Tuesday, June 28, 2022

The benefits of listening to music

 

The Benefits of Listening to Music

In 2009, archaeologists excavating a cave in southern Germany uncovered a flute carved from a vulture’s wing bone. The delicate artifact is the oldest known musical instrument on earth — indicating that people have been making music for over 40,000 years.

Although we can’t be sure exactly when human beings began listening to music, scientists do know something about why we do. Listening to music benefits us individually and collectively. Here’s what research tells us about the power of music to improve our physical, mental, and emotional health.


Researchers think one of the most important functions of music is to create a feeling of cohesion or social connectedness.

Evolutionary scientists say human beings may have developed a dependence on music as a communication tool because our ancestors descended from arboreal species — tree-dwellers who called to one another across the canopy.

Music remains a powerful way of uniting people:

  • national anthems connect crowds at sporting events
  • protest songs stir a sense of shared purpose during marches
  • hymns build group identity in houses of worship
  • love songs help prospective partners bond during courtship
  • lullabies enable parents and infants to develop secure attachments

How, then, does music benefit us as individuals?

It can lead to better learning

They recommend that you listen to music to stimulate your brain. Scientists know that listening to music engages your brain — they can see the active areas light up in MRI scans.

Researchers now know that just the promise of listening to music can make you want to learn more. A research showed that people were more motivated to learn when they expected to listen to a song as their reward.

It can improve memory

Music also has a positive effect on your ability to memorize.

In one study researchers gave people tasks that required them to read and then recall short lists of words. Those who were listening to classical music outperformed those who worked in silence or with white noise.

The same study tracked how fast people could perform simple processing tasks — matching numbers to geometrical shapes — and a similar benefit showed up. Mozart helped people complete the task faster and more accurately.

They point out that while music doesn’t reverse the memory loss experienced by people with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia, music has been found to slow conigtive decline, helping people with mild or moderate dementia remember episodes from their lives.

Music memory is one of the brain functions most resistant to dementia. That’s why some caregivers have had success using music to calm dementia patients and build trusting connections with them.

It can help treat mental illness

Music literally changes the brain. Neurological researchers have found that listening to music triggers the release of several neurochemicals that play a role in brain function and mental health:

  • dopamine, a chemical associated with pleasure and “reward” centers
  • stress hormones like cortisol
  • serotonin and other hormones related to immunity
  • oxytocin, a chemical that fosters the ability to connect to others

Although more research needs to be done to understand precisely how music can be used therapeutically to treat mental illness, some studiesTrusted Source suggest that music therapy can improve the quality of life and social connectedness for people with schizophrenia.

A number of researchers have interviewed groups about why they listen to music. Study participants vary widely in terms of age, gender, and background, but they report strikingly similar reasons.

One of the most common uses of music? It helps people regulate their emotions researchers found. It has the power to change moods and help people process their feelings.

It can help lower anxiety

There’s lots of evidence that listening to music can help calm you in situations where you might feel anxious.

Studies have shown that people in rehab after a stroke are more relaxed once they’ve listened to music for an hour.

Similar studies indicate that music blended with nature sounds help people feel less anxious. Even people facing critical illnessTrusted Source feel less anxiety after music therapy.

There’s conflicting evidence about whether listening to music has an effect on your body’s physiological stress response, however. One study indicated that the body releases less cortisol, a stress hormone, when people listen to music. This same study referenced previous research stating that music had little measurable effect on cortisol levels.

One recent study that measured several indicators of stress (not just cortisol) concluded that while listening to music before a stressful event doesn’t reduce anxiety, listening to relaxing music after a stressful event can help your nervous system recover faster.

It helps the symptoms of depression

In an other research they concluded that listening to music, particularly classical combined with jazz, had a positive effect on depression symptoms, especially when there were several listening sessions conducted by board certified music therapists.

Not into jazz or the classics? You may want to try a group percussion session instead. The same research review found that drum circles also had above-average benefits for people dealing with depression.

It can help your heart health

Music can make you want to move — and the benefits of dancing are well documented. Scientists also know that listening to music can alter your breath rate, your heart rate, and your blood pressure, depending on the music’s intensity and tempo.

It decreases fatigue

Anyone who has ever rolled down car windows and turned up the radio knows that music can be energizing. There’s solid science behind that lived experience.

They also found that relaxing music helped reduce fatigue and maintain muscle endurance when people were engaged in a repetitive task.

Music therapy sessions also lessened fatigue in people receiving cancer treatments and raised the fatigue threshold for people engaged in demanding neuromuscular training, which leads us to the next big benefit.

It boosts exercise performance

Exercise enthusiasts have long known that music enhances their physical performance.

There was also confirmation that working out with music improves your mood, helps your body exercise more efficiently, and cuts down on your awareness of exertion. Working out with music also leads to longer workouts.

In clinical settings, athletes who listened to high-intensity, fast music during warmups were motivated to perform better competitively.

You don’t have to be a world-class competitor to benefit: It shows that syncing your workout to music can allow you to reach peak performance using less oxygen than if you did the same workout without the beat. Music acts as a metronome in your body, researchers said.

It can help manage pain

Specially trained music therapists use music to help alleviate pain in inpatient and outpatient settings. An analysis of over 90 studies reported that music helps people manage both acute and chronic pain better than medication alone.

About music therapy

Wednesday, June 22, 2022

Sunscreen... bad or good?

 


Is sunscreen bad for you?

Like many things, some sunscreens are good for you and some sunscreens are bad good for you. As you’ve probably read or seen in the news, a few people say all sunscreens are good for you because they prevent skin cancer. And then there are people on other end of the spectrum that claim you don’t need any sunscreen at all because sunscreen is dangerous.

The truth is, if you’re planning to spend more than 10-30 minutes in the sunshine, you should use safe sunscreen.

 

No Sunscreen Blocks 100%

First, there is no perfect sunscreen that blocks all UV rays. No matter what you use, if you're in the sun, your skin will receive some level of UV energy.

It's important to try to find sunscreen that will most effectively lessen risk of sunburn AND longer term skin damage, and just as importantly, how human biochemistries relate to the effects of UV energy on the skin.

 

Sunburn + Deeper Tissue Damage

Big skincare brands have considerable knowledge of how to combine synthetic chemicals so that they defend against sunburn, but they lack a true appreciation (or even a good faith knowledge) of how those chemicals affect the body, and for how those chemicals ultimately fail in preventing deep tissue damage.

Broad spectrum sunscreens contain minerals and/or chemicals that screen both UVB rays (those affecting skin surface) and UVA rays (those affecting deeper skin tissues). However, those UVA defending ingredients in chemical sunscreens degrade quickly and do a much poorer job than their UVB-defending partners.

The effect is that people stay in the sun much too long, without covering up or seeking shade, do NOT have their skin get red while receiving significant deep tissue damage. This damage shows up for most in the 50s and 60s at the dermatologist, as various types of skin cancer or pre-cancer.

 

Chemical Sunscreen Ingredients can Enter your Bloodstream

Recent news announcing sunscreen ingredients can soak into your bloodstream has obviously caused concern to Americans.

In the Spring of 2019, the FDA announced mineral sunscreen ingredients, specifically zinc oxide and titanium dioxide, are safe, but another 12 ingredients commonly used in chemical sunscreens, including oxybenzone and octinoxate, need more research to determine if they can be officially listed as safe.

 

Non-nano Zinc Oxide

Non-nano Zinc Oxide does not pass through the outer layer of skin and thus cannot enter the bloodstream. Zinc Oxide sunscreen sits on top of the skin. Unfortunately most dermatologists, do not differentiate between proper zinc oxide products and petrochemical products. Amazingly, most do not even understand how zinc oxide works: they'll say, like most lay people, that zinc oxide is a sun "block" meaning it REFLECTS UV rays.

This is actually not so. It's true that zinc oxide reflects VISIBLE light (that's why it looks white on the skin), but it actually ABSORBS rays within the UV portion of the light spectrum, then CONVERTS those rays to infrared heat, which is radiated harmlessly away from the skin and body.

 

Know your Sunscreen Ingredients

In contrast to big companies, many small sunscreen companies have a great appreciation for healthy living and healthy ingredients. What the small guys lack is a formal education of human biochemistry; i.e. they're well-meaning amateurs.

This manifests itself in the serious shortcomings of their sunscreen formulations, which many times include ingredients, such as vitamin A (a HUGE no-no on skin while it's in the sun, since it encourages cell division, normally a good thing, while cells are actively DNA damaged) or ill advised anti-inflammatory ingredients, which can lead to significant damage to deeper skin layers.

 

Please Wear Sunscreen

We recommend a sunscreen with an SPF rating of 30-35, and if you're considering something higher, make sure it doesn't have one or more of the above issues. Better yet, send us a link, and we'll be more than happy to review its ingredients in detail and give you our honest evaluation. It may be that someone's developed an honest-to-goodness validly safe high SPF product, and we are absolutely interested in learning about that!

Also, look for the words “Broad Spectrum” — this helps make sure you’re protecting yourself from UVA rays (as well as UVB rays). Make sure it contains NO petrochemicals, and that it either uses only non-nano zinc oxide as an active ingredient (at least 20%, but 25% is best) and that if it contains no more than 5% titanium dioxide. Always read the active and non-active ingredient list to make sure you’re not putting harmful chemicals on your skin.

And please remember your hat, sunglasses and long sleeve shirt — for those especially long days on the boat or at the beach.

 


NEXT STEPS

1. Know your ingredients — Flip over your sunscreen and read the ingredients. We want everyone to know what good ingredients are, regardless of whether they use our products or not. Your health is worth it.

2. Buy safe sunscreen — Find the ones that are using only the healthiest, safest, most effective ingredients in our sunscreens. 

3. Teach a friend — If you know someone who might still be buying sunscreen with questionable ingredients, please share this post with him/her.


BECAUSE WE CARE...

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Tuesday, June 14, 2022

8 Super Foods to help boost Fertility

 

Boost Fertility With These 8 Amazing Super Foods


      




Whether you’re just thinking about getting pregnant, or actively trying to get pregnant, or already struggling with infertility, these 8 foods are foods that you want to be included in your diet on a regular basis.

They’ve been shown to nourish the system, balance your hormones and help boost fertility.

Foods That Boost Fertility

These foods that boost fertility will also help you calm down, which is a difficult thing to do when you’re trying to get pregnant because there are so much anxiety and excitement built into the process.

Here are the foods you should consume if you want to boost fertility:

1. Asparagus

Asparagus is a great source of folate, which is necessary for healthy ovulation. It is also important for healthy sperm production and the quantity of sperm. So you want to definitely include asparagus into your diet.

2. Black Beans

According to Chinese medicine, when you’re trying to get pregnant, you want to nourish the kidneys, so you also want to build the blood. The black beans are a great way to do that because they’re a great source of protein, folate, zinc and B Vitamin.

3. Avocados

You should eat avocados on a regular basis if you want to boost fertility. Avocados are a great source of folate and potassium, but more importantly, they are a great source of mono-unsaturated fats.

Couples that eat avocados regularly have a higher success rate than those that do not.

4. Wild Alaskan Salmon

Wild Alaskan Salmon contains Omega 3 essential fatty acids which reduce inflammation in the body. And this is necessary for implantation of the egg. Omega 3 fats have also been shown to help with healthy cervical fluid production which is necessary for optimal fertility.

5. Yams

There’s a tribe in Nigeria called the Aruba Tribe that is known for their massive amounts of twin births. They also have an enormous amount of yams in their diet. Yams help to balance your estrogen levels and it also helps promote a little bit of progesterone in your body. So it helps to create a hormonal balance.

You want to eat yams in the first 2 weeks of your cycle, so the first day of your period to day 14 is the optimal time to boost your fertility.

In the US most yams are in the sweet potatoes family, so look for yams that are either from the Caribbean or from Africa.

6. Flax (ground seed or oil)

They are a great source of B Vitamin, magnesium, manganese and an excellent source of Omega 3 and Omega 6 essential fatty acids. Flax balances out your estrogen levels and helps protect against estrogen dominance, which is quite common in women that have endometriosis or heavy periods.

7. Cruciferous Vegetables

Broccoli, cauliflower, Brussel sprouts, and other cruciferous vegetables help to process harmful estrogens out of your body, out of your liver. Cruciferous vegetables also help to lower estrogen dominance in your body, leading to greater hormonal balance.

8. Kale

Kale is a great source of folate and iron, which help you to boost fertility.

You want to combine these foods as best as you can to maximize your nutrient intake and to get the most out of them.

For example, you can make a bean salad and put a grilled salmon on top of it. Add some avocado to that bean salad or maybe some chopped asparagus. Another suggestion would be to bake a yam and then to put some flaxseed oil on top of it.

So combine these foods however you want to boost fertility to the maximum.


These are key foods that you should be including, but there are also key foods that you should be avoided if you’re trying to get pregnant. These foods are:

  • trans-fats, which block your ability to absorb essential fatty acids like Omega 3 fats found in salmon and in flax;
  • sugar and refined foods which disrupt your hormonal balance;
  • alcohol;
  • caffeine.

It’s so simple to change your diet, you just need a few suggestions and then you need to put them into play.

But sometimes food can’t do everything. So you need to get some professional advice from specialists. No matter what kind of fertility problem you have, the doctors can help and guide you.

BECAUSE WE CARE...

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Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Why do women need more iron than men?

 

Why Do Women Need More Iron Than Men?

Iron makes for an essential mineral for each and every human being; however, it is most required by women.





Highlights

  • One of the most essential mineral in the body is Iron
  • An average adult female needs 18 milligram of iron per day
  • One of the biggest reasons to add more iron in your diet is menstruation




The human body is made up on innumerable nutrients and minerals without which it cannot function properly. The body tends to experience loss of these nutrients and minerals due to one or more factors, which can further affect the proper functioning of the body. One of the most essential minerals in the body is iron. It is required to help the red blood cells transport oxygen to the rest of the body. Furthermore, it also helps in producing energy and facilitates cell respiration. Iron makes for an essential mineral for each and every human being; however, it is most required by women.

According to the National Institute of Health, an average adult male needs about eight milligram of iron per day and an average adult female needs 18 milligram of iron per day. During pregnancy, a female needs 27 milligrams, a triple of what men need.

According to a specialist, "It is primarily because of the monthly cycle that women tend to lose blood. Typically in pregnancy, women require more iron because there is an increase in blood volume, which is needed for baby's growth in the womb. Iron is needed to replenish the loss of blood during menstrual cycle and delivery of the baby. While it is important for both men and women, these two factors make iron an important mineral for women." "Physiologically, women need more iron because of the menstrual cycle you need to replenish blood, which is why you should load up on iron rich foods more."

Iron helps form the placenta that is an essential part of the womb

One of the biggest reasons to add more iron in your diet is menstruation. It is about losing a lot of blood every month, which can affect overall iron content in the body. Compensate by increasing the consumption of iron rich foods.

Another reason is pregnancy. Iron helps form the placenta that is an essential part of the womb. The iron is not needed by your body but also by the baby for its growth. In fact, the iron you supply to the baby needs to last for six months after birth. So iron does not only aid in development, but the child is storing up for later.

Iron Deficiency

An insufficient amount of iron can lead to insufficient amount of oxygen in your blood, which can result in anemia, further causing fatigue. So it is important to load up on iron rich foods. Consume more green leafy vegetables, eggs, dry nuts, nuts and seeds, pulses and beans, fish, whole grains...

Iron is a must for everyone, be it a male or female. However, it is imperative for women to be extremely careful of their deficiencies considering they might have to suffer from quick loss of iron.


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