Showing posts with label holistic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holistic. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Kava Kava Cave In . . .

The root Kava Kava is said to relieve anxiety, cause a feeling of euphoria and taste like dirt.

All of the above, in my humble experience, is 100% true.

It also numbs your lips, which feels kind of like that "Lip Venom" lip gloss that was such a hit at Sephora however many moons ago that was.

For those of you new to Kava, it’s a root most commonly found in Vanuatu. It is commonly prepared by crushing the root into a powder, mixing it with water and serving it in a coconut shell.  (Visual: Imagine a ginger root and you are on the right track.)



You can find Kava Kava in Whole Foods and other holistic candy stores.  Go to the “Wellness" aisle in a sea of all the other wellness aisles and you’ll find it camped out with the other supplements.

The other day we visited the local KavaSutra in Fort Lauderdale to have a sip before we skipped down the road for a bite to eat.


Now, as someone who manages their Anxiety, Panic and Depression holistically (which means no meds) any time I introduce something, anything, to my system I’m a pretty cheap date.  In other words, I feel it really fast and really heavy.  Even too much tea sends me off and running.  The Kava Kava I had the other day, as it turns out, was a whole new realm for me. 

Hopefully I'm setting the tone of what's to come...

KavaSutra is a tiny little spot off Las Olas.  When you see the gorgeous mural (pictured above) you've found the spot.  The entrance is nestled under a great big oak tree decorated in twinkle lights.  

You’d think you walked into a tiny little dive bar….but there’s no alcohol for sale. Just Kava, Kombucha and some fruit bowls.

We grabbed a few stools and bellied up to the bar, ordered a few coconut cups and proceeded to sip away on our dirt drinks.

Here’s how everything unfolded for me from here:

A few sips in I could feel my lips getting numb, not dentist office numb where you are drooling or anything like that….just tingly "lip venom" numb.

Then, as I’m nearing the bottom of my coconut cup it’s like the weight of an elephant had stepped off my chest and a veil lifted up, up and away so I can see everything in it's crystalline clear beauty.

All of this sounds beautiful, right?

Right.

Because it is.

Until it isn’t.  

What I didn’t calculate after my cheeky smile and eyes wide open glow was the transition back to my own, personal version of “normal”.

For me, that’s where those mean motherfuckers, Anxiety, Panic and Depression settle back into their spots on my chest.

What I didn't anticipate, at all, was that little bit of relief from their mutinous rule opened a door to a room I had boarded up and closed a long, long time ago.

That room was where I didn’t live with these heavy assholes draped all over me in the capacity I do now.

Oomph.

So, as the evening passed and the Kava Kava euphoria exited stage left….the others stomped back in with ferocity.

I wasn’t prepared.

At all.

In fact, the process of letting them all back in and readjusting to “normal” sent me for a spin.

You see, the reality is, sometimes I forget how heavy my Anxiety is.

Sometimes I forget how sneaky my Depression is.

And sometimes I forget how agile my Panic is.

I’ve been living with them, managing them for so long…..a string of minutes without them felt so light I was almost crushed by the weight of them all when they returned.

It was a lesson for me.

Maybe I’m not managing them all as well as I think I am.

Maybe I’m not working my “Tool Box” (yoga, writing, running) as diligently as I promised myself I would. (Note: That’s my agreement with myself.  As long as I’m exhausting all of my options to the best of my ability to manage my “stuff” without meds, I’ll stay off meds.  But if I exhaust all my options and it’s not working, then I’ll consider the conversation of…well, something else.)  

It appears, I’ve been getting lazy, comfortable and complacent.

As Sweet Brown so eloquently said in her interview that went viral on the good ol’ web….”Ain’t nobody got time for that!”.


So here’s to that far away root supplement, Kava Kava, and the lesson in lightness it brought me.

Here’s to working our individual tool boxes to live the best lives each of us can.

Here’s to NOT BEING LAZY.

And here’s to good health…Physical, Mental and Spiritual (in the best ways we can all independently achieve this triumphant trilogy).

I’m going to continue on my yoga, writing, running path...but I’m promising myself I’m going to work it far more diligently so they next time I choose to sip a dirt drink I'm prepared for the reentry.

Onward!




















:: Always from under the same sky ::

Tara

Friday, June 21, 2013

Hostess with the Mostess


Hostess with the Mostess, reporting for duty.

You might be asking yourself how someone could possibly give herself that title. Well, look, it simply must be the case because I've been hosting some pesky barnacles for several years now. I've asked them to leave, begged them, pleaded, cried, screamed, whispered, tried to charm them with witty banter...and nothing! They just won't budge.  So I have to assume I'm a pretty awesome host in order for them to want to camp out for so long, right?  

Well, it's something like that but before this story unfolds please allow me to give a special warning:  If PTSD, Anxiety, Panic and the mother of all barnacles, Depression come knocking at your door you better lock it, deadbolt it, switch the blinds and sound an alarm because once they are "in" they are Stage Five Clingers!

(And all this time you had been thinking a visit from your Mother-In-Law was tough.)

The Arrival

It was just over six years ago that this gang swept in under the cover of darkness, completely undetected.  You see, my dad had died by suicide and the sun had disappeared from sight.  I couldn't see them, hear them or feel them when they arrived.  In the chaos of mourning, I must have left the front door wide open because I just awoke one day and there they were, at home within me.

To be clear, I don't mean guests that are so kind and helpful while they are visiting that they are always welcome to make themselves "at home".  I mean the out of line, way too cozy, settled-in version where their muddy feet are up on the couch, the remote has been hijacked and dirty dishes have been scattered about the house - kind of visitor.  

Now you can understand why I call them barnacles, right?  So, how does one get rid of them? Well, like I said, I begged and pleaded for them to bolt.  I collected their belongings, packed their bags and left them at the door. I packed a meal for the road as an added gesture but they just would not leave.

Then what?

My answer:  Hell if I know.  (Ha, I'm just kidding.)  But in all honesty, at first I really didn't have a clue what came next.  All I knew is that I felt awful all the time.

How awful?  Well, for me it felt as if the gang would pass me around in circles. Anxiety had me in his clutches for the majority of the day.  Once he was satisfied he'd hand me off to PTSD so I could get a good slam in the gut by a flashback (or string of them) that hurt like hell and would render me motionless.  Occasionally Panic would get his hands on me, which was always an epic show.  Under his direction I'd be spinning in worry, with my heart racing, tears flowing and rationale on vacation.  When Panic was in charge I was certain the world was ending.  I'm not sure which one of them was responsible for the blockbuster nightmares I had every night for longer than I care to admit but they could battle Scorcese for one of those coveted golden statues any day.  And finally, there was Depression.  He was the biggest, the baddest and the worst of all. He would blanket you in a toxic cloak of cloudy skies, bone-chilling breezes, a constant state of disinterest as well as complete and utter sadness.  Food didn't taste good, sights didn't look good, sounds didn't sound good and feeling anything wasn't really part of the deal.  He is the vacuum that sucks the life out of you.  Every emotion loses its luster.  Every drop of color is stolen from your world until the only thing you see is an underwhelming sea of gray.  That's who Depression is ... he's a bully and he's an asshole.

Needless to say, I just couldn't navigate it all.  My Spirit had bloody hands and banged up knees from crawling so far for so long.  Until ...

Enter Jane, Stage Right

After an ER-worthy panic attack I landed in my therapist's office.  She was a tremendous gift to me at that point in my life.  I had whittled myself down to the bone.  I was emotionally bankrupt and spiritually void.  More than anything, my whole essence was truly exhausted.

So, she and I began waging a mighty battle on my uninvited guests.  I chose to do so holistically, kindly declining medications to assist me in the journey (however, that was a personal choice and although I'm happy with my strategy I absolutely value and respect the fact that I had a choice and the fact that you or others like us do as well.  Choose wisely friends.  These barnacles are not one size fits all.)

As time progressed, so did I.  Soon I began doing tiny, minuscule things that sparked a recollection of a person who wasn't shattered into pieces.  

I would journal, a lot.  Just write and write and write until I had no words or ink left.  I would devour magazines.  I needed visual inspiration, color and beautiful images more than I needed air.  I would listen to music that felt good and avoid the downers with everything I had.  I would crave weekend afternoons sitting on my patio overlooking the ocean even if it meant I had to be wrapped in 4 blankets and bundled like an Eskimo.  In the morning, I relished sipping on tea as if it were laced with gold. All of these things, so insignificant to some, were the anchors of which I held on to with a life force.

In time, that supremely dark phase began to come to a close and a new one was beginning to bloom.  My house guests and I were moving right along.

Re-finding Yoga

I had found yoga many years before when I was trying different types of workouts on for size (similar to the way others try on shoes before buying them).  I was always a fan of yoga but never had I fallen as deeply in love as I did at this juncture.

This time, it was different.  This time I was different.

It was a new year and I was committed to the next phase of my therapy.  Yoga was going to be my foundation.  So there I was, in my first class back on the mat in what felt like eons.  My body was tight, my mind was chaotic and my Spirit was war torn but none of that mattered because the most amazing thing happened.

Yoga took me by the hand to places my heart didn't believe existed anymore.  It lead me to a spot where all those racing thoughts quieted, where my mind slowly stopped spinning and by the grace of everything holy I was able to focus for a collection of moments.  It reintroduced me to Breath and the power it had over the gang of bullies taking up residence within.  It lead me to Presence and that allowed me to be in my body rather than solely inside my pain.  But most importantly, it lead me to Hope which I thought was lost forever.

Somehow through the magic of my yoga practice, I was able to convince the barnacles to "sit in the corner and be quiet" before stepping on my mat.  Somehow I was able to breathe my way through an hour and a half of practice without being bullied.  Somehow, through practice, the gang began to back off - not just when I was on my mat but throughout my day - and I was able to regain strength, light and the pieces of me that were battle-scarred but still true.

Yoga is what taught me that PTSD, Anxiety, Panic and Depression might have moved in but that didn't mean they were in charge.

Yoga taught me how to silence the chaos, how to muzzle the uninvited guests and how to keep moving forward even with my baggage.

Now we all coexist fairly peacefully.  I don't believe any of them will necessarily leave me for good.  So instead of putting my energy toward their departure I just check in to make sure our Treaty is still signed.  Yes, of course there are flair-ups and occasionally one of them will run amok but now I use each and every one of the tools I collected along this bumpy road, in therapy & within my practice and I apply them to the best of my ability.  Especially those handy muzzles.

:: Always from under the same sky ::

Tara




Images courtesy of:
Tara Mazzeo