Monday, December 31, 2012

A Holiday Tale: The Binge Bandit Versus The Control Freak


The Utah SWEAT Spot
A Blog for Sports & Wellness Therapy
POST #10
MONTH: December
WEEK: 2
TOPIC: Nutrition Spot

Spot of the Week:       A Holiday Tale: The Binge Bandit Versus The Control Freak

When I was a kid, well actually a young adult, I guess an adult… OK until about 3 years ago, I was a hoarder when it came to food. Those around me find it hard to believe given my shape, but in truth, it hasn’t been until this past year that I’ve grown into my natural way physically and mindfully. These patterns are things that I tend to reflect on as I close out yet another year (with half empty thoughts), and welcome a New Cycle (half full and then some!)

I met with a client not long ago who I hadn’t seen in months. We talk regularly and as his Coach, I’ve been building his training plan consistently for endurance sport, specifically triathlon, for a few years.  Not only has he made incredible gains as a seasoned short and long course triathlete, he has undergone a health make-over. I believe it started from finding joy doing sport- having fun, feeling success and seeing life change. With some nutrition guidance, his body shifted quickly. Like most recreational enthusiasts, he took time ‘off’ from his training plan and found his body composition bouncing right back to where he started. The older we get, the faster this tends to happen. After a few tough races dabbling into the next season, this man I’m calling ‘Ambo’ (sounds like Rambo), took a step back and honed in on nutrition. He gave over to a highly structured and medically facilitated program and WOW! Huge gains with not only weight loss, but education, awareness, and confidence- some critical keys to long-term success.

Ambo was not morbidly obese by any means. His energy can spread like wild fire- he expresses with conviction, half-full (vs half empty) nature, and he can turn a rainstorm into a rainbow.  I imagine him like an Amphetamine Boost (therefore his nick-name ‘AmBo’), medicinally going right to my blood stream, providing a motivating high. But he left feeling remorse, even with his success to where I could barely recognize him,  exposing common signs of internal battles we all face, especially this time of year.

The Sweat of the Matter by sharing AmBo’s story is that my recommend could be for your nutrition program to follow a strict diet in order to reach your goals, but I’m not. I do commend AmBo and the Program on his successes, and I look forward to seeing him move beyond performance goals again 2013 season. Instead, AmBo triggered memories of my hoarding days. When he left the office, we joked about him sounding like a ‘girl’ fretting over a few extra pounds gained since Thanksgiving. When he called me a few hours later, he was still kicking himself- rather his Control-Freak conscience had his Binge-Bandit in the line of fire. I’d like to share some personal experience, some professional advice and some progressive tips to gift you if facing your demons this holiday season.

In my little days, I remember running from the dinner table crying often, typically before I got to taking a bite. As I’m writing this I realize that I began to associate food with emotion very early. I grew up feeling like I had to fight for everything- love, attention, fun, food… I was a shy pea of a thing, a girl in tom-boy pants having three older brothers, in a very male-oriented household. And from a young age, I always had stuff stashed in my closet and school bag, just in case- not just one thing but lots of the same or a small variety. Food became my survival kit when I needed to feel so living and breathing without it within my control was like asthma without an inhaler. I resolved to my stores often as an athlete natural born and raised, aside from make-shift dinners in my room.

Strike a chord? If you’ve followed my blogs, you will likely see that I use writing as a tool. This Spot has revealed yet another layer of my onion, and when I find these joyful moments of awareness, I become lighter, faster, stronger from the inside out.

That’s my wish for each of you, especially Ambo, this holiday season, whether we are talking nutrition, work, love, etc.... Take time to:

1. FIND YOUR MEANS- what’s your tool to access your layers? We all have them being human, both tools and layers. First step is to face the fact that you might have some need to find them. Then take a fun journey spending time doing things that bring you great joy with the soul intention of accessing, for the greater good of you and all you touch.  Once you find your tool, build it into your schedule like a workout and start peeling away.

2. DOCUMENT WHAT YOU’RE LEARNING- in some way shape or form. This could be writing, taping yourself talk, or some cool techno gadget. It could be investing in a specialist that can support your journey, or it may be best to go with it and let the process unfold without order.

3. GO ALL IN- by prioritizing time, attitude, perhaps dollars, etc... I’ve found the half way process could leave you in a worse place battling the Bandit and the Freak. So, begin by  ‘feeling-full’ with the intention of reaching ‘empty’, and knowing you will then re-fill with only what you really need. This is one way of describing a ‘cleanse program’. A healthy one though!

And most important, if you’ve accessed a layer or even simply bought the onion and don’t know what to do with it next, I’m only a phone call away (see office contact on our website).

Into the New Year, I Wish You Well In Life & Sport!

Cari Junge
Nutrition & Therapy Director
Utah Sports and Wellness

Friday, December 28, 2012

“Dr. Cerami, why do I need to see you twice per week?!”


By Dr. Michael Cerami

The average patient comes into my office assuming we will provide medical care to fix their problem in basically the same way as their previous physicians have. It’s normal for all physicians to take a history, do some tests, come up with a diagnosis and then treat based on these findings. Where we get into trouble is mostly in the treatment side of this recipe.

Over the last 30 years traditional medical treatment has changed dramatically. I see a direct comparison to the way our culture eats today. We want it fast and cheap. 50% of all meals are eaten outside the home today with 1 in 5 breakfasts eaten at Macdonald’s.  As long as we have that “full” feeling, it doesn’t seem to matter to many Americans what they put in their stomach. The same holds true for pain relief. It doesn’t seem to matter what drug prescription was provided, as long as it provides relief.

Drug taking like food consumption is a personal choice. Do what you need to but don‘t assume that feeling full or being out of pain by taking medication are long term strategies for a healthy life. You can’t put a square peg in a round hole.

When I set out to correct a patient’s problem, I’m trying to find the cause or source of the symptom. This differs greatly from “treating the symptom”. Over the first 3-6 visits we expect to fix each of the below 5 “upstream” causes that contribute to the athlete’s pain and poor performance.
  • ·         Bio-mechanical misalignments
  • ·         Pronation
  • ·         Weak muscles
  • ·         Neuro-spinal distortion
  • ·         Inflammation

If we skip steps, we won’t solve the problem and the body will eventually crash again. As hard as I’ve tried over the past 27 years, I can’t get all of these things fixed in one or two visits. The good news is that I’ve reduced the time needed for initial correction by about 60% since I began practicing.

So, please be a little patient and give us a few weeks of 2 visits per week so we can “stack” the improvement and get a sustainable result. This way we can get to the core of your problem and have a better chance of not only permanently correcting some long standing distortions, but also keep you happy and healthy throughout the year.

As always I look forward to your comments.

Dr. Michael Cerami is a local Utah sports chiropractor who has been treating patients for over 25 years. He writes a weekly patient blog and monthly athlete article for community education on a wide variety of topics including treating sports injuries, nutrition, exercise, motivation and wellness. 

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Strengthen Your Core This Holiday Season


The Utah SWEAT Spot
A Blog for Sports & Wellness Therapy
POST #10
MONTH: December
WEEK: 1
TOPIC: Health Spot

Spot of the Week:      

Strengthen Your Core This Holiday Season                                                                                                                                                                                  TAKE THE ‘6-PACK CHALLENGE’          
                                               
I’m back- and so are you! Thanks for your patience during my hiatus in November. Though I was Turkey and near sugar free flying solo for the Holy Day, I did get the opportunity for a solid workout on Black-n-Blue Friday fighting crowds with my girls from sun-up to sun-down. More for the experience, we covered the gamut. Surprisingly, we had the store to ourselves at Stop 1. By noon, I waited in a check-out line for nearly an hour. We closed out the evening with a festive trolley ride around downtown, sitting in traffic through City Creek Center from hurried crowds. I was thankful that our day was crime and violence-free, unlike nationwide reports.

With a New Year blooming, I’ve taken time to dust off some books on creative measures to enhance our health given today’s standard American Way. Whether we bring stress upon ourselves by choosing to face crowds of Black Friday rather than relaxing, or we battle a chronic condition called Work-a-holism that dates generations in our family, life on our planet is far from what it was meant to be Day 1 when heaven and earth were created.

Whatever your beliefs, we can likely agree that each of us came into the world with a set of blueprints that had some level of commonality, as well as authenticity.  Since, we have likely conformed to the environment(s) we’ve been raised, in some way. Theoretical and scientific testing is done world-wide that replicates original blueprints, as well as the path of change. Just like evidence and assumption about the evolution of the universe.

The Sweat of the Matter

My ‘Gift of Health’ to you this Holiday Season is a Strong Core! You have a few weeks to work at it so your New Year arrives with definition.  What may seem as worthwhile as a lump of coal in your stocking, this present involves you accessing and assessing one of the most basic attributes that differentiates us human folk from other species to develop deeper levels of strength and stability at the root of your core. And I’m talking a well-defined ‘6-Pack’!

Let’s first touch on the health of our nation’s core on a planetary scale before we focus on the human cellular level…

In September 2012, ‘C3 Headlines’ shared new evidence in response to the predictions made by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and NASA’s James Hansen regarding Global Warming. Their hypothesis as follows:

“…human CO2 emissions would increase atmospheric CO2 greenhouse gas levels; the increase of gases would allow more radiated heat to be retained; this heat would warm the atmosphere; and, the atmosphere would then warm the world's oceans and land surfaces. This warming would set in motion a "runaway tipping point" that would produce catastrophic climate disasters and a doomsday for civilization.

Further evidence from ‘C3’ has shown that satellite measurements of the Earth’s microwave emissions have shown a slight cooling trend since 1997, after a modest warming period from 1980-97. Some call the effect ‘Global Cooling’, and I’d say in more ways than one.

Not just our planet, but our culture has experienced a global cooling trend. Human interaction has become colder. Communication is impersonal, and value is placed on efficiency and economy at the expense of human warmth and genuine presence. We feel these voids when we face day to day stressors that set our tipping point in motion. Symptoms can look and feel like stomach ulcers, anxiety-driven heart palpitations, weight gain, and worse.

Scientific research confirms that kind people are healthier and live longer, are more popular and productive, have greater success in business, and are happier than others. Do you notice feeling healthier when you’re acting kind? Try this:

6-PACK CHALLENGE

I. ASSESS (1=low to 5= high)
1. Rate your current health condition, including psycho-, physio-, spirituo-…
2. Rate yourself as a kind-giver, practicing for the simple mission of being kind, rather than       with intentions other than the simple desire. (1=ulterior motives, 3=unaware, 5=master)            
II. ACCESS
3. High Scores?
·         Spread global warming with those in need- teach others how to access this core attribute
·         Add bodywork to your mind exercise and note another ripple forming in your 6-pack
4. Not So High?
·         Practice with intention six kind acts each day for one week and see if you feel a warming trend.
·         True Kindness includes offering warmth, trust, patience, gratitude, love …


Given that our 6-pack is where we typically hold toxic stress in the form of a tire, it’s a simple sign and an easy spare to lose.

Express Love before it turns to hate.
Feel Joy rather than depression.
Give Thanks regardless of receiving.
Be Kind and Reveal your Six-Pack!

Wishing You Well in Life & Sport This Holiday Season!

Cari Junge
Nutrition & Therapy Director
Utah Sports and Wellness

Monday, December 17, 2012

2013 RACE SCHEDULE



By Dr. Michael Cerami

I figured if I posted my plans I would be held more accountable to completing them! So here’s my plan for next year:

March: Canyonlands ½ marathon.  This is a beautiful race in Moab to start the season off right.

April: Salt Lake City ½ Marathon. I have some very specifics goals for this year’s race.

May: St. George ½ Ironman. A good early season primer.

June: Boise ½ Ironman. Hopefully it won’t be 44 degrees with a downpour and the wind blowing at 20 mph plus this year!

July: Open for now

August: Boulder ½ Ironman. A better outcome than last year is expected :-0  http://blog.utahsportsandwellness.com/2012/08/14.html

August: USAT Age Group Nationals: I’m a bit on the fence about this. I would love to go and test myself against the best in the country, but it’s a pretty big time commitment.

September: Lake Tahoe Ironman. My first Ironman race and I’m psyched!

Wish me luck in achieving these goals and set your sights high for your personal desires for 2013.
As always I look forward to your comments.

Dr. Michael Cerami is a local Utah sports chiropractor who has been treating patients for over 25 years. He writes a weekly patient blog and monthly athlete article for community education on a wide variety of topics including treating sports injuries, nutrition, exercise, motivation and wellness. 

Monday, December 10, 2012

EXPENSIVE REPAIRS OR REGULAR MAINTENANCE?



By Dr. Michael Cerami

I was recently over at the local tire shop getting some work done on my car when I walked by a 4x4 pickup truck. Because the truck was sitting up so high the tires immediately caught my attention. The outside edges of the front tires were worn all the way down (see photo) so there was no tread left while the inside edge of the tire had plenty of tread left.  I’m guessing the tires on this truck must cost at least $250.00 each and at some point in the near future this person was going to have to pony up a bunch of money because he (?) didn’t spend a little money (probably less than $100.00) on an alignment or maintenance. That $100.00 at the time might have seen unnecessary, especially when you see the brand new tires on the truck with full tread. The problem was that the underlying distortion or upstream problem (the cause) was not addressed. Eventually the misalignment caused a wear pattern and I’m betting reduced the life of these tires by 40-60%.
I saw a Facebook post the other day that said “If you think organic food is expensive, have you priced cancer lately?” Yes, I know, it’s a little over the top but I think it does make a very valid point. What we do or don’t do today will dictate the results we get in the future. This approach applies to everything in life from education to relationships, but I will focus on health and wellness with this blog post. 

Think about the cost of being sick, or even less symptomatic and more pervasive; what I call “Not Well”. Being Not Well limits your productivity, not just at work but also at home and in your hobbies. This cost you time, money and enjoyment like when you can’t play that second round of golf because you hurt too much or are too tired. Or at work when you need to put some extra time in to complete a project and you can’t motivate yourself to make it happen. In my opinion and observation of myself and patients for over 27 years in practice, all these items are effected by your choices in diet, exercise and neuro-spinal integrity which lead to better focus, more energy, better immunity and increased emotional plasticity.   

If we take this conversation to the next level we should understand that 80% of what kills us are chronic illnesses or lifestyle illnesses. If you assume this from a defect on your genes then I suppose you could argue that you couldn’t prevent these illnesses from occurring and you would only use a health care professional to assist you in the management of your upcoming symptoms leading eventually to illness and death.

I don’t see it that way. I believe you have options and choices and your body is a miraculous self healing living system that can do amazing things if you treat it right. 

Yes, it’s a hassle and cost money to get adjusted once per month. It’s annoying to take your supplements daily and you procrastinate about reordering when you run out. Getting up at 5am to get to the pool before early enough to beat the crowds is a bit of a pain especially when its 25 degrees out and you got to bed later than you wanted. Making your meals on Sunday for the week is not as enjoyable at plopping in front of the TV to watch a movie that you’ve been waiting to see because “I deserve a break today. It’s the weekend dang it!” 

These things are not easy to reprogram but as far as I know we only go around once in life. Think and feel your way through these ideas and determine not only where you are but where you want to be. A little bit of consistent effort on a regular basis will go a long way to making you a life you can enjoy.
As always I look forward to your comments.

Dr. Michael Cerami is a local Utah sports chiropractor who has been treating patients for over 25 years. He writes a weekly patient blog and monthly athlete article for community education on a wide variety of topics including treating sports injuries, nutrition, exercise, motivation and wellness.