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Posted by Amy Hale on July 21, 2011 at 10:56 am
As many of you might know, I’ve been diving into research regarding food and health. There are so many books and methods out there that make claims that “this” way of eating will definitely work because it’s backed by such and such an agency. We then find that another books makes an opposite claim with similar medical backings. Obviously health and weight maintenance is about what foods we eat, how much food we eat and moving our bodies. Those are the keys. Or are they?
As I research more about our healthier foods and why they are so important to our health, I keep coming across a particular company who is making bad news all over the world. Monsanto. Have you heard of them? With so much information (including opinions) out there, it amazes me that more people haven’t and yet most of us have heard of their products.
Monsanto manufactures chemicals – many of which harm people and the environment. Those chemicals which several have been banned years ago, still show up in our soils, in our bodies and in our DNA.
Monsanto has given us DDT, Agent Orange, PCBs, Saccharin and Aspartame and more. They initially claimed that all of these chemicals were safe to humans and the environment. Today we still frequently come in contact with Saccharin, Apartame, (Nutrasweet) through the foods we eat. They are also illegally enforcing Genetically Engineered foods to us and many people are finding that they are getting very sick from it.
I’m focusing on Nutrasweet today because so many people are “hooked on it.” It can be found in many products including some that children use such as diet soda, light yogurt, Flintstone Vitamins, baked goods, puddings, and Winterfresh gum.
So upon researching Nutrasweet further, I was stunned by the results I found. It has been known to cause headaches, nausea, vision problems, seizures and cancer in its users. Newer research is now finding that it also disturbs the endocrine system. This is the part of you that helps your body maintain a healthy weight. It seems that Aspartame doesn’t cause weight gain itself. What it is capable of is breaking down the chemicals in your body so that you gain weight and have a much harder time taking it off. It can also cause sleep disturbances which has also been linked to weight gain.
Why am I writing this? Because I want YOU to research what exactly you’re putting into your body, instead of blindly thinking everything is o.k. The awareness that this brings will help you make better decisions for the health of your family and yourself.
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Posted by Amy Hale on April 4, 2011 at 6:37 pm
Article by Kathy Freston/Huffington Post
In this series of interviews I’ve conducted with extraordinary nutritional researchers and medical doctors, I’ve sought to understand the link between diet and health. The common refrain is resoundingly clear in that a plant-based diet is both preventive and healing, whereas a diet high in animal protein is destructive to our health. And now it’s become abundantly evident that a high protein diet is not only making us sick, but it also makes us fat.
There is no one who has more peer reviewed research on the subject of weight loss and overall health than Dean Ornish, M.D. He has sparked a revolution in cardiology with his studies which show that heart disease can be reversed through comprehensive lifestyle changes. His current research is showing that those very changes also affect gene expression — that you can turn on or turn off genes that affect cancer, heart disease and longevity. He is the founder and President of the non-profit Preventive Medicine Research Institute and is a Clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. Here’s what he says about losing weight the healthy way, and keeping it off.
KF: It’s widely believed that people lose weight fastest on a high protein diet. True?
DO: Initially, they may lose more weight because they are losing water weight. But by the end the year, the weight usually returns. In general, slower weight loss by eating more healthfully is more sustainable. Slow but steady wins the race.
KF: Why do some people have such a hard time losing weight and keeping it off?
DO: It’s not enough to focus only on what we eat and other behaviors; we need to work at a deeper level. The real epidemic in our country is not only obesity but also depression, isolation, and loneliness. As one patient told me, “When I feel lonely and depressed, I eat a lot of fat. It fills the void. Fat coats my nerves and numbs the pain.” People often overeat when they’re feeling stressed, lonely, and depressed –”comfort foods.”
Everyone knows that diet and exercise play a role in how much we weigh, but many are surprised to learn what a powerful role emotional stress has in causing us to gain weight and how stress management techniques can help us to lose it and keep it off.
Chronic emotional stress causes us to gain weight in several important ways:
• Many people overeat to cope with feeling stressed, and they often tend to eat foods that are high in fat, salt and sugar as well.
• Chronic emotional stress stimulates your brain to release hormones that cause you to gain weight, especially around your belly where it’s most harmful and least attractive. Chronic stress also causes stimulation of hormones such as cytokines that promote inflammation. Also, obesity itself causes a low-grade inflammation which, in turn, tends to promote more obesity in a vicious cycle.
• Since chronic emotional stress promotes weight gain, stress management techniques may play a powerful role in helping you to lose weight and keep it off. The psychosocial, emotional and spiritual issues are as important to address if you want to lose weight and keep it off as the nutrition and exercise ones.
Most Americans eat too many refined carbohydrates. When they go on a typical high-protein diet, they reduce their intake of all carbohydrates, which for most Americans means they primarily reduce their intake of simple carbohydrates. This helps them to lose weight.
Whenever I debated Dr. Atkins before he died, he was usually described as the “low carb” doctor and I was the “low fat” doctor. But that was never accurate. I have always advocated that an optimal diet is lower in total fat, very low in “bad fats” (saturated fat, hydrogenated fats, and trans fatty acids), high in “good carbs” (fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, and soy products), low in “bad carbs” (sugar, white flour, processed foods) and with enough of the “good fats” (omega 3 fatty acids) and high-quality proteins.
There are clear benefits to reducing the intake of refined carbohydrates, especially in people who are sensitive to them. The solution is not to go from refined carbohydrates like pasta to pork rinds and from sugar to sausage, but to substitute refined bad carbs with unrefined good carbs.
KF: Tell me more about a good carb vs a bad carb.
DO: Good carbs are whole foods. These include fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and soy products in their natural, unrefined, unprocessed forms.
Because these good carbs are unrefined, they are naturally high in fiber as well. The fiber fills you up before you eat too much. For example, it’s hard to get too many calories from eating apples or whole grains, because apples are naturally low in calories and high in fiber, which causes you to feel full before you consume too many calories.
Also, the fiber in good carbs causes your food to be digested and absorbed into your bloodstream more slowly. This helps to regulate your blood sugar into a normal range without getting too high or too low.
For example, when whole wheat flour is processed into white flour, or brown rice into white rice, the fiber and bran are removed. This turns a “good carb” into a “bad carb.”
Why? Because when the fiber and bran are removed, you get a quadruple-whammy:
• You can eat large amounts of “bad carbs” without getting full. Fiber fills you up before you consume too many calories. Removing fiber allows you to consume virtually unlimited amounts of sugar without causing you to feel like you’re full.
• When you eat a lot of “bad carbs,” they get absorbed quickly, causing your blood sugar to rise too rapidly. When your blood sugar gets too high, your pancreas secretes insulin to bring it back down. However, it may go down below where it started, causing low blood sugar (hypoglycemia). By analogy, when you pull a pendulum to one side and let it go, it doesn’t stop at the mid-point; it continues an equal distance to the other side.
When your blood sugar gets too low, you feel tired, lethargic and a little crabby. There’s a good temporary fix for those bad feelings–more bad carbs! This creates a craving for more “bad carbs” to raise your blood sugar in a vicious cycle.
• When your body secretes too much insulin, it accelerates the conversion of calories into triglycerides, which is how your body stores fat. Thus, when you eat a lot of “bad carbs,” you consume an excessive number of calories that don’t fill you up, and you’re more likely to convert these extra calories to body fat. Insulin may also cause your body to produce more of an enzyme called lipoprotein lipase, which increases the uptake of fat into cells, leading to weight gain.
• When your body secretes too much insulin, it may lead to insulin resistance and even diabetes. Insulin binds to what are called insulin receptors on your cells. When your body makes repeated surges of insulin in response to too many “bad carbs,” the receptors become less sensitive–a little like Aesop’s fable of the boy who cried wolf–as if the insulin receptors were saying, “Oh, not more insulin again, just ignore it.” Like a heroin addict who requires more and more of the drug to get the same feeling, insulin resistance causes your body to make more and more insulin just to maintain the same effect on your blood sugar. Over time, this may lead to type 2 diabetes. Too much insulin also enhances the growth and proliferation of arterial smooth muscle cells, promoting atherosclerosis and clogging your arteries.
This doesn’t mean you should never eat bad carbs. I do, in moderation. When I eat bad carbs, I try to consume them along with good carbs and other high-fiber foods. That way, the fiber in the good carbs will also slow the absorption of the bad carbs.
KF: Does it make a difference if the protein in our diet is vegetarian or animal?
DO: Yes. To paraphrase Gertrude Stein, a calorie is a calorie is a calorie in its effects on weight but not on health. Interestingly, there have been a few “vegetarian Atkins diet” studies published recently, which is a little like putting lipstick on a pork rind…
KF: What’s the danger in a high animal protein diet? Is animal fat any different than vegetable fat (like oils or avocado)?
DO: Diets that are high in animal protein are usually high in saturated fat, which promotes both heart disease and cancer. A recent study reviewed by Dr. Steven A. Smith in The New England Journal of Medicine found that high-protein, low-carbohydrate diets accelerate atherosclerosis (blockage in arteries) through mechanisms other than traditional risk factors such as changes in cholesterol and triglycerides.
Fat (from any source) has nine calories per gram, whereas protein and carbohydrates have only four calories per gram. Thus, when you eat less fat, you consume fewer calories even if you eat the same amount of food–because the food is less dense in calories.
Also, too much protein, especially animal protein, puts a strain on your liver and kidneys and promotes osteoporosis. When your body excretes too much protein, it excretes too much calcium along with it. Too much animal protein, especially red meat, has been linked with significantly increased risks of heart disease, prostate cancer, breast cancer and colon cancer.
For example, a study published last year in the Archives of Internal Medicine reported the findings from a half-million people in the NIH-AARP study that consumption of red meat was significantly associated with increases in total mortality, cardiovascular mortality and cancer mortality.
Studies show that measures of cardiovascular disease rather than just risk factors show that people on average become worse on an Atkins diet. For example, a recent study published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association by Miller et al showed that flow-mediated vasodilation (a measure of heart disease), LDL-cholesterol and inflammation worsened on a high-animal-protein diet but improved significantly on a low-fat, whole foods, plant-based diet.
KF: How should one eat in order to lose weight?
DO: Mindfully. It’s not just what you eat, but also how you eat that matters. Have you ever eaten a bag of popcorn while watching an intense movie? All of your attention is focused on the movie–so you may look down and see that the bag of popcorn is empty. You got all the calories but little of the pleasure. In contrast, if you really pay attention to your food, savoring it as you would a fine wine, you have greatly enhanced pleasure with fewer calories. And pleasure is sustainable.
KF: What should be avoided?
DO: As described above, avoid refined carbohydrates, too much fat (especially trans fats which cause weight gain), and processed foods.
KF: Should we count calories? Fat grams? Carbs?
DO: In my experience, if you eat predominantly a whole foods, plant-based diet that is naturally high in fiber and low in fat and in refined carbohydrates, and if you eat it mindfully, you don’t have to count anything to lose weight. You feel full before you consume too many calories.
KF: What are some of the health concerns of being overweight?
DO: Being overweight significantly increases the risk of virtually every chronic disease. Some authorities have said that obesity is now overtaking smoking as the most preventable cause of premature death.
KF: How do you break through cravings for unhealthy food, because they really do have a hold on most of us!?
DO: As you begin to eat more healthfully, your taste preferences change. You begin to prefer foods that are more healthful. And you connect the dots between what you eat and how you feel. Because these mechanisms are so dynamic, most people find that the feel so much better, so quickly, it reframes the reason for changing from living longer to feeling better. And feeling better is sustainable; risk factor modification is not.
KF: What is a reasonable rate of weight loss?
DO: In most cases, no more than three pounds/week.
KF: What if we want to lose weight faster; is there a healthy way to do it?
DO: Do more exercise and meditation and eat smaller amounts of healthy foods and less salt. Regular exercise not only burns calories, it also raises your basal metabolic rate, the number of calories you burn while at rest. Thus, exercise helps you lose weight even when you’re not exercising. Do some strength training as well as aerobic exercise. Walking a mile burns even more calories than running a mile. Exercise in ways that you enjoy, then you’re more likely to do it. If it’s fun, it’s sustainable.
KF: If someone is too busy to cook, and is in a big hurry, what is the best and most affordable approach?
DO: There are more and more healthy prepared and frozen meals on the market. Eat with your friends and take turns shopping and cooking–not only does it save time, but when you fill your heart with the love of friends and family in a shared meal, you have less need to overfill your belly.
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Posted by Amy Hale on March 14, 2011 at 6:40 pm
Now that I’ve got your attention, standing in front of the mirror naked is a good weight loss motivator. Recently Charles Barkley (former NBA player and now TNT analyst) said that he was motivated to lose weight because he looked at himself in the mirror and was horrified by what he saw. He mentioned he saw man boobs and that’s never a good thing for a man. So undress and stare at yourself in the mirror. Then suck your gut in and see what you could look like in a few months. This alone should be enough motivation to get you to start or continue your weight loss plan.
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Posted by Amy Hale on February 15, 2011 at 6:46 pm
Got milk? New research suggests you should if you want to lose weight. T
he study shows that calcium — three or four daily servings of low-fat dairy products — can help adjust your body’s fat-burning machinery.
The key is low-fat dairy sources, says lead author Hang Shi, a postdoctoral student in the Nutrition Institute at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. “High-fat dietary calcium can establish obesity, but it’s surprising that low-fat calcium may help reduce body fat,” says Shi. “The effect is very significant, much more than we imagined it would be.”
“The magnitude of the findings was shocking,” says Michael Zemel, PhD, director of the Nutrition Institute, who is Shi’s co-author.
In their past studies, Zemel and colleagues have shown that calcium stored in fat cells plays a crucial role in regulating how fat is stored and broken down by the body. It’s thought that the more calcium there is in a fat cell, the more fat it will burn.
“Calcium is no magic bullet. What researchers are finding … higher-calcium diets favor burning rather than storing fat. Calcium changes the efficiency of weight loss,” Zemel tells us.
The human body’s metabolism makes weight loss difficult, he explains. “Many people who stick to a calorie-reduced diet don’t lose weight as fast as they think they should. That’s because they activate metabolic protection … Their bodies sense starvation and hang on to energy — fat — more voraciously.”
Too many dieters tend to immediately “jettison dairy foods from their diet, because they’re just sure they’re going to make them fat. In fact, they’re shooting themselves in the foot, because they subject themselves to more empty-calorie sources. They would be better off if they would substitute high-fat dairy products with low-fat dairy,” says Zemel.
Keeping in mind that the mouse study is preliminary, it is very well done and shows promise, Pamela Meyers, PhD, a clinical nutritionist and assistant professor at Kennesaw State University near Atlanta. “But the calcium amounts the study suggests are effectively equal to what the USDA already recommends as a minimum for adults,” she adds.
While nonfat dry milk was used in this study, few people buy that product, says Meyers. “Also, there are people who are lactose intolerant who can’t consume dairy products. That’s why we need to look at other food sources of calcium, [such as] … dark leafy vegetables, salmon, mackerel, almonds, and oats. … They also are very high in fiber, which helps in terms of weight management.”
If using calcium supplements, it’s important to choose those with added vitamin D, zinc, and magnesium, which help the body to better absorb calcium, says Meyers.
Keeping in mind that the mouse study is preliminary, it is very well done and shows promise, Pamela Meyers, PhD, a clinical nutritionist and assistant professor at Kennesaw State University near Atlanta. “But the calcium amounts the study suggests are effectively equal to what the USDA already recommends as a minimum for adults,” she adds.
While nonfat dry milk was used in this study, few people buy that product, says Meyers. “Also, there are people who are lactose intolerant who can’t consume dairy products. That’s why we need to look at other food sources of calcium, [such as] … dark leafy vegetables, salmon, mackerel, almonds, and oats. … They also are very high in fiber, which helps in terms of weight management.”
If using calcium supplements, it’s important to choose those with added vitamin D, zinc, and magnesium, which help the body to better absorb calcium, says Meyers.
Guest author: Jeanie Lerche Davis
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Posted by Amy Hale on January 13, 2011 at 6:44 pm
Here’s a sensible post from Lisa Lillien aka: Hungry Girl.
Happy New Year! I think a LOT of people have this experience. They start the year excited about their resolutions, and then they get bored/frustrated/etc. and give up. The good news is that you’ve identified your pattern early this year, so you can make changes from the get-go. Here are some tips to help you out…
1. Set mini goals. If you just set out to lose double-digit pounds by the year’s end, it’s easy to a) not appreciate and give yourself credit for the little milestones or b) tell yourself you’ve got plenty of time and slack off. Obviously, neither of these is a good thing. So set a small target — like dropping 5 pounds by the end of February. This way, you’ll keep yourself accountable and have a very realistic goal.
2. Don’t get stuck in a food rut. If you really want to stick to an eating plan that’ll help you lose weight and keep it off, don’t be too rigid with your choices. Fill your diet with a VARIETY of foods so you don’t get bored. (Pssst… Keep reading your HG emails for new recipes and food finds!)
3. Have fun with exercise. If you fork over cash for a gym membership every year only to remember that you hate the treadmill and weight lifting, don’t do it! Find ways to burn calories that are fun for you. Jump rope, go rock climbing, dance around your living room to bad ’80s music… whatever! And definitely don’t take on an exercise routine that causes pain or discomfort — you’ll end up ditching it completely (which is what I did for SO many years).
4. Let yourself “cheat” a little… and don’t feel bad about it. Everyone strays once in a while. That’s life. So splurge when you need to, and enjoy it. Don’t feel guilty; live a little! Then just get right back on track.
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Posted by Amy Hale on December 18, 2010 at 6:47 pm
In this piece, Kripalu Yoga teacher Lisa Groshong shares how the simple and compassionate act of paying attention eventually allowed her to shed pounds—and feelings—she’d carried with her for years.
Practicing yoga helped me learn how to feel. Learning to feel helped me lose more than 50 pounds.
I have spent much of my life in my head, which I always thought was a safe place to hide. Along with my practice in thinking and analyzing, I’ve had plenty of practice in feeling bad about being fat. I’ve known all about the frustration of trying to button a waistband around a thick middle, of sitting on my hands so I wouldn’t grab an extra slice of pizza, of hoping the stranger sitting next to me on the airplane wouldn’t notice my butt crowding against the armrest.
I remember being horrified when, against my protests, a tiny little yoga teacher insisted on hoisting me into a handstand I was not strong enough to maintain. As she struggled to hold my flailing tree-trunk legs aloft, the baggy T-shirt I had worn as camouflage fell down over my head, exposing rolls of fat to the entire class.
Even though I knew plenty about my emotional body and the rollercoaster ride that feelings can be, I had no idea how to inhabit my physical body. Considering the body I lived in, it’s no surprise that I’d choose my mind over my body. But yoga helped me change that.
I became a yoga teacher by accident, after a friend called me to fill in when the leader of the class in her church auditorium quit. I called upon what I had learned during Kripalu’s Volunteer Program to cobble together a session. I discovered in that first class that I loved teaching—so much that I attended Kripalu Yoga Teacher Training soon afterward, soldiering through the nagging feeling that someone as obviously lacking in willpower and physical aptitude as myself had no right to become a yoga teacher.
When I moved back to my Missouri hometown, I started teaching a class at the recreation center and slowly built a community of dedicated students. I think my size helped put my yoga-phobic students at ease. Maybe they thought I was less likely to criticize them, that my acceptance and approval in my classes was wide and all-inclusive, that I wasn’t going to ask them to tie their legs in a knot.
My size gave me empathy for my students, mostly beginners, mostly stiff, some old, some overweight. Like them, I struggled. While I could now touch my toes, I still understood exactly how difficult the physical practice of yoga could be.
I wanted my students to feel confident in their postures, so I worked hard to explain alignment and help them key into sensations they could expect to feel. Of course, this meant I had to know what to tell them. While leading postures, I began to look inside to find sensations and ways to articulate them. I invited my students to focus on the physical feelings in their feet as we spread our toes wide in Tadasana. As I talked my students through Spinal Twist, I’d notice my own rib cage, the tendons stretching under my armpit, the elasticity of the skin around my neck.
Teaching several classes a week was a huge leap from my personal practice, which, to be honest, had always been a little flimsy. As a teacher, I was doing enough yoga to see the incremental loosening that comes from practicing every day.
When I became able to flatten my palms on the floor in a standing forward fold, I felt proud, and that I had proven my ability to register success, however small, in yoga. Small successes in my practice helped me soften towards myself, helped me believe that even though my body was still, in my opinion, profoundly flawed, I could still be a yogi and a competent, maybe even gifted, yoga teacher. Having spent my life as a gawky, clumsy, unathletic person, this internal shift was no small feat.
I began to understand and accept the responsibility I had to myself and my students to embody the principles of Kripalu Yoga: recognizing that each of our bodies is different from every other and has its own unique needs, limitations, and strengths; that the physical practice of yoga is in the service of self-transformation; and that what we practice on the mat can go with us into our daily lives.
As a result, I was able to simply observe, becoming more aware of the way my belly squished and got in my way during forward bends, and my thick thighs kept my toes from tucking behind my calf in Eagle. But my legs were getting stronger in Warriors, and my arms had stopped wobbling in One-Armed Plank. For moments at a time, I could simply observe myself without placing qualitative judgment on what I was doing or how I was doing it. Without realizing it, I had begun to practice the asana of self-compassion.
Empowered by my yoga practice, I embarked on my first true diet, the kind with no white bread, no sweets, nothing fried. As I shed pounds, I also shed the harmful ways in which I saw my body. Accepting myself was an asana I had to practice all day long—and it was a lot more tricky than that handstand had been.
Instead of seeing myself as a hulking monstrosity, I began to appreciate the joys my body had to offer. I allowed myself to indulge in the pleasures of a deep stretch, which I discovered can be just as delicious as a spoonful of Ben & Jerry’s. I signed up for swimming lessons and learned that once I stopped swallowing water, I loved the blue serenity of the pool and the rush that came from swimming lap after lap. I gave the elliptical machines outside the yoga studio a whirl and found a deep sense of satisfaction when sweat poured down my arms and legs.
The next step in learning to feel was learning how to taste food. I remember as a girl standing before a glass bakery cabinet and the woman at the counter handing me my favorite: a powdered-sugar-dusted cream horn, a crispy pastry I couldn’t wait to devour.
On my new journey toward being more present in my body, the cream horns I had always loved had taken on the flavor of the Styrofoam and plastic wrap they came packaged in. The filling had gotten gummy. The pastry shells had gone soggy. I didn’t let this stop me right away from eating them, even well into my diet. But one day as I chewed the plastic-flavored treat, I realized that it just wasn’t worth eating. Like I had let myself feel yoga postures, I let myself feel that lardy paste on my tongue and realized it’s silly to eat things I don’t enjoy when the world is full of tastes and sensations I love.
A lesson from Kripalu’s Volunteer Program kept bubbling into my mind. A leader had invited us to revisit a painful childhood memory and watch the feelings that arose. I remember being terrified to invite agony in, and gripping my cushion as waves of pain crashed over me. Then, amazingly, the sensation ebbed until I was left feeling like smooth sea glass, made more beautiful by the crashing waves. I held on to the belief that no feeling could crush me as I bumbled along on my journey towards self-acceptance. But to blossom into myself, I had to take risks that terrified me.
When I set a goal of jogging a 5K race, I could barely force myself to look at the salesman who sold me my first pair of running shoes. Sitting on the bench with my 35-year-old foot in his hands, I felt like my chunky 12-year-old self, sulking on a bench wishing I was one of the sporty girls on the soccer team. But I stayed put and endured the fear, and the man sold me the shoes that I had every right to buy. I ran and finished the 5K and was so inspired that I signed up for a half marathon to take place a few months later.
I stood in a crowd at the starting line, again churning with anxiety and hoping nobody could read the invisible sign hovering over me that blared “fraud!” This time, I looked around and saw my fear mirrored in so many faces—the fear melted into compassion and love, for myself and the other grown-up fat girls bravely claiming their adult bodies.
Two hours and twenty minutes later I wasn’t wearing a sign that said “fraud” but an actual medal engraved “finisher.” As the medal rested against my sternum, I cherished the buoyant, triumphant feeling.
I have lost and kept off more than 50 pounds in the past several years. But more importantly, I found a way to refresh my feeling of strength and triumph, a way to shake myself from my head back down into this delicious, powerful body: a good asana always does the trick. 
Lisa Groshong lives, writes, and teaches yoga in Columbia, Missouri. She spent four months as a volunteer at Kripalu in 1996, working in the Maintenance and Grounds Department. In 2000, she returned for the Kripalu Yoga Teacher Training. © Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health. All rights reserved. Originally published in the July 2007 issue of Kripalu Online.
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