#TeaandWellness
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Happy International Tea Day
Celebrate the love for tea on International Tea Day! Acknowledge the rich history, cultural significance, and joy this timeless beverage brings to millions worldwide.
Visit > https://newleafskills.com/
#InternationalTeaDayCelebrate#HappyInternationalTeaDay#HappyInternationalTeaDay2024#TeaCulture#LoveforTea#TeaTraditions#GlobalTeaCelebration#TeaandWellness
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Explore the world of tea and wellness as we delve into the health benefits of consuming different teas. It's time to embrace this harmonious blend!
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It's here, the last month of 2018. Do you know what your life's purpose is? #purposeinlife #surrey #surreybc #abbotsford #langley #langleybc #tea #teaandwellness #planning #healing #shoutoutsaturday #smallbusinesssaturday #socialsaturday #salessaturday #saturdaysale (at Surrey, British Columbia) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bq28XXHl7zi/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=pmucu54ygn34
#purposeinlife#surrey#surreybc#abbotsford#langley#langleybc#tea#teaandwellness#planning#healing#shoutoutsaturday#smallbusinesssaturday#socialsaturday#salessaturday#saturdaysale
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Tea and a Healthy Lifestyle According to Traditional Chinese Philosophy
I have been so excited to share my recent experience in an illuminating tea appreciation and tasting seminar led by Tea Master Yang here in Beijing at a friend's teahouse. It was richly philosophical, thought provoking, inspiring, and such a deeply relaxing and delightful mind and body experience.
Tea Master Yang led our group of Chinese tea enthusiasts through a guided tea tasting according to the ancient "Seven Cups of Tea" poem from the Tang Dynasty, expounded on tea's pivotal role for a healthy lifestyle according to traditional Chinese philosophy, and challenged everyone to live more consciously connected to your mind and body with a daily tea practice.
quick disclaimer: the whole session was in Chinese so these are my rough English translations/approximations that I think best capture the spirit of what was discussed in Chinese with added commentary and context so everything will make more sense.
What is Health According to Chinese Belief?
To succinctly summarize thousands of years of philosophy, texts, and debate about health in traditional Chinese thought and in the rich legacy of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM): Chinese define health as balance and harmony. One theme that is repeated over and over is balance between two opposing forces (think yin and yang).
Master Yang took the Chinese characters for health 健康 (jian kang) and analyzed how in fact they were describing two opposing forces "fortifying" (健 jian) and "detoxing" (康kang) which combined together mean "health."
Drinking Tea is as Essential to Everyday Living as Eating
If we think of eating food as a daily necessity towards fortifying (健 jian), we should think of drinking tea as the equally essential complement to eating since it works on detoxing (康kang), according to Master Yang.
He mentioned how just as cleaning (your home, your workspace, your clothes and etc) is an essential practice in living, so is cleaning your internal body systems.
According to traditional Chinese philosophy, each meal should be accompanied with tea to complete the eating ritual. In this way, tea serves as an essential digestive to all meals--the necessary detox to balance the fortification to achieve health.
To Get Really Specific About It...
Traditional Chinese philosophy on the ideal lifestyle is inspired by the rhythms and elements of nature. And over the course of the last 5,000 years, those contributing to this cannon had time to get really specific about it. I mean really specific.
According to traditional thought there are universal ideal times of day for carrying out everyday essentials like sleeping, eating, and working that correspond to various natural rhythms and elements.
Since Chinese philosophy believes tea should be drunk after every meal there are specific times that are considered the ideal times of tea to drink tea: between 9:00 am-11:00 am, 3:00pm-5:00pm, and 9:00pm-11:00pm. With the most essential and important time for tea drinking as 3:00pm. (hmm, it seems that British high tea time is perfectly analogous to this idea...)
And there is the ideal accompanying feeling you should receive from drinking tea: In the Summer, your hands should feel cool, in the Winter your feet should feel warm and overall you should feel perfectly satiated.
Specific AND Sort of Goldilocks
Ok, so not only are there specific times of day that are considered ideal for drinking tea, but there are specific conditions for tea drinking. There are in total 8 conditions to avoid when drinking tea according to traditional Chinese philosophy:
You shouldn't be too full
You shouldn't be too hungry
The tea shouldn't be too strong
The tea shouldn't be too weak
The tea shouldn't be too hot
The tea shouldn't be too cold
You shouldn't drink too much
You should drink too little
Back to the main idea I presented in the beginning, Chinese traditional thought (on all topics including health) is really focused on balance and harmony and so you can take these 8 conditions to mean as a whole: nothing too extreme but valuing balance.
Tea as Your Teacher to Connect with Your Mind and Body
The main idea that Master Yang emphasized was how tea is nature's most precious gift to humans for maintaining a healthy lifestyle and connecting with our mind and bodies in a unified and balanced way.
According to Master Yang, true health is not just going for a medical check-up and having no external signs of disease, but rather being in touch with your internal systems and intentionally managing and balancing your reactions to both external and internal indicators.
One example he listed was choosing what to eat. Instead of eating what looks the most attractive, or smells the most aromatic, one should check-in internally to gauge what the body needs and chose food to eat according to that.
Master Yang proposed that tea is the best teacher for understanding your body since it actually enters into your body and thus can help you become alert and in touch with your internal organs and systems.
In Conclusion on Traditional Chinese Health Philosophy and Tea
To sum up all the concepts and ideas he touched upon, Master Yang concluded with: If we each spent 30 minutes a day drinking tea (ideally after each meal, but at least everyday at 3:00pm) it would help us connect with our mind and body in a deep and essential way, allow our mind and body to process and detox, and provide the balance and harmony that is the foundation of health according to Chinese traditional thought.
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Tea's Health Benefits
So one of the most common questions I get is about the health benefits of tea, and I'm usually reluctant to touch the subject.
I know study after study is published that gets a lot of buzz in the news and it is an angle that attracts new drinkers to tea, but I'm usually pretty reluctant to expound on the subject for two main reasons (cue diversion to my personal disclaimer on the subject):
I think what is most fascinating and exciting about tea is the breadth of amazing natural flavors, the complete sensory experience, how it has shaped history and politics is so many ways, how tea is intertwined in so many cultures, how it has touched so many people in so many ways, and more and more...so that the health aspect is like the 16th most interesting thing about tea in my opinion.
It tends to give people unrealistic expectations of "what tea can do for them" health wise. I mean lets be real, tea is an amazing, enchanting, multifaceted beverage enjoyed all over the world but it is a BEVERAGE not medicine. Some unscrupulous promoters tend to overstate the health benefits of tea and then consumers get misguided start looking at tea as medicine. Interestingly teas' origins in China were as a medicinal elixir, but in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) all food and drink are viewed as medicine when eaten or drunken strategically under the guidance of a TCM practioner. But let me repeat, while tea is a wonderful healthy beverage great for overall wellness, it is not medicine.
Either way, there is a huge interest in the health and wellness benefits of tea in general and many Tranquil Tuesdays customers are also curious, so I wanted to take a chance to present a reliable overview, introduce the fundamentals of the relationship between tea and health, and offer links of published medical research for further reading if so inclined.
All Tea Impart Health Benefits--Not Just One Type
To begin with, when people talk about tea and health they are usually talking about antioxidants found in tea. And before we get into the specifics of that, I want to remind everyone that all true tea is from the same plant (albeit often different cultivars of the same plant) cameilia sinesis, so whatever type of tea you like, the chemical and structural composition of the tea leaf isn't that radically different.
Differing tea processing methods changes some of the nutritional profile and health effects of tea, but no matter the process, all tea leaves are dense with flavonoids (we'll talk more about those in a second).
Related to that point, I really like one of the takeaways from a recent Washington Post article on the topic:
"Stick with the tea you enjoy most, whether white, green, oolong or black. All impart health benefits, and the studies are not detailed or numerous enough to choose one over another."
Get Ready to Nerd Out: Polyphenols, Flavoids, Catechins and more!
Ok, lets get back to the specifics on the science of antioxidants in tea (get ready to nerd out! Warning: nerding out is so one of my favorite hobbies). When we look at tea and antioxidants, we are usually talking about flavonoid polyphenols, a category of antioxidants.
Polyphenols are a group of antioxidants that are the primary health-giving components of the tea plant. Flavonoids are a family of polyphenols found in tea and also found fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. According to Jeffrey Blumber, Professor of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University, about one-third of the weight of a tea leaf is flavonoids! He says: “A serving of tea is like adding a serving of fruits or vegetables to your diet.” The flavonoids particularly present in tea are: catechin, theaflavins, and thearubigin. And the celebrity tea flavonoid that hogs up all the attention on the red carpet in studies and in the press is EGCG--a type of catechin particularly found in green tea.
Oxidation's Effect on Flavonoids
Wait, I thought you just said earlier that no one tea is particularly more healthy than another--but you just mentioned EGCG in green tea is the celebrity, so are you saying green tea is the most healthy? Glad, you're paying attention! So the thing is, the reason why EGCG/green tea gets the most press is because EGCG is much more easily identified and studied than the flavonoid polyphenols in black tea.
Black tea's reigning flavonoid polyphenols are theaflavins and thearubigin which have different health contributing properties than EGCG. As you know, the main chemical process that distinguishes different categories (white tea, green tea, yellow tea, oolong tea, black tea, and pu'er tea) of tea is level of oxidation. As leaves oxidize and turn from green to black, the polyphenols also undergo a similar transformation making them different and harder to isolate.
Flavonoids multiply during the oxidation process, particularly theaflavins and thearubigin. Whereas oxidation reduces catechin levels (and remember EGCG is a type of catechin). So in less-oxidized teas (like white tea and green tea) you find more catechins like EGCG and in more oxidized teas (like black tea) you find more theaflavins and thearubigin. And for partially oxidized teas like oolong you find a little bit of both.
And Why Do We Care About Anti-Oxidants Again?
Research has shown that antioxidants act on free radicals in your cells. Some free radicals have a microscopic yet harmful affect on your cells and body and have been linked to chronic diseases and aging.
There have been studies that show that drinking lots of tea (all studies have subjects drinking at least 3 cups a day) has been linked to improved immune systems, fighting obesity and lowering cholesterol, strengthening bones and fighting tooth decay among many other potential benefits. And one of my favorite studies that sets my purist tea drinking heart aflutter is one that claims adding milk to your tea negates any health benefits you get from drinking tea--so don't milk to your tea. Compared with water, black tea “significantly improved” arterial function, researchers found, “whereas addition of milk completely blunted the effects of tea.” European Heart Journal, January 2007 As promised, here are the links to some research studies so you can nerd out on your own: • Tea is linked in a variety of studies to stronger immune function and reduced cell damage. European Journal of Internal Medicine, January 2012 • In very limited studies, tea and its extract have been shown to fight obesity and lower LDL "bad" cholesterol -- two risk factors for heart disease and diabetes. Obesity Review, July 2011 • Drinking up to four cups of tea a day may reduce the possibility of having an heart attack. Drinking tea could have the potential to guard against tooth decay and strengthen bones. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, January 2007
To take it even further. You can go crazy searching this database of medical journals. Just type in tea and go wild: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.go/pubmed
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If you enjoyed this article, sign up for Tranquil Tuesdays' newsletter to
Explore the stories behind each of Tranquil Tuesdays teas and teaware
Travel with Tranquil Tuesdays seeking the best teas and teaware in China
Learn the historical and cultural elements that make Chinese tea and teaware so unique
Sign up for Tranquil Tuesdays' newsletter now!
#tea#TeaandWellness#chinese tea#health studies#health benefits#tea health benefits#antioxidants#camellia sinesis#flavonoids#flavonoid#polyphenols#catechin#thearubigin#free radicals#white tea#green tea#oolong tea#black tea#Pu'er tea#tea and health
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