Tuesday, December 14, 2010

The role of your spleen in digestion

In Traditional Chinese Medicine, one of the most important organs in digestion is the spleen. The spleen has an incredible ability to adapt to our environment and help us get our needs met. The functions of the spleen are adaptation, nourishment, and support. These are expressed at a physiological, anatomical, mental, emotional, and spiritual level.

At the physiological level, the spleen helps with digestion, converting food into usable substances within our bodies and sending them to where they are needed. This function in Chinese Medicine is known as "transformation and transportation". The stronger our spleen function is, the better we are able to receive nourishment from our food.

At the mental level, the spleen governs our ability to study and concentrate, to process information. The spleen's function is to adapt both food and information into something we can use. Ever heard of the saying, "There's food for thought"? Ever eaten too much and then felt sluggish? Or notice you crave sweets when you are really stressed out or have a huge exam to cram for?

At the emotional level, the spleen in expressed through your ability to obtain and give emotional nourishment and support. When our needs are met, we feel nourished and supported. When they are not, we sometimes turn to comfort foods.

At the anatomical level, the spleen governs the fascia and soft tissue in our body. When our fascia are relaxed and not constricted, body movements and digestion are smooth and easy. Our fascia and tissues become tense or relaxed in direct response to the emotions we hold onto.
Ever lost your appetite when you are worried or anxious about something?

So how to we strengthen our spleen, or better yet, how do we improve how our body absorbs and distributes the nutrients we take in everyday?

First make sure you are eating a broad and balanced diet! Second, consider our you are preparing your food. The process of digestion involves breaking food down into a "warm soup" in the stomach. Our spleen then "transforms and transports" the nutrients to the rest of our body. The spleen has to work extra hard and becomes strained/weakened when the food is very rich, raw, or cold. So to support our spleen in providing our bodies with the most nutrients possible, try to eat moderate amounts of rich food, chew all food well, and avoid too much cold foods/fluids. Raw foods are easier to digest the more finely it is chopped or grated, and when warm, pungent spices are added.

Here are some more general suggestions:

1) Enjoy and take time to eat! If we are stressed, unhappy, worried, or angry when we eat, our fascia and muscles are tense and constricted and our bodies don't digest and absorb all the nutrients from the meal. You might experience cramping, gas, bloating, burping, or diarrhea immediately after eating. Take time to sit down in a quiet place and enjoy the food you are eating!

2) Form a positive relationship with your food! Try not to think of food as "good" and "bad". Try not to eat "good" foods even if you don't enjoy them, but do so because you know you need to, and feel guilty when you eat "bad" foods. Once you have made the choice in what to eat, accept the food lovingly. Our attitude ti the food we eat will instruct our spleen on what to do with it.

3) Chew your food! The more you chew and break down your food in your mouth, the less work your digestive organs have to do! Chewing also warms cold/raw foods that you may eat before it enters your stomach.

4) When you are able to sit, relax, and become more aware of what you are eating, you are better able to assess when your stomach is full! The goal is to stop eating just before you feel full. When you overeat, a temporary line of food waiting to be digested is created (what we call stagnation!) Your body then uses all of its energy digesting food, and as a result, you feel tired and lethargic after eating. Overtime, our spleen becomes overstrained and eventually that stagnation of food becomes dampness and/or heat that accumulates throughout the body.

5) Try not to drink too much fluids during a meal. A little warm fluid with a meal is helpful, but too much dilutes the spleen's action and weakens digestion.

6) The digestive system needs warmth- think of your spleen as a fire- which is going to burn better- wet slaggy wood that has been snowed on or crisp dry wood? Too much raw or chilled foods/fluids overtime will weaken the spleen function to break down foods and can create dampness that accumulates throughout the body.

7) Eat like an Emperor in the morning and a Peasant in the evening. When you wake up, your body is running on empty and needs substantial nutrients to get you going in the morning. If you are already crashing by lunch time and looking for an afternoon siesta, you may need to re-evualte what you are eating in the morning. Try reaching for foods high in protein and carbs that have a low glycemic index. These foods release substantial energy over a long period of time to keep you going. (Oatmeal, whole grain cereals, eggs, peanut/almond butter, nuts, yogurt, etc) One the flip side, when you eat a huge meal at night, not only does your body have fewer hours to digest tar food, but our system is naturally slowing down towards the end of the day. The food ends up sitting in your digestive tract for longer, isn't best utilized in the body, and ends up creating stagnation, dampness, and heat in the body. This can lead to insomnia, increasing weight gain, as well as other things. By only changing the times you eat meals (not the daily calorie intake), you can drastically drop hard to lose pounds and increase your energy!

8) Aim to try to include as much fresh, local, seasonal produce in your diet as possible!











For more information on theTraditional Chinese energetics of food, check out "Helping Ourselves" and "Recipes for Self-Healing" by Daverick Leggett

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Help! I have Seasonal Affective Disorder

Well it seems like an appropriate time to write about this as my friends and I are joking that we live in Mordor. It poured rain for the past 24 hours, nothing but rain in the forecast, and the shortest day of the year is fast approaching- December 21st- 8.5 hours of daylight. So what's a Seattlelite to do? How can we get through it? How did you guess, Traditional Chinese Medicine can help. Acupuncture helps to restore the balance between yin and yang and promote the movement of qi, thus preventing stagnation and its nasty symptoms. Winter is a time of yin stillness and restoration, and while this is an important cyclical aspect of nature, certain individuals struggle with the associated darkness. I will share more information that can help. I have included an explanation of SAD as discussed in Acupuncture Today, followed by some useful lifestyle tips. Hope this helps~

"Seasonal affective disorder (SAD), a type of depression, is a debilitating problem that interferes with the quality of life of thousands of patients, especially during the fall, winter and early spring.

Clinical experience reveals that patients may have other mental problems as well, such as substance abuse disorders, personality disorders and anxiety disorders, which as comorbdid conditions, further exacerbate the degree of the SAD patient's symptoms. Flaws and Lake define SAD as "a variant of bipolar disorder characterized by cyclic manic, depressive or mixed mood states that are somehow triggered by external clues to changing seasons, including principally, increased or decreased day length. Individuals with SAD tend to become depressed during the autumn months and manic during the springtime."1 This is a complicated disorder that may accompany many severe illnesses such as cardiovascular and endocrine disease, and for which a patient should seek qualified professional help. Seasonal affective disorder does, however, respond well to treatment with Oriental medicine." Acupuncture Today, April 2003 by Skya Abbate

As a sun junkie somehow living and thriving in this soggy mess, I can appreciate the challenges of our winters. Here are some things to help get you through:

1) Receive regular acupuncture to boost and balance energy and support mood.

2) Exercise. In whatever way you can manage, and enjoy :)

3) Get outside. Put on your goggles, raincoat, ski boots, snowshoes, or not- and breathe in the fresh air and soak up any daylight you can.

4) If the sun comes out, so do you. Spend some time getting your Vitamin D.

5) Take Vitamin D. We will be adding Thorne Research Vit D to our herbs/supplements at The Pin Cushion.

Vitamin D is also known as the "sunshine vitamin" because the body manufactures the vitamin after being exposed to sunshine. Ten to 15 minutes of sunshine 3 times weekly is enough to produce the body's requirement of vitamin D. However, many people living in sunny climates still do not make enough vitamin D and need more from their diet or supplementation.

The Food and Nutrition Board at the Institute of Medicine recommends the following dietary intake for vitamin D as cholecalciferol. (One microgram of cholecalciferol is the same as 40 IU of vitamin D.)

Infants

  • 0 - 6 months: 5 micrograms per day (mcg/day)
  • 7 - 12 months: 5 mcg/day

Children

  • 1 - 13 years: 5 mcg/day

Adolescents and Adults

  • Males and Females age 14 to 50: 5 mcg/day
  • Males and Females age 51 to 70: 10 mcg/day
  • Males and Females age over 70: 15 mcg/day
6) Do your best to avoid overeating and gaining excess weight, as this will increase fatigue and decrease mental clarity.

7) Rest! Bears do it, so should you. Stay warm, don't expend extra energy to keep your internal fire going. Wear warm layers, take hot baths and showers.

8) Cultivate the relationships and things in your life that bring you joy. Enjoy the warmth of friends and family.

The days will soon be getting longer friends!