in dentistry andover 40 years with AMA.
My primary objective is keeping it simple:uncovering parasites and dental related medicalproblems. Once you have this basis, you’ll beable to use AMA for understanding allergies andother hidden medical problems. We’ll touch onthese other areas as well.
I believe two and half days is sufficient timefor you to learn to apply AMA for your patientsfollowing week after you receive this training.The attendees will also be evaluated by me forthe acupuncture meridian assessment during thecourse of the training in a volunteer basis.
This training is specifically geared and limit-ed toward MD’s, DO’s and DDS’s who have anactive medical/dental practice.
If you have your own Ohm meter or old EAVdevice, you may bring it with you. There will betwo representatives for EAV/AMA equipment,from Avatar, USA and Kindling, Germany.
When: March 27-29, 2015
Cost: Special Rate of $800 USD at least twoweeks before the training. Space is limited.Otherwise, the rate will be $900 USD. Twolunches are included on Friday and Saturday. It isnot refundable. If you do not need basic intro-ductory training on Friday, you can deduct $200USD and attend for Saturday and Sunday.
Contact: Prevention and Healing, Inc. andask for Kate, Office Manager, at 314-432-7802or please fill in the form below.
Location: Prevention and Healing Clinic at10908 Schuetz Road, St. Louis, MO 63146
Time: Starts at 8:15 am Friday morning tillevening around 9 pm. Saturday starts at 8:15 amtill 5:30 pm and there will be a group dinner andtour of St. Louis. Sunday starts at 8:15 am until1:00 pm.
Recommended reading:1. My article: Acupuncture Meridian
Assessment: New Medicine based on Ancient
Principles
2. My book, Accidental Cure.
Recommended Hotels:Comfort Inn Westport: 12031 Lackland Rd,
St. Louis, MO 63146 Phone: 314-878-1400 or888-725-8988 and ask for Dr. Yu for a specialrate. Use code LDRYU for the special rate of$54.00
Hilton St. Louis Frontenac: 1335 SouthLindberg Blvd, St. Louis, MO 63131 Phone:314-993-1100.
Free Shuttle service available between theairport, hotel, and the Clinic.
D
Acupuncture Meridian Assessment Training for Detecting Parasites and Dental Problems:
Training Designed for MD, DO, and DentistsMarch 27-29, 2015 in St. Louis, MO
It Just Makes SenseFor me, Biological Dentistry means
dental materials and procedures in tune with my entire body. It means dental and
physical wellness go hand in hand, for life.
BIOLOGICAL DENTISTRY IS ABOUT CHOICES.
Uncover the Tooth and Body Connection...and how your teeth and gums can induce illness.
Discover dental materials compatible with wellness.
Balance acid-alkaline chemistry between teeth and body
Learn about mercury-free, tooth-colored fillings.
Support your immune system with nutritional therapy.
FREE EDUCATIONAL SEMINARSThird Tuesday each month, 6:30 pm 8 Call to reserve space
“Biological Dentistry” is a non-specialty interest area that requires no specific educational training.
MICHAEL G. REHME, DDS, CCN & ASSOCIATESBIOLOGICAL AND GENERAL DENTISTRY FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN
314-997-2550 8 www.toothandbodyconnection.comCCN, Certified Clinical Nutritionist 8 NW corner Ballas & Clayton
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FREE SeminarsYou may not realize it, but your teeth and gums may be
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and those that aren't.• Understand options for mercury-free, tooth-colored fillings.
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Third Tuesday each month, 6:30pm Call to reserve space
“Biological Dentistry” is a non-specialty interest area that requires no specific educational training.
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Dr. Matt Goben
years.
W
Learn to heal “incurable” symptoms and take charge of your health.
FREE EDUCATIONAL SEMINARSSecond Tuesday of each month at 6:30 pm
Topics: Cancer, Heart Disease/Stroke, Diabetes, Arthritis, Osteoporosis, ADD/ADHD, Food Allergies...
Prevention & Healing Inc., Dr. Simon Yu, MD11710 Old Ballas Rd 5 314-432-7802 to reserve space
www.preventionandhealing.com
Build your immune system
Learn to heal incurable symptoms
Take charge of your health
Discovernew
avenues
healingto
For a copy of Dr. Yu’s new book,Accidental Cure, visit his website www.preventionandhealing.com
Offering Infrared Thermography
Learn to heal “incurable” symptomsand take charge of your health.
FREE EDUCATIONAL SEMINARS2nd Tuesday of each month at 6:30 pm
Topics: Cancer, Heart Disease/Stroke, Diabetes,Arthritis, Osteoporosis, ADD/ADHD, Food Allergies
3rd Tuesday - Free Monthly Wellness Support Group
Prevention & Healing Inc., Dr. Simon Yu, MD10908 Schuetz Rd. • 314-432-7802 to reserve space
www.preventionandhealing.com
114 East Lockwood
12 The Healthy Planet magazine • Thehealthyplanet.com February, 2015
By Phylis Clay Sparks
his comment wasonce made byself-help author,
Tony Robbins: “I never failto be amazed at the overwhelming number of peoplewhose rules wire them for pain." When it comes torelationships, how are you wired? Can you think ofsome rules you have made for yourself and your rela-tionships that cause you pain when a rule is broken?
We all have to set our boundaries and follow per-sonal guidelines with respect to healthy relationships,but many rules with which we're wired are disempow-ering. They give us only a few ways to feel good andlots of ways to feel bad. They can be filled with unrea-sonable expectations, addictive demands and crueljudgments. But rather than look at the rules that wire usfor pain, let's think about some rules that wire us forlove and compassion.
Wiring yourself for love begins with you. If youcan't feel love and compassion toward yourself, howcan you feel it for someone else? If you're a perfec-tionist, for instance, then you will expect perfectionfrom other people. When that rule is broken, you feelthe pain of imperfection. So learn to embrace andaccept the imperfections in yourself so that you canaccept them in others. This will greatly expand thefield from which to choose your friendships.
Ask yourself if you are wired with the need to beright. If so, you will suffer the pain of pushing peopleaway from you. Being right, or being defensive, iso-lates and alienates you from other people. The need tobe right means that you need the other person to bewrong. Instead, follow the age-old advice about walk-ing in the other person's shoes; see things from theirpoint of view; imagine what it's like to be in the otherperson's position. Practice honoring the differencesbetween you and others. This can end quarrels and cre-
ate harmony and relaxation instead of tension andstress. If you have something to correct them about,then begin with praise for that which they do well.
You might ask yourself how good you are at takingan interest in another person. I mean genuine interestby being present with them when they're talking. Thismeans not interrupting them or finishing their sen-tences for them. If you learn to truly listen, the peopleyou communicate with will feel more relaxed aroundyou because they will have felt heard and listened to.And you will learn to enjoy your conversations more.
When someone tells a story, or tells you somethingabout themselves, do you have a tendency to respondby telling something similar about yourself? Break thehabit! Just respond by saying “That’s wonderful," or“Tell me more about it.” In other words, stop waitingyour turn. Relax and let someone else have the floor.
Another question to ask yourself is, "Am I wired toconstantly keep score?" In Richard Carlson's book,Don't Sweat the Small Stuff … and It's All Small Stuff,he suggests that "When in doubt about whose turn it isto take out the trash, go ahead and take it out." Avoidbecoming resentful by constantly keeping score.
My point is that we all need to examine our inter-nal rules. Keep the good ones and toss out the badones. Wire yourself for love by moving into under-standing and compassion. If you do, you will never feelalone.
Phylis Clay Sparks is a professional speaker,teacher, workshop facilitator and author of SOUL-ESTEEM: The Power of Spiritual Confidence. A grad-uate of Washington University in St. Louis and theErnest Holmes College School of Ministry in Orlando,Florida, Phylis is an ordained minister. She is thefounder and Spiritual Director of The Soul-EsteemCenter in Maryland Heights, Missouri, now in its eigh-teenth year. Visit www.Soul-Esteem.com for moreinformation.
Wired For Love
T
February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • Thehealthyplanet.com 13
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14 The Healthy Planet magazine • Thehealthyplanet.com February, 2015
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Dr. Deepak Chopra, best selling author and leader in the holistic health field,has revived Primordial Sound Meditation. This ancient form of meditationuses mantras, or Primordial Sounds, which are selected for each individual.This simple mantra technique, which is practiced twice daily, allows ourawareness to go beyond the activity of our mind to the stillness of our spirit.This process allows our bodies to gain the deep rest necessary to release stressand fatigue. The result can be improved health, more satisfying relationships,increased creativity, and renewed enthusiasm for life.
Primordial Sound Meditation can be learned by people of any age, culture, and educational background. It is recommended for anyone who wishes to enjoy greater peace, freedom and fulfillment.
About the Instructor, Shirley Stoll, B.S., M.A. - Shirley has been involved with meditation since 1995 and is certified by Dr. Deepak Chopra as a Primordial Sound Meditation Instructor and affiliated with the Chopra Centerin Carlsbad, California. As a former teacher, she combines her love for teaching with her commitment to meditation.
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February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • Thehealthyplanet.com 15
Not Just Calories That Make Bellies
Dr. Raj Banerjee, DC Dr Wellness
Centre 314-282-3990
GetLeanToday.com
Dear Seeker of Health & Fitness, Have you had any of these in your life? Injury,
pain, surgery, infection, illness, divorce, financial stress, job stress, poison ivy, giving birth, irritable people, starvation diets, the menstrual cycle, eating junk foods, drugs and medication, excessive cold or heat, staring into computer monitors, and babysitting 15 small children under the age of five for over 13 hours these are all examples of physical, mental and emotional stress.
Your walnut-sized adrenal glands, which sit on top of your kidneys, cannot distinguish among the various stresses that are present in your life whether they are physical, mental, or emotional. These glands just pump out hormones to counteract stress any stress! They are or hormones intended to serve us for short periods only. But stresses are anything but short term so the hormones just keep flowing! If this persists, you can become an of person one who has either overactive or exhausted adrenals. This is very serious business because your quality of life depends so greatly upon how well your adrenal glands work.
Visible symptoms come along with persistent adrenal imbalances. Chief among them is hanging fat in the midsection that sags downward over the belly. Thinned-out arms, legs and buttocks generally accompany this fat because the key hormone that prevails during stress (cortisol) converts these muscles
to sugar in an attempt to create more energy for a continually stressed body. With thinned muscles and large abdomen, adrenal types often have a hard time finding clothes that fit. Moreover, stress hormones in excess will steal protein from the bones, leading to osteoporosis.
Sometimes a fat pad develops in the lower neck and upper back called a Further, fat accumu- lation in the face gives a round or appearance, a face that may redden because of weakened blood vessels.
So why does the extra fat appear? With all this sugar poring into the bloodstream through the action of stress- fighting hormones, the fat-burning hormones of the liver get turned off. Not even high-protein or low-calorie diets will turn them back on again! Then fat accumulates on the belly because of the excess sugar thrown into the blood to meet
that exist (and insulin stores the sugar as fat to keep your blood sugar levels normal). In other words, stress hormones prevent fat burning, and counting calories or eating more protein simply will n ot help.
To make matters worse, some adrenal types will try to work off fat with heavy exercise. But this just creates more stress and more stress hormones. Result? Less muscle and even more fat! What a predicament. Fortun- ately, adrenal imbalances can be corrected to turn muscle-burning adrenal types into fat burners again.
But only part of the adrenal story. Exhausted adrenals can run out of anti-inflammatory hormones and enter a chronic stage where pain and inflammation stay in the body for years (e.g., fibromyalgia). Sore muscles
seem to recover after exercise. Pain triggers stress hormones, which turns off fat burning. A deep, restful sleep becomes impossible. Constant fatigue, mid-
afternoon drowsiness, and brain fog or dullness prevail. Caffeine beverages become a constant sidekick, doing yet more damage to the already exhausted adrenals!
If you think you might be an a whole lot more I can tell you about it (and how to get healthy again) at my one-hour talk, Saturday morning, at my Wellness Centre in Clayton just off 170 and Ladue. Seating is limited, so call us now to reserve a spot for yourself: 314-282-3990.
a healing path for you if to walk it.
P.S. Here are a few words from patients who have discovered and embraced the value of wellness chiropractic:
seeing Dr. Banerjee I was a wreck! I was overweight, had no energy, and experienced frequent anxiety attacks. Quite frankly, I was desperate for a solution. Since following Dr.
prescribed program lost over 25 lbs, my anxiety is a thing of the past, and my new level of energy allows me to function to my fullest. Not only do I look and feel healthier, my quality of life has dramatically
Cindy H, St. Louis MO
came to Dr. Banerjee at the recommendation of a friend and as a skeptic! Three months later I had realized one of the most rewarding experiences of my life. Since attending Dr. weight-loss program, friends have commented that my body is looking tighter and I have much more muscle definition. I have fewer food cravings, depend on coffee, and have to say that I enjoy the compliments I get. Thank you so much Dr.
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We promote a holistic
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16 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
by Kari Hartel, RD, LDProgram Coordinator, CookingMatters, Operation Food Search
lthough kale seems to have been
the trendy “it” vegetable over
the past few years, it may have
some competition this year.
Cauliflower is poised to become the next hip veggie
in 2015, which is fantastic considering the plethora
of health benefits it provides. Cauliflower is loaded
with vitamins, minerals, fiber, antioxidants and other
powerful phytochemicals.
Research has shown that cauliflower can help
fight cancer because it contains sulforaphane, which
kills off cancer stem cells. Not only does sul-
foraphane help ward off cancer, it significantly
improves your blood pressure and kidney function,
and it reduces inflammation because of its indole-3-
carbinol (chronic inflammation causes damage in
your body, leading to multiple diseases). This crucif-
erous veggie is also chock-full of fiber, providing a
beneficial boost to your digestive system.
Cauliflower is not only a nutrition powerhouse—
it’s a culinary star as well. Because cauliflower is so
mild-tasting, it really absorbs the flavors of whatev-
er herbs and spices you use.
Here are some delicious ways to make the
most of this versatile veggie:
*Give mashed potatoes the boot and try
mashed cauliflower instead. It’s lower in
calories and carbohydrates (more diabetic-
friendly), and it tastes wonderful! For a
super-smooth consistency, use a blender.
*Try roasted cauliflower. Roasting vegetables
really brings out their natural sweetness and intensi-
fies their flavor. Plus, roasting veggies is a super
simple preparation—chop your veggies, place them
in a large bowl, toss with some olive or canola oil
and your favorite seasonings, and place on a baking
sheet, spreading them out evenly so that none of the
pieces are overlapping. Roast at 400 degrees
Fahrenheit for about 20 minutes and enjoy. I have
actually found that roasted cauliflower is just as
scrumptious cold as it is hot, making for great left-
overs that you can toss onto a spinach salad or into a
brown rice pilaf.
*Toss cauliflower with some curry powder, salt,
and pepper and sauté it with some olive oil, onions,
and tomatoes for a delicious Indian-inspired side
dish. To make it more of a main dish, add in some
protein-packed chickpeas (garbanzo beans) and
serve over warm brown rice or quinoa.
*Banish the boring buf-
falo wings! For a healthy
swap, try cauliflower wings
instead of chicken. Whisk
together a batter consisting
of 3/4 cup flour, 1 cup
water, and your favorite
seasonings and dunk cauli-
flower pieces until well-
coated. Then, spread it out
onto a baking sheet sprayed
with non-stick cooking spray. Bake at 450 degrees
Fahrenheit for about 20-25 minutes. Remove from
oven and brush cauliflower with wing sauce – a mix-
ture of 2 tablespoons melted butter, 1/2 cup hot
sauce, and 1 teaspoon honey. Bake 10 minutes more,
cool 10 minutes and enjoy!
Rev Up Your Grocery Cart for the
IdiotDashSTL & Virtual Food Drive!
Start gearing up for crazy
fun in St. Louis’ wackiest race
where you mush a decked out
grocery cart with your five
member team through the
streets of downtown. Race
days are either February 17
(Corporate Race and Fat
Tuesday) or February 21
(Open Race). Themes and
costumes that you create are
all part of your team’s fun as you stop at restaurant
checkpoints and compete in challenges for prizes.
One of the challenges is to raise funds through your
team’s online virtual grocery cart for OFS to pur-
chase food to feed families and individuals in need
throughout our community. Register today at
http://www.downtownstl.org/event/idiotdash/.
Cauliflower: A Culinary Captivator
A
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18 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
utritionists fighting obesity knowit. Local farmers preparing thesoil know it. And environmental-ists studying water quality know
it. The “what,” “where,” and “how” of our foodhas big impacts. Eating locally grown fruits andvegetables and locally raised beef, pork, andchicken improves health outcomes, puts moremoney in farmers’ pockets, and reduces envi-ronmental damage.
The Saint Louis Regional
Food Study, produced by MCE
and published online last fall at
www.moenviron.org, describes
how our current, industrial
food system has contributed to
obesity and diabetes, drained
local economies, and devastated
our natural resources. And it
considers how a local food
economy can have the opposite
effect when health advocates,
farmers, and environmentalists
work together. While we can now eat avocados any day of
the year, we are also experiencing unprecedent-ed rates of obesity and diabetes. In the 59 coun-ties highlighted in the Food Study, obesity is at30% and diabetes in the City of St. Louis isover 11%. According to the U.S. Department ofAgriculture, in those same 59 counties, wespent $17.8 billion on food in 2012, most ofwhich left the region. And the United Nationsreports that the livestock industry is responsible
for 15 percent of total global carbon emissions. Our current agricultural system relies on
large amounts of chemical fertilizers to replen-ish soils depleted from growing exclusivelycorn and soybeans year after year. These cropsare not providing our children with the nutri-ents they need to grow and thrive and the fertil-izer these crops require runs off into our water,growing the Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexicoand threatening our drinking water. In fact, theCity of Toledo had to shut off water for over400,000 people for 3 days last year.
Growing diverse crops locally makes for amore nutritious menu with fewer impacts onour environment. However, making local foodaffordable and accessible is complicated by asystem of incentives established to promotecorn and soybeans and a culture that has cometo rely on cheap, fast food. Government pro-grams prioritize commodities that increase cor-porate profits over growing nutritious food.And, as a working mother, I know first-handhow unrealistic it has become to feed a growingfamily a square meal from scratch every night.
Fixing our food system and switching tomore local, sustainable farming practices willhelp health advocates, farmers, and environ-mentalists achieve their goals. Efforts areunderway at MCE to start these conversations.
Visit www.moenviron.org to learn more.
CoaLiTionRepoRTby Heather B. NavarroExecutive DirectorCoalition For The Environmentwww.moeniron.org
NThe Confluence of Food,
Health & Farming
Green LivingSustainable & Eco-Friendly Topics For Green Living
By Johanna Schweiss, Volunteer & Outreach
Coordinator, USGBC-Missouri Gateway Chapter
ver 40% of greenhouse gas emissionsin the United States come from thebuilding sector. Anywhere there is abuilding, there is an opportunity to
measure its energy use and make changes to con-serve energy, save money,improve building occupant expe-rience, and protect the environ-ment. This is a huge opportunityto make a difference - in ourhomes, our workplaces, ourschools and our houses of wor-ship.
For many congregations, sav-ing energy can mean more than alower energy bill. From Catholicto Buddhist, Muslim toPresbyterian, Methodist toBahá’í, faith traditions from allover the world have ethical and moral frameworkfor stewardship of the environment. MissouriInterfaith Power and Light, an organization thatengages faith communities and individuals from allbackgrounds to take action on climate change, hascollected a number of these statements on their web-site (www.moipl.org/green-resources).
Missouri Interfaith Power and Light and theU.S. Green Building Council- Missouri GatewayChapter, a non-profit that works to make everybuilding a green building, have teamed up to sup-port congregations as they improve their energyefficiency and reduce their environmental impacts.In the Fall of 2014, we were excited to receive agrant from the national USGBC that funded 10complimentary energy audits for congregations.
Since those audits were awarded, energy audi-
tors have been working hard to investigate opportu-nities for energy savings in the congregations’ facil-ities, and are providing each with a report thatdetails potential strategies for energy savings.Going forward, these congregations will be review-ing their reports and considering their potential nextsteps.
To aid them in this process, the MissouriInterfaith Power & Light, theUSGBC – Missouri GatewayChapter and the JewishEnvironmental Initiative, a com-mittee of the Jewish CommunityRelations Council, are invitingcongregations to reunite in aworkshop titled “Green yourHouse of Worship: BuildingSuccess for a Better Building anda Better Planet” on February 22nd.Attendees will have the opportuni-ty to learn about the results of theten congregational energy audits,
become familiar with strategies for financing ener-gy efficiency improvements, and connect withmembers of the USGBC-Missouri GatewayChapter, volunteers that have expertise in greenbuilding and sustainability, to begin developing alow-cost, high impact action plan to green theirbuilding operations. Through a whole-buildingapproach, all aspects of sustainable building opera-tions (energy use, water use, purchasing, manage-ment of the building site, and indoor environmentalquality) will be considered.
Congregations of all faith backgrounds are wel-come to attend this workshop and the event is free,but registration is required.
Save the date for Sunday, February 22nd at 1:00pm and visit www.usgbc-mogateway.org to learnmore and register.
Learn How to Green Your Houseof Worship at Feb. 22 Workshop
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February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 19
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20 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
by Linda Wiggen Kraft
ome is where the heart is. That
home can be our gardens.
Planting seeds of our hearts
into the garden lets us experi-
ence gardens in a deeper and
more loving way. Just as seeds of plants are
planted into the soil of mother earth, seeds of
our hearts are planted in that same soil. Seeds
of our heart are the feelings, thoughts and
actions that come from within. These feelings,
thoughts and actions go out into the atmos-
phere, into the soil and in turn into the plants
and all parts of the garden.
I once heard the story from some horticul-
turists who worked at one of the world’s largest
outdoor amusement parks about how some
flowers in areas near public benches would not
grow. Nothing seemed to work to keep them
alive. Finally these flower experts came to the
conclusion this was where parents often scold-
ed their children and sent all that negative ener-
gy into the ground. The plants responded
accordingly. The opposite also happens, where
gardens flourish beyond compare because of
the love of the gardener.
Positive and negative energies created from
within have an impact on us, and our gardens.
Sometimes it is simply being unaware and
ungrateful in mind and heart, and sending
those vibrations into the earth. Other times it is
unkind thoughts and actions. Soil and plants
absorb all of this for better or worse.
Mindful, loving thoughts are the seeds that
plant our hearts into our gardens, allowing it to
become a home for our hearts, and a garden
that thrives. It takes just a moment to become
present and in a state of gratitude. As this
awareness comes to mind, it takes another
moment to send the seeds of love into the gar-
den. A practice of pausing before we head out
into the garden and setting an intention of grat-
itude is one way. Pausing at times when we are
in the garden also brings us to mindfulness.
And ending our gardening day with a moment
of thanks wraps the day in a tone of love.
A meditation or ritual of
planting seeds of love into
the garden can also be done,
any time of year. Simply
sitting down, settling down,
imagining and feeling a
heart warmth that goes
out into the garden and
down into the earth is an
easy garden practice. Planting word seeds is another way. Begin
by writing down thoughts of gratitude, love,
hopes and dreams for the garden year. These
thoughts can be written on papers that can be
dug into the soil and planted at the four corners
of the property, into the garden beds or hung
from branches to blow in the wind. No matter
which way of planting heart seeds, your heart
will find a home in the garden.
Linda Wiggen Kraft is a landscape design-
er who creates holistic and sustainable gar-
dens. She is also a mandala artist and work-
shop leader. Visit her blog:
www.CreativityForTheSoul.com/blog or web-
site: www.CreativityForTheSoul.com. Contact
her at 314 504-4266.
HHearts In The Garden
Linda Wiggen Kraft • Green & Growing Editor
Heartplants
February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 21
by Crystal Stevens
“Life’s most persistent & urgent
question is, what are you doing for
others?”
- Martin Luther King Jr.
he world is in dire straits.
Philosophers, prophets,
educators, healers, scien-
tists, activists, environmentalists, free thinkers,
dreamers and the like have been trying to find
pragmatic solutions to global epidemics for
centuries. In all the searching, love and com-
passion tend to play a significant role in global
solutions to hunger and homelessness,
poverty, environmental degradation,
war, among other severe problems fac-
ing the world today. World peace will
never be possible without love and
compassion permeating every cell of
our beings. One of my favorite solu-
tion based concepts is Radical
Compassion, a term coined by
philosopher Khen Lampert. Radical
Compassion is defined as a “specific
type of general compassion which
includes the inner imperative to
change reality in order to alleviate the
pain in others.” This state of mind,
according to Lamberts theory is uni-
versal and stands at the root of the his-
torical cry for social change.
When it comes to matters of the
heart, love and compassion are the
bringers of joy, the bearers of happiness, and
the emotions that evoke joyful visceral
responses which make millions smile. Love
and compassion have the miraculous ability to
heal, to give hope, and to actually
change the course of one’s life.
Mindfulness is among the tools
needed to truly practice love and
compassion in this crazy world. In a
world full of love and compassion,
trust would grow like wildflowers.
Love and compassion were at the
core values of some of the most
influential peacemakers and reli-
gious figures of all time and tend to be recur-
ring themes throughout many religions around
the world.
Practice love & compassion daily
Smile at a stranger, offer a hand to someone
in need, open doors for others, call a friend to
tell you how much they mean to you, practice
self love, go out of your way to do a random act
of kindness, pay for the person in line behind
you, place coins in toy machines for children,
visit the elders in your life, volunteer in your
community, be a positive example to others.
Positivity, love and compassion send ripples
out into the world.
Heart Health:
Show your heart some love
Rosemary Gladstar, a world renowned
herbalist and author, recommends linden
flower tea as a good heart tonic. She recom-
mends Hawthorne in the form of tea, tincture,
syrup, jelly or jam to aid in depression, anxiety
or to help tone the muscles and vessels of the
heart and to help lower cholesterol.
Be compassionate to the earth
As conscious consumers, we have a choice
on how to spend our money. Unfortunately,
holidays promote hype leading to wasteful con-
sumerism. Each purchase we make directly
affects the future of the earth. Let’s show love
and compassion to the earth this month. Instead
of buying flowers, buy a houseplant. Instead of
buying chocolates in a heart shaped box loaded
with preservatives and artificial sweeteners,
buy fair trade organic chocolate. Instead of
buying a card, make your own with recycled
materials. Or instead of buying a gift, give an
experience. For children, encourage them to
make their own valentines from recycled mate-
rials. Instead of giving candy to their friends,
give organic fruit leathers or let them make
friendship bracelets.
Crystal Stevens is a regular contributor to
The Healthy Planet magazine and is the co-
manager of the La Vista CSA Farm with her
husband Eric. You can find out more about the
La Vista CSA Farm at www.LaVistaCSA.org.
Compassion & The Art of Loving
Tby Steffie LittlefieldGarden Heights Nursery
any Gardenersfind that feedingthe birds is a
rewarding and enjoyablehobby in the midst of chillywinter weather. Watching thewild birds feed and setting–up feeders is also agreat family activity. These easy winter birdfeeding tips can help you make the most ofyour feeders during the coldest months of theyear.
Depending on the climate, geography andlandscape of your backyard and your region ofthe country, you could be visited by dozens ofdifferent backyard bird species during the win-ter months. The most common winter birdsinclude:
House finches House sparrows Tufted titmice American goldfinches Downy woodpeckers Black-capped chickadees Northern cardinals Dark-eyed juncos American robins European starlings
To attract the greatest number of species inthe winter, it is important to have a number ofdifferent birdfeeders available. While easybirdfeeders such as hopper and platformdesigns are always popular, the feeders you useduring the winter should have several charac-teristics in common.
Cover: It is best if feeders have a widecover over feeding ports, perches and dispens-ing trays so seed is not buried during snowfallsor storms.
Placement: Ideally, winter birdfeedersshould be placed in sheltered locations out ofthe most severe winds. Placing feeders closerto the house will be effective and will make forbetter indoor birdwatching. At the same time,feeders should be placed near protective coversuch as hedges to offer birds safety from preda-tors.
Capacity: Large capacity feeders are pre-ferred for winter feeding because they do notneed to be refilled as frequently.
Cleanliness: Because natural food sourcesare scarcer in the winter, more birds may beattracted to backyard feeders and those feederswill need to be cleaned and sterilized regularly.When cleaning, discard soggy seed or seedencased in ice, and let the feeder dry beforerefilling if possible.
Most birds that visit backyards in snowyweather thrive on seeds, since insects and fruitare harder to find naturally during the winter.The best foods to offer birds in colder weatherhave a high fat or oil content that will provideabundant energy for winter survival. Nutritiouswinter foods for birds include:
Black oil sunflower seed Hulled peanuts Niger seed Suet mixes with seeds or fruit Peanut butter White millet seed When choosing birdseed and other foods
for winter feeding, take into considerationwhich bird species are present in the winter andwhat foods they prefer to avoid excess wastedseed. Many birders also prefer to use no-wasteseed mixes such as hulled sunflower seeds in
the winter to avoidseveral months’ of hullaccumulation beneathfeeders in the spring.Good Brands to lookfor are Song BirdEssentials, DesMoines AudubonBrand Seed, and BlackOil Sunflower Seed by
Wild Delight. In urban areas one of the challenges for
backyard bird feeders is the animal pests thatcan rob the feeders before the birds get to it. Itis wise to incorporate some squirrel proofingwith baffles or select a feeder that will protectthe seed. The Audubon Absolute and mini-absolute feeders are well designed and the“Squirrel Buster” line are a patented squirrelproof design.
Another important element for your back-yard feathered friends is a good source ofwater. One that will not freeze in winters lowtemperatures. This may mean a heater for yourbirdbath or backyard pond.
As the season changes and we look forwardto spring, be ready to provide good nestinghomes for your flock. In March, install sturdyand safe birdhouses. You will be continuallyrewarded with the wonder of nesting and thehatching of baby birds. This is sure to delightthe whole family!
For more information please stop by orcontact Garden Heights Nursery, 1605 S. BigBend Blvd., Richmond Heights, MO 63117.
Call 314-645-7333 or visit online atwww.gardenheights.com.
Backyard Bird FeedingDuring Winter Months
M
22 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
by Monisha Vasa, M.D.
an we actually teach ourchildren how to be mind-ful? Or are we just try-ing to preserve the inher-
ent consciousness that they alreadyseem to have? In other words--ismindfulness truly taught, or is it just“unlearned” over time?
I remember watching my childreneat when they were four or five years old. Ifgiven a cookie, they would turn the cookie deli-cately over and over in their hands. They wouldstudy the texture and composition with their eyes.They might inhale the chocolatey scent. Allbefore taking a single bit. And when they startedto eat, they would savor each mouthful, thor-oughly enjoying themselves. And the most amaz-ing thing--when their tummies were full, theywould put the cookie down and move on, notfeeling compelled to continue eating if they wereno longer hungry.
I find that young children often already havethe inherent knowledge of how to live mindful-ly—it’s often simply what they do without know-ing any differently. They linger on their walks,observing the flowers, turning over rocks, run-ning when their bodies feel like accelerating,spinning around when their hearts feel like turn-ing.
But these days, when I take them on walks, Iam aware of the homework that needs to be com-pleted, or bedtime looming. I urge them to hurry.I start to accelerate in my head. If we don’t getback home in time, we won’t finish dinner andhomework in time. If dinner and homeworkdon’t get done, bedtime will be delayed. If wemiss our window of opportunity for bedtime, theywon’t fall asleep. If they don’t fall asleep, theywon’t wake up in time for school. If we are latefor school, I will be late for work. And so on andso forth until I am spinning into the catastrophicimplications for the next day, rather than beingpresent for the walk that we are on in the here andnow. With the tension in my body and my rushedvoice, I put a screeching halt to searching forroly-polys and blowing the dandelions.
Of course we have to balance our mindfulnesspractices with the logistical needs of day to daylife. But I realize I often start to fall into a pat-tern of hurrying them when hurrying isn’t neces-sary, rushing them when we have time. Part ofthis frantic pace is because our kids are oftenover-scheduled or over-committed. Part of thisrushing comes from feeling frazzled ourselves,and projecting that onto our kids.
So these days, my goal isn’t necessarily toteach my kids how to be mindful. It’s to getmyself out of their way. I try to allow them timeto play. To explore. To rest. To breathe. To justbe. It is not easy as they get older, and they arepulled in multiple directions, as are we. It oftenfeels like we are juggling a million balls in the airat once and they are all about to come crashingdown. But we try our best to honor the time andspace for them to just be who they are, becausethat is when we find their most centered selvesemerging. Or perhaps that is when we are mostable to notice.
Here are five tips for preserving mindfulness in our children:1. Allow for plenty of unscheduled down
time: Kids may complain of getting bored, oryou may see them get restless. It is important forchildren to become aware of these emotionalstates and see them through on their own.Consider refraining from stepping in with solu-
tions or ideas. This process helpsthem to learn that they can sitwith all sorts of emotions, andthat emotional states come andgo. Often periods of intense cre-ativity arise from boredom andquiet.
2. Model mindfulness:Make time for your own mindful-ness practice. Whether you havea formal sitting practice or try to
implement conscious awareness throughout yourday, make it a priority. Kids will do what they seeus do, more than they will listen to what we say.Use your practice as a springboard to discuss set-ting intentions, or cultivating gratitude for thesmall and big blessings of our lives: “I am grate-ful for the fact that we are all able to sit downtogether for dinner today.”
3. Ask lots of questions. Ask questions thatencourage children to connect to their senses.“What does the air after today’s storm smell liketo you?” or “What do you see in the cloudstoday?” Using our senses or awareness of ourbreathing is a way to connect immediately to thepresent moment. We can also ask our kids ques-tions to consider other people’s feelings, or theirimpact on others. For example, “There was anew boy in class today? What do you think thatwas like for him?”
4. Manage your expectations: Kids maynot always be in the mood to discuss big pictureideas like gratitude and compassion. Use kidfriendly language and consider bringing up suchtopics in casual passing, or at night before bedwhen they are relaxed. Some kids may even beopen to short meditation practices, like focusingon breath or the flame of a candle. Some kidsmay not be. It is ok to be brief, or to let it go ifthey are not receptive in a given moment. We arejust planting seeds. Even the introduction ofmindfulness to their developing minds can behelpful.
5. Discover opportunities for compassion:Mindfulness ultimately is one tool to recognizeour interdependence, and find ways to relate toone another with an open heart. Discover oppor-tunities for kindness and compassion within yourfamily, and in the larger community. This couldmean involving children in a simple service pro-ject, or making it a point to use positive, kind lan-guage with those we come across.
The amazing thing about the process of“teaching” kids mindfulness, is that it is a journeyfor child and parent alike. Teacher becomes stu-dent becomes teacher, as we together deepen theprocess of occupying our bodies and living ourlives as they unfold before us. There are no mis-takes, no right ways or wrong ways, just the waysthat work for each family. Let us encourage ourchildren, just as they encourage us, to cultivate amore curious and fully lived life. The processitself is a gift and a blessing for all of us.
Monisha Vasa, M.D. is a board certifiedGeneral and Addiction Psychiatrist in privatepractice in Orange County, CA. She is a CumLaude graduate of Northwestern University,completed medical school at the University ofIllinois at Chicago College of Medicine, and herPsychiatry residency, Chief Residency, andAddiction Psychiatry fellowship at Cedars-SinaiMedical Center in Los Angeles. Dr. Vasa residesin Orange County, CA with her husband, twobeloved children and two English Bulldogs. Dr.Vasa is the author of the new non-fiction chil-dren's book, My Dearest One. For more informa-tion, please visit www.mindful-healing.com.
“Teaching” Mindfulness to Our Children
C
For more than 25 years, helping boys & teenage boys
excel academically, socially, & emotionally through:
• Pet Assisted Therapy • Play Therapy • Talking Therapy
Where caring, competence, and integrity make all the difference.10900 Manchester Road, Suite 201, Kirkwood, Missouri 63122 •
314-966-0880 • www.stlouischildpsychologist.com
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February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 23
n May of 2015, midwives Susan Mickley,
CPM and Linsey Kornya, CPM, will open
the doors on a small birth center in the
heart of South St. Louis. Susan and Linsey
are excited to expand birth options for families in
the St. Louis area, including
Illinois. Confluence Midwifery
Center is located at 3271 Roger Pl,
St. Louis, MO 63116. They encour-
age expectant parents and anyone
else curious about the center or
home birth to stop by “Meet The
Midwife” night the first and third Tuesdays of
every month at 7pm.
With a combined 7 years of experience in
homebirth setting, Susan and Linsey are already
working in partnership, striving to provide fami-
lies with safe and empowering birth experiences.
They will open with one birth suite upstairs from
the current office. The birth suite will be a home-
like room with a comfortable bed, tiled shower
and sofa. Other amenities that people might not
have at home will include various labor-support
devices like a heated birth pool, yoga swing, birth
ball and waterproof birth stool.
“Our birth center is small, and we will still
have a focus on homebirth,” explains Susan, “but
we hope that having this space will give women
who can't give birth at home but are still interest-
ed in a more intimate birthing experience, more
options.”
Women choose to give birth at home or in a
birth center for many reasons. Homebirth mid-
wives work to minimize interventions that can
interrupt the normal, physiological process of
childbirth. Women giving birth out of the hospi-
tal are often more able to easily move around,
nourish themselves, vocalize, and often feel less
fearful, more comfortable, safe and empowered
in a family-centered non-hospital environment.
However, homebirth doesn't just
feel safer; for many low risk
women is is safer. Recent stud-
ies confirm that women plan-
ning to give birth with experi-
enced midwives at home are
less likely to experience infec-
tion, c-section, episiotomy, instrumental delivery,
or hemorrhage. Additionally, breastfeeding rates
for these moms and babies are much higher.
Midwives are trained to identify problems that
might necessitate hospital assistance, and to deal
with many obstetric emergencies at home. With
c-section rates over 30% and epidural rates over
80% at most hospitals, many women feel like
their best chance for a normal, safe birth is at
home or at a freestanding birth center. With hos-
pital birth costs on the rise, homebirth is also an
affordable option for many families, and is often
covered by insurance.
Susan and Linsey are currently accepting
clients for home birth and birth center births.
Please attend “Meet the Midwife” night on the
first or third Tuesday of the month at 7 pm.
Contact us at [email protected],
and “Like” us on facebook for news and updates
about our practice https://www.facebook.com
/confluencemidwifery.
New Center To Open in South St. LouisOffering Expanded Birth Options
IHomebirth • Birth Center
Complete prenatal careBreastfeeding Support
Homevisits • Waterbirth
Linsey Kornya, CPM and Susan Mickley CPMAn experienced birth team with a focus on respect, guidance, safety
and individualized care. We combineevidence based medicine with the
midwifery model of care for a pregnancy and birth experience
that is holistic and family centered.
OPEN HOUSE Meet the Midwives Night
every 1st and 3rd Tues. 7pm 3271 Roger Place, 63116
Call for a private consultation314-677-9998.
The Healthy Planet
Summer Camp Guidewill appear
in our March, April and May
editions.
If you would like to have your camp
or summer opportunity listed,
please call 314-962-7748
today!
The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 25
The ARTS Are Important,In Many Ways!
uch of what we know aboutearlier cultures comes to usthrough the art left behindby those peoples. Art speaks
to us from across the centuries. Today, we enjoyplays, concerts, dance performances, exhibi-tions, museums, festivals and everything elsethat falls under the broad umbrella of “the arts.”But the arts don’t just happen—they can’t hap-pen without support, and that support translatesto “funding.”
Annually, the Missouri Department ofRevenue collects approximately $35 million innew funds from the Non-resident Athletes andEntertainers tax. This is an income tax imposedon professional non-resident athletes and enter-tainers who work in Missouri. For example,when Lady Gaga or the Chicago Cubs come totown, Missouri collects personal income taxfrom each of them. Known as A&E Tax, themoney is designated by statute (Section143.1833 RSMo) to be distributed among thefive Cultural Partners: Missouri Arts CouncilTrust Fund (60%), Missouri State LibraryNetworking Fund (10%), Missouri HumanitiesCouncil Trust Fund (10%), Missouri PublicBroadcasting Corporation Special Fund (10%)and Missouri Historic Preservation Revolvingfund (10%). The lion’s share of the funds goesto Missouri Arts Council which, in turn, dis-tributes funds (in the form of grants) to more
than 500 art institutions, organizations, and themany other entities that present the arts in allforms to the public. Such public funding assuresequal access to the arts throughout all ofMissouri’s communities.
It’s a good plan: to collect money from non-Missourians who make money within our state,and return some of that money to the culture ofour state. The catch in this plan, however, is thefact that the release of these funds must be votedon each year by Missouri state legislators,because the income and release of those fundsare part of the Missouri State Budget. Hmmmm,it’s getting a bit complicated…..
Step in, Missouri Citizens for the Arts! Thisstatewide nonprofit group advocates on behalfof the Cultural Partners and serves as a watch-dog so A&E Tax funds don’t get misappropriat-ed. It’s a big job, an important job, to continual-ly educate and remind legislators what thestate’s arts industry does for Missouri.
Annually, the National Endowment for the
Arts studies how the arts industry impacts theU.S. gross domestic product (GDP). The mostrecent report revealed that the production of artsand cultural goods added more than $698 billionto the U.S. economy, and that 4.7 millionAmericans are employed in the arts industry,earning $334.9 billion in salaries and benefits(Source: “The 2014 Arts and CulturalProduction Satellite Account: 1988-2012,”National Endowment for the Arts, 2014).
Impressive? Important? YES!So, here’s the point: On February 11,
Missouri Citizens for the Arts hosts Citizens’
Day at the Legislature in Jefferson City, andYOU are invited!! It’s an art-filled day in thestate capitol, with arts advocates from across thestate convening to remind our legislators that thearts are important!! The reality of securing pub-lic funding for any issue is that advocates must
present a consistent, focused message year afteryear so that elected officials give serious consid-eration to funding.
A special guest speaker from Americans for
the Arts will travel from Washington, D.C. toaddress attendees at 10:30 a.m. There is an hour-long brass ensemble concert performed by fel-lowship students at UMKC Conservatory of
Music; the prestigious Missouri Art
Awards will be presented at 2 p.m. Inbetween all of this, there’s time tovisit or have lunch with state legisla-tors and to tell them that funding thearts is important. The entire day is freefor members of MCA (just $10 fornonmembers). Check out even moredetails at www.mo4arts.org. Just a2-hour drive from St. Louis, so bringsome friends. I’ll see you there!
Exciting local news: COCA has a history of preparing
dancers for great careers in the arts. Itis COCA-alumnus Antonio Douthit-
Boyd who has become “the” principalfor the Alvin Ailey Dance Company
(that’s Antonio you’ve seen doingincredible leaps in all of the ads forthe Ailey Company). COCA DirectorKelly Pollock announced that, fol-lowing their final performance inParis, both Antonio and KirvenDouthit-Boyd will retire to joinCOCA as Co-Artistic Directors ofDance, pushing St. Louis to the top ofthe list for dance training.
The St. Louis Classical Guitar
Society received $20,000 from TheAugustine Foundation of New YorkCity to launch Phase One of the
Ferguson Guitar Initiative. “We knowthat music motivates and prepares stu-dents for higher achievement,” said
Lawrence W. Larrew, acting superintendent ofthe Ferguson-Florissant School District. Thisinnovative program, which brings classical gui-tar lessons to students in the district, began inJanuary.
ArtFul Happenings can be viewed
at www.thehealthyplanet.com
M
IMAGE: Nichole Angeli as Nell Gwynne, “Or”
presented by Slightly Askew Theatre Company.
photo by Joey Rumpell of RumZoo Photography
ARTful LivingSt. Louis Area Fine Arts, Crafts & Performing Arts
Michelle “Mike” Ochonicky, Arts Editor
If you would like to place an ad or article in The Healthy Planet magazine, please call 314-962-7748.
Don’t Miss The Healthy Planet Natural Living Expo March 29In Webster Groves. For info, call 314-962-7748!
FOX THEATRE • FEBRUARY 27 - MARCH 1 314-534-1111 • METROTIX.COM
North American Tour Cast. Photo by Jeremy Daniel
February, 2015
26 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
by the Master of Wisdom,
through Benjamin Creme,
8 November 2014
he time is soon coming when men will
realize that the most important prob-
lem facing this generation is the eco-
logical imbalance which threatens vast
areas of Earth. As you know, men are divided as to
the extent of this problem but unless their attention
is squarely fixed on this ecological dilemma, the
future for many is under question.
Soon many groups will realize the extent of this
danger and that, year by year, little separates them
from disaster. The forces unleashed by global
warming are now well beyond the control devices
available to men.
Hearken, therefore, while there is still a little
time. For the waters rise inexorably, and men gam-
ble, blithely, with their future.
S.O.P.-Save Our Planet.
This article, published in Share International
magazine, was written by a Master of Wisdom.
The Masters, headed by Maitreya, the World
Teacher, are highly advanced teachers and advisors
of humanity who are planning to work openly in
the world very soon.
www.share-international.org
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If You Would Like To Publish An Ad or Article In
The Healthy Planet magazine, please call 314-962-7748 today!
railnet and partners are excited to share
the progress of Trailnet’s Neighborhood
Greenways St. Louis project. In the pro-
ject’s newly released video, featuring St.
Louis pedestrians and bicyclists, viewers see how
Neighborhood Greenways can make walking and
biking a way of life in St. Louis. A new online inter-
active map encourages residents to plot their dream
routes. Map input will be used for the next phase of
the project.
Neighborhood Greenways are streets trans-
formed to have increased safety and comfort. Design
elements slow traffic and enhance streets to allow for
everyone to walk and bike with ease. Studies have
proven that these low-stress, family-friendly routes
increase biking and walking among residents who
have had lower levels of biking in the past, such as
youth, seniors, women, and people of color. “I think
Neighborhood Greenways are a good idea for St.
Louis because it’s more accessible for people who
may be afraid of biking on bigger streets,” said Katie
Miller, featured bicyclist and resident.
As St. Louis begins a new year with new possi-
bilities, Neighborhood Greenways St. Louis seeks to
move the city toward becoming a world-class walk-
ing and biking city.
Neighborhood Greenways would also help cre-
ate a more active St. Louis and improve the environ-
ment. By driving less, St. Louis residents can lead
healthier lives and help keep the air clean.
Neighborhood Greenways include rain gardens that
allow water to return to the Earth, filtering it on the
way, and lessening the burden on our drainage sys-
tem.
In 2014, Trailnet and partners educated the com-
munity about Neighborhood Greenways through
community meetings, walks, and outreach. As the
project efforts continue in 2015, Trailnet and part-
ners will have critical conversations about strategies
for making Neighborhood Greenways a reality.
Trailnet is one of 12 organizations to receive a
Collaborative Problem-Solving grant from the EPA
to continue this work.
Trailnet leads in fostering healthy, active and
vibrant communities where walking, bicycling and
the use of public transit are a way of life.
For more information visit www.trainet.org or
call 314.436.1324.
Trailnet’s New Interactive Map Allows St. Louis Residents to Map Neighborhood Greenways
T
February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 27
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28 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
by Dr. Doug Pernikoff, DVM
ebruary starts the annual
PET DENTAL MONTH,
and subsequently, this is a
great time to discuss den-
tal disease in our pets, both dogs and
cats. Unfortunately, pet owner com-
pliance for pet dental care is esti-
mated to be around 33% or less.
The American Animal Hospital
Association (AAHA), presents data
confirming the presence of periodontal disease
in dogs(80%) and cats(70%), by 3 years of
age. This condition is the most prevalent dis-
ease syndrome we see in most pets.
Periodontal disease is the end stage condi-
tion of a common sequential process of dental
and gum (gingival) disease that starts with bac-
terial plaques sticking to the tooth surface and
along the gum border. Inflammation follows,
and over time, as the dead bacteria/plaque mix
with the saliva, minerals cause a concretion to
form, called calculus. As the process works its
way under the gum line, and sometimes, deep
along the root wall, the inflammation and
infection can loosen the ligamentous structures
that secure the tooth in its socket. The result
can be loose teeth, infected roots, infected and
highly inflamed gums and more. Just as with
humans, dental infections can enter the blood
stream and colonize areas in the heart, lungs,
kidneys, and most anywhere else in the body,
causing serious illness or even death. So, with
our beloved pets, management and dental hus-
bandry are the keys to keeping your pets free
of dental disease and associated maladies, as
presented above.
The signs of dental disease can be very sub-
tle, or very obvious. The best suggestion is to
be diligent about veterinary visits. Most pet
owners should visit their veterinarian at least
2x each year. Your vet will perform a thorough
examination, and should very quickly provide
an assessment of your pet’s dental condition.
An annual dental cleansing is often very sensi-
ble and appropriate. I have found that small,
lap type dogs accumulate calculi much worse
and more frequently than larger breeds. The
subtle signs might be early plaque and calculus
accumulation on the very back molars, and
often on the larger canine teeth up front. Your
vet will likely grade the condition and tell you
if a formal cleansing is best. With more
advanced disease, we find varying degrees of
redness to the gum line, or pus along the gin-
gival margin. Teeth may be fused together
with calculus and often, you can note very
loose dentition. Often, I hear my clients
respond to my findings with comments like,
“Oh, he always has bad breath!”. I always
wonder why they don’t take a peak to find the
obvious reasons for that smell? Oh, well! I am
just happy that they are here visiting. In both
dogs and cats, signs other than odor, might
include drooling, receding gums, red gums that
bleed very easily with minimal contact, weight
loss with a history of NOT FEEDING as is
normal, or general irritability, a result of the
pain and discomfort that comes with sore gums
and infections.
Dental cleansings require a general anes-
thesia, meaning your pet will be under for the
procedure. Your veterinarian will perform a
blood exam along with a
general physical to ensure a
safe exercise for your family
pet. The teeth are either
manually scaled with dental
instruments, or are cleansed
with an ultrasonic unit, fol-
lowed by a formal polishing
and finally, the application
of a fluoride kind of cover-
ing. This latter step is some-
thing that pet owners need to follow up with on
an every 2 week interval. Cleansings at home
should be 2x each week, minimally. There are
many pet toothpaste products and applicators
available. I like the structure that fits right
over your index finger, and you can rub the
tooth and surface gently with the paste, using
the bristled face of the structure. Don’t be sur-
prised to find that your veterinarian sends you
home with antibiotics and maybe even anti-
inflammatory medicines, depending on the
degree of disease present.
Finally, you might ask your veterinarian
about discounts for National Dental Month in
February.
Help your pets well-being by instituting a
reasonable dental management program soon.
Good luck!
Fondly, Dr. Doug & Staff
Clarkson-Wilson Veterinary Clinic
636-530-1808
Vet Pet Rescue Follow us on Facebook!
February is Pet Dental Month!
F
HealtHy petsHealtHy petsThe greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. — Gandhi
Clarkson-Wilson Veterinary Clinic
• Full service veterinary clinic with an in-house laboratory.
• Laser therapy for Dogs/Cats-Arthritis treatment -Non-invasive -Pain alleviation -Skin conditions
• Digital X-ray• Low cost spay and neuter• Exotics are our specialty
Dr. Doug Pernikoff, DVM636-530-1808
clarksonwilsonvet.com32 Clarkson-Wilson Center,
Chesterfield, MO 63017
Dr. Doug’s
ANIMAL HEALTH & HEALINGThe St. Louis Leader in Holistic Therapies
Dr. Garden voted“Best Veterinarian” in 2006
St. Louie Tails Readers’ Choice Awards
TERESA GARDEN, D.V.M.
and associates
2615 S. Big Bend Blvd • 314-781-1738
AnimalHealthandHealing.com
By Teresa Garden, DVM
ebruary is Heart Health
month and we were asked
to write about heart matters.
As a twist on the subject, I
decided to take the opportunity to
write about a chance encounter with
one of God’s creatures which left an
indelible impression upon my heart.
It was Saturday, August 31, in the
hellish summer of 2013. At 6:30 am I
was walking my dog Baby when we came across
a little baby squirrel lying in the middle of the
sidewalk two blocks from home. The little thing
was breathing but not moving and its mouth was
bloodied. I was in a hurry to get to work and I
just wanted to walk on by and forget I even saw
the poor creature. (I know, I am a very flawed
human being.) I took 2-3 strides past the squirrel
and then my conscious kicked in. It was already
90 degrees and forecasted to hit 107. I couldn’t
see any squirrel nests in nearby trees so I had no
clue where he came from or where his momma
might be. I knew the baby would continue to
dehydrate and die if I left him there or he would
become prey for a dog or the numerous hawks
and owls that frequent the neighborhood. (I also
believed if I left him there I would surely go
straight to hell.) So, of course, I picked him up,
took him home, put him in a very small cat car-
rier and paraded off to work with Baby and
squirrel in tow.
Once at work, my staff and I cleaned his
mouth and muzzle and found no serious injuries.
Lindsay asked, “What’s that thing?” I had to
explain that it was a penis and our patient was a
boy squirrel with boy parts. For
the next 24 hours, I rehydrated
the squirrel by giving him
Lactated Ringers solution orally
every 2-3 hours with a tuber-
culin syringe that he greedily
suckled. That night we visited
our neighbors for show and tell.
Mason, their 5 year old grand-
son, named my squirrel Mr.
Peanut.
The next morning I did an
internet search to learn how to raise a baby squir-
rel. I downloaded “Squirrel Tales: A Manual of
Infant Care for Beginners” from the Columbus
Squirrel Rescue of Columbus, Georgia. This
became my bible for the next 2 months of my
life. After a thorough reading, I determined Mr.
Peanut was 5 weeks old: his eyes were open, he
was fully haired, and he slept all the time with
his tail curled around his back. I slowly started
him on formula given every 4 hours around the
clock with a 6cc oral syringe. Mr. Peanut was
soon thriving.
By the following week Mr. Peanut was 6
weeks old and became very active. The bad
news was I had to go to Petsmart to buy a bigger
cage. The good news was I only had to feed him
every 6 hours so I no longer felt like the walking
dead. Mr. Peanut went to work with Baby and
me every day and he was able to start eating
solid food. It was a thrill to see him eat his first
piece of avocado. The squirrel manual tells us
squirrels are wild animals and are not capable of
loving humans and do not make good pets.
However, this information did not stop me from
falling in love with him. And, Mr. Peanut most
The Tale Of Mr. Peanut
F
February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 29
certainly bonded with me and seemed attached to
me. When taking his formula, his black ball-
bearing eyes would stare at me with the same
loving and trusting look a human infant gives its
mother. As Mr. Peanut got stronger, he would
hold the syringe with his little squirrel
hands…similar to a human baby. Feeding time
consisted of many tender moments.
By 7-8 weeks of age, he would hang on the
side of his cage and have me stroke his belly. We
played tug of war with paper towels and wash
rags. He would get excited and start playing if
he heard the sound of my voice or if I came into
his line of vision. He seemed to respond to his
name.
By the time he was 9 weeks old, Mr. Peanut
needed an even bigger cage since he was now
about 3/4 the size of an adult squirrel. He was
often flying around performing daring acrobatic
feats, hanging upside down, and jumping from
ledge to ledge. The cage was so large it would-
n’t fit into my Mini Cooper so Mr. Peanut now
stayed home during the day while I worked. He
was eating a variety of fruit and veggies and
starting to eat nuts and acorns I collected from
my yard and Carondelet Park. He still needed
formula 3 times a day so I would go home at
lunch to feed him.
When Mr. Peanut was about 10 weeks old I
could leave his cage outside on nice days to help
him acclimate to the outdoors. Most squirrels are
ready to leave home at 12 weeks old. When I
was home I would open the door to his cage and
encourage him to explore the backyard. At first
he steadfastly refused. Eventually he mustered
enough courage to take a few tentative steps
beyond his cage. Then Mr. Peanut immediately
panicked, ran up my pant leg and perched on top
of my head. He was terrified. I was terrified. He
piddled in my hair. I think I piddled myself.
After an eternity, he gingerly climbed down my
back, thereby thankfully, not raking my face to
shreds. For the next couple of weeks he would
spend time outside in my backyard with his cage
door open when I was home. But Mr. Peanut
would only scramble around on the ground, go
into my gardens, or sit on the lawn furniture…
making himself a good target for predators. If I
was outside he would sit on me or near me. He
would follow me around the yard like a very tiny
dog. I was afraid he was going to be 40 years old
and living in my basement.
Around 12-13 weeks old he finally started
climbing the trees in my backyard and was eat-
ing much less formula. He had become a hand-
some squirrel with a gray body, red face and legs
and a very long, full bushy tail. A group of 3
squirrels that habituated my backyard made
friends with him. But every evening, as twilight
approached, he would sit on the ledge of my sun
porch and scream for me to put him back into his
cage. I felt sorry for him. I would put him in his
cage and carry it inside to the sun porch. Mr.
Peanut would immediately make a nest and go to
sleep. I was still coming home at lunch to see
how Mr. Peanut was doing outside in the back-
yard and to offer him formula. He was consum-
ing less and less of it now.
On Monday October 21st I came home at
lunch and Mr. Peanut was sitting on the ledge of
the sun porch as usual. He refused his formula.
We sat together on the back porch steps. I fed
him some nuts and acorns. He spent some time
sitting on my shoulder. I went back to work at
2:30pm. I came home from work at 7pm and Mr.
Peanut was gone.
Dr. Teresa Garden is chief veterinarian
/owner of Animal Health & Healing, a full-ser-
vice holistic and conventional veterinary prac-
tice in the Maplewood/Richmond Heights area.
Phone: 314-781-1738.
Does your pet suffer from allergies, dry skin, ichiness and doggie odor?
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30 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com February, 2015
Through March 22 Orchid ShOw aT MiSSOuri bOTanical garden“Orchids and Their Pollinators” The annual Orchid Showoffers visitors a once-a-year opportunity to see a rotatingdisplay of hundreds of orchids from the Garden’s expan-sive permanent living collection amid a tropical oasisinside the Orthwein Floral Display Hall. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Orthwein Floral Display Hall. Garden admission plus $5;free for Garden members. Visit www.mobot.org.
January 31 - February 1 Orchid SOcieTy OF greaTer ST. lOuiS Orchid ShOw & Sale New cultivars and old favorites are shown and sold by thearea’s top growers who are on hand to give plant careadvice and share information about their organization. 9a.m. to 5 p.m. Beaumont Room, Ridgway Visitor Center.Missouri Botanical Garden. Included with Garden admis-sion. www.osogsl.org.
February 6FOOd OuTreach Trivia nighT7th Annual Trivia Night, 50/50 Raffle, Scratch-Off LottoTree, VIP Tables, Prizes and more! Questions? ContactJesssica Healey at [email protected] or314.652.3663 ext. 118.
February 7ST. lOuiS harMOny chOruS: a cappella 101with Special Guests The Tonightengales, from the GrandCenter Arts Academy, HEAT, 4th Place InternationalMedalist Quartet, The Stereotypes, award winning male acappella ensemble from Washington University, ExecutiveSweets, a quartet made up of members from St. LouisHarmony Chorus. February 7, 2015 at 8pm, FlorissantCivic Center Theatre, 1 James J. Eagan Dr., Florissant,MO 63033. Order Tickets online atwww.florissantmo.com. $20/adult, $18/senior 62+/fulltime student, $12/child 12 & under, $14/group of 10 ormore. Questions? Check out www.stlharmony.org.
February 7dOOrwayS annual gala FundraiSer RED HOT, will be held Saturday, February 7, 2015 at theFour Seasons Hotel St. Louis and will feature Dr.Zhivegas. Gala hours are 6pm to midnight. Ages 21 andup. The 2015 gala co-chairs are Glenda and Al Wiman. Topurchase tickets, visit www.doorwaysRED.org. For spon-sorship information please contact Jim Timmerberg,phone: 535.1919, ext 3123 or e-mail: [email protected].
February 10inTegraTing alTernaTive Medicine wiTh cOnvenTiOnal Medicine FREE Monthly Seminar and Discussion - IntegratingAlternative Medicine with Conventional Medicine - Learnhow to build your immune system and take charge of yourhealth. If you are suffering from chronic conditions, you'lllearn why you don't have to live with your "incurable"symptoms anymore. Topics covered include: Cancer,Heart Disease/Stroke, Diabetes, Arthritis, Osteoporosis,ADD/ADHD, Chronic Fatigue, Fibromyalgia, FoodAllergies, Nutrition, and many more. You should come tothis discussion also if you feel, "My Doctor said every-thing is fine! Then why do I feel so lousy?" SecondTuesday each month at 6:30 pm at our healing clinic -Prevention and Healing, Inc., Dr. Simon Yu, M.D., BoardCertified Internist, 10908 Schuetz Road, St. Louis, MO63146, Weaving Internal Medicine with AlternativeMedicine to Use the Best Each Has to Offer. Call to veri-fy meeting date; seating is limited, arrive early, 314-432-7802. See patient success stories at www.preventionand-healing.com.
February 10reducing inFlaMMaTiOn7:30-8:30 PM. What is inflammation? Inflammation is thebody's strategy for self-protection. All healing and allimmune system responses are inflammatory processes.But, the class is called "Reducing Inflammation," whywould you want to do that? Well, acute inflammatoryprocesses are needed to fight infection and heal woulds.Chronic inflammatory conditions like arthritis or bloatingcan lead to diminished functioning and is a drain on thebody's energy level. Medications can suppress inflamma-tion, but they do not address the root causes. At this classwe will discuss identifying and resolving the causes ofchronic inflammation. Presented by Dr. Rebecca GouldDC. Cost: Free. Held at The Healing Center, 734 De Mun
Avenue in Clayton. For details or to register call DrRebecca Gould 314-727-2120 or register online viaHealingSTL.com or Meetup/HealingSTL.
February 10apply TO be an earThdance apprenTiceJoin us for a free informational session about theEarthDance Farm & Garden Apprenticeship at SchlaflyBottleworks Tuesday, February 10th, from 6-7:30pm.Hear from former apprentices & learn about the program'sbenefits. (For example, we accept AmeriCorps Awards &VA education benefits, & your participation can count ascollege credit.) You can apply via our websitehttp://www.earthdancefarms.org/what-we-do/grow-farm-ers/become-an-apprentice/. Applications are due Sunday,February 15th at 12pm. What is the Farm & GardenApprenticeship? You might be looking for a career infarming, or simply interested in learning more about whereyour food comes from & how to grow it. The program (9.5hours/week from April-October for $700) offers weeklyclasses on topics from methods of propagation to foodpreparation, field trips to local farms, a share in ourCommunity Supported Agriculture, networking opportuni-ties with leaders of the local good food movement, & thechance to make good friends down in the dirt. Questionsabout the program? Contact Apprenticeship CoordinatorTori Dahl at [email protected] or callus at 314-521-1006.
February 14The 18th annual FaceS OF lOve cOncerT features diverse and extraordinary female musicians andsingers whose performances are both spiritual and con-temporary arousing our deepest emotions and instincts.Aska Kaneko, an internationally known Japanese violin-ist/composer and member of the group Gaia Cuatro isteaming up with Jasnam Daya Singh (Weber Iago), aBrazilian pianist and composer as the featured artists.Joining them are Amy Camie, professional harpist andaward winning recording artist and Ruth LatchisonNichols recognized as one of the leading Gospel singers inthe region. All of these spectacular artists share a commit-ment to internal harmony and universal peace through thevehicle of music ranging from classical to jazz, new age togospel and contemporary forms of sacred music. 8:00 PMEthical Society of St. Louis,9001 Clayton Rd. St. Louis,MO 63117. Cost: $25. 314-721-6556.
February 17Free MOnThly wellneSS SuppOrT grOupFree Monthly Prevention and Healing Support Group.This month's presenter is Michael Rehme, DDS. The topicis Biological Dentistry including a discussion on DefiningBiological Dentistry. Biological means life and healthenhancing. Biological Dentistry has one aim: to supportand promote total health with healthier teeth, gums, andmouth. Teeth and mouth are connected to the Whole Bodythrough bones, blood, lymph, fascia, emotions, food,water, air, and more. Come and learn the numerous waysyour mouth can be related to your overall health and wellbeing. Support Group Leaders: Dr. Simon Yu, M.D. andChaplain Paul R. Johnson, M.Div. When: Third Tuesdayeach month (with an occasional exception) at 6:30 pm. atour healing clinic, Prevention and Healing, Inc., Dr. SimonYu, M.D., Board Certified Internist, 10908 Schuetz Road,St Louis, MO 63146, Weaving Internal Medicine withAlternative Medicine to Use the Best Each Has to Offer.Call to verify meeting date, 314-432-7802. For more infor-mation, read the article on our web site atwww.PreventionAndHealing.com titled "New Medicine,New Biology: Spiritual Wellness, Spiritual Assessment,and Spiritual Care."
February 17cOnnecTing yOur healTh beTween yOur TeeTh and bOdyFREE Monthly Seminar and Discussion. Connecting YourHealth Between Your Teeth and Body. You may not real-ize it, but your teeth and gums may be making you ill orweakening your immune system. Hidden infections.Unresolved illness. Find out what may be happeningbetween your teeth and body and what to do about it.Discover how infection and illness transfer between theteeth and body. Understand how biological dentistryfocuses on your overall health. Learn about what dentalmaterials are compatible with wellness, mercury-free,tooth-colored fillings,the impact of dental procedures, howcertain dental procedures can influence your body, andnutritional therapy that supports a healthy mouth. ThirdTuesday Each Month, 6:30 pm at the Holistic Dentistryoffice of, and presented by, Dr. Michael Rehme, D.D.S.,
C.C.N. (Certified Clinical Nutritionist), 2821 N. BallasRd, Suite 245, St. Louis, MO 63131. A Healthy Choice forDental Care. Call to verify seminar date and reserve yourspace at 314-997-2550. See Patient Success Stories atwww.toothbody.com.
February 18OliveTTe in blOOM iS SpOnSOring a Free lecTure SerieS on gardening this spring. If this could be listed in your cal-endar, it would be great. Green Thumb 106: Olivette inBloom Presents a Free Gardening Lecture Series. Olivettein Bloom offers a series of free evening lectures to start theyear and inspire you for the new gardening season.Wed. Feb. 18, 2015 7:00 PM - Welcoming Wildlife.Learn how your garden can become a haven for beneficialwildlife with Claire Linzee of Linzee Gardening. Wed.March 11, 2015 7:00 PM - Spring Pruning. March is agreat time to prune. Join us as Master Gardener, JasmineFazzari, demonstrates proper pruning techniques.Location: Old Bonhomme School, 9661 Old BonhommeRd., St Louis, MO 63132. Classes are free, but space islimited so please reserve your place as soon as possible. Register Online at www.OlivetteinBloom.org. Email us at:[email protected]. Or call: Jan Fitzgerald, 314-991-4954.
February 21-22herMann’S chOcOlaTe wine Trail is a romantic Valentine’s getaway for many couples. Whenwinter settles over Wine Country, thoughts turn to choco-late, the food of love. Chocolate Wine Trail has become aromantic tradition for many couples, who warm up a win-ter weekend with luscious chocolate and wine pairings atseven stops along the beautiful Hermann Wine Trail.Chocolate Wine Trail is one of five annual events hostedby the Hermann Wine Trail, which hugs the MissouriRiver for 20 scenic miles between Hermann and NewHaven. Next up is the Wild Bacon Wine Trail the firstweekend of May. The $30 per person ticket price includesa souvenir wine glass. Participants also may enter a draw-ing for a $30 gift certificate from each winery and a one-night stay at a Hermann B&B. The ticket price does notinclude transportation to wineries or additional wine tast-ing. Wine Trail tickets may be purchased online atHermannWineTrail.com or from the Hermann WelcomeCenter, 800-932-8687. Advance purchase is required. Aword to the wise—tickets always sell out early for thispopular event.
February 21, 23reSidenTial energy eFFiciencyAirs on KNLC Channel 24 02/21 at noon and KNLCRenewable Energy Channel Channel 24-2 02/23 at 8:00p.m. For low income homeowners, reduction of energybills can be critical for affording medications or food.Jessica Freiberger and Connie Taylor discuss residentialenergy efficiency. They ask why “healthy homes” areimportant and how home retrofits can provide local jobs.
February 23weighT and wellneSS6:30-8:30pm. Join us and discover an optimal health pro-gram that will help you to reach your healthy weight goals.Our program has over 30 years of safety and success andis the only health optimization program that comes with afree health coach to help you reach your goals. At thismeeting you will also meet others who have lost weightwith and kept it off with our program and get all yourquestions answered. Cost: Free. Held at DePaul HospitalMay Community Education Center, 12303 DePaul Driveparking lot #3, Bridgeton, MO 63044. For details or to reg-ister call Dr Rebecca Gould 314-727-2120 or registeronline via HealingSTL.com or Meetup/HealingSTL.
February 28 & March 1priMOrdial SOund MediTaTiOnDo you want to reduce stress and anxiety in your life?Learn to meditate! As stress is reduced through medita-tion, our mind and body function with more effectivenesswhich can lead to better health, vitality, and happiness!Primordial Sound Meditation is a meditation programdeveloped by Dr. Deepak Chopra. This weekend class willbe held February 28 & March 1 at the Mercy Center, 2039North Geyer Road, St. Louis, MO. Learn how to enjoy thebenefits of meditation! Light refreshments will be served.Contact Shirley Stoll for more information and/or registra-tion. 800-796-1144 or [email protected].
• Rebirthing
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314-644-5223The Center for Transformationwww.CenterForTransformation.net
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IF you would like to placeand ad or article in the
Healthy Planet magazine,please call
314-962-7748 today!
February, 2015 The Healthy Planet magazine • TheHealthyPlanet.com 31
RECYCLE PAINT and HOUSEHOLD CHEMICALS
Must be in original container with the label intact.
We charge a fee of 30¢ a pound, can and all. We recycle electronics
and BUY SCRAP METAL.EarthboundRecycling.com,
25 Truitt Dr., Eureka, MO, 63025, 636-938-1188 Open 9-5 Mon-Sat.
Combining traditional training with acutting edge holistic approach, Deborahspecializes in helping people change theireating habits to achieve optimal health. Asan experienced educator with a teachingdegree, she excels at motivating individualsto improve the quality of their wellbeing.
Cutting edge nutrition for:• Autism• Auto-Immune Disorders• Cancer• Digestive Problems• Fibromyalgia• Food Allergies & Sensitivities• Learning Disabilities
• Weight Managemento Weight losso Weight gain
For more information contact DeborahZorensky, RD, lD, CCn, Clinicalnutritionist at The Center For Mind, Body,Spirit, 7649 Delmar, 314-725-6767.
An Integrated Approach ToHealing & Wellness
Deborah Zorensky,RD, LD, CCN
314-725-67677649 Delmar
St.Louis,MO 63130
The BioMat’s quantum energetics allows the bodyto fight disease and heal with a naturally strong andefficient immune system. It is composed of 17 layersof technology, combining Far Infrared Rays (FIR),negative ions and amethyst crystals. Time spent on themat relieves pain and joint stiffness, reduces stress andfatigue, boosts the immune system, burns calories andmany other healthful benefits.
Infrared Rays, nature’s invisible light and most
beneficial light wave, penetrate skin and increase cir-culation to detoxify the body of harmful toxins. TheFIR can increase blood flow and clean the arteries(which means it can help lower blood pressure),release toxins, increase metabolism, heal soft tissueand relax muscles.
Negative Ions are Nature’s Energizer. Ion particlescleanse and purify the air we breathe.
Amethyst bolsters the production of the hormones
and strengthens the cleansing organs, the circulatorysystem and blood, the immune system and bodymetabolism.
Be proactive about your health and well being. A good nights sleep on the BioMat or a mere 30
minute nap, can go a long way to ensuring a healthier,happier you.
Call The Center for Mind, Body & Spirit to sched-ule an appointment to try the BioMat. 314.725.6767.
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Call 314-725-6767
P R o F E s s i o N A l R E s o U R c E D i R E c t o R Y If you would like to have your professional resource listed, call 314-962-7748 today!
The focus of holistic dentistry is to considerthe mouth as a part of the whole body. We usematerials and methods that are more compatiblebiologically with the body instead of the tradi-tional dental materials. Examples of non-com-patible materials are mercury fillings, non-pre-cious heavy metal crowns, bridges and partialsor dentures. Alternatives to fluoride are used
for the prevention of cavities.Proper alignment of the jaws and teeth are
the foundation of how the body perceives itselfin space. The result of improper alignment canresult in symptoms of headache, ears ringing,loss of hearing, pain in the head and neck andclenching or grinding of the teeth.
Good nutrition is inseparable for good
health. If your diet consists of food and drinkmade with white flour, sugar and no fresh fruitsand vegetables, your body is likely to be acidicwith resultant more medical and dental prob-lems.
For your dental evaluation contact our
office for an appointment by calling 636-458-
9090 or email at [email protected].
Ronald Schoolman, DDSRodney Lofton, DDS
636-458-9090 16976 Manchester Road, Wildwood, MO 63040
H o l i s t i c D E N tA l c A R E
Our approach to holistic health includesthe entire body and the oral cavity is noexception. We are dedicated to serving ourpatients and promoting a level of health carethat carefully evaluates and reviews the use ofdental materials, dental procedures and alsooffers dietary and nutritional support for eachand every individual that is seen in our office.
Did you know that examining the mouthcan reveal the presence of illnesses or unsta-ble conditions in other areas of the body?
If you feel like you’ve just about exhaust-ed all your options in your search for betterhealth, have your mouth examined with a dif-ferent approach in mind. Get motivated, geteducated, and get ready to participate in a
health-oriented lifestyle that will provide den-tal alternatives and a nutritional foundationdesigned to help support your own body’shealing powers.
For more information visit our website at www.toothbody.com.
BIOLOGICALDENTISTRY
Michael G. Rehme, DDS,CCN & Associates
314-997-2550at the corner of Ballas
& Clayton Roads
St Louis Aquatic Healing Center offersstate of the art, cutting edge alternative healththerapies for health, healing, balancing anddetoxification. Many of our therapies canonly be found at St Louis Aquatic such as:The MG-PRO, Pulsed ElectromagneticField (PEMF) Cellular Exercise, widelyused in Eastern Europe for 30 years withextensive research behind it; cleaning and
promoting cell repair and regeneration; TheQuantum Pulse frequency generator, suc-cessfully eradicates many viruses andpathogens; Watsu/Wassertanzen, warmwater shiatsu therapy to relieve pain and revi-talize organs, and Cranial Sacral Therapy inthe pool, all the benefits of CST amplified bythe water. We also offer T-Zone, Whole BodyVibration for health and fitness, Nutri-
Energetics Systems (NES) health evaluationand therapy to promote the body’s naturalhealing and detoxification, far-infrared sauna,ionic foot soaks, ear candling, lymphaticdrainage, other therapeutic massages andmuch more. Call, email or visit our websitesfor more information. 314-432-5228,[email protected], www.watsu1.com,www.purificationhealthproducts.com.
St. Louis AquaticHealing Center
Kathleen Huber ChristLicensed Massage Therapist
Internationally Certified in Watsu/Wassertanzen Water Massage
Natural Peacefulness For The Whole Body
314-432-5228 • www.watsu1.com
REFLEXOLOGIST/LMT WANTED IN SHREWSBURY
Preferred shifts: Evenings/weekends. Generous commission; 70% of fees.
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Email your information to [email protected].
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