Empowering Individuals

Thursday, August 25, 2011

A prologue to the new Spring post - How to make sprouts at home!



HOW TO MAKE SPROUTS

Sprouts can be made with any kind of seed but the most delicious are mung beans and aduki beans.  To make your own sprouts, take a large glass jar, a rubber band, your beans and a piece of chux, cheesecloth or muslin big enough to cover the opening of the jar.  

Put your beans in the jar.  Cover the opening of the jar with the fabric in a single layer.  Place the rubber band around the lip of the jar, over the cloth to hold it on. You should now have a contraption that looks a little bit like a drum.  

Put the jar under the tap and run cold water through the cloth until the water is about half way up the jar.  Swill it around a little and then turn the jar upside down to empty out the water.  When the jar is empty and your beans are rinsed, put the jar in a dark place (I put mine under the sink).  Leave for 24 hours and then rinse the beans again.  Keep repeating this step every day for 4 or 5 days and you should have a beautiful jar full of fresh and delicious sprouts that you can sprinkle over soup, add to stir-fries and top salad with.  VERY easy to do this at home.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

5 Reasons why Veggie Gardening is good for Health!



  1. Physical exercise

If we work in a desk job, chances are we don’t get a lot of exercise, unless we specifically aim to do so – like going to the gym. If you’re anything like me you don’t like gyms very much. Personally going to the gym makes me feel a bit like a rat in a cage, and that exercise has no point other than getting exercise. Often we lose self-discipline because our exercise has no reason to exist other than itself. Making a contribution to self-nourishment by getting out there and digging, turning over the compost, planting, weeding, watering and fertilising gives our exercise a reason for being and shows us tangible proof that we’ve been Doing Something.

  1. Good food.

The flavour of home grown veggies is absolutely unsurpassable. Many veggies that we buy from supermarkets have been sitting in storage for up to months at a time before they go on the shelf. This means that their nutrients are negligible. Fresh veggies straight from the garden contain far more nutrients than supermarket bought ones, and we also have the choice as to what pesticides and fertilisers we use on them so we know exactly what’s going into us when we eat. It’s also fun and incredibly satisfying to be in the middle of cooking dinner and say, “Hang on, just have to dash out to the garden for __(insert ingredient here)__.”. It’s just outside, it’s really damned fresh and delicious, and it also saves money.

For great mail-order organic fruit and veggie seeds, visit www.diggers.com.au .

They have wonderful seeds and great gardening ideas, plus a pack for those with health care cards to start a backyard food garden for a very reasonable price. If you get the opportunity visit their display gardens at St Erth (Daylesford) or Heronswood (Dromana) – they are both beautiful and educational.

  1. Connection with Universe

Seasonal veggies only grow in the right season. That’s why they are *seasonal*. Nowadays with global transport and everything available at supermarkets we take things for granted much more than we should. The point about Seasonal vegetables is that when we eat them at the right time of year, when they are in season, we eat with the seasons and live in accordance with the flow of the Universe, visible to us in observation of seasonal change. This has a positive impact on health and wellbeing and allows us to see, absorb and taste the seasons in our food.

Another plus for health and wellbeing is the development of an understanding of the cycles of death and rebirth inherent in growing one’s own food. Compost is derived from waste. It breaks down and becomes rich, fertile soil in which new life grows, and contributes to the nourishment of future food.

I often ask Fertility clients to get themselves a pot and some seeds, and grow themselves a flower or other kind of plant. This helps them to see several things:

a) Nature will sprout the seed when Nature is ready to and all the right factors are present;

b) You can’t grow a seed in soil that’s not ready to be planted in.

A connection with the Universe and the seasons combined with Seasonal eating can help us to understand the factors in our lives which are constant yet constantly changing. It can allow us to prepare for them in advance and thus protect ourselves from prevalent seasonal energies which may overwhelm us and cause disease (see blog entry “Seasonal Change”).

  1. The Health and Wellbeing of the Earth

Importing veggies from other countries burns LOTS of carbon in the form of fuel used to transport it. Asparagus, for example, takes 3 years to be edible from seed to fork. If your household is anything like ours, you probably eat at least 1-2 bunches of asparagus a week. Most of the time, the asparagus we get comes from Peru or Mexico, which are in the Northern hemisphere and have opposite seasonal weather patterns to us here in Oz. Whilst I personally don’t mind supporting the economy of Peruvian or Mexican farmers, the food is not sold here in its proper harvesting season, but all year round. It also leaves an enormous carbon footprint. Think of the truck to transport it from the farm to the airport, the plane to transport it over the sea to Australia, the truck to transport it from the docks to the warehouse, the truck to transport it again from the warehouse to the supermarket and last of all, the plastic bag that the supermarket puts it in so you can take it home in your car!!!! So much carbon for one little bunch of asparagus!

Growing food ourselves in our own gardens reverses that aspect of our carbon footprint not only by reducing the carbon from transportation of goods but also contributes to local greenery and plant growth, giving us more Oxygen in our own back yards.

For more information about the Carbon footprint of imported vegetables, see this article from the Independent, a UK magazine: http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/food-miles-the-true-cost-of-putting-imported-food-on-your-plate-451139.html

  1. Understanding of nourishment

Throughout history human beings have worked on the land, hunted, gathered and done all else to do with physical labour and since last century, we have been in a position where much of that work is done en masse by agricultural workers. Food arrives at our tables and we have little to do with its production other than going to buy it at the shops. As a result we have very little idea about what sort of energy goes in to nourishing us – is it any wonder so many people are exhausted? When you grow plants you have to water them most days when it doesn’t rain, weed the garden around them so they don’t get overtaken by other plants and fertilise them so they have the right chemicals present. What you are rewarded with is beautiful, fresh veggies which look and taste fantastic. What you are also rewarded with is an understanding of how to give nourishment to receive nourishment. How many of us do all of those things for ourselves? If we develop an understanding of nourishment, perhaps we can learn to provide nourishment to our Selves more effectively.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Revamped website as of 7/8/11

Hi everyone,

Over this weekend we've been updating the website so it looks a bit nicer and is more easily navigable and socially networked. We hope you enjoy looking through it as much as (even MORE than) we enjoyed putting it together for your benefit.

JTTW

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Hang on, what season is it?

Hi there folks.

Hasn't this weather been spectacular?

I do remember many years ago having a discussion with a friend about being excited about the sunshine around this time of year. She replied, "But Mum says August is the coldest month! Spring won't be here for ages!". Whilst I might not fully agree with her Mum, because it was damned cold in June (and January for that matter), traditionally speaking, August is pretty cold.

Rabbiting on about the weather, however superficial it may seem, does have a relative importance when it comes to Chinese Medicine and its view of disease. Those of you who subscribe to the Facebook page might have seen a recent post I put up about the Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine, or Huang Di Nei Jing (Lovingly known by TCM practitioners as "The Nei Jing").

This 2000 year old book, attributed to the legendary character the Yellow Emperor, is the oldest classic of Chinese Medicine and discusses, amongst many other detailed concepts, the Tao, or the Way of the Universe. This includes the shifting of the seasons and the most healthy behaviour in terms of diet and lifestyle according to these shifts.

There is a passage in the Nei Jing which discusses the environmental conditions in which the seasons are out of sync with themselves. It suggests that during these unusual conditions, people are far more vulnerable to catching diseases from the outside. These days we know that colds and flu are caused by viruses but in ancient times the belief was held that weakness in the body's Wei (protective) Qi - similar to the Western Medicine Immune system - could cause Wind to get in from outside and disrupt the opening and closing of the pores.

The symptoms people get when a flu takes hold are interpreted in Chinese Medicine as the body having an argument with the Wind. This generates inflammation in the Lungs and respiratory system and disrupts the Lung's other functions of a) breathing and b) sending fluids to the right place. Fluids congeal in the Lungs, then you get cough and congestion. The argument itself creates what we call "Heat" which can't escape because the pores are blocked, then you get fever.

Whilst "a virus" is an accurate description of what is wrong when a cold or the flu arrives, it doesn't give much explanation about what is *going on* inside our bodies. The ancient Chinese really seem to have had it figured out. Although the way in which disease is described is poetic and based in metaphor, it all makes very good sense. Microbiology wasn't discovered until the 17th Century and in the absence of modern science, treatments had to be devised to heal people from a context that was familiar to everyone, using the materials they had on hand. So they did it.

Those contexts are still completely valid in the modern world. Regardless of technology or scientific advancement, sedentary lifestyles and everything on demand, we are still living on Earth. We are almost completely at the whim of Mother Nature. Climate change is coming thick and fast and these unusual weather patterns are going to start becoming a lot more normal to us. As a result, we may find our immune systems getting thrown around a bit, and subsequently weakened. Those treatments that were current 2000 years ago for times when the weather behaved out of season are still available and in use by Chinese Medicine practitioners all over the world. There are a number of herbs which can be combined to make a formula that supports the Immune system and prevents disease taking hold. There are also dietary and lifestyle considerations that a TCM practitioner can advise you on.

Chinese medicine is ancient medicine for a modern world.