Self-Care Archives | Natural Women's Health Institute https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/category/diy/self-care/ Dr. Caroline Peterson Fri, 16 Jun 2023 22:27:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 How to Prepare for Your Healing Vacation or Treatment Series https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2023/06/30/how-to-prepare-for-your-healing-vacation-or-treatment-series/ https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2023/06/30/how-to-prepare-for-your-healing-vacation-or-treatment-series/#respond Fri, 30 Jun 2023 01:58:17 +0000 https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/?p=3536 When you are planning your Healing Vacation in Sarasota, Florida with Dr. Caroline Peterson, or prepare for your healing series locally, there are several things you can do at home to help optimize your treatment. You could be coming to Florida for a Healing Vacation, or beginning your local healing series, for many different [...]

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When you are planning your Healing Vacation in Sarasota, Florida with Dr. Caroline Peterson, or prepare for your healing series locally, there are several things you can do at home to help optimize your treatment. You could be coming to Florida for a Healing Vacation, or beginning your local healing series, for many different conditions including:

  • Chronic Pelvic Pain and Pelvic Congestion
  • Postpartum Renewal
  • Varicosities
  • Digestion Problems
  • Infertility
  • Period Problems or a Difficult Menopause
  • Chronic Back or Neck Pain and Headaches
  • Prolapse or Incontinence
  • Preparation Before Surgery or Manual Therapy After Surgery

These conditions each require about 20 hours of manual hands-on therapy to treat. You will also need about one hour of health history, and about two hours for discussing exercise, posture, movement patterns, diet, and lifestyle factors.

If you have time and interest, you can begin some essential self-care components at home one month before your Healing Vacation. If you are able to address kidney/lymph detox, inflammation, adhesions, and breath (at a minimum) prior to coming, your treatment sessions should move forward with few side effects. Here is the full list of things to address prior to coming, if possible.

Because my approach is strongly based in the fluid body, it is important that the detox systems of the fluid body are prepared to receive the extra flow. I recommend Kidney Care by Quicksilver Scientific. Available through Fullscript at a 10% discount. (Link at the bottom of the page https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/)

Inflammation

People who are highly inflamed have difficulty tolerating manual therapy. That is because all manual therapy, no matter how gentle, destroys cells. Cellular debris is always inflammatory and requires more of the detox systems of the body. The most common cause of inflammation is consumption of refined carbohydrates (like bread, cookies, and crackers. Even gluten free) including sugar.

  • Eliminate or reduce refined carbohydrates and sugar
  • Eliminate or reduce alcohol, tobacco, pot/vaping, other drugs
  • Consider a natural anti-inflammatory supplement like D-Flam by Protocol for Life Balance. Available through Fullscript at a 10% discount. (Link at the bottom of the page https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/

Adhesions

Adhesions are another way of saying scar tissue. Adhesions nail organs and tissue in place and create pain and dysfunction. Adhesions are commonly caused by inflammation, surgery, and congestion among other things. Castor oil packs are a terrific way to dissolve adhesions and release tissue so manual therapy is easier. You can buy pre-made castor oil packs online, or make your own. I recommend using castor oil packs for two hours at a time in one location, two days in a row, then take a day off. You will need an electric heating pad to drive the castor oil into the tissue. https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2018/04/13/castor-oil-pack/

Where to use the castor oil packs in preparation:

  • Upper back across shoulders where the neck meets the back. This area is very important because the whole body drains here.
  • Bra line and lower ribcage of back. This area is very important because it is a lymphatic watershed, the home of the liver and kidneys, and the location of the respiratory diaphragm.
  • Belly button up to chest (covering lower ribcage). This area is very important because the liver, part of GI tract, and respiratory diaphragm are here and everything from the belly, pelvis, and legs drains up through this region.
  • Belly button to the pubic bone in the front of the pelvis. This are is very important because the large intestines, uterus, bladder, and rectum are here and everything drains out of the pelvis and legs through this area.

Venous Support

If you have varicose veins, pelvic congestion syndrome, or other evidence of venous issues (like pain worsens with standing or walking) it would be beneficial to support the veins with herbs before coming for your healing vacation.

Liver Detox Support

Because your body’s elimination systems will be required to work harder with manual therapy, it’s not a bad idea to support the liver.

Digestion

If you have any kind of digestive issue, consider doing the Whole 30 before you come. The Whole 30 is a good way to temporarily restrict all the top food allergins and sensitivities as well as sugar. The Whole 30 decreases inflammation, potentially kills yeast and bacterial gut overgrowth, and gives you an idea of which foods you are sensitive to when you add each food in one at a time looking for reactions.

Lymphatic Drainage

It is important to start getting the lymph moving through the upper chest and upper back since the whole body drains here. One simple way of supporting this process is to end each shower with cold water. After your shower, turn off the hot water and let the cold water run over your head, over your upper back, turn and let it run into your armpit, turn and let it run over your chest, turn and let it run over your other armpit, turn and let it run over your head and repeat it all again. You are finished when you feel your head clear and your feel light and happy. This is the short-cut version of a deep lymph hydrotherapy that you can find here. It is a lot more dramatic, and you need to follow these deep lymph hydrotherapy instructions carefully and expect a dramatic response.

Breath

Proper physiologic breathing is necessary for correct muscle and diaphragm (transverse plane) activation, along with correct drainage patterns. I have found one of the best ways to teach correct physiologic breathing is by using the resistance breathing pipe to retrain your body. https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2023/06/02/how-to-do-resistance-breathing-and-why/

  • Consider getting a resistance breathing pipe and practicing physiologic breathing 5 minutes a day before you come for your Healing Vacation

Muscle Activation

Many chronic issues (especially pelvic issues) are exacerbated by improper firing of postural muscles and the diaphragms (transverse planes) of the body. Begin practicing these principles at home before your Healing Vacation

  • When you talk, laugh, cough, sneeze or lift the respiratory diaphragm and pelvic floor diaphragm should lift, and the core muscles should engage and move toward the spine.
  • Notice if your tummy pooches out with any of those activities, or if your pelvic floor releases and lowers.
  • If your muscles and pelvic floor is not engaging properly use your mind to activate the core and the pelvic floor right before you push out air through talking, laughing, sneezing, coughing, or exerting. Feel the tummy come toward your spine and your pelvic floor lift. If you can’t actually feel them move at first, keep trying. Everything starts with the mind.

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Your Uterus Has One Normal Position https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2023/06/09/your-uterus-has-one-normal-position/ https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2023/06/09/your-uterus-has-one-normal-position/#respond Fri, 09 Jun 2023 07:05:08 +0000 https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/?p=3506 There is one normal position of the uterus: slight anteflexion. The uterus should be slightly bent forward, hovering over the bladder. In biomedicine there is only one abnormal position of the uterus, and that is prolapse - or falling out. All other positions of the uterus are considered to be normal variants. I think [...]

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There is one normal position of the uterus: slight anteflexion.

The uterus should be slightly bent forward, hovering over the bladder.

In biomedicine there is only one abnormal position of the uterus, and that is prolapse – or falling out.

All other positions of the uterus are considered to be normal variants.

I think biomedicine has come to this conclusion for two reasons:

1) The paradigm that biomedicine functions under is largely biased toward the diagnosis and treatment of pathology.

Things that are not pathology are often considered to be normal variants.

2) Biomedicine does not have a form of intervention that suits addressing a uterus that is not in the optimal, or normal, position of slight anteflexion.

So there is no reason to identify a problem if there is no way to address it.

Possible Positions of the Uterus

In natural medicine and in indigenous medicine, such as Maya medicine, there is one normal position of the uterus:

In slight anteflexion.

The standard medical literature talks about normal variants for the position of the uterus as

Retroversion – Uterus Leaning back

Retroflexion – Uterus bending back

Anteflexion – Uterus leaning forward too far

In my practice, I also see the uterus leaning to one side, or torqued. I have not seen these positions mentioned in the medical literature.

The normal position of the uterus is for the non-gravid (not pregnant) fundus to be two inches above the pubic bone.

The uterus should also palpate as two inches wide in this area.

If the uterus is lower than two inches above the pubic bone, this suggests prolapse.

Parts of the uterus

The uterus is divided into sections

The cervix is the lowest section. It is in the top of the vagina and is the neck of the uterus

Above the cervix is the lower uterine segment.

The top of the uterus is the fundus

The arms of the uterus, called the fallopian tubes, come out of the fundus and end in hands, called the infundibulum, and fingers, called the fimbriae.

The fimbriae reach to draw the egg up into the uterine hand and arm.

Uterus: Anatomy, blood supply, histology, functions | Kenhub

Ligaments of the uterus

The ligaments of the uterus are different from most other ligaments in the body because some have muscles fibers in them, and all have some capacity to stretch and lengthen to respond to the uterine changes of pregnancy.

The main ligaments of the uterus are the

Broad ligament: The broad ligament is actually a big sheet of fascia that goes over the front an back of the uterus, in which the fallopian tubes and ovaries are inserted. It hooks on to the sides of the pelvis and is a major stabilizer of the uterus. I call the broad ligament the wings of the uterus. (The yellow in the picture)

Round ligaments: The round ligaments are also embedded in the broad ligament; one on each side of the uterus. But they are true ligaments, even though they have smooth muscle fibers in them. Each of the two round ligaments originates in the cornu of the uterus (the upper outer part of the fundus close to where the fallopian tubes attach), travels through the inguinal canal (like the spermaticord in males), and inserts into the labia majora by the perineum.

Utero-sacral ligaments: These ligaments originate below the broad ligament on the cervix and go on either side of the rectum to insert onto the sacrum. They also have smooth muscle fibers in them.

Cardinal ligaments

The cardinal ligaments originate on either side of the cervix and insert into the sides of the pelvis.

 Pubocervical ligaments

The pubocervical ligaments originate in the front of the cervix and insert into the pubic bone

Why the uterus is in a non-ideal position

The uterus generally moves out of its normal anteflex position due to trauma.

This trauma could happen at any time of life.

I have treated little girls all the way through to elderly women who have a uterus out of position.

Many times people do not even have an overt association of injury when we start to talk about the position of the uterus.

For active children and adults, falls are a normal part of athletics, and play.

Our shared cultural paradigm does not indicate that playful falls could cause alterations to our insides.

But they can.

Slip and falls, falls off horses, falls skiing or snowboarding, cannon balls, falls rollerskating, and pregnancy/birth are some of the common ways a uterus becomes displaced.

When an organ is displaced, commonly there is no immediate associated symptom.

If there was a fall, there could be a muscle or joint injury that will heal up within a matter of days or weeks.

If an organ is displaced, the associated symptoms will arise gradually over time, and are generally due to an alteration of venous or arterial blood, or lymph flow.

These symptoms, although caused primarily by the displaced organ and secondarily by the change in fluid flow, will often present as musculoskeletal complaints.

If you have a musculoskeletal symptom that does not respond to chiropractic, massage, acupuncture, stretching and strengthening think of the possibility of an organ or fluid component.

When I work with a displaced uterus, the body will usually indicate when the injury occurred and what type of injury it was.

Once we are working with the organ and have an idea of the time-period when the organ became displaced, the patient will also usually have a recollection of some type of trauma at that point in their life, even if it didn’t seem major at the time.

As the patient recounts the trauma, the uterus will begin to move to reposition herself.

The uterus and all the organs like to have their stories told and listened to.

That is part of the healing journey.

What happens if the uterus is in a non-ideal position

If the uterus is not in slight anteflexion the whole relationship of the pelvic organs and abdominal organs are thrown off.

The uterus in strong anteflexion will impair the function of the bladder.

The uterus that is retroverted or retroflexed will lay on the rectum and could cause constipation.

This leaning or bending back of the uterus can also cause low back pain and pelvic pain because the uterus is laying on the vascular or lymph drainage pathways.

The uterus that is leaning to the side or twisting can influence the function of the sigmoid colon, the cecum, and the ovaries or ureters.

Any of these altered positions can challenge the vascular and lymphatic drainage out of the pelvis.

Sometimes the symptoms are subtle and seemingly unrelated.

Sometimes the symptoms are dramatic and the relationship between the uterus and the symptom is overt.

Movement

Everything in the body is designed to move.

All movement occurs in relationship to all other movement.

Organ position can throw off proper relationship.

Proper movement is also influenced by a variety of experiences including a history of surgery, a history of inflammation or infection, trauma to connective tissue, congenital variants, chronic spasms, and deconditioning.

What to do

In the next video I will teach you how to palpate your own uterus and give you tips on treating it yourself.

You can also look for a practitioner of Arvigo Maya Abdominal Therapy or the Barral Technique to help you out.

The Mayans say the uterus is the queen of the body.

When the uterus is in her ideal/normal position she is on her throne.

When she is out of her normal position she is not on her throne and nothing in life will be easeful.

Find a way to put your queen back on her throne so you can have the easeful life you deserve and yearn for.

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Head Raise to Strengthen Your Core https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2023/03/17/head-raise-to-strengthen-your-core/ https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2023/03/17/head-raise-to-strengthen-your-core/#respond Fri, 17 Mar 2023 20:51:29 +0000 https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/?p=3405 Strengthen Your Core with Head Raise Raising your head off the ground should cause your transversus abdominus to fire and pull in tight toward your spine. Be sure you do not pooch out your stomach to the ceiling when you raise your head. Remember the transversus abdominus is a corset, [...]

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Strengthen Your Core with Head Raise

Raising your head off the ground should cause your transversus abdominus to fire and pull in tight toward your spine.

Be sure you do not pooch out your stomach to the ceiling when you raise your head.

Remember the transversus abdominus is a corset, it pulls in your gut all the way around toward the spine.

Lift your head less high if your belly moves toward the sky.

Put your hands on your belly and lift your head just high enough to feel your core engage without pooching.

See if you can hold 5-10 seconds.

Your neck will probably get tired.

Try to work up to 5 repetitions.

Try to work up to lifting your head higher while your core is drawn toward your spine.

Try to hold this 10 seconds with 5 repetitions, three sets daily.

This is a good first step for rehab for prolapse, incontinence, low back pain, and pelvic pain.

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Castor Oil Pack https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2018/04/13/castor-oil-pack/ https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/2018/04/13/castor-oil-pack/#comments Fri, 13 Apr 2018 22:36:08 +0000 https://naturalwomenshealthinstitute.com/?p=1548 What are Castor Oil Packs? Castor oil packs are made with castor oil. Castor oil comes from the bean of the castor plant (Ricinus communis). The plant leaves look like a hand, so it is sometimes called the Palm of Christ because of its healing qualities. This plant grows widely as a weed and [...]

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What are Castor Oil Packs?

Castor oil packs are made with castor oil. Castor oil comes from the bean of the castor plant (Ricinus communis). The plant leaves look like a hand, so it is sometimes called the Palm of Christ because of its healing qualities. This plant grows widely as a weed and is used all over the world. Edgar Cayce often prescribed castor oil packs for many conditions including cysts, fibroids, congestion, skin conditions, and adhesions.

I will often prescribe castor oil packs for women after Maya Abdominal Therapy for a displaced uterus. I find castor oil packs are also helpful after surgery or injuries that have created adhesions – or scar tissue. Castor oil packs can also be helpful for tummy pain, constipation, and ovarian cysts. Sometimes after Maya Abdominal Therapy or Barral visceral manipulation the tummy might hurt. I find that people who use castor oil packs for the 2 nights after treatment often will not experience any after-treatment pain.

How Does Castor Oil Work?

No one knows exactly how castor oil packs work. Castor oils is 90% ricinoleic acid, and ricinoleic acid has a special affinity to prostaglandin EP3 receptors, and could be impacting conditions via that inflammatory system.

What You Need

  • A piece of flannel about the size of a pillow case or receiving blanket
  • About 8-16 oz of castor oil
  • A heating pad
  • Old linens/towels you don’t mind getting oil on, and maybe a garbage bag to cover your nice linens.
  • Cookie sheet for heating castor oil pack in oven

How to Make a Castor Oil Pack

  • Saturate flannel with castor oil
  • Put saturated flannel on cookie sheet in oven to heat up to skin temp. Be careful and don’t burn yourself!
  • Protect the surface you will lie on with plastic and old towels or old linens because castor oil will stain
  • Put the castor oil pack directly on the body part you will be treating
  • Then put a piece of plastic on it like a plastic bag to protect your heating pad from the oil
  • Then put your heating pad on the castor oil pack
  • Relax with the heat for 1-2 hours or as instructed by your health care professional

How to Store your Castor Oil Pack

  • Seal the castor oil pack in a plastic bag and keep it in the fridge so the oil doesn’t go rancid.
  • Keep the open castor oil container in the fridge, also, to keep it fresh
  • After you use the pack you will probably need to add more oil the next time
  • After you use the pack about 5 times you will notice that it does not have the same affect and will probably need to be thrown away. Then you will start fresh with a different piece of flannel

Contraindications

  • Pregnancy
  • Heavy bleeding

Side Effects

  • A rash may develop from moving the stagnation. Don’t worry. This is a normal part of healing and removing toxins. If it itches you can take a baking soda bath by putting 1 cup of baking soda in your bath.
  • If you are using a lot of castor packs over your lower abdomen the castor oil could cause loose stools. Take a break from using the packs until your stools firm again.
  • If you eat castor oil you will get diarrhea. If you are pregnant, consuming castor oil can induce labor

Warning: The Castor Bean is Poisonous and Should Never Be Consumed

References

  • http://www.pnas.org/content/109/23/9179
  • Gladstar, Rosemary 1993 Herbal Healing for Women. Simon and Schuster, NY, NY
  • McGary, Wiliam 1993 The Oil that Heals
  • Northrup, Christiane 1994 Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom. Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, NY,NY
  • Soule, Deb 1995 The Roots of Heling, A Women’s Book of Herbs. Carol Publishing Co NY

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