Make Over Your Mind


by ELIZABETH BARKER

Meditation can change your brain for the better, according to recent research from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Looking at brain scans of 16 Tibetan monks and 16 volunteers with no previous meditation training, scientists discovered that certain emotion-related brain regions were dramatically altered in those who practised compassion meditation. Those regions included the insula (an area engaged in detecting bodily responses to emotion) and the temporal parietal junction (a region regarded as important in processing empathy).

It’s possible that meditation training may help people to develop skills that cultivate compassion and happiness, suggests study director Richard Davidson. In fact, he states, the study findings indicate people can learn compassion the same way they might learn to play a musical instrument. “People are not just stuck at their respective set points,” Davidson notes. “We can take advantage of our brain’s plasticity and train it to enhance these qualities.” Since the process involves regulating your thoughts and emotions, such training may be particularly valuable to people prone to depression, adds Davidson.

Tummy Trouble
Just a few weeks of slacking off on your exercise routine could lead to a bigger belly, a new report from the Journal of the American Medical Association finds. For two weeks, 10 healthy young men cut their physical activity back to just 1,500 steps per day (about 4,500 to 8,500 fewer steps than the men usually walked daily). Even though participants didn’t appear to put on any weight, their belly fat increased by seven per cent in those two weeks. Linked to increased inflammation levels in previous studies, excess belly fat may raise your risk of chronic conditions such as heart disease.

In another experiment, the same researchers had eight healthy young men stay sedentary for three weeks. By the end of the study period, the participants showed signs of impaired insulin sensitivity, a known risk factor for diabetes.

Get Your Three Squares a Day
Skipping breakfast, going light on lunch, and piling on the grub at dinnertime might not be your most health-smart meal strategy. In a study from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, researchers found that sticking with a solid three-meal-a-day diet may be more effective for keeping your cholesterol and blood pressure in check.

For the study, a small group of volunteers took in all their calories in either one meal a day or in three meals a day. After eight weeks, the study groups switched, so that the “one-mealers” became “three-mealers” (and vice versa). Despite experiencing slight drops in weight and body fat compared to their counterparts, the volunteers had greater increases in total cholesterol, LDL (“bad”) cholesterol, and blood pressure when they were one-mealers. What’s more, according to further analysis published in the journal Metabolism, the one-mealers had more sustained elevations in blood sugar concentrations and other diabetes risk factors.

Body Image and Bad Health
The body-image blues could be bad for your health, suggests a recent report from the American Journal of Public Health. Scientists studied more than 150,000 U.S. adults, finding that about 66 per cent wanted to shed pounds, while 26 per cent were happy with their weight. Those who longed to slim down spent a greater number of days per month feeling physically unhealthy: women who wished to lose 20 per cent of their weight, for instance, said they felt under the weather an average of 4.3 days a month.

Negative body image could contribute to chronic stress, which in turn may weaken mental and physical health, notes study author Peter Muennig, MD. Young people and women may be particularly at risk, since both groups were found to be disproportionately impacted by negative body image and both “unduly suffer” from morbidity and mortality associated with being overweight or obese, according to Muennig.

Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’?

Rekindle the fire in your loins

by DONNA BARKER

Several years ago I was kvetching with two girlfriends about my non-existent sex drive. I’d been married for a decade, was having sex with my husband once every six or eight weeks, and was of the mind that if I never had to have sex again, my life would be no worse.

Don’t get me wrong—I loved my husband. I just had no interest in getting naked with him anymore. My GP prescribed antidepressants. My counsellor encouraged me to explore past sexual experiences. My girlfriends bought me sex toys. None of these things helped. I decided that something in me was broken, and went as far as proposing to my husband that he have an affair while away on a business trip.

He gratefully accepted my indecent proposal. Unfortunately, he fell in love with the other woman and left me. My dream of never having to have sex again had come true… but not quite as I’d envisioned it. Too bad I hadn’t done better research before declaring myself libido-less.

For instance, had I spoken to Dr. Karrin Fairman-Young, a naturopath, she would have asked me about my lifestyle, diet, and the strength of my sex drive when it was “normal.” The most common causes of libido loss for both men and women, says Dr. Fairman-Young, include diet (“A diet that’s too low in fresh food might indicate that antioxidants are needed”), smoking (“Smoking creates free radicals that damage cells in our body, so energy that might be directed to sex drive is focused on repair”), being overweight, and stress.

“When someone comes to see me and their beeper is going off, and they’re anxious to get through our meeting so they make their next appointment, I’ll check cortisol levels and show them stress-reducing breathing [exercises], for instance.”

And if all those possible causes are ruled out? Dr. Fairman-Young says many of her patients have hormone imbalances, which can be caused by estrogen in our drinking water or hormones found in meat.

“Or [it] may be due to vitamin deficiencies that are inhibiting the sexual organs from producing the hormones that influence sexual desire,” she says. “I look at all of these things before suggesting a treatment plan.”

Another perspective on why people lose interest in sex comes from Joseph Schumeckers, an instructor in the Feldenkrais Method: “Sex and sexuality in North American culture are loaded with emotional trauma and taboos that we store in our bodies and minds. This mind-body interaction influences how comfortable we are with the movements that make sex pleasing.”

With the Feldenkrais Method, the muscles that control the movements that make intercourse so enjoyable are worked, so tension is released. From gentle pelvic motions for lovemaking’s subtle moments to improving overall balance for wild explorations, Feldenkrais has been proven to increase sexual pleasure.

Schumeckers believes that “once you are more at home in your body, libido becomes a word with little meaning. What matters is the sensation of two melting bodies carrying each other into blissful experiences.”

Meanwhile, John Ince, co-owner of Vancouver sex toy store The Art of Loving and author of The Politics of Lust, believes that by nature, we tend to become bored with long-term sexual partners and desire newness. Ince suggests trying new ways of lovemaking to re-energize sexual interest—assuming that medical, psychological, and energetic conditions have been ruled out as the cause of low libido.

“Make love somewhere other than the bedroom, perhaps somewhere slightly dangerous, like a secluded public space. Or plan an evening of fantasy role-play, taking different personas, like a fireman hooking up with a waitress. Or, to really transform yourself into someone “new” to your partner, try wearing a wig during foreplay and lovemaking. The erotic mind can be easily tricked into arousing new charge with old lovers. But it takes a genuine interest to rekindle the flame, and openness to experiment to make it work.”

Since my husband had already left, I took all this advice into my new dating life. I even tried the whole wig-stilettos-fishnets thing with one man—but he was the one wearing them, and it did nothing for my libido!

As a relaxed, non-smoking, light-drinking vegetarian, my diet was already pretty libido-friendly. However, when I started dating I did go on the Pill for the first time in 15 years. Did the extra estrogen help? Maybe.

But I think it was Feldenkrais that really reignited my pilot light. I could feel it happening in the hours following each session, in the way my hips moved when I walked. I still have a Feldenkrais treatment once a month—and the man I now share my life with has never heard the words “I have a headache” from my lips.

Donna Barker is a native of Quebec who shares the common French-Canadian attitude that the only subject not to be discussed in mixed company is one’s political beliefs.

Syndicate content