Saturday, May 22, 2010

Book: "Fit Nurse: Your Total Plan for Getting Fit and Living Well"


Book: 'Fit Nurse: Your Total Plan for Getting Fit and Living Well'

By Gary Scholar, MEd

Reviewed by Eileen P. Williamson

Fit Nurse
opens nurses’ eyes to author Gary Scholar’s thesis that, regardless of the shifts they work—even nights—nurses can make personal shifts to wellness. Scholar is a nationally recognized health and wellness consultant on a mission—to help nurses create healthier lifestyles for themselves.

This book is a not-to-be-missed practical guide for nurses who want to live well and live better. Scholar points out the disconnect between how much nurses do to promote the health of others and how little they to do to promote their own wellness and well-being. To help them change that, he invites nurses to examine their frequent failures as well as their sporadic and short-lived successes. He challenges them to honestly assess what he terms their nurse personalities: their chronic inability to relax, their collective reluctance to exercise and their inconsistent—and worse—eating habits. He even helps them understand the “why” of their aching backs. And, he convinces them they can change all of it!

Fit Nurse demonstrates that the time for allowing one’s self to be overloaded, overextended and overwhelmed is over—that it’s time instead for self-belief, self-management and self-empowerment. From putting a kitchen pantry through “rehab” and planning new, different and healthy menus to developing “surgically precise” shopping skills (including Code Blue interventions and avoidance of “dangerous” aisles), Scholar makes it clear that food—whether craved or comforting—is not the enemy. The real enemy is how food is viewed, used and “experienced.”

Nurses love acronyms, and this guide for getting fit and living well includes some new and easy-to-remember ones, including FINE (Frequently Ignoring Needs and Emotions), GUILT (Guaranteeing You Infinite Lifetime Therapy) and, of course, the ever-popular ER (Exercising Regularly). With its fun and motivational interactive exercises done in “group wellness challenge” settings, its how-to’s for award ceremonies in which “Golden Nightingale Wellness Wings” are bestowed and its “Livewell” hints, quotes and “confessions” from nurses around the country, Fit Nurse is a book that readers will stay with from beginning to end. In fact, it’s one that’s likely to make them run to the kitchen to prepare and cook healthy food, work on their ergonomics or strength training, or sign up for Pilates or yoga classes.

Scholar believes that fitness comes from doing what we love, and that all we need to do is find that love. In this 200-plus-page book, he has given us one really great way to do just that! RNL

Eileen P. Williamson, RN, MSN, is vice president, Nursing Communications & Initiatives, Gannett Healthcare Group.

Published 4/25/2010 , Vol. 36, No. 1

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

How to Meditate by Chris Willitis

As I sit here recalling my first dance with meditation, it was no easy task. Quieting the mind. The impossible task, right? Our ego is so used to running the show, we don’t become aware of how dominating it is until we actually try to calm and quiet our minds. Make no mistake, chances are the first few times you try to meditate will seem virtually impossible, frustrating, and even painful. No worries though, this is perfectly natural.

Below you will find some of my personal advice if you’re curious about giving meditation a try… Come on in, the water’s nice!

START SMALL AND EASE INTO IT

* Try to meditate for only 4-5 minutes at first.
* Add one minute every 1-2 days until you can meditate at least 15-20 minutes.
* The more you practice, the easier and more enjoyable it becomes. Give it a little time and persist.

DON’T “DO” ANYTHING

* Meditation isn’t something you actually do or accomplish, it’s the state of non-doing (our natural state).
* Don’t try to get it right, or have any expectations. What happens during your session – sleep, mind wandering, insight, deep relaxation, etc. – is exactly what was supposed to happen. Just allow and let go.
* When thoughts enter your mind, be mindful of them and acknowledge they’re there. Then, gently return your awareness to your breath or mantra.

IT’S ALL ABOUT ROUTINE

* Build it into your schedule so that it’s automatic (like brushing your teeth, showering, etc.).
* Think of it as daily physical, mental, and spiritual nourishment—make it a MUST!

My challenge to you is the same one Dr. Mann (UofM Professor) gave me:

1. Experiment with a few different kinds of meditation (TM, mindfulness, guided, music, etc.)
2. Choose one or more practices that you would like to explore further.
3. Journal your experiences over a period of two weeks (3-4 sentences).
4. Craft your own customized meditation practice.


Enjoy the gift of meditating. Namaste.