I [heart] Davids It helps me to say these things aloud, I think.

March 20, 2007

Ban Smoking in Public Workplaces/Restaurants

Filed under: Personal/Health — JeniQ @ 2:41 pm

When Dave lived in California, I was always amazed that we could stay out all night drinking but I could still wear the same jeans the next day. That’s becuase you’re not allowed to smoke in restaurants or bars in California – it’s AWESOME!

Support a current House bill to ban smoking.

Secondhand smoke is a serious health hazard, especially for North Carolina’s bar and restaurant employees. Please email your representative and ask him or her to support H259, which would ban smoking in nearly all workplaces.

Click here to show your support.

February 15, 2007

Classic Spa Facial – Aaaahhh!

Filed under: Personal/Health — JeniQ @ 2:05 am

Monday night I treated my dry, acne-prone skin to a facial. I really like Natural Body but I didn’t want to drive all the way over to North Hills, so I hunted around for a different (and affordable) option. Both of the Brier Creek options (Generations and Skin Sense) were too expensive, so I decided to try the Spa at BodyLase.

I was most impressed! It’s a funny little location but the place is really nice and the quality excellent! I recommend Sarah if you go.
I wish I could do that once a month, ahhh, that would be lovely!

December 3, 2006

Acne blows

Filed under: Personal/Health — JeniQ @ 6:14 pm

One of the worst lies ever told to a youngster is that acne goes away when you’re an adult. It didn’t for me and it doesn’t for a lot of people. I finally had the good sense to go to the dermatologist and do something about it. If you know me well, you know I like to put in a good word for products and people I like, so here’s what I like when it comes to skin care.

On my face, I use Benzaclin every morning. It’s basically a bleach cream that helps cut down on excess oil. I wait about 10 minutes and then put on moisturizer for the day. I have two favorites, Olay’s Complete and Aveeno Ultra-Calming Moisturizer. At night I wash my face and lightly apply moisturizer.

On my back and chest, I use Evoclin, a true breakthrough in acne treatment medication. Evoclin is delivered in a foam so it’s easy to apply, and it won’t bleach your hair or clothes. I also use a body wash in the shower, either Neutrogena’s Acne Body Wash or Brevoxly, a sudsing peroxide-based cream.

On a related note, I have recently discovered blotting sheets. These are now perhaps my favorite beauty product. I use Clean & Clear Oli Absorbing Sheets – they come sized for your purse and work wonders! If you have oily skin and haven’t tried these, go to the drugstore now and get some! Even with the acne medication and oil-free moisturizers I use, my face is quite oily by mid-afternoon. Blot your face with one of these sheets and you can go another 4 hours looking faboo!

October 22, 2006

Thai Yoga Massage (Nuad Boran)

Filed under: Personal/Health — JeniQ @ 2:55 pm

I got my birthday present on Saturday. I have been wanting to try out Thai Yoga Massage after my yoga instructor, Cyndi Bulka, raved about it several years ago. I’d been putting it off because it was expensive but I decided it was time and treated myself for my birthday this year. At its most basic, Thai yoga is meridian line massage (think accupressure) coupled with supported yoga positions. Learn more about Thai Yoga Massage (Nuad Boran) here and here.

I met with Bob Haddad on Saturday morning at 11:00 a.m. in his studio about 20 miles away in Chapel Hill. It was a beautiful, sunny morning and the leaves were starting to show their fall colors. The studio is a small addition to the main house where Bob lives. It’s a fabulous space with stained wood trim, lots of windows, and pocket doors to both the bathroom and the massage room.

We spent about 20 minutes getting acquainted. Bob explained what nuad boran is, his experience and education, and how we would work together in the next two hours. I told him about my “sensitive” nerves throughout my body, and highlighted the cubital tunnel syndrome as the worst offender. He gently pressed his finger directly onto my ulnar nerve on the back side of my elbow and I said something like “Um, yeah, you can’t do that.” Then I began to tear up and had a little cry right there. I knew after our brief talk that the session was going to be pretty intense. I was already emotional at the anticipation of this very intimate method of body work. That pushed me right over the edge.

[He wanted to create some kind of a warm medicinal poultice to apply to my elbow but said we didn’t have time. He wants me to come back later to try it out. I let him know that the only medical remedy (besides not ever bending my elbows) is to ice my elbows three times a day. He said “You’re talking about allopathic medicine. Eastern medicine uses heat.” I’m willing to give the poultice a try, but my experience is that applying cold has really helped calm the irritated nerves.]

So, then we started the session. I had changed out of my sweat pants into a pair of bright orange Thai shorts that Bob supplied, and I had on a sports bra. I think I looked cute, if not somewhat scantily clad! 🙂 These Thai pants are very thin, lightweight and floppy, and when you tie them on, they tie tight right above hips, under the navel, so while they are quite comfortable, they’re pretty revealing. Bob wore a pair, too, and he was definitely flopping around! I think part of the strangeness of this bodywork is how intimate it is. I have no problem stripping down to nothing and laying under a sheet for a traditional massage (I’d recommend Meridith at Hands on Health if you’re looking). But in this modality, the provider is moving all around you, lifting you up, supporting you with his limbs or feet or hands. Trust is sort of a requirement; Thai yoga can’t be done well when you’re focused on guarding yourself. And there are many times when different parts of my body and his body intersected in unexpected ways.

My instructions were to be very relaxed and floppy. He wanted me to be in a place where I could just receive, physically and emotionally, what he had to give. I guess it’s obvious that when you get a massage, you’re receiving a gift of love from your massage therapist, but in nuad boran, it’s an even more important part of the exchange. The way the practitioner uses his or her body to move yours and the way they channel their energy to help yours flow, it’s really amazing.

We started on my back, and he used thumbs and other devices of torture (hands, elbows, feet, forearms, knees, etc.) to work along the energy lines of my feet, legs and hips. It was strong, very direct pressure and bordered on the edge of discomfort. He moved my ankles, my knees, my legs in the hip sockets. I could feel him moving around on the mat on all sides of me. I think my favorite move was when he extended his leg underneath mine and he rested my sitz bone on his toes and raked his toes upward along my hamstring. That was nice.

He worked on my stomach and that was really crazy. I had been doing a good job of breathing and being really relaxed, but I couldn’t maintain it when he started pressing on my stomach. My defenses kicked in and I tensed my stomach muscles to protect myself. My breathing got rapid and shallow and he kept putting his hand on the center of my chest to help me breath calmly. I trembled all over. He told me that I was releasing a lot of stuff. I couldn’t help but agree.

When he got to my arms and shoulders, I could feel him putting pressure on my brachial plexus on both the front and the back of my shoulder. My hands kept pulsating with energy, throbbing in response to the pressure on the nerve. He neatly avoided my evil ulnar nerve. He said there was a lot of release from my shoulders as well.

Then we did several seated positions and a number of supported asanas. I spent some time face down and on my side, where he worked the piriformis and the deep hip rotators, causing my legs to pulse with the pressure on those delicate tissues. We did a few more supported asanas, including cobra and some where I was hanging down by my limbs.

Here are some pictures of what it looked like. I had my eyes closed most of the time but I would have loved to have seen it – must’ve looked strange. I’d like to upload photos but Blogger sucks and won’t upload photos half the time. It’s just as well as the photos are all copyrighted so I had no right to post them here. This image shows Bob and the studio where I was at!

The session ended with some delicate facial massage combined with lovely scented oils, a gentle shoulder rub and lots of head scratching, which was just to die for. He placed a eyebag on my eyes and crept out of the room. I awoke sometime later (2 minutes or 12? I don’t know) by a little rat-a-tat-tat at the door. There was a cup of hot herbal tea waiting for me by my side, along with my glasses, how thoughtful! I gave up my comfy pants and got back into my sweats, then walked around the reception area and checked out Bob’s enormous world music CD collection. It turns out that Bob used to own his own record label, Music of the World. Then we spent a few minutes comparing notes about the session.

Bob felt that the left side of my entire body was blocked, that energy was not flowing the way it should be. He also felt that there is some “deep and hidden” stuff in my back and shoulders that he would like to investigate further. I think I was fairly guarded with my back and shoulders, as well as my stomach. I know that I have an at-times guarded persona, and I’d like to shed it, but I find it so difficult. It’s so much easier, somehow, to put up my funny, sarcastic facade, the one that makes people laugh and (I think) makes me look cool. But sometimes I want to be calmer, more centered, and more honest and open with people. Maybe one of the reasons I can’t seem to do that is I become a blubbery mess when I get open and emotional. My empathy is stronger than it needs to be and I think it makes me overly sensitive to even minor input. I think that if I go back and we work on releasing some of this blocked energy, it might have a cathartic affect. Perhpas I could shed my mental/psychological hamstrings? Would it be better than a good shrink? It’s weird, leaving a bodywork session consumed with thoughts of unloading emotional baggage, but it really makes sense when you get down to it.

I felt great the rest of the day. I felt like I could breathe into every surface and cavity of my body. In my yoga practice, I’m just learning how to feel both upward, lifting energy at the same I can sense downward, grounding energy. I’m not sure I felt the movement of energy through my body the way Bob wanted me to, but I did feel good. I realize now that I need to be more kind to the left side of my body, the yin of me. I also promise to give it more attention in yoga. And I’m going to give it a few more days to integrate, but I think I’ll go back in a few months for another session.

August 16, 2006

"Her wrists were beautiful…"

Filed under: Personal/Health — JeniQ @ 4:33 pm

I went to the hand specialist at Raleigh Orthopaedic yesterday. I was relieved to hear that part of the numbness/tingling that I’d been feeling in my right thumb was a result of my watch! It seems that the radial nerve that passes alongside the underside of my forearm and up and over my wrist to my thumb is very sensitive, and any pressure/compression will irritate it. The doctor proved this by (unintentionally) making me cry when he lightly thumped my arm in the right spot. It’s called Wartenberg’s Syndrome.

But it seems that is not all that’s going on. He suggested that what is causing pain when I use the wrist in a hyperflexed, weight bearing situation is a ganglion cyst. He suggested an MRI to be sure, but said that I shouldn’t get the MRI if I wouldn’t consider surgery to resolve the problem. I guess I’m allowing that option because I have the MRI scheduled for Saturday.

“Her wrists were beautiful…”

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