7 Dimensions of Wellness

7 Dimensions of Wellness
7 Dimensions of Wellness

Monday, December 29, 2008

Meatless Monday: Mexican Bake















Makes 5 servings (2 tortillas per serving)

A festive breakfast that will perk you right up even if you overindulged a bit the night before. Quick and easy to prepare, in a microwave (as described here) or in a conventional oven.

1-1/2 cups frozen hash browns, thawed
1/2 cup onions, chopped
1 cup egg whites, slightly beaten
1/4 cup skim milk
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
10 veggie sausage links, thawed
10 fat-free flour tortillas
1/2 cup picante sauce

In a 2-quart glass dish, combine hash browns, and onions. Cover and microwave on high for six minutes, or until onions are tender, stirring once during cooking time.

In a mixing bowl, combine egg whites, milk, salt, and black pepper. Mix well. Pour over hash browns. Cover and microwave on high for four minutes or until just about set, stirring once during cooking time. Arrange links in center of each tortilla.

Spoon 1/3-cup egg white mixture over links. Roll up with filling inside. Place rolled tortilla seam-side-down in a glass dish. Cover and microwave on high for three and half minutes, rotating dish once during cooking time. Let stand three minutes before serving. Spoon a little picante sauce over each tortilla just before serving.

Nutrition Facts
380 Calories per Serving, Total Fat 3.5g, Saturated Fat 0g, Cholesterol 0mg, Sodium 870mg, Carbohydrate 62g, Fiber 5g, Protein 25g

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Positive Thought For the Week

Is it Faith or is it Safe?

I have a confession to make. I am by nature a very cautious person. As a child I am the one who would take the least amount of risk and I tried my best to do the right thing. In a lot of ways, I’m still that girl. Now some one might be saying what’s wrong with that? The answer would be nothing as long as your definition of safe is not greater than your faith in God. One of the foundation principles of my belief is that faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen. The irony of that is in order to truly apply this principle to my life I have to constantly battle against my nature. Because there is nothing in the natural that is safe about hoping and believing in something you can not see, or that you have no evidence it will work.

When I look back over some of the choices I have made in say the last three – five years, I can see how some of them have been based not on my faith in what God can do but how safe those decisions were for me. How do you know when you are operating out of safe verse faith? If your answer to any of these questions more often than not are yes then may be you have a safe walk verses a faith walk.
- When you are willing to help only to degree it doesn’t cause you any emotional discomfort and will not alter the cocoon you are living in.
- When you have calculated the risk and you have decided that the degree you are willing to help is limited to what you can define as safe through your natural eye.
- When you won’t seek God for further instruction for fear he will ask more of you then you are comfortable with giving.
- When you have done just enough to keep up the appearance of being a person of faith to the world but in your heart you knew you were not doing enough to be a person who truly walks out his or her faith.

Every one’s safe place is different. For me safe has become I will help you as long as I don’t have to take any emotional risk. You see I have been hurt by a couple of folks in the past and although you can not see the scars on the outside there are still some places I believe that are very tender on the inside. To be honest, for all I know those once tender place may have healed, but I will not let any one close enough to touch those places to find out.

This has been a very interesting year for me. Through Christ I have come to this realization I have been loved by more people than I have been hurt when I walk in faith. When I have operated in faith rather than playing it safe in the natural I have had more successes than I have failures. Through faith rather than safe I have been blessed in ways I could not comprehend with my natural eye. That my definition of safe in the natural did not always safe guard me from emotional challenges, disappointments or sadness. I confess I still have some hurdles but at least now I can see by faith the finish line and it’s a lot closer than what it use to be.

Have a blessed.
YMA

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Reflection Room at cwuwonline.org

CWUW has added a "Reflection Room" for your enjoyment on its organizational website.

The page features music and poetry from local artist and can feature your music, poems, and journal entries as well.

If you're interested in having your work in the Reflection Room, send us an mp3 of your work, permission to post the work, and a statement about your work.

We embrace the therapeutic importance of journaling and any creative outlet.

Visit the CWUW website today!

Monday, December 8, 2008

Meatless Mondays: Dijon-Lime Shrimp









Makes 4 servings


It may remind you a bit of cerviche, but this easy, make-ahead shrimp salad is cooked and seasoned with mustard and capers.


1 medium sweet onion, thinly sliced into rings

1/2 cup fresh lime juice, lime rind as garnish

2 tablespoons capers

2 tablespoons Dijon mustard

1/2 teaspoon hot sauce1 cup water

1/2 cup white wine vinegar

3 whole cloves

1 bay leaf

1 pound small shrimp, peeled and deveined

Combine onion, lime juice, capers, mustard, and hot sauce in a wide but shallow serving bowl.

Bring the water, vinegar, cloves and bay leaf to a boil in a large saucepan then add the shrimp.

Cook for one minute, stirring constantly, then drain. Discard the cloves and bay leaf.

Add the shrimp to the onion mixture. Stir to combine, then cover and refrigerate until ready to serve.

Garnish with a twist of lime rind. Serve with water crackers or on Melba toast.


Nutrition Information per Serving:Calories 105, Total Fat 1g, Cholesterol 175mg, Sodium 380mg, Protein 19g, Carbohydrates 19g, Fiber 0g

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Positive Thought For The Week

One of the benefits of time is that it can give you perspective. We must all learn it's not only all right to place a value on yourself, but it's key to a healthy balanced life. If you don't acknowledge your worth, then who will? This season as you go about getting gifts for others don't forget to put something under the tree for your self. My positive thought for the week is this simple poem.

ME
I'm not the place you stop at on your way through.

I'm not the place you visit because you have nothing else better to do.

I'm not the place you check into while you are trying to decide is this some place you might want to reside.

I will not be a rest stop in your life while you are on your way to your final destination.

If I am your destiny, I will be the place you have searched for all your life.

The place you want to be most.

And if you had to choose a hundred times over, every time the choice would still be me.

For I am what you have searched for.

I am me.

Have a blessed. YMA

Monday, December 1, 2008

World AIDS Day 2008



Info from AIDS.gov


HIV can be found in body fluids, including:
*blood
*semen
*vaginal fluids
*breast milk
*some body fluids sometimes handled by healthcare workers (fluids surrounding the brain and spinal cord, bone joints, and around an unborn baby)




HIV is passed from one person to another by:
*having sex (vaginal, anal, or oral) with a person who has HIV
*sharing needles with a drug user who has HIV
*during pregnancy, birth, or breast-feeding if a mother has HIV
*getting a blood transfusion from a person with HIV



Abstaining from (not having) sex is the most effective way to prevent HIV transmission.


There are several ways to protect yourself or to prevent transmitting HIV during vaginal, oral, or anal sex if you choose to have sex:


*Get tested for HIV and know the HIV status of yourself and your partner
*Be faithful to your sexual partner
*Use condoms or other latex barriers during vaginal, oral, and anal sex, and never reuse condoms or latex barriers
*HIV cannot be transmitted by casual contact. Here are the facts:
*You cannot get HIV from shaking hands or hugging a person with HIV/AIDS
*You cannot get HIV from using a public telephone, drinking fountain, restroom, swimming pool, Jacuzzi, or hot tub
*You cannot get HIV from sharing a drink
*You cannot get HIV from being coughed or sneezed on by a person with HIV/AIDS
*You cannot get HIV from giving blood
*You cannot get HIV from a mosquito bite
*Transmission of HIV while getting a tattoo or through a body piercing is possible, but it can be prevented through:
*Single-use instruments intended to penetrate the skin being used only once, then disposed of
*Reusable instruments or devices that penetrate the skin and/or contact a client's blood should be thoroughly cleaned and sterilized between clients according to medical guidelines.


These guidelines are the same as those practiced within any medical facility where there is a risk of instruments coming into contact with blood.



The Skinny on Sugars and Sweeteners




(Forbes) When cutting calories from their diet, especially during the holiday season, conscientious eaters often start by eliminating sugar. But adding honey to tea or substituting "raw" sugar for white won't make a difference. A teaspoon of table sugar has 14 calories, no matter its color, as does honey, molasses and other "natural" sweeteners.


And artificial and plant-based sweeteners may pose additional health risks, as they've been linked to cancer and other serious health problems in previous animal studies. Packets of plant-derived Stevia, sold in health food stores as a dietary supplement, aren't even approved by the Food and Drug Administration for sale as a food additive. High fructose corn syrup, an artificial sweetener used in products like soda and ice cream, has been increasingly blamed for rising levels of diabetes and obesity.


All the caveats have left consumers confused about sugar, and it's frequently difficult to find straightforward answers. That's partly due to the controversy surrounding sugar consumption, and while scientific research is still inconclusive on many of these questions, there are some very basic guidelines that consumers can follow to stay healthy.


Souring On Sugar
In the past few years, sugars have been blamed for worsening rates of diabetes and obesity, and companies in the business of sweetening the American diet have countered.


The Corn Refiners Association, an industry group, recently launched an advertising campaign extolling the virtues of high fructose corn syrup. Some beverage and food companies have scrambled to swap high fructose corn syrup for cane sugar and other natural sweeteners. And this year, food manufacturers launched "all-natural" zero-calorie sweeteners extracted from the stevia plant.


These companies are trying to capture market share even as sugar consumption becomes a public health concern, and billions of dollars are at stake. In 2007, total retail sales of sugar and sweeteners reached $3.1 billion, according to an estimate by the market research company Packaged Facts.


Consumers, though they spend consistently, are often overwhelmed with conflicting information about sugar and sweetener consumption, including warnings about calories, cancer and weight gain.


Myths and Misperceptions
One popular misperception is that unprocessed sugar is healthier than processed versions.
"When it comes to sugar and cane sugar and any other word they're using, sugar is sugar," says Amy Virus, a registered dietitian at Temple University's Center for Obesity Research and Education. Virus is referring to the caloric content of not only table sugar, but also honey, molasses, cane sugar and even high fructose corn syrup, which is derived through a chemical process from corn starch. All of these sweeteners have the same number of calories in one teaspoon.


Persuasive marketers using phrases like "all natural" have helped make products with high sugar and fructose levels appealing, says Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit advocacy organization.
"Marketers know that people will pay a little extra for that all natural product," he says. "It's totally dishonest of companies to brag about not having high fructose corn syrup when they contain sugar."


Both Jacobson and Virus say that what matters most is quantity. Americans now eat less table sugar than they did in 1970, but the advent of corn syrup as an additive in everything from ice cream to ketchup means we consume more sugars than ever before. In 2007, Americans consumed 44 pounds of refined cane and beet sugar and 40 pounds of high fructose corn syrup per capita.


The simultaneous increase of diabetes and obesity has not escaped the attention of public health experts and scientists, but scientific research has yet to provide conclusive evidence that sucrose and fructose, found in table sugar and corn syrup, respectively, are directly responsible for the trend.


Dr. Peter Havel, a professor in the departments of molecular biosciences and nutrition at University of California, Davis, has studied the impact of fructose intake and found that it increases some markers that are considered risk factors for cardiovascular disease and diabetes in overweight and obese patients.


Alternatives to Sugar
Mr. Elizabeth Parks, an associate professor at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and in the Center for Human Nutrition, has also studied the role of fructose and found that the body often turns excess quantities of fructose into fat.


But Parks is hesitant to draw any conclusions about fructose's links to obesity.
"It appears to me that it's too many calories of everything," she says. Parks recommends satisfying sweet-tooth cravings with something healthier than a sugary drink or soda, which can have more than the day's calorie allowance. She also warns against demonizing fructose, a natural sugar found in fruit and which is healthy in small doses.


For those who cannot give up sodas and sweets, there are several artificial and natural zero-calorie sweeteners available. The FDA has approved five artificial sweeteners for use in the U.S., including saccharin, aspartame and sucralose. However, they are not without medical caveats; some scientific studies using animals have raised questions about aspartame and saccharine and links to cancer.


Stevia, a South American plant whose extract is up to 300 times sweeter than sugar, has become a popular calorie-free alternative and is sold as a dietary supplement in health food stores. The FDA has yet to approve it, or newly launched versions of it, for sale in food products and previous animal studies have demonstrated a link between stevia and genetic mutations and diminished fertility. More recent studies sponsored by Coca Cola and food manufacturer Cargill have deemed it safe for human consumption. Cargill currently sells a zero-calorie, stevia-based tabletop sweetener named Truvia in grocery stores.


Elizabeth Parks sympathizes with consumers who struggle to stay abreast of the current research and make educated decisions about sugars and sweeteners and their health, but says shifting opinion is part of the scientific process.


"[Consumers] shouldn't be surprised that they might get one advice this year and then that advice is refined," she says. "We're getting better at understanding how the intricacies of the diet may affect [people]."

Few Resources

CWUW wants to keep you updated on some resources and data that supports healthy living.

Check out the links below!


Women and Heart Disease: An Atlas of Racial and Ethnic Disparities in MortalitySecond Edition


Breaking Cultural Barriers
Cervical Cancer in Asian American and Pacific Islander Women


Guiding Principles of Diabetes Care