Make the most of the season by following these simple guidelines
Website Editor • October 3, 2024
The new season is a great reason to make and keep resolutions. Whether it’s eating right or cleaning out the garage, here are some tips for making and keeping resolutions.
Make a list
Check the list regularly
Reward yourself
Think positively
Lists are great ways to stay on track. Write down some big things you want to accomplish and some smaller things, too.
Check the list regularly
Don’t forget to check in and see how you’re doing. Just because you don’t achieve the big goals right away doesn’t mean you’re not making progress.
Reward yourself
When you succeed in achieving a goal, be it a big one or a small one, make sure to pat yourself on the back.
Think positively
Positive thinking is a major factor in success. So instead of mulling over things that didn’t go quite right, remind yourself of things that did.
It’s National Endometriosis and Adenomyosis Awareness Month, so we should
take a moment to consider these conditions and how they are often
overlooked.
The common presentation for either condition usually includes very painful
menstrual cycles, but you can still have this condition without those
indicators. Many women are never diagnosed until they have difficulty
conceiving. “Silent” endometriosis, or a mild form, is usually just
accepted as normal menstrual pain and medicated or tolerated.
What then, is endometriosis?
Endometriosis is a medical condition in which the tissue that normally
lines the inside of the uterus grows outside of it. It can be found on
other pelvic organs, such as the ovaries, fallopian tubes, or the outer
surface of the uterus, and other parts of the pelvis.
This condition can cause pain, heavy periods, and fertility issues.
Most people are simply unaware of what a vitamin is and its physiological
importance.
A vitamin is the short form of the term “Vital Amine” which was coined
about the discoveries of organic compounds and proteins that contained
amine groups, which were deemed VITAL for metabolism and health.
What we think of today as vitamins are only a fraction of what was
discovered and what is intended by the term.
The term "vital amine" refers to a type of organic compound known as a
vitamin. Vitamins are essential nutrients that are required for the proper
functioning of our bodies. "Vital amine" described the earliest discovered
vitamins which were organic compounds containing an amine group.
Each year around this time people create unrealistic expectations for
themselves and then suffer from low self-esteem when they don’t pull it
off. It’s a negative reinforcement loop: creating unattainable goals and
then confirming your low self-worth when you fail.
Let’s just stop doing it, okay?
Learn to set a few reasonable expectations, and work on them every day.
Like, two or three things. Then, in a month or so, when you’re feeling good
about having made this small progress, add one more thing to your list and
build that new habit.
Small, simple steps over time lead to great success.
For those who aren’t keeping up, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled on a case
regarding the accidental destruction of embryos. Despite previous courts
dismissing the suit, the ASC ruled that cryopreserved embryos, (frozen
embryos that may never even receive a transfer into a gestational carrier),
are essentially children with the full rights of children who are walking
the earth.
Although many people jump to agree with this, a drastic fight for logical
reasoning is playing out now, in the courts and in the media. And the risk
is potentially the failure of IVF treatments as we know it.
In 1978 the US government issued a new visual image of how Americans should
eat, The Food Pyramid. A challenge to how most Americans were currently
eating, the new food pyramid emphasized eating 6-10 servings of grain-based
carbohydrate foods daily.
The new pyramid reduced salt and dietary fats to minimal levels and put
them at the very top. Americans were told to stop consuming fat and instead
fill their day with bread, cereals, popcorn, pasta, and all kinds of highly
refined carbohydrate products.
This is the beginning of the obesity epidemic we see today. Not only that,
but neurological disorders, brain diseases, hypertension, autoimmune
illness, hormonal imbalance, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and most other
epidemics we see today have skyrocketed since this incident.
When going to sit down with a fertility specialist for the first time, it’s
easy to get overwhelmed and forget to ask the questions you’ve been wanting
to. Here’s a quick list to help you prepare. Make notes that apply to you
and your partner and take it with you to help guide the discussion.
Feeling heard and understood from the origin of the relationship helps
build trust and respect, which prove to be vital to also feeling cared for
by your physician and clinic.
Informed patients are good at self-advocating, so plan to speak up when you
have the opportunity.
Time is your most precious asset. Spend it wisely.
If your biggest complaint is not enough time, then you probably need to
recalibrate your time management. Not to fit more in and master
multi-tasking, but rather to eliminate the time-wasting elements.
Scroll less. Watch less television. Declutter your house to eliminate time
spent on organization and storage. Stop shopping for items you don’t need
anyway. Stop researching.
Go make a snowman instead.
Your mind is your strongest muscle, train it well….
Sometimes fertility clinics will recommend that you follow a diet that is
intended to reduce inflammation in the body, but unless they give you
specifics you can go down a rabbit hole trying to decide which one will
produce the desired result but also suit your needs.
If your doctor recommends you try this approach, ask a few more questions
to understand their wishes. Be sure to understand the intended goals and
desired effect, which leads to improved decision-making and an increased
chance of sticking to the plan.
You might only have 30 or so days to prepare for the next cycle or
procedure, so rapid intervention might be the goal. You might have three
months and a doctor who wants you to focus on getting five to eight
servings of fresh fruit and vegetables each day. To achieve the desired
outcome you should aim to clarify as much detail as you can and make a
master list of goals.
If a certain amount of weight loss is desired, make a note of it. Find
other ways to monitor a reduction of inflammatory symptoms such as changes
in your physical body like joint pain, skin rash or headaches. Fill out a
toxicity or inflammation questionnaire before you begin and keep your
store. Take the test again after each month of dietary changes and track
your progress.
Here’s a quick exploration of the most common diets for reducing
inflammation.
Sometimes fertility clinics will recommend that you follow a diet that is
intended to reduce inflammation in the body, but unless they give you
specifics you can go down a rabbit hole trying to decide which one will
produce the desired result but also suit your needs.
If your doctor recommends you try this approach, ask a few more questions
to understand their wishes. Be sure to understand the intended goals and
desired effect, which leads to improved decision-making and an increased
chance of sticking to the plan.
You might only have 30 or so days to prepare for the next cycle or
procedure, so rapid intervention might be the goal. You might have three
months and a doctor who wants you to focus on getting five to eight
servings of fresh fruit and vegetables each day. To achieve the desired
outcome you should aim to clarify as much detail as you can and make a
master list of goals.
If a certain amount of weight loss is desired, make a note of it. Find
other ways to monitor a reduction of inflammatory symptoms such as changes
in your physical body like joint pain, skin rash or headaches. Fill out a
toxicity or inflammation questionnaire before you begin and keep your
store. Take the test again after each month of dietary changes and track
your progress.
Here’s a quick exploration of the most common diets for reducing
inflammation.
Am I the only person who love-hates the “New year, new you” schtick?
I love the promise of it, the romance of summing up where I am in life and
then creating a new landing page for the next year. I love taking time to
reflect on where I’ve come from and be proud of what I’ve accomplished. I
love creating new goals.
But I hate the fact that it creates a false narrative that it all must
begin RIGHT NOW. The suggestion that our timeline is arbitrary to the
calendar year. And I hate that most endeavors take longer than the time we
ourselves to achieve them and we quit before ever really getting anywhere.
I don’t like thinking of myself as the new me, like a pair of new shoes and
we just toss the old ones. Starting over with a clean slate feels good but
our old self informs our new self, so shouldn’t we carry it along?
Instead of new you, maybe focus on same you with new habits. Habits are
what we are all trying to change, really. We want to eat healthier, be
kinder, read more books or take over the internet. Whatever it is you want
to change it requires shifting your habits to get there.