#life_is_in_session
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drsixto · 11 months ago
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Journaling aids in making important life decisions, helps navigate hard times, allows celebrating joyful times, and provides a tangible record of your life. Journaling promotes holistic self-care and well-being and an anti-inflammatory lifestyle.
" Journaling is an example of an expressive coping method, which is a technique that helps a person process negative thoughts, feelings, or experiences by releasing them to more productive thinking doing and ultimately "being."
Dr. Sixto
Journaling and Setting Intentions for Healthful Habits: A Holistic Approach
Intention is the human ability to redirect the electricity in your brain, that would be nerve energy, and no, it is not Mad Science. In doing so one avoids nerve energy flowing down the path of least resistance, the one that loves distraction! Intentions help us execute! In simple terms having intention is a cognitive process that involves setting a goal and then taking action to achieve that goal. When you set an intention, you are essentially programming your brain to focus on a specific outcome. This helps to activate the prefrontal cortex (the executor), which is responsible for planning, decision-making, and other higher-order cognitive functions. By doing so, you can improve your ability to concentrate, make better decisions, and achieve your goals. Maintaining the executor in tip-top shape is paramount, in addition to maintaining a serious meditation practice, another task that has been shown to provide superior results is Journaling. Read on! Let’s learn another new path to better motivation, naturally!
Nerve Energy: Not only is it important to restore maximum energy to the body in our sleep (goal of good sleep hygiene), but it is also important that we are aware of the Whole Self and how that energy will be utilized, conserved, and restored during the day to maintain the body’s optimum use of nerve energy for maximum health, physical strength, and endurance. To optimize this flow, the path of least resistance is required to keep the lines of communication open, coordinated, and well-tuned between cells. When out of synch (as in when the pillars are not in balance) messages in the nervous system become delayed, crossed, or even completely misinterpreted, suddenly body function can turn into total chaos. Have you ever experienced a “Lack of Sleep Hangover?" You know, when you are just trudging along, your mind is not grounded and the day just seems to not make sense. Maximum nerve energy is the flow, the key, to healing and preventing disease holistically. Getting to the cause before the Symptoms of disease arise.
Journaling and Setting Intentions is a Holistic Health approach toward healthy living, and much like setting intentions has been shown to have a positive impact on daily living and has been recognized as an effective tool for healthy brain functioning, ergo creating healthy habits. When one writes in a journal one is scaling the thought process towards developing and implementing fruitful intentions. Expressive writing through journaling can be a powerful tool to process stress, trauma, and the onset of unhealthy behaviors and related emotions, ergo, a proven effective method for managing mental health conditions and stress. Journaling is an example of an expressive coping method, which is a technique that helps a person process negative thoughts, feelings, or experiences by releasing them. By putting these things on paper the latter have less power over us.1 We have an improved ability to be aware of triggers and “re-route” the electricity behind nerve energy to more productive thinking and doing and ultimately being. The benefits of journaling can be felt, intrinsically, done regularly, it can change your perspective and the reality of one’s life.
Besides reducing stress and anxiety, journaling also helps with sleep. Part of a regular sleep hygiene regimen writing in a journal, and getting things down on paper, not
digitally (more on this later), instantly helps you shift the focus of your thoughts on the positive and short-circuit negative thought loops or remunerating loops of “need to do.” Other essential benefits are:
Anxiety Management: Journaling can help cope with anxiety by externalizing anxious thoughts, putting them into words, and then setting them aside. It can also help explore alternatives to anxious thoughts. Studies show that regular journaling for just 12 weeks significantly reduced mental distress and increased resilience.
Depression Management: Journaling seems to be effective for people living with depression. Emotional writing significantly decreased symptoms of depression. Keeping a gratitude journal is another specific approach that can help with depression.
Emotional Processing: Writing about an emotional event can help you understand it better. The act of putting an experience into words and structure allows you to form new perceptions about events.
Emotion Regulation: Brain scans of people who wrote about their feelings showed that they were able to control their emotions better than those who wrote about a neutral experience.
Physical Healing: Journaling may also have an impact on physical health. A study found that those who wrote about their feelings on upsetting events healed faster than those who wrote about daily activities.
Awareness is key, the most efficacious way to journal “awareness” is through writing things down on paper, in other words, requires handwriting, not typing, or using a digital device (as speaking into one). Handwriting is a multisensory activity that activates multiple cognitive functions, including motor skills, attention, and perception. By stimulating cerebral circuits, this involvement helps individuals process information more effectively. The cognitive approach to handwriting is based on learning theories that involve self-instruction along with verbal mediation (using words or sentences to help associate a reaction to triggers), an attractive approach to dealing with the possibility of unhealthy thinking.
Research also shows that handwriting can have a positive impact on our cognitive performance. According to scientific studies, writing by hand stimulates the part of the brain known as the Reticular Activating System (RAS), which is a sort of filter that focuses only on the stuff you are writing, resulting in a more effective learning process and therefore more effective at changing unhealthy habits.
When we write, we are exposed to more critical thinking. Writing allows us to think more thoroughly about the information we are recording and encourages us to expand upon our thoughts and form connections between them. Writing by hand also helps increase brain connectivity (electric firing of neurons) which is crucial to memory building and information encoding. Actual handwritten notes help with memory and recall since areas of the brain associated with recall and comprehension are more engaged when we write notes with pen and paper.
Do you want to avoid distractions? Writing by hand helps one avoid distractions. When you are writing, contradictory to digital devices there are no notifications, there are no open tabs, there is no other distraction than the writing itself or a wondering day-dreaming brain! Although one may find that typing might be faster and more efficient, handwriting can offer deeper cognitive engagement and better memory recall. The choice between the two often depends on the context and the individual’s preference.
Wisdom:When we are living our life behind a screen we are living an illusion of self and how we relate to the world around us. Stunting the social aspect of life by not comforting very important stimuli that are blunted by a screen: Social connection, being ourselves around others, and not being afraid of the world outside ourselves. How does this relate to handwriting in a journal? In much the same way. When we write we are connected
to the inner self, we are in a state of self-learning, of actively achieving awareness for our thoughts. Our brain-to-hand connection allows us to visually see what we are thinking, there is no distraction. – Dr. Sixto
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yusifmv-94 · 2 years ago
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"Intellectual Wellness is strengthened by continually engaging the mind."   "Every night before we go to sleep, we must ask ourselves: What weakness did I overcome today? What virtue did I acquire?  Intellect refers to, describes, and identifies what is true and what is false in our realities..."       Dr. Sixto   Intellect explores what is true and what is false in our reality. Intellectual thinking lies in the way that we look at our personal growth and development. In the confusion that life may present, in the behavioral quandaries that we may encounter, the intellect asks, how can I live harmoniously and productively?  And the intellect will go further to observe how to create a life that will create excellence not only for the Self but also for Others. We are not talking about the moral aspects of right and wrong. We are talking about the human intellect, the capacity in that intellect of the awareness and understanding to generalize experiences, to work with abstract terms, and to make conclusions from assumptions to reach higher consciousness; stimulating us to transcend our primal animal instincts and move past self-interest and cravings. Hmmm, that is a lot to think about, quite a mouthful really! The intellect helps us to go beyond living in a reactionary state to a place where we take a more proactive approach to life. In a proactive frame of mind, the mind considers the overall state of the being and develops solutions to avoid similar “chaos” in the future. In other words, being proactive will more likely promote a behavioral foundation with less stress, where the unanticipated consequences of life are less impactful on the psyche. Easier said than done? Those cogs and wheels, if rightly lubricated are the force that keeps societies moving forward. It is the capacity for intellectual thinking that empowers cultures to be their very best.  It is not about intelligence. Having intellect is a thinking process by which we attain a level of personal fulfillment in life and equips us to face life more creatively and productively. I am sure I am not the only one who has met an Ivy League graduate who “lacks” intellectual abilities. The intellect lends itself to all aspects of well-being as when we exercise the power of our intellect it means that we are doing the best with what we know, right now at this present moment.  Exercising the intellect, therefore, is a lifelong discipline and therefore an equally important discipline in the 8 disciplines (pillars) of Holistic Wellness. Every time we exit our surroundings into the outside world, we come back to where we started a different person. Some occurrence, some encounter, such as stopping to smell a vibrant red rose with its intoxicating fragrance changes a perspective in our soul. It is a new experience, a new way of looking at ourselves, and we grow. When we grow we use our intellect. Keeping the mind sharp it has been shown, creates new connections between brain cells (new behaviors are born) by changing the balance of available neurotransmitters and changing how connections are made,” In other words, staying sharp means stimulating more brain cells, in modern science, we call this growth of new cells a process called Neurogenesis.  The concept evolves into a simple meaning: learning and intellect is a lifetime process. Our brains demand that we exercise our intellect to address the impermanence of life, the ever-changing nature. Due to this impermanence life seems to create quite a bit of fear. Yet without change we stagnate, we stall, and our lives may even become less of a thrill something that should never be in question:  The thrill of life. ��Two elements must therefore be rooted out once for all, —the fear of future suffering, and the recollection of past suffering; since the latter no longer concerns me, and the former concerns me not yet
.” – Seneca Unknowingly my life has been an experiment in impermanence and all for the good. From leaving my homeland at an early age fleeing from what would eventually destroy the country and its society, to growing up within a culture of different values to the perplexity of my self-discovery. College was a life-changer, I toured Europe, studied in Paris, France, and visited the homeland of my grandparents, the Canary Islands. This trip was influential in opening my intellect to even more growth opening my eyes to life’s riches. I finished grad school, got stuck in uninspiring jobs, then found great joy in a career that would later push me to rebuild and rethink my life.  Through hardships and there were many, I arrived at my present stage, here I am, a doctor in Holistic Health and Nutrition, what I feel was my life’s calling all along. Was it a thrill? absolutely not. Was it fulfilling? wouldn’t change a thing, well, just a couple of things. As I sit here and write this piece, I know that more change is to come and I will accept the thrill and keep on moving. There are new people to meet, more places to see, and more disciplines to enjoy. There is always change, life is impermanent, and exercising our intellect is paramount for us to effectively deal with change and seek a beautiful joyful state in life. “We should just live, and let life be, instead of constantly preparing ourselves to live” (paraphrasing Seneca, Roman (Spanish) philosopher). Let’s let things be, and let us let things happen the way they happen, stop controlling what has already been determined, in some way, is meant for us. We should focus on the present and not live our lives worrying about what is to come. Intellectual Wellness is about feeding your curiosity through learning, switching from the rigid to the flexible brain. Using our neuroplasticity we can expand our knowledge and skills to help live a full, engaging life. Intellectual Wellness is strengthened by continually engaging the mind.  Doing so can help you build new skills and knowledge that inspire and challenge you, and help you grow. You might choose different ways to keep your mind sharp—depending on your mood. Sharpen meditation skills, try brain self-care such as brain games, puzzles, or exercises in mental wellness. Enjoy a new scholastic endeavor such as learning a foreign language (bilingualism has been shown to provide many cognitive benefits and fortify the mind, experiencing less cognitive decline in later years1), or even simply engaging in intellectually stimulating conversations and debates can strengthen this Holistic Wellness discipline. In other words, less television and more interaction with others, getting involved in the community, or other avenues of personal growth can stimulate the experience of an intellectual boon. Intellectual wellness is focused on strengthening your mind by continually engaging your curiosity, expanding your knowledge, and building new skills to inspire, challenge, and help one another grow and live full lives in healthy living environments free of extreme ideologies. In today’s world, we need to deter those egocentric intellectuals or those with the inability to understand that another person’s view or opinion may be different than their own.  In the study of the human mind, intellect refers to, describes, and identifies the ability of the human mind to reach correct conclusions about what is true and what is false in reality or their reality; and how to solve problems. The discussion of intellect is in two areas of knowledge2 that concern the relationship between intelligence and intellect. Being socially engaged may help fend off social isolation and depression, both of which have been linked with a decline in cognitive functioning. Having good social support also reduces stress, another aspect of negativity on thinking and cognitive skills. This takes me to the topic of what are Cognitive Skills. Cognitive Skills are the core skills your brain uses to think, read, lea
rn, remember, reason, and pay attention. Working together, they take incoming information and move it into the bank of knowledge you use in everyday life. Each of your cognitive skills plays an important part in processing new information. That means if even one of these skills is weak, no matter what kind of information is coming your way, grasping, retaining, or using that information is impacted. It is safe to say then that most behavioral quandaries are caused by one or more weak cognitive skills. Every night before going to sleep, we must ask ourselves: What weakness did I overcome today? What virtue did I acquire? What can I do to achieve serenity in my life? What matters: the intellect! For further information on how you or a loved one could benefit from a Holistic Wellness, Whole Health path, please do not hesitate to contact me at [email protected] To your wellness, naturally! Sixto J. Sicilia, Ph. D. 1 Marian, V., & Shook, A. (2012). The cognitive benefits of being bilingual. Cerebrum : the Dana forum on brain science, 2012, 13. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved August 22, 2022, from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3583091/Accessed 8/23/22 2 Knowledge - Wikipedia. (2022). Retrieved 23 August 2022, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge  
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drsixto · 1 year ago
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Training the brain to adopt healthful habits is a holistic approach that integrates the power of our minds with our physical well-being to help cultivate sustainable healthful habits. "In our quest for improved health and well-being, we often focus on external factors such as exercise routines and dietary choices. While these are undoubtedly important, we must not overlook the incredible power of our minds." Dr. Sixto Training the Brain for Healthful Habits: A Holistic Approach In our quest for improved health and well-being, we often focus on external factors such as exercise routines and dietary choices. While these are undoubtedly important, we must not overlook the incredible power of our minds. The brain, the command center of our bodies, plays a vital role in adopting and maintaining healthful habits. As a Holistic Health practitioner, I firmly believe that training the brain is essential for long-term sustainable change. In this blog post, we will explore the basic ins and outs to train our minds and cultivate healthful habits. Let’s begin by stating my favorite saying: “Life is in Session.” The awareness that we do not always get our way in our existence. And the awareness that at the core of our processing is our Executor (our brain)… How well does [it] function when we are knocked off our healthful habitual ways by unanticipated life events? Unanticipated life events = Life is in Session. We humans function by learned habits, or automatic responses to what is and has been our reality in the past. In the path to deactivating unhealthy automatic responses to stimuli, we need to give that part of the brain, our Executor, enough time to come up with a “new plan” for how to respond to a stimulus in a familiar circumstance (to a habit) before our reward system says “embody that, “take that on.” By postponing “transacting” with the habitual, unhealthy automatic responses long enough, the executor has time to enact a new plan to avoid unsavory temptations and to consider the options for healthy alternatives. Awareness and Willpower: Awareness of the behavior that you are trying to inhibit is key before any change in said behavior can be made. First comes awareness then comes the work! To change a behavior one has to be aware of the unhealthy habit (keep it in our working memory) so that we may avoid the negative consequences of said behavior. Makes sense, by using our willpower to avoid the bad habit, we can overcome the triggers, but not so fast! Think about it, if said behavior is in our working memory, or in constant awareness, the challenge becomes not partaking in the behavior in any situation. Let me get into this: to change a behavior we have to be aware of what it is we want to change. Keep the thought in our working memory. The issue with this is that if we keep something in our working memory, our brains will include “that something” throughout the day not just when decisions need to be made about the habit, but it will include that thought (the habit) in every decision it needs to be made throughout the day. So for example, although you are “aware" of the habit and you make a conscious effort to avoid the habit and the triggers to that habit, the brain may still trigger a desire for the habit in other situations not related to the usual obvious triggers. You may avoid that “stimuli", when you see it, yet your executor may very well steer you towards putting the “stimuli” into your system when you feel tired and drained. The decision to use the stimuli is in all the decisions the executor makes, not just conscious ones. Another example: you avoid chocolate when you see it, not going to touch it; this is willpower. Yet the executor may may very well have you ingest it when you feel stressed out, a bit hungry or need comfort food (in all its decisions); takes you off guard. You may even take the opportunity to buy it! So you see willpower is not enough! You need a plan! Yes you do and read on...
The executor has no other alternative in its “hard drive” to deal with the unhealthy habit and it gets cluttered with other things that it needs to do to keep us functioning. When the working memory is flooded, the clutter will make it less likely for the executor to promptly respond to avoid an automatic response. For this reason, it is imperative that we seek alternatives to plain willpower (using our working memory to stop a behavior) and that we have a “pre-plan” of how to avoid unwanted habits in any situation. No stimulant when we are aware of it and we see it (we know the consequences) and no stimulant if we are tired or wiped out or have too much clutter in our working memory (so to stop our mind from considering how "great," as unhealthy as it was, the past results of that automatic behavior to take the stimuli made us feel). Let it be known that "willpower" alone is usually not enough to effect change to automatic responses. Cold Turkey, the act of stopping a bad habit suddenly and completely works if you have a strong, calculated, and focused plan for change. How we process a behavior: Automatic processing (responses) are habits that we enact without much thought. When the automatic responses result in unhealthy consequences, however, they can be altered through much practice, daily focus, and concentrated effort; to achieve change through what is termed as a controlled process. A controlled process requires thought, effort, planning, and lots of practice. Lots of practice to get to the place where the automatic behavior is quickly “hijacked” by the newly learned process overriding any whim or temptation to carry out behavior deemed as unhealthy. If we do not practice a new healthful process (a habit) we lapse into old ways of thinking and reacting (old habits). Lapses are normal in our existence and can be defined as the point at which a new habit and skill are compromised by unanticipated life events. Remember, “Life is in Session.” Building skills to fortify resilience is indispensable to carrying on a healthy lifestyle. To reapply and further develop healthy positive principles and fortify newly learned skills to step back from a lapse, requires much daily awareness. Changing behaviors that do not suit you can change your life, wellness, and longevity. Optimal health requires the ability to make creative, flexible decisions based on your current condition and the local environment For the Executor to learn new habits, the Executor needs to go through a process that requires it to react to the behavior in question before it has a chance to happen. This reaction needs to be calculated and requires problem-solving and critical thinking. Developing Daily Habits: The brain has the ability to reorganize and form new neural connections throughout our lives therefore evolving in response to our life experiences. This process is known as Neuroplasticity which makes it possible for us to form new habits. By understanding the principles of neuroplasticity, we can harness its potential to create lasting change through repetition and consistency in our daily practices (key to rewiring our brains and forming healthful habits). In Summary, by consistently engaging in health-promoting behaviors, we strengthen the neural pathways associated with these habits, making them more automatic and effortless over time (healthy habits). Training the brain to adopt healthful habits is a holistic approach that integrates the power of our minds to help cultivate sustainable healthful habits. By prioritizing our well-being and focusing on living an anti-inflammatory lifestyle (the 8 pillars of Holistic health), we can unlock our full potential for living a vibrant and fulfilling life. Remember, the health journey begins within. Start training your brain today and witness the transformative power it has on your habits and overall well-being. For further information on how you or a loved one could benefit from a Holistic Wellness, Whole Health path, please do not hesitate to contact me at [email protected].
To your Whole Health and Wellness, naturally! Dr. Sixto J. Sicilia Holistic Health & Nutrition Practioner Founder, issimoUSA 1Getting ready for bed controlled by specific brain wiring in mice. (2023, September 21). Retrieved Nomer 25, 2003, from Imperial News. https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/247873/getting-ready-controlled-specific-brain-wiring/
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drsixto · 1 year ago
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Training the brain to adopt healthful habits is a holistic approach that integrates the power of our minds with our physical well-being to help cultivate sustainable healthful habits. "In our quest for improved health and well-being, we often focus on external factors such as exercise routines and dietary choices. While these are undoubtedly important, we must not overlook the incredible power of our minds." Dr. Sixto Training the Brain for Healthful Habits: A Holistic Approach In our quest for improved health and well-being, we often focus on external factors such as exercise routines and dietary choices. While these are undoubtedly important, we must not overlook the incredible power of our minds. The brain, the command center of our bodies, plays a vital role in adopting and maintaining healthful habits. As a Holistic Health practitioner, I firmly believe that training the brain is essential for long-term sustainable change. In this blog post, we will explore the basic ins and outs to train our minds and cultivate healthful habits. Let’s begin by stating my favorite saying: “Life is in Session.” The awareness that we do not always get our way in our existence. And the awareness that at the core of our processing is our Executor (our brain)… How well does [it] function when we are knocked off our healthful habitual ways by unanticipated life events? Unanticipated life events = Life is in Session. We humans function by learned habits, or automatic responses to what is and has been our reality in the past. In the path to deactivating unhealthy automatic responses to stimuli, we need to give that part of the brain, our Executor, enough time to come up with a “new plan” for how to respond to a stimulus in a familiar circumstance (to a habit) before our reward system says “embody that, “take that on.” By postponing “transacting” with the habitual, unhealthy automatic responses long enough, the executor has time to enact a new plan to avoid unsavory temptations and to consider the options for healthy alternatives. Awareness and Willpower: Awareness of the behavior that you are trying to inhibit is key before any change in said behavior can be made. First comes awareness then comes the work! To change a behavior one has to be aware of the unhealthy habit (keep it in our working memory) so that we may avoid the negative consequences of said behavior. Makes sense, by using our willpower to avoid the bad habit, we can overcome the triggers, but not so fast! Think about it, if said behavior is in our working memory, or in constant awareness, the challenge becomes not partaking in the behavior in any situation. Let me get into this: to change a behavior we have to be aware of what it is we want to change. Keep the thought in our working memory. The issue with this is that if we keep something in our working memory, our brains will include “that something” throughout the day not just when decisions need to be made about the habit, but it will include that thought (the habit) in every decision it needs to be made throughout the day. So for example, although you are aware” of the habit and you make a conscious effort to avoid the habit and the triggers to that habit, the brain may still trigger a desire for the habit in other situations not related to the usual obvious triggers. You may avoid that “stimuli", when you see it, yet your executor may very well steer you towards putting the “stimuli” to use in your system when you feel tired and drained. The executor has no other alternative in its “hard drive” to deal with the unhealthy habit and it gets cluttered with other things that it needs to do to keep us functioning. When the working memory is flooded, the clutter will make it less likely for the executor to promptly respond to avoid an automatic response. For this reason, it is imperative that we seek alternatives to plain willpower (using our working memory to stop a behavior) and that we have a “pre-plan” of how to avoid unwanted habits in any situation.
No stimulant when we are aware of it and we see it (we know the consequences) and no stimulant if we are tired or wiped out (so our mind can not start to consider how alive, as unhealthy it was, the past results of that automatic behavior made us feel). Let it be known that "willpower" alone is usually not enough to effect change to automatic responses. Cold Turkey, the act of stopping a bad habit in a sudden and complete way works if you have a strong, calculated, and focused plan for change. How we process a behavior: Automatic processing (responses) are habits that we enact without much thought. When the automatic responses result in unhealthy consequences, however, they can be altered through much practice, daily focus, and concentrated effort; to achieve change through what is termed as a controlled process. A controlled process requires thought, effort, planning, and lots of practice. Lots of practice to get to the place where the automatic behavior is quickly “hijacked” by the newly learned process overriding any whim or temptation to carry out behavior deemed as unhealthy. If we do not practice a new healthful process (a habit) we lapse into old ways of thinking and reacting (old habits). Lapses are normal in our existence and can be defined as the point at which a new habit and skill are compromised by unanticipated life events. Remember, “Life is in Session.” Building skills to fortify resilience is indispensable to carrying on a healthy lifestyle. To reapply and further develop healthy positive principles and fortify newly learned skills to step back from a lapse, requires much daily awareness. Changing behaviors that do not suit you can change your life, wellness, and longevity. Optimal health requires the ability to make creative, flexible decisions based on your current condition and the local environment For the Executor to learn new habits, the Executor needs to go through a process that requires it to reat to the behavior in question. This reaction needs to be calculated and requires problem-solving and critical thinking. Developing Daily Habits: The brain has the ability to reorganize and form new neural connections throughout our lives therefore evolving in response to our life experiences. This process is known as Neuroplasticity which makes it possible for us to form new habits. By understanding the principles of neuroplasticity, we can harness its potential to create lasting change through repetition and consistency in our daily practices (key to rewiring our brains and forming healthful habits). In Summary, by consistently engaging in health-promoting behaviors, we strengthen the neural pathways associated with these habits, making them more automatic and effortless over time (healthy habits). Training the brain to adopt healthful habits is a holistic approach that integrates the power of our minds to help cultivate sustainable healthful habits. By prioritizing our well-being and focusing on living an anti-inflammatory lifestyle (the 8 pillars of Holistic health), we can unlock our full potential for living a vibrant and fulfilling life. Remember, the health journey begins within. Start training your brain today and witness the transformative power it has on your habits and overall well-being. For further information on how you or a loved one could benefit from a Holistic Wellness, Whole Health path, please do not hesitate to contact me at [email protected]. To your Whole Health and Wellness, naturally! Dr. Sixto J. Sicilia Holistic Health & Nutrition Practioner Founder, issimoUSA 1Getting ready for bed controlled by specific brain wiring in mice. (2023, September 21). Retrieved Nomer 25, 2003, from Imperial News. https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/247873/getting-ready-controlled-specific-brain-wiring/
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drsixto · 1 year ago
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Sleep is a survival instinct and is key to physical and mental health. "Historically, we humans followed our circadian rhythm sleep-wake cycle, this meant that as the light of day started weaning, we naturally started to wind down, and consequently, as the light of day started shining upon us, we started to feel awake for the brand new day. Even Mother Nature knew when she gave us fire as a light for nighttime use, to make it as to not interfere with our circadian sleep-wake cycle." Dr. Sixto Circadium Rhythm, cha, cha, cha! What is it about the time change in the Fall that drives me especially into a state of bewilderment until the days start to feel, or start to get longer, around mid-January? I am one who counts the number of days from the time that we go back to Standard Time, the first weekend in November until December 21st, the Winter Solstice. Countdown… from then on, let there be light! Yes, yes, time is just a construct, yet it affects my mood. In the dread of “falling back” around 6:00 pm I am ready to call it a day in its entirety. And although I am not one whose life is dictated by a clock, so I can be on to “wake up” with the sunlight and “wind down” with the onsetting sunset, the hard change to our societal clock of time does have an effect when I have to be places at a certain time. In general, this time change thing throws me off. Our clocks and watches abruptly tell us now that by 4’ish the night is coming. What time is it anyway? For my primitive self, light is light and I wake up, and dark is dark, and I hibernate for the evening. Those evenings become too long and I just can’t even see straight! Historically, we humans followed our circadian rhythm sleep-wake cycle, this meant that as the light of day started weaning, we naturally started to wind down, and consequently, as the light of day started shining upon us, we started to feel awake for the brand new day. Even Mother Nature knew when she gave us fire as a light for nighttime use, to make it [fire] at lumens low enough as to not interfere with the production of melatonin and therefore not interfere with our circadian sleep-wake cycle. It is said that “way back when” during the long nights of winter, humans would trek off to slumber when the sun went down, yes as early as 4:30 let’s say, and that they then would wake around 1 or 2 am and they would have a winter sleep sort of ritual to lull themselves back to sleep until the sun rose the next morning. And to reiterate, if there was a fire, the light emitted would not send the mind into wake mode. Very interesting huh! However, in modern-day times we have too much to interrupt our circadian rhythm. Just look around you, it is nighttime and your neighborhood could look like Disneyland, all bright and cheerful. There is increasingly more light pollution and more disruption from technology screens, and we wind up trying all sorts of sleep aids, including melatonin (naturally secreted) to help us drift off to sleep. Exposure to bright artificial light in the late evening can disrupt this process and prevent your brain from releasing melatonin. This can make it harder to fall asleep. Examples of bright artificial light include the light from a TV screen, a smartphone, or a very bright alarm clock. I for one use a mask to sleep, because one small detection that the light of the sun is coming up, I am right up with it even if I went to bed late or did not get enough rest. 23andMe says that generally, I am a night person, meaning that I am in bed by 10 and up by 7 am. Pretty accurate on the getting up part, but going to sleep, ugh. There are many interruptions. Although I have an alarm set for 9:04 pm or 21:04 to start winding down, meditate, and relax, my rewards system says, ah how about just a little bit more of doing this or watching that… Sleep hygiene is paramount, and is a habit to develop. I have a routine that most nights I do follow. Yet I still have a habit
to form, an automatic response to develop when that 9:04 pm time comes around (yes 9:04, the rebel in me, not the automatic 9:05), I head for the sleeping quarters and start my sleep hygiene routine. As we age it is even more important that our sleep hygiene does not get hijacked by automatic responses… remember what I just said… well let’s just change the last part… “the alarm goes off and my reward system says, ah, just one more episode, yet my executor knows better and says, no, no, start to wind down…” this is the type of automatic response I seek to respond to every single night of the year! Our brains, geeeezzzzz. What does light have to do with it?: Now let’s bring Mother Nature into the mix, she has something to do with light! When we look at Lumens 1800 to 2200K this is a very warm light with an almost pink tone. This type of light works very well for mood lighting, lighting that isn’t stimulating, romance lighting, the list goes on. Candles, for example, have a Kelvin temperature, we refer to it as Lumens, of around 1800 to 2200K, which is also the temperature that gives off the coziest light in a room. This lighting also does not interfere with Melatonin secretion which normally occurs when exposure to the bright white light diminishes. Bright light, we understand, releases Cortisol, and we do not need heavy amounts of Cortisol released at night as Cortisol serves as a wake-up call to the body, raising our core body temperature, heart rate, and blood pressure from a sleep state, and is also a factor in normal digestion. This natural release of Cortisol needs not be confused with the over-production of Cortisol that occurs during a stress response. A stress response is a whole different story! Responding to every stress trigger we may encounter throughout a given day, whether real or perceived, causes spikes in cortisol that disrupt this important, natural rhythm. If stress is a normal part of your daily life, then this has an even greater impact on your cortisol circadian rhythm and may mean that you need extra support to reestablish a healthy hormone balance in your sleep hygiene. A recent study by researchers at the Imperial College London in England published in Nature Neuroscience suggests that practicing a bedtime routine might be even more critical than experts once thought. Preparing for sleep may be a tendency embedded in the brains of all mammals, including humans, and is part of the survival instinct.1 In Summary, so much depends on sleep to stay healthy and bright. As a Holistic Health practitioner, I can't emphasize more the importance of sleep; the importance of a routine; the importance of meditation; the importance of a personal ritual every night, and of course good sleeping quarters such as a quality mattress, inviting sheets, and avoidance of any type of screens in the bedroom, this includes television). All of this helps in getting enough sleep to feel up to the game during wake hours. As early as the 1800s, those well-versed in sleep and its effect on human functioning, yes we will call them Sleep Experts, have recommended keeping good habits of healthy sleep hygiene. For further information on how you or a loved one could benefit from a Holistic Wellness, Whole Health path, please do not hesitate to contact me at [email protected]. To your Whole Health and Wellness, naturally! Dr. Sixto J. Sicilia Holistic Health & Nutrition Practioner Founder, issimoUSA 1Getting ready for bed controlled by specific brain wiring in mice. (2023, September 21). Retrieved Nomer 25, 2003, from Imperial News. https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/247873/getting-ready-controlled-specific-brain-wiring/
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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Check out the new blog post! You will always find useful information from the House of Holistic Wellness!
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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Check out the new blog post! You will always find useful information from the House of Holistic Wellness!
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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Warmer days ahead? As dr.sixto puts it... going bonkers. Stay tuned for more non Eudaimonia, OK?
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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Check out the new blog post! You will always find useful information from the House of Holistic Wellness!
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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We can't use Thinking to escape or understand; out-think the stories in our minds...
Rest in Awareness instead... find Peace and Serenity.
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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Make Intentions
that evoke
CHANGE!
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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Check out the new blog post! You will always find useful information from the House of Holistic Wellness!
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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drsixto · 2 years ago
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