Posts Tagged ‘prevention’

An ounce of prevention…

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010 by annemarie

I don’t know what it is about my Chiropractor…but every time I go I have a whole new freedom to move. I see an upper cervical Chiropractor, Dr Dan Fedelli at the Balancing Center near my home. Today on the way there I was walking like a young giraffe ~ plopping my left foot out there and following theough with my stronger right leg…however after my adjustment today as I walked out I was moving close to normal person walk! PURE GLEE!

You may recall if you’ve been reading that I had let my wellness practices lapse and I hadn’t seen Dr. Dan in 6-8 weeks up til 3 weeks ago. So I went in twice 1 week and then the 3 weeks since only 1 time, and presto a whole new gait. Come ON! If you have any idea how rare forward progress is with ALS you’ll capture how I’m feeling. Often after I see him I feel the need for a nap to let the treatment set in, but today I am enlivened by the progress. I also made a cool discovery~ he has some samples of essential oils on the counter where you check out, and I grabbed one at random for respiratory support and put some on…wouldn’t you know I am breathing deeper and dont feel so deprived.

This weekend I head to Detroit to see a holistic healer who will check me for food allergies and guide me through a heavy metal cleanse ( hopefully!) as I have been reading “Eric is Winning” and noticed his survey of long time ALS survivors all had very few almalgam fillings or they had them removed…I have quite a few of them and until I can create a plan to get them removed, I want to take some action! There are several voices out there people who were diagnosed with ALS and have beat the odds and the time constraints and are living longer through eliminating toxins in their environment, their food, their bodies and eat a fairly clean diet ( lots of raw food but not all) Eric Edney of “Eric is Winning ” Fame and Dr Craig Oster from www.healingwithdrcraig.com are just a few. Why our traditional medical resources donot acknowledge these possibilities and include a proactive diet plan and cleansing program? I get that it’s not completely researched so STUDY IT! We already HAVE NO CURE…it can’t hurt and it gives us something to do in the meantime!

People also ignore the abundant research on mind body medicine, eloquently detailed in “When the Body says No: The Cost of Hidden Stress,by Dr . Garbor Mate. Our biology is intimately connected to our relationships and emotional health and wellness. Not taking care of ourselves is a running theme in people with ALS. Having a duty to our image or our promises which overwhelms our own self preservation. Protecting others from the impact of our own pain.
Continueing to perform and play ball through injury and sickness. All of which further errodes the immune system until you have a major breakdown.

I can see patterns of this in my own life. I wish my doctors have suggested that I explore what patterns I have had that donot serve me through out my life…at least it would have begun an interesting inquiry and a pathway to insight. We can no longer ignore the impact of life stresses on disease. It is imperative to explore the body-mind connection and harvest all the knowledge we can from there.

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How I set the stage for my own illness…I dare researchers to prove me wrong!

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010 by annemarie

Here is my pet theory on the development of my ALS: I believe that continually placing my self in a work enviroment that had a high stress factor- one that constantly reacted my biological fight or flight mechanism and that had a rigorous schedule of 12-14 hour days/6 days a week, combined with playing hard rather than taking care of myself, depleted my adrenal system over time and damaged my immune system. I also had a diet that caused alot of inflamation in my body: lots of caffiene,diet soda, nicotine,dairy, soy and meat and one that was for the most part low in nutrients while high in calories. The key I think was inadequate recovery time between periods of intense activity and regular sleep deprivation. I pushed too fast too far for too long and with out the proper care and attention my body broke down. I believe that this triggered the gene that is present in people who have familial ALS as my uncle died from ALS, or it triggered ALS in me spontaneously.

When I look at the groups of people who have been identified as having a higher occurance of ALS in their population I see some common cultural threads. We have Combat veterans from the Gulf war, Professional football and soccer players and Type A personality executives who, research tells us, are more likely than the general population to develope ALS. Now 2/100,000 versus 1/100,000 cases doubles the occurance but doesnot emcompass a large population as there are only about 30,000 people with ALS at any given time. That number stays fairly steady due to attrition, read death. However, if we can extrapolate the common enviromental threads and eliminate them perhaps we can diminish the occurance of ALS in these groups and the general population as well. Given only 10% of ALS is familial and 90% of ALS is spontaneous this deserves a conversation about prevention. I would not wish my symptoms upon my worst enemy. The experience of disintegrating before your own eyes isn’t pretty and the discipline it takes to maintain a positive mindset in a world with no cure is relentless.

So what do we know about these professions that makes them a breeding ground for this particular dis-ease? Well, they have a common language… the language of war permeates the cultures. Appropriately so in the case of combat military, however the same language exists in professional football in the US and Professional soccer overseas. I found it very telling that this year the Cincinatti Bengals brought in a Navy Seal to talk to the team about “fighting in honor of” their fallen comrad after the tragic death of a young player. It has been said that language creates our experience of the world around us. If people really believe they are in a fight for their job or survival, based on performance, the “life” or death of that “life” which comes from their job can be excruciatingly real. Professional athletes are always fighting to keep their position on the team. While this struggle may not be a literal matter of life and death, it is very much a battle to remain in the world of professional athletics, which could be the only dream that person ever had. This is when “It’s not like anyone has a gun to your head…” feels very much like someone has a gun to your head.
Many corporate cultures also promote the thinking that they are “at war” with the competition, fostering a state of emergency in their work enviroment. My work enviroment was like that…there was a delibrate concerted effort by the upper managment to foster an ethos of emergency…CONSTANTLY, and regardless of what ever results had been achieved. I actually spent 5 quarters living in the experience of failing when the truth was I was the only bonus-able performer on my region’s staff for those 5 quarters. When I found out I was actually performing well I felt completely duped, and cheated of any sense of accomplishment, even though they gave me a raise. I believe working in an enviroment of perpetual emergency is harmful to the business by virtue of it’s unsustainability and equally harmful to the health and wellness of the staff. It’s simply not accurate and has no integrity. Unless you are in an emergency room OR you are in a war zone- Where that would be accurate, though if the people are in there too long we know it has long term effects on their mental, emotional and physical well being.

There is something about the cycle of cortisol combined with the continual rush of adrelaline that is a nasty, dis-ease producing super-combo. It’s time to start telling the truth about what makes us sick. It may not manifest the same way in all people, however setting the stage for destruction and setting ourselves up to win are two totally different things.

I don’t know if I would have changed my behavior had I known about the destructive effects of my enviroment, but at least I would have been informed and had the opportunity. I had a vaugue feeling that this atmosphere of continual PRESS can’t be good for me over the long haul, but it wasn’t until I was on the outside that I saw clearly just how destrucutive it was. You’d think that gaining 70 lbs over 6.5 years would have been the wake up call all by itself, but I’m a stubborn one! I urge you not to be as hardheaded as I was and to manage your sleep and your stress levels in such a way that you are set up to win over the long haul ~ not solely driven for the immediate results, no matter what.

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