Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Mother's Day!



Here are some mother's day ideas to honor all the special mothers in your life :) As well as some other DC area links I came across during my search...and be sure to try and buy organic, local, and fair-trade gifts!

Brunch in DC, or Old Town!

Mother's day spa treatment specials

Mount Vernon Garden Tours (this is my Mom's pick for the day!)

Other Gardens in the DC Area


Bethesda Fine Arts Festival

Cruise along the Potomac

Mother's day in Virginia (scroll to bottom for Northern VA, including winery and vineyard specials)

DC Yoga Week: May 2-9, free or $5 classes at participating yoga studios in DC!

Also, a list of good hiking trails in the DC area. I've hiked some of the AT, in the Shennandoah National Park and George Washington National Forest, Great Falls, Sugarloaf Mountain, and Bull Run park. I'd like to try Rock Creek Park, Black Hill Park, Catoctin Mountain Park, and Cunningham Falls. :)
View of the sunset from my apartment window

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

DC is the new NYC?


DC is the new New York? via vogue.com

Best of Old Town: 12 Great Shops via washingtonian.com

Radiant


Alyson Shotz Radiant, 2007 Aluminum laminated with acrylic with a dichroic film
variable; 49 panels, each 96 x 1 x 1 in., 8 ft. x 45 ft. x 14 in. overall
My favorite ever in the Hirshhorn collection (not currently on view).

Terrence McKenna theorized/wrote a Timewave equation, based on the I Ching and entheogenic experiences, in which great periods of novelty in the equation coincide with major events in the Earth's history. The end of the timewave equation, where it goes to infinity, matches that of the Mayan calendar, in which the end will occur at the winter solstice in 2012. There are many speculations of what will happen at this time, including the end of the world, and a great shift in human consciousness. You can find lots more resources and books on the web about 2012, including on the site http://deoxy.org/. Here is the wikipedia link:
Novelty Theory and 2012

Currently listening to talks from the last day of the EFT summit, Using EFT to determine your life values.
And, yesterday I watched Kymatica which I will definitely watch again soon and write more about. Highly recommended. -thanks Katherine

Quote of the day:
"Millions of hours have passed, even more stars have fallen" -thanks Lia

Friday, April 24, 2009

Daily Dharma

via Tricycle magazine, the Buddhist Review

Our difficulties are not obstacles to the path; they are the path itself. They are opportunities to awaken. Can we learn what it means to welcome an unwanted situation, with its sense of groundlessness, as a wake-up call? Can we look at it as a signal that there is something here to be learned? Can we allow it to penetrate our hearts? By learning to do this, we are taking the first basic step toward learning what it means to be open with whatever life presents us. Even when we don’t like it, we understand that this difficulty is our practice, our path, our life.

–Ezra Bayda, from Being Zen: Bringing Meditation to Life (Shambhala)

Thursday, April 23, 2009

A little late, but you can probably catch a rerun or watch on the pbs website:

FRONTLINE
http://www.pbs.org/frontline/

- This Week: "Poisoned Waters" (120 minutes),
April 21st at 9pm on PBS (Check local listings)

For years, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Hedrick Smith has reported from the corridors of power in Washington, on Wall Street, and overseas. But these days, he's worried about something that he's found much closer to home -- something mysterious that's appeared in waters that he knows well: frogs with six legs, male amphibians with ovaries, "dead zones" where nothing can live or grow.

What's causing the trouble? Smith suspects the answers might lie close to home as well.

This Tuesday night, in a special two-hour FRONTLINE broadcast --"Poisoned Waters"-- Smith takes a hard look at a new wave of pollution that's imperiling the nation's waterways, focusing on two of our most iconic: the Chesapeake Bay and Puget Sound. He also examines three decades of environmental regulation that are failing to meet this new threat, and have yet to clean up the ongoing mess of PCBs, the staggering waste from factory farms, and the fall-out from unchecked
suburban sprawl.

"The environment has slipped off our radar screen because it's not a hot crisis like the financial meltdown, war, or terrorism," Smith says. "But pollution is a ticking time bomb. It's a chronic cancer that is slowly eating away the natural resources that are vital to our very lives."

Among the most worrisome of the new contaminants are "endocrine disruptors," chemical compounds found in common household products that mimic hormones in the human body and cause freakish mutations in frogs and amphibians.

"There are five million people being exposed to endocrine disruptors just in the Mid-Atlantic region," a doctor at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health tells Smith. "And yet we don't know precisely how many of them are going to develop premature breast cancer, going to have
problems with reproduction, going to have all kinds of congenital anomalies of the male genitalia that are happening at a broad low level so that they don't raise the alarm in the general public."

Can new models of "smart growth" and regulation reverse decades of damage? Are the most real and lasting changes likely to come from the top down, given an already overstretched Obama administration? Or will the greatest reasons for hope come from the bottom up, through the
action of a growing number of grassroots groups trying to effect environmental change?

Join us for the broadcast this Tuesday night. Online, you can watch "Poisoned Waters" again, find out how safe your drinking water is, and learn how you can get involved.
Quote of the day: When you are doing what you are doing, who are you being?

DC this weekend

French Market in Georgetown this Saturday and Sunday from 11 am to 6 pm. "The more-than 30 Book Hill shops host the sidewalk sale of the season! With strolling musicians, grilled merguez, outdoor crepes, and more! All your Georgetown favorites will have their goods out for the pickings, and even a few great Eastern Market finds!"

National Arboretum Events page (the full moon walk is highly recommended)

Great Grapes Wine Arts and Food Festival at the Reston Town Center,
Saturday, Apr 25 12:00p
Over 200 Wines and 20 Virginia Wineries. The festival is an inexpensive way to see Virginia Wine Country - right in your own backyard.

Ideas for inexpensive dates in Washington :)

Invasive Plant Removal Day, May 2nd

Thoughts on Bodhisattva Vows

via the Earth Sangha newsletter, written by Lisa Bright:

Some of our friends initially wondered about taking the Vows of which
are guaranteed to be broken. For instance, how on earth we could
take the vows to save all the sentient beings?

Would you feel better, if I readily agree that such Vows to save all
beings and to attain the Enlightenment are ridiculous, like all Vows
are? As ridiculous as it sounds, taking such vows helps us to see
how we approach life. This act of taking and renewing the Vows lets
us pause and watch ourselves, inside and out. It would allow us to
become keenly aware of our own emotions as they arise, our thoughts
as they arise, our actions as motivated by our emotions and thoughts,
the consequences of our actions on others both intentional and
unintentional, and how we are relating to other living beings through
our actions, and ultimately bringing happiness (or unhappiness) to us
all.

We come into being without any grand schemes. The question,
therefore, isn't about why we live. There's no reason; we are
already here to live! The right question is, then, how to live.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Today's musings

Global Shift - About the Institute of Noetic Sciences

I want to try this restaurant, located north of Old Town, next time I go out for brunch or dinner: Indigo Landing

Best Outdoor Food and Dining via the Washingtonian

Great Day Spas 2009 via the Washingtonian (check out the new spa at 1600 King St.!)

Tricycle Magazine: The Buddhist Review

EFT How to Tap

I just did this youtube video on how to tap and really I feel better already!
For more information on the EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) World Summit click here

Monday, April 20, 2009

Earth Ball, Sahaja Meditation

The DC Earth Ball will take place on May 1st at the Mott House at 122 Maryland Ave, NE. All proceeds will be donated to urban vegetable garden programs benefiting moderate and low-income residents of the District.

I joined the Sahaja Meditation meetup group but have not yet been to a meeting. I was just checking out more about Sahaja meditation and click here for more info about the meetup group.


Subtle System from Dheeraj Agarwal on Vimeo.

Greenbelt Lake




Pictures from my fieldwork last Monday, which involved checking out the sewers/manholes around Greenbelt Lake in the Buddy Attick Park in Greenbelt, MD.

Quotes of the day: "You know what to do."
"Every recession creates new wealth."

Filmfest DC

Yesterday afternoon I saw a wonderful Japanese film, Megane (Glasses), part of the International DC Film Festival. I think if I made a movie it would be something like this, lots of ocean views and shots of the water. Exquisite and meditative.

Check out drum n bass and dubstep mixes at Expansion Brodcast and Dirtbox radio, especially good are Encryption and Dave J! :)

April 20

Giorgio Morandi, Natura morta, 1960.



Current exhibition at the Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW:
Morandi: Master of Modern Still Life

February 21-May 24, 2009

Giorgio Morandi approached painting with the concentration of a Zen master. Working in the small apartment he shared with his mother and three sisters in Bologna, Morandi's carefully chosen collection of bottles, bowls, and jars served as his muse. He altered these objects by painting their exteriors, erasing their labels and reflections to expose their shape and volume, painstakingly creating still-life arrangements. Quietly mesmerizing and mysterious, Morandi's paintings hover between physical and spiritual, traditional and modern.

EFT World Summit 2009 Starts today, April 20th. Click on the link to register and learn more.

EFT stands for "Emotional Freedom Techniques" and is a simple and amazingly fast "tapping" technique. You just lightly but firmly tap on certain acupuncture/acupressure points on the face, head and upper body and astonishing events begin to take place. The process quickly and easily activates the body's own "energy meridian system" and has great potential for releasing virtually anything that's "wrong" with you.

Finally, via my calendar, in a clear sky the Lyrid meteor shower presents its nightly show from April 16 to 26. It produces around ten meteors per hour at its normal maximum, but on rare occasions tremendous bursts of up to 100 meteors per hour have been seen. The best views are in the eastern and northeastern skies between midnight and dawn. The Lyrid meteor shower is expected to peak on April 22. It occurs each year when Earth passes through the dust trail of Comet Thatcher.

On April 26, Mercury an dthe star cluster Pleiades can be seen together with the moon at sunset.


Friday, April 10, 2009

Floating

Chesapeake Bay River Summer Soujourns

Filmfest DC, the Washington DC international film festival

Liquid Chlorophyll


Outdoor Bars in DC (I've been to the Reef in Adams Morgan once)

Ideas for places to get food for a spring picnic (Le pain quotidien in Old Town is excellent and I want to try Cheesetique in Del Ray)

Tropical Forest Group Articles


Wiki of the day: John Cage
and click here for a John Cage youtube video

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Tonight!

Quotes


Quotes I have written and collected in my daily planner, the Ecological Calendar, so far this year..

"When you try it doesn't look good, but when you don't try, it's perfect"

"The force is already setting things up, if you need to do something it will tell you, wait in uncertainty until the choice becomes clear." (Calm-perfect, or urgency? Still seeking this balance..in effortless effort..)

"A lot of it is unnecessary, be realistic, no assumptions, no pretending, a person of truth."

"Meditate daily on how I will change the world."

"Smile and laugh more."

"Inner confidence and strength
Don't worry
Don't fight the forces, use them
Spiritually resonate
Interconnectedness of all things
Keep it simple
Discipline and self control"

Above quotes from one of my spiritual advisors.

"Stay straight on the path."

"Love, compassion, and kindness are the anchors of all life."

"Spiritually resonate."

"Love your soul."

"We are all one, not only with beings on this earth, but all planets and galaxies." - Alan Watts

"Calm down. You will find your way."

"We are in the flow of it...we are in the flow of time"

"The things you love you will be destined to hate and the things you hate you may love." -idea originally from The Garden, by Michael Roach

"What is doing, thinking, motion, action, awareness, movement, connection, soul, spirituality? Acceptance of the state of complete and utter confusion or the state of empty mind, knowldgeless leads to all knowledge. Is there a possible balance between the two extremes. Am I completely lost, or not lost at all? When you look at reality realistically, you see the truth, and there is nothing else. Everything else is just manifestations of the truth that somehow are here and this is it, this is what life is, or is it. How could it be different? Present moment awareness." -me

"The passageway into the world of shamans opens up after the warrior has learned to shut off his/her internal dialogue."

"Stress happens when your mind resists what is..the only problem in your life is your mind's resistance to it as it unfolds."

"Remaining detached from the outcome creates enough space for a solution to inherently unfold."

"Where your talents and the needs of the world cross, therein lies your vocation." Aristotle

"In a controversy the instant we feel anger we have already ceased striving for the truth, and have begun striving for ourselves." Buddha

"Your fantasies can show you places you don't normally go, and they can also lead you to the right path for your future."

"Real justice is for God to help us through his grace to rectify that which truly wronged us. And what is that? Our estrangement from our divine nature. At that point, when we have returned to our divine nature, justice will be experienced and function not as commonly understood but as total, absolute, and unconditional divine love."

"The art of being wise is knowing what to overlook."

"You can't be everything you want to be before your time."

"Every teacher tells us how important it is to control your mind. Something powerful happens when we lock our minds on an idea."

"When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it." Coelho

"Let it go. Quit trying to live with your past and explaining every action you take. BE YOU. Fully. In this moment."

"What is it you want. WHY do you want that? What deep reason compels you to strive for it? Get clear. Very clear." Nietzsche

Man's mind, once stretched by a new idea, never regains its original dimensions. - Oliver Wendell Holmes

"Follow the calmness, by means of meditation, we can teach our minds to be calm and balanced."

Word of the day:

velleity \veh-LEE-uh-tee; vuh-\, noun:

1. The lowest degree of desire; imperfect or incomplete volition.
2. A slight wish or inclination.

Book of the day: Interpretation of Dreams, Freud (link to read online)

Wiki of the day: Dancing Mania and Ergot -thanks Issamu

Beautiful Life Emerges

After a lunchtime walk to the Potomac River, I feel more inspired. The river has been such a source of energy during my time here in Old Town Alexandria. Sitting on the edge of the dock, looking across the horizion and the expanse of the river, the sun, clouds, and sky...and just being present in the moment. Watching the wave patterns in the river as the wind and currents provide ceaseless flow to the form of the river, constant change...like life itself. I can see how in the novel Siddhartha, enlightenment was reached by a relationship with awareness of a river's movements, yet always being at the same point on the shore of the river. In the river I can see the oneness of the universe, its easy to let all thoughts go, in the path towards spiritual illumination. Walking down King St, seeing all of the familiar shops and restaurants, families, tourists, fashionistas, the blooming flowers, it was quite a relaxing break from the office :) Note: photo of the Potomac stolen from a google image search, will upload one of my own when I can, to get a better picture of the view from the Old Town waterfront. :)

And now some words of wisdom from Natasha at the Pure Prana yoga studio:

March 20 marked the Spring Equinox, the day of equal light and dark and the beginning of the blossoming Spring season. It's the ultimate clebration of life, where important and ideal qualities in ourselves and elements of nature are deliberately recognized and new beginnings and intentions are set.

Each of us contributing to the web of life is ripe with brilliant possibilities.

Add these elements to the Virginian outdoors and we witness life-springing in every tree, plant and flower; we welcome this unfolding beauty.

It is the unfolding of beauty all around us that has the potential to inspire the unfolding of beauty from our inside, out. We've transitioned from the cold, fallow of winter to make way for the new. From the yogic perspective, all things go through the natural life cycle ( birth, existence, death). Naturally, it is time for renewal.

We know how ideal a time it is to renew your practice, and give new life to your life. Maybe that means spring cleaning at home, renewed interest at work, getting back into your fitness, being outside, starting a new routine or finally beginning that hobby you've always wanted to try.

Any which way you find yourself in a new pattern, it's important to identify it, express it and just start where you are. I'm certain a more beautiful expression of yourself will emerge.
Enjoy the web of life!

Old Town Alexandria

Five Fun Outings in Old Town

Good Eats near Old Town

Water

Via WHF email:

Can you please tell me about the benefits of drinking water as well as provide me with some information about its pH balance?

First, with respect to the benefits of drinking water, I cannot overemphasize the importance of this essential nutrient. Our bodies are approximately 60% water by weight, and even a 5% shift in this amount can compromise our health. Our bloodstream cannot transport nutrients effectively unless we drink enough water. Our kidneys cannot filter wastes without enough water. We cannot maintain our skin tone, or our digestive flow, or regulate our body temperature without enough water. The vast majority of nutrients dissolve in water, and this fact alone makes water unique in our nourishment.

The natural pH of water is close to neutral-a measurement of 7 on the pH scale. Water districts typically try to keep the pH of tap water within a limited range of 6-10. I've seen websites recommending consumption of "acidified water" in which an acid substance is added to natural water to bring its pH level down. I've also seen websites recommending consumption of "alkalized water" in which a basic substance is added to raise water's natural pH. I've never seen research studies to suggest that either practice is desirable. In addition, these steps don't make sense to me from a science standpoint. One of the unique features of water is its neutral pH-this neutral level allows the body to easily shift the pH either up or down, depending on the moment-by-moment metabolic circumstances. In most circumstances, the optimal step is to support the body's ability to carry out metabolic activities by consuming adequate amounts of clean, neutral pH water, and leaving the acid-base balance up to the body and its complex buffering systems.

At a much more general level, two factors are equally important when it comes to water: (1) drinking a sufficient amount, and (2) making sure what you drink is high quality.

The quality of tap water can vary depending upon where you live and whether the water is provided from a municipal site or you have your own spring or well. Contamination can occur not only from the water source but also from sources closer to home. For example, the quality of your water can be affected by your type of plumbing (whether you have copper lined pipes, lead solder containing plumbing, etc.), whether you use a well, and whether there is contamination from agricultural chemicals. If you are curious about the quality of your water, you may want to get it tested. In general, it would be best to filter city water before consumption. With rural (well) water, the decision about filtering is usually best made on a well-by-well basis.

The quality of bottled water also varies greatly. Some water is good quality and other water is simply repackaged tap water. Bottled water can also be expensive, unless purchased in large amounts in the type of 5-gallon containers used with water coolers often found in office settings. I recommend that you read the label carefully when buying bottled water and look for the following information:

  • Check to see where the water originated. High quality waters either name their source (which is typically a natural spring) or they list their primary ingredient as "filtered water" and also present information about how the water was purified and tested. Consider natural mineral water as a particularly good option. You can get a surprising amount of your day's calcium and magnesium and other key minerals from most high-quality mineral waters.
  • Avoid distilled bottled waters. Although they can be highly safe and well purified, they have typically lost too much of their natural mineral content.

    If you are concerned about the quality of your tap water, you may want to investigate getting a water filter. In general, the best water filters involve blocks of carbon (rather than granulated carbon) and are often combined with reverse osmosis filters. The under-sink types of filters are typically more effective than the type that attach at the faucet. I recommend carbon block or reverse osmosis filters over distilled water because I believe that too many desirable minerals are lost during the process of distillation. Another option that may be available in your area is water filtration systems in supermarkets. Many natural foods supermarkets offer good quality water filtration systems where you can refill your own jugs. For some this is a convenient option, yet for others having a home filtration system is more convenient.

    Whatever option you use for guaranteeing high quality water, you also need to make sure that you consume enough water during the course of the day. Water is usually best consumed between meals if you are drinking a sizable amount (8 ounces or more). As for intake goals, the National Academy of Sciences recommends (in its Dietary Reference Intake (DRI) recommendations) about 13 cups of water each day for men and 9 cups for women.

  • Also, more info on the Acidity/Alkalinity of foods:

    The issue of acid and alkaline foods is a confusing one, because there are several different ways of using these words with respect to food.

    The pH of foods

    In food chemistry textbooks that take a Western science approach to foods, every food has a value that is called its "pH value." pH is a special scale created to measure how acidic or alkaline a fluid or substance is. It ranges from 0 (most acidic) to 14 (most alkaline) with 7.0 being neutral. One way of thinking about it is that as you get closer to 7.0 from either end, the food becomes less acidic (6.0 vs 5.0, for example) or less alkaline (8.0 vs 9.0, for example).

    Limes, for example, have a very low pH of 2.0 and are highly acidic according to the pH scale. Lemons are slightly less acidic at a pH of 2.2. Egg whites are not acidic at all, and have a pH of 8.0. Meats are also non-acidic, with a pH of about 7.0.

    Many vegetables lie somewhere in the middle of the pH range. The pH of asparagus, for example, is 5.6; of sweet potatoes, 5.4; of cucumbers, 5.1; of carrots, 5.0; of green peas, 6.2; of corn, 6.3. Tomatoes fit on the pH scale toward the more acidic end in comparison to other vegetables. Their pH ranges from 4.0 to 4.6. However, this range is still higher (less acidic) than fruits like pears (with a pH of 3.9) or peaches (with a pH of 3.5) or strawberries (3.4) or plums (2.9).

    Acid-forming foods

    Another way to talk about food acidity is not to measure the acidity of the food itself, but the to measure changes in the acidity of body fluids once the food has been eaten. In other words, from this second perspective, a food is not labeled as "acidic," but instead as "acid-forming."

    Although the idea of acid-forming foods goes back almost 100 years in the research, there's been very little research published in this area until fairly recently. In earlier publications, acid-forming foods were often talked about as key components of an "acid-ash diet." The term "ash" was used much more commonly in those days to refer to the inorganic components of a diet (mineral elements or molecules not containing carbon) that remained after the digestion and metabolism of food had occurred. This ash was also commonly referred to as a "residue" of the diet. Diets largely devoid of meat, fish, eggs, cheese, and grains were described as "alkaline-ash diets." These diets focused on consumption of fruits and vegetables and also included cow's milk. By contrast, diets containing large amounts of meat, fish, eggs, cheese and grains were described as "acid-ash diets."

    Although the term "ash" is seldom used in current research studies on diet, the idea of acid-forming foods has remained a topic of research interest. A new term has been created in the research world to refer to the potential impact of certain foods on the kidneys and urine acid levels. This term is "potential renal acid load" or PRAL. For meats, a PRAL value of 9.5 has been reported by researchers. Alongside of meats in terms of high PRAL value are cheeses (8.0), fish (7.9), flour (7.0), and noodles (6.7). In contrast with these high PRAL values are the values for fruits (-3.1), vegetables (-2.8), fruits, and cow's milk (1.0).

    Researchers have been concerned about one particular aspect of high-PRAL food intake, and that concern involves bone health. It's always important for our bloodstream to keep acidity under control. Our kidneys, lungs, and other organ systems work hard to keep our blood pH very close to 7.4. However, if presented with too many acids from the digestion and metabolism of food, our body will try to neutralize those acids using a process called buffering. To buffer an acid, our body needs to link the acid with another chemical called a "base." Sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium are minerals that readily form bases for our body to use as acid buffers. One readily available source for calcium is bone, and researchers have wondered whether a diet that is overly acid-forming will place too heavy demands on our bone for calcium buffers. There's some research that suggests this process may take place over the short run (60 days or less), but the long-term impact of excess acid-forming foods in the diet on bone calcium is not clear from studies to date.

    One of the factors that high-PRAL foods have in common (with the exception of grains) is their high protein content. Meat, fish, and cheese are all high-protein foods. Because protein is composed of amino acids, and because amino acids can be easily converted in the body to organic acids, it makes sense for high-protein foods to be treated as foods that can increase potential renal acid load. When present-day researchers try to model the potential acid-forming nature of a diet (meaning the potential for a diet to increase the acidity of our urine and acid load upon our kidneys), they always factor in the protein density of the diet. Potassium content, calcium content, and magnesium content are also typically factored in because these minerals readily form bases that can be used to help buffer acids. Sometimes researchers also look at the ratio of a potentially acid-forming component like protein to an available buffering mineral like potassium.

    The table below summaries primary higher PRAL and lower PRAL food groups

    Food GroupPRALHigher or Lower PRAL
    Meats9.5Higher
    Cheeses8.0Higher
    Fish7.9Higher
    Flour7.0Higher
    Noodles6.7Higher
    Fruits-3.1Lower
    Vegetables- 2.8Lower
    Cow's Milk1.0Lower

    Source: Barzel US and Massey LK. (1998). Excess dietary protein can adversely affect bone. J Nutr 128: 1051-1053.

    Acid-alkaline and the World's Healthiest Foods

    Although the impact of foods on our kidneys and urine acidity is definitely an important topic from the standpoint of diet and health, it is still one very narrow component of our body's acid-base balance. All of our bodily fluids have their own characteristic degree of acidity, and our metabolism works in thousands of ways to protect acid-base levels in all of our tissue. So we would not want to draw any hard and fast conclusions about how to eat from studies on urine acidity and the PRAL value of foods. However, I do believe that research in this area supports our basic approach to healthy eating at the World's Healthiest Foods. We place our greatest emphasis on daily intake of vegetables and fruits, and in this urine acidity research, we discover that vegetables and fruits have lower PRAL values than any other food groups. We also encourage moderation throughout our website with respect to consumption of meats and believe this recommendation is in keeping with urine acidity research that places meats at the top of the PRAL list with a value of 9.5. While the PRAL research was not a factor in our initial construction of the World's Healthiest Foods list, we are reassured to see that our Healthiest Way of Eating is one that should result in little risk with respect to potential renal acid load.

    Other approaches to acid-alkaline and diet

    On other websites, especially websites interested in macrobiotic eating, Asian medicine, and energy medicine, you'll find detailed discussion of acid-forming and alkaline-forming foods that do not follow this Western science research involving urine acidity and PRAL values. Instead, these approaches typically look at whole body acid-base balance (rather than acidity of one body fluid like the urine) and they talk about "toxic acidic conditions" or the need for a slightly alkaline condition in the body as whole. To find out more about these alternative ways of approach acid-base balance in the body and dietary choices, you may want to visit one or more of the following websites:

    http://www.gomf.macrobiotic.net/Info_Macrobiotics.htm (The George Osawa Macrobiotic Foundation)

    http://www.kushiinstitute.org/html/articles.html#Food%20&%20Healing (The Kushi Institute)

    http://www.ppnf.org/catalog/ppnf/Articles/articles_list.htm (Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation)

    Monday, April 6, 2009

    Moon and Saturn

    Via Stardate,

    The bright gibbous Moon has a bright companion tonight, the planet Saturn. It looks like a golden star, a little to the upper left of the Moon at nightfall.

    Spring Cleaning/Cleansing Foods

    From my WHF email of the week:

    Foods can assist with cleansing and detoxification:
    • Lemon juice detoxifies and cleanses the digestive tract and balances pH
    • Cilantro can detoxify and reduce mercury levels
    • Prunes help cleanse and detoxify the digestive system and help prevent constipation
    • Whole grains, high in fiber, help cleanse the digestive tract
    • Fibers such as beta-glucan, found in oats and barley, help eliminate excess cholesterol
    • Turmeric helps cleanse the liver
    • Allium vegetables like onions and garlic contain sulfur compounds critical for the detoxification of many potential toxins
    • Cruciferous vegetables such as broccoli, kale, cabbage, and cauliflower are sulfur-rich foods, which are important for cleansing the liver

    Sunday, April 5, 2009

    Currently Reading

    The Art of Possibility, by Rosamund Stone Zander and Benjamin Zander.

    The practice for it's all invented:

    Ask yourself this question:
    "What assumption am I making,
    That I'm not aware I'm making,
    That gives me what I see?"

    And when you have an answer to that question, ask yourself this one:
    "What might I now invent,
    That I haven't yet invented,
    That would give me other choices?"
    Interesting ideas on DMT -thanks Alex
    Joe Rogan
    Terrence McKenna

    Quote of the day: "Be realistic."

    Nature



    The Buzz on Bees: Solving the Mystery of the Vanishing Bees

    Frogs: The Thin Green line, Can the decline of frog populations around the world be stopped?

    Michael Pollan, TED Talks, A Plant's Eye View

    Friday, April 3, 2009

    Cherry Blossoms!



    Deal with it before it happens.
    Set things in order before there is confusion.
    Source: Tao Te Ching [Text Only], Page: 66