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Overcome
Driving Phobias, Stress & Rage
with the Survival Kit: New DVD,
CD's & more!
by "The Driving Therapist"
Kit links: Secure Survival Kit order form
For new brochure & tell me about your driving
problems.
I listen, I care and I'm here to help you.
email
me:sycohn@ca.rr.com
I make "house calls" or to join the Drivers
Support Group, ask me how.
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To try at all is to risk failure.
But to risk we must,
Because the greatest hazard in life is to risk nothing.
The man, the women, who risk nothing,
has nothing, is not living well.
-Anonymous
Some active
ingredients
Include: Cicuta virosa 4X; Ignatia 4X;
Staphysagria
4X; Asfoetida 3X; Corydalis for-mosa 3X;
Sumbulus moschatus 3X; Olei gaultheria
procubens
4X; Valeriana officinalis 3X, Hyoscyamus
3X; and Avena sativa 1X.
Putting the natural
alternative
to the test.
Who says
'natural"
remedies can't reach the effectiveness of drug therapies? One
anti-anxiety
homeopathic formulation was put to the test in
a one-month long, randomized trial involving 30
women suffering from anxiety. Half of the women
were given the anti-anxiety homeopathic remedy daily and the other half
took a daily dose of 2 mg of the common pharmaceutical diazepam,
Valium.
The homeopathic treatment was found to be as effective as diazepam In
relieving
anxiety, phobia, and emotional
instability.
Other symptoms, such as hot flashes, rapid heartbeat, shortness of
breath,
intestinal problems, and dizziness, also
improved with the use of homeopathic remedies.
Hilly, B. 'Random Trial of [homeopathic remedy) with Diazepam In Cases
of Nervous
Depression," Center for Therapeutic Research
and Documentation, Paris, France, January, 1985.
Lock, Andrew, G.P. The Family Guide to
Homeopathy.-
Symptoms and Natural Solutions.
New York: ice Hall Press, 1989, p. I I 1.
More than half of all visits to health care professionals are the consequence of stress-related disorders. This new 6-hour seminar for health professionals describes how stress translates into bodily symptoms and effective treatments. The topics include:
Listening to the Body:
The Stress Experience: understanding somatic symptoms:
headaches,
pain around neck, shoulders, lower back, chest, GI tract, immune
suppression,
insomnia and chronic fatigue. Identify your stress profile.
The Many Faces of Stress: consequences of acute versus
chronic
stress: the deadly tradeoff- introduction to the mechanisms underlying
musculoskeletal, fight-or-flight and psycho immunological symptoms.
Managing Musculoskeletal Symptoms:
How muscles respond to stress: the "armoring effect in
response to real and imagined threats.
Muscle Contraction Headaches, TMJ, Shoulder and Neck aches: key
findings
and therapies.
Lower Backaches: psycho biological therapies; exercise and
endogenous
opioids, distraction
and the pain clinic.
Chronic Muscle Fatigue: fibromyalgia and its relation to
chronic
fatigue syndrome.
Managing Fight-or Flight Symptoms:
Hypertension: role of suppressed anger and other mental
states
in hypertension; therapies.
Cardiac Symptoms: personality, type A behavior, and symptoms;
test your hostility level; how stress can worsen coronary artery
disease;
responsivity of angina to placebo; programs that reverse CHD disease.
Migraine Headaches: etiology, pathophysiology; pharmacotherapy
and psychological management. ,
GI Symptoms: abdominal pain, irritable bowel syndrome, and
colitis;
psychological factors and treatments.
Stress, Related Appetite: stress hormones, hunger,
bulimia
and obesity: psychobiological
therapies.
Managing Psychoimmunological Symptoms:
Acute Immune Suppression: stress exposure and
susceptibility
to the common cold and flu.
Stress-related Autoimmunicy: allergies (e.g., asthma);
chronic
disorders (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis and lupus.)
Chronic Immune Suppression: chronic fatigue and cancer: psycho
social factors enhancing immunity.
Managing Emotions that Produce Stress-Related Symptoms:
Anxiety and Panic: autonomic reactivity,
palpitations, vascular symptoms, difficulty initiating sleep.
Post-traumatic Stress: life-long health risks following
trauma;
the healing power of confiding;
desensitization.
Anger: hypertension, type- 1, behavior, jaw
clenching,
and selected headaches.
Depression: somatic symptoms as a form of masked depression;
common physical and mental symptoms; cognitive distortions and
pharmacotherapies.
Bio-behavioral Approaches for Managing Stress-Related Symptoms:
Increasing Predictability and Control:
revealing hidden stressors; identifying one's core
values,
prioritizing activities, limiting exposure to stressful events while
increasing
exposure to healthy pleasures.
Focused Relaxation Training: gateways to muscle relaxation, paced
breathing,
focused visualization, meditation, suggestion and the placebo
effect;
learning to slow down, calm, relax and focus.
Somatic Therapies: aerobic and anaerobic approaches to mood
elevation, massage, and
therapeutic touch.
Cognitive Restructuring: Entering thoughts that trigger
stress (distorted beliefs self-talk, and
personal scripts): reframing, redefining, and revising;. beliefs; the
healing power of
optimism,
laughter, and love.
**************
from ENcourage Newsletter- Jan. 1998 email:encourage@aol.com
Control Your Breath, Control Your Life
by Howard Liebgold, M.D. "Dr. Fear" (visit
his website)
During my first phobia class, that eventually led to my cure, I found myself lying on my back being taught deep abdominal breathing. I thought, "One thousand dollars and they're teaching me to breathe-give me my money back! " Little did I know that deep, slow, and controlled cahnative breathing was one of the most effective tools you could utilize to reduce the frightening anxious symptoms produced by fearful adrenaline secretion. Readily available, controlled breathing rapidly counteracts the stimulating effects of anxiety produced adrenaline.
Multiple disciplines, cultures and religions have recognized the importance of breath control. For thousands of years, disciples have embraced multiple empirical approaches to breathing. Nasal breathing through one or both nostrils, pausing at inhalation or exhalation, breath holding, focusing on the passage of air, adding audible sounds or manum to process have all been suggested. Meditation, a mainstay of many Eastern philosophies and religions, focuses on postures and breathing in its universal quest for a quiet mind, a profound state of relaxation and peaceful calm.
Patients with anxiety frequently embrace a destructive style of breathing that fosters and exaggerates their discomforting symptoms. Chronic shallow, rapid hyperventilation characterizes anxious breathing. This changes the chemistry of blood so that the brain, inner ear and distant body parts receive less oxygen resulting in symptoms of detachment, unreality, dizziness, numbness and tingling of body parts, a feeling of faintness and pain in the chest from over breathing. Acute fear situations produce a massive outpouring of adrenaline which stimulates heart and breathing rates.
It is imperative that you invoke calmative breathing to counteract the respiratory changes created by acute or chronic hyperventilation. But what style should you adopt? Is there a correct way to maximize the calming effect of breath control? Despite the thousands of years of breathing history, we must turn to modem pulmonologists and sophisticated electronic equipment to define a preferred technique.
Two basic components of all effective calming breathing are slow and deep. Slowness is attained through nasal inhalation which narrows the intake inlet. Pausing, after inhalation, creates a momentary breath holding with full lungs, which tends to correct the chronic over breathing blood changes. All agree that diaphragmatic abdominal breathing produces maximal lung vital capacity. Constant practice of abdominal protrusion at inhalation guarantees correct mechanics. Exhalation which is felt to be an important calmative action is best done through pursed lips. That gives the precise slowing control and maximal bronchial dissension not possible when one exhales nasally. Pausing after exhalation is less desirable since the empty lungs create a hypoxic stimulus that increases sympathetic and adrenaline stimulation. So at the first sign of anxious symptoms, say, "Stop, take a slow, deep diaphragmatic inhalation through your nose, pause, count to four, and exhale slowly through pursed lips." Repeat as necessary. Control your breathing and control your life.
This copyrighted article from "More" Phobease Revisited by Howard Liebgold, M.D. is reprinted by permission. Dr. Liebgold (affectionately referred to as "Dr. Fear") is a recovered phobic of thirty-one years duration and shares his expertise through classes, wtitings, and speaking engagements. (visit his web site on the order page of my web site)
Slow Dance
Have you ever watched
kids
on a merry-go-round
Or listened to the rain slapping on the ground?
Ever followed a butterfly's erratic flight
Or gazed at the sun into the fading night?
You better slow down
Don't dance so fast
Time is short
The music won't last
Do you run
through
each day on the fly
When you ask "How are you?", do
you hear the reply?
When the day is done, do you lie in your bed
With the next hundred chores running through your head?
You'd better slow down
Don't dance so fast
Time is short
The music won't last
Ever told your child, we'll do it tomorrow
And in your haste, not see his sorrow?
Ever lost touch, let a good friendship die
'Cause
you never had time to call and say "Hi!"?
You'd better slow down
Don't dance so fast
Time is short
The music won't last.
When you run so fast to get somewhere,
You miss half the fun of getting there.
When you worry and hurry through you day,
It is like an unopened gift..thrown away.
Life is not a race.
Do take it slower.
Hear the music
Before the song is over
(Author Unknown)