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- Segment Number 1
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1512wl5a.mp3
- Featured Speaker Orlando M. Gutiérrez, MD
- Guest Website Kidney Fund
- Guest Twitter Account @kidneyfund
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Guest Bio
Orlando M. Gutiérrez, M.D., M.M.Sc., obtained his medical degree from the University of Toledo College of Medicine in 2002. He then completed internship and residency training at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston from 2002 to 2005, and a clinical and research fellowship in nephrology from the Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Massachusetts General Hospital Joint Nephrology Training Program in 2008. With the support of an American Kidney Fund Clinical Scientist in Nephrology Fellowship award, he completed a Masters in Medical Science degree in human clinical investigation from Harvard Medical School during his fellowship, graduating as the valedictorian of his class. Dr. Gutiérrez joined the faculty of the Division of Nephrology and Hypertension at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine as an Assistant Professor of Medicine in 2008. He was then recruited to the University of Alabama at Birmingham in 2011, where he is currently an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the School of Medicine and an Assistant Professor of Epidemiology in the School of Public Health. In addition, he serves as the section head for outcomes and epidemiology research in the Division of Nephrology at UAB.
Dr. Gutiérrez’s research is focused on understanding pathophysiological mechanisms underlying disorders of phosphorus and vitamin D metabolism in health and in individuals with kidney disease. He has a special interest in delineating environmental and/or behavioral factors that may modulate these associations, particularly those related to poverty and nutrition. His research has been published in high-impact journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine and Circulation, and he has been an invited speaker in numerous national and international conferences. He is currently supported by a Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development Award (K23) from the NIH. - Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 5
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1510wl5e.mp3
- Featured Speaker Susanne Bennett, DC
-
Transcription
RadioMD Presents: Wellness for Life Radio | Original Air Date: March 6, 2015
Host: Susanne Bennett, DC
It’s time to feel better with help from Dr. Susanne Bennett. Allergies, nutrition, ultimate wellness—all discussed right here, right now. It’s Wellness for Life Radio on RadioMD.Here’s your host, Dr. Susanne.
DR. SUSANNE: A third of us—US—US Americans routinely sleep fewer than 7 hours a night and that’s a lot. That really isn’t by choice. Overly committed lifestyles and stress, unhealthy habits, plague our ability to get a good night’s sleep. Now, what is going on inside our body and what can we do to improve our sleep?
Alright. Two bodily processes impact your sleep. Number one, your body has to have its own sleep/wake homeostasis and what that is, is a state of balance. Now, it naturally creates restorative time for itself as long as you let it. The other critical process is our circadian, biological click. Another name for it is internal clock or biorhythms. It regulates a 24-hour cycle within our bodies, consisting of patterns of brain activity, cell regeneration, hormone production and many other biological activities.
Now, this circadian rhythm is controlled by the hypothalamus in our brain, a small little area and it’s literally our body clock’s timing set by the light and dark cycle around us through our day. Light and dark.
So, light exposure is key to sleep. It’s really a fascinating process and any time light, whether it’s natural or artificial, is hitting your opting nerve—the nerve that’s in the back of your eyeballs, it transmits a message of “awake” to the SCN. SCN stands for “suprachiasmatic nucleus”. That’s the reason why I’m calling it “SCN” because it’s such a long word. Anyway, it’s a group of cells in the hypothalamus in our brain. The light trigger produces an elevation of body temperature and our hormone cortisol and reduction in sleep hormones and many other physiological changes that gets us up and going in the morning.
Now, alternatively, when our eyes are not being stimulated by light, it tells the SCN and the hypothalamus that it’s nighttime and that nighttime is for restorative rest. Now, the SCN is really important because it instructs our pineal gland. Our pineal gland produces melatonin and serotonin to help us relax and sleep and our body temperature drops and our bodies get really ready for sleep.
Now, why is this important? Because when you think about it, all of this electricity--before electricity or we had the artificial lighting, people when to bed when the sun went down and got up when the sun came up, and they likely got a good night’s sleep, probably at least 10-12 hours and a lot of restorative sleep. Now, with modern electronics, all these distractions, all this light hitting our eyes, it really messes up with our natural light and dark rhythms. So, what we want to do is, we want to maintain a healthy sleep cycle, sleep hygiene. You will improve your immune system. You’ll get stronger and your immune system—you’ll get less illnesses. You can fight those infections. You’ll also improve your mental clarity and memory skills, improve your energy level and even improve your ability to lose weight.
Now, why do I say lose weight? Oh, my gosh, what the researchers are showing is that sleep can affect many hormones in our body, especially these two that relate to appetite: ghrelin and leptin. Now, ghrelin is what’s produced in our gut—inside our gut—and it stimulates our appetite. While leptin is produced in our fat cells and it sends signals to our brain saying, “Hey, I’m already full.” I always say, my mantra is, “Go away ghrelin. Love, love, love you leptin,” because I want more leptin to curb my appetite and don’t want more ghrelin since it increases my appetite.
So, it really important that you understand that sleep really helps and there’s studies that were done at Stanford University, University of Chicago, that when you get more sleep, or let’s say this, if you restrict sleep, then leptin goes down. Ghrelin goes up and that means you have more appetite. You eat more and you actually eat more calories and carbohydrates—more calories and carbohydrates--which then will increase your weight gain and increase your fat deposition, increase your sugar insensitivities or insulin sensitivities. So, it’s really important that we deal with this.
Now, I want to tell you a few things about how to maintain a healthy circadian rhythm.
What you want to do is, you want to wake up and go to sleep at the same time every day, even on the weekends, and get 8 hours of sleep. If you can get 9, that’s even better and don’t take naps if you can help it, because if you take naps, it’ll confuse your body clock.
Number two, turn off all your lights at nighttime, ideally dim it as soon as the sun goes down and definitely at least one hour prior to bedtime and what you want to do is that you want to ensure the bedroom to be very dark. What I do is, I wear an eye mask to definitely close up, take all the light out of my eyes. That little eye mask is a God send for me so that there’s nothing triggering that pineal gland or turning off that pineal gland and producing melatonin. Another thing you could do is make sure that in the morning, you wake up with sunshine hitting your eyes. You want that sunshine hitting your eyes so that your body’s ready to wake up and it’ll turn off the message to your brain saying, “Hey, I don’t need any more melatonin.”
Alright. You know when people have seasonal affective disorders and especially in the winter time and you’re living in areas where it’s upper and the higher levels in the Northern countries and hemisphere, then there’s not enough light to wake you up in the morning to turn off that melatonin. So, some people get what’s called seasonal affective disorder where you feel tired, you’re sad, you’re depressed, you eat more. Well, it’s because you need more light. So, those individuals, I highly recommend for you to get a light box. I love those natural light boxes that you can use and every day, in the morning, you turn it on for about 30 minutes with your arms—it’s like an arm length. So, this full-spectrum light box is in front of you about 3 feet away and you just use it when you’re having your tea in the morning and getting ready for your work.
Now, so it’s really important that you do make sure that you go to bed early. Even if you get 8 hours, let’s say, and, it’s from 1:00 AM to 9:00AM, that’s not healthy sleep to me because you’re really moving the shifting of your sleep pattern where you’re not getting the benefits of the healthy hormones that are good for rejuvenating. We sleep because we need to rejuvenate ourselves and replenish ourselves and that happens at night when the growth hormone goes up and melatonin goes up. But, if you shift it, then that means that you don’t get enough of those very, very important hormones. So, it’s important to try to sleep anywhere from 10:00 PM to 6:00 AM is a good time that is 8 hours or, at the latest, 11:00. But, melatonin really does start to be produced at about 8:00-9:00. That’s the reason why little babies, kids, go to sleep so quickly.
Now, one of the things you’ll want to do is create a bedtime, relaxing ritual. Really important. You want to create rituals every night, cool down your body. You have a nice little lavender bath, turn off the lights, of course, listen to really quiet, natural music, turn off all your computers and ensure that all of the electronics are turned off because you don’t want that stimulating. That electro-pollution can definitely stimulate you. Don’t have any nicotine, caffeine and alcohol in the nighttime especially and it’s because it will increase your cortisol level and that stimulates the nervous system and definitely reduces restful sleep.
Alright. I wouldn’t drink any water or an excess amount tea, even decaf tea past 8:00 because what it’ll do is, it’ll make you urinate and you don’t want to do that when you wake up.
What I want to do is tell you about things you can take to help you with sleeping. Pumpkin seeds have the highest dose of tryptophan per serving. Tryptophan is amino acid that turns into 5HTP and it increases serotonin and melatonin and relaxes your body and promotes sleep. You know, I talk a lot about it also in my book, The 7-Day Allergy Makeover, that you've got to change your environment so that all of the allergens don’t bother you. Remember that. Number two, phosphatidylserine, when it comes to supplements, I love that because it actually turns off the cortisol level in your body, helps your body rest and it’s excellent to help you with your cell membranes. Melatonin. You can take melatonin. It’s the only supplement out there that does not turn off your ability to make melatonin. So, this is a naturally occurring hormone and that helps you with the sleep/wake cycle and it will help you with anyone who’s suffering from insomnia or can’t get deep sleep and it’s interrupted. Gaba gamma-aminobutyric acid, a neurotransmitter that helps the brain and body to relax. I love magnesium which is a mineral very important for controlling blood sugar, but it also really helps for sleeping and relaxing.
So, there’s so much you can do. So much you can do. There are a lot of studies out there now that show that sleep deprivation can impact the hormones of insulin and regulate our blood sugar. So, really, it’s clearly important and vital for your health and you really need sleep.
So, follow these steps. Improve your nighttime sleep habits and keep your circadian rhythm clock humming.
Until then, this is Dr. Susanne. Thank you so much for giving me this opportunity to serve you. I’m dedicated to helping you feel great and be your best.
This is Wellness for Life Radio on RadioMD. See you next time.
Stay well.
[END OF RECORDING] - Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 4
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1510wl5d.mp3
- Featured Speaker Sister Jenna
- Guest Website Meditation Museum
- Guest Twitter Account @americameditate
- Guest Bio Sister Jenna is an award-winning spiritual leader, author, radio and TV personality, renowned speaker and founder of the Meditation Museum in metropolitan Washington DC. For decades, she has demonstrated an extraordinary level of improvement in the quality of lives of people ranging from heads of government to children in villages. She has traveled to over 80 countries where she continues to provide practical life tools and solutions that empower people to foster and build stronger relationships. Her wisdom, peace, and compassion for humanity are expressed through the variety of initiatives she spearheads for youth, women, governments, and communities and through her syndicated radio show, America Meditating. Sister Jenna is the recipient of numerous awards and proclamations including, the President's Lifetime National Community Service Award, Every Day Hero Award by the Foundation for Better Life and the Friendship Archway Awards, to name a few.
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Transcription
RadioMD Presents: Wellness for Life Radio | Original Air Date: March 6, 2015
Host: Susanne Bennett, DC
Guest: Sister Jenna
You’re listening to RadioMD. She’s a chiropractic, holistic physician, best-selling author,
international speaker, entrepreneur and talk show host. She’s Dr. Susanne Bennett. It’s time
now for Wellness for Life Radio. Here’s Dr. Susanne.
DR.SUSANNE: Work, politics, natural disasters and global news. No longer is the stress we face within our own four walls.
Now, my next guest is an author, radio host and TV personality, renowned speaker and founder of the Meditation Museum in metropolitan Washington, D.C. She joins me today to share with you how to de-stress and take a minute to breathe in life and love.
Welcome, welcome Sister Jenna.
SISTER JENNA: Let’s breathe it in right now because I think we’re going to need it. We’ve been covered with snow here in Washington, D.C. and I think you’re on the West Coast so, kudos to you for choosing.
DR. SUSANNE: I know the environment has so much to do with living a stress-free life in this modern world. Would you agree?
SISTER JENNA: I do. But, you know, we can’t rely only on the external environment because that’s one of the reasons why we internally fluctuate so much because we’ve developed a habit of coming from outside in and what I teach in here in all of our programs and classes is to practice the soul to come from inside and conjugate something outside. So, whether it’s raining or snowing or beautiful weather, I’m the master here of creating my environment. It’s not my environment that’s going to create me. And so, as much as I want to be where you are, by the ocean--by the way, I’m planning to retire there.
DR. SUSANNE: Fabulous.
SISTER JENNA: But, I think right now, being in the nation’s capital with so much that goes on here, they need individuals who have a lot of heart and empathy. Another thing I find being on the East Coast is that you’re constantly upping your game and whether it’s spiritually or materially, you have to keep thriving, you know? Because the game says you’ve got to keep moving your energy. If you don’t move your energy, you start to take from the past instead of pray for the future.
DR. SUSANNE: Oh. That’s interesting what you’re saying. So, you feel like…You’re saying that I don’t…Personally, I don’t listen to the news, I don’t watch TV. For me, it really doesn’t serve a purpose for me to feel good about things with what’s going on. My interests are about the environment and helping people with their health and everything about that.
But, what you’re saying is you’re seeing people out here are more driven, ego-driven. That’s what I’m hearing. Is that correct?
SISTER JENNA: I don’t know, but I know that individuals have the conscious karmic attention of constantly thriving here on the East Coast. I’m not saying they’re not doing that on the West. It’s for me the West is artistic, it’s natural, it tries to flow with the nature and it’s moved things, I mean, come on. All the media that comes out of Hollywood has influenced over 70% of the world’s consciousness. The whole world thinks America is Los Angeles, California, and New York City, you know? Or, Washington, D.C. so, obviously, we’re impacting the consciousness of the world and I think that my role here—I’ve been here for 17 years—is keep establishing an awareness of the spiritual accountability which, decoded in very basic language is: Be wise. Know that you’re responsible for your thoughts, words and actions. Do not give sorrow to anyone, but also develop the habit to not take sorrow from anyone and start to have a very deep relationship with silence.
DR. SUSANNE: When you just said right there “not take sorrow from anyone,” I really love that. Can you just expand on that a bit?
SISTER JENNA: We sometimes tend to say that we don’t give sorrow to anyone, but when someone acts up and they’re less than virtuous in a relationship or an encounter with us, we get affected. The reason why we get affected is, again, the five senses are so much pulling from the external world that it hasn’t allowed the sixth sense, the soul, the being of light, to be the master. So, based on whatever’s going on in the external world, the soul—which is the main element of the human consciousness—is being affected because that’s what it’s used to.
So, in spirituality or when I’m becoming more knowledgeable about what is its state here; who’s in charge? It is the soul that’s in charge and the soul is the energy that gives life to the body and it thinks, it feels, it speaks, it makes choices and if it can keep coming from a place of virtues and quality, you know? The Himalayas could be falling down, and the soul would be like, “Well, that was entertaining.” Because they know it’s in itself. It’s not outside of itself and when you are practicing meditation or spirituality, I know we use the language of de-stressing, Dr. Susanne. De-stressing basically means, I’ve got to give up unlimited belief systems. I’ve got to give up on a sense of being unworthy. I’ve got to give up on guilting myself because I can’t meet the grade. I’ve got to give up on the fact that I’ve failed. I’ve lost something very good to me. I’ve got to lose all of those things, Dr. Susanne, and when that consciousness is not in our thinking, we’re not that stressed. We can take on the world if we want to because we have enough love to do it.
DR. SUSANNE: So, during your meditation, is that what you are thinking during that state of meditation? That silence? Is that what you’re bringing up?
SISTER JENNA: Yes. My foundation in meditations starts with the awareness. I know that I’m a soul and I’m immortal and imperishable and I know that the soul has gone through changes and I know that I am the one responsible to bring my soul back to a place of truth and peace and dignity. I know that. So, now when I go into meditation, I start where I am. I am here, maybe, talking to you from the ashram, but in another 30 minutes, I’m going to the construction site of our new museum. My intent is to go and serve the contractors more than seeing if they’re doing a good job. So, you constantly keep focusing on the pure aspects of the soul, the qualities of the soul and as the soul starts to build the momentum of these innate strengths and qualities, it starts to get higher in consciousness feeling and vibration until it reaches the point that it connects to the energy of the supreme source, God, which is a quality as well. So, when you start to feel this ultimate quality coming through from that link, then you start to pull in so much power that you are silent. That means, I don’t have any more issues with anybody. I’m okay. Silence is an absence of waste and negative thoughts, Dr. Susanne. It’s not an absence of a sound or a place. It’s an absence of waste and negative thinking and when we can do that, we’re silent.
DR. SUSANNE: Well, that purity that you feel is really…I connect to it as a sense of love. That’s pretty much all you feel is this divine love within you and connection to earth energy.
SISTER JENNA: Exactly. Exactly. And we need that. I mean, we need to bring a sense of love and power. Let me explain to your listeners, when you’re soul-aware, you feel comfortable inside no matter what happens. Your heart is open and loving. You love yourself. You’re confidence and self-respect soars. Your life has meaning. You attract beauty. When you’re body aware, which is when you’re in the state of fear or you are more than in just the five senses, and you don’t include the sixth sense, you feel anxious and uptight. You’re grumpy, short tempered. You are not in harmony with your body. You have a lot of expectations of others and yourself. You waste time, energy, money. There’s a lot of things that show where we are inside just by looking at the way that we think and feel.
DR. SUSANNE: That’s beautiful. Absolutely. You know, I know that we just have a few more seconds. I just want you to know that I took a look at your website and you had this Pause for Peace initiative, I thought that was phenomenal. Can you just give a couple of sentences about what is Pause for Peace?
SISTER JENNA: Sure. Well, we’re trying to get Pause for Peace plaques all over the world, but starting through America where we have these posters that we offer to people free of charge and they’ve put up in their spaces and it’s been the license that they’re going to choose to pause for peace during the day and you can just email us at MeditationMuseum@gmail.com and let us know and, you know, the off the grid meditation CD that I launched just recently is inviting everybody. They own the grid.
DR. SUSANNE: Well, thank you so much, Sister Jenna.
Alright. This is Dr. Susanne sharing natural strategies for ultimate health and wellness. - Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 3
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1510wl5c.mp3
- Featured Speaker Sister Jenna, Founder of Meditation Museum
- Guest Website Meditation Museum
- Guest Twitter Account @americameditate
- Guest Bio Sister Jenna is an award-winning spiritual leader, author, radio and TV personality, renowned speaker and founder of the Meditation Museum in metropolitan Washington DC. For decades, she has demonstrated an extraordinary level of improvement in the quality of lives of people ranging from heads of government to children in villages. She has traveled to over 80 countries where she continues to provide practical life tools and solutions that empower people to foster and build stronger relationships. Her wisdom, peace, and compassion for humanity are expressed through the variety of initiatives she spearheads for youth, women, governments, and communities and through her syndicated radio show, America Meditating. Sister Jenna is the recipient of numerous awards and proclamations including, the President's Lifetime National Community Service Award, Every Day Hero Award by the Foundation for Better Life and the Friendship Archway Awards, to name a few.
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Transcription
RadioMD Presents: Wellness for Life Radio | Original Air Date: March 6, 2015
Host: Susanne Bennett, DC
Guest: Sister Jenna
It’s time to feel better with help from Dr. Susanne Bennett. Allergies, nutrition, ultimate wellness—all discussed right here, right now. It’s Wellness for Life Radio on RadioMD. Here’s your host, Dr. Susanne.
DR. SUSANNE: In this fast-paced lifestyle we all manage daily, many of us feel an urgent need to decompress and get off the grid. Researchers in the new field of interruption science have found that it takes an average of 25 minutes to recover from a simple telephone call. That fact is taken directly from the blog of my next guest. Please welcome the renowned speaker and founder of the Meditation Museum in Washington, D.C.
Welcome, Sister Jenna. It’s so good to have you on Wellness for Life Radio.
SISTER JENNA: I am just so enthusiastic and happy hearing you on the radio. I’m already off the grid even though I’m using technology to connect to you and your audience, but glad to be with you, Dr. Susanne.
DR. SUSANNE: Awe. Thank you, Sister Jenna. I know how you're so busy. I see your websites, your Twitter, all the things that you’re doing. It’s so amazing. Now, I would like to ask you the first question. What is interruption science, Sister Jenna?
SISTER JENNA: Well, you know, it’s really about observing oneself. It’s really a spiritual terminology, but internally, there’s a lot going on in the soul and the soul has a natural sort of a wave of peace. It was born with that peace, but after living lifetimes and going through experiences where things are just not working out the way that you think they’re supposed to, something gets erupted on the inside and it shifts our natural peace because we’re no longer centered or no longer really coming from the place of who we really are. We’re coming from an acquired place. And so, it’s really been out there and I’m very happy to know a little bit more about it. It amazed me when I realized the shift that happens after I get off of a phone call, but can you imagine those calls where it was devastating when you got them? Or didn’t get them?
DR. SUSANNE: Well, I know that when it comes to interruptions, I mean, when I’m on my inbox, I’m looking at my mailbox, it’s constantly pinging me. Constantly. And, I mean, I often feel like I am being a hostage. I’m being held hostage to my email inbox because I’m constant with these notifications and the need to respond to like 300 emails, I get per day. I mean, it’s really, really tough. So, what advice would you give for people, just like me who are feeling the same way I do? Feeling like you’re a hostage. What do you advise to do? What do you give? What kind of advice?
SISTER JENNA: We only have a few minutes on the air, but I would suggest that everybody call Pico Aire and ask him. He’s a journalist that writes for Time and many newspapers globally and Pico doesn’t even own a cellphone. And I think that it’s a choice that we have made and I’ve told my assistant, Antonia, time and time again, I, too, wish to just turn my phone off, but there is this sense, I think, Dr. Susanne, that we feel karmically responsible to showing up in these relationships. That’s one. So, if my response to my karmic responsibilities are offered from a sincere and loving place, it’s not really that stressed. But, there are times that we are responding only because of duty and there really isn’t much love in it. Those are where the stressful factors occur and when I get to those emails or those messages, they tend to be the ones that I don’t know why, but I put those last to respond to and I’m working on it because I don’t wish to have, you know, variations of how I’m dealing with my relationships, but I do put them a little bit more on the pending file than the ones that are emerging from the heart. Another thing that I try to do is just be more of a witness of the way that I’m looking at these messages or approaching these messages and there’s something I keep reminding myself: that the world existed before these smart phones and emails and messages and people and the world will exist after these messages, emails, texts and with me involved in these stories. So, it’s really creating an awareness, Dr. Susanne, that will pacify our stress factor within. It’s not getting away from the world and trying to empty your mind. We can’t empty the mind. It’s not possible.
DR. SUSANNE: You know, I love what you’re saying because it gives me, like, I feel like you’re giving me permission, that it’s okay not to respond. That’s one thing. And, really, be mindful of what I’m actually doing by even reading these spam messages or anything that really doesn’t pertain to what I truly love to do and how I want to express myself. So, I really love that idea that, you know what? It may be that I might not look at those emails at all, right? Because the people that are very close to me, that really are meaningful, they know how to call me.
SISTER JENNA: Right.
DR. SUSANNE: They know my personal phone number, wherever I’m at in the world, they will be able to reach me, if I need them. I really like that, what you’re saying.
SISTER JENNA: I was having a discussion with Antonia when we started out the A.M. show and even with the Meditation Museum and social media it is such a big thing and when we started…Now, I know hundreds of thousands of people globally on an internet level and when we started our social media, whether it was Facebook or whatever, I think there’s just that expectant feeling. Like this feeling that everybody would just sign up, but my people are not like that and my friends are not like that. We don’t need to show too much of ourselves to be recognized or acknowledged. I remembered like later on I was telling Antonia, after I was asking her, "How many likes? Two? Oh, my god. Nobody likes us? It’s been a month."
But, what we were realizing is that our world is so genuine and sincere, we don’t move that fast. We don’t do things that…We do move fast, but we don’t move in that genre. But then, we realized that there were two purposes. That, of course, if you’ve got a good message, it’s great to keep getting it out like your radio show. When you Tweeted us today--I love Tweeting--so I tweeted it out to my friends. But, I love to share that. I get that. But it shouldn’t be that I’m driven by this concept of social media to define who we are or our worth. I think that can create a stress factor that’s unnecessary. The kind that of…One that moves us sometimes off the grid, you know?
DR. SUSANNE: Right. I know for myself, when it comes to off the grid, I travel to Mexico. I have a little place down there all the way down south in La Paz, Mexico, and we have a place that’s pretty much off the grid. Yes, we’ve got internet, but we barely have the service and I just go there to decompress and rejuvenate my body and just really get centered doing a lot of mindfulness and meditation the way I meditate. I know you founded and created the Meditation Museum and I really would love to know what inspired you to do that.
SISTER JENNA: Courage. In a city like Washington, D.C., you need courage. If you don’t have backbone or courage, it’s a hard place to continue and with the business of spirituality. It’s not always easy, but the Meditation Museum was this thought: We have 200 museums here. How about one that can help people to find themselves? So, we got influential friends, we did it and it’s doing great. Two hundred events per year and still ticking.
DR. SUSANNE: Wow, that’s amazing.
SISTER JENNA: It is.
DR. SUSANNE: It’s amazing and that’s like almost, I mean, 200 events. That’s so many. Every week something is going on.
SISTER JENNA: Let me explain, though, about this. A lot of people have this conception that meditation is emptying, getting away, being away from yourself. I’m teaching people, step up, get deeper in yourself. Lean in to life, but stop thinking waste and negative thoughts and that’s really my message to your listeners. No more waste or negative thoughts. That’s where the big amount of stress comes into the soul.
DR. SUSANNE: Mmm. Gosh. Lean into yourself. That is phenomenal. You know, I listen to some of your songs. I suppose they’re called songs, but these meditations called Off the Grid into the Heart. Everyone can find that at iTunes. Really beautiful because your words are so powerful and I know you use your words very efficiently. Just by us talking today, I can feel that your words have such meaning in the way you express them and the way you’re delivering it. So, everyone, that
CD is Off the Grid into the Heart.
Oh, wow. This was so wonderful.
Thank you so much, Sister Jenna. What insightful information. F
For more about Sister Jenna, you can definitely go to iTunes or go to my Wellness for Life radio show page and I’ll have all sorts of goodies there.
Until next time, this is Dr. Susanne sharing my natural strategies for ultimate health and wellness right here on RadioMD.
Stay well, everyone.
[END OF RECORDING] - Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 2
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1510wl5b.mp3
- Featured Speaker Mel Abraham, Author
- Book Title The Entrepreneur's Solution: The Modern Millionaire's Path to More Profit, Fans & Freedom
- Guest Website Mel Abraham
-
Guest Bio
Mel Abraham is the author of The Entrepreneur's Solution: The Modern Millionaire's Path to More Profit, Fans & Freedom and founder of Business Breakthrough Academy, Thoughtpreneur Academy and Business Builder Toolkit, where he helps entrepreneurs bring their businesses to the world and build the lifestyle that they want. Mel is one the most sought after entrepreneurial mentor and strategic thinkers of our time. Unlike many other so called "business coaches," Mel has lived everything he teaches and continues to do so. Mel has built, bought and sold numerous multimillion-dollar businesses for himself as well as his clients. Mel's strategies have helped build thousands of businesses and have generated hundreds of millions of dollars for his clients, ranging from large corporations to startups and small family-owned businesses.
Mel is a true believer in the entrepreneurial way of life and says that this "new frontier" is the paradigm that will shift society from simply existing to living life bigger, bolder and on their own terms. - Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 5
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1509wl5e.mp3
- Featured Speaker Susanne Bennett, DC
- Guest Website Dr. Susanne
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Transcription
RadioMD Presents: Wellness for Life Radio | Original Air Date: February 27, 2015
Host: Susanne Bennett, DC
It’s time to feel better with help from Dr. Susanne Bennett. Allergies, nutrition, ultimate wellness—all discussed right here, right now. It’s Wellness for Life Radio on RadioMD.Here’s your host, Dr. Susanne.
DR. SUSANNE: As we age, we all eventually experience a decline in our cognitive abilities. Our memory starts to fail, we may not be as alert or focused and our brain may just feel super foggy. We have a difficult time retrieving words and even trouble creating sentences. In fact, my own sweet mama, 83 years young, Sarah Chung confided in me a couple of months ago that her number one fear—her number one fear that she has-- is that she may be losing her mind. In fact, she used the word “Alzheimer’s” to me. Wait. Wait. Wait. She actually pronounced it “Old Timers”. She’s Korean with a Korean accent, but I knew exactly what she was talking about. She called it “Old Timers. I’m so afraid of it.” Now, my mom is in great health. She eats well, walks daily, watches her Korean drama shows and gets her exercise by dancing around to Korean pop. But, she does have her forgetful moments. A lot of us have experienced that as well, not remembering little things here and there, which really, really frustrates her terribly. Now, one of the things that is a constant thing is that she actually loses the place where she parked her car. She’s in a big mall and she doesn’t remember what floor she was at, so I taught her how to take a picture of it--where she’s at--so that she can always look back at it.
But, anyone who has a parent who is over 75 years old understands these little mishaps. So I reassured her. Told her to calm down. “Mom, that’s okay.” You know, that she does have these memory issues, but definitely “You don’t have Alzheimer’s”. Now, it’s called type 3 diabetes or the diabetic brain. I’ve written an article on this called, The Nine Key Strategies to Prevent Dementia and Early Alzheimer’s Disease. You can get that on my website, DrSusanne.com/OldTimers. You can find that on my radio page. Now, I expressed to her that, “You know what? We’re going to do whatever it takes and change some of your lifestyle as well as what you’re eating,” so that we can strengthen and create her brain to spark again without having any ill effects in the future. I reminded her that her mother lived to 104, so I told her, no worries. We were going to do the same for her. Then, a few days after I gave my mother her Old Timers protocol, CNN.com came out with this very interesting article about reversing dementia and ADD and how to improve the brain. That was perfect timing.
Now, the article is based on a study by Dr. Dale Bredesen from UCLA, my alma mater, at the UCLA’s Mary S. Easton Center for Disease Research and it was basically all the things that I shared with my mother about that lifestyle and you can make these changes and make these choices properly so that you can enhance your brain’s function.
Dr. Dale goes over 7 strategies and I end up going into 9 key strategies. I added a couple more. Again, you can get that at DrSusanne.com/OldTimers. Now, so let’s go into the four strategies. I talk about 9, but I’m going to give you 4 lifestyle strategies here because we don’t have that much time.
Number one, we’ve got to look at your gut health and how diet has everything to do with it. Now, Dr. Eli Metchinikoff, who was an old scientist way back when, believed that death begins in the gut. Same thing with Hippocrates, our father of medicine. He stated that all diseases begin in the gut. So, that means we’ve got look at why. Why do we have to look at the gut? You know, it is often referred to as our second brain. There’s the brain with our gut nervous system and our brain with just our head brain that has a communication physiologically. They mirror each other in our health, so if we’ve got inflammation in our gut because we’re eating the wrong foods; you’re not having enough probiotics; if you’re eating, also, toxins; and then you might even have a real bad overgrowth of bacteria or yeast overgrowth, then it’s going to affect your gut, too. Remember, it communicates with one another. So, the most important thing is they’re finding that sugar--when you eat too much sugar and you have a condition that’s caused insulin insensitivity and that’s literally pre-diabetes--it causes inflammation in our body and that is what is causing the possible dementia and rapid deterioration which then goes into Alzheimer’s. So, if you want to have a healthier body, healthier brain, we’ve got to change the food that we’re eating and reducing our sugar level. By reducing our sugar level, we end up digesting better, the insulin effect is less and we’re not going to have as much damage to our brain.
A four-week study that focused on diets and consisted of healthy foods as well as unhealthy foods, found that definitely it had a positive impact on reducing the beta amyloid levels and that beta amyloid levels are actually the plaque in the brain. It’s one of the biggest signs of Alzheimer’s. Also they found that strategic fasting or intermittent fasting, another word for that, has suggested also it will reduce the beta amyloid levels. What you want to do is, you want to fast from 7 PM to 7 AM. So that means, after dinner—have an early dinner--and don’t eat anything else until after that time. So, if you eat at 7 PM, don’t eat anything until after 7 AM when you wake up and that’s thought to help give us time to break down those beta amyloid proteins.
The number two factor that I want you to think about is sleep. You want deep, uninterrupted sleep because studies showed that during our sleep, we detox out chemicals like heavy metals and arsenic and lead, chemicals that we breathe in the air and foods that we might be eating loaded with pesticides, fungicides and fertilizers. So, we need 7-8 hours as adults. When you have children, they need a lot more—anywhere from 9-11 hours depending on their age.
Number three, we need to change the lifestyle of exercise and circulation. Circulation improving the blood flow into the brain through exercise and massage will help decline the dementia and Alzheimer’s because we’re getting more blood flow to the brain, detoxing out those toxins, reducing those cortisol levels. Cortisol, which I’m going to talk about next, is about the stress and actually, cortisol will start to degrade the hippocampus, the brain’s memory center.
So, the next one, the fourth factor that I want you to know is about mindfulness and stress reduction. There’s no way we can have a healthy brain without reducing our stress. It may sound like a “no-brainer” but living with less stress and a more positive attitude is really key to a healthy brain function. So, you can do things where you can relax, go and meditate, go ahead and have a positive outlook, do meditation tapes and things like that. For me, I love to relax in the sun or go and play with my dog. That reduces my cortisol and it helps me relax more.
Now, I’m going to go over the brain healthy nutrients. These are brain boosters. So, I’m just going to go one by one so that you can get an idea of what it takes to have a healthy brain and healthy outlook.
So, acetylcarnitine is one of those neuroprotector formulas. Acetylcarnitine, it’s called, and it really helps improve mental energy, mental clarity and reduces any of these memory issues that you have because it helps the connection from nerve to nerve. Vitamin B12 is really important. It lowers our homocysteine level, but it also is excellent in increasing blood flow as well as developing healthy nerve cells. It reduces the depression and stress. Glycerophosphocholine, phosphatidyl serine, phosphatidyl choline are all fatty acid supplements for brain health. They increase the flexibility of the nerve cell and makes it more fluid to exchange nutrients and excrete toxins. Vitamin D is so important to improve your immunity as well as help you with modulation of your immune system and increase mental fitness. Omega-3s are so important to get those DHA polyphenol like EG, CG and resveratrol.
Wow. We all have those powers to change our brain by changing our lifestyle and what we take nutritionally.
Until then, thanks so much for giving me this opportunity to serve you. I’m dedicated to helping you feel better and the best that you can today.
This is Wellness for Life radio on RadioMD.
See you next time. Stay well, everyone.
[END OF RECORDING] - Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 4
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1509wl5d.mp3
- Featured Speaker June Silny, Author
- Guest Website June Silny
- Guest Twitter Account @LivingOutLoud
- Guest Bio June is a personal excellence coach and writer. Her recent article, “20 Things to Remember if You Love Someone Who Has ADD,” was a viral sensation with over 1.9 million shares. June writes about her life with ADHD on her website, http://junesilny.com, where she teaches people how to stress less, sleep better, stop fighting, and love more.
- Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 3
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1509wl5c.mp3
- Featured Speaker June Silny, Author
- Guest Website June Silny
- Guest Twitter Account @LivingOutLoud
- Guest Bio June Silny is a personal excellence coach and writer. Her recent article, “20 Things to Remember if You Love Someone Who Has ADD,” was a viral sensation with over 1.9 million shares. June writes about her life with ADHD on her website http://junesilny.com where she teaches people how to stress less, sleep better, stop fighting, and love more.
- Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 2
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1509wl5b.mp3
- Featured Speaker Cheryl Liew-Chng, Author
- Guest Website The 24 Hour Woman
-
Guest Bio
Having served in leadership positions in multiple industries and countries, Cheryl Liew-Chng transitioned to become an award-winning international speaker, trainer, coach and author. In addition to being the founder of LifeWorkz, a management consulting practice, Cheryl is also a recognized authority for women leadership and personal development. Meet Cheryl at www.The24HourWoman.com which guides women in redesigning and transitioning to live a “live most excellent.”
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Transcription
RadioMD Presents: Wellness for Life Radio | Original Air Date: February 27, 2015
Host: Susanne Bennett, DC
Guest: Cheryl Liew-Chng, Author
It’s time to feel better with help from Dr. Susanne Bennett. Allergies, nutrition, ultimate wellness—all discussed right here, right now. It’s Wellness for Life Radio on RadioMD. Here’s your host, Dr. Susanne.
It’s time to feel better with help from Dr. Susanne Bennett. Allergies, nutrition, ultimate wellness—all discussed right here, right now. It’s Wellness for Life Radio on RadioMD. Here’s your host, Dr. Susanne.
DR. SUSANNE: Between family, work and our “to do” list, women are busier than ever before. I know I fall into the same trap of wishing there were more than 24 hours in a single day because I manage an extremely busy life, as many of us do.
Now, my next guest is here to share how you can start to overcome the challenge of being too busy, how to stop being overwhelmed and start to enjoy your life instead of constantly chipping away at these tasks that we deal with every day.
Please welcome the author of The 24-Hour Woman, Cheryl Liew Chng.
Hi, Cheryl.
CHERYL: Hey, Susanne. Great to be on your show.
DR. SUSANNE: Oh, thank you so much.
Now, in this whole busyness of daily life, we’re constantly trying to navigate our work/life challenges, so how do we do that successfully? What should we be doing?
CHERYL: Well, I would say first off, let’s take some time off and appreciate what you have and appreciate your achievements over the years. We all are standing on a position of strength and very often we forget that in the busyness of life and in everything that we are trying solve. In my practice with coaching and training women from around the world, those that have lived happy, fulfilled and truly successful lives on their own terms, one of the fundamental practices that we all recognize is that there’s a sense of appreciation and gratitude. So, for me pillar number one for the 24 hour woman is about appreciating where she is right now and identifying the growth that she has already achieved and celebrating and recognizing the opportunity to be growing even more and even further with all that is happening.
The second thing that we need to be really, really acutely aware of in the midst of all this noise that’s around us is to be aware of where you are right now--of where you want to be. For that to happen, you would need to have the clarity of really, what is our legacy? What do we want to building every single day? And, because you are, then, aware of your legacy, you’re very involved on a day-to-day basis to create a success around that. So pillar number one is appreciation. Pillar number two is awareness. Pillar number four is a sense of acceptance. Wherever you are, whatever your state, is “I’ve heard so many women say, ‘Oh, I can’t do that because…’” but let’s change the conversation and say that “I can do that in spite of” because acknowledging and having acceptance of where we are doesn’t mean that there’s a sense of denial or there’s acquiescence. They’re just saying “Yes. I’m taking stock. I know where this is now and I’m accepting and it I’m using it, however, as my launching pad instead.” So, accept where you are and move on. Change the conversation. That’s readying our mind.
So then, there is health pillar number four, a sense of accountability. It’s about the discipline to do more or less of what is needed to continue with the journey towards our legacy. It’s not about finding fault or putting blame, but yes, I take stock and I take account accountability and I move on. Now, that is a sense of hope and optimism. The 24 hour woman is happy and vibrant and fulfilled because there’s a sense of optimism that she’s having the momentum to be moving to towards her legacy and building toward it every single day which brings me, then to pillar number five.
This is really about action. The 24 hour woman is a woman of action, but do not be caught by surprise that by her sitting silent and keeping still is not an inaction. In fact, that is a very proactive, a very difficult action to take. Just to sit still and wait for things to move on and to find the right timing to take action. So, being still is not an inaction. Being still is an action—one of the most deliberate pieces about taking action so that she’s engaged in that which is strategy, bringing about her legacy and her goals. So, the five that I’ve seen have been very powerful when it comes together.
Appreciation, acceptance, accountability, things about taking action. These are the five. Appreciate things that are around you. Being aware, acutely aware. Taking a sense of being and acting where you are right now, but using it as a strength and launching pad. Taking accountability as you maneuver and then taking action. These are the five.
Sorry. Go ahead.
DR. SUSANNE: No, I love what you’re saying because it’s so important to be able to utilize these tools every day and you could actually talk about it every day. Put those out there and make sure that you are living that life that you want to lead and it doesn’t have to be right away either, does it? I mean, Cheryl, a lot of us are like, “Oh, we’re getting so old and I’ve got to get all these things done within such a short period of time.” Everyone has kind of like a timeframe, but using your pillars, we can really do that for the rest of our lives, can’t we?
CHERYL: Absolutely. There’s no time. You’re not bound by time. It’s about everything in the moment, living fullness and being engaged. You know, I’ve had women that ask themselves multiple times in a day, “How aware am I? Am I back in the present? Am I aware of what’s happening? Am I taking action or is it a strategy time to be inactive around this at this point in time?” Do not be framed by the amount of time, and then try to hurry through it because hurrying through it sometimes does not give you the result that you want. It’s really being engaged and enjoying and being fulfilled and happy at the end of the day rather than disillusioned and disappointed at the end of the day because you’re only giving yourself a 24-hour timeframe. Give yourself a longer horizon and enjoy the journey and that is part of living a happy, active and a well life.
DR. SUSANNE: That’s great. You know, there’s one statement that you say. It’s one of your practices in your book. “I will not wear a ski jacket on a tropical vacation.” Can you explain that?
CHERYL: Yes. Well, that’s one of my favorites and that came about as I wrote the book around the five pillars and I wanted something that the community of women that I am working with have something that they can live by, something that they can paste on the walls and all and remind them, that “I will not wear a ski jacket.” No. That’s why being aware of what are your circumstances and accepting it is important so that you do not gear yourself up for the wrong occasion. You do not have the expectations that are going to bring disillusionment. If you are raising a young family right now, one of the key pieces of not wearing a ski jacket is, if you are thinking of having an international practice and raising a young family, what does that mean? Are you wearing a ski jacket on a tropical vacation? Because that time, too, will pass and then you can have your tropical vacation and then your ski vacation, but the thing is, being [inaudible 08:13] at the right fit at the right time.
DR. SUSANNE: That’s important.
CHERYL: That’s important for you to enjoy that part of that journey because it’s going to serve you well as you move on to the next phase in life, whether your career or your personal life or your family life. Managing expectations of not wearing a ski jacket on a tropical vacation.
DR. SUSANNE: Love that. Love that concept. You know, you’ve really got to be prepared for this and the situation that we’re all in, whether it’s the timing, whether it’s who your with, your audience, all that. You know, everyone, you can get the book—Cheryl’s book—The 24-hour Woman, by looking at DrSusanne.com/24hourwoman. Meaning Dr. Susanne, S-U-S-A-N-N-E.com/24 (and that’s the number 2-4) hour woman. And, by going there, you’re going to be able to look at her videos and get access on how to get amazing, amazing content and also get her book. It’s a fantastic book.
Thank you so much Cheryl. For more information, also you can go to my Wellness for Life radio page on RadioMD.
Thank you so much for listening. Until next time, I’m Dr. Susanne sharing natural strategies for ultimate health and wellness right here on RadioMD.
Stay well everyone.
[END OF RECORDING] - Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC
Additional Info
- Segment Number 1
- Audio File wellness_for_life/1509wl5a.mp3
- Featured Speaker Cheryl Liew-Chng, Author
- Guest Website The 24 Hour Woman
-
Guest Bio
Having served in leadership positions in multiple industries and countries, Cheryl Liew-Chng transitioned to become an award-winning international speaker, trainer, coach and author. In addition to being the founder of LifeWorkz, a management consulting practice, Cheryl is also a recognized authority for women leadership and personal development. Meet Cheryl at www.The24HourWoman.com which guides women in redesigning and transitioning to live a “live most excellent.”
-
Transcription
RadioMD Presents: Wellness for Life Radio | Original Air Date: February 27, 2015
Host: Susanne Bennett, DC
Guest: Cheryl Liew-Chng, Author
It’s time to feel better with help from Dr. Susanne Bennett. Allergies, nutrition, ultimate wellness—all discussed right here, right now. It’s Wellness for Life Radio on RadioMD. Here’s your host, Dr. Susanne.
DR. SUSANNE: If you’re a woman, definitely listen closely and if you are a man, you grab your girl and listen in as well. Should women strive to have it all? The ultimate life possible? A loving relationship, a family and a successful professional life? Well, my next guest has spent her career on teaching women how to achieve a fulfilled, balanced and vibrant life. Here to share some of her amazing principles, please welcome the award-winning author of The 24-Hour Woman, Cheryl Liew-Chng.
Hey, Cheryl!
CHERYL: Hey, Susanne! How are you? Thank you for this invitation.
DR. SUSANNE: Absolutely. Now, everyone, you’re going to know that there’s a little lag because we are talking to Cheryl who is calling in from Singapore. So, thanks so much.
Now, Cheryl, The 24-Hour Woman can sound really like you’re going to be a superwoman, you know? Tell me, what is your exact definition of a 24-hour woman.
CHERYL: Yes, Susanne. Well, the 24-hour woman is well, anything but the superwoman because she knows that for her to have that kind of relationship and the kind of life that you have just described, she knows that she has to be wise around what she does with her effort and her time. Very often, there are certain myths that we have with us as we were growing up. I think the biggest thing was like for us to have it all. I think, basically, in my area of work, I’ve discovered that women do want to have it all, but their definition of having it all is different from one woman to the other and the 24-hour woman who can be vibrant and live a fulfilled, happy life certainly knows that there are certain distinctions that she needs to make. One of the first areas is that when she realizes that she does not have all the resources at her disposal. She is just stressed, like all of us, having all the things to be coping with and she is mindful, however, and wise that she cannot do it all alone. So, one of the first myths I like to bust about the 24-hour woman is that she knows that she needs to be building her resources. She needs to be readying her help around her personal life, around her family life so that she is able, then, to live and thrive as the 24-hour woman she desires in living the life to the fullest that she wants.
The other humongous assumption about the 24-hour woman having it all, I think, it’s less about having it all, but more the emphasis on how do we manage it all and be happy and fulfilled rather than having it all as defined by everyone around you and beign empty and unhappy within because having it all depends on how you define what drives your happiness and fulfillment. Ultimately, with that, being able to live a vibrant life. The women I’ve worked with in my own life, what I’ve experienced is, instead of trying to have it all and trying to do it all which is what the ideal superwoman cares about, is that you master the art of navigating life successfully based on what is most important to you. What is the legacy that you want to be leaving behind? I think that’s a key piece because, you know, at the end of the day, do we ask ourselves, “Do I love all the mansions and the holidays and all I have?” Yes, of course. But, what do I truly, truly, truly value most at the end of the day? It’s really the relationships, the friendships.
What do you think, Susanne? In your own life?
DR. SUSANNE: Well, let’s talk about that, Cheryl, because you and I have talked about this intensely. We’ve been friends for about 3 years and I so respect what you teach in your book, The 24-Hour Woman because I know for myself that I live a pretty busy life. We all know that. Anyone who knows my lifestyle, my practice, how I work with food and nutrition, my supplements, I’ve got a family. I’ve got my son and, of course, I’ve got this radio show which I absolutely love. See, this all takes a lot of time and energy and you’re absolutely right. I really can’t do everything that some women would want to do. What I try to do is manage my time properly and work very efficiently so that I have a balanced life, so that I have time to go on vacation and be with my family members, be able to hang out with my girlfriends. I mean, things like that. So, I am so right there with you about managing. Managing is key. I don’t do everything. I just manage it better than most people or most women. That’s what you’re saying, aren’t you? That’s what you’re talking about—the 24-Hour woman.
CHERYL: Yes, absolutely. It’s about managing proactively and consciously by designing your day to the life that you want and having the clarity of what is the legacy you want to be leaving behind. You know, your legacy really touches so many lives through nutrition and your practice. That’s one of the key pieces or foundations to be directing your day.
DR. SUSANNE: So, when you say “creating it deliberately”, what is it that you can suggest to the women out there, and even men, what can we do right now? How do you create your day deliberately to help us deal with the day to day stresses?
CHERYL: Well, I think one of the key pieces--and this is a great time to be talking about it. You know, it is the Lunar New Year in Chinese New Year. It is time for the Great Reset. But, for that matter, for all of us, any point in time. There is no better time for a Great Reset than now. So, you do not need permission to be going for the Great Reset. But, the Great Reset will help you, then, to find yourself. The clarity as to what you want to be building towards. Every single day, we are building towards something. What do you want to be building towards? And with that, that becomes your key focus of what you do on a day to day basis. What do you say “yes” to? What do you say “no” to? And that helps you to cut down on a lot of the noise that’s around you on a day to day basis. Every action that you take, every conversation that you have, every relationship that you are investing in will help you to move towards the legacy that you are building. So that, at the end of the day, you feel fulfilled. You feel engaged because you are building toward something that you value versus day to day just running your “to do” list. I think that’s important because time is an element that we know that in the blink of an eye, it’s another year. So, begin to have clarity as to what is it that you really want to be achieving? Breaking it down to your day to day and then, therefore, you know what are the boundaries going into that. What are the boundaries day to day that you need to be setting? What would you need to say “no” to, but would you need to bundle some of the daily practices? To bundle your daily practices, or alternate some of the things you need to do rather than doing it, every day, do it on alternate days. A very clear view of simplifying your life so that you can really invest in what matters most.
DR. SUSANNE: Great.
CHERYL: I think, if you can at all, delegate.
DR. SUSANNE: Delegate things that you’ve got to do. That’s so true. You know? I know for a fact that if it wasn’t for my assistant, I really couldn’t deal with everything. We really only have time--Gosh, we’re almost down to the last minute here. I want us to finish up with those beliefs that trap us from being able to live that fulfilled, happy, vibrant life. You already went over Myth 1, which was about dealing with all of your resources. Then, Number 2. There’s Myth 2 and Myth 3. Within a minute, I hope you can go over those two myths quickly before we end our show.
CHERYL: Right. Myth 2 is all about having it all but I want you to have it all, you know, all your listeners, but have it all in your own terms. What having it all, success, means to you and the third one is really about don’t let the media, don’t let history, don’t let your social community tell you what success is about. Success is determined by you and who you authentically are, so be the 24-hour woman that’s happy, fulfilled and vibrant. Burst all those myths and have a Great Reset right now.
DR. SUSANNE: Thank you, Cheryl. Thanks so much. For more information about her book, The 24-Hour Woman, and more, please go to my Wellness for Life radio page on RadioMD and thank you so much for listening.
Until then, I’m Dr. Susanne sharing natural health remedies right here on RadioMD.
Stay well!
[END OF RECORDING] - Length (mins) 10
- Waiver Received No
- Host Susanne Bennett, DC