If you've got poor circulation - maybe related to mobility problems - get twinkling those toes! - By which I mean - Twiddle 'em! - Wriggle 'em! - That'll help! - And you could let your fingers dance too! - And squeeze a soft toy! - You could be a Twinkling Star! - Good luck!
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Get twinkling those toes!
Posted by Willow at 8:33 pm
Labels: poor circulation, Twinkling Star, twinkling toes, wriggling toes
Friday, August 22, 2014
Struggling to carry on
Sometimes it's a struggle to carry on and you are in the position of
choosing between options as to what's best to do at the time. And
sometimes additional problems present themselves. And understandingly
you may sometimes choose what is not really the best option.
I wrote in February about meds which cause dehydration and how drinking plain water is what you need to do. - Extract - "By the time you feel thirsty, you are already dehydrated. And you may
unwittingly increase the problem by drinking, say, coffee, which is widely
considered to have diuretic properties. Alcohol too is a diuretic. If you are thirsty, you would be much better slaking your thirst with plain
water. Salty drinks are clearly inadvisable, and sugary drinks also
tend to increase thirst. You are not in need of vague 'liquid'; you are specifically in need of PLAIN WATER."
- I had found this so helpful myself and I kept rigidly to my own
advice. - But in the last month I have drunk two cups of extremely weak
coffee and one cup of weak tea. - In my constant struggle with
increasing pain and insufficient sleep, I did this in the hope that
these drinks would 'wake me up a bit' from my great tiredness. I hadn't
chosen a good option.
When we struggle, especially with very great
difficulties, and we make a mistake, there may be the temptation to give
up altogether. - Before that, I'd like to suggest asking for help, if you can. There are a lot of kind people in the world. Obviously
I don't mean approaching anyone who is going to label your problems and
difficulties with the catch-all daft label of 'depression' and want you
to take anti-depressants. - You do NOT need even more problems to
deal with! - Drink a glass or two of plain water and continue each day to drink plain water and avoid coffee and alcohol. This will help you in many ways
and clear your head. If you think you need my input, then email me from my website and I'll do my best to get back to you.
Posted by Willow at 2:42 pm
Labels: dehydration, drinking water, meds which cause dehydration, plain water, Struggling to carry on
Sunday, August 17, 2014
OBESITY AND THE SALT CONNECTION - Mensa article by Margaret Wilde
Obesity and the Salt Connection
What
follows is a slightly modified version of an article I wrote for the
British monthly glossy magazine of Mensa, the high IQ society, of which I
am a member. It was published in the December 2004 issue. Four months
later, the April 2005 issue contained a letter from Joyce Barnard, who
has given permission for her name to be used here. She wrote that by
following the advice I had given her a few years earlier - i.e. that to
lower her high blood pressure and lose weight she simply needed to eat
less sodium - she had lost 5 stones in weight (70 pounds) in a year! -
All she did was stop sprinkling salt onto her meals and use LoSalt
instead of ordinary salt when cooking.
Many years ago I
gained a great deal of weight because of taking HRT prescribed by my
GPs, mainly on the advice of an endocrinologist. - I did not realise at
the time that the weight gain was because of the medication.
I
became desperately ill and exhausted and had very high blood pressure
for which I took Atenolol, a beta-blocker. I was so fat I could barely
walk. Yet I was not overeating. My feet, hands and breasts were
exquisitely painful and very red and swollen. I was unable to use my
hands for many tasks. I needed a larger size in shoes. My face and neck
became beetroot red and very swollen. I developed acne and eczema. I
suffered from breathlessness.
Having never sprinkled
salt on my food in my life, and never used it in cooking, in 1997 I
became aware that there was a lot of salt in bread and cheese and
breakfast cereals. Because of the connection between hypertension and
salt intake I altered my eating to reduce, and eventually to exclude,
all avoidable sodium. This lowered my blood pressure and I no longer
needed to take Atenolol.
More spectacularly, and very
unexpectedly to me, eating less salt reduced my weight by 51 pounds! -
This was nothing to do with calories, fat or sugar. - The weight I lost
was clearly water, which I worked out was held in my body by the salt -
held in my veins, which had become massively distended and painful since
I had embarked on the HRT.
I worked out that it was
the oestrogen that had caused the sodium and water retention and this
was confirmed when I looked in the British National Formulary for the
side-effects of oestrogen. I then realised that oestrogen was a steroid,
though it is not normally thought of in that category, and that the
sodium and water retention came about because certain steroids and
certain other prescribed drugs relax/weaken the walls of the blood
vessels so that they take in excess salt and the water which accompanies
it. I realised that I was a 'steroid victim'.
For many
years I have been providing a free telephone helpline for people in
pain in my area and for the last five years have been advising all
callers to reduce their salt intake, particularly when they were obese.
Their weight loss, too, has been dramatic and swift. One Mensa member
whom I helped lost about a stone in a month just by eating less salt.
Her dog, too, lost weight when she stopped salting his food!
I
firmly believe that the massive rise in the incidence of obesity,
especially child obesity, is due to the prevalence of salt in modern
diets, mainly from manufactured foods, and that calorie counting and
advice about reducing fat and sugar intake and increasing exercise are
counter-productive.
But salt causes obesity only in vulnerable people, i.e.
People whose veins are weak because of immaturity (babies, children),
People
whose veins are weak because of steroids or HRT or amitriptyline or
certain other prescribed drugs, too readily prescribed, often in very
high dose,
People whose natural oestrogen levels are higher than normal (e.g. pregnant women).
People whose blood vessel walls have been weakened by 'slimming' – i.e. eating insufficient food.
Inactivity does not cause obesity. Obesity causes inactivity.
In
2001 I wrote to MPs, to medical people, to journalists, to
nutritionists and others, explaining that salt sensitivity is what
causes obesity, and urging that the facts be made known, particularly to
steroid victims. The powerful and influential people to whom I wrote
have taken no action to give publicity to the life-saving message. The
public is not being told the truth about weight gain and weight loss.
The best, the healthiest, the safest way to lose weight is to
concentrate on eating less salt (and more potassium).
An
Emeritus Professor of Medicine at Oxford, Professor Sir Richard Doll,
wrote back to me in August 2001 that I was right about steroids causing
weight gain because of salt and water retention and that weight can be
lost by eating less salt or by taking diuretics. Sadly he seems to be
the only medic who knows this! - A book on salt, written by experts on
hypertension and brought out in a blaze of publicity a few years ago
makes no mention of steroid victims and specifically states, among other
errors, that HRT does not cause a salt problem.
A
person who gains weight has a higher calorie requirement. There are two
reasons for this. Having to carry a greater mass around and service a
more massive body uses more calories. And having a bigger surface area
means greater heat loss, since heat lost is proportional to surface
area. - A greater calorie requirement results in greater
appetite/hunger, so, really, overweight people need to eat more than
people of normal weight. If the overweight eat insufficient calories (ie
if they 'diet') they may lose weight, but it is at the cost of being
hungry. There has never been the slightest evidence that the practice of
fewer calories in and more calories out by way of exercise reduces
obesity! - It is often confidently stated that fat will be lost by doing
this. - Sadly, what is more often lost is lean tissue, usually an
irreversible adverse effect.
The result of the
misunderstanding of the cause of obesity is the well-known fact that
over 95% of dieters actually gain weight in the long term! - They cannot
be expected to go hungry all the time. - Nor would staying hungry all
the time benefit them. - With insufficient calories for the body's
needs, the body feeds on itself. - The skin becomes thinner; the bones
become less dense; there is some hair loss, etc.
Contrast
this with the right way to lose weight - by eating less sodium. -
Eating less sodium releases some of the excess water held in the blood
stream. This lowers the blood pressure and, significantly, lowers the
weight. - Weighing less results in a lower calorie requirement so very
gradually less food is eaten and this becomes a virtuous circle because
less food eaten results in lower sodium intake.
In
societies in which no salt is eaten (what some might describe as
undeveloped or uncivilised societies) there is no obesity and no
hypertension.
The cavemen and women who were our
ancestors lived for millennia without added salt. Our bodies evolved on a
low sodium and high potassium intake. The modern diet has reversed this
to high sodium and low potassium. The intake of salt has massively
increased in recent years - as has the incidence of obesity.
I
submit that the universal 'slimming' advice - to eat fewer
calories/less fat/sugar - is a major cause of obesity. - All that is
normally necessary to lose weight is to eat less salt/sodium. This is a
drug-free, cost-free course of action. There are no hunger pangs and no
adverse side-effects. It requires no visits to the doctor or to the gym
and it WILL work.
Lose weight by eating less salt! - Go on! -Try it! My website http://www.wildeaboutsteroids.co.uk/
provides more details and advice. (The site does not sell anything and
has no banners or sponsors or adverts - just helpful information.)
Margaret Wilde
Anyone
is welcome to copy this article in whole or in part, provided only that
it is always attributed to me, Margaret Wilde, that the information is
provided free, and that my web-site address http://www.wildeaboutsteroids.co.uk/ is always included.
If you wish to get in touch with me, you can email me from my website.
Posted by Willow at 10:13 pm
Labels: 'Slimming', amitriptyline, Breathlessness, HRT, Mensa article, Obesity and the Salt connection, oestrogen, Prescribed Steroids, Richard Doll, Salt Intake, Salt Sensitivity, sodium retention
Thursday, August 07, 2014
Do you know that a high salt diet can lead to cataracts?
Developing cataracts is one if the lesser-known possible consequences of eating a high salt diet. - See http://www.saltmatters.org/site/uploads/PDFs/SRHP%2025+table.pdf - See also http://wildeaboutsteroids.co.uk/conditions.html
Posted by Willow at 10:11 pm
Labels: cataracts, high salt diet, salt-related health problems
There is evidence that Salt-Related Health Problems include calcium urinary stones
Posted by Willow at 5:43 pm
Labels: calcium stones, calcium urinary stones, eat less salt and salty food, kidney stones, reduce salt intake, reduce sodium intake, salt-related health problems, salt/sodium