july 2012 - seattle natural awakenings

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July 2012 | Seattle Edition | SeattleAwakenings.com FREE HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET feel good • live simply • laugh more LET΄S EAT OUTSIDE! Easy Backyard Favorites NATURAL SUN CARE Tips to Protect Your Skin SIMPLE SUMMER Pleasurable Pastimes THE ULTIMATE MINIMALIST Five Powerful Lessons From Ghandi

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Page 1: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

July 2012 | Seattle Edition | SeattleAwakenings.com

FREE

H E A L T H Y L I V I N G H E A L T H Y P L A N E T

feel good • live simply • laugh more

LET΄S EAT OUTSIDE!Easy Backyard

Favorites

NATURALSUN CARE

Tips to ProtectYour Skin

SIMPLE SUMMER

Pleasurable Pastimes

THE ULTIMATE MINIMALIST

Five Powerful Lessons From

Ghandi

Page 2: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

Turn Your Passion Into YOUR OWN BUSINESS! Across North America, Natural Awakenings’ over 85 publishers are helping more than 3.6 million readers make positive changes in their lives, while promoting local practitioners and providers who support natural, Earth-friendly lifestyles. Create a healthier community while building your own financial security in the franchise market of your choice. You’ll work for yourself but not by yourself. Complete training and support is provided.

Contact Co-Founder John R. Voell at (239) 530-1377 or go online to NaturalAwakeningsMag.com.

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Page 3: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

3natural awakenings July 2012

3815 S Othello St. 100-186Seattle, WA 98118

Phone: 206-788-7313Fax: 877-531-7691

PublishersAnn Dorn

David Seregow

National EditorS. Alison Chabonais

Account ManagerDena Marie

[email protected]

Design & ProductionPatrick Floresca

Franchise SalesJohn Voell II239-530-1377

To Advertise:206-788-7313 or 425-350-5448

© 2012 by Natural Awakenings. All rights reserved. Although some parts of this publication may be reproduced and reprinted, we require that prior permission be obtained in writing.

Natural Awakenings is a free publication distributed locally and is supported by our advertisers. It is available in selected stores, health and education centers, healing centers, public libraries and wher-ever free publications are generally seen. Please call to find a location near you or if you would like copies placed at your business.

We do not necessarily endorse the views expressed in the articles and advertisements, nor are we re-sponsible for the products and services advertised. We welcome your ideas, articles and feedback.

SUBSCRIPTIONSSubscriptions are available by sending $30

(for 12 issues) to the above address.

Natural Awakenings is printed on recycled newsprint with soy- based ink.

contact us

SeattleAwakenings.com

letterfrompublisher

Welcome to the July issue of Seattle Natural Awak-enings! After a lush and green spring (otherwise

known as rainy and wet), this is the month we always hope to finally unfurl the beach and patio umbrellas, kick back poolside and enjoy the good life. Routines get upended this month, and in a good way—the warmer days beckon with all kinds of outdoor activities. My parents had an above-ground pool when I was growing up, and it was just big enough to allow me to spend many a relaxed summer afternoon drifting on a float with a book. When I think of simplicity and being unavailable to the world, my mind goes to those mo-ments suspended above the water, seemingly suspended from time as well. There are understandably not many

pools in the northwest compared to warmer regions of the United States, but just sitting next to a lake or the Puget Sound this time of the year is incredibly refresh-ing and abounds with simple pleasures: a warm breeze, perhaps the lapping of the water or the crashing of the waves, and the scent of healthy, pure air that usu-ally lingers near aquatic environments. We know you want to live the good life this summer, too, and you want it to be healthy and conscious, so we've brought you some tips and ideas for a beauti-ful and simple summer. Start with some mouth-watering and all natural picnic ideas for fun outdoor gatherings, like amazing pesto corn on the cob and more in “Outdoor Entertaining” (page 22). Need ideas for ways to enjoy the sun and your extra time outdoors? Check out "Simple Summer Pleasures" (page 12) for classic reminders of amazing activities like stargazing, hosting a potluck block party, or taking a sunrise walk. Brush up on your knowledge of an important issue, geneti-cally modified foods, in our article “The Truth about GMOs” (page 18). There's lots more inside these pages, and we hope it all contributes to a peaceful and simple summer for you and your loved ones. Get out there and soak up the precious sun, and enjoy.

To your health and happiness,

Ann

Page 4: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

4 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

advertising & submissions

SeattleAwakenings.com

HOW TO ADVERTISE To advertise with Natural Awakenings or request a media kit, please contact us at 206-788-7313 or 425-350-5448 or email [email protected]. Deadline for ads: the 15th of the month.

EDITORIAL SUBMISSIONSEmail articles, news items and ideas to: [email protected] Deadline for editorial: the 5th of the month.

CALENDAR SUBMISSIONSEmail Calendar Events to: [email protected] or submit online at SeattleAwakenings.com. Deadline for calendar: the 12th of the month.

REGIONAL MARKETSAdvertise your products or services in multiple markets! Natural Awakenings Publishing Corp. is a growing franchised family of locallyowned magazines serving communities since 1994. To place your ad in other markets call 239-449-8309. For franchising opportunities call 239-530-1377 or visit NaturalAwakeningsMag.com.

19

11 THE ULTIMATE MINIMALIST Five Powerful Lessons from Gandhi by Arvind Devalia

12 SIMPLE SUMMER PLEASURES Sweet, Easy, Perfect by Claire O’Neil

14 NATURAL SUMMER SKIN CARE Protective Tips for Sunny Days by Kathleen Barnes

16 TOOLS FOR CHANGE Yoga Provides Path Of Tranformation by Frytz Fatepahl Mor

17 YOGA RETREATS Refreshing Trips That Renew by Andrea Blair Cirignano

18 THE TRUTH ABOUT GMOs

Plant Pathologist Don Huber Reveals the Risks by Melinda Hemmelgarn

22 OUTDOOR ENTERTAINING

Backyard & Picnic Party Foods by Renée Lou

24 HEALTHY SUMMER FOOD Delicious Natural Recipes by Renée Lou

Natural Awakenings is your guide to a healthier, more balanced life. In each issue readers find cutting-edge information on natural health, nutrition, fitness, personal growth, green living, creative expression and the products and services that support a healthy lifestyle.

5 newsbriefs

10 healthbriefs

11 inspiration

14 healingways

16 wisewords

17 yogalife

18 actionalert

22 consciouseating

26 calendar

30 naturaldirectory

10

14

contents

1112

22

16

Protective Tips

24

Page 5: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

5natural awakenings July 2012

newsbriefs

New Food Growing Towers Coming to the Northwest

A local resident is bringing a new indoor growing method to Seattle. A

compact vertical growing system of inter-locking pots, the Foody is ideal for those with limited space, according to Greg Hendrick, who is the exclusive Northwest distributor of the system, along with his wife Brenda. "One of the benefits is that it al-lows for year-round growing of delicious organic food,” Hendrick says. "It allows anyone to grow healthy plants just about anywhere and inspires whole genera-tions to take ownership of growing some of their own food,” Hendrick explains. “It’s a great conversation starter.” The Foody tower contains from three to five stacked units, each divided into eight compartments, or pockets, and can work either hydroponically or with soil. The arrange-ment reduces weeding and water use. In fact, according to Hendrick, plants grown in the Foody require only about 2 percent of the water needed by plants grown outside. The unit takes less than two square feet of actual floor space. "One of the beauties of the Foody system is that you can stagger your plantings, so you always have something coming up,” Hendrick explains, noting that most leafy greens can be harvested repeatedly and will continue to grow more leaves. Owners of Foody towers have grown ev-erything from herbs, tomatoes and eggplant to cucumbers, cabbage and even potatoes. Hendrick has an aquaponic set-up that runs water from his aquarium, in which he grows tilapia, through his Foody tower.

For more information: 509-293-2628 or [email protected].

NW Healing Tree Opens In Lynnwood

NW Healing Tree, a new healing center that offers acu-puncture, massage, sound healing and Ayurveda, has

opened near the Whole Foods Market in Lynnwood. Oper-ated by Melissa Yaden, NW Healing Tree is located within Lynwood Natural Medicine. “I’m excited to bring the power of natural health and healing to the residents of Lynnwood and surrounding areas,” Yaden enthuses. “Working with Lynnwood Natural Medicine, I can offer the highest level of care and effective ayurvedic, massage and acupuncture remedies for clients who want to feel amazing.”

Location: 3005 Alderwood Mall Pkwy., #100, Lynnwood. For more information: 360-434-0670 or [email protected]. To learn more about Lynnwood Natural Medicine, visit LynnwoodNaturalMedicineWa.com.

Sweet SurvivalBees & Superbees UpdateWhile bee colonies die off around the world, pesticide chemical companies continue to protect their businesses by lobbying against bans on neonicotinoids, a group of nicotine-based toxins designed to paralyze insects by attack-ing their nervous systems. And that, claim critics, includes honeybees. Mounting authoritative research undermines the pesticide industry’s long-repeated arguments that bees are not being harmed, and increases pressure on U.S. and UK authorities to follow other countries in banning the suspect chemicals,

blamed for the “colony collapse disorder” that has been decimating bee populations. The current double-whammy for honeybees is an Asian mite, the varroa, which feeds on honey-bee young and adults and spreads viruses. To fight the pest, commer-cial beekeepers have turned to heavy feeding and medica-tion to try to keep hives alive. Now, scientists at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s honeybee lab, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that have studied for the last decade why some hives had low mite levels, have determined that the bees in those colonies were able to detect mites hiding in sealed cells and feeding on devel-oping young. The researchers’ goal is to breed a queen that will pass on to her colony the traits of resistance to pests and disease, gentleness, productivity and winter hardiness, thus creating a superbee. The project is ongoing.

Source: Environmental Health News

Page 6: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

6 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

Yoga For Hope Expands Awareness Of Mind-Body-Spirit Connection

The fourth annual Yoga for Hope takes place July 14 at the Seattle Center’s North Fountain Lawn underneath the

Space Needle. Registration and vendor booths open at 9 a.m., opening remarks begin at 10 a.m., and yoga with the music of Steve Gould begins at 10:30 a.m. The yoga class features prominent Seattle instructors Jenniferlyn Chiem-ingo, Dora Gyarmati, John (Jess) Jessum and Cosetta Romani. Yoga for Hope is a fundraising event for City of Hope, an innovative biomedical research, treatment and edu-cational institution dedicated to the prevention and cure of cancer and other life-threatening diseases. Yoga begin-ners and experts alike are welcomed to practice together, celebrating the practice’s benefits, while raising funds to advance City of Hope’s mission to transform innovative research into treatments that save lives here and around the world. In its three-year history, Yoga for Hope has raised more than $80,000 for vital research and treatment. “Yoga for Hope is the most inspiring event I have ever been a part of,” said Jenniferlyn Chiemingo, instructor and Yoga for Hope presenter. “To witness yoga truly 'uniting' for an important cause is powerful. I am so honored to be a presenter, demonstrating how to take your yoga off the mat, and to save lives.” Patient treatment at City of Hope recognizes the mind-body-spirit connection and incorporates complementary and integrative therapies. Gentle, restorative yoga and medi-tation classes are offered to City of Hope patients and their caregivers to provide a way to help manage the emotional and physical process of treatment and recovery. Many par-ticipants report profound impacts on their symptom man-agement and quality of life.

Cost: $35 in advance or $45 at the door. Location: 400 Broad St., Seattle. For more information and to register: YogaForHope.org/Seattle.

Local fitness studio changes name to The Chris Meredith Method

The Redmond based fitness studio formerly known as Hard-core Fitness Studio is now the Chris Meredith Method

Fitness Studio, a name change that reflects owner Chris Meredith’s evolution towards a unique form of functional fit-ness. “I’ve been training for years, and one thing that I really want to emphasize is my results-oriented approach,” Meredith says. “We do a 30-minute workout and complete money-back guarantee, which reflects how strongly I stand behind the fit-ness concepts I have adapted and developed.”

The Chris Meredith Method Fitness Studio is notable for the lack of complicated fitness machines: rather, everything in the studio compliments the body’s natural range of mo-tion and enhances “functional fitness,” the ability to improve strength for everyday tasks instead of isolating muscles for body building, for example. However, the simplicity of the heavy ropes, half bouncing balls, punching dummies and bands hanging from the a-frame structure should not be un-derestimated. Testimonials abound and clients say the studio’s 30-minute classes have helped them slim down, tone up and build plenty of muscle.

“We have a really strong community here, because our classes are semi-private,” Meredith explains. “We usually have four to six people in one class and they get to know

each other. It’s a great supportive atmosphere for reaching fitness goals.” Meredith says they also strive to offer a friendly, inclusive environment. “We’ve had people of all ages, fitness levels and abilities in here, and they all leave feeling like they were incredibly challenged but not discouraged,” he says. “The great thing about our approach is that it’s relevant to every fitness level. A pro athlete can walk in and get a very challenging workout, and so can a retired grandparent who has not worked out for years.”

Meredith offers a free week trial and a money-back guarantee. When asked if he’s ever had to refund someone’s money, he laughs and points to a wall filled with dramatic before and after photos of his clients. “You show up for 30 minutes, three times a week, and we’ll take care of the rest.”

For more information: TheChrisMeredithMethod.com or 206-595-5291.

Is your child

well?

eating sleeping learning playing growing

$20 Well-Child VisitsJuly 1–August 31, 2012

Offer good for children 11 and younger.

Includes free pediatric vitamins

WellChild.BastyrCenter.comAppointments: 206.834.4100

Page 7: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

7natural awakenings July 2012

RENEWABLE ENERGY &SUSTAINABLE LIVING FAIR

NW

Saturday - July 28th - 201210am to 6pm

Shoreline Community College16101 Greenwood Ave N

Shoreline, WA 98133

9th Annual

Presented by

www.ShorelineSolar.org

FREE

Dowsing and Earth Acupuncture Training with Karen Rice King

Master Dowser Karen Rice

King will be train-ing others in Earth Acupuncture and dowsing in Belling-ham, July 21 and 22, and at Brooke Medicine Eagle’s organic farm in the Cascades near Loomis, on July 28 and 29. In Earth Acupuncture, geobiologists dowse for geopathic stress—zones of energy which conflict with and cause harm to living organisms. They find and map meridians—unseen electromagnetic energy lines—in order to heal them because they can affect the physical and emotional health of living organ-isms. By placing metal or crystal rods in the earth on the intersections of these meridians, geobiologists can help neutralize negative energies. According to King, the discipline of dowsing can cure one’s own home and office, but two distinctly different settings (one, urban/residential; the other, rural/agri-cultural) were chosen for the training to show the versatility of the process. “Dowsing has been used for thousands of years to meet the needs of people all over the world, primarily for finding water and precious stones, gems and metals,” King says. “Dowsing is used now by healthcare practitioners to create effective treatments for their clients; by agriculturalists for farming and raising stock; by the military for strategizing operations; and by devel-opers and builders for deciding on a location for investing and for clients.” “Essentially Earth Acupuncture addresses all matters of health, wealth and happiness,” King continues. “It is the modern geomancy that our ances-tors knew and used for their chal-lenges.”

Cost: $390/individual or $300/each for a couple. For more information: 303-665-0175 or [email protected].

Page 8: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

8 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

Workshop: Intuition in Space Clearing

Robyn Fritz of Alchemy West will present the

workshop, Using Intuition in Space Clearing, from 7 to 8:30 p.m., July 10, at East West Bookshop in Seattle. “The workshop is a hands-on event for participants to explore Space Cooperating, a new modality of space clear-ing I pioneered in Seattle,” says Fritz, an experienced intuitive that works in partnership with a citrine Lemurian quartz. “Space clearing is a holistic, practical, intuitive technique that revitalizes space on an energetic or vibrational level, much like vacuuming and dusting keep the physical space clean,” she explains. “It helps establish and maintain clear home and business space to promote healthy, balanced lives. It’s useful for real estate, when selling or buying a new home, it provides creative support and facilitates personal and business changes.” Fritz explains that Space Cooperating moves deeper into space clearing because the practitioner intuitively talks directly with the space being cleared, addressing its concerns and interests as well as human ones. In this workshop participants will learn how to talk intuitively with the space, choose appropriate tools and conduct a clearing, so they can either apply this technique to their own home or business or determine when they should work with a space clearing professional.

Cost: $10. Location: 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. To register, call 800-587-6002 or go to EastWestBookshop.com/events/. For more information: [email protected].

Ninth Annual NW SolarFest Comes To Shoreline

NW SolarFest Renewable Energy & Sustainable Living Fair takes

place July 28, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., at Shoreline Community College. Displays and interactive presentations from nearly 80 participating vendors and non-profit and educational orga-nizations will demonstrate products, such as appliances and vehicles, that operate using solar, wind, geothermal and other renewable power sources. The event will feature a variety of food vendors, and an after-party complete with beer garden and entertainment takes place from 6 to 8 p.m. The region’s longest running grassroots-organized renewable energy and sustainability fair, NW SolarFest is intended to help attendees learn and apply more sustainable habits in daily living. SolarFest is organized by mem-bers of Shoreline Solar Project, which operates with a mission to promote the practical application of renewable en-ergy and environmentally responsible practices to enhance the economic, ecological and social environment of the community.

Cost: Free. Location: 16101 Green-wood Ave. N. For more information: 206-306-9233 or ShorelineSolar.org.

Seattle Natural Mattress

206-419-9550 SeattleNaturalMattress.com

“Locally crafted, these beds give full body comfort and

support. Earth’s best mattress at Seattle’s best price.” TL

4033 Aurora Ave. N, Seattle

100% Natural LatexOrganic CottonChemical Free

Page 9: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

9natural awakenings July 2012

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Yoga and Inspiration — July 23, 6:30-8:30pm

Daughter of Dr. Christiane Northrup Comes to Seattle and Tacoma

Kate Northrup, daughter of Dr. Christiane Northrup, will share the story of how the pair founded Team Northrup

and how the company has grown since then, with engage-ments in Tacoma, July 3, at 7 p.m., and Seattle, July 5, at 7 p.m. Dr. Northrup says, “Team Northrup began with a handful of people and a dream: Give women of all ages a way to learn about finances, pursue a life of passion and have a career in the health and wellness industry. Today, Team Northrup is a group of thousands of women and men around the world who are consciously creating vibrant health and vibrant wealth, with USANA Health Sciences as their product partner.” USANA Health Sciences develops and manufactures nutritional supplements, healthy weight-management prod-ucts and personal-care products. Dr. Northrup calls USANA “one of the world’s leading companies in the field of health and nutrition.” “Kate Northrup’s approach to business is unique,” Local Team Northrup leader Michelle Wong explains. “By redefining sales as service, she is leading a movement that sees selling as a spiritual practice.” The two free events give details about how Team Northrup can help health-conscious individuals achieve financial success and personal freedom.

Cost: Free. Locations: July 3, 7030 Tacoma Mall Blvd., #200, Tacoma; July 5, 1520 Eastlake Ave. E., Seattle. Prereg-istration is required. For Tacoma event, register at Team-NorthrupTacoma.eventbrite.com; for Seattle, go to TeamNorthrupSeattle2012.eventbrite.com. For more information: 206-552-8819.

YogaTone H2O Brings SUP Yoga to Juanita Beach Park

This July, YogaTone H2O returns to Lake Washington. Offered for the second consecutive year by Northwest

Paddle Surfers in partnership with yoga instructor and Natural Awakenings writer Andrea Blair Cirignano, the class comprises a full yoga lesson on standup paddleboards (SUP) in the water just off Juanita Beach Park. “Both yoga beginners and SUP beginners are wel-come,” Cirignano says. “Each class starts with a paddle les-son and a warm-up paddle before a full yoga session on the water, and students have time for extra paddling after yoga.”

Cost: $26 single class rate includes all equipment; discounts offered with 5- and 10-class packages. Advance registration required at NorthwestPaddleSurfers.com. For more informa-tion and class schedule: NorthwestPaddleSurfers.com. For more information about Cirignano: ABCYogi.com.

Page 10: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

10 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

Cancer Prevention in a SpiceThis year, an estimated 52,610

people (38,380 men and 14,230 women) will develop cancer in the head and neck, leading to an estimated 11,500 deaths (or just under 22 percent), according to statistics adapted from the American Cancer Society’s publication, Cancer Facts & Figures 2012. New hope may lie in an ancient spice. A pilot study conducted at the University of Califor-nia-Los Angeles Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has shown that eating curcumin, the main component in the spice turmeric, works to suppress a cell-signaling pathway that spurs the growth of malignancies in the head and neck. Further, curcumin reduces pro-inflamma-tory cytokines (naturally occurring regulatory proteins) within saliva. Turmeric is widely used in South Asian and Middle Eastern cooking (curry, for example), and has been long valued for its anti-inflammatory properties. In India, women have used it for centuries as an anti-aging agent rubbed into the skin, as a poultice to promote wound healing and as a treatment for menstrual cramps.

Wondrous WatermelonOn a hot summer day, a cool,

juicy slice of watermelon offers enticing refreshment. The treat offers surprising health benefits, too—it may help keep weight off and arteries clear, according to a recent study involving mice with high cholesterol by University of Kentucky researchers. One group sipped watermelon juice; the control group, water. After eight weeks, the mice that imbibed the juice had a lower body weight due to a decrease in fat mass; lean muscle mass was unaffected. These same mice also experienced reduced atherosclerotic lesions—associated with hardening of the arteries—and lower concentrations of cholesterol in their blood. “This pilot study has found… interesting health benefits in the mouse model of atherosclerosis,” says lead investiga-tor Dr. Sibu Saha, a cardiothoracic surgeon. “Our ultimate goal is to identify bioactive compounds that would improve human health.”

healthbriefs EAT FIBER FOR HEALTH AND LONGEVITY

Now consumers have another convincing argument to add more fiber to their diet. According to a National

Cancer Institute study at the National Institutes of Health, which followed patients over a nine-year period, scientists associated the intake of fiber (about 30 grams per day) with a reduced risk of death from any cause, including cardiovascular, infectious and respiratory diseases.

Source: Archives of Internal Medicine

The Lowdown on Low IronLow levels of iron in the blood not

only cause fatigue, but also may be linked to more serious health risks, including dangerous blood clots. Iron deficiency is widespread, and thought to affect at least 1 billion people worldwide, mostly women. Alleviating such deficiencies is a preventive measure.

Source: Imperial College, London

Page 11: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

11natural awakenings July 2012

6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle206-523-3726

www.EastWestBookshop.com

*Tools for Wellness& Conscious Living

*Inspiring Books& Meaningful Gifts

* Transformative Classes& Events

See complete schedule online

MONTHLY DINING EVENTWednesday July 18th, 6:30pm

at the Mount Baker Community Club, SeattleYou don’t need to be a vegetarian to enjoy a delicious multi-course vegetarian dinner. Catered by a different restaurant or chef each month. $15 plus tax for members, $20 plus tax for guests, children half-price.VegofWa.org/monthlydining.aspx or 206 706 2635 for reservations.

inspiration

Political and spiritual leader Mohandas Gandhi prac-ticed total simplicity and minimalism, leaving an admirable legacy of how to live. Born into a prosperous

family, he enjoyed a privileged upbringing and studied law at University College, London, in England. When he left Earth, he had fewer than 10 possessions. In contrast, most of us tend to spend a lot of time and

The Ultimate Minimalist

Five Powerful Lessons from Gandhi

by Arvind Devalia

“You may have occasion to possess or use material things, but the secret of life lies in never missing them.”~ Mohandas Gandhi

energy accumulating and looking after possessions; by having less, life naturally becomes simpler. We can take up author Dave Bruno’s The 100 Thing Challenge and start cutting down to bare basics by recycling, refusing to accept more stuff and giving away or selling unwanted possessions. Accumulate little. Gandhi believed in possessing only the clothes, sandals, watch and spectacles he wore and some cooking and eating utensils. He would give away or auction any gift he received. Eat simple food. Gandhi never had a problem be-ing overweight. He followed a strict vegetarian diet and frequently cooked his own simple, locally produced foods. He ate from a small bowl, a reminder to eat moderately and mindfully, often accompanied by prayers. Dress simply. Gandhi wore simple clothes, often just a wraparound cloth, for modesty and comfort. A simple hairstyle can shorten daily grooming. Gandhi shaved off his hair. Lead a simple, stress-free life. Gandhi meditated daily and spent hours in reflection and prayer. Though he was a revered world leader, he led a simple life with few dis-tractions and commitments and would interrupt political meetings to play with children. Gandhi insisted on doing his own simple tasks. He advocated self-sufficiency and simple work. Let your life be your message. A prolific, concise writer and powerful speaker in public; in private, Gandhi spoke quietly and only when necessary. He preferred to let his life talk for him. By living a simple life, Gandhi was able to devote himself to his chosen higher purpose and focus on his com-mitment to his people and the world. Accordingly, consistent focus determines anyone’s success and the potential for leav-ing one’s own inspiring legacy.

Arvind Devalia is the author of the bestselling Get the Life You Love, an inspirational coach and prolific blogger. Con-nect at ArvindDevalia.com/blog.

Page 12: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

12 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

Author Neil Pasricha observes, “I like to stop and remember sometimes that we’ll never be

as young as we are right now. We only get 100 years or so to enjoy interior de-sign, books, buffets and clean sheets, radio waves and good movie seats, bakery air, rain hair, bubble wrap and illegal naps.” The Toronto-based creator of the international bestseller, The Book of Awesome: Snow Days, Bakery Air, Finding Money in Your Pocket, and Other Simple, Brilliant Things is on such a roll that he keeps adding to the list at 1000AwesomeThings.com. All it takes to travel this pleasur-able path is a little attitude adjustment and awareness, agrees Victoria Moran, author of Creating a Charmed Life. She suggests we continually ask, “What

simple thing can I do today that will make it an amazing day?” What follows is not exactly a bucket list, but more like a summer “sand pail” sparked by Natural Awak-enings publishers and contributors around the country. Taking cues from summers past and present, they hap-pily offer a springboard to enjoyment.

Acting Like a Kid Again Just the thought of summer days to come brings back memories of free time, family vacations and outdoor fun. Whether we go swimming, sip real lemonade on the porch or catch and release fireflies with our kids or grandkids, we love renewing that “in the moment” feeling for ourselves. “I love hanging out with 3-year-olds,” says Pasricha, “because they’re

still seeing the world for the first time. Every moment is right now.” If you’re having trouble reaching your inner child, “Think of how you were when you were 10 years old,” suggests Joy Behar, comedian and co-host of The View. “What did you like to do then?” Sometimes revisiting a childhood pleasure or two can provide the missing link to fresh summer fun. Retro sweets: When is the last time you heard the tinkling bell of an ice cream truck? If you’re lucky to hear one this summer, don’t miss the chance to indulge in a favorite child-hood treat. Grab some coins from the change jar and run outside, barefoot and all, but be wary of the stubbed toe. Bike riding and kite flying: Freewheeling it on two tires instead of four with wind blowing in one’s face is sheer exuberance. Flying a kite can feel like that too, and when you pass it off to someone else, watch a huge smile break out across his or her face. Potluck block party: Gather kids, parents and grandparents and transform a summer barbecue into a mini-block party. Set up rows of card tables, covered with colorful camp blankets and old tablecloths and adorn with a few Mason jars filled with puffy, purple-tinged hydrangeas, dainty red-and-yellow-spurred colum-bines or the simple cheer of sunflow-ers. Bring the fun and games outdoors and join the neighborhood youngsters in a game of kick-the-can, hide-and-go-seek, or flashlight tag.

Indulging the Senses The sights, sounds, smells, tastes and textures of summer are easy to discover or recreate. They can be as simple as making the most of… A sunrise walk: A peaceful early

SIMPLE SUMMER PLEASURESSweet, Easy, Perfectby Claire O’Neil

Summer beckons with the freedom of long sunny days—a perfect time to cultivate the art of treating one’s self to simple pleasures.

Page 13: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

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morning walk before the thermometer starts to rise is a great way to start a summer day. Listen to the quiet twitter of birds as they wake with the morning sun and inhale the freshness of a new day.

Dining alfresco: On summer eve-nings, find an opportunity to indulge in outdoor meals, replete with candles and cool, crisp salads, featuring fresh summer fruits like berries, nectarines and peaches. Keep meals simple and let summertime story telling and laugh-ter serve as background music.

Stargazing: It’s easy to acquire a lifelong fascination with the desert night sky. When warm, calm nights

call you outdoors, reach for binoculars or a telescope and point toward the stars. Consult EarthSky.org for a meteor shower calendar and you’ll be count-ing shooting stars during the summertime Delta Aquarid and Perseid meteor showers.

Personal Pursuits “Having space and time to nurture our creativity may be one of people’s authentic hungers,”

muses author Sarah Ban Breathnach, well-known for her Simple Abundance books. She suggests allotting perhaps an hour a day to dabble in a hobby, to paint, to plot or to throw pots. It can feel like taking a little getaway every day. “Some days are shaped by sum-mer pleasures, others are redeemed by them,” concludes Breathnach in Simple Pleasures. Making time for such simple joys nurtures an ongoing sum-mer vacation state of mind.

Claire O’Neil is a freelance writer in Kansas City, MO.

Spend a few peaceful hours at the Ballard Locks, watching the occa-sional salmon jump the fish ladder and the boat traffic come and go. Don’t miss the visitor center and botanical garden. Free.

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Page 14: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

14 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

Are you inspired by the work of Dr. Christiane Northrup?Discover the secrets of the health-wealth connection with Team Northrup!

Attend one of our FREE events and learn how to:Transform your life both physically and financiallyUse pleasure as a business building strategyEnjoy the freedom of living the life of your dreams while helping others do the same

Don’t miss our FREE events in July. Details are in the events calendar [on pg. 26 of this issue] or register online at: http://bit.ly/seattlehealthfreedom. Questions? Call: 206-552-8819 for more details.

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Leaders Wanted

Natural Summer Skin CareProtective Tips for Sunny Days

by Kathleen Barnes

Now that much-anticipated beach vacations, garden-ing, outdoor sports and other

outside summer activities are on our calendars, it’s time to practice ways to protect skin from sun damage. The medical profession has reported loud and clear that too much exposure causes dryness, wrinkling, premature aging and even skin cancer. Yet, many people don’t understand that certain types of medications, among other factors, can

increase sensitivity to the sun’s rays. People of all types of skin can be susceptible to allergic reactions to sun exposure, and contrary to popular belief, dark-skinned people are not im-mune. There are many ways to protect skin from overexposure, burning, dry-ing and wrinkling, and careful use of safe sunscreens is one of the best.

Sun Protection from WithoutYale dermatologist Dr. Nicholas Per-ricone, author of The Wrinkle Cure,

healingways strongly recommends natural non-chemical sunscreens such as “physi-cal” blockers titanium dioxide and zinc oxide, not chemical sunscreen formulations, for everyone that plans to spend more than a few minutes in the sun. He states, “The benefit of a physical sunscreen is that it acts like tiny mirrors—deflecting all spectrums of the radiation away from the skin, including the dangerous ultraviolet [UV] rays.” Taking commonsense steps can reduce exposure to both sun dam-age and sun-blocking products that have, among other synthetic chemical ingredients, paraben-based preserva-tives and can carry health risks, says medical researcher Elizabeth Plourde, Ph.D., author of Sunscreens are Bio-hazards: Treat as Hazardous Waste. Plourde supports Australia’s Victo-ria-based SunSmart program, credited with preventing more than 100,000 skin cancers and saving thousands of lives since its inception 32 years ago, in a country with one of the world’s highest rates of skin cancer, according to Cancer Council, Australia. Effective UV protec-tion has come from the increased use of hats, sunglasses and protective clothing, including neck-to-knee swimsuits for children. Rather than use chemicals, Plourde is among the health advo-cates that suggest sun worshippers seek shade, cover up and avoid sun between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.; be extra-careful when the UV index is high; find the daily National Weather Service forecast assessing the risk of sun overexposure at epa.gov/sunwise/uvindex; take extra precautions near water, snow and sand, because they reflect and substantially intensify radiation; avoid tanning products or tanning beds, even those advertised as safe; and wear tightly woven, dark, clothing for maximum sun protection. Lightweight denim is a good choice.

Skin Protection from WithinNumerous studies show that specific foods can help provide natural sun protection, working from the inside out, including a class of foods incorporat-

Page 15: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

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ing carotenoids, which give rich colors to fruits and vegetables. According to recent research from Henrich-Heine University, in Dusseldorf, Germany, subcategories of the nutrients lutein (in dark green leafy veggies) and lycopene (in tomatoes and other pink/red foods) are among the most powerful antioxi-dants. Perricone explains, “Numerous scientific studies from around the world show that oral supplementation with carotenes, especially lycopene and betacarotene, improve skin struc-ture, have powerful wound-healing properties and offer great protection from damage caused by sunlight.” Be-cause inflammation is a major cause of

many types of skin damage and prema-ture aging, he highly recommends the Mediterranean diet and other eating plans rich in healthy oils like olive oil, omega-3 from walnuts and butternuts and oily fish, along with lots of veg-etables and fruits. A growing body of research from such prestigious institutions as North Carolina’s Duke University and the Xienta Institute for Skin Research, in Pennsylvania, shows that vitamins C and E can protect skin against free radical damage and also reduce the chances of sunburn. Potent antioxidant herbs such as green tea (Camellia sinen-sis) are also proving effective, accord-ing to research from the University of Alabama.

Healthy Sun ExposureStill, sunshine is the best source of vitamin D, so Perricone recommends stepping outside without sunscreen protection for at least 15 minutes a day with as much skin exposed as pos-sible, even when clouds are present, preferably in early morning or evening sunshine. “But don’t bake in the sun,” the doctor warns. “Limited sun exposure will in-crease vitamin D production, known to reduce the risk of many internal cancers, while also reducing the risk of osteoporosis.”

Kathleen Barnes is a natural health ad-vocate, author and publisher. Rx from the Garden: 101 Food Cures You Can Easily Grow is among her many books. Visit KathleenBarnes.com.

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16 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

wisewords

Everyone wants to be happy—it is a core desire of hu-manity. For centuries, yogis have lived the idea that people can be whoever they want to be; all they need are the right tools and the ability to understand and respond to their changing environments. Recent research and theory advances the notion that individuals are affected by what they think and vibrate and can affect change through thoughts, words and vibrations.

It stands to reason, considering that the human body comprises a high percentage of water. Masaru Emoto, author of Messages From Water, demonstrates his postulation that words, thoughts and ideas can have a direct effect on trans-forming water, as shown in its frozen crystals. Emoto main-tains that positive projections onto water led to snowflake-

Tools For Transformationby Frytz Fatehpal Mor

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like, brilliant designs, while negative projections onto water appeared to form “incomplete, asymmetrical patterns with dull colors.”

Recently, biophysicist and molecular biologist Pjotr Garjajev reported his findings supporting the hypothesis that human DNA is coded much like human language, using grammar and syntax, and storing memory like a computer. He also finds that language and sound vibrations can alter DNA if the right frequency is used.

These types of studies lend credence to the idea that people have the ability to directly recreate themselves anew in each moment.

Kundalini yoga speaks of “cherdi kala.” It translates “ris-ing spirit,” or “continuous resurrection.” In every moment and in every situation, people have the opportunity to recre-ate themselves, be at their best and rise above. People can confront every situation with commitment, character, divinity, dignity, and grace: the light of the spirit shining bright. Yoga offers tools to help practitioners achieve that state.

However, most people cannot hide in caves like the yogis of old. Most are householders with careers and families, living in environments that changes constantly and quickly. Old ideas make way for new inspirations in finance, technology, science, spirituality, governance, community, communication and interconnection. How does the individual keep a tranquil pace with the constant revision? By incorporating a method of recalibrating the mind, body and spirit to remain neutral and flexible in an ever-morphing environment.

Kundalini Yoga and Meditation as taught by Yogi Bhajan offers such transformative technology. Utilizing pranayama (powerful breath work), kriya (sets of postures designed to strengthen the body and nervous system), mantra (calibrated vibratory wordings chanted or sung), and mudra (hand posi-tions) the practitioner can experience their true natural vital-ity and soul. Kundalini yoga is a technology for happiness.

Frytz Fatehpal Mor is a kundalini yoga and meditation teacher (certified by Kundalini Research Institute and Inter-national Kundalini Yoga Teachers Assocation) and a former television producer and editor. He is currently co-owner of Wahe Guru Yoga, located at 7415 Greenwood Avenue North, in Seattle. For more information, call 206-783-WAHE, email [email protected] or visit WaheGuruYoga.com.

Page 17: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

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YOGA RETREATS Offer Long-Lasting Benefitsby Andrea Blair Cirignano

It’s that time of year again—time to count down to July 5, otherwise known as the unofficial start of sum-

mer in Seattle. Many Pacific Northwest residents have a love/hate relationship with the weather in the area: it is one of the few places in the country that runners can get out year-round, but it is also home to shorter, later summers than most other U.S. cities.

“The Pacific Northwest has an extremely prosperous high-tech com-munity,” said Ali Valdez, local resident and founder and owner of Sattva Yoga Online. “This means we have extremely intelligent people laboring in seden-tary positions in front of computers for extended periods of time.”

This makes Northwesterners ideal candidates for warm-weather yoga retreats. “Our bodies, circadian rhythms and melatonin production are reliant on sunlight,” added Valdez.

A retreat is an organized vacation that encourages students to disconnect from technology and their everyday lives. “No one leaves a fifty-hour-a-week job on Friday afternoons refreshed, invigorated and recommitted to their overall well-being,” said Valdez.

It is important to practice healthy habits like yoga on a regular basis, but sometimes yoga students find it difficult to block outside distractions when they are only taking an hour-long break from the stress and their yoga studio is right down the street from work or home.

Because of the distance and change in scenery, retreating can be a healthy practice for anyone, even residents that enjoy the local climate. “When you

make a commitment and investment to get away from it all, you are more likely to use the getaway to unwind, decom-press and focus inwardly,” Valdex says.

Some retreats are more structured than others, but most will promote a healthy diet, an active lifestyle and time outdoors—all habits often lost in the daily grind.

Local studios and local instructors offer retreats of all types in a variety of locations but Valdez said one of her favorite places to retreat at this time of year is Bali or Southeast Asia because the weather allows for time outdoors and compliments relaxation.

Writer Andrea Blair Cirignano is a lo-cal yoga instructor with a journalism background. She believes yoga is for everyone and that each member of the community could benefit from the prac-tice in some way, shape or form. Her ar-ticles highlight the unique pairing of this ancient practice with a modern Pacific Northwest lifestyle. Find out more about Andrea at abcyogi.com.

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Page 18: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

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At least 70 percent of processed foods in supermarkets con-

tain genetically modified (GMO) ingredients, mainly from corn, soy, canola, sug-ar beets and cottonseed oil. Yet the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) does not require GMO food la-beling, despite overwhelm-ing consumer support for their “right to know.” Genetic engineering goes beyond traditional plant breeding because it al-lows scientists to cross species barriers and insert a gene from one organism into another that would not normally occur. Examples include inserting bacterial DNA into a plant to effect traits such as pest or herbicide resis-tance. Plant Pathologist and Purdue University Professor Emeritus Don

The Truth about GMOsPlant Pathologist Don Huber

Reveals the Risksby Melinda Hemmelgarn

Huber, Ph.D., speaks out internationally about the risky business of biotech-nology.

We are told we need GMOs to “feed the world,” but will GMOs provide affordable food for the masses, as Monsanto ads tell us?There is nothing in the

GMO process that has added any new yield potential to any crop. All of the yield increases achieved in the past 15 years have been through traditional breeding programs. When Professor Karen McAfee, an economist at Yale University, analyzed the GMO claim, she found that the only entity that benefited was the biotechnol-ogy industry (Geoforum report). Nutri-

tional quality has suffered, food safety has been compromised by the toxic entities involved in the genetic engineer-ing process and farmers’ production costs have increased significantly, while quality and harvested yield potential have decreased. What we see in practice are failed promises.

What is the risk and potential harm to people and the planet due to GMOs?There are two serious risk factors involved in current genetically engi-neered plants. The first is an increase in plant, animal and human diseases plus pests associated with GMO crops, reported by sources as diverse as the European Journal of Agronomy, Earth Open Source and the University of Leipzig, in Germany. The second is abusive use of the chemical products that the herbicide-tolerant GMOs have been developed to tolerate; supporting studies include research published in the European Journal of Agronomy and the Fluid Fertilizer Foundation’s Forum. For example, glyphosate in many weed killer formulations is used exces-sively both on Roundup-ready crops and as a single chemical for general weed control. This has resulted in super weeds, super pathogens, compromised natural biological controls and devastated com-ponents of the soil biology responsible for nutrient availability and function.

Page 19: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

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Recent research from institutions around the world, including the UK’s King’s College and Leipzig Univer-sity, is now showing a link between GMO crops and/or the products they produce or tolerate and increased in-cidence of mutations, chronic fatigue syndrome, Parkinson’s disease, aller-gies, birth defects, cancer, reproduc-tive failure and other health effects. It is a heavy price for society to pay for a massive experiment. Scientists also are seeing hazard-ous levels of some of the products excessively used to grow GMO crops accumulating in the Earth’s soil, water and air. The biodegrading process of those substances often takes much longer than anticipated, and damage to non-target crops, plants and organisms is becoming a serious concern (Plant and Soil and Geoderma). Scientists also are finding that such ‘foreign’ genes in the environ-ment are quite promiscuous and can persist, perhaps indefinitely, in soil, intestinal or plant environments with unknown health consequences (Re-productive Toxicology, Aquaculture Research and Journal of Agricultural Food Chemistry). Several countries have banned importing crops grown in any field where one of five corn hybrids were previously grown, for instance, be-cause soil microbes have picked up the GMO genes from decomposing plant residues and can transmit the genes to future crops—resulting in the toxic product possibly being present in the later crop. No one knows how to remove the GMO foreign genes once they are introduced.

Looking to the future, should we be concerned by chemical companies’ lobbying for approval of the next leap in GMOs, to 2,4-D resistant crops?Like glyphosate tolerance, 2,4-D resis-tance is based on flawed science and a failure to understand that agriculture is the management of a delicately interre-lated ecological system, comprised of the plant and its various environments (biological, chemical and physical), rather than the selection of ‘silver bul-

Petition the U.S. Food and Drug Administration today to require labeling of GMO foods at JustLabelIt.org.

Melinda Hemmelgarn, aka the “Food Sleuth,” is a registered dietitian and award-winning writer and radio host at kopn.org, in Columbia, MO ([email protected]). Hear her interview with Don Huber at Tinyurl.com/foodsleuth.

lets’. Adding 2,4-D tolerance introduc-es another foreign and potentially toxic protein in the plant and an additional toxic chemical applied directly to food and animal feed. Food safety, nutrition-al quality and potential yield will all be compromised in the process.

Do you see any benefits from this technology?The GMO technology could be a powerful tool when we gain enough understanding to use it properly and effectively. We are a long way from gaining that essential understanding. The current rush to commercialize it and widespread implementation of the associated hazardous and ineffective products currently on the market may well be a major deterrent to future use of the technology when it is properly understood.

What can people do to avoid GMOs and protect their health?Buy organic foods, preferably from known local growers, and stay alert to the issue to take needed grassroots actions. Future historians may well remark not about how many pounds of pesticide we did or didn’t apply, but how willing we were to sacrifice our children and jeopardize future genera-tions for the massive flawed experi-ment of genetic engineering only to benefit the bottom line of a commer-cial enterprise.

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Page 20: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

20 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

This interview was conducted by Diana E. Vargas M.D. as a written transcript for her patients. She has practiced medicine for 31 years and was recently certified to teach Food-Based Healing. Jeff Primack is a Qi-gong teacher that has studied with many naturopathic healers from all over the world and has taught over 30,000 people in live seminars.

Dr. Vargas: Medical weight loss with HCG was very popular in 2011. People lose weight, but many con-test it is a starvation diet. What are your feelings?

Primack: HCG is a homeopathic formula for suppress-ing the appetite. I have seen dozens of my students lose very hard-to-burn fat with HCG when high-phytochemical smoothies are the main part of the diet, but I disagree with the diet most people are using along with the HCG. Most people are advised to eat zero fat, meat and vegetables for 30 days! This will make anyone lose weight; however, this creates a very acidic condition for the body. My weight loss protocol can be combined with HCG; however, drinking high-phytochemical smoothies automatically suppresses the appetite because the body is getting the nutrients it needs. High-phytochemical smoothies and a combination of ther-mogenic fat burning foods work better for weight loss than a crash diet.

Dr. Vargas: Why is it common for people eating healthy to have difficulty getting enough phytochemicals?

Primack: Most phytochemicals (active plant medicine) hide in the cellulose fibers of seeds, stems, skins and rinds of common foods. Many people eat the right foods, but throw away the parts with all the medicine! Smoothies from a 3-horsepower blender have helped many people to reverse cancer. We need to cleave out or “micronize” phytochemi-cals from the seeds, stems, skins and rinds. Juicing fruits and vegetables is a waste of time. It throws fiber away that God intended us to eat and is where phytochemicals dwell! Most people simply don’t know where the phytochemicals are.

Dr. Vargas: It amazes me more Doctors are not educated about Food-Healing. Especially considering America has seen a 500 percent increase in Diabetes in 10 years. Jeff, how can people naturally balance their blood sugar? Primack: People often balance blood sugar after a few weeks on a high-phytochemical diet. It is very inexpensive and does not require much of anything outside of the pro-

Conquering ANY Disease & Losing Weight

An Interview with Qigong Practitioner Jeff Primack (Part 2 of 2)

The white part of the grapefruit is phytochemical-rich and highly

effective at fighting cancer.

Page 21: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

21natural awakenings July 2012

duce department. Certain foods like the bitter melon con-tain an “insulin-like substance” that, when eaten, naturally lowers blood sugar. Bitter melon helps the body naturally balance its sugar. Many with diabetes have missing informa-tion and eat foods they think are healthy, but in reality are not. To begin with, nobody has told the diabetes community that the disease is completely reversible. Monitoring blood sugar proves food works. The first step is to increase the amount of phytochemicals eaten and the second is remov-ing certain problem foods. Oddly enough, the foods I rec-ommend avoiding are many of the same ones the diabetic community thinks are good to eat.

Dr. Vargas: Let’s talk about Asthma and its connection to Vitamin C deficiency. You have hundreds of Asthma reversal testimonials and I specifically want to hear how food and Qigong play a role.

Primack: I became Asthma-free 15 years ago using a Qi-gong breathing technique called “Breath Empowerment”. We teach it on Day 1 of our Qi Revolution seminar along with food-based healing. People's wheezing and Asthma symptoms often vanish in as little as a few days using breathing techniques and, of course, eating specific foods. I've recommended Kiwi for years because of its superior bioavailable Vitamin C content. The white center of kiwi holds a treasure trove of phytochemicals and is particularly effective in helping to reverse symptoms of asthma! Asthma is often caused by a deficiency of Vitamin C; however, tablets of Vitamin C will not reverse someone’s asthma; only food-based Vitamin C does this. There are many foods that when eaten help to keep asthmatics out of the emergency room.

Dr. Vargas: The unique aspect of your program is that you BLEND parts of fruits and vegetables that most throw away. Why do you do this specifically for reversing heart disease?

Jeff Primack tells an audience of 2000 people how to make smoothies with avocado seed taste delicious. He gives everyone a sample to prove it tastes good.

Primack: I realize most nutritionists are surprised to see me blend a delicious smoothie adding AVOCADO WITH THE BIG SEED. When a knowledgeable nutritionist hears that the Avocado Seed has tons of phytochemicals for detoxification and more soluble fiber (for cleaning plaque out of arteries) than any other food, we usually have their attention. Some of what I say is controversial, but real life people have tested my heart disease protocol. Reishi mushroom is clinically shown to help heart disease patients with chest pain and is backed by research from the University of Tokyo. My grandfather had chest pains every day for years, and the same day he began supplementing Reishi into his diet, the chest pains stopped. Along with ingesting the high soluble fiber foods like avocado (and its big seed), my grandfather extended his life, astonishing the doctors with his lipid panel. Cholesterol can be safely lowered with special foods and inexpensive mushrooms. We make a tea out of Eggplant and other powerful foods that can significantly lower the LDL bad cholesterol. Some foods like eggplant are so effec-tive, simply drinking the tea can be very beneficial. I com-bine several foods that have similar effects and add foods to balance the taste, making it delicious. Don’t assume that medicine has to come from a pill or inside a bottle; often it’s just sitting in the produce department.

Jeff Primack will teach 4-days of Food Healing & Qigong for $99. “Qi Revolution” comes to the Tacoma Convention Center July 21–24. To reserve tickets or for more info, call 800-298-8970 or visit Qigong.com.

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Page 22: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

22 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

Summer is the high season for out-door gatherings to celebrate warm weather and make the most of eve-

ning’s lingering natural light. When it comes to outdoor entertaining, simple is generally better. Backyard cookouts and picnic takeouts call for tasty fare, light foods and nothing too fancy or fussy. In most parts of the country, sum-mer brings a bounty of just-picked produce, and the fresher it is, the fewer the steps required to make delicious dishes. By keeping just a few staples on hand—cold-pressed olive oil, garlic cloves, fresh herbs and lemons, a good sea salt and freshly ground pepper—the cook will always be prepared to put to-gether a delectable, trouble-free spread. Options run from grilled goodies to marinated and tossed salads that give the hosts time to enjoy their company. Complete the treat by serving skewers of fresh, ripe, cut fruit for dessert—an easy, healthy and welcome alternative to rich and complicated or store-bought sweets. Creating a fun and festive atmo-sphere for backyard gatherings is easy, without a lot of fanfare. String up twin-

kly lights and use natural wax votive candles placed in empty jam and jelly jars to protect them from the wind. To ward off mosquitoes and generally keep bugs at bay, encircle the patio, deck or park picnic area with citronella candles or incense. Fire pits always make an outdoor gathering feel more special. A mesmerizing center of attention, they also warm up the evening as the tem-perature drops. To keep serving and cleanup easy, use eco-friendly disposables. Look for plates made from recycled content or bagasse (derived from sugar cane fiber), cutlery sourced from biodegradable, plant-based plastic and recycled-paper napkins. Give guests instant access to a nearby com-post bin, garbage can and recycling bin, or designated carry-away bags.

Happy summering!

Renée Loux is an organic chef, restau-rateur, green expert and media person-ality. Her books include Easy Green Living and The Balanced Plate. Visit ReneeLoux.com.

consciouseating

OUTDOOR ENTERTAININGBackyard & Picnic Party Foods

by Renée Loux

Tasty Ways to Savor Summer

Grilled Black Bean Quinoa PattyThese flavorful patties are a hearty and complete source of protein, a popu-lar, plant-based option for traditional burgers. Ground flaxseed mixed with water works to bind the ingredients together in place of eggs. When grill-ing, be careful to flip them gently, so that patties stay together; they’re equally delicious cooked in a skillet on the stove. Serve on a whole-grain pita and load on the toppings. For a gluten-free alternative, use ground tortilla chips instead of breadcrumbs.

Yields 6 to 8 burgers

1 15-oz can black beans, rinsed, drained and spread out to dry for 20 minutes; divide into two equal parts2 Tbsp Vegenaise2 tsp ground cumin1 tsp dried oregano1 tsp garlic powder¼ to ½ tsp crushed red pepper (optional)1 Tbsp ground flaxseed, mixed with 3 Tbsp water½ cup cooked quinoa½ cup breadcrumbs or ground tortilla chips, as needed1/3 cup finely chopped red onion¼ cup chopped cilantroSea salt Freshly ground black pepper

ToppersSalsaAvocado slicesLettuceSliced red onionPickles

1. Drain and rinse black beans in a colander. Shake and let stand for a few minutes for excess liquid to drain. Spread out on a clean, dry towel; blot dry with another clear, dry towel; and let stand to dry for 20 minutes. This can also be done in the oven—spread on a cookie sheet and dry at 300° F for 15 minutes.

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23natural awakenings July 2012

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2. In a food processor, place half of the beans, Vegenaise, cumin, oregano, garlic powder and crushed red pep-per. Chop in pulses to create a coarse purée. Transfer to a medium bowl.

3. In a small bowl, mix ground flax-seed and water. Let stand 5 minutes to thicken. Mix into the black bean mix-ture and add remaining beans, quinoa, breadcrumbs or ground tortilla chips, onion and cilantro. Mix until combined. If the mixture looks too wet to hold to-gether, add more breadcrumbs or ground tortilla chips. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

4. Form into 3- to 4-inch-circumfer-ence patties. If time allows, let chill in the refrigerator for 2 hours to firm and for flavors to develop.

5. On a grill preheated to medium-high and brushed with oil, cook patties until crisp and brown, turning once, 5 to 6 minutes on each side. Or heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat and cook until browned, turning once, 5 to 6 minutes on each side.

Grilled Portobello Mush-rooms with Quinoa, Toma-toes and HerbsGrilling mushrooms brings out their savory flavor. Stuffed with protein-rich quinoa, this dish is satisfying enough to be served as an entrée.

Yields 6 servings

6 Portobello mushrooms, stems and gills removed3 Tbsp olive oil1 tsp balsamic vinegar½ tsp dried thymeSea salt1 Tbsp olive oil3 scallions, chopped1 large clove garlic, minced¾ cup uncooked quinoa1½ cups water1 low-sodium vegetable bullion cube2 medium heirloom tomatoes, diced into ½-inch pieces2 Tbsp chopped herbs—basil, parsley and/or mintSea salt and freshly ground black

pepper to taste

1. Preheat grill to medium-high.

2. Whisk together olive oil, balsamic vinegar and thyme. Brush cleaned mushrooms with mixture and sprinkle with salt. Let stand 20 to 30 minutes.

3. Grill on each side until grill marks appear, about 4 minutes per side. Or roast mushrooms under the broiler un-til juicy, about 10 minutes (optional).

4. In a skillet with a tight-fitting lid, heat olive oil over medium heat, and sauté garlic and scallions with a pinch of salt and pepper just until fragrant, for about 1 minute. Add quinoa, water and bullion cube. Turn up heat, cover and bring to a boil. Stir once and reduce heat to low to simmer for 20 minutes or until all the liquid has been absorbed. Remove from heat and let stand for 10 minutes.

5. Fluff quinoa with a fork. Fold in to-matoes and herbs. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

6. Place mushrooms cap-side down on a serving platter. Fill the cavity of the mushrooms with the quinoa mixture. Serve warm or at room temperature.

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24 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

embarkon a new career path

enhanceyour holistic health practice

expand personal wellness

Weekend Programs for Busy People

Start Fall ‘12• Essential Oil & Aromatherapy• Hypnotherapy• Medical Qigong• Indigenous Wisdom Teachings

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Master Dowser Karen Rice King shows you how at workshops in

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See calendar this issue for events on July 21 and 22, 28 and [email protected]

303-665-0175

Watermelon Mediterranean Salad with Tomatoes, Cucumbers, Avocado and OlivesThis dish embodies the zenith of summer, when watermelon and tomatoes are at their height. Paired with refreshing cucumber, buttery avocado, savory olives and bright herbs, this pastiche of flavor and texture is a perfect accompaniment to any backyard or picnic party.

Yields 4 to 6 servings

3 medium heirloom tomatoes, cored and cut into ¾-inch pieces1 cup watermelon, cut into ¾-inch cubes1 cucumber, peeled, seeded and cut into ¾¾-inch cubes1 avocado, cut in half, pitted and cut into ¾-inch cubes½ cup pitted green olives, chopped (Castelvetrano olives recommended)1 Tbsp chopped basil1 Tbsp chopped mint2 Tbsp olive oil2 Tbsp white balsamic vinegar or champagne vinegarSea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

1. In a bowl, place tomatoes, watermelon, cucumber, avo-cado, olives, basil and mint. Toss gently.

2. In a small bowl, whisk together ol-ive oil, vinegar and a pinch of salt and pepper. Pour over tomato-watermelon mixture and toss gently to mix. Season to taste with more salt and pepper. Serve immediately.

Pesto Grilled Corn on the CobA pesto-packed twist on a backyard party classic, grilling corn in its husk yields tender kernels and a delectable natural sweetness.

Yields 6 servings

6 ears unhusked corn

Pesto1 cup packed basil leaves1 clove garlic2 Tbsp pine nuts1½ Tbsp lemon juice1 tsp sea salt1 tsp freshly ground black pepper6 Tbsp olive oil

1. Oil grill and preheat to medium high.

2. Fill a large bowl with cold water.

3. Keeping the husks attached at the base, peel back the husks of each cob and remove the silk. Cover the cobs again with the husk.

4. Soak the corncobs in cold water for 5 to 10 minutes to prevent husks from charring too quickly.

5. In a food processor, place basil, garlic, pine nuts, lemon juice, salt and pepper and chop in pulses for maximum mix-ing. With the motor running, slowly drizzle in olive oil. Set aside.

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25natural awakenings July 2012

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6. Place corn, covered in its husk on the grill. Cook for 3 to 4 minutes on each side. Remove from the grill, let it cool enough to touch and then remove husks. Return to grill and cook, turning to lightly char all sides, for an addi-tional 5 to 7 minutes total.

7. Remove from grill and generously brush with pesto. Sprinkle with sea salt and pepper if desired and serve hot.

Watermelon-Mint Limeade1 small watermelon (or half of a larger melon), diced1/3 cup fresh lime juice1/3 cup agave nectar2 Tbsp chopped mint1 Tbsp chopped basilPinch crushed sea salt2 cups ice

1. Using a chinois or other fine-mesh strainer, push the watermelon through the mesh using a sturdy wooden spoon, to push through all the liq-uid into a bowl, leaving behind the pulp and seeds. Pour the liquid into a pitcher with the lime juice, agave nec-tar and a pinch of salt. Chill well.

2. Just before serving, add the mint and basil to the liquid, and blend the mixture in the blender in two batches, adding a cup of ice to each batch.

Future fun: Freeze leftover portions into popsicles for an easy treat on another day.

Recipes from The Balanced Plate and Living Cuisine, by Renée Loux, and ReneeLoux.com; limeade recipe cour-tesy of Beth Bader, co-author of The Cleaner Plate Club.

Page 26: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

26 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

NOTE: All Calendar events must be received by the 12th of the month prior to publication and adhere to our guidelines. Email [email protected] for guidelines and to submit entries. Alternatively, visit SeattleAwakenings.com to submit online.

TUESDAY, JULY 3Health & Freedom with Team Northrup – 7-8:30pm. Join Kate Northrup Moller, co-creator of Team Northrup, for an intimate discussion to explore the relationship between the health of one’s body and their bank account. Learn how she and thousands of others have created optimal health and fi nancial freedom. Free for guests. Afl ac, 7030 Tacoma Mall Blvd, Ste 200, Tacoma. Registration required. TeamNorthrupTacoma.Eventbrite.com.

THURSDAY, JULY 5Health and Freedom with Team Northrup – 7-8:30pm. See July 3 description. Free for guests. 1520 Eastlake Ave E, Seattle. Registration required. TeamNorthrupSeattle2012.eventbrite.com.

FRIDAY, JULY 6Inner Alignment Group Session – 2-6pm. Burhan Gebhardt joins us from Germany for a new expan-sive way to receive Inner Alignment, a treatment that requires minimal contact and tangibly adjusts physical alignment issues. Participants remain clothed. $130. East West Bookshop, 6500 Roos-evelt Way NE, Seattle. Registration required. 206-523-3726. EastWestBookshop.com/events/3924.

SATURDAY, JULY 7Balance in Action - Travelling – 1-4pm. With LeeAnn Starovasnik. Whether you are taking a road trip this summer or fl ying off into the wild blue yonder, or simply commuting in Seattle, there are things you can do physically to support your comfort, ease and improve your well-being while you travel. Come and prepare to travel well this summer. $60/$45. M’illumino, 6921 Roo-sevelt Way NE, Rm 3, Seattle. 206-372-8822. [email protected].

calendarofevents

Inner Alignment Group Session – 2-6pm. See July 6 description. $130. East West Bookshop, 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Se-attle. Registration required. 206-523-3726. EastWestBookshop.com/events/3924.

MONDAY, JULY 9WuHsing Tao School Open House – 6:30-8pm. Wu Hsing Tao School provides high quality academic and clinical training in traditional Five Element Acupuncture and Psychology. Come visit for an opportunity to see the school, interact with current students and to fi nd out more information about our programs. Late summer classes begin August 3rd. Registration required. 206-324-7188. [email protected]. WuHsing.org.

Health and Freedom with Team Northrup – 7-8:30pm. See July 3 description. Free for guests. 1520 Eastlake Ave E, Seattle. Registration required. Bit.ly/seattlehealthfreedom.

TUESDAY, JULY 10Essential Oils for Wellness – 6-7:30pm. Find relief naturally with the oldest alternative therapy. We will discuss the many applications of these miracle oils and learn how to use them for migraines, insomnia, pain relief, anti-depressant, allergies, hormone balance, eczema and more. Island Hospi-tal, 1211 24th St, Anacortes. Registration required. 425-210-2532. CircleOfHealingEssentialOils.com.

Using Intuition for Space Clearing – 7-8:30pm. Creating clear home and business space nourishes and inspires healthy, balanced and prosperous lives. Join intuitive Robyn M Fritz MA and Fallon, the citrine Lemurian quartz crystal, for a fun, hands-on look at clearing your space with their Space Co-operatingSM technique. Explores rituals and tools,

including crystals. Bring your crystals. $10. East West Bookshop, 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 800-587-6002. EastWestBookshop.com.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 11Postpartum Doula Skills Workshop – July 11-14. The postpartum doula helps meet this need by educating, nurturing and empowering mothers and families toward confi dence in their new roles. Doulas provide assistance with breastfeeding, newborn and mother care, and referrals to commu-nity resources as needed. $629, Full-Registration. Bastyr University, 14500 Juanita Dr NE, Kenmore. Registration required. 425-602-3361. Bastyr.edu.

Skin Care from Nature – 6:30-8:30pm. Treat skin gently with soothing natural ingredients. Come to this hands-on class and be guided step-by-step in making natural skincare products. We will learn to make toners, anti-wrinkle serums, skincare scrubs with sea salts, clay masks, cleansers and much more. $30. Michelle’s home, near Broadway Ave, Snohomish. Registration required. 425-210-2532. CircleOfHealingEssentialOils.com.

THURSDAY, JULY 12The Sacred Language of the Human Body Talk-shop and Book Signing – 7-9pm. With Mona Delfi na. As a medical intuitive, vibrational healer and massage therapist, Mona Delfi no has been an exceptional body worker for over 20 years. Coming into this fi eld of healing naturally, her passion and abilities as a healer became apparent at a very young age. $20. Friends, Philosophy & Tea, 13850 Bel-Red Rd, Bellevue. 206-755-4044. FriendsPhilosophyandTea.com.

SATURDAY, JULY 14Yoga for Hope – 9am-1pm. Yoga for Hope is an outdoor yoga class for beginners and experts alike to promote the benefi ts of yoga practice for health and well-being and raise crucial funds to support research at City of Hope to fi ght cancer and other life-threatening diseases. Participants will enjoy live music and sampling from local vendors. $35 pre-purchase or $45 day of event. Seattle Center, Seattle. Registration required. 425-646-9530. YogaForHope.org/seattle.

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Page 27: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

27natural awakenings July 2012

Introducing Natural Awakenings’ Detoxified Iodine at Our Webstore, www.NAWebstore.comIodine is a mineral that is a vital element of the human body and is essential to the process of building new cells. To comply with Healthy Heart Guidelines from the AMA, many people have decreased their salt intake. Detoxified Iodine nutritionally aids the thyroid to function properly and regulate many metabolic processes, prevent fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, weight gain, depres-sion and goiters associated with iodine deficiencies. And, the nuclear regulatory industry recommends iodine for protection from excessive unnatural radiation.

Order your supply today!NAWebstore.com now offers Detoxified Iodine in convenient ½ oz. amber dropper bottles. Also, while visiting our webstore you can shop by product categories that include beauty and skin care, home and office, books and music, fitness, clothing, accessories, kids and pets. It’s your one-stop, eco-friendly and healthy living destination!

Intuitive Crystal Consultations and Energy Work – July 14, 25 & 28. 12-5 pm. Intuitive Robyn M. Fritz, MA and Fallon, the citrine Lemurian quartz crystal, offer practical, inspiring intuitive insight. Explore mystery: tap intuition; examine relationships, career, and creativity; fi nd balanced healing; clear home and business space and more. $50 1/2 hour; $85/hour. East West Bookshop, 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle, WA. 1-800-587-6002. EastWestBookShop.com.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 18Vegetarians of Washington Monthly Dining Event – 6:30pm. One doesn’t have to be a veg-etarian to enjoy delicious vegetarian food. Enjoy a gourmet, multi-course vegetarian dinner (dairy and egg free) catered by a different restaurant or chef each month and hear an insightful speech from our president, Amanda, on a key vegetarian topic, and meet lots of interesting people. All attendees will receive a special free gift to take home. $15 plus tax for members, $20 plus tax for guests and non members. Children are welcome. The Mount Baker Club, 2811 Mt Rainier Dr S, Seattle. Register: 206-706-2635 or VegOfWa.org/MonthlyDining.aspx.

Spiritual Dating – 7-8:30pm. Make dating fun and easy and fi nd the love of your life quickly. Kathryn Alice, author of the bestseller Love Will Find You is the U.S.’s foremost expert on soulmates and spiritual dating. $20. East West Bookshop, 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 206-523-3726. EastWestBookshop.com/events/2655.

SATURDAY, JULY 21Dowsing & Earth Acupuncture Training – July 21-22. Learn how to dowse the property for geo-

pathic and man-made stress, and install copper L-rods to create greater health and well-being. Cost includes tools to dowse one’s own property. $390 with discount for couples. Bellingham. Registra-tion required. 303-665-0175. KarenRiceKing.com.

Qi Revolution – July 21-24. This massive qigong event teaches high-powered breathing techniques, qigong energy movement exercises, naturo-pathic food-healing and more. 4 days of Training only $99. Tacoma Convention Center, Tacoma. QiRevolution.com.

Balance in Action - Running – 1-4pm. With LeeAnn Starovasnik. Whether you run in circles or after a ball, a little one, or for the bus, you can improve your ease and comfort. Running was so natural, we ran around a lot as children, and this natural process can be relearned using the Harmo-nious RunningTM program. $60/$45. M’illumino, 6921 Roosevelt Way NE, Rm 3, Seattle. 206-372-8822. [email protected].

Kirtan Concert With Gina Sala – 6:30-8:30pm. Be transformed by the power of mantra. Gina was a principal singer for Cirque du Soleil’s show “O”. Gina began singing and chanting at age 3 when she lived with her parents in an ashram in Canada. $15 in advance. Three Trees Yoga & Healing Arts Cen-ter, 204 S 348th St, Ste 2, Federal Way. Registration required. 253-815-9642. ThreeTreesYoga.com.

Evening of Cosmic Comedy – 7:30-9pm. Swami Beyondananda, whose favorite yoga pose is tongue-in-cheek, is coming to Seattle. Beyon-dananda offers “comedy disguised as wisdom, and wisdom disguised as comedy.” If you have an answerable question, the Swami promises to have a questionable answer for you. $20 in

advance, $25 day of. East West Bookshop, 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 206-523-3726. EastWestBookshop.com/events/3940.

SUNDAY, JULY 22How to Lead a Healing Retreat – 3-5pm. Have you considered sharing your gifts at sacred set-tings? Have you wondered what it would be like to organize and lead your own retreat? It could be yoga, meditation, tai chi, chant, dance, heal-ing or whatever. Join professional retreat leader Roy Holman to ease apprehension and help start your planning. $15. East West Bookshop, 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 206-523-3726. EastWestBookshop.com/events/3935.

MONDAY, JULY 23Yoga and Inspiration – 6:30-8:30pm. With Michelle Ringgold. This workshop will unite yoga, meditation, and refl ection through writing. Move between yoga asana, seated and walking meditation to bring balance and calm to your mind and body while letting what rises fall onto the paper. All lev-els of experience welcome. $25. M’illumino, 6921 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. Registration required. 206-525-0363. [email protected].

Health & Freedom with Team Northrup – 7-8:30pm. See July 3 description. Free. Roy Street Coffee & Tea, 700 Broadway Ave E, Seattle. Registration required. 206-552-8819. Bit.ly/seattlehealthfreedom.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 25Essential Oil 1st Aid Kits & Remedies – 6:30-8:30pm. Learn how to safely and effectively use

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28 Seattle SeattleAwakenings.com

Fee for classifieds is $1.00 per word per month. To place listing, email content to [email protected]. Deadline is the 12th of the month.

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ADULT FAMILY HOMES

We’ll help you take care of your aging parents or other loved ones. RN-owned, 17 yrs. experience in elderly care. Assisted by professional and long-term employed staff. Located in the Wedgewood and Meadowbrook areas. References and testimonials available. www.viewhavenhomes.net, Call Josie @ 206-679-9082, 206-362-3650.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

Nutraceutical & herbal DNA research company moving HQ to Seattle. Looking for home-based business builders. Local training, leads [email protected].

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save the dateSATURDAY, AUGUST 18Ocean Shores Body & Soul Festival – August 18-

essential oils for bug repellants, cuts, sore muscles & joints, hydrating skin and hair, sunburns, ver-tigo, food poisoning and motion sickness. Each student makes a fi rst aid spray, antibacterial oil blend, asthma/allergy blend for their kit. $50. Circle of Healing Center, near Broadway Ave, Snohomish. Registration required. 425-210-2532. CircleOfHealingEssentialOils.com.

FRIDAY, JULY 27Faerieworlds Festival 2012 – July 27-29. World’s largest Faerie festival featuring art, literature, crafts and music from across the globe. Every summer in the Pacifi c Northwest, Circle of Healing Oils & fans of Faerie from around the globe gather in the wooded meadows of Eugene, Oregon, to experi-ence the unique magic that is Faerieworlds. Mt. Pisgah, Eugene, OR. 425-210-2532. FaerieWorlds.com.

SATURDAY, JULY 28Dowsing & Earth Acupuncture Training – July 28-29. Learn how to dowse a property and reduce stressful energy fi elds, resulting in greater health and well-being. $390 single or $300/each for a couple includes entire take-home-kit. Flower Song Farm, Near Loomis. 303-665-0175. KarenRiceK-ing.com.

NW SolarFest – 10am-6pm. Enjoy a great day while learning about solar, wind, geothermal, electric vehicles and more along with food and entertainment. Free. Shoreline Commu-nity College, 16101 Greenwood Ave N, Shoreline. 206-306-9233. ShorelineSolar.org.

TUESDAY, JULY 31Travelling the Maze – 7-8:30pm. As publisher of New Spirit Journal, Krysta Gibson has delved into many different paths, read hundreds of books and interviewed many teachers. In this class she gives the keys to walking the maze without getting lost and talks about some of the various schools of thoughts, practices, and techniques available. $10. East West Bookshop, 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 206-523-3726. EastWestBookshop.com/events/2350.

19. The Body and Soul Festival is a holistic lifestyle event that provides an opportunity for individuals to explore their options in creating healthier and more conscious lifestyles. Featuring vendors and classes. $3/day or $5 weekend pass includes all classes. Ocean Shores Lions Club, 832 Ocean Shores Blvd, Ocean Shores. OceanShoresFestival.com.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10FREE Program Information Session – 6-9pm. Spend an enlightening evening exploring Bastyr’s four new non-credit weekend programs: Essential Oils & Aromatherapy, Hypnotherapy, Indigenous Wisdom Teachings, & Medical Qigong. Start a new career, add additional skill sets to your health care practice, or enhance personal & family health. Meet the instructors & attend two mini-workshops free. Anyone is welcome. Free. Bastyr University, 14500 Juanita Dr. NE, Kenmore. Registration required. 425-602-3152. Bastyr.edu/Continuing-Education.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16Heal Your Life Workshop Leader Training – Sept 16-23. Become a licensed Heal Your Life workshop leader in the philosophy of Louise Hay. Complete manuals and materials provided. This training is approved by Louise Hay. $3795 special for Natural Awakenings readers includes lodging and most meals. Bahia Hotel, Mission Bay Dr, San Diego. Registration required. 800-969-4584. HealYourLifeTraining.com.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22Hypnotherapy: Awareness & Integration – “Awareness & Integration” (50 hours) is one of two courses in Bastyr’s non-credit Hypnotherapy Train-ing Program. Take this course separately or also take “Transformation & Healing” to complete the 100-hour program. Each seminar is held over two weekends. No prior experience needed. Start a new career or add a new skill set to your practice. Any-one is welcome. $635. Bastyr University, 14500 Juanita Dr NE, Kenmore. Registration required. 425-602-3152. Bastyr.edu/Continuing-Education.

Medical Qigong Self-Care: Qigong I – Bastyr is offering two new non-credit Medical Qigong certifi cate programs. Qigong I is the fi rst of three courses in the “Medical Qigong Self-Care” pro-gram. Learn to cultivate Qi to maintain a healthier body/mind. General public & health care practitio-ners welcome. Practitioners who complete the Self-Care Program can go on to take three additional courses to become Medical Qigong Therapists. $1125. Bastyr University, 14500 Juanita Dr NE, Kenmore. Registration required. 425-602-3152. Bastyr.edu/Continuing-Education.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5Essential Oils: Foundations – October 5-7. The “Foundations” class is the fi rst class in the new Essential Oil & Aromatherapy Certifi cate Program. Take this class alone as an excellent introduction to using essential oils, or continue on to complete the remaining 7 seminars in the program. No prior experience needed. General public, health care professionals, estheticians, spa therapists, & wellness professionals welcome. $375 . Bastyr University, 14500 Juanita Dr NE, Kenmore. Registration required. 425-602-3152. Bastyr.edu/Continuing-Education.

Page 29: July 2012 - Seattle Natural Awakenings

29natural awakenings July 2012

ongoingevents

sundayCascadia Hikes – 8am-12pm. Learn about local and natural history, sustainability and ecology while viewing waterfalls and wildlife on these guided half-day hikes. Includes hotel pick up and drop off, nature guide, refreshments, transportation, and entry fees. $95. Register: EvergreenEscapes.com/Seattle-Hiking-Tour.asp.

Community Yoga Class – 9-10:15am. Beginner pay-what-you-can yoga class. All welcome. Taught by a registered yoga teacher. Donations accepted. Three Trees Yoga & Healing Arts Center, 204 S. 348th St, Ste 2, Federal Way. 253-815-9642. ThreeTreesYoga.com.

Wing Chun Martial Arts – 11am-1pm. Wing Chun is a martial art that can be used for general fi tness; to relieve stress, improve refl exes, coordi-nation speed and power and more. $10. Friends, Philosophy & Tea, 13850 Bel-Red Rd, Bel-levue,. 206-349-9376. [email protected]. FriendsPhilosophyAndTea.com.

Feldenkrais® Awareness Through Move-ment – 6:30-7:45pm. No class July 23rd. With Becci Parsons. $20/drop-in, $75/5 prepaid classes. M’illumino, 6921 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 206-525-0363. M-illumino.com.

mondayBreast Feeding Class – 10:30am. With Renee Beebe and Lauren Harris. Get questions answered by an expert, check your baby’s weight and boost confi dence in this weekly drop-in support group. $15 suggested donation. Dragonfly Holistic Healing, 760 N. 34th St, Seattle. 206-356-7252. Dragonfl yHolisticHealing.com.

Cafe Noevir – 7-8:15pm. 2nd Mon. This is the opportunity to discover the secrets Japanese women have known for years. Reverse the signs of aging and enjoy younger more “Radiant Skin” with Noevir’s herbal, botanical and marine based ingredients. Available to experience now. Free. Hilton Garden Inn, 22600 Bothell-Everett Hwy, Bothell. 425-238-7052. [email protected].

tuesdayUrban Forest Restoration – 10am. Nature Consortium hosts volunteer work parties in the West Duwamish Greenbelt beginning with a short informal forest ecology workshop followed by performing restoration activities, including planting native species, removing invasive species, mulch-ing and more. Register: 206-923-0853 or NatureC.org/Volunteer.

Seattle Greendrinks – 5:30pm. 2nd Tues. Informal social networking to connect and unite those work-ing or interested in environmental issues. Locations

vary. Details: SeattleGreendrinks.org.

Sustaining Vitality Qigong – 7-9pm. Discover Chinese Qigong, the study of internal energy and the natural way to enhance or maintain a healthy energetic lifestyle. Class includes medi-tation and movement exercises. Suitable for all levels including beginners. $10/class. Phinney Neighborhood Center, 6532 Phinney Ave N, Seattle, Rm 5. Contact Dennis at 425-775-9609. [email protected]. Fmi-Qigong.com.

Tribal Style Bellydance – 7-9pm. With Shay Moore. Classes get people moving to the global groove as they develop core tribal bellydance movements with strength, grace, and fl exibility. Women of all ages, shapes, sizes, and experience welcome. $75 for 6 week session. M’Illumino, 6921 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. Registration required. 206-525-0363. DeepRootsDance.com.

wednesdayFeldenkrais® Awareness Through Movement – 9-10am. With LeeAnn Starovasnik. Engage the brain and body in new ways while learning to move more easily, more comfortably and even more playfully. $20/drop-in, $75/5 prepaid classes. M’illumino, 6921 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 206-525-0363. M-illumino.com.

La Leche League of Seattle – 10:15am. 3rd Wed. Good Shepherd Center, Wallingford, Seattle. 206-304-9153.

Free Energetic Healing Clinic – 2-6pm. Expe-rience the powerful healing energies of Pranic Healing Therapy to help overcome depression, stress, anxiety, grief, pain, disease, negative thoughts and emotions, and more. Energize one’s system to increase health, well-being and overall vitality. Free. Friends, Philosophy & Tea, 13850 Bel-Red Rd, Bellevue. 425-641-4364. FriendsPhilosophyandTea.com.

Wednesday Wellness Talk – 7pm-8pm. 3rd Wed. Join us for a series of free monthly talks on a variety of health and wellness topics on the third Wednesday of each month. Topics to be announced - check website for updates. Space is limited; please call to reserve a seat. Free. Butterfl y Bal-ance Wellness Center, 3515 SW Alaska St, 2nd Fl, West Seattle. Registration required. 206-755-9900. Butterfl yBalance.com.

thursdayBaby Diaper Service 101 – 6:30-7:30pm. 2nd Thurs. Mark Stief, owner, will present the ins and outs of diaper service, share best practice cloth diapering techniques and educate expect-ant parents on the health and environmental benefi ts of cloth diapers. $10/family. Parent Trust for Washington Children, 2200 Rainier Ave S, Seattle. Registration required. 206-634-2229.

BabyDiaperService.net/Baby/Diapering-101.

Feldenkrais® Awareness Through Movement – 6:30-7:30pm. See Wednesday description. $20/drop-in, $75/5 prepaid classes. M’illumino, 6921 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 206-525-0363. M-illumino.com.

Monthly DIY Meetup and Ask an Expert – 6-8pm. 2nd Thurs. West Seattle Tool Library hosts expert DIY coaches who are willing to answer questions about current and future proj-ects. These open and informal events cover green remodeling and design, solar, water harvesting and edible gardening. Free. Youngstown Cul-tural Arts Center, 4408 Delridge Way SW, Seattle. 206-317-4671. WSToolLibrary.org.

Weston A Price Foundation Seattle Meeting – 6-9pm. 3rd Thurs. With Rebecca Oshiro, BS in nutrition from Bastyr University. Covering the basics of vitamin D – its role in human metabolism, defi ciency and relation to disease states. Also cover-ing the pros and cons of supplements vs using the sun as a source of vitamin D. Potluck begins at 6 followed by presentation at 7. Firefl y Kitchens, 844 NW 49th St, Seattle.

fridayInterPlay – 10:30am-12pm. An improvisational practice that playfully explores the things a body can do: move, make sounds, tell stories, sing, and experience stillness. Based on life-affi rming body wisdom principles and the transformative power of play. $10 suggested donation. M-illumino, 6921 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle. 206-525-0363. M-illumino.com.

saturdayFeldenkrais® Awareness Through Movement– 9-10:15am. With LeeAnn Starovasnik and Vicki Robinson. Learn to move more easily and more comfortably while improving your sense of balance and overall well being. $20/drop-in, $75/5 prepaid classes. M’illumino, 6921 Roosevelt Way NE, Rm 3, Seattle. 206-525-0363. M-illumino.com.

Who wants to know about yourEvent/Class/Workshop?

$20 per calendar listing. No charge for nonprofits producing events free to the

public.Submit by the 12th of each month at SeattleAwakenings.com.

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ACCOUNTING

C. BROOKS SCHOMBURG, CPABrooks [email protected]

Offer ing a fu l l r ange o f bookkeeping, accounting, tax, and small business consulting services, we focus on your unique tax, accounting and consulting needs.

BEDDING

SEATTLE NATURAL MATTRESS206-419-9550SeattleNaturalMattress.com

Manufacturer and retailer of natural, chemical-free latex mattresses designed to provide a comfortable and supportive alternative to traditional spring mattresses. See ad page 8.

BODYTALK

JOY OF HEALTH SOLUTIONSPatricia SullivanSeattle & Woodinville206-920-5528JoyOfHealthSolutions.com

Get to the cause of your issue or ‘story’ easily and with great results! Resolving anxiety, pain, allergies, digestive, immune i s sues , i n ju ry, s t ruc tu ra l challenges and more.

CHILDREN’S SERVICES

BABY DIAPER SERVICE206-634-2229BabyDiaperService.Net

Committed to providing 100% pure cotton diapers for your baby. Convenient weekly pickup and delivery of cloth diapers and accessories. Better for baby’s skin, more sustainable than washing at home. See ad page 23.

CONSTRUCTION

PATHWAY DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION206-937-4809PathwayDC.com

Design, build and remodeling contractor specializing in sustainable, healthy homes and the symbiotic relationship between humankind and nature.

DENTISTS

INTEGRATIVE DENTISTRY9730 3rd Ave NE, Suite 205Seattle, WA [email protected]

We are a holistic dental practice specializing in safe mercury filling removal, non-surgical periodontal care, and TMJ/orthodontic treatments. We welcome new patients! See ad page 10.

ESSENTIAL OILS

CIRCLE OF HEALING Snohomish, WA 425-210-2532CircleOfHealingEssentialOils.com

Offering aromatherapy products to help live a healthier, happier and more balanced life using all organic ingredients when available so you can be sure that you are receiving the most effective products possible. Local classes and hands-on workshops available.

HEALTH CENTERS

BASTYR CENTER3670 Stone Way N • Seattle, WA 98103206-834-4100BastyrCenter.org

Bastyr Center offers naturopathic medicine, acupuncture and Oriental medicine, nutrition counseling, Chinese herbal medicine, short-term psychological counseling, and more. Our Team Care approach to healing ensures you’ll see a licensed practitioner and two to three advanced student clinicians while receiving individualized treatments and generous practitioner time.

HEALTH FOOD

TRUHEALTH, INC.18001 Bothell-Everett HwySuite 109Bothell, WA [email protected]

A unique health food store o f f e r i n g r a w m i l k , pastured eggs, grass fed meats and a variety of

organic and gluten-free foods as well as the highest q u a l i t y s u p p l e m e n t s a n d s e r v i c e s .

HEALTHY HOME

LULLABY ORGANICS800-401-8301CustServ@LullabyOrganics.comLullabyOrganics.com

Lullaby Organics offers safe, healthy mattresses, bed-ding, sleepwear, toys, gear, furn-i t u r e , a n d a i r

filtration systems so your whole family can get a pure night’s rest.

MASSAGE

SOARING SPIRITS MASSAGENE Ravenna NeighborhoodSeattle, WA 98115206-412-5170Laura@SoaringSpiritsLightCenter.comSoaringSpiritsLightCenter.com

Offering aromatherapy, Raindrop Therapy, Shiatsu, deep tissue, and Swedish massage, tailored to your sense of pressure since 1993. Therapeutic grade essential oils by Young Living.

Connecting you to the leaders in natural healthcare and green living in our community. To find out how you can be included in the Community Resource Guide, email [email protected] to request our media kit.

naturaldirectory

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MEDICAL

AMY FASIG, ND2206 Queen Anne Ave N, Ste 204Seattle, WA 98109206-599-6030Dr.AmyFasig@gmail.comQueenAnneNaturalMedicine.com

Specializing in women’s health, hormone balancing, and immune wellness. Saturday and evening appts. available. Covered by most insurance plans.

DR. VENESSA WAHLER, NDBroadway Building1620 Broadway, Ste 204Seattle, WA [email protected]

Special interests in natural weight loss (including HCG diet), stress m a n a g e m e n t a n d f o o d sensitivities. Call today for your complimentary 15 minute introductory consultat ion! Accepts insurance.

THRIVE NATURAL FAMILY MEDICINEDr. Scott Moser, ND LMP5020 Meridian Ave N, Ste 104Seattle, WA 98103206-257-1488Info@ThriveNaturalMedicine.comThriveNaturalMedicine.com

Thrive offers botanical medicine, nutrition, physical medicine, nutraceuticals and counseling to treat the whole family. Most insurance plans

accepted. Book an appointment today and Thrive!

MOVEMENT CENTERS

M’ILLUMINO6921 Roosevelt Way NESeattle, WA [email protected]

At m’illumino, we are dedicated to your transformation through movement. Take a class, try private sessions, discover your own innate grace. See ad page 9.

NATURAL PRODUCTS

[email protected]

Live more sustainably with GladRags washable menstrual pads and menstrual cups. Join the community of women who have decided to make a lower carbon footprint every month!

REIKI

REIKI RANCHEnergy Healing CenterChehalis, WA360-748-4426ReikiRanch.com

All levels of Reiki certifi cation including laser Reiki, advanced Reiki energy training, and cosmic energy healing classes.

RESTAURANTS

THRIVE CAFE1026 NE 65th StSeattle, WA 98115206-525-0300GenerationThrive.com

Thrive in Seattle offers fresh, vegetarian and 95% organic i n g r e d i e n t s i n t h e i r smoothies, juices, pies, salads and decadent entrees.

SKINCARE

MY MAMA’S LOVEMy-Mamas-Love.com

My Mama’s Love skin care products use safe, non-toxic and hypoallergenic organic ingredients. Our products don’t just mask symptoms; they address the underlying causes of a skin condition. Locally owned and operated.

VETERINARIANS

ANCIENT ARTS HOLISTIC VET110 N 36th StSeattle, WA [email protected]

Veterinary acupuncture and natural medicine for animals rebalances health safely, gently, peacefully. Improve pets’ quality of life the way nature intended—your pet will thank you.

YOGA

KANJIN [email protected]

Kanjin Yoga is a path to abundant health and wellness helping people live better inside their bodies. Specializing in Yoga Nidra, Gentle Hatha Yoga, we offer classes and workshops for groups and organizations.

OVERNIGHT ACCOMMODATIONS

M’ILLUMINO6921 Roosevelt Way NESeattle, WA [email protected]/P/Retreat.html

Escape from the city without having to travel 100 miles. Relax in the steam room and infrared sauna, and have lunch in the private garden. See ad page 9.

PERSONAL GROWTH

LIFT YOUR SPIRITS WITH DENA MARIE!425-350-5448Dena@Dena-Marie.comLiftYourSpiritswithDenaMarie.com

Classes, Workshops and Re-Treats that will Lift Your Spirits! Individual consultations by appointment.

SONGDOG HEALING & DREAMCRAFTCamilla Paynter, M.A.206-914-3769SongdogDreaming.com

Spiritually informed hypnotherapy and Reiki for life transitions, personal growth, healing and more. Connect with deep inner wisdom and live life’s bigger story.

PLUMBING

GREEN T PLUMBINGSam [email protected]

Full plumbing services ranging from fi xing leaky faucets to design and installation. Sustainable and independent. Email or text a photo of your problem for free professional opinion.

PRINTING

SNOHOMISH PUBLISHING CO.605 2nd StSnohomish, WA 98290206-523-7548SnoPub.com

Family owned publishing company providing professional design, printing and mailing services for magazines, books, brochures, business cards, posters, tickets, forms and more.

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