Sandor Katz has been living with AIDS for over 20 years. In this episode he talks about his early activism, getting back to nature, and his passion for fermented foods.

You can learn more about the wonderful world of micro-organisms through Sandor’s books — Wild Fermentation and The Art of Fermentation — as well as his website with links to his YouTube videos.

Transcript

welcome to glass half full with leslie krongold she shares her stories experiences and knowledge of living and coping with a chronic health condition learn about tools and resources and hear inspirational interviews that help you to live a life filled with quality and dignity with two decades of support group leadership leslie’s ready to help you make lemonade out of life’s lemons are you ready

hello and welcome to this podcast episode with my guest sandor katz he calls himself a fermentation revivalist but he’s a lot more than that as you’ll soon see i first heard about xander because of his book wild fermentation which my partner or spouse read a few years ago the book launched her avid curiosity about fermented foods and soon there were fermented projects all over the house a crock of sauerkraut quasi cheese in the toaster oven sourdough starters on the counter tanks of beer in the hallway closet and a variety of unrecognizable beverages some of them were very tasty and some were a bit too bitter for my taste buds but it intrigued me enough to start attending fermentation events where i heard even more about sand sandor katz and the publication of his third book the art of fermentation in 2012 i witnessed legions of fans speak about him with awe this book has become the fermenter’s bible okay and then i heard this little factoid that convinced me to learn more about sandor as well as fermentation he is a man living with aids and fermented foods have helped him with the healing process now you’re talking my language someone with a chronic health condition living life fully so i don’t know sandor we’ve never met this is my first interview with someone i have never met and have no connection to so i’m preparing for our skype conversation he lives in rural tennessee i felt like a real journalist we had an email exchange and he graciously graciously accepted my invitation for an interview our conversation covers everything from aids to activism gut health microorganisms and role models healing can really encompass so many different avenues different modalities what you eat how you eat communing with nature or focusing your energies on activism i hope you enjoy listening to our conversation so i mean you know as i told you in our email correspondence i mean i you know i i’m not a clinician um you know i certainly don’t know um you know sort of much about you know the specific disease that that you’re dealing with um or most people’s diseases but i do but i have learned um you know a lot about you know some ways in which um you know fermented foods can be helpful to people and really i’d love for you to speak from your own experience you know um you were diagnosed with hiv in the early 90s right this is true this is true but i mean you know i’m also i mean i i mean i consider to be fermented foods uh you know a piece of what keeps me healthy but i also take hiv meds and sometimes people misunderstand that and just assume that you know i have cured um you know hiv using fermented foods and you know while i think that you know you know good nutrition and probiotic stimulation you know help the immune system in all kinds of ways it generally does not amount to curing any specific disease including hiv you know the things i practice certainly having cured me of my condition but uh i find them to be definitely healing and i i personally don’t take any drugs and i read that for many years you were against taking any sort of the i guess azt and the earlier drugs that were available because you believed in clean living and i was wondering what clean living meant and did that coincide with your leaving new york and going to a more rural environment yeah sure i mean i would say that when you know when i tested positive in 1991 i was living in new york um i had a career in municipal government um you know that that year that i first tested positive is you know it’s really almost a blur when i think back on it you know it i mean i i certainly was involved in aids activism i knew a lot of people who were living with hiv i knew a lot of dynamic and vibrant and empowered people um but uh you know once once it was you know sort of my own health um you know i just i feel like i walked around in a daze for a year you know just feeling something huge has to change in my life and i can’t even picture what it is and you know i was um i was i was going to yoga classes almost every day i was meditating i was definitely experimenting with diet and at that time actually at the time when i tested positive i was already practicing a macrobiotic diet but um you know i i really felt like something big has to change and you know at the point when i met some people who lived in this community in tennessee and uh you know heard about its existence was enchanted by stories i was hearing you know that fit perfectly into the idea of looking to make a big change in my life and this friend of mine who i met because she was my yoga teacher had started taking me on plant walks in parks in new york city and i was getting interested in uh healing herbs you know sort of start starting to drink some herbal infusions as regular health practice and so i mean i feel like i was very open to the idea of moving to a rural place um you know having the opportunity to um get to know plants more intimately get more deeply into herbal medicine learn about growing food um uh and and and harvesting things and so at the point when i moved to to tennessee from new york city you know these things were were all on my mind i mean i wouldn’t say specifically that you know i i thought that like eating a particular way was going to save my life but i thought that you know sort of getting away from the stress of a more than full-time job um and new york city living in a rural place being involved in plants and getting my my hands uh uh in the earth and and growing food and eating that food drinking fresh spring water i mean these were sort of all aspects of a lifestyle that i was hoping would be a healthier lifestyle than the you know working to the point of exhaustion every day kind of lifestyle that i was living so i had read that you were you were concerned about the long-term toxicity of of drugs at that time and and you didn’t start taking antivirals until i guess you had a health crisis in the in 99 yeah that that’s when i that’s when i went on the on the meds yeah i mean i mean certainly in the early period when azt was the only uh um treatment that was available you know at least as long as i was feeling healthy i mean i never really considered doing that because i had certainly watched people who had been healthy you know start taking that drug and start getting really sick and you know the the early uh strategy with azt was high doses and now they give people you know doses that are a tiny fraction of the original doses and with other medications um but you know i didn’t really consider that and then when the new meds came out you know i just was i wasn’t considering myself a sick person it was hard for me to imagine you know getting on the medical tread wheel and taking drugs every day um you know for an abstraction you know something that showed up on my blood test but wasn’t like making me um uh uh feel sick um and so you know it really took um you know getting sick you know honestly i i it took me a long time to realize i was sick i mean my earliest symptoms i really viewed as um you know psychological symptoms uh you know i thought i thought i was depressed i thought that you know my loss of appetite was related to that and it took me a long time to recognize that i had you know all of the classic symptoms of um aids wasting and so well how’s your current health um my current health is is really pretty uh uh uh pretty strong and robust and um you know to some degree i i credit the the drugs with that but i’ll tell you that most of the people who i meet who take the kind of drugs that i take you know just live with chronic digestive problems and i have just never experienced any of that and um you know that really you know makes me think that you know alongside the meds that the you know kinds of foods that i eat that are you know sort of so you know tied up with good digestion have kept my digestive process strong well that’s a certainly good segue to talk about fermented foods so i read that you know you’ve always enjoyed pickles from your youth you grew up in new york but you didn’t start actually playing around with fermented foods until you moved out to tennessee right that is correct and so how does that coincide with your healing how did it come did it come after you were you had your health crisis my interest in fermented foods um uh certainly developed before my health crisis did i mean in my first year of i mean my interest in fermented foods i would say go back goes back to my childhood and um you know as a kid growing up in new york city i loved sour pickles and um you know they just were a favorite food of mine and i always have been you know drawn to the lactic acid flavor um you know it’s not that any of the adults in my life were talking about fermentation it’s not like my grandparents had a fermentation practice or my parents but um but i was drawn to this flavor of fermentation and you know i mentioned earlier that uh during my the later period that i was in new york i was following a macrobiotic diet and macrobiotics was definitely where i first heard about the the you know healing and medicinal potential of fermented foods because mac robotics places a great emphasis on um you know eating a little bit of a little bit of pickles at the beginning of each meal um you know as a digestive stimulant and and you know once i started thinking about that um i started observing that whenever i would eat these pickles that i had always loved or sauerkraut or kimchi or other kinds of fermented vegetables that i could literally feel my salivary glands under my tongue squirting out saliva and so in a really tangible way i started associating these foods with getting my digestive juices flowing so how has your diet changed you know what percentage of your diet actually consists of fermented foods um i i mean i i’ll say that i really don’t at this point you know follow any particular kind of um a dietary ideology you know my my primary dietary ideology would be um you know variety and and and seasonality and i have a beautiful garden and to the extent that i can i i eat out of my garden um but i don’t think any one kind of food is the best food or the answer i mean i love fermented foods i’ve been teaching people about fermented foods and promoting fermented foods and beverages but that doesn’t mean that because fermented foods are good that you know cutting out everything else and eating exclusively fermented foods is somehow better i think that um you know diversity is probably the highest value in in diet and eating lots of different kinds of plants um eating lots of different kinds of ferments so i mean i lots of lots of different kinds of food i mean like i love eggs i mean i’d say half half the time my breakfast is consists primarily of eggs but you know certainly not exclusively i know about fermented foods being good for your gut for your gut health um how else has the consumption of fermented foods been healing for you well i mean okay i mean par part of the answer of this has to be we don’t know i mean you know until the beginning of of the new millennium science had no way of studying bacteria beyond individual organisms that could be cultivated in a dish so you know our ability to sort of look at and understand the dynamics of interactions between microbial communities is really a brand new thing so i mean it’s pretty well so so basically you know each of our bodies are host to um something like a trillion bacteria uh you know increasingly evolutionary biologists are coming to the conclusion that all life is um uh evolved from bacteria the flip side of this is that no form of life has ever lived without bacteria it’s certainly not unique to human beings um you know i mean every uh uh every animal every plant every fungus is populated by bacteria and has never lived without them and and frankly probably couldn’t live without them so in our human or in our own human bodies we’re we’re learning extraordinary things about you know what bacteria do for us so um you know it’s it certainly a part of it is our ability to effectively digest food and assimilate nutrients from our food and and and that’s one big piece of it uh bacteria in our intestines actually synthesize essential nutrients for us so we don’t have to find them in our food what we think of as our immune system is mostly the work of bacteria in our intestines increasingly we’re realizing that you know serotonin and other chemical compounds that determine you know how we think and how we feel are regulated by bacteria in ways that we don’t fully understand uh the abilities of the cells of our livers to regenerate is regulated by bacteria in our intestines i mean almost every aspect of our health and well-being um is related to these bacteria so um historically nobody had to think about you know restoring gut biodiversity but you know for the last um you know most of a hundred years we’ve been living with you know in the midst of what i call the the war on bacteria and our uh bodies our battlegrounds in the in the war against bacteria and um you know we all have abundant chemical exposure frequently to chemicals designed to kill bacteria and you know that would include antibacterial cleansing products you know which have just been outlawed by the usda but we’ve all been using them for a couple of decades and you know they’re they’re found in private homes and and public institutions everywhere you know antibiotic drugs i’m certainly not against the use of antibiotic drugs i probably wouldn’t be here we’re not for the miracle of antibiotic drugs but everybody agrees that they’re overused as a result of their overuse and in health care and even more so in agriculture you know we’re finding rising levels of antibiotic compounds in our water table so we’re all ingesting low levels of antibiotics every day no matter how pristine the source of our water um you know and then the chlorine that’s in our drinking water um in the first place is also put there to to kill bacteria so we have all of this chemical exposure to kill bacteria which thankfully doesn’t kill all the bacteria otherwise it would kill us but but it diminishes biodiversity we think about biodiversity as an important concept you know out there you know having to do with um you know wolves and whales and trees and i mean that’s all important i mean i don’t mean to diminish that in any way but biodiversity is really just as important of a concept looking inside of us and so um you know what’s the relationship between eating bacteria-rich foods and these bacteria that help us i mean we don’t exactly know you know there’s some sort of an elaborate uh interaction that happens between the bacteria we ingest and the bacteria that are in residence in our intestines it’s a highly competitive environment what we do know about about bacteria though is that you know unlike us unlike plants unlike fungi bacteria are genetically flexible and can exchange genetic information so presumably the interaction between the bacteria we ingest and the bacteria that are residents or in our intestines is some sort of a genetic exchange

so how does that trickle down to someone who in my community people with myotonic dystrophy which i know you know nothing about but one of the the major symptoms people complain about is gi stress and there’s also incredible amount of weakness and fatigue and in many people there’s a cognitive sort of apathy personality issues but gi stress is a big one and they will never most people will never become avid for mentors because of a lot you know variety of reasons mostly just the energy and motivation it would take to to start you know the little projects and everything what would you recommend it means i i know i’ve heard people talk about you know they bought some probiotic or prebiotic pill supplement that they take while still consuming a diet that i would i would judge it’s not very healthy um is it am i putting you on the spot by asking you you know what would you recommend for someone in that situation well i mean first of all i mean i think that probiotics do have their place but i think that you know mostly i would conceptualize the benefits of ingesting bacteria as being uh promoting biodiversity and um you know most probiotic capsules you know they might have five billion cells in them but it’s five billion copies of a single cell or of two or three so um you know i think that fermented foods are a much more you know effective uh source of diverse bacteria because all traditional fermented foods involve these broad communities of organisms rather than singular organisms single microorganisms are really a human technological achievement and in the natural world in our bodies microorganisms are always found in communities so you know i would say that foods are probably a superior source of probiotics than capsules if you don’t have the the motivation or the time to make them yourselves i mean yourself i mean certainly it is possible to um purchase you know good quality uh living fermented foods and beverages i mean you have to be a savvy consumer um i mean certainly the most commonly uh available products and the the products that you find um you know sort of in widest distribution um you know they’re heat processed i mean he he probably you know it with your sauerkraut sitting on the shelf in the supermarket is canned it’s it’s it’s heat processed and that’s what gives it that shelf stability a living product always has to that’s sealed in a jar always has to be in a refrigerator otherwise it’ll build up carbon dioxide and pressure and potentially explode or the juice will ooze out or whatever so as a practical matter these things are always found in the refrigerator and i would say you’ll you’ll find better products if you go to a natural foods market than you know at a mainstream supermarket but you know fermented vegetables fermented dairy products different kinds of lightly fermented beverages these are all excellent sources of probiotic bacteria and um and and you know because they need to stay refrigerated uh you know once they’re put in a jar they’re they’re kind of pricey um so i mean i would also just sort of challenge the idea that it’s hard to make them i you know really like if you take um you know two pounds of vegetables and 10 minutes of your time you know you can have a quart of fermented vegetables that you know would would cost you 15 or 20 bucks so um you know it’s really easy i mean all you do is chop or grate the vegetables to create surface area lightly salt them there’s no magic number of salt just salt it to taste then what i like to do is just get in there with my hands and squeeze it for five minutes what you’re doing is kind of bruising the vegetables and breaking down cell walls and helping them give up their juice and the significance of that is that the condition you’re trying to create what prevents molds from growing and enables lactic acid bacteria to dominate on the vegetables is getting them submerged if you just cor if you chop up vegetables and leave them in a bowl exposed to air it’s going to become engulfed with mold over time but when you stuff them into a jar and you’ve gotten them juicy and get them submerged under their own juices you know that’s when the lactic acid bacteria dominate and um you know i know that sometimes people project um anxiety about bacteria onto this process but let me just say that according to the u.s department of agriculture there has never been one single documented case of food poisoning or illness from fermented vegetables this is about as safe as food gets and you have some really great videos uh youtube videos about how to actually create that jar of vegetables i’ll include a link to that because i for many people you know once they they realize okay this is something they can do it’s not expensive it’s not uh you don’t have to get a prescription it’s natural if they have that motivation uh they may be able to achieve it and you know but there are some people who wouldn’t have the energy of the the cutting the chopping of the vegetable yeah yeah i understand that i’m going i have two other questions that are a little off this path i was wondering if there was anything else you wanted to say about fermented foods about your healing process before i go on to these other two questions well i mean i would just i would just add that you know these foods are incredibly delicious i mean most of the world’s major delicacies are products of fermentation you walk into any gourmet food store and what you see are products of fermentation you know they’re practical from a standpoint of food preservation as well um uh you know sauerkraut kimchi pickles you know yogurt cheese cured meats you know these have really all been you know strategies to preserve you know the over abundance that comes with certain seasons to get people through the seasons of relative scarcity so there’s just a lot of you know practical benefits to fermentation um and among them you know are these living bacteria that can um you know really um you know help digestion help overall immune function help mental health and you know anybody can benefit from that like you don’t have to be living with a chronic disease but if you’re living with a chronic disease then it can be especially helpful i was especially moved by the last chapter in wild fermentation and i’m reading uh not your newest edition so i have no idea how much you know okay right and this is and and just to let people in on it that that um just a few weeks ago uh um a revised edition of my original book wild fermentation was released but so let’s hear it but chances are i i kind of think in that last chapter most of the significant stuff uh stayed substantially the same so as someone diagnosed with a chronic health condition at a young age you were forced to think about death and conscious living before you know most average people do i mean and some people never really think about it or at least never speak about it and i really appreciated what you had to say about fermentation and composting as they relate to the cyclical nature of life and i was wondering if you could elaborate on this yeah i mean i was 29 years old when i tested hiv positive uh my mother died a couple of years before that so i was you know confronted you know i was confronted with death with her death um and then you know testing hiv positive and and sort of watching all of these um you know young young people who were my age uh uh past certainly gave me you know gave me pause and and um you know forced me to um you know think about my own mortality and i i think that you know i think that’s one of the things that sort of drew me to um you know moving to a rural area and being involved in growing things was the idea of being closer to the cycles of life and death and the cycles of nature but you know when i when i when i got involved with fermentation it really kind of fleshed that out for me if you will um you know because you know i just i just realized to what a degree you know fermentation is an essential link in the cycle of life and death because it’s really the cycle of life and death and fermentation and fermentation is what you know it’s microorganisms you know acting upon um you know dead plant and animal material in order to you know recycle nutrients and and and basically you know take the remnants of death and recycle them for further forms of life and you know when we when we sort of expand our view of it you know fermentation isn’t something that just happens you know in in kitchens uh and cellars in crocs and other kinds of vessels you know fermentation is what’s happening in the compost pile too and that’s the you know the recycling of the you know of of the waste from the kitchen the parts of vegetables you can’t use the things that go bad the weeds from the garden um you know recycling them back into humus which um you know nourishes further plant growth and um you know so so i think that you know fermentation is really um you know integral in the in in the whole cycle of life and death absolutely yeah i was it just was a particularly poignant uh chapter for me okay my final question and i wasn’t aware of your involvement with act up and aids activism until i read the transc script from the um oral history project that you linked to yeah you did your homework

but anyhow so i i was wondering uh what role this this early activism played and the fact that you were involved in act up before you actually diagnosed positive what role that played for you in your journey with the illness um are you still an aids activist how does the activism change as you age because you know not just with aids or certainly other conditions cancer you know where some people choose to become really super involved and you know go to washington and meet with legislators it is a role that some people when diagnosed they naturally fall into and then it’s something that’s alien to other people they never have the desire so i was wondering how was that a coping mechanism for you well um i mean interestingly i got involved in aids activism before i tested positive myself so it’s certainly that’s not that’s not what you know got me in involved in it but um you know i i i think that the fact that i was involved in aids activism and through that you know sort of got to know so many um you know empowered people um who you know were were were making a difference and were not um you know like laying at home in bed feeling sorry for themselves that were you know kind of trying to do something you know really by the time i tested positive it just gave me gave me role models um and it really kept me from you know just um you know getting excessively morbid and just like imagining that this was you know going to kill me and that i should just give up um so i mean you know at this stage in life i i mean i actually have not remained super active um uh you know in in aids activism i mean some sometimes i’ll sometimes i’ll you know sort of hear about something going on and and um get involved with it but i have not been um um you know i have haven’t been um you know regularly involved in that or deeply involved in that

if you’d like to learn more about sandor please check out his website in the podcast show notes on the glass apple website i have links to his books and his website where he has links to youtube videos he’ll show you the simple steps to create your own fermented vegetables thanks again sander for your time and thank you listeners for listening let’s toast to good gut health cheers thank you for listening to glass half full leslie invites you to leave a rating and review on itunes this helps spread the word to others dealing with chronic health issues for show notes updates and more visit the website glass half full dot online.online

Service dogs can be a best friend for someone with a chronic health condition. In this podcast episode Hazel Weiss, diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis in 1989, talks about her experiences with first Hams and now Virgil. Melissa Marshall, featured in podcast episode, The Cancer Fight Song, talks about her new puppy-in-training.

Hazel mentions two organizations — Bergin University of Canine Studies and Canine Companions for Independence. You can read the policy on service animals at the City of Berkeley’s website.

Transcript:

welcome to glass half full with leslie krongold she shares her stories experiences and knowledge of living and coping with a chronic health condition learn about tools and resources and hear inspirational interviews that help you to live a life filled with quality and dignity with two decades of support group leadership leslie’s ready to help you make lemonade out of life’s lemons are you ready hello and welcome to this episode of glass half full today we have two guests who will be talking about their relationship with dogs service dogs both of these guests are women so i decided to title this episode woman’s best friend according to my friend and yours wikipedia man’s best friend is a common phrase about domestic dogs referring to their close relations loyalty and companionship with humans the first recorded use of a related phrase is by frederick the great of prussia it was likely popularized by its use in a poem by ogden nash and has since become a common colloquialism i wonder if anyone saw this title and thought the episode might be about diamonds i have nothing to say about diamonds nor any other jewels or gems actually most women i know including myself think of cats as their best friends as far as i know though no cats have been registered as service animals service animals are animals that have been trained to perform tasks that assist people with disabilities dogs are the most common service animals there are other service animals i once had a woman show up with a pig at my house for my annual garage sale the pig was cute all dressed up and the woman told me the pig was her service animal i stopped myself from inquiring how the pig helps her but there are people with animals that provide emotional support for them both of my guests speak to that issue as well my cats definitely help me emotionally but the idea of bringing one of them with me outside of my house to ease any of my physical or psycho-emotional issues is just plain scary

my first guest is hazel weiss we met several years ago when i requested a presentation about service dogs from bergen university of canine studies for my support group hazel brought her dog hams with her to represent bergen and their service dog training program hazel is a former housing and community development manager for almena county and was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1989 she’ll talk about her first experiences with a service dog hams and her current service dog virgil hazel’s life has been dramatically impacted by her experience with a service dog she even went back to school to study assistance dog education and served as a faculty member for bergen university in the podcast show notes on the website glass half full there are links to two organizations hazel mentions bergen university and canine companions for independence there’s also a link to the city of berkeley office of access services that explains berkeley’s policy and rules for businesses regarding service animals my second guest is melissa marshall melissa wrote the cancer fight song and was featured in podcast episode number four speaking about her colon cancer and coping with an ostomy bag melissa talks about how her dog helps her with both physical tasks and dealing with anxiety so now please join me in a lovely cafe in berkeley california as i meet with hazel and her service dog virgil you were diagnosed in you said 89 right so when at what point did you feel like a service dog might enter your life this is this is a wonderful story it has kept me going actually for many years i didn’t know very much about service dogs and in my mind they were for people who were much more disabled than me and basically people who use wheelchairs that was my sense of it and in about the year 2000 i was watching kqed public television and there was a documentary on service dogs and i loved dogs anyway i always have i always had pet dogs and um and being a person with a disability was of great interest to me so i was watching and the first person was somebody who used a wheelchair and so the dog did a lot related to that person using a wheelchair and then the next sort of vignette whatever yeah they they were doing stories on like three or four different people and their dogs was a woman a very short stature and she mostly used a scooter an electric scooter to get around she had a lot of trouble with her hips and her legs she could stand briefly she could walk a little bit but not so much and her service dog was a papillon this little small size dog and i’m i’m watching and so the dog jumped up on counters to get things that she couldn’t reach because she was a very short stature and i’m thinking that’s that’s wonderful and i’m appreciating and then she goes to her washer and dryer and she opens the door of the dryer and the dog jumps into the dryer and starts handing her the clothes from the dryer because it’s too hard for her to be leaning in and and i looked at that and i thought oh wow it totally hit home with me leaning over to put clothes in the dryer and take them out of the dryer is a lot of effort and particularly with fatigue from ms it’s always on my mind the energy bank we talk about the ms energy bank you know there’s only so much in there so decide what you’re going to use your energy on and i thought wow that’s something like a service dog could help me to do that and then she went out into her garden and she was saying how much she loved to garden but she had stopped because when she would go out and she’d get down on her hands and knees to be you know working and she said i couldn’t get up again it was too hot she said i could but it was so so hard i couldn’t really get up she said but now my dog i braces and i put my hands on my dog’s shoulders and she can brace my whole weight because even though she’s a small this is me just filling in here even though it’s a small dog the woman was a very short stature and she weighed far less than 100 pounds and i was like light bulbs were going off and and firecrackers were fireworks were going off because i had pretty much stopped gardening for the same reason it was too hard to get up i can get up from the ground but it it’s very hard for me to do that has been for years and i was beside myself i thought service dogs do that they help people with i could i could get a service dog and the dog could help me do the things that i need and that’s what got me thinking about i can i’m going to apply for a service dog that would be wonderful so it was thanks to public television i don’t know when or how long it would have been if if ever that i found out more and ultimately the program they gave me my first dog and my successor dog they said because i had said well am i disabled enough to get a service dog and i don’t want to take one away from somebody else who needs to talk more than me and they said if you have a disability and having a service dog will improve the quality of your life you’re eligible and that really freed me to say okay yes yeah so that’s how i it’s how i got started on the road to applying to get a service dog i discovered that there was a program called canine companions for independence in santa rosa which was you know just like 60 miles from my house and i was starting to look into that and so i had to get you know my my neurologist had a fill out of some forms about my disability that i have a disability and the level of it and there were some other letters i had to get from different people and then i had to write an essay about why i wanted a service dog and looking back now it was so big a deal and i approached it with so much care and and i had to think about everything for the longest time and like right now i could just go do an application into me you know probably in a day or something and then just get the right forms but it was part of the process accepting a different level of disability you you know your your identity was changing and you were looking for an external tool resource to help you with everyday living um it was it was it was it became then that i would be announcing to the world that i have a disability although i later found out so many people don’t know about service dogs or if they do they think i’m cheating to this day i think i’m faking it because i look like i’m okay but back then yes it was so i knew i was going to be really putting myself out there much more than i ever had and it part of me it’s my own perfectionist or my high standards of i had to do the best application i had to really make sure i i wrote what i needed to say and that i didn’t get refused and it was this very big deal which it probably is for many many people i don’t think i’m alone in that and i don’t think it was a bad thing i think it was good because it had me reflecting and thinking and you know feelings about all of what it might mean so it was it was it was very intense it was very intense process and when i started this part and saying i was very lucky they called me in july and said they called me at the beginning of july and said the end of june and said we have a match a dog who we think is a match can you come to team training in july tell me about that process because what i’ve heard is it’s pretty rigorous the training it is and so for most places it’s a two-week they call it team training they call the boot camp they call they call it a number of different things it’s for um you and your dog to get to know each other and to bond and it’s for the person to learn all the 95 commands that the dog already knows and to learn how to now the term is how to handle the dog you know as the dog trainer dog handler but in reality it’s much more personal and meaningful and individual than how to handle my dog it’s learning how what the commands are when to give them how to be in sync with your dog and um how to respond particularly when you first meet your new dog in training and the dog’s going well who are you i don’t know if i should do anything for you that’s often you know that’s why there’s a whole thing about bonding and so it’s very intense in that and for some people more so than others for me more so than others and then it was tiring because it was two weeks of monday through saturday from like starting at eight in the morning till five or six at night and then there was homework because a lot of it was learning about service dogs and about all the commands and how to take care of your dog and how to make sure your dog is in good health and how to be aware and protective that that your dog’s not in a dangerous situation and they call it bonnie bergen calls actually having a third eye always on your dog it’s much more than just you know i’ll go out and my dog’s with me kind of thing but when i got hams back with me to the room so i called my husband i said i’ve got him he came back with me i’ve got him here and i said i said honey you’re gonna love this dog he’s just like me he’s stubborn he’s persistent he’s out there he’s very self-confident and it was true and which is part of what the whole matching thing is to try and actually match personalities which in terms of bonnie bergen’s positive method of training service dogs is is what it’s all about is matching by personality the dog and the person and um that they’ll get along better if that’s the case is that a different style than other service dog organizations that you’re familiar with well at the time bonnie berg and she created the concept of service dog back like 35 30 seven years ago oh okay there there was there was no such thing there were guide dogs everybody lots of people knew about guide dogs for blind people and bonnie bergen was the first person who thought she actually took a trip to um i think maybe turkey and she saw some people um and some small burrows or donkeys were helping them and she got the idea from that to people with disabilities that maybe dogs could be trained to help persons with disabilities so she came back and she trained the very first service dog she started the very first program which was canine companions for independence she developed the whole positive service dog training methods a lot of the training before her was not a positive reinforcement there’s a lot the old ways of dog training you know about pinching the dog’s ear and jerking their leash so hard that they fall upside down and you know kind of pain and punishment was a large part of dog training and so she really was the front runner the forerunner and particularly with service dogs and she said it’s going to be all positive from day one and um and it all happens out of bonding and love and that and i’ve come to believe this totally that my dog helps me because he knows he loves me and i love him and he knows i need to help he knows that time in my life and having ms and getting a dog um he was just quite amazing and once i got him i was like i did everything i went everywhere i did everything i like nothing could stop me can you talk a little more about you know the different ways your your two experiences with two different dogs have you know helped your life one is just to get help me stay motivated to get out of the house and do whatever ranging from i keep i continued to walk more because i wouldn’t i don’t i don’t feel like doing a lot of stuff a lot of the time it’s the ms i’ll say well virgil needs to go for a walk and it wouldn’t be fair hazel for me for you not to take him out for a walk he needs to go it gets physically it gets me up and going he needs breakfast in the morning he needs you know whatever he needs so it actually helps my motivation to keep doing things that i might be inclined to let slide or let slip so that’s been true um with with both of them being a person with a disability and other people they don’t know how hard it is oh generally only other people i’ve spoken to with disabilities have a clue here and then even then some of them are they don’t have a clue either because their way of approaching it is is to say no i’m going to act like there’s absolutely nothing wrong and they sort of don’t admit that anything is difficult or hard it’s sort of been my experience and talking with people if i have to have multiple sclerosis which i would not choose to have i wouldn’t choose to have any disability i’m not grateful that i have it even though i’ve learned many things and it’s affected my life in many positive ways but i i would rather not have gotten it or not have it but since i have it getting to have my dog come with me everywhere i go is the greatest blessing and uh wonderful thing that um balances out both sort of my my positive nature and my happiness as well as i’m just being able to deal with stuff because there’s lots of little stuff that comes up all the time that no one else is when people get impatient with me because it my hands don’t work so well um like at the checkout counter it it takes me longer to get my wallet out get the card out get it slid i just had that before you and people make it clear sometimes that come on hurry up and when that starts to and whether or not they’ve identified now that well she’s got a service dog there must be something wrong but they’re still impatient having my dog with me balances all that garbage out it balances all the garbage all the negativity ranging from just knowing that he’s there because he’s always right next to me two i lean over and i hug him and i kiss him i talk to him and nobody thinks that i’m crazy because you’re talking to your service dog and so that’s perfectly fine with them he also acts as a bit of a buffer for me and i i don’t even tell him to my first dog did that too and he does it too they just seem to know like they put themselves between me and the person behind me or in front of me because people violate their space oh my gosh so much so and that’s it’s even harder for me number one just because i don’t like it that’s the person i am i don’t like my personal space violated it also throws me off balance with my ms it’s it’s scary for me and so having my dog be a buffer or if he didn’t jump to it i can just say over here and then that gives me that little bit of space so i mean for all those reasons and just the joy of getting to have my dog with me everywhere i go i mean i love him i want to be with him all the time he’s such a sweetheart he is he’s just so mellow he’s that’s the thing most often that physically if you had a child there

we don’t know it that’s the truth but that’s the most frequent comment people say is he’s so mellow and he’s he’s doing his job

there’s federal and state law the americans with disabilities act basically provides access for a person with a disability accompanied by a service animal which is a dog which is specifically or specially trained to do certain tasks to mitigate that person’s disability so under title ii local and state governments requires access title iii is all public accommodations businesses and theaters and public conveyances and buses and just about any everywhere that the public is invited or welcomed is covered under the ada and even in employment now that it’s a little bit different title one of the ada it’s not quite the same but there’s still an employer is required to accept a request for an employee to have a service dog and to pretty much grant the request unless there’s a good reason not to in fact i often say when i’m having a bad day which however however often it happens or i’m having a hard time in the middle of the day or whatever and somebody will say how are you doing i’ll say well you know i woke up this morning and i was able to get up out of the bed i could see because i actually had some optic nerve damage from the ms in the early years and i could get up and stand and i have my family and my friends and my dog i’m okay that’s probably one of my most profound things that i’ve said glass half full attitude yeah absolutely absolutely well thank you so much my pleasure thank you very much for asking me to do this yeah

also the most difficult time for me now is going to sleep period that is the time that normal people allow themselves to fall into you know a rem sleep and relax and let their bodies be well my body does not stop producing waste and so sometimes there are accidents these situations when it happens it’s been mortifying i think that has been the hardest thing for me to um deal with and to to not break down constantly and just just keep going i mean that i it’s very hard um i’m scared to sometimes go to sleep and sometimes i’m perfectly fine sometimes i’m not um what i’ve learned is it can all be cleaned up and uh it disrupted it disrupts my sleep but the next morning there you go and you start another day um the best thing that that has happened to me just recently is that i did uh get a puppy who is now a registered service dog she’s in training and uh she’s tiny her name is mari actually her name is mariposa which is butterfly in spanish and she’s part papillon and um maltese she has really really helped me and my anxiety i never used to be an anxious person i never you know really had that problem at all but now um that is the that is where the height is for me is if if i do have an issue where i might have a leak and sometimes these do happen she keeps me calm and um eventually she is going to be taught to retrieve my ostomy products either out of my purse or wherever they might be if i’m in an inconvenient point that something happens

yes my well she she really has been a blessing now i had to

plead bribed my husband um to to get her he did not want a dog at all but um but she really has been such a joy and she has helped me to um just just to relax and to feel more comfortable sometimes if i’m in a crowd or whatever because she is so darn cute that she diverts all of the attention to her so people aren’t really paying attention to me anymore so that was that’s just the irony but she really is quite adorable

thank you for listening to glass half full leslie invites you to leave a rating and review on itunes this helps spread the word to others dealing with chronic health issues for show notes updates and more visit the website glass half full dot online.online

This is a continuation of the last podcast episode exploring how food can be the best medicine. In this episode I spoke with Jill Nussinow, The Veggie Queen, at the Farm to Fermentation Festival. Jill is a Registered Dietician and author of cookbooks and DVDs. Her most recent book is Vegan Under Pressure: Perfect Vegan Meals Made Quick and Easy in Your Pressure Cooker.

This podcast is for anyone interested in adding more plant-based dishes to their diet or is curious about fermented foods.

Transcript

welcome to glass half full with leslie krongold she shares her stories experiences and knowledge of living and coping with a chronic health condition learn about tools and resources and hear inspirational interviews that help you to live a life filled with quality and dignity with two decades of support group leadership leslie’s ready to help you make lemonade out of life’s lemons are you ready i hope you don’t mind but this episode is a continuation of the last episode exploring food as medicine maybe you saw the live stream on facebook this past weekend as i visited the farm to fermentation festival i couldn’t help but continue the discussion because i had a chance to interview the veggie queen it’s not everyday you meet with veggie royalty right so the queen was on hand talking about veggies and fermentation and all that good stuff and i didn’t want to keep you in suspense so you have this podcast as the second part of food as medicine before you meet the veggie queen jill nussenau i want to cover a few things first what is fermentation according to my friend wikipedia fermentation in food processing is the process of converting carbohydrates to alcohol or organic acids using microorganisms you know like yeasts or bacteria under anaerobic conditions fermentation usually implies that the action of microorganisms is desired according to sandor katz who has written several pivotal books about fermented foods and is thought to be the modern revivalist of fermentation eating a variety of live fermented foods helps promote diversity among microbial cultures in our bodies katz has aids acquired immune deficiency syndrome and considers fermented foods an integral part of his healing process the second item i’d like to briefly review is the idea of eating a plant-based diet jill being the veggie queen is more than qualified to talk about this and she will i just happened to read a lot of health related newsletters and wanted to prep you with a few tidbits for example one newsletter i receive is the women’s nutrition connection this is a monthly published by the wild cornell medical college and in last year’s june issue they discussed the five top foods for brain health foods that can boost memory and thinking and help prevent cognitive decline and those foods are berries the study included strawberry and blueberries nuts especially walnuts cruciferous vegetables and those are or they include cabbage broccoli cauliflower brussels sprouts kale arugula watercress and bok choy and then the fourth top food for brain health is cocoa powder and spinach in the july 2015 issue of this same newsletter there was an article about the powerhouse vegetables revealed by the cdc the centers for disease control and prevention and the study they were involved in measure nutrients in a variety of vegetables and they found 20 of these vegetables have the highest nutrient dense scores and the number one powerhouse veggie is you ready you ready can you guess what do you guess what i i know half of you are thinking kale but it’s not kale it’s watercress watercress i bet you don’t eat a lot of that okay so the others on the list but not necessarily in the order of their scores are and maybe it is in the order of their scores they just didn’t reveal that in the article uh chinese cabbage charred beet greens which are so good cooked i don’t need any of this stuff raw really spinach chicory leaf lettuce parsley romaine lettuce collard greens turnip greens mustard greens and knives chives kale dandelion greens red pepper arugula broccoli and pumpkin okay you ready for another tidbit eating tree nuts such as almonds brazil nuts cashews hazelnuts macadamias pecans pine nuts pistachios and walnuts are associated with lower body weight and a lower risk of cardiovascular disease and in the january 2015 issue of tufts university’s health and nutrition letter there’s an article about one of my favorite foods hummus it’s a staple of my diet it’s very easy to eat when you have chewing issues okay so the article is not really just about hummus it’s really it explains how garbanzo beans and black-eyed peas are a type of legume known as pulses pulses are known to improve cholesterol levels they are complex carbohydrates and have insoluble and salt insoluble fiber which helps with digestion and prevents constipation and finally you wondered how long i could keep this up right okay in the september 2016 issue that’s the current issue of self-healing by dr andrew weil you know the the good doctor with the beer the older chubby guy um well the good doctor promotes the seven superfoods for autumn and you’ll have to do your own research to find out why these foods are considered super but these superfoods are kale sweet potatoes brussels sprouts apples cranberries pumpkin and pomegranate and a pumpkin latte from starbucks would not qualify as a superfood at least i don’t think so those are my food facts for you the next few podcast episodes will explore topics such as the role animals can play in our lives and i’ve interviewed a woman with ms who has a service dog i have another interview with a woman who works with a voice coach and calls herself a musical philanthropist she raises money for a local non-profit organization and and seeing is her passion and then her i have another episode i’m working on that i’m calling reefer modness

you m-o-d-n-e-s-s figure out that

so as i previously mentioned i was at the farm to fermentation festival last week it was my fourth time attending this unique event in santa rosa california and four years ago may have been the first time i saw the veggie queen jill nussenau or it may have been the first time i may have been at the annual sonoma county mushroom camp we have some pretty cool events in northern california one how jill is a registered dietitian a culinary educator and has published books and dvds about cooking and she was kind enough to sit with me in the hallway for an interview before her presentation in the festival i first wanted to ask her what she recommends for people who really do want to make their diets more plant-based but are often bewildered on where and how to start well i think the main thing is to really look at what you’re eating that’s not plant-based and say oh what could i eat instead or just fill up with the plant foods the beans the grains the uh vegetables and fruit and nuts and seeds and then kind of go lower on the other foods and i think what people say is oh i’m going to cut it all out and then they end up eating pasta with tomato sauce or olive oil and they think they can live on that so i think the main thing is to get a really broad variety of food and the things that you like because people like oh i really want to eat that but i don’t like it it’s like you don’t have to not like the food that you eat unless you only eat like five or ten foods but most people eat way more so to really look at what’s out there and see what you could eat and i think you know there’s people know what’s good but they’re like there’s a lot of barriers like people say well i don’t cook well beans come in cans and you can actually i think you can buy almost anything pre-cooked and frozen in a store like they make frozen brown rice and frozen quinoa and frozen steel cut oats so you didn’t have to cook to get these things so i think that it’s really looking at the foods that you might want to choose that will fit in your lifestyle so uh your latest book is about using a pressure cooker absolutely it’s called vegan under pressure and it is the pressure cooker helps so many people and there are a number of people that i know who have chronic health conditions and other things who use the electric pressure cooker and love it because first of all you only lift the inner pot which isn’t heavy and so some people have issues with the lifting so um the inner pot is not heavy and for a lot of things you can just put the food in and push the button you know set it for 10 minutes it will cook like if you’re cooking soup or stew or chili and then just open it up and you have food so it doesn’t take a lot of energy to prepare the food to put in i mean if you don’t have the energy to like chop onions you can buy them already chopped there’s a lot of things that you can do that will make it way easier and the pressure cooker is so fast that that um you know how to how to uh you know cook beans it just kind of goes away but still people do use hands and that’s okay yeah i mean the goal is to get the best food you can any way you can get it into your body the crock pot you need to think yesterday and the pressure cooker you can think oh it’s 5 30. i want dinner okay so you have to think in advance the other thing is the food that comes out of the crock pot tends to be mushier and the food that comes out of the pressure cooker tends to be more firm and cooked the way that you might want it so the flavors stay more intact i would say than with the slow cooker so as a dietitian have you counseled people with any kind of chronic issues and you do just name someone or mention someone and what’s most helpful for them in terms of do you have any examples case studies um i think that me you know this is this is what i really think i have not really worked with a lot of people who have chronic health issues but some and i think one of the things and mcdougall and there’s lots and lots of people there but i don’t see them one-on-one so it’s just kind of general but one of the things that really i think is the main thing is like don’t try to do more than you can you know some people like well i have to and then you just wear yourself out and you still don’t have food so it’s like go slow go easy be easy on yourself and do what you can really do so if all you can do which is not all but if all you could do was make a pot of you know soup in a week and that’s what you ate for most of the week and you ate some other vegetables and fruits that’s fine you know some people like but i have to and it’s like there’s no have to’s there’s no perfection the goal is to get the best food that you can in the with the energy that you have so it may be that you don’t have a lot of energy but you really want to make sure that you eat better just use what you you know use your resources and your wrist one of your resources is how much energy you have and so some people want to try to be perfect but it’s not going to work is there any food you recommend to help with energy i mean a lot of people suffer from you know yeah well i think that the energy part um comes from you know eating the right foods and that would be cutting out the crap so not eating a lot of highly processed foods that have a lot of sugar in them once you get those down you eat more clean food i think it really helps so you mentioned before about frozen foods acceptable if you don’t have fresh foods you know about people who live outside this great salad bowl that we live in uh where they have limited you know people in the middle of the country well i have been to kansas a couple of times i’ve done cooking demonstrations there i’ve been to various other places and what i have to say is there is food in other parts of the world and the country and people like there’s nothing to eat i’m like and part of it is because people don’t know what to look for or where to look or what’s in season so yes you’re not going to get a whole range of food but i have a friend who grows kale in kansas in the winter they have squash they have rutabagas they have root vegetables so people sometimes are like there’s no food it’s like just because um there isn’t any there aren’t any tomatoes well there aren’t any tomatoes in california in the winter either so it’s like rethinking your food scene like what’s really in season and what i can eat and pretty much you can get greens anywhere any time of year and actually the winter greens are better than the summer greens because the summer greens are cruciferous vegetables they tend to get really hot and spicy and they’re not as good so there is food in other places and this actually is one of the things like with fermented food you can take the food that’s fresh now whatever time of year it is you can take your cabbage and you can ferment it and you can make sauerkraut which you can have for six months so it doesn’t have to be in season but it had to be in season at some moment somewhere and so there’s ways to get around that um but certainly the more fresh food you can eat the better but yes people tell me oh you live where it’s paradise yes i do but the reality is that you know it doesn’t have to be as you know as fresh from the farm as it can be but there are farms in other places in the country everywhere actually everywhere okay even in kansas even in kansas i’ve been to topeka and i’ve been to lawrence and there was food okay that’s good to know yeah yeah i haven’t been there so here we are at the farm to a fermentation festival what’s so great about fermentation for our bodies well i mean the thing about fermentation that’s so good is basically your body is run by your immune system which makes up which is in your digestive system and many people have issues have digestive issues many people in this country have digestive issues and they don’t realize that many of the other things that happen to them stem from the fact that they’re not digesting their food very well so one of the things is that that you you know fermented foods actually help with your with your immune system by boosting it so the more fermented foods that you’re able to eat the better your immune system might work now as people who have compromised digestive systems and might not be able to metabolize their food very well and have all kinds of things that can go wrong those people are better off not eating necessarily things like sauerkraut or fermented pickles or really those harder to digest things but more things like miso or kombucha or kefir or yogurt or not dairy yogurt and things that are easy to eat that don’t require so much processing with your body because sometimes the sauerkraut and things like that that are really delicious are a little bit harder to digest also harder to chew definitely harder to chew yeah so i i mean one of my go-to’s is miso when i travel i often take a little jar because you can’t carry more than three ounces but a little jar of miso with me and then no matter where i am i can just get hot water and make miso soup so it’s really wonderful to be able to do and miso is really potent and delicious so i think it just helps boost your immune system i think it makes you feel good when you eat it and the thing to remember though is something like even sauerkraut you know it’s meant as a condiment like maybe you know two three four tablespoons but people have told me oh i bought it it was so good i ate half the jar i’m thinking oh my god my tummy hurts just thinking about it so there’s a limit you know but it really does help your immune system by helping your gut helping your gut helps your brain helps the rest of your body is there kombucha in kansas they’re you know what at the last time that i went to the mother earth news fair which is where i go there they had a a truck a food truck that was all fermented foods wow and they did have kombucha they have all this is the whole thing there’s a whole fermented food movement across the country so i met a young couple um in asheville north carolina they came from cincinnati ohio with their fermented foods and they were serving them there and they were delicious and it was wonderful so i think there is a whole thing people are catching on and the thing that’s so fascinating about the fermented foods is this is not new this is old so like you know i think like 100 years ago before there was refrigeration most people had fermented foods because it was a way to preserve the food so um my late mother told me stories about the pickle barrel and how she loved the pic i loved how she loved the pickles and like everybody you know in an area would have a pickle barrel and you would go and get your pickles because in the neighborhood yeah in various places like you know they’d have a pickle barrel and you could go get you could buy pickles like now if you go to buy a pickle i think they’re like two or three dollars but these probably were not expensive and it was the only way you could have them or sauerkraut you know you’ll hear people like oh my grandmother had a croc and it was 40 gallons and you know you hear this stuff and it’s like not new but people think oh it’s so new it’s so different but if you didn’t do anything with your food and it didn’t rot and you knew the thing to do with it you could ferment it fairly easily so any other tips for people you know with any kind of condition like life that is right yeah well you know yeah i think it’s important to make sure that you get if you can tolerate it you get fresh food you get fermented food you have some cooked food if you can tolerate whatever you can tolerate but every day i like to say when you eat something cooked eat something raw and so that’s like i have these very short list of food rules and that’s one of them and so for me it might be like i like to make this little sauce of miso tahini lemon juice and maybe some garlic and just stir that up and put it on my cooked food because then i get something fermented with it or maybe put a couple tablespoons of sauerkraut on top of my cooked food or just chop up some herbs or and put that on top of my cooked food so i think there’s a synergy between our food and we’re not meant to eat all cooked food or all raw food at least i don’t tolerate it really well and a little fermented food to make any mushrooms and mushrooms mushrooms are immune boosters like you cannot believe and so i love mushrooms i actually have never fermented mushrooms but i’d like to try and see what happens with them i just the texture thing kind of just has my brain like thinking yeah it’ll be slimy but maybe it wouldn’t be but mushrooms are extremely important and i highly encourage people to either eat them as food or if you can’t take capsules or do a tincture or something they change your life my husband has asthma and he started taking mushroom capsules and he changed things he yeah he really boosted his immune system it used to be if somebody got a cold or something or the flu he’d get it immediately go right to his lungs and he’d be down he started taking the mushrooms he no longer gets affected if everybody in his office got something he might get something but maybe not but maybe for two days instead of a week really made a huge difference great yeah well thank you and he hates to eat mushrooms just so you know why he hasn’t come with you to the festival pops in once in a while but he won’t stay he won’t eat mushrooms yeah a lot of people they love him or hate him i love them yeah i thought so i hope so i hope yeah yeah in every form i mean i think they’re just amazing you need a lot too no i don’t eat them wrong but you can get mushroom powder so um i have a friend who just went through no i have a friend who just went through chemo and radiation for breast cancer and she now actually is doing the powder and she puts it in her smoothies so you can buy it as powder and use it that way no it’s actually not from host defense which i really support um but it’s from a company called mushroom matrix and they make one called critical care and one called immune so they have some for people who really really need boosting it’s really wonderful stuff so anything else uh no i have a website the veggie queen.com which i know you’ll mention and thank you for talking to me and i hope i can help some people because my mission in life is to get people to eat better to feel better and have healthier happier lives sounds good i’m with you on that thank you you’re welcome

thank you for listening to glass half full leslie invites you to leave a rating and review on itunes this helps spread the word to others dealing with chronic health issues for show notes updates and more visit the website glass half full dot online

classful.online

This is the first of perhaps several episodes to explore how food = medicine for a variety of people with different chronic health conditions. In this episode I speak with Retired Navy Lieutenant Laura Root and Edibell Stone, LPC & health coach about their respective diets.

Edibell strongly recommends a book that’s inspired her — The Urban Monk: Eastern Wisdom and Modern Hacks to Stop Time and Find Success, Happiness, and Peace — and finds great plant-based recipes on this website.

Those are the words of a young man who has faced many health challenges. Paul Robison, L.Ac., shares his personal story of achieving health and eventually becoming an acupuncturist and herbalist.

You can find Paul at the Washington, DC integrative practice Capital Center. To locate a licensed acupuncturist in your area, please consult these organizations: National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, American Organization for Bodywork Therapies of Asia, or American Association of Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine.

A bath can be healing for sore muscles, a night-time transition to sleep, and a spiritual experience. It’s one of my treatment modalities. My friend, Barbara, shares her thoughts on bathing for her chronic fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia.

If you’d like to explore some bathing accouterments, check out this book, Spiritual Bathing: Healing Rituals from Around the World. Also, this is my favorite bubble bath.

Here’s more information about my personal Hierarchy of Needs.

Retired Navy Lieutenant Laura Root — diagnosed with myotonic dystrophy type 2 (DM2) — talks about her current work with wounded warriors as a Level 3 Shooting Coach and mentor.

Valerie uses Reiki therapy, one of five modalities used in Urban Zen Integrative Heealing

Valerie uses Reiki therapy, one of five modalities in Urban Zen Integrative Healing

Urban Zen integrates the practices of Reiki, aromatherapy, body scans, breath awareness, and movements/restoratives to initiate self-care and healing. In a conversation with Valerie Jew, I learn how these modalities can help not just people with chronic health conditions but caregivers as well as health care providers.

You can visit the Urban Zen Foundation website to learn more about this program.

Valerie recommends the following books to learn more about any of the specific modalities used:

 

Diagnosed with MS as a teenager, Michael Muir spreads his “fun is therapeutic” philosophy while making the horse ranch experience accessible to everyone.

To learn more about Michael’s organization visit the Access Adventure website.

If you’d like to know more about hippotherapy you can listen to this panel session at the 2014 Myotonic Dystrophy Foundation Conference.

book groupIn this podcast you’ll hear about my book group, now in its fifth year, and how it helps me with social support and brain health. There are also two guests.

You might want to scroll down this page and read the blog entry, For the Love of Reading.

One graphic novel mentioned in this episode is Can’t We Talk about Something More Pleasant? This is an amazing book and recommended reading for anyone taking care of their aging parents.

As I mention in the podcast, if you’d like to join our Goodreads book group please request to join – Glass Half Full.

If you’d like to learn more about starting your own book reading group here are some tips from the American Library Association and a group in Ireland which seems to offer book groups for people with cancer.