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Wonder by Martin
Collis, PhD At Speakwell we like acronyms. M.E.L.L.O.W. is a formula for high level wellness that stands for Magic of the Mind, Exercise, Laughter, Love, Optimal Nutrition and Wonder. In previous issues we have looked at the first 5 dimensions of lifestyle artistry and now is the time for Wonder. (Isnt it always?)
Einstein was right, wonder, like everything else, is in the eye of the beholder; we carry within us the wonders we sometimes seek outside ourselves. If I have had any success in this world it is because my sense of wonder would never leave me alone. I often think of myself as a recovering Brit, recovering from the ritual beatings at school, the frosty formality of home and having my dreams and thoughts labeled "sentimental rubbish." Wonder was reserved for the church where it was appropriate to be lost in wonder, love and praise. There seemed to be an unwritten conspiracy to separate wonder from science, logic and reality. I was talking with my son Paul about this recently and he pointed me to Dickens Hard Times. " 'I wonder, said Louisa. But Mr. Gradgrind interjected. 'Louisa, never wonder! Mathematics and science can answer all questions without stooping to the cultivation of sentiments and affections. Never wonder!' " I know how Louisa felt, but magic and wonder refused to be suppressed. As Leonard Cohen wrote in Beautiful Losers "Magic never faltered, magic always led, for magic is no instrument magic is the end." The lines between art and science and fact and fancy blur and become one. Again I go back to Einstein. "The fairest thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion, which stands at the cradle of art and science. He who knows it not and can no longer wonder is as good as dead, a snuffed out candle." Wonder is everywhere, but never so apparent as in the human spirit. One of the simplest ways to awaken a sense of wonder is to look at the achievements of extraordinary people. Beethoven was a pain wracked, sickly man whose life was plunged into silence by his deafness in his early 30's. His autopsy revealed multiple kidney stones, a nodule covered liver, a swollen almost nonfunctional pancreas and 43 times above an acceptable level of lead. It is not surprising that at age 32 he wrote a suicide letter to his brothers. But he chose life and lived for another twenty years after his planned suicide. During this period he learned to block a lot of pain by creating his own neurological busy signals. Inside his head he created masterpieces so great, that for a while, the pain cold not enter. It brings tears of wonder to my eyes to think of this lonely, almost broken genius huddled over the piano sensing the vibrations of the notes by holding a stick between the piano and his ear. Near the end of his life he became the first person to integrate the human voice in symphonic form when he built his 9th Symphony around Schillers Ode to Joy. There can be few finer expressions of the triumph of the human spirit than this masterpiece in sound by a deaf man. Extraordinary people are everywhere. Jean Dominique Bauby was totally paralyzed by a stroke at age 43. There was no longer a link between mind and spine. But by some neuronal quirk he retained control of is left eyelid and worked out a code so that he could communicate with people in code one letter at a time. Gradually letters became words, words became sentences and somehow he kept his sense of humor. ("If Im going to drool I might as well drool on cashmere.") Finally the sentences became a book titled 'The Diving Bell and the Butterfly' which is one of our summer reading suggestions in this issue. Then there's Renoir whose hands were so arthritic that his son would have to stuff the claws with rags and then wedge the paintbrush in place so that his father could paint.
Yesterday Lance Armstrong won his 3rd consecutive Tour de France. By any conventional logic there is no way this man should be dreaming about competing in, let alone winning, one of the most physically challenging sporting events in the world. Five years ago he was riddled with cancer in a testicle, his lungs and his brain. His body was decimated by disease and by chemo and radiation therapy. This highly conditioned athlete lost nearly 30lbs but somehow the fire of competition still burned. His cancer went into remission and he got back onto his bike. In his book Its Not About the Bike he writes, "Without belief we would be left with nothing but an overwhelming sense of doom every single day and it will beat you. I didnt fully see, until the cancer, how we fight every day against the creeping negatives of the world, how we struggle daily against the slow lapping of cynicism. Dispiritedness and disillusion, these were the real perils of life, not some sudden illness. I knew now why people fear cancer: because it can become a slow and inevitable death, it is the very definition of cynicism and loss of spirit." Earlier Armstrong writes, "I
believed in belief for its own shining sake." As George Orwell told
us. "No bomb that ever burst, shatters the crystal spirit." I often close my presentations with the story of Claudia Kolb. In the late 60s while studying for my Ph.D. at Stanford University I was an assistant coach at the world famous Santa Clara Swim Club where I was privileged to watch the unfolding of the Claudia Kolb story.
Claudias achievements made such an impact on me that I commemorated them in a song. We had many great swimmers in the club including Mark Spitz but it is Claudias story that inspires me most when I think back to my days as a California coach. Claudia It was just 50 meters of pale
blue water Chorus Because she never made the finals ![]() Claudia on the left, age 12 So the season ended and we said goodbye to Claudia Repeat Chorus If that was all the story it
would still have been worth telling
She won 2 Olympic finals Click to hear the Claudia song (claudia.mp3 - 9MB)
Ill leave some of the final words to the mystical William Blake, whose sense of wonder was so acute people thought him to be mad.
It is interesting that it was grains of sand that were key ingredients in the evolution of modern computers, giving us Silicon Valley and a revolution in communication. It makes you wonder. |
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Update on Andrew Weil Dr. Andrew Weil, "Americas most trusted doctor" was in Vancouver recently to address the Alternative and Integrated Medicine Conference at the University of British Columbia. He is a warm, affable, approachable man who clearly has absolute faith in his vision/version of wellness.
His talk, "Nutrition and Healthy Lifestyle," was prefaced by an anecdote about his attempts to improve the food at his hospitals cafeteria (owned and operated by the Marriott Hotel chain). The hospitals cafeteria had long been a bastion of poor food choices, except for a modest salad bar. It was time for a renovation and Weil saw this as an opportunity for the hospital to practice preventative medicine by having a healthy cafeteria kitchen. Several meetings and several proposals later, the renovation was complete. Replete with more fast food and depleted of most of the already modest salad bar! Americas leading proponent of healthy nutrition was not even able to get his own institution to, as he said, "budge one inch, we even lost ground!" Go figure? Weils point to this story is one that "WELL" agrees with we need to make and act on healthy choices about our lifestyle if we want to experience wellness, and we live in a culture that often discourages us. If you want to shift from low level to high level wellness, start "hanging around those with healthy habits." Some of the healthy habits of which he spoke include: Be wary of extreme diets
The importance of Omega 3 fatty acids
Decrease saturated fats.
According to some recent research, chocolate is good for you. Weils advice is to eat it now before the pendulum swings back! His new book, Eating Well For Optimum Health gives detailed information on the above and emphasizes that how we eat influences how we feel, look and age. He also puts forth the idea that food is to be nourishment for the body and the soul.
He spoke at the end of the day on the issue of stress and illness. When people are in stress reactive mode over a long period of time and feel less and less control, the predictors and the incidence of illness increase. This is partly due to wear and tear of the fight or flight reflex on the body and because when under stress, many of us make poor lifestyle choices. Consumption of fat, sugar, tobacco and alcohol goes up and physical activity goes down. Sustained levels of catecholamines (the stress hormones: adrenaline, cortisol and glucocoticosteroids) depress the production and effectiveness of immune system components, the biochemistry associated with mood and sleep stability and with normal pain perception. Increased and sustained cortisol levels are now being linked with brain toxicity that may have implications for early onset dementia. One of the easiest and most efficient stress handlers is "right under our noses" using our breath as a tool to increase parasympathetic tone and elicit the relaxation response. See "WELL" Spring 1999, vol. I, Issue I. Eating well, seeing activity as a natural and necessary part of life, and practicing stress resiliency, are all a part of his lifestyle medicine approach. He is on a mission to change medical education so that more physicians are, first of all, well themselves, and able to encourage the practice of wellness in their patients. The word doctor comes from the Latin word for teacher and in his mind, it is the role of physicians to prevent illness by teaching wellness. Integrative medicine, is Dr. Weils term for the use of a combination of conventional and complementary modalities in wellness and illness care and, in his view, offers the best hope for individual and collective healing. In a conversation with him, I said that people buy all the books and get lots of information and yet struggle to make healthy changes. In fact, they do not change when they see the light and sometimes not even when they feel the heat (or get what I call the cosmic two by four). He laughed. I noticed in his books that almost all his case studies are of people who are in some form of medical crisis before they embark on his programs. Prevention, and inspiring prevention, are issues yet to be clearly addressed. Just why has he become Americas most trusted physician? He doesnt say a lot that is new, some of it is what mom has always said, "eat your fruit and veggies and go out and play!" and some of it is just plain common sense. I think his appeal lies in his ability to make the concept of being healthy doable and pleasurable. He is low on jargon, high on wonder at what the human body is capable of and doesnt use the fear factor. He is egalitarian and takes the pomposity out of medicine.In person, Weil exudes a calm and powerful belief in what he says and does. He clearly walks his talk, looking fit, relaxed and energetic. And that is the key to his message advice on wellness does not replace action taken on wellness. As Gandhi says, "We must become the changes we wish to see in this world." |
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REFLECTIONS ON A PIONEER IN HEALTH PROMOTION By Russ Kisby, President, ParticipACTION Times change. New learnings and understandings emerge. As witnessed by todays growing "Wellness Movement," our current knowledge of the inseparable body-mind-spirit relationship is in many ways an updated appreciation of a concept powerfully articulated over 100 years ago by the YMCA and YWCA organizations. The "Ys" in turn were building upon a reality expressed centuries earlier by historical medical and philosophical pioneers. Surely the key is to learn from the past - - unsuccessful as well as successful efforts - - and to adapt to current and future needs. That is the metamorphosis ParticipACTION is undergoing today. It may be timely (perhaps nostalgic), to pause for a moment and reflect on some of ParticipACTIONs achievements and learnings from the past. Indeed, many of todays wellness and health promotion leaders throughout Canada were major contributors to these learnings. And it is these learnings that will be the base upon which a renewed and repositioned organization will be built in the near future. VISIONARY LEADERS ParticipACTION was the "brain child" of then Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau. In 1971 Trudeau established this small, national, non-profit, catalytic health promotion organization. He convinced former Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson to become Chair of its first Board of Directors. He also convinced Mr. Philippe de Gaspe Beaubien (former Director General of the internationally successful EXPO 67) to provide leadership in developing and implementing a strategic plan of action. Over the years many business, media, government and health leaders have volunteered their time and expertise to serve on the organizations Board of Directors. A CATALYST
ACHIEVEMENTS While money is clearly "not everything," it can be one significant measure of progress. For the record therefore, during its first 30 years of operation (1971 ‚ 2001):
More important, during these three decades, ParticipACTION and its numerous partners throughout Canada - - health, fitness and wellness leaders, non-profit and for-profit organizations, volunteers, etc. - - have witnessed the percent of "regularly active Canadians" move from approximately 10% to 35% (Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research Institute). Today, ParticipACTION is internationally recognized as a pioneer in health promotion, social marketing, and public ‚ private ‚ volunteer partnerships. Some 25 countries worldwide have adopted this "Canadian model." Mr. Trudeau and Mr. Pearson would be proud. MOVING MOUNTAINS WITH A WHEELBARROW Perhaps the most important learning from ParticipACTION's first three decades - - particularly for wellness leaders - - is the "power of one." When confronted with a big problem people often think: "Something should be done . . . . but what difference can I make?" And another well-intentioned effort ends before it begins. The hidden, pessimistic assumption is that big problems will only succumb to big money, big organizations and by government. In our ParticipACTION experience, it's not necessarily so. From the start our task was to help change the health attitudes and habits of a whole country. At first, it seemed a lot like trying to move a mountain with a wheelbarrow. Remarkably, the mountain has been moving. From experience, we learned that half of the secret of getting things done is not to spend a lot of time, money and effort trying to do things you're not equipped to do. We learned very early that we couldn't hope to improve the health and fitness of Canadians by ourselves. We therefore decided our primary focus should be on communications ‚ being catalysts - - and resist the temptation to get directly into programming or building facilities. Far from limiting our effectiveness and range, this concentration increased them. It removed us from potential competition with other groups and left us in a position to cooperate with them.
As a result we demonstrated an ability to positively work with literally dozens of national organizations, hundreds of cities and towns, and thousands of workplaces, schools, seniors groups, health and recreation centers, health units and local clubs. Cooperation and strategic alliances became a key strategy in our success. Equally important, we also learned early on that even though we were a national organization, we should not try to create change from the "top down." Indeed we became convinced - - and it has proven to be a wise decision - - that we would be more effective if we addressed individuals on a highly personal basis, either directly (the media) or via those they most respected (health and wellness leaders, peer group, local leaders of clubs, etc.). The best way to build a movement for change, we found, is from the bottom up. This important learning regarding the influence of "front line" wellness leaders - - the "power of one" - - warrants emphasis. The experience of ParticipACTION and other behavior change initiatives has demonstrated that mass media campaigns and mass distributed educational materials are valuable in helping to create general public awareness of health issues and the actions individuals can undertake. Nevertheless, most individual behavior change is primarily and ultimately impacted by inter-personal influencers. This understanding - - which moves wellness leaders to the "front line" in the battle to change personal lifestyle practices - - greatly influenced ParticipACTION's strategies over the years. Increasingly, all initiatives - - from media campaigns to resource materials and high profile events - - were designed to primarily support the efforts of "front line" wellness / fitness leaders and other community-based health influencers. ParticipACTION's experience with this strategy has been positive. We found that the resources necessary for action and change are usually already in place. Therefore we concluded that the best way to move mountains is to mobilize those resources, to work as a catalyst, to bring the movers and shakers together under the umbrella of a good idea.
THE FUTURE ParticipACTION's Board of Directors, in cooperation with Health Canada and assisted by a small group of respected health promotion and population health leaders, is currently exploring a renewed mandate for this internationally acknowledged "wellness pioneer." Perhaps the next decade will see a renewed effort by ParticipACTION and its many partners. Russ Kisby A couple more health promotion links: | |
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GRINS Forwarded to us by Charles Sterling How to Sing the Blues
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Top 10 Ways to Get the Most out of Martin "Martin points you in the right direction when making bookings for your conference."
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Wellness Wisdom of
Bob Dylan
On May 24th Bob Dylan turned 60. Picasso said, "One starts getting young at 60, but then it's a bit late." Bob echoed these sentiments with, "I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now." I'm aware of Dylan quotations in many contexts, including my own presentations, but Bob on wellness is probably a first.
Timeless advice that is reflected in one of my favorite acronyms, F.A.I.T.H. (Find Answers In The Heart.)
Focus your energies and anything is possible.
This goes right back to "Trust yourself." Don't allow advertisements to dictate your needs and wants. A recent article by Heather Mallick in the Globe and Mail pointed out that men are now being subjected to the same kind of advertising pressure that has diminished the lives of so many women. A recent issue of Men's Health asked its readers "So, what's your problem?" and then offered wardrobe solutions. The underlying message in this type of advertising is that you are inadequate, but you can fix your flawed self if you have money and product. Whatever your gender, ignore the blandishments of Madison Avenue and listen to Bob.
I often apply this to the workplace. Give your employer your heart, energy and enthusiasm, but don't let them have your "soul" or the essence of who you are. No paycheck or pension is worth that.
There are diminishing returns from living vicariously. The only way to grow, is to experience things for yourself. A 10 minute bike ride on a beat up bike trumps an hour of watching the Tour de France on TV.
One of many good reasons to be involved in wellness.
This quote reflects the biblical wisdom, "As you think so shall you be." The way in which we choose to think will determine how we see the world and how well we function. You can't do justice to 40 years work with a few quotations. If you'd like to listen to a retrospective of Bob I'd suggest "Biograph" on Columbia Records.
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Poetry
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A Few Suggestions for Summer Reading Pleasure
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Quotes Every day four quotations show up on my computer from qotd@starlingtech.com. I enjoy them and thought Id share 10 of my favorites with 'Well' readers.
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Speaking Engagements
Martin at the Greater Edmonton
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A SMORGASBORD OF ITEMS
THAT CAN by Dr. Martin Collis
At Speakwell we often receive inquiries about the effectiveness of workplace wellness and what forms it can take. In response to this Im expanding a brief article which first appeared in Vol. II, Issue I of "Well." Workplace wellness works and this fact is strongly supported by the ongoing work of the University of Michigan Health Management Research Center (HMRC). Since 1976 the HMRC has collected health care utilization data on over 2 million individuals and consulted with over 1000 work sites. We will discuss highlights of their large 2001 cost benefit analysis report in a future issue of "Well." But briefly it is worth noting that they found consistent value in on-going programs of workplace wellness. An approximation would be that for every one dollar invested a company could expect 3 dollars of cost savings or benefits. Obviously there was a range but there were consistent bottom line benefits. (www.umich.edu/~hmrc) Milligan (2000) found the major reasons for offering health promotion programs were as follows:
Check out the following list to see what your organization is doing, or could be doing to improve their wellness profile.
I recently read of a fine example of workplace wellness with a service function. TELUS Mobility employees in Scarborough, Ontario provide dog walkers for the local dog pound every lunch time. The organization looks good, and the humans and dogs get some exercise. Everybody wins.
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The Journey At Speakwell things are settling down for the summer after three months crisscrossing the continent. Guy, my executive director, has moved on to Arizona State to work on his Ph.D. so when you next call the office you'll be talking with Trina, who is just back from three months in Nepal. There have been many highlights in the past few months but one of the most interesting was "The Supersize Generation" (Halting the Obesity Epidemic). This was a conference on childhood obesity presented by Edmonton Capital Health Region which drew a great deal of interest from the public, politicians and media. Personally it has led to a spate of media interviews over the past two weeks. I have included the transcript of a three minute radio commentary in this issue of 'WELL.' I hope it leads to some creative approaches to get our children moving and eating well. There were many highlights including the ACSM Fitness Summit in Vegas, the National meeting of Governors Wellness Councils in Phoenix and a great visit to Regis University in Denver, where I was able to see my Seattle Mariners beat the Colorado Rockies. The "Little Book of Lifestyle Artistry" which reflects the content of my M.E.L.L.O.W. presentation has been a success and is now going into its third printing. After a quiet summer Im looking forward to 2 major conferences in Canada. "Whister 2001 - Communicating Physical Activity & Health Messages" September 26-30 and "Health, Work & Wellness Conference 2001" in Calgary, AB October 21-23. My most important engagement for the summer is on August 11th when I will marry Nancy Wardle, a warm and caring mind/body/spirit physician. You may recognize her name as a regular contributor to "WELL." People used to be brought up to marry well, and thats what Im doing in the best sense of the word. |
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Evian When Reversed Spells Naïve By Dr. Martin Collis Theres big money in bottled water. We complain about the price of gas, but it still sells for considerably less than plain old H2O. The Coca-Cola Company markets Desani, while Pepsico sells Aquafina. Neither soft drink giant sells you special glacial water or something from a pure mountain spring, they sell you processed, filtered water from the normal regional water supply. Its a significant expense to pay for filtration, reverse osmosis and in some cases, mineral enhancement. I feel sometimes we're frightened into spending money and doing things for our health that are not always necessary. The Bottled Water Association has referred to coffee and pop as "dehydrating beverages" and we are told they are no substitute for water. But in a recent small scale study at the College for Human Nutrition in Omaha, young men were divided into 3 groups who drank:
They collected urine and did multiple measures of hydration status and guess what? The subjects remained in the same state of hydration no matter what they drank.
Conclusive? No. The numbers were small and they were all young men. I wish theyd had other subjects quaffing beer, or even tea, which is a favorite of mine. Im not advocating consuming large amounts of caffeine, but I think this is worth looking into further. For instance, as a lifelong tea drinker my perception is that the diuretic effect of tea on me is not measurably different from that of water. Water is great, but dont feel guilty about dehydrating yourself with your morning tea or coffee, the guilt is probably more dangerous than the caffeine. |
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Fat and Getting Fatter A Taxing Problem? This
article was written for a three-minute commentary and aired nationally
on CBC radio. www.cbc.com Over the last twenty years obesity in Canadian children increased dramatically. For boys its more than doubled and nearly tripled for girls. Todays children are less and less inclined to follow the old parental suggestion to: "Eat your fruit and veggies and go out and play." In simple terms our children dont move enough and eat too much calorie dense fast food. Physical activity has been engineered out of our lives. Children are spending an increasing amount of their waking hours looking at screens, TV screens, computer screens, movie screens, and video-game screens. Many children watch more than 20 hours of TV for every hour of physical education they get in school. (See article in 'Well' - Summer 2000) Eating habits are powerfully influenced by fast foods. In the past 40 years many fast food servings have quadrupled in size. This increase can be referred to as 'portion distortion.' The 1 1/2 oz. burger is now 6 oz., pop at the movies has gone from 8 oz. to 32 oz. Movie popcorn has metastasized from 3 cups to 16 cups. Size sells, whether its Biggie fries, Whoppers or super sized meals, but huge portions can result in biggie, whopping, super sized kids.
Advertising works and the suggestions of parents and educators are no match for the multiple billions the fast food industry. (Coca-Cola is spending one hundred million dollars just to sponsor the upcoming Harry Potter movie.) In order to level the advertising playing field it is necessary to have funding to sponsor healthy eating choices and to promote physical activity. I agree with the suggestion of two American researchers, Nestle and Jacobson, who've called for a modest tax on some of the products associated with caloric imbalance in kids. By designating a portion of the GST on each can of soft drink, package of potato chips and liter of gas, we would raise tens of millions of dollars that could be earmarked for positive lifestyle advertising. In California soft drinks are the only foods subject to the seven-and-a-quarter percent sales tax. It yields a multi-million dollar tax windfall. Arkansas levies a 2 cents per can tax on soft drinks, which raises $40 million per year and goes directly to health care. Taxation of any sort is not palatable, but it is preferable to increasing numbers of overweight children and having problems such as "maturity onset diabetes" showing up in teenagers. In some countries governments have shown the political will to shield children a little from the relentless barrage of fast food advertising. In 1992 Switzerland banned all TV advertising directed at children under the age of twelve. Ads have also been banned from children's television programming in Norway, Belgium, Ireland and Holland. The eating habits of North American children are widely considered an example of what other countries wish to avoid. In Canada we have the perfect organization to administer 'wellness focussed' advertising, namely ParticipACTION, whose work is admired worldwide, but overlooked by our Federal Government. Give ParticipACTION a healthy budget and we'd see more Canadian kids eating well and going out to play. |
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A Vision of Wellness Wonderboy grandson Toby (age 3)
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