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New study reinforces need for proactive cognitive monitoring after heart surgery

Source: https://sharpbrains.com/blog/2018/10/26/new-study-reinforces-need-for-proactive-cognitive-monitoring-after-heart-surgery/

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Heart surgery: Does it impact cognitive ability? (Medical News Today):

“Almost 8 million people in the United States undergo cardiovascular surgery or other related procedures each year.

Thanks to the steady improvements made by medical science, the procedures are becoming ever safer and can give people a new lease of life.

Aware of improvements in physical health due to cardiovascular surgery, scientists know less about the cognitive impact of open heart surgery.

A recent study set out to understand precisely how heart surgery might influence the mind … Overall, the researchers conclude that individuals who undergo…

Source: https://sharpbrains.com/blog/2018/10/26/new-study-reinforces-need-for-proactive-cognitive-monitoring-after-heart-surgery/

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Heart surgery: Does it impact cognitive ability? (Medical News Today):

“Almost 8 million people in the United States undergo cardiovascular surgery or other related procedures each year.

Thanks to the steady improvements made by medical science, the procedures are becoming ever safer and can give people a new lease of life.

Aware of improvements in physical health due to cardiovascular surgery, scientists know less about the cognitive impact of open heart surgery.

A recent study set out to understand precisely how heart surgery might influence the mind … Overall, the researchers conclude that individuals who undergo…

New Location Pre-Sale

Source https://evolutiontucson.com/new-location-pre-sale/

Pre-Sales are still ongoing! We are moving to Monterey Village plaza. 6130 E. Speedway Blvd next year.  The 12,400 square foot strength and conditioning facility will have numerous power racks, powerlifting equipment, Olympic lifting equipment, obstacle course specific equipment, and specialized cardio machines that you will not find anywhere else…

The post New Location Pre-Sale appeared first on Tucson Strength: Personal Training, Tucson Gyms, Kettlebells, Powerlifting.

Source https://evolutiontucson.com/new-location-pre-sale/

Pre-Sales are still ongoing! We are moving to Monterey Village plaza. 6130 E. Speedway Blvd next year.  The 12,400 square foot strength and conditioning facility will have numerous power racks, powerlifting equipment, Olympic lifting equipment, obstacle course specific equipment, and specialized cardio machines that you will not find anywhere else…

The post New Location Pre-Sale appeared first on Tucson Strength: Personal Training, Tucson Gyms, Kettlebells, Powerlifting.

Brain News You Can Use | October 2018

Source: https://totalbrainhealth.com/brain-news-you-can-use-october-2018/

Brain News You Can Use – Our Top Picks That Caught Our Eye this month:

15 Minutes of Running Boosts Your Mood More Than Meditating | According to a new study, going out for as little as a few miles has some serious brain benefits. (Source: RunnersWorld | Danielle Zickl).

Charleston-Area Retirement Communities Promote Wellness through Friendly Competition | For the past few years, residents from Bishop Gadsd…

Source: https://totalbrainhealth.com/brain-news-you-can-use-october-2018/

Brain News You Can Use – Our Top Picks That Caught Our Eye this month:

15 Minutes of Running Boosts Your Mood More Than Meditating | According to a new study, going out for as little as a few miles has some serious brain benefits. (Source: RunnersWorld | Danielle Zickl).

Charleston-Area Retirement Communities Promote Wellness through Friendly Competition | For the past few years, residents from Bishop Gadsd…

Bronx Food Revival Is Rewriting The Playbook On Gentrification

Source https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2018/10/26/660231987/bronx-food-revival-is-rewriting-the-playbook-on-gentrification?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=thesalt

The Ghetto Gastro collective (Jon Gray, Lester Walker, Pierre Serrao and Malcolm Livingston II) is a self-described "black power kitchen" in The Bronx.

It’s a prime example of “gentefication,” economic revival led by people with roots in the community. The cultural mix is a culinary celebration: African, Albanian, Caribbean, Italian, Latino and more.

(Image credit: Mackenzie Stroh/NPR)

Source https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2018/10/26/660231987/bronx-food-revival-is-rewriting-the-playbook-on-gentrification?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=thesalt

The Ghetto Gastro collective (Jon Gray, Lester Walker, Pierre Serrao and Malcolm Livingston II) is a self-described "black power kitchen" in The Bronx.

It’s a prime example of “gentefication,” economic revival led by people with roots in the community. The cultural mix is a culinary celebration: African, Albanian, Caribbean, Italian, Latino and more.

(Image credit: Mackenzie Stroh/NPR)

Photo Highlights from Day One at the 2018 Club Industry Show

Source https://www.clubindustry.com/news/photo-highlights-day-one-2018-club-industry-show

In photos, revisit the first day of the Club Industry Show, Wednesday, Oct. 24, to see what attendees and speakers were up to.

Source https://www.clubindustry.com/news/photo-highlights-day-one-2018-club-industry-show

In photos, revisit the first day of the Club Industry Show, Wednesday, Oct. 24, to see what attendees and speakers were up to.

How Does Obesity Affect Kidney Transplant Success?

Source: https://www.webmd.com/diet/obesity/news/20181026/how-does-obesity-affect-kidney-transplant-success?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Kidneys given to obese patients fared as well as those transplanted into normal-weight patients, a new study says. In addition, no difference was seen in patient survival, regardless of weight.

Source: https://www.webmd.com/diet/obesity/news/20181026/how-does-obesity-affect-kidney-transplant-success?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Kidneys given to obese patients fared as well as those transplanted into normal-weight patients, a new study says. In addition, no difference was seen in patient survival, regardless of weight.

Medicare Open Enrollment Begins Today

Source: https://www.aarp.org/health/medicare-insurance/info-2018/open-enrollment-2019-begins.html

Beneficiaries have until Dec. 7 to select or makes changes to their healthcare plan for 2019. … Learn more about the coming Medicare changes….

Source: https://www.aarp.org/health/medicare-insurance/info-2018/open-enrollment-2019-begins.html

Beneficiaries have until Dec. 7 to select or makes changes to their healthcare plan for 2019. … Learn more about the coming Medicare changes….

The soda industry is having trouble meeting calorie targets

Source https://www.foodpolitics.com/2018/10/the-soda-industry-is-having-trouble-meeting-calorie-targets/

In 2014, the soda industry (American Beverage Industry, Coke, Pepsi, and Dr. Pepper) and the Alliance for a Healthier Generation (founded by the American Heart Association and the Clinton Foundation) pledged to reduce calories in its beverages as a means to help with weight control.  The pledge was to reduce calories in sugary drinks by 20% by 2025.

At the moment, achievement of this goal seems unlikely according to a report by the American Beverage Association and the Alliance. 

The overall summary: a 3 (!) calorie per person per day reduction since 2014.

Plotting the data this way makes the change seem significant, but this industry has a long way to go.

Why isn’t it doing better?  The simple answer: sugary drinks sell and are highly profitable.

The report explains the trends:

  • A decline in consumption of carbonated soft drinks, but an increase in consumption of sugary sports drinks, energy drinks, and ready-to-drink teas and coffees.
  • A decline in retail sales of carbonated soft drinks, but an increase in calories from fountain drinks and food service.
  • An increase in sales of smaller-size containers, but also an increase in sales of larger containers.

The report does not give advertising figures.

I’d like to know which products are getting the most marketing dollars.   Want to take a guess?

Source https://www.foodpolitics.com/2018/10/the-soda-industry-is-having-trouble-meeting-calorie-targets/

In 2014, the soda industry (American Beverage Industry, Coke, Pepsi, and Dr. Pepper) and the Alliance for a Healthier Generation (founded by the American Heart Association and the Clinton Foundation) pledged to reduce calories in its beverages as a means to help with weight control.  The pledge was to reduce calories in sugary drinks by 20% by 2025.

At the moment, achievement of this goal seems unlikely according to a report by the American Beverage Association and the Alliance. 

The overall summary: a 3 (!) calorie per person per day reduction since 2014.

Plotting the data this way makes the change seem significant, but this industry has a long way to go.

Why isn’t it doing better?  The simple answer: sugary drinks sell and are highly profitable.

The report explains the trends:

  • A decline in consumption of carbonated soft drinks, but an increase in consumption of sugary sports drinks, energy drinks, and ready-to-drink teas and coffees.
  • A decline in retail sales of carbonated soft drinks, but an increase in calories from fountain drinks and food service.
  • An increase in sales of smaller-size containers, but also an increase in sales of larger containers.

The report does not give advertising figures.

I’d like to know which products are getting the most marketing dollars.   Want to take a guess?

Flu Activity Is Low — For Now

Source: https://www.webmd.com/cold-and-flu/news/20181025/flu-activity-is-low—-for-now?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Flu activity nationwide is “just a smattering of cases,” a top CDC doctor said Thursday. She noted that now would be a great time to get a flu shot, because “It gives your body enough time to respond to the vaccine and mount a good immune response so you’re ready for the flu season.”

Source: https://www.webmd.com/cold-and-flu/news/20181025/flu-activity-is-low—-for-now?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Flu activity nationwide is “just a smattering of cases,” a top CDC doctor said Thursday. She noted that now would be a great time to get a flu shot, because “It gives your body enough time to respond to the vaccine and mount a good immune response so you’re ready for the flu season.”

4 Ways to Sell Yourself Without Selling Your Soul

Source https://www.sonima.com/meditation/mindful-living/sell-yourself/

In today’s world where nearly 10 hours of the average young person’s day are spent online, success and self-branding—in almost every field—go hand-in-hand. And yet, you know that crafting and solidifying your “brand” online means a lot of time and energy glued to your phone. You also know that all that phone time leaves you feeling alone, alienated, lost in comparisons to others, and carrying around a vague feeling of not being good, or pretty or exciting or successful enough. Sure, you get a nice rush each time you get a new follow, like, or comment, but the “high” fades as quickly as it comes, leaving you feeling empty.

Don’t delete your accounts just yet. While simply dropping out of the social media game is an option for some, for those of you who have committed to career goals that require a strong online presence, it can feel unwise to leave the social media universe entirely.

So if you are one of the 88 percent of 18 to 29-year-old Americans who use Facebook or one of the 56 percent in the same age group who use Instagram, or one of the millions who use other social media sites, my suggestion is to implement the following mindfulness hacks into your social media strategy.

1. Clarify your goals, then re-examine them periodically.

Why do you need/want to brand yourself on social media? Is it so that other people in your chosen field take you seriously? Is it to broadcast your message to the world, or to connect with others? Get very specific and write these goals down somewhere where you can refer back to them regularly. As you post, notice whether you are staying true to your goals. Is there a common theme among your posts? Is your feed telling a story, and is it the story you intended?

This is not only a smart branding strategy, it is a mindfulness practice. Without clearly articulated goals about your brand and its purpose, it is easy to fall into the trap of chasing “likes” or seeking approval for its own sake. In that zone, we tend to suffer, comparing ourselves madly against other people, losing our confidence and feeling awful when we don’t receive enough affirmation from the outside world.

2. Cultivate your brand, but don’t believe the hype.

The truth is, that we which we call our “self” is not a fixed thing. Every cell in our body dies and is regenerated every few years. It is true that we all have bodies, brains, personalities, likes, dislikes, and our own unique quirks, but recognizing that every one of those things will shift and change throughout the course of our life helps us to remain flexible and loose in the face of those changes.

If I post an accomplishment on my page, for example, and it receives a lot of likes, I feel really good. There is nothing wrong with that. But if I take myself too seriously and cling too hard to my identity as a fixed thing, I will most definitely suffer when I post something and don’t get any response, or when things actually go wrong in life (which, spoiler alert, they will). Holding ourselves and our “brands” loosely, with as much humor and gentleness as possible, makes lots of room for the ups and downs of life—online and off.


Related: A Meditation for Authentic Communication


3. Be real. Others will see and appreciate it.

This is a tough one for many of us. It is very hard to be vulnerable online, especially when trying to “sell” ourselves. We often present pictures of ourselves and our lives in the most flattering light imaginable, wishing that it were true, while the “real” us sits behind our screens, flailing and failing, struggling and feeling sad, lost and lonely.

Even though it is counterintuitive, every time I see an example of someone being real online—being honest, sharing a struggle, or even just showing up unfiltered—I am filled with love and appreciation. It gives me room to do the same, to share my own messy life and still stand rooted in my own worth and love-ability. I am not advocating for endless posts complaining, whining, or being overly self-deprecating. Those do not usually help you, or the person reading them, to feel better. Just more snapshots of real life, more honesty about the ups and the downs, and more authenticity will go a long way in helping others see you in their own struggles.

4. Spread kindness, go beyond the “like.”

Nothing combats jealousy and what the Buddhists call “comparing mind” like showing love to others on social media. You don’t have to be fake or to say things you don’t mean, but if a portion of your time spent online each day is allotted to writing encouraging comments to people whose posts you appreciate, or to those who are having a hard time, has the potential to transform both of your online experiences.

When I set this as my intention for a trip into Instagram-land or the Twitter-verse, I think of myself like a Jewish-Buddhist Santa Clause, dropping gifts of gratitude and admiration around to my various heroes, friends, and people who I admire, just letting them know how they have affected me. It does not take a long time, and someone who has been on the others side of these loving gifts, it can truly make someone’s day.

I hope that I have convinced you that the social media universe does not have to be such a difficult place to maintain mindfulness and compassion, and that selling ourselves does not automatically mean selling our souls. The good news is, each new day, each new post is a chance to practice. Good luck!

The post 4 Ways to Sell Yourself Without Selling Your Soul appeared first on Sonima.

Source https://www.sonima.com/meditation/mindful-living/sell-yourself/

In today’s world where nearly 10 hours of the average young person’s day are spent online, success and self-branding—in almost every field—go hand-in-hand. And yet, you know that crafting and solidifying your “brand” online means a lot of time and energy glued to your phone. You also know that all that phone time leaves you feeling alone, alienated, lost in comparisons to others, and carrying around a vague feeling of not being good, or pretty or exciting or successful enough. Sure, you get a nice rush each time you get a new follow, like, or comment, but the “high” fades as quickly as it comes, leaving you feeling empty.

Don’t delete your accounts just yet. While simply dropping out of the social media game is an option for some, for those of you who have committed to career goals that require a strong online presence, it can feel unwise to leave the social media universe entirely.

So if you are one of the 88 percent of 18 to 29-year-old Americans who use Facebook or one of the 56 percent in the same age group who use Instagram, or one of the millions who use other social media sites, my suggestion is to implement the following mindfulness hacks into your social media strategy.

1. Clarify your goals, then re-examine them periodically.

Why do you need/want to brand yourself on social media? Is it so that other people in your chosen field take you seriously? Is it to broadcast your message to the world, or to connect with others? Get very specific and write these goals down somewhere where you can refer back to them regularly. As you post, notice whether you are staying true to your goals. Is there a common theme among your posts? Is your feed telling a story, and is it the story you intended?

This is not only a smart branding strategy, it is a mindfulness practice. Without clearly articulated goals about your brand and its purpose, it is easy to fall into the trap of chasing “likes” or seeking approval for its own sake. In that zone, we tend to suffer, comparing ourselves madly against other people, losing our confidence and feeling awful when we don’t receive enough affirmation from the outside world.

2. Cultivate your brand, but don’t believe the hype.

The truth is, that we which we call our “self” is not a fixed thing. Every cell in our body dies and is regenerated every few years. It is true that we all have bodies, brains, personalities, likes, dislikes, and our own unique quirks, but recognizing that every one of those things will shift and change throughout the course of our life helps us to remain flexible and loose in the face of those changes.

If I post an accomplishment on my page, for example, and it receives a lot of likes, I feel really good. There is nothing wrong with that. But if I take myself too seriously and cling too hard to my identity as a fixed thing, I will most definitely suffer when I post something and don’t get any response, or when things actually go wrong in life (which, spoiler alert, they will). Holding ourselves and our “brands” loosely, with as much humor and gentleness as possible, makes lots of room for the ups and downs of life—online and off.


Related: A Meditation for Authentic Communication


3. Be real. Others will see and appreciate it.

This is a tough one for many of us. It is very hard to be vulnerable online, especially when trying to “sell” ourselves. We often present pictures of ourselves and our lives in the most flattering light imaginable, wishing that it were true, while the “real” us sits behind our screens, flailing and failing, struggling and feeling sad, lost and lonely.

Even though it is counterintuitive, every time I see an example of someone being real online—being honest, sharing a struggle, or even just showing up unfiltered—I am filled with love and appreciation. It gives me room to do the same, to share my own messy life and still stand rooted in my own worth and love-ability. I am not advocating for endless posts complaining, whining, or being overly self-deprecating. Those do not usually help you, or the person reading them, to feel better. Just more snapshots of real life, more honesty about the ups and the downs, and more authenticity will go a long way in helping others see you in their own struggles.

4. Spread kindness, go beyond the “like.”

Nothing combats jealousy and what the Buddhists call “comparing mind” like showing love to others on social media. You don’t have to be fake or to say things you don’t mean, but if a portion of your time spent online each day is allotted to writing encouraging comments to people whose posts you appreciate, or to those who are having a hard time, has the potential to transform both of your online experiences.

When I set this as my intention for a trip into Instagram-land or the Twitter-verse, I think of myself like a Jewish-Buddhist Santa Clause, dropping gifts of gratitude and admiration around to my various heroes, friends, and people who I admire, just letting them know how they have affected me. It does not take a long time, and someone who has been on the others side of these loving gifts, it can truly make someone’s day.

I hope that I have convinced you that the social media universe does not have to be such a difficult place to maintain mindfulness and compassion, and that selling ourselves does not automatically mean selling our souls. The good news is, each new day, each new post is a chance to practice. Good luck!

The post 4 Ways to Sell Yourself Without Selling Your Soul appeared first on Sonima.

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