Book Review: Are you looking forward to Christmas… or just wanting to survive it?

Rick Phillips, one of our fellow bloggers, has enjoyed reading Lene Anderson’s book Chronic Christmas, which gives some tips for the less enthusiastic among us on how to make the best of Christmas.

happy-christmas

capture_313x480I was so excited to hear about Chronic Christmas Surviving the Holidays with a Chronic  Illness.  It came to me at exactly the right time of year, and I was in the mood for some fun and practical advice about the holiday season.  When this book arrived in the mail, I was excited to see what Lene might share to help me find that contentment and excitement about the holiday season.  As a person with choric conditions, I sometimes have difficulty getting into the season.  Lene’s words helped me discover some reasons I feel out of step with the rest of the world and gave me practical advice about how to overcome some of my barriers.

Lene shares such wonderful tips for slowing down and basking in the goodness of the holiday season.  Her writing style is easy; her essays are well conceived, and the result is a partial guide to managing the Christmas season with a good touch of fun.  She manages to capture the season in short bursts of narrative that can make even the grumpiest old man find his inner goodness.  Here are a few chapters that especially spoke to me.

December 2, Pace Yourself When Eating.

As a person with diabetes, I often feel left out of the annual celebrations because I see others enjoying food while I enjoy the Television.  In this chapter, Lene reinforces the well know notion that the holidays are not about the food.  Rather they are about who is eating the food.  Her chapter gives me permission to enjoy those who are at the gathering instead of the food at the gathering.   I think it is sometimes difficult for people with diabetes to know this and Lene approached the subject in a way that offers constructive tips.  For instance:

“Moderation is key, Instead of five pieces of Candy stick to one (okay, two).” (Andersen, 2016, p. 7).

“Instead of four glasses of eggnog, have one per occasion and drink sparkling water or tea for the rest of the evening. And so on. You won’t feel deprived. And you won’t stand out as that one person who’s nibbling on a lettuce leaf, making the other guests feel bad for scarfing down everything in sight.” (Andersen, 2016, pp. 7-8)

chronic-christmas-back_314x480December 8, Say Hello

Lene reminds us that we need not remain isolated because we have a chronic condition.  She suggests we try an experiment to break out of our shell.  She suggests that on December 8 we leave the book or earphones at home and practice looking up and out at the world.  She suggests we should look at and marvel in the crowds as they pass by.  She reminds me that people watching is both entertaining and a great way to connect to the world at large.  (Andersen, 2016).  This is great advice for the many times we feel isolated or somewhat alone in the world.  After all, connection is what the holiday season is all about.

For the person who cares about the person with a chronic condition Lene suggests that they offer a drive or a trip to a coffee shop to help people get out in the world.  She suggests:

“Chat with each other, but reach out to others as well. The people at the next table, the clerk, a security guard. Slow down, take the time, exchange a few words. You could very well make someone’s day and you might meet someone really interesting” (Andersen, 2016, p. 35).

These are terrific ideas for helping both ourselves and others.  In fact, opening up during the holidays might make everything brighter.  Lene’s advice gives us the reminder that we need not be isolated while others are engaged in the business of the season.

December 21 – Celebrate Disasters

For me, this was the best advice of the book.  When we celebrate disasters, we have a built in mechanism to make sure things go right.   I love how Lene starts this chapter:

“What do you remember from past Christmases — the times everything went according to plan or the moments when imperfection snuck into the celebrations? We work so hard to make the holidays perfect, but that’s not what makes for enduring family legends. You know the type — the ones that get told and retold, with everyone talking over each other, adding details, and laughing together. Those stories always originate in disasters” (Andersen, 2016, p. 93)

I totally agree with her observation.  The real stories of the season are the ones that revolve around disasters.  So I took this chapter as the best advice I received from Lene’s’ book.    This year, I vow to celebrate the many disasters in my life past, present and future. I will take time to celebrate this year: the time the lock was frozen on the storage barn where I stored the Christmas presents or the time the cat climbed/knocked over the Christmas tree because doing so can prolong the celebration of the season.

So how do I feel about Lene’s book?  I loved it.  You can pick it up on Amazon or Barnes and Noble along with some other retailers.   It is a great gift for those who love people with chronic conditions or those of us who live with chronic conditions.  I am glad I treated myself to this book, and I hope you will as well.   Reading it is way too much fun to miss.

References

 Andersen, L. (2016). Chronic Christmas Surviving the Holidays with a Chronic  Illness. Toronto Two North Books

 

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Over 60 with high LDL? : So what?

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If you are over the age of 60 it’s time to stop fretting about your total cholesterol and low density cholesterol levels. Unless perhaps the levels are on the low side. Indeed total mortality rates are at least the same and usually better if your cholesterol levels are high.  Many doctors now believe it is the PATTERN of different lipid levels that is much more important, particularly high triglycerides and low HDL.

This systematic review tells the story:

Lack of an association or an inverse association between low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol and mortality in the elderly: a systematic review — Ravnskov et al. 6 (6) — BMJ Open

BMJ Open 2016;6:e010401 doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010401

Orthopaedic surgeon who wants to reduce amputations silenced by regulatory body

fb_BPhotography_Belinda-Fettke_No-Fructose_Gary-Fettke_LAFM_Fairsies-Fat-Busters.jpg

It would be funny if it wasn’t so tragic. Gary Fettke, a Tasmanian orthopaedic surgeon has been banned from talking to patients about the nutritional changes they can make to prevent amputations.

His wife, a nurse, tells his story here:

 

http://www.nofructose.com/gary-fettke/

 

Gary’s presentation on you tube is here:

 

 

 

 

Low carb store: Steak au poivre

sirloin steak

 

  • 2 beef steaks
  • 1 tbsp black peppercorns
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 shallots, finely chopped
  • 50g unsalted butter
  • 60mls Cognac
  • 100ml double cream

 

Preheat oven to 180°c. Season the steaks with sea salt and allow to come to room temperature.Coarsely crush the peppercorns and press into both sides of the steaks evenly.Heat a heavy griddle pan (preferably cast-iron) over moderately high heat until hot,then carefully add the oil. Add the steaks and cook to your liking turning only once. Transfer the steaks to a warm plate to rest. Pour off the fat from the pan then add the shallots and half of the butter and cook over low-medium heat until the shallots are well-browned.Add the Cognac (it may ignite!) and boil, stirring, until the liquid has reduced to a glaze (a few minutes). Add the cream and any meat juices from the steak plate and boil, stirring occasionally for a further 4-5 minutes. Add the remaining butter and cook over a low heat until the butter is incorporated into the sauce. Serve sauce with steaks and lightly cooked vegetables.

How does mental distress show physically?

 

8558187594_65216d9621_bAlmost every patient with stress related mental health problems reports at least one somatic symptom and 45 per cent report six symptoms or more, according to a Swedish study of 228 patients suffering from what is termed as exhaustion disorder.

Here is the chart run down of the most common symptoms:

Almost all: Tiredness and low energy

67% Nausea, gas and indigestion

65% Headaches

57% Dizziness

Men and women reported the same number of symptoms.

Chest pain and sexual problems and pain during sex were more reported in men.

Pain in the arms, legs, joints, knees, hips reported more in the over 40s.

The more severe the mental health problem the higher the number of somatic symptoms.

From Human Givens Volume 21 No 1 2014

 

(BMC Psychiatry, 2014, 14, 118)

Although the causes of fibromyalgia are insufficiently understood at present and there is dubiety over whether the condition is due to stress or physical factors I have reproduced a chart which does show many psychosomatic symptoms in its presentation.

 

Symptoms_of_fibromyalgia.png

 

 

 

Health anxiety for diabetics is as bad as for neurological patients

 

girl_suffering_from_anxiety

A quarter of Canadian diabetics, with either type one or two diabetes suffer from a tendency to worry about their health and thus misinterpret bodily sensations as more serious and threatening than they actually are.

Neurological patients have the same degree of anxiety, judged the highest for all patient groups.

Health anxiety was worse in younger patients, females, those recently diagnosed and those who were unmarried.

They had anxiety, a fear of diabetes complications, poorer adherence to dietary and self care activities and a lower physical quality of life.

The researches add, “The cognitive behavioural theory of health anxiety suggests than health anxiety increases when patients feel more vulnerable, perceive the medical condition to be more distressing, feel they are unable to cope with the medical condition, and believe that resources for coping with the medical condition are inadequate.”

From Human Givens Volume 21. No 1 2014

(Janzen Claude JA Hadjistavropoulos, HD and Friesen, L (2014) Exploration of health anxiety among individuals with diabetes: prevalence and implications, Journal of Health Psychology, 19,2 312-22)

Low carb store: Moussaka

low-carb pizza

 

 Moussaka for two
  • 150g lamb mince
  • 1 shallot, chopped
  • 100g tomatoes, chopped
  • 1 tsp oregano, cinnamon,thyme
  • 1 garlic clove
  • 1 aubergine, sliced
  • 1 mozzarella ball, sliced
  • 2 tbsp olive oil

 

Heat 1 tbsp of olive oil in a frying pan and add the garlic and shallot. Lightly fry until they are soft.Add the lamb mince and cook until brown. Add in the oregano, thyme, cinnamon and tomatoes and stir through. Leave to one side. Heat the remaining oil in a frying pan and add the aubergine slices cooking until softened on both sides.Take an oven proof dish, layer half the aubergine slices on the bottom of the dish and add half the lamb mixture.Top with mozzarella slices and repeat, layering the same ingredients again. Bake in the oven at 180oC for 30 minutes. Serve with a green salad dressed in olive oil.

A meaningful life will help you live longer and be happier

Having  a sense of purpose in life helps us live longer, and the earlier we discover it, the sooner the protective effects occur. meaning-in-life

Researchers looked at data from over 6,000 participants, focusing on their self reported purpose in life. Over the 14 year follow up period 569 people died and all of those who died had reported less purpose in life and fewer positive relationships with others than did survivors.

Greater purpose in life consistently predicted lower mortality risk right across the lifespan, even when taking into account other markers for psychological and emotional well being.

(Reported in Human Givens Magazine Volume 21, No 1 2014 from a report in  Psychological Science, 2014, doi:10.1177/09567976145311799)

Eric Barker blogs weekly about what will improve your health, happiness and productivity.  Click on this blog post for further information on the same topic:

http://www.bakadesuyo.com/2016/10/meaning-in-life-2/?utm_source=%22Barking+Up+The+Wrong+Tree%22+Weekly+Newsletter&utm_campaign=8491fcb5d5-meaning_10_9_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_78d4c08a64-8491fcb5d5-57758173

Dr Sheri Colberg: Why insulin does not always work predictably

 

Migraine.jpgHead Scratching Days with Insulin Action Changes

From Diabetes in Control
August 6th, 2016

by Dr. Sheri Colberg, Ph.D., FACSM
The topic of insulin action (resistance and sensitivity) has come up multiple times over the years in my articles, but it is admittedly much more complex than I often make it out to be.

In a DIC article last summer, you can find a short list of all the factors that can potentially improve insulin action (basically insulin sensitivity). In reality, though, sometimes it is impossible to know exactly what is causing your reduced insulin action from day to day and how to easily and consistently manage it.
Recently, I spent the majority of two days traveling in a car and not exercising, and I reached the point where I could barely eat anything without my blood glucose rising over 200 mg/dl, even when giving twice or three times my usual insulin dose for the same food.

Just sitting in a car and not exercising resulted in full muscle glycogen stores, with no room to store more carbohydrate—hence the resulting muscular insulin resistance.

Although I have an extensive working knowledge of nutrition, exercise, and diabetes overall, even I was frustrated by dealing with my lack of immediate control, even though I knew that physical inactivity was the cause. It was hard to anticipate how large of an impact it would have and how much insulin it would take to overcome it.
Based on my personal experience, I want to take some of the burden of always being on top of blood glucose levels off of people with diabetes (PWD). You have to realize that sometimes you can do everything right and your insulin action can still less (or more) than expected. It’s not necessarily your fault, nor can you always anticipate how to best combat it.
Here is my short list of factors from my personal experience that can make people insulin resistant one day and insulin sensitive the next—and not always as you would expect. I call those the “head scratching days,” but sometimes it’s more like hair pulling!
If you’ve had a prior hypoglycemic event
Going too low and staying there for a while (such as during sleep) may increase insulin resistance more than just having a simple hypo event and treating it quickly. Morning insulin resistance is the most variable anyway (higher levels of cortisol then). It is admittedly my most frustrating time of day since often the same exact breakfast and starting blood glucose level will result in a different rise in blood glucose levels. Sometimes an overnight low explains it, but sometimes it doesn’t.
If your blood glucose has been running high
Hyperglycemia begets more hyperglycemia because it causes insulin resistance. That is why sometimes it takes way more insulin than you would expect just to get back to a normal level, and it may take hours. Try not to overdose on insulin in the meantime (especially at your bedtime) or you’ll end up low and back on the blood glucose rollercoaster.
If you’ve drastically changed your normal exercise patterns
Heightened insulin action due to your last workout is fleeting, and sitting in a car for two days is a dramatic change for me, particularly since my basal and other insulin doses are set for being active, not for being inactive. Even a week of detraining (due to injury, vacation, sickness, or other life event) can cause insulin resistance to rise rapidly in everyone, not just in people with diabetes. If you start working out more overall or just more regularly, your overall insulin needs (including basal) may also decrease. Just try to be as consistent as possible to make it easier for yourself to manage.
If you ate more calories, fat, or protein than you realized
Eating out at restaurants is really hard for me because no matter what I order, it seems like it takes two to three times my usual insulin doses to cover it. It is likely because protein and fat kick in and affect blood glucose levels later on (3-6 hours after a meal) and restaurant meals have more calories in them than most home-cooked meals. Fat, sugar, and salt keep people coming back to the restaurant for more! You can strategically use protein and fat intake overnight or after exercise to help prevent later-onset lows, though.
If you’re stressed, mentally or physically
It is truly amazing how much of an impact that stress has on blood glucose levels. Just try going to court (if you’re not an attorney) and keep your blood glucose in check while your adrenaline is pumping. Your cortisol levels also go up and raise blood glucose. So, just being stressed out during the day, or being exhausted or sick (physical stress), can cause insulin resistance. Try to take deep breaths and get some exercise during the day to combat both the stress and the resulting insulin resistance. Getting sick and running a fever or having an infection can also drive your blood glucose and insulin needs up.
If you’re lacking on sleep
Not getting enough sleep is physically (and often mentally) stressful. I knew an oceanography professor who had to harvest samples at sea, sometimes for days at a time, on no sleep.  The longer he went without sleeping, the higher his insulin resistance became. Lack of sleep may be causing some of your unexplained highs since more cortisol (a stress hormone) is released when you are sleep-deprived.
If you’ve had some alcohol to drink
Alcohol interferes with the normal function of the liver in making and releasing glucose. While it can lead to hypos, it can also be used strategically to relieve insulin resistance or to keep it in check—and luckily it does not take much alcohol to have an effect. An older guy called me on a diabetes hotline I was manning for a TV station once and explained that he usually had two shots of whiskey at night and woke up with good blood glucose levels, but that if he ever had to skip the whiskey, he would wake up too high.  He wanted to know what he should do.  I said, “Keep drinking the whiskey!” No more than one drink daily for women or two for men is recommended, though, so do not overdo it or you raise your risk of other health problems.
If it’s a certain time of the month (women only)
You may have everything else accounted for and your blood glucose levels are still skyrocketing for apparently no reason—except that you’re either ovulating (and releasing extra hormones that promote insulin resistance) or in the few days or week leading up to your period when insulin resistance is highest.  This has been a bigger issue for me later in life since my cycles seem to be more extreme, although I do not know if this is the case for all women. I helped a diabetes educator recently figure out that she was actually pregnant when she simply could not figure out why her blood glucose levels were so whacked out; it can be as simple an explanation as that (and hopefully a desired one, if you are pregnant).
Regardless of what is causing your (unexplained) insulin resistance, just try to control your blood glucose levels the best you can and lose the guilt over not knowing exactly why it is high and not being totally in control of your blood glucose levels 24/7. Even the most knowledgeable of us have our head scratching and/or hair pulling days trying to figure it out!

In addition to my educational web site, Diabetes Motion (www.diabetesmotion.com), I also recently founded an academy for fitness and other professionals seeking continuing education enabling them to effectively work with people with diabetes and exercise: Diabetes Motion Academy, accessible at http://www.dmacademy.com. Please visit those sites and my personal one (www.shericolberg.com) for more useful information about being active with diabetes.

Jovina cooks Italian: Swordfish Messina Style

swordfish messina.pngPesce Spada alla Messinese (Swordfish Messina style)

Ingredients (serves 4)

1 lb (600 gr) swordfish cut into palm-sized pieces slices
2 cloves of garlic, chopped
2 spring onions, chopped
20 capers (if salted, rinse well first)
10 black olives, chopped
4 anchovy fillets
1 cup white wine
2 cups tomato passata (sauce)
15 oz can chopped tomatoes
Extra virgin olive oil
Salt and pepper
A pinch of crushed dried chili pepper
Parsley, chopped

Directions

Brush the swordfish slices with olive oil and set aside.

In a skillet heat enough olive oil to cover the bottom of the pan. Add the spring onions, garlic, capers, olives, chili pepper and anchovy fillets and cook until the anchovies melt into the oil and the onion is soft.

Put the slices of swordfish in the skillet and add the white wine. Burn off the alcohol and then add the tomatoes. Mix well, cover and cook for 30 minutes on very low heat.

When ready to serve, sprinkle with parsley.