Tuesday, March 25, 2008

The Five Tibetan Rites

Five Exercises That Will Dramatically Change Your Health. Great natural energy booster!

These five exercises or five rites will improve the overall condition of your digestive system. Within thirty days, just ten minutes a day you will be more relaxed, have more energy and be more focused. Don't believe? Try it for yourself and you will see!

It's a proven fact that people who lose weight can only maintain their weight loss if they incorporate a daily exercise program into their everyday lives.For some of us that may be difficult. But there are other ways besides the final Five Rites listed below .

and also below the Five Rites are ALTERNATIVE methods for the Five Rites and warm up exercises for those of us not ready for the whole Five Tibetan Rites Exercises.

The Five Tibetan Rites. Sometimes called the Five Rites,
the Five exercises or the Five Tibetans. Five Exercises for Healing, Rejuvenation, and Longevity.

In 1985 a book called The Ancient Secret of the Fountain of Youth written by Peter Kelder was published which for the first time fully described an exercise program for "youthing". This is an exercise program used by Tibetan monks to live long, vibrant and healthy lives. In fact, this book states that many have lived longer than most can imagine by following the program often called the "Five Tibetan Rites".


Potential Benefits of the Five Rites

The authors provide many examples of the benefits of the "Five Tibetan Rites" including the following: looking much younger; sleeping soundly; waking up feeling refreshed and energetic; release from serious medical problems including difficulties with spines; relief from problems with joints; release from pain; better memory; arthritis relief; weight loss; improved vision; youthing instead of aging; greatly improved physical strength, endurance and vigor; improved emotional and mental health; enhanced sense of well being and harmony; and very high overall energy.
How the Five Rites Work


The Tibetans claim that these exercises activate and stimulate the seven key chakras that in turn stimulate all the glands of the endocrine system. The endocrine system is responsible for the body's overall functioning and aging process. This means that the Five Rites will affect the functioning of all your organs and systems, including the physical and energetic systems and that includes the aging process. The man who brought these Five Rights out of Tibet stated that "performing the Five Rites stimulates the circulation of essential life energy throughout the body".


Chakras/Vortexes
Chakra is an Indian Sanskrit word that translates to mean "Wheel of Spinning Energy". Chakras are spinning wheels or vortexes of energy of different color that perform many functions connecting our energy fields, bodies and the Cosmic Energy Field. Chakras are powerful electrical and magnetic fields. Chakras govern the endocrine system that in turn regulates all of the body's functions including the ageing process. Energy flows from the Universal Energy Field through the chakras into the energy systems within our bodies, including the Meridian System.

Our bodies contain seven major chakras or energy centers. The chakras are located at the base of the spine (Root Chakra), at the navel (Sacral Chakra), in the solar plexus (Solar Plexus Chakra), within your heart (Heart Chakra), within the throat (Throat Chakra), at the center of your forehead (Brow or Third Eye Chakra), and at the top of your head (Crown Chakra). These chakras are linked together with all other energy systems in the body.

The Speed of the chakra spin is a key to vibrant health. The other keys to vibrant health that relates to the chakra is ensuring they are clear of negative energy and that they are perfectly shaped and not distorted.

The Five Rites speed up the spinning of the chakras, coordinate their spin so they are in complete harmony, distribute pure prana energy to the endocrine system, and in turn to all organs and processes in the body. This is one of the major requirements for vibrant health, rejuvenation and youthfulness.
The Five Rites Exercise Program

This program is often described as a modified yoga program. Simply put, yoga is a science that unites the body, mind and spirit. Today this is often called Mind/ Body Healing. The author of the book believes that yoga was brought to Tibet from India in the 11th or 12th century and that Tibetan monks over time developed modified these exercises and developed an effective program of exercises that western society now calls the "Five Tibetan Rites". The rugged mountainous conditions these monks live in may well account for their particular emphasis on vigor. Many of the yoga exercises and practices being taught in the western world today are very new. The "Five Tibetan Rites" are exactly what the ancient Tibetans developed over many centuries of time. Therefore it's very important to do the "Five Tibetan Rites" exactly as they are presented without altering the form or sequence to achieve some of the benefits accrued to these "Rites".


The Five Tibetan Rites


Rite #1

Stand erect with arms outstretched horizontal to the floor, palms facing down. Your arms should be in line with your shoulders. Spin around clockwise until you become slightly dizzy. Gradually increase number of spins from 1 spin to 21 spins.

Breathing: Inhale and exhale deeply as you do the spins.



Rite #2

Lie flat on the floor, face up. Fully extend your arms Along your sides and place the palms of your hands against the floor, keeping fingers close together. Then raise your head off the floor tucking your chin into your chest. As you do this, lift your legs, knees straight, into a vertical position. If possible, extend the legs over the body towards your head. Do not let the knees bend. Then slowly lower the legs and head to the floor, always Keeping the knees straight. Allow the muscles to relax, and repeat.

Breathing: Breathe in deeply as you lift your head and legs and exhale as you lower your head and legs.



Rite #3
Kneel on the floor with the body erect. The hands should be placed on the backs of your thigh muscles. Incline the head and neck forward, tucking your chin in against your chest. Then throw the head and neck backward, arching the spine. Your toes should be curled under through this exercise. As you arch, you will brace your arms and hands against the thighs for support. After the arching return your body to an erect position and begin the rite all over again.

Breathing: Inhale as you arch the spine and exhale as you return to an erect position.




Rite #4
Sit down on the floor with your legs straight out in front of you and your feet about 12" apart. With the trunk of the body erect, place the palms of your hands on the floor alongside your buttocks. Then tuck the chin forward against the chest. Now drop the head backward as far as it will go. At the same time raise your body so that the knees bend while the arms remain straight. Then tense every muscle in your body. Finally let the muscles relax as you return to your original sitting position. Rest before repeating this Rite.

Breathing: Breathe in as you raise up, hold your breath as you tense the muscles, and breathe out fully as you come down.


Rite #5

Lie down with your face down to the floor. You will be supported by the hands palms down against the floor and the toes in the flexed position. Throughout this rite, the hands and feet should be kept straight. Start with your arms perpendicular to the Floor, and the spine arched, so that the body Is in a sagging position. Now throw the head back as far as possible. The, bending at the hips, bring the body up into an inverted "V". At the same time, bring the chin forward, Tucking it against the chest.

Breathing: Breathe in deeply as you raise the body, and exhale fully as you lower the body.






Exercises In Preparation For Doing the Five Tibetan Rites

The following group of exercises has been developed as a preparation for doing the Five Rites, or as an alternative when you are unable to do any of the Five Rites. Doing these exercises will help you strengthen and become more flexible to be able to do the Five Rites as they have been described above.

Do these alternative exercises in the sequence from one to five and when possible, substitute the Five Rite exercise into this alternative program until you have fully integrated the Five Rites.

As with the Five Rites, begin by doing two or three of each exercise daily, until you are able to do 10 each day. Once you are able to do ten of these alternatives, you should be ready to begin doing the Five Rite exercises themselves.


Alternative (for Rite#1) Exercise #1


Stand with your feet about 12 inches apart. Extend your arms palms down until your arms are level with your shoulders. Swing your arms to the right, letting your slapping your left hand against your right shoulder, with your right hand slapping against the small of your back. Then swing your arms in the opposite direction, having your right hand slap against your left shoulder and the back of your left hand slap against the small of your back. As you swing back and forth allow your torso and legs to follow the movement. Allow your heels to lift from the floor but do not allow either foot to completely leave the floor. As you swing right turn your head right, and turn your head left as you swing to the left.

Breathing: Breathe in rhythm to your swinging Movement.



Alternative (for Rite #2)
Exercise #2

Lie down on the floor and elevate your head and shoulders propping up on your elbows keeping your forearms flat on the floor, palms facing down. Keeping your legs straight, hold them off the floor For 20 or 30 seconds.

Breathing: Inhale as you raise your legs, breathe in and out normally while holding your legs up, and exhale as you lower your legs.



Alternative ( for Rite #3) Exercise #3

Stand with your back to the wall and your feet 12 - 18 inches apart. Without moving your feet bend forward from the hips so that your buttocks rest against the wall. Slide downward, bending your knees as you go. Keep sliding down until your thighs are horizontal, as if you were sitting in a chair. Hold this position for 15 seconds and then slide back up.

Breathing: Begin to exhale as you slide down to the chair position and inhale when slide back up.



Alternative ( for Rite #4) Exercise #4

Lie flat on your back, your arms straight, palms down, feet flat, and knees bent. Press your pelvis up a few inches off the floor and hold it for 10 seconds. Release and lower your pelvis to its original position.

Breathing: Inhale as you lift your pelvis and Exhale as you lower your pelvis.



Alternative ( for Rite #5) Exercise #5

Begin in the table position. Curl your toes under And bend your hips raising your buttocks so that Your body forms an inverted "V". Your knees will lift up off the floor, your legs will be straight, and your outstretched arms will be in a straight line with your back. Hold this position for 15 seconds.

Breathing: Inhale as you raise your buttocks, breath Slowly and deeply while holding the position, and exhale as you return to the table position.



Warm-up Exercises

The following group of exercises has been developed to open, relax, release tension, to strengthen various parts of the body, and to provide toning to different parts of your body.

If you are overweight, in poor physical condition, or experiencing serious illness, this group of exercises is an excellent to help you begin your journey towards physical fitness. I suggest you do these warm-up exercises prior to the Five Rites if you are overweight or have not exercised in a long time.

Begin this group of exercises by doing 2 of each exercise and then gradually increase the repetition until you are able to do 10 of each warm-up exercise.
Warm-Up Exercise #1

Stand upright, tilt your head sideways towards your left shoulder and hold it for five seconds, then tilt your head towards your chest and hold it 5 seconds. Then tilt your head towards your left Shoulder and hold it five seconds, and lastly tilt your head backward and hold it five seconds. Return your head to a normal position.

Breathing: Exhale as you move your head around, and inhale as you return to the upright position.



Warm-Up Exercise #2

Stand upright, slowly rotate your shoulders in a forward circular motion 5 times, then reverse the movement and rotate your shoulders in a backward circular motion 5 times.

Breathing: Breathe normally but deeply as you do this exercise.



Warm-Up Exercise #3

Stand upright with your arms help up, your elbows bent, and your hands together in front of your chest, with your fingertips touching and palms apart. Press inward on your fingers until their inside surfaces are almost touching. Your palms should not be touching. Release and press your fingers again.

Breathing: Breathe normally.



Warm-Up Exercise #4

In a relaxed standing position, hold your arms in front of you. Clasp your right hand around your left wrist, with your thumb against the inside of the wrist. Squeeze gently but firmly five times. Repeat the procedure with the left hand Squeezing the right wrist.

Breathing: Breathe normally.



Warm-Up Exercise #5


Recline on the floor, resting the upper part of your body on your upper arms. Flex your knees and rhythmically bang Them up and down against the floor in rapid succession. Your heels should remain on the floor throughout this exercise. Do this exercise for 20 - 30 seconds.

Breathing: Breathe normally through this exercise.


Warm-Up Exercise #6

Get down on the floor on your hands and Knees with your hands positioned under your shoulders and your knees under your hips. Bring your chin up and rotate your hips so the tailbone moves up, arching your back down. Then tuck your chin into your chest and rotate your back so that your pelvis moves down, arching you're your back down.

Breathing: Inhale as you move your tailbone up and exhale as you move your tailbone down.




Conclusion: The daily practice of the exercises I have described in this article is an essential element of vibrant health. It's a proven fact that people who loose weight can only maintain their weight loss if they incorporate a daily exercise program into their everyday lives.

These exercises will stretch muscles you haven't felt in years so approach this program gently and begin with one or two repetitions each day, increasing each exercise by one repetition every week. After you are able to do ten repetitions of the Alternate Exercise program, you should be able to begin to do the Five Rites.

And add a half hour of a brisk walk on a daily basis. Not only will it contribute to your physical health, it will give you the opportunity to enjoy all of nature around you. You will feel younger than you have felt in years.

Happy and Joyous Vibrant Health

For an easy print version of this article go here:
http://www.mkprojects.com/pf_TibetanRites.htm

Monday, March 24, 2008

A.C.T. NOW!

OMG!
The BEST energy drink ever! I am sooooo thrilled about how great it works, how good it tastes and how awesome it makes me feel :) !!!

Probably like thousands of others, I have a 'low energy point' sometime during my day...(usually close to 3 hours past lunchtime) and always need a pick me up for the last leg of my day and almost every time I grab an energy drink for a burst of juice to make it through. I must have tried every single one out there! Well, needless to say, they usually either speed me out like a maniac for about an hour, then crash, OR they taste terrible, OR are absolutely terrible for you (some of the ingredients are really questionable out there!). Learn more here

FYI: most are sweetened with high fructose corn syrup ,( click here for more info on high fructose corn sweetener )
and can contain enough damaging ingredients to scare anyone. But what can you do???

Well, there is finally an actual healthy one that tastes fantastic too. It is the first ever all natural Energy Drink. It contains No Added Caffeine, No Artificial Sweeteners, and no Artificial Flavors. It contains some serious vitamins, Purified Water, Maltodextrin, Natural Juice Extracts, Maca (root), and...
Dietary Fiber
Protein
Vitamin C
Vitamin B6
Vitamin B3
Vitamin B12
Niacin
Pantothenic Acid
Riboflavin
Ginkgo Biloba
Added Caffeine
Inositol
Guarana
Green Tea
Panax Ginseng
Stevia extract
L-arginine
Taurine
L-Carnitine
Tyrosine
and more!

lovin' the stevia! for more information on stevia click here http://www.stevia.net/safety.htm

Compare A.C.T. to other Energy Drinks click here

and.........what's better than to have something you love and be able to share it
knowing how good it is for everyone!

p.s...
I've also heard of it helping hangovers too :^)


10 reasons to join A.C.T




1.It Is The Perfect Product-ACT is the first ever all natural Energy Drink. It contains No Added Caffeine, No Artificial Sweeteners, and no Artificial Flavors.

This product tastes incredible and it has only 6 grams of carbohydrates per can making it a perfect drink for people looking to lose weight! It will give you an awesome energy boost anytime you need a quick pick-me-up and the high energy level lasts 5-6 hours!

It comes in both ready to drink 12oz cans and in powder packets that you can pour into 16 ounces of water anytime you want! ACT gives you awesome energy levels without the jittery effects that some people get from drinking too much caffeine.

Within 10-15 minutes of drinking ACT you will feel an incredible surge of energy that will last 5-6 hours. I have one when I wake up and I have another one in the afternoon and I feel incredible all day long! I have lots of energy and I am very focused with no jittery feelings.

Why drink just any sodas or coffee for a 20-minute buzz, when you can have the long-lasting,

"healthy energy" of ACT for less money?

learn more here!

Friday, March 14, 2008

The Ominvore's Dilemma

There is so much controversy about our national eating disorder that its almost impossible to choose the inevitable daily question,
"What's for dinner?"
How about meat or no meat, carbs or no carbs, milk or no milk, or questions like organic vs. non organic, local or imported?
Where are we supposed to look for answers to our endless questions?

It all seems a bit too much and one thing I highly recommend is reading a great book by Michael Pollen.

Below are a couple exerpts from the book:
The Omnivore’s Dilemma, by Michael Pollen

The organic apple or the
conventional? And if the organic, the local one or the imported? The wild
fish or the farmed? The transfats or the butter or the “not butter”? Shall I
be a carnivore or a vegetarian? And if a vegetarian, a lacto-vegetarian or a
vegan? Like the hunter-gatherer picking a novel mushroom off the forest
floor and consulting his sense memory to determine its edibility,we
pick up the package in the supermarket and, no longer so confident of
our senses, scrutinize the label, scratching our heads over the meaning
of phrases like “heart healthy,”“no transfats,”“cage-free,” or “range-fed.”
What is “natural grill flavor” or TBHQ or xanthan gum? What is all this
stuff, anyway, and where in the world did it come from?

“Eating is an agricultural act,” as Wendell Berry famously said. It is
also an ecological act, and a political act, too. Though much has been
done to obscure this simple fact, how and what we eat determines to a
great extent the use we make of the world—and what is to become of
it.To eat with a fuller consciousness of all that is at stake might sound
like a burden, but in practice few things in life afford quite as much satisfaction.
By comparison, the pleasures of eating industrially, which is
to say eating in ignorance, are fleeting. Many people today seem perfectly
content eating at the end of an industrial food chain, without a
thought in the world: this book is probably not for them; there are
things in it that will ruin their appetite. But in the end this is a book
about the pleasures of eating, the kind of pleasures that are only deepened
by knowing.

_______________________________

Do yourself and your family a favor......read this book, you won't regret it!

here's a page of great links;
http://www.michaelpollan.com/eat_sustainably.pdf

Best Meal Replacement Bars....

Ok, I'm probably like thousands of other people out there who are always busy, on the go, and have no time for a nutritious (let alone organic) meal. So I usually go for whatever I can grab in a hurry. This leaves me usually feeling guilty for eating something probably not so good, or worse yet skipping it all together. I have tried dozens of meal replacement bars on the market, but none of them are made with my specific requirements and needs in mind.
But today, I've found a God-send!
The people at youbars.com have designed the perfect way to not only eat something good for you while on the go, but literally, choosing exactly what you want in your energy bar! OMG! How wonderful is that???!!! They have loads of choices and all of them sound so good that its difficult to make up my mind! (And for those of us who can't make up our minds, they also have popular choices already designed). I can't say enough about them.
A brilliant mother and son team in LA began formulating and creating their own snack/nutrition bar recipes for themselves, and when friends and relatives started bringing them their personal requests, they realized that they were onto something. YouBars don't sell these in stores, only online, and you can select all the ingredients personally based on your nutritional needs, tastes and preferences. They offer many all natural and organic ingredients, dairy and gluten free options, even vegan varieties, and so much more! And if you don't like your own concoction, they offer a money back guarantee!

You've just got to check out this smart product!

www.youbars.com

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Inspiring Quotes

Here are some inspiring quotes:


"It always seems impossible until it's done." Nelson Mandela

"All that we are is a result of what we have thought." Buddha (563 BCE-483 BCE)

"The more you praise and celebrate your life, the more there is in life to celebrate." Oprah Winfrey

"The good news is that the moment you decide that what you know is more important than what you have been taught to believe, you will have shifted gears in your quest for abundance. Success comes from within, not from without." Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)

"The point of power is always in the present moment." Louise L Hay

"To be happy, all I have to do is give up my judgements." from the book A Course in Miracles


"You can develop the right attitude towards others if you have kindness, love and respect for them, and a clear realisation of the oneness of all human beings." The Dalai Lama

“Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, and fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small doesn't serve the world. There's nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We are born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us, it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.” From Nelson Mandela's inaugral speech (1994) written by Marianne Williamson

Daily Quotes

ThinkExist Dynamic daily quotation