Thursday, January 24, 2013

Attack of the germs

Attack of the germs


According to New York magazine, the entire state of New York is currently in a state of flu emergency. Want comfort? Try a healthful spoonful of the following advice, collected from some of Yoga International’s best holistic-health experts and contributors.

Take the edge off To get rid of whatever nasty congestion lurks within, Vasant Lad recommends giving yourself at least one if not many DIY ginger steam treatments all you need is a towel, a teaspoon of powdered or fresh ginger, and a pint of heated water.


If that doesn’t sound inviting, substitute a couple drops from a bottle of eucalyptus oil instead. It’ll do wonders. Or you can just grab your eucalyptus-scented Dr. Bronner’s “dish soap, bath soap and laundry detergent in one extra-large, fun-sized container”that you keep at the ready.

No time to bathe? Experiment with a similar technique to this during your morning shower. Just make the water hot and the steam billowing. Then add a couple of drops of essential oil near the drain of your shower before stepping in and breathe.

Change up your practice. Fever and flu and their attendant upper respiratory infections are bad enough on their own, but to add insult to injury, they’re almost always accompanied by such sidekicks asnightmare aches and pains and sleepless nights.


Warm up your diet. There’s no sure-fire replacement for chicken noodle soup for vegetarians. Just take one look at lentil soup: it’s usually either somewhat green or brownish, and chunky not all that appetizing when you have the flu.

You can still ease a winter chill or nurse an ailing stomach with warming spices like cinnamon, ginger, black pepper, and cardamom. A spice like ginger promotes healthy digestion and, according to Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner Janet Webb Lee, a spice like cinnamon circulates blood, relieves pain, and helps rid the body of pathological fluids. Plusthey’re the perfect complement to a bowl of hearty carrot soup.

Prevent a relapse. A daily dose of Vitamin D can help put the kibosh on future outbreaks of mucus-related illness and discomfort, but how much do you take? That answer’s not so simple, 

Recommendations can vary, especially depending on factors like age, skin pigmentation, sun exposure and location. But the actual dose you take might not be as essential a factor as the type of vitamin D. Keough says when buying a supplement, make sure the label says Vitamin D3, which is the form of the vitamin produced by the skin. It’s definitely not vegan all D3 comes from animals but Keough notes that it’s much more bio-available than its D2, plant-based counterpart.

No comments:

Post a Comment