Stephane Bensoussan upcoming events

Applied Kinesiology
6 hours
Can-Fit-Pro Conference
Sunday, August 23rd
Toronto


aromatherapy lavender Lavender oil is widely used in aromatherapy to ease tension, tiredness and feelings of depression. Lavender's gentle yet powerful healing properties allow it to be used for burns and insect bites. Blended lavender oil, when used for massage produces a relaxing, calming effect. A few drops of the oil in a hot bath will relieve anxiety and produce a pleasant drowsiness. In a cool bath the oil will refresh and energise.
Source:The Kevala Center

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web sites recommended International Journal of Healing and Caring
A holistic US psychiatrist reporting on research in the fields of mind-bdy-spirit and complementary alternative medicine. Well doumented and well written. The information is well worth the read.
www.ijhc.org

Spiritual Cinema Circle
If you're tired of watching violence and movies that promote the ego world and lack soul, this is for you. This group sceens movies for their inspirational content on a spiritual level and will send you these indepedently made movies on DVD that did not make Hollywood but are worthwhile to see. These movies will make you think, and inspire your spirit. There is a monthly membership rate but you do get to keep th movies and share hem with your friends.It helps to support the spiritually conscious movie directors, promote these lower budget movies, and raises the consciousness of the earth as well.
www.spiritualcinemacircle.com

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soul challenges

How would you define
   success?

You know how successful
   you  are by :…

If you haven’t reached   success as you have defined
  it, what are your excuses?

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inspirational quote

“Giving someone all your love is never an assurance that they'll love you back! Don't expect love in return; just wait for it to grow in their heart but if it doesn't, be content it grew in yours.”

Author unknown


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greetings
Its summer time... For many summer is a long awaited time of glory, joy and freedom. It is the time to let loose, relax and play. Summer is notorious for festivals and laughter. Energetically, summer is a yang time. The sunshine supports expressions of high levels of energy. It is a time for expansion of the mind-body-spirit system and releasing the pent up energy from the winter and spring. It is a time for exploring, taking risks and testing the limits of the physical body.It is a time to replenish the soul's need for growth and stimulation. Allow the fireworks within you to to light up the sky around you! Have a happy and fun summer !
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Applied Kinesiology

By: Stephane Bensoussan, M.A., N.D., Holistic Psychologist, Naturopath

kinesiology

Have you ever wondered which exercise routine to use today, or debated which supplements best support your system? How do you really know how much your body actually needs? Ever wondered why you got a specific health problem? Wouldn't it be great if you possessed a tool that could tell you the answers in an instant? Well, look no further. The field of applied kinesiology is attracting recognition amongst North American health and educational practitioners and the public at large. In the last twenty years, well over two million people in forty-two countries have studied applied kinesiology through various training programs.
Applied Kinesiology is commonly used from the more physical therapies such as chiropractic to the subtler domain of healing and energy work. It is practised world wide by chiropractors, osteopaths, doctors, naturopaths, physiotherapists, nutritionists, psychotherapists, and trainers and in almost every branch of alternative and complementary medicine. Several business people, educators, athletes and performers also use it.

What is Applied Kinesiology?

Applied Kinesiology (AK) is a biofeedback tool that allows us to go beneath our conscious level of awareness to access the wisdom held in the body. Through this holistic system, AK is used to understand the root cause of any problem whether the problem manifests on a physical, emotional, spiritual, environmental, interpersonal, or cosmic level. Once it is understood what needs rebalancing, AK is used to custom design the specific intervention plan for an individual. Just as each individual is unique, so too is the customized treatment plan. There is no single system, formula, or remedy that will be effective for everyone. AK, is respectful of each individual's needs and as such constitutes a complete system of natural health care.

AK, has its roots in chiropractic. It was created in the 1960s by an American chiropractor named George Goodheart. At the time, AK was utilized mainly to evaluate the integrity of muscles and their nervous system supply. This field has greatly evolved in that now it is apparent that what is being evaluated is the energy of the muscle and not the muscle itself. Applied kinesiology is not to be confused with kinesiology, which is the study of muscles and muscular movement and used in physical education and sports since the early 1900s.

AK, also referred to as "muscle checking or muscle testing", is a very effective and versatile tool for detecting and correcting various imbalances in the body which may relate to stress, nutrition, learning problems, injuries and so on. In the hands of a skilled practitioner, and trained lay people, muscle checking has been employed to achieve remarkable results in eliminating symptoms of ill health and improvements in general health and well-being. Positive results include the freedom from stubborn physical aches and pains, the resolution of the conditions of allergies/food sensitivities; the freedom from phobias and repetitive negative life patterns and the correction of dyslexia and other learning disabilities. AK can greatly enhance the work of health practitioners including those working in a conventional medical approach.

The AK procedure

In muscle checking, light pressure is applied to limbs held in particular positions. If the limb can be held steady, then the muscle and brain are communicating fluently. If the limb cannot be held steady, then something is interrupting this mind-body connection. The muscle response that the limb gives indicates the state of this communication. If the stimulus results in a strong muscle response it means that stimulus is harmonious to the person's system. However, if the muscle response is weak, this indicates the stimulus is causing some stress resulting in temporary disorganisation in the person's system.

Muscle checking can then produce a strong or weak muscle response; in AK terminology this is on or off. This binary code language acts like a translator in a conversation between the internal and external aspects of the person.

As an example, when checking for sensitivity (or allergy) to a food, a client holds the food in the right hand while holding out their left straight arm to the front of the body. The practitioner then applies pressure on this arm, thereby testing the resistance of that particular muscle. If the food being tested is incongruent with the needs of the body, it registers as a stress and the muscle being tested will weaken. This enables the arm to drop despite the client's attempt to resist it.

How it works

Any form of blockage, whether it is musculo-skeletal, nutritional, emotional, spiritual and even environmental will disrupt this circuit of communication within the body systems. AK allows this conversation to take place and thereby discover what has caused the disruption and how to correct it. However, the information that can be obtained and the level of change that can be achieved is dependent upon the skill, knowledge and creativity of the practitioner.

Physiologically, it appears that there are direct neurological connections between the limbic brain and the pathways that control our muscle tone and tension. The limbic brain, which controls our emotional and physical survival programmes, also sets the tone of our muscular system. Because AK monitors subconscious muscle tone, it is directly linked to the emotional centres that are setting that tone. When monitoring a muscle, it is possible to get in touch with the interface between the neurological physical body, and the emotions and thoughts that affect the body. Further, the muscle also monitors the interface between the physical body and the energetic systems of Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine.

AK as a science, an art and a skill

Muscle checking is a mechanical process and it requires skill with the technique and therapeutic finesse to maintain rapport and the flow of therapy. But that is seldom a problem for the experienced therapist. As the therapist becomes adept at muscle checking, intuitive skill and "flow" appears in a similar fashion that an accomplished skier or dancer no longer comes to rely on a set routine. The process is then conducted in such a way that the therapist and client are joined on a discovery mission to observe what the body has to say. This holistic approach is mainly a diagnostic process but it is also therapeutic, since it guides the therapist and the client in discovering the remedies and the optimal treatment interventions required. The power of muscle checking is that there is no guesswork. The facilitator and the client can go to the heart of an issue quickly.

One of the great virtues of AK is its versatility. The basic concepts and techniques of AK are easily learned and incorporated in an individual's personal and professional domains. Students who invest the time to learn AK possess a powerful tool that may enable them to flex a new muscle.

Case example: Alice was experiencing regular sugar cravings. She couldn't prevent herself from indulging in her favorite chocolate on a daily basis. Alice was getting stressed at the fact that her habit was preventing her from losing the weight she needed. She tried self-restraint, self-deprivation, and bingeing until she got sick. None of the approaches worked at supporting her goal. With AK, it was determined that there was a physical and an emotional component to her eating. The AK procedure suggested that she had a problem processing sugar and that she was deficient in chromium. Furthermore, her cravings seemed to come out when she was feeling lonely and when she missed her father who had died 5 years ago. Upon determining these factors, it was a lot easier for Alice to understand the root cause of her problem and to address them successfully.

© Stephane Bensoussan, 2004

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Repairing the damage

Source:Time Magazine      By Christine Gorman

Ready to turn your life around? It's simple. Eat right. Quit smoking. Get fit. Watch your weight. Drink less. And take it easy. Think it's too late to reverse a lifetime of bad habits? The latest research will surprise you

Over the past five years, scientists have accumulated a wealth of data about what happens when aging boomers and slackers decide to turn their lives around. The heartening conclusion: the body has an amazing ability to heal itself, provided the underlying damage is not too great.

The effects of some bad habits — smoking, in particular — can haunt you for decades. But the damage from other habits — especially those that affect the circulatory system — can be largely offset. "At any time you decide to improve your behavior and make lifestyle changes, they make a difference from that point on," says Dr. Jeffrey Koplan, director of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). "Maybe not right away. It's like slamming on the brakes. You do need a certain skid distance."

But the skid distance can be remarkably short. Consider these recent dispatches from the front lines of medical research:

— Just two weeks ago, a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association concluded that women who consume as little as 8 oz. of fish a week cut their risk of suffering a stroke almost in half.

— Laboratory measurements show that eating more fruits, vegetables and fiber changes the blood's sensitivity to insulin within two weeks, helping decrease the risk of diabetes almost immediately.

— Scientists have found that hitherto sedentary 40-year-old women who start walking briskly for half an hour a day, four days a week, enjoy almost the same low risk of heart attack as women who have exercised conscientiously their entire lives.

— The day you quit smoking, the carbon monoxide levels in your body drop dramatically. Within a week, your blood becomes less sticky and your risk of dying suddenly from a heart attack starts to decline. Four to five years later, the chance you will have a heart attack falls to nearly that of someone who has never smoked.

Adopting healthy habits won't cure all that ails you, of course. But doctors believe that as much as 70% of all chronic diseases in the U.S. — from diabetes and high blood pressure to heart disease and even some cancers — can be warded off with some timely, sensible changes in lifestyle.

Still, we have our work cut out for us. Nearly 50 million Americans continue to smoke. More than 60% are obese or overweight — 20 years ago, it was 47%. One in four Americans gets no regular exercise at all. Perhaps 25% of the populace consumes the recommended minimum of five servings a day of fruits and vegetables. The incidence of adult-onset (or Type 2) diabetes, having jumped 33% from 1990 to 1998, climbed an additional 6% in 1999, according to a report released last week by the CDC. Health experts worry that if present trends continue, the incidence of cancer could increase and the death rate from heart disease — which had been leveling off — could reverse itself.

Wouldn't it be great if there were a vitamin or a drug or a fad diet that would protect you? Unfortunately, undoing the damage from a lifetime of bad habits means learning — and sticking with — a whole new set of behaviors. After all, anybody can lose 10 or 20 lbs., and many of us have — over and over again. It's only by maintaining that weight loss, however, that you derive real, lasting benefits.

That's the bad news. The good news is that even small changes can lead to big improvements. For example, doctors for years thought that lowering cholesterol levels reduces the risk of heart attack by shrinking artery-choking plaques. As it turns out, lowering cholesterol levels doesn't change the size of the plaques very much. But it makes them less reactive, thereby lowering the chances that they will rupture. Similarly, even a modest reduction in blood pressure decreases the likelihood that a plaque will burst, reducing the risk of both heart attack and stroke. The payoff can be huge. "It isn't just a matter of living an extra day," explains Dr. James Cleeman, coordinator of the National Cholesterol Education Program at the National Institutes of Health. "Avoiding strokes and heart attacks adds quality to your life."

Not sure where to start? Surprisingly, it doesn't really matter, since one positive change usually leads to another. Becoming more active physically, for example, inspires many people to eat a healthier diet. Make enough changes, and eventually you'll discover you've adopted a new way of life. It won't make you invincible or doctors unnecessary, and you can't wait forever. But you'll never know just how much damage you can undo if you don't try.

It's Never Too Late To...

Eat Right

For more than a decade, dietitians and nutritionists harangued us to lower the amount of fat in our diet. As it happens, their message was only partly correct. Although all fats are high in calories, certain fats, like the omega-3 fatty acids commonly found in fish, are actually good for you, provided you consume them in moderation. Not only do omega-3s reduce the risk of clot formation in blood vessels, they also lower the amount of triglycerides, another fatty substance in the blood. The bottom line is that folks who eat 6 to 8 oz. of fatty fish a week experience significantly fewer heart attacks and strokes. (A caveat: the Food and Drug Administration warns pregnant women not to ingest such species as swordfish and king mackerel to avoid birth defects due to possible mercury poisoning.)

Still on the consume-sparingly list are saturated fats, commonly found in red meats and whole-milk dairy products. Recent studies also suggest that another group of fats, called trans-fatty acids, found in abundance in crackers and cookies prepared with hydrogenated oils, may be an even more dangerous promoter of high cholesterol than saturated fats.

The most immediate benefit from adopting a healthy diet is that it can lower blood pressure. Even if you don't have hypertension, decreasing your blood pressure makes your blood vessels springier and can help stabilize potentially dangerous plaques in the arteries. Two major studies, one published last month, have shown that the DASH (for Dietary Approaches to Stopping Hypertension) diet — which emphasizes fruits and vegetables, promotes low-fat dairy and high-fiber grains, permits modest portions of lean meat and reduces sodium intake — can lower blood pressure as effectively as taking a prescription anti-hypertension drug. Just as important, the foods are filling, taste good and aren't that different from what most Americans are used to eating.

Lower blood pressure isn't the only reason to put a little DASH in your life. The extra calcium in the diet helps reduce the risk of osteoporosis. The fiber in the fruits, vegetables and other foods can decrease insulin resistance in many diabetics and even lower their need for medication. There's also the possibility, over the very long term, that it may help diminish the risk of some types of cancer. "It's not a diet for one disease," says Dr. Lawrence Appel, a DASH researcher at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Md. "It's a diet for all diseases." (For more on DASH, visit dash.bwh.harvard.edu.)

Quit Smoking

Long-term studies now indicate that it is harder to undo the damage to the lungs from smoking than most people and even many doctors realize. While quitting can eventually restore the lungs to their original bright pink form, that doesn't necessarily mean that all the cells deep within their folds are now healthy. "Quitters 30 years out still get lung cancer," notes Dr. Eva Szabo, chief of the lung-cancer research group at the National Cancer Institute. But their risk, she hastens to add, is substantially lower than it would be had they continued to smoke.

Fortunately, the circulatory system is more resilient. In the past few years doctors have learned that blood vessels and coronary tissue respond almost immediately to quitting smoking — even in smokers who are 60 or 70 years old. The risk of suddenly dying begins to drop within the first weeks and five years after quitting is nearly indistinguishable from that of someone who has never smoked. "I tell this all the time to my patients to help motivate them to quit smoking," says Dr. JoAnn Manson, chief of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. "They're always surprised to learn they're going to get benefits quickly."

Get Fit

Among the more surprising findings of the past decade is that weight training can reverse some effects of aging. In 1990 researchers from Tufts University showed that elderly nursing-home residents, ranging in age from 86 to 96, dramatically increased their strength and improved their balance in just eight weeks of supervised weight training. Further studies have since proved that working out with either free weights or machines helps restore lost bone density, diminish knee pain from arthritis, and moderate insulin insensitivity in Type 2 diabetics.

You don't have to wait until you're 90 to get started. Studies show that some of the greatest benefits occur in men and women who pick up weight training in their 30s and 40s. That doesn't mean you can ignore aerobic activity, however. Even a brisk walk three times a week for half an hour at a stretch does some good. But the best cardiovascular results appear once you start breaking a sweat at least five days a week. As you become more fit, you may need to increase the intensity or duration of physical activity.

Your circulatory system benefits the most in the early going. Practically from the moment your heart starts pounding harder, your blood vessels become more flexible, lowering blood pressure. For 18 to 24 hours after you exercise, your body becomes more sensitive to the insulin it produces, keeping your sugar levels efficiently in check and reducing your risk of diabetes. A study of more than 5,000 women with diabetes published in the Annals of Internal Medicine last month found that those who walked the most (and at a brisk pace) lowered their risk of heart disease and stroke better than 40%.

"We know that if everybody exercised a few hours a week, Type 2 diabetes would be virtually nonexistent," says Ken Goodrick, associate professor at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. "The trick is motivating everyone to do it."

Somewhat unexpectedly, the benefits of regular exercise appear to be relatively independent of how much you weigh. A 1999 study of 25,000 men (average age: 44) showed that, all other things being equal, men who were obese and physically fit had about the same risk of death over a 10-year period as men who were both physically fit and of normal weight. By contrast, men of normal weight who were unfit were twice as likely to die as the obese but fit men. "It's pretty clear that if you follow a healthy diet and don't smoke but don't exercise, you are still at high risk [of chronic illness]," says Steve Blair, an author of the study and director for research at the Cooper Institute in Dallas. Men who were both obese and inactive faced the worst odds: they were three times as likely to die of heart disease as physically fit men of normal weight.

So get moving — even if you don't need to lose weight or have given up trying. Top choices include brisk walking, moderately fast dancing and swimming. "A lot of it comes down to trying to do more than you're already doing," says Abby King, a health researcher at Stanford. "We start people where they are and encourage them to build on that. If they jump in too quickly and get sore, they quit."

Watch your weight

Doctors have long known that being 30 lbs. or more overweight dramatically increases your risk of heart disease, diabetes, gallbladder disorders and arthritis. The most effective strategies for losing weight and keeping it off, according to a 1997 study of men and women who had dropped at least 30 lbs. for more than five years, consist of cutting back on caloric intake while significantly boosting physical activity. Yet only about 20% of folks who say they're trying to lose weight depend on a combination of diet and nearly daily exercise in their efforts.

Can't imagine losing 30 lbs.? Current research shows that many overweight folks who shed as few as 10 lbs. can lower their blood pressure (though it won't necessarily make it normal) and, in some cases, reduce their risk of diabetes. The goal is to drop just a pound or two a week so that the body doesn't lower its metabolic thermostat to starvation-level readings. (Paradoxically, losing weight too rapidly increases the risk of developing gallstones.) Even such a gradual regimen has recently been shown to result in the loss of muscle as well as fat, however, unless you also include a moderate strength-training routine.

Is 10 lbs. too much to ask? Then just make sure not to gain any more. Indeed, such a large proportion of the U.S. population is overweight that the American Heart Association decided last year for the first time to stress the importance for adults of trying to maintain their current weight rather than just urge the overweight to slim down. Of course, the older you get, the harder this is to do. For most folks, the solution is to combine eating moderately with exercise that strengthens both the heart and skeletal muscles.

Drink less (if at all)

What is it about alcohol that triggers our most moralistic impulses and feeds our deepest reserves of denial? There is no question that many people can drink alcohol without suffering lasting side effects and may, in some cases, be healthier for it. There is also no question that for some folks — not all of them alcoholics — even a single drink is poison.

The evidence suggests that consuming a moderate amount of alcohol, equal to a glass or two of wine, may benefit the heart and blood vessels. But the results aren't overwhelmingly positive. Furthermore, it doesn't take much to trigger a host of ills--from fistfights to high blood pressure. A lot depends on circumstances and individual physiology. "A young healthy woman may, for example, be able to drink one or two glasses of wine a week," says Samir Zakhari, director of the division of basic research at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. "But that's not something she should be doing if she's pregnant or trying to become pregnant."

Driving while drinking is obviously a bad idea. And alcohol can cause devastating side effects with a number of medications, including some over-the-counter remedies, like acetaminophen, often sold under the brand name Tylenol.

The liver and the brain are the most susceptible to alcohol's harmful effects. Contrary to popular mythology, the liver doesn't always regenerate itself. As long as extensive damage hasn't occurred, the liver can recover. But once cirrhosis or scarring of the organ sets in — a process that generally takes years of intense drinking — the damage is no longer reversible; the best you can do is avoid making it worse. The brain, on the other hand, tolerates much less abuse. A weekend of binge drinking will kill some neurons. Whether or not you notice depends on how often you do it.

Perhaps one of the most overlooked dangers of alcohol use is that it masks or even exacerbates mental illness, particularly depression. In such cases, undoing the damage caused by the alcohol requires treating the underlying psychiatric disorder as well.

Take it easy

Although doctors have studied meditation, prayer and anger-management programs since the 1970s, research into the effects of the mind on the body is still in its infancy. The latest evidence suggests that a holistic approach that touches both the heart and head offers the best chance of success. Dr. James Blumenthal and his colleagues at Duke University, for example, have shown that heart patients who exercise and learn how to control their anger are less likely to suffer from ischemia, a sometimes painful condition in which the cardiac muscle is starved for oxygen. Exercise alone was only half as effective.

Attitude also makes a difference. Blumenthal and his colleagues have determined that exercise, combined with weight loss in a support-group setting, allows more people with mild hypertension to normalize their blood pressure than does changing just one of those variables. The message is clear: if you want to improve your health, you need to make several changes in your routine.

More controversial has been the handful of studies that suggest that practicing yoga may help decrease the number of asthma attacks in some patients. The idea is that the regular, measured breathing that yoga teaches may reduce the level of stress hormones in the blood, making the airways less vulnerable to an asthma attack. But if research into lifestyle changes has proved anything over the past few years, it's that while undoing the damage caused by chronic illnesses or unhealthy habits is possible, it's not always easy or foolproof. So be sure to keep your doctor's phone number handy, just in case.


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Stephane Bensoussan, M.A.,
Holistic Psychologist
West Island Holistic Clinic
3608 St..Charles Blvd, suite 9
Kirkland, Quebec, H9H 3C3
Tel : (514) 695-5560

Disclaimer: Psysante does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information, which is in no way to be considered as a substitute for consultation with a duly licensed holistic physician/medical practitioner. Psysante and its director shall not be liable or responsible to any person or entity for any loss or damage caused, or alleged to have been caused, directly or indirectly by or from the information or ideas contained, suggested, or referenced on this website or in any related publications.