Category Archives: Natural Health

Staying Healthy When Everyone Else is Dropping Like Flies Around You

By | Natural Health, Recipes | 3 Comments

We’ve reached the time of year when the darkness of night comes sooner and lasts longer. In it, I find the  reflective, quieter part of me beginning to surface. I find I’m ready for bed earlier and my body seems to want the rest. Listening to my body is a big part of my staying healthy – and keeping my kids that way. Since it’s getting to be that time of year – when flu and cold season is beginning – I thought a little visit back to what I posted last year about building a healthy immune system might be in order.

How to stay healthy when everyone else is dropping like flies around you. Remember that rest, good nutrition and exercise are the best way to get started on a healthy immune system. As my mom used to say, “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”

Here‘s what I said last year about staying healthy and it still holds.

And, if you’re already in the throes of the season’s sickly woes, here’s a good recipe for chicken noodle soup, click here.

Healthy Blessings.

OM

A Life Flowing with Milk and Honey

By | Natural Health | 2 Comments

Recently, I happened to visit a friend’s house after I picked up my milk and honey from some local friends. Both foods are delicious and as fresh as food can get. My friend’s husband soon arrived and I had to laugh as he exclaimed, “Wow, this is just weird!” when he saw my glass jars of goat milk and how our dark, raw, medicinal quality honey was crystallized. I sometimes forget how different our shopping habits are from many of our friends despite the fact that one of my sisters refers to me as a “hippie”.

We haven’t always eaten such fresh, delicious food. When I first ventured out on my own as a single girl, my cabinet had plenty of canned/boxed and otherwise prepared foods. But, as I got more interested in fueling my body to do the things I was interested in – like long hikes and martial arts (I know, what a picture!) – I learned to get the most bang for my buck by investing in fresh, whole foods.

I wish I could say that I’ve consistently made healthy choices with my life since the time I learned to make REAL food, but like most people I have regressed from time to time. In the early years of our marriage, my husband and I ate out a lot, made white pastas and bread a staple of our diet and added quite a few pounds to our waistlines.

When we realized (each at different times in our journey) how much these choices affected our health and our ability to do things we love, we each committed to make changes in our lifestyles and food choices. We didn’t try to change everything at once. Instead, we made small adjustments – like cutting out sugar, pasta and bread and adding lots of veggies. We incorporated legumes or organic meat and whole grains (like brown rice, quinoa, couscous, steel cut oats etc). We learned to eat till we weren’t quite full and our attitudes about food started to change. We learned to love eating foods as close to their natural state as possible.

As we tried to find a healthy balance, we discovered we liked cooking healthy food a lot more when we had fun options. We decided that a diet high in fruits and veggies meant we needed to switch to organically grown food so we weren’t eating a lot of pesticides with each bite. We discovered that farmer’s markets sell locally and seasonally grown food at a reasonable price. We learned that we like knowing the people who grow our food and love supporting the local economy. Thanks to our venture into local foods, we now have great friends who provide us with delicious dark honey and milk in glass jars.

Making changes to the way we shop, eat and live has taken us on somewhat of a unexpected journey.  Saying goodbye to mainstream, box stores has brought us closer to our community and has opened our eyes to an abundance of locally grown foods, including those grown in our own yard. It’s given us a way to spend time together as a family each week and helps us to teach our kids about caring for this beautiful world and their own bodies. We have everything we need to live well and we breathe in our food and life with gratitude. In a way, we’ve realized that we live in a land flowing with milk and honey –  and it’s a good place to be.

Dark, raw honey. We use it for medicinal purposes and it has a rich, almost smoky flavor. DELICIOUS!

Tips for Talking Your Kid into Eating Those Veggies!

By | Natural Health | 2 Comments

http://www.foodconnect.org/phoenixmarket/I went to the store yesterday to purchase some almonds for our weekly snack packs and my nearly-two year old kept asking for them while we were paying our bill. The woman at the counter was amazed that my daughter wanted to eat something so healthy. I didn’t explain that I soak the nuts at our house to make them tastier and more digestible (more about this in a later post). But, it reminded me again how important it is to offer our kids healthy – and DELICIOUS options to all the junk food surrounding them.

Here are three tips for getting kids interested in healthy eating.

1. Introduce healthy foods early and often. Loving any kind of food is a learned experience so we just need to be sure we’re teaching our kids what kinds of food are delicious and healthy. We naturally crave sweet tastes so it’s easy for us to like things that are filled with sugar, especially processed sugars like granulated white sugar and corn syrup. But, if you want your kids to love veggies and fruit, those items need to appear more than cereal bars or packaged options.

  • Start with the baby food. Mash up whatever you’re eating and offer it to the baby who keeps grabbing at your dinner plate. Babies LOVE to eat what the big people eat at that phase. Add a little water if it’s too thick and whirrrrrrrrr it up in the food processor! It takes moments and costs pennies.
  • Keep offering healthy options like veggies and try different recipes if necessary. Not everyone likes broccoli and dip so “steam it, mash it, stick it in a stew” if you have to.

2. Involve your kids in the process – to help them become familiar with and love healthy foods.

  • Growing easy veggies like greens
  • Visiting the farmer’s market. Look for Phoenix Farmers’ markets here and here.
  • Talk about “Strong food” vs. being thin or fat. Our daughter is used to this way of describing food now and asks, “Mom, is candy strong food?”   “Um…not so much.”
  • Make snacks fun and colorful. Fruits and veggies come in such beautiful colors and textures, you’re sure to find something they’re like!
  • Be creative – nickname the foods if it helps. We have Disney themed food at our house and call red peppers, “Ariel Peppers”, green peppers “Jasmine Peppers” and broccoli – “Trees”.

3. Most importantly, be a good example of healthy eating to your kids. It doesn’t matter how many times you say, “Sweetie, eat it – it’s good for you,” if you don’t eat well yourself, they won’t either. Moms – be sure you sit down and eat with your kids if you’re the one serving. It’s really easy for us as moms to take care of everyone else and put ourselves on the back burner when it comes to eating. Share a moment relaxing and nourishing your body with that healthy food and be a mirror of what you want to see in your kids.

If you didn’t start early – it’s never too late. If your kids are used to sweets, start with the sweeter healthy snacks like dried fruit and work backward from there.

Healthy eating is the best form of medicine. Here’s to an apple a day!