Susanna’s Blog


Baking Soda
16 December 2009, 9:41 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

sodium bicarbonate, baking soda, arm & hammer, arm and hammer, flu, influenza, swine flu, H1N1, flu remedy, flu remediesIn today’s modern world of medicine the FDA just will not let companies that sell products make medical claims about them unless they have been tested at great expense, and approved as a drug. But this was not always the case.

In a 1924 booklet published by the Arm & Hammer Soda Company, the company starts off saying, “The proven value of Arm & Hammer Bicarbonate of Soda as a therapeutic agent is further evinced by the following evidence of a prominent physician named Dr. Volney S. Cheney, in a letter to the Church & Dwight Company:

“In 1918 and 1919 while fighting the ‘Flu’ with the U. S. Public Health Service it was brought to my attention that rarely any one who had been thoroughly alkalinized with bicarbonate of soda contracted the disease, and those who did contract it, if alkalinized early, would invariably have mild attacks.

Recommended dosages from the Arm and Hammer Company for colds and influenza back in 1925 were:

  • During the first day take six doses of half teaspoonful of Bicarbonate of Soda in glass of cool water, at about two hour intervals
  • During the second day take four doses of half teaspoonful of Bicarbonate of Soda in glass of cool water, at the same intervals
  • During the third day take two doses of half teaspoonful of Bicarbonate of Soda in glass of cool water morning and evening, and thereafter half teaspoonful in glass of cool water each morning until cold is cured.

More -  http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/12/15/Baking-Soda-Used-to-Treat-Swine-Flu-85-Years-Ago.aspx



Colds
3 December 2009, 3:48 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

I found this article really great, and helpful!  With the swine flu scare (just a bunch of hype, in my opinion) and cold and flu season, we are trying to incorporate as much immune boosting stuff as possible.  I am particularly interested in raw and fermented products for health.  We’ve been eating raw fermented sauerkraut from a local place called Fab Ferments, it’s SO delicious and Juliana likes it too!  I tried kombucha, a fermented tea that I heard was really healthy but personally I find absolutely awful tasting!  I think my next thing to try will be coconut oil, and maybe add a vitamin D supplement.  The girls are on an echinacea routine (everyday for two weeks, none for two weeks, and repeat throughout the winter) and I swear this stuff is amazing!  It works for us!  We’ve stayed healthy so far, except for Juliana who has a cold now (first one so far!).  Anyway, I thought this article was really interesting.

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/12/03/How-to-Prevent-the-Flu-Easy-as-1-2-3.aspx

Colds are a leading cause of doctor visits and missed days from work and school, and this season is no exception. Americans suffer from approximately 1 billion colds per year, or about two to four colds per year for the average adult.

But why do people start getting sick as the leaves start to fall?

Unfortunately in the US, thanks to the CDC, nearly anyone seeing their doctor for a cold will be told that they are infected with H1N1 and will be added to the already inflated CDC statistics.

However, according to the CBS News study, when you come down with chills, fever, cough, runny nose, malaise and all those other “flu-like” symptoms, the illness is likely caused by influenza at most, 17 percent of the time, and as little as 3 percent! The other 83 to 97 percent of the time it’s caused by other viruses or bacteria.

So remember that not every illness that appears to be the flu, actually IS the flu. In fact, most of the time it’s not.

Nevertheless, as temperatures drop, we begin to congregate indoors and spend less time in the sun. This means our vitamin D levels begin to drop, and we are more apt to spread viruses from one person to another.

It isn’t that these opportunistic pathogens magically appear at certain times of the year—they’re always around. It’s your ability to respond to them that changes with the seasons.

It is important to understand the causes of viral upper respiratory syndromes if you want to avoid them.

The Real Cause of Colds and Flu

Many people believe that colds and flu are caused by bacteria, but this is simply incorrect. Colds and flu are caused by viruses, and using antibiotics to treat a viral infection is inappropriate and completely ineffective.

Viruses are orders of magnitude smaller than bacteria and have entirely different structures that make antibiotics useless. (Occasionally antibiotics are required if there is a secondary bacterial sinus infection or bronchitis/pneumonia, but this is the rare exception.)

It is also important to recognize that, although a virus triggers your cold or flu symptoms, it is not the real cause of the illness.

So, what is the real cause of colds and flu?

My simple and short answer has always been that it’s due to an impaired immune system. That’s still true. However, research has confirmed that “catching” colds and flu may be a symptom of an underlying vitamin D deficiency! Less than optimal vitamin D levels will significantly impair your immune response and make you far more susceptible to contracting colds, influenza, and other respiratory infections.

Although there are many ways you might end up with a weakened immune system, the more common contributing factors are:

  • Vitamin D deficiency, as previously mentioned
  • Eating too much sugar and too many grains
  • Not getting enough sleep
  • Insufficient exercise
  • Inadequately managing emotional stressors in your life
  • Any combination of the above

THE Number One Way to Conquer a Cold or Flu: Vitamin D

Vitamin D is an amazingly effective antimicrobial agent, producing 200 to 300 different antimicrobial peptides in your body that kill bacteria, viruses and fungi.

In the United States, the late winter average vitamin D level is only about 15-18 ng/ml, which is considered a very serious deficiency state. It’s estimated that over 95 percent of U.S. senior citizens may be deficient, along with 85 percent of the American public.

In 2009, a team of researcher’s from Children’s Hospital Boston analyzed blood samples taken from 5,000 children under age 12 and found that nearly one out of five children in the U.S. have low blood levels of less than 50 nanomoles per liter, the level recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics. They also found that two out of three children have a level below 75 nmol/L–which is still insufficient, based on most of the research coming out today.

No wonder colds and flu run rampant each year.

The best source for vitamin D is direct sun exposure. But for many of us, this just isn’t practical during the winter. The next best thing to sunlight is the use of a safe indoor tanning device. If neither natural nor artificial sunlight is an option, then using oral supplements is your best bet.

Remarkably, researchers have found that 2,000 IU of vitamin D per day abolished seasonal influenza. This is somewhat surprising, as it is half the dose of what most adults need to achieve ideal levels of vitamin D

Please note that this is far greater than the recommended daily allowance (RDA) advised by public health agencies like the American Academy of Pediatrics, which recently doubled the RDA of vitamin D for children to 400 IU. This new guidance still falls absurdly short of what’s needed to keep kids healthy, especially during flu season.

In order to prevent the flu, children and adults need 35 IU of vitamin D per pound of body weight. So, for example, a child weighing 57 pounds would need 2,000 IU a day of vitamin D.

Adults typically need an average of 5,000 IU per day—but some adults have to take 20,000 to 30,000 IU daily to get their vitamin D level up to optimal levels. Exactly how adults absorb and process vitamin D so differently is still somewhat of a mystery, so the only way to know if your vitamin D level is therapeutic and nontoxic is by having your blood tested.

Not all vitamin D testing is accurate, so make sure your health care provider is ordering the correct test.

Lifestyle Options: Choose Wisely

As you know, I’m not an extremist. I advocate balancing healthful choices with enjoying life, which includes celebrating from time to time.

That said, if you feel yourself coming down with a cold or flu, this is NOT the time to be eating sugar, artificial sweeteners or processed foods. Sugar is particularly damaging to your immune system–which needs to be ramped up, not suppressed, in order to combat an emerging infection.

You must address nutrition, sleep, exercise and stress issues the moment you first feel yourself getting a bug. This is when immune-enhancing strategies will be most effective.

When people come down with a cold or flu, it’s because some combination of factors has weakened their defenses. You might be able to get away with one or two transgressions, but a bucketful of poor choices will cause your immune system to crash. And then suddenly…you’re sick.

When you’re coming down with a cold, it’s time to address ALL of the contributing factors immediately.

This would be a good time to tweak your diet in favor of foods that will strengthen your immune response. Good choices include:

  • Raw, grass-fed organic milk, and/or high-quality whey protein
  • Fermented foods such as kefir, kimchee, miso, pickles, sauerkraut, etc.
  • Raw, organic eggs from free-ranging chickens
  • Grass-fed beef
  • Coconuts and coconut oil
  • Locally grown fruits and vegetables, appropriate for your nutritional type
  • Mushrooms, especially Reishi, Shiitake, and Maitake, which contain beta glucans (which have immune-enhancing properties)
  • Garlic, a potent antimicrobial that kills bacteria, viruses AND fungi
  • Herbs and spices with high ORAC scores: Turmeric, oregano, cinnamon, cloves (for more on ORAC, visit www.oracvalues.com)

Make sure you are drinking plenty of fresh, pure water. Water is essential for the optimal function of every system in your body.

Pay attention to how you are sleeping. If you aren’t getting enough sleep, or enough restorative sleep, you’ll be at increased risk for a hostile viral takeover.

And don’t underestimate the importance of regular exercise for increasing your resistance to illness. There is evidence that regular, moderate exercise can reduce your risk for respiratory illness by boosting your immune system.

But at the same time, don’t overdo it. Over-exercising can actually place more stress on the body, which can suppress the immune system–and you don’t want that either. You might just go for a walk if you are coming down with something. Any rise in body temperature will be an unwelcome climate for a viral invader.

Emotional stressors can also predispose you to an infection. Finding ways to manage daily stress as well as your reactions to circumstances beyond your control will contribute to a strong and resilient immune system.

Most of the people incorporating a significant number of these wise lifestyle choices into their daily lives simply don’t get sick. And when they do, it’s mild and short-lived.

Supplements That Send Pathogens Packin’

Supplements can be beneficial, but they should be used only as an adjunct to the lifestyle measures already discussed.

Some of the more helpful ones for cold and flu are:

  • Vitamin C: A very potent antioxidant; use a natural form such as acerola, which contains associated micronutrients. (By the way, intravenous vitamin C was recently used by a physician in New Zealand to cure a man with “terminal” swine flu.)
  • Oregano Oil: The higher the carvacrol concentration, the more effective it is. Carvacrol is the most active antimicrobial agent in oregano oil.
  • Propolis: A bee resin and one of the most broad-spectrum antimicrobial compounds in the world; propolis is also the richest source of caffeic acid and apigenin, two very important compounds that aid in immune response and even fight cancer.
  • A tea made from a combination of elderflower, yarrow, boneset, linden, peppermint and ginger; drink it hot and often for combating a cold or flu. It causes you to sweat, which is helpful for eradicating a virus from your system.
  • Olive leaf extract: Ancient Egyptians and Mediterranean cultures used it for a variety of health-promoting uses and it is widely known as a natural, non-toxic immune system builder.

Another treatment that is surprisingly effective against upper respiratory infections is hydrogen peroxide.

My patients have had remarkable results in curing the colds and flu within 12 to 14 hours when administering a few drops of 3 percent hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) into each ear. You will hear some bubbling, which is completely normal, and possibly slight stinging.

Wait until the bubbling and stinging subside (usually 5 to 10 minutes), then drain onto a tissue and repeat with the other ear. A bottle of hydrogen peroxide in 3 percent solution is available at any drug store for a couple of dollars. It is simply amazing how many people respond to this simple, inexpensive treatment.

By incorporating these strategies, you’ll be able to nip that nasty little virus in the bud–before it can say, “Big Pharma.”



Juliana and Emma’s Christmas Wishlist
5 November 2009, 2:07 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

I know it’s really early, but I’ve begun my Christmas shopping because I hate crowds and hope to avoid shopping after Thanksgiving.

The girls love the Scholastic Videos! I love them too because they are in short segments, so we can watch just 10 minutes at a time (or more), as opposed to a full-length movie that is so long.  We have Harold and the Purple Crayon and Chicka Chicka Boom Boom already.

Books!  A couple favorites that we’ve only gotten from the library, and would love to own are Corduroy and Where the Wild Things Are.

Puzzles.  Juliana is really into puzzles now (and it keeps her still, which I love!)

Games.  We only have a few, including Hi-ho Cheery-O, Memory, Dominos, and Sorry.  Juliana and Emma love these games and I’m sure they would like other games like these.

Juliana has said several times that she wants a pogo-stick.  Do they still exist?

Paper and Crayons.  We go through these like water.  I make them use all the space on the paper, both sides even…but they color so much!  They like glue sticks too, usually one glue stick only lasts a day or two, but ends with a couple nice collages.  Coloring books and big coloring pages (Emma really loved the ones she got for her birthday) are great!

Educational things for Juliana.  She loves letters and numbers and is learning to write words, so things that encourage reading and writing are great!  She has an educational activity dry-erase book (birthday gift) that has been used so much, we’re on our fourth marker and the pages are stained gray!

Emma is still into cars and trucks, and is driving one around the living room now.

Cooking things.  I think Juliana would be the happiest girl alive if I let her cook everyday, so a simple cake mix or kids cookbook would be fun.

Please don’t feel obligated to get stuff on this list, but usually people ask what they want…so here is some help for those who want it.  I have a big favor to ask everyone, PLEASE take my sanity into consideration when choosing gifts.  The girls are noisy enough, so toys that make noise really bug me and I’ll probably take the batteries out.  There are exceptions of course, like the piano and mp3 player where the volume can be turned low.  We have every Disney princess barbie-like doll already and I’m really tired of seeing them naked, so no barbie style dolls.



“Flubber”
31 October 2009, 4:03 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

We made homemade “flubber,” a mixture of water, glue and borax.  So simple and so fun!

oct 019

oct 020



Conservatives Maintain Edge as Top Ideological Group
28 October 2009, 12:48 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Conservatives Maintain Edge as Top Ideological Group.

Conservatives continue to outnumber moderates and liberals in the American populace in 2009, confirming a finding that Gallup first noted in June. Forty percent of Americans describe their political views as conservative, 36% as moderate, and 20% as liberal. This marks a shift from 2005 through 2008, when moderates were tied with conservatives as the most prevalent group.



NO on issue 2!!!
13 October 2009, 10:53 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

I saw on sign “yes on issue 2″ in front of a Farmers Market, and am entirely confused.  Maybe that farms owner is getting big government subsidies….  Anyhow, Issue 2 will only make more rules for organic farmers, and cost taxpayers something for the new “Livestock Care Standard Board” they want to create.  Do you have a problem with the way cows are raised in Ohio?  I do…I think that there should be a ban on growth hormones for livestock and rules for more ethical treatments of animals (that means nourishing them properly with grass, not corn)….BUT Issue 2 will create a board to make the very opposite rules, favoring the factory farmers instead.  I’m pretty sure Monsanto is behind this garbage.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Taken from OEFFA (Ohio Ecological Food & Farm Association).

By, now you’ve heard about Issue 2. You’ve seen the yard signs, gotten the robo calls, and heard the radio ads, all telling you that Issue 2 is about “safe, local food.” And, on the surface, Issue 2 sounds great—creating a Livestock Care Standards Board that will oversee and protect livestock in Ohio and protect local foods.

However, Issue 2 will have the opposite effect.

Here are the real facts about Issue 2:

–Issue 2 would create a Livestock Care Standards Board, stacked with Big Ag and factory farm supporters, which would have sweeping authority to make decisions related to farms and food in Ohio that would have the force of law. The Board would have largely unchecked power to override any act by the Ohio Department of Agriculture and the Ohio Assembly.

–Issue 2 will create a Livestock Care Standards Board with no accountability to voters. Their decisions will be final. There is no further review or evaluation of the standard, no established forum for public comment, and no ability to appeal their decisions.

–Issue 2 serves the economic interests of factory farms, opening the door for the proliferation of Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) in Ohio.

–Issue 2 emphasizes the need of the livestock industry to provide “affordable food,” yet ignores its hidden costs, including environmental contamination, human health impacts, and the loss of rural communities.

Big Ag is spending millions of dollars to pass Issue 2, so defeating Issue 2 won’t be easy.

That’s why I’m asking you to vote NO on Issue 2 and to share this information with your friends, blogs, listserves, Facebook fans, and Twitter followers. It’s important that people know this won’t benefit the farmers we support and care about.



Government run schools
9 October 2009, 5:50 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

The US government has a bad habit of expanding it’s failures as a way of “fixing” them.

I’m looking at schools for Juliana, who should start kindergarten next fall, and having a very hard time finding one that has half-day kindergarten.  I thought the full-day thing was just a way for schools to make more money and for parents to receive free daycare, but turns out it’s a law that all Ohio kindergartens must be all day beginning in fall 2010.   Schools can file for extensions if they don’t have the facilities, money or teachers.  Since the government typically does everything WRONG, they made this law without extra funding.  Many public schools are staying half day, while most private are full day.  I want to home school, and fully understand how overwhelming this could be….however, peace of mind is priceless and this is the only option so far that would give me peace of mind.

The Nature Center class is AWESOME!  Juliana has a new teacher and she is fantastic!  I can’t wait for Emma to start there next year!  I really can’t imagine finding a kindergarten this good…we’ll see.



Absurd decision on Obama makes a mockery of the Nobel peace prize – Times Online
9 October 2009, 5:31 pm
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More on cell phones
29 September 2009, 1:24 pm
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Eleven studies done show that using a cell phone for 10 or more years approximately doubles the risk of being diagnosed with a brain tumor on the same side of the head as that preferred for cell phone use.

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/09/29/More-Confirmation-That-Cell-Phones-Cause-Brain-Tumors.aspx



Cell phone radiation
24 September 2009, 12:10 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

I hate cell phones.  There is nothing more annoying than people who talk on their cell phones non-stop, or people who constantly check their iphones.  John can’t seem to leave his in his pocket through dinner, but at least he ignores it when we eat with other people and through church.  Not only is it annoying, but dangerous….

http://products.mercola.com/blue-tube-headset/?source=nl