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Amber Erickson: Denver Content Marketing Strategist & Freelance Health and Lifestyle Writer

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Sweating in the night? Holistic solutions for night sweats

by Amber Erickson

By request, this week we’re talking about menopause-related night sweats. The request I had was this:

Q: I don’t want to take pills or do hormone stuff but I can’t sleep, I toss and turn and wake up sweating. What can I try?

I did some digging and this is what I found.

Lifestyle Changes

1) Avoid stimulants. That’s anything with caffeine, such as sodas, coffee (ahem) or teas. But stimulants can also be white sugar, alcohol and acidic foods such as pickle

s and tomatoes.

2) Avoid hot foods. This may seem intuitive, but avoid eating or drinking hot foods in the hours before bed (or if you have daytime hot flashes, avoid hot stuff all the time). Also beware of anything spicy.

3) Related to #2, avoid hot stuff. I’m talking about intense exercise, hot showers or baths, romps with your loved one, stress and unresolved anger. We forget that emotions have a great effect on our bodies and minds, so an
y heated emotions (anger, lust, greed, fear, etc) can heat the body from the inside out, making it hard to cool down. You could also try keeping your home at a lower temperature (I even have night sweats in that house!)

4) Move. Exercise is great for the body, especially to ensure fluids are moving about the body. While exercise is good, be careful of too much sweating, as this could increase your core temperature. Play around with how exercise helps or hinders your night sweats. You could try exercising in the morning rather than evening, or toning it down a bit.

5) Chill out! (Pun intended). Many believe night sweats to be a byproduct of stress. I would probably include this in any article, but taking time each day to meditate, do mindful yoga, deep breathing, guided imagery or other mind-pacifying activities could help learn to control stress and keep an even keel. Even if you don’t think you’re stressed, you most likely are. It’s the culture we live in.

6) Add flax to your diet. One study found 40 grams per day to be the recommended serving size. The study had successful results. I recommend buying the whole seeds and a small coffee grinder and grind the seeds. However, this isn’t practical for many so buying a pure oil extract or pre-ground flax seeds are good options too. Any natural health store would have flax seeds. I know what you’re going to ask: What do I do with it? Flax seeds are tasteless (I think) so sprinkle some over oatmeal, into shakes, or you could do whole seeds on salads. You can really put it on anything.

Herbal or Natural Remedies:

1) Black cohash. I have seen this mentioned in many places and apparently, clinical trials have found it to be helpful in treatment hot flashes, night sweats and symptoms that accompany menopause.

2) Acupuncture. I believe acupuncture is good for just about everything. It won’t hurt you, so it’s worth a shot.

3) Sage. I knew of the cleansing power of sage, but never heard of it for menopausal symptoms. It appeared in several places and one anecodatal piece said sage was all the woman  needed and it only took a week for her to feel better. She took a capsule once daily. Again, a health food store would carry this.

4) Vitamin E. Studies recommend between 50 and 500 IU taken daily (one study had good results off of 400 IU). You can find capsules at probably any pharmacy or health store since Vitamin E is a common vitamin. Studies found Vitamin E to be helpful against hot flashes.

5) Apple cider vinegar. Seriously what doesn’t this stuff do! Go to your health food store again to get this stuff, rather than the typical supermarket stuff. You want organic and make sure it’s unfiltered or unprocessed. It will probably be cloudy in the jar – don’t worry, that’s normal. It looks like 2 tablespoons in the morning and at night are the recommended dosage. Again, this stuff won’t hurt you (unless you’re allergic to apple or can’t handle fermented stuff) so try it and see. You will probably not like the taste, so you can “chase” it with food or drink lots of water to dilute it.

There you have it. Six lifestyle things to consider and five different natural options, one requiring a practitioner and four simple supplements/vitamins to add to your daily routine.  This is a new topic for me so I’m interested in hearing what has worked for others. Do not feel shame about your night sweats, let’s talk about it!

Filed Under: Blog, Holistic Health Tagged With: herbs, holistic health, lifestyle, menopause

Defining Natural vs. Lifestyle Changes

by Amber Erickson

Today I was writing a story on sleep apnea and was looking for some “holistic” treatment options. I learned an important lesson here. The term holistic is a fuzzy word. Yes, I knew this, but sometimes I think I have a narrow view of what fits there. What I discovered was that there are very few holistic therapies for sleep apnea. But I was very wrong. Once I thought about it more, most of the treatment options are holsitic in nature; I was just seeing them as traditional, and thus, not holistic.

Let me explain. One treatment option is to learn how to sleep on your side. This helps with the collapsing or obstruction in the airways. Since this is a normal intervention, mentioned by hospitals, physicians and associations with a more biomedical focus, in my mind, it wasn’t holistic. Oh but it is! An alternative that isn’t harmful and isn’t ignoring the problem – this is one of the definitions of holistic interventions!

What I think ended up being most important in this process for me was remembering how wide the holistic net is, and how differently it is interpreted by different people. There are quite a few options for sleep apnea, and most importantly, many of them are lifestyle changes, which are holistic in nature. Rather than being in the holistic camp and scoffing at mainstream medicine (I’m working on that), I am beginning to see the interconnectedness. This is true integrative medicine. It’s a beautiful thing, you know, the best of modern medicine when it’s really needed and choices when it’s not.

Filed Under: Blog, Holistic Health

Roll out the Mat: An Introduction

by Amber Erickson

I find it customary that a blog’s first post discuss the details, the logistics, or the information that people may ask, so it’s easier to spell it out from the get-go.  This blog is about so many things it’s hard to pinpoint the exact topic. If I had to, I’d label it as a conglomeration of topics related to the extensive field of holistic health.  If really looking holistically about health, it isn’t just about policy, or treatments, or global pandemics- we’re also talking about the role of spirituality and/or culture, alternative/complementary therapies, consciousness, movement, diet, meditation, community building, relationships, the role of the environment, and really, anything else.  But yet I have a focus.

In my life- which this blog isn’t necessarily about, but would be silly to omit altogether- I am on a journey.  Aren’t we all.  My journal to to wellness, or wholeness, and higher states of consciousness.  There are millions of paths that lead to the jewel within the lotus.  I’m not here to judge (I’m working on that one still), and everyone’s path is unique, special and A-OK just as it is.  I am a serious student of all these holistic health topics, and in these studies, have realized I am not a healer in the conventional use of the term.  I’m not out to save people.  But I’d like to help you if I can, and the way I best can is by sharing information.  That is what this blog is for.  I want to provide you with useful information, things I am currently finding to be interesting/inspiring/useful in my own journey.  They say one can only help people to a level of wellness/health with which they themselves are at.  I work on me first, and it’s a life-long journey, but I’d like if you came along for the ride, and hopefully I can help you with your journey too.  But with this, keep in mind that your path is yours.  It will probably look and feel differently than mine.  That’s just fine.  Also, you may not agree with me on certain points.  That’s fine too.  The only promise I can make is that I will speak honestly, authentically, and represent my true self in this venture.  I challenge you to do the same, be open to the possibilities, and see what the universe provides.

This blog is for everyone, and hopefully by everyone.  Please feel free to comment, add suggestions, provide your own tools or learnings and help this community.  It truly does take a village; I’m no expert.  I will only share things I have personally tried or thought about, and I value the wisdom of the readers.  I will attempt to post regularly, but as with any creative venture, it cannot be forced.  When my heart has something to share, I will share.  I look forward to sharing with you.

I’ll close the introductory blog with a quote:

“There is a candle in your heart, ready to be kindled.
There is a void in your soul, ready to be filled.
You feel it, don’t you?”    

       –Rumi

Filed Under: Blog, Holistic Health Tagged With: consciousness, journey, Rumi

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amber@mindfullywritten.com
952-250-1739

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