Saturday 2 November 2013

TIME magazine just published a cover story on mindfulness and the science behind it.




TIME magazine just published a cover story on mindfulness, the science behind it, and how it’s making inroads in various parts of society. The story will reach a vast number of people, many of whom have likely not been exposed in any significant way to the mindfulness movement.
We are honored to have been included in the article as the representative of mindfulness & education. Reading though it, we reflected on how far the Mindful Schools Community has come in the last seven years: with people in almost all 50 states and 43 countries, our shared community is weaving an incredibly important piece of the mindfulness tapestry. We offer our deep thanks to you all for joining us on this journey.
We are especially grateful to our graduates for the amazing work they are doing to bring mindfulness to youth of all ages, genders, ethnicities, and economic backgrounds around the world. It is truly inspiring to see such a heartfelt, widespread impact that underscores the deep commitment Mindful Schools has to making secular mindfulness increasingly accessible to the world’s diverse population of educators, children, and adolescents (below are a few images from the Mindful Schools community).

Thursday 24 October 2013

Ogano Gold in Kenya !



For More Information on Organo Gold Coffee, Kindly Contact Ms.Dinah Tan +6017 8798755 or +6012 3159527  http://dktan.blogspot.com





Wednesday 16 October 2013

Malacca revives Straits of Malacca-Dumai Bridge Project

Artist's impression of the proposed Malacca-Dumai bridge.
*  MALACCA: 
Artist's impression of the proposed Malacca-Dumai bridge.
Artist's impression of the proposed Malacca-Dumai bridge.









MALACCA: The Malacca Government has revived the controversial 48.69km-long Malacca-Dumai, Indonesia, bridge project across the Straits of Malacca, after a seven-year lull.
Chief Minister Datuk Seri Idris Haron said finer details of the project linking Teluk Gong in Malacca in the peninsula to the port of Dumai, in Sumatra, would be revealed when all mechanisms were in place.
If implemented, the bridge straddling the busiest international shipping waterway would be the world’s longest, even without including a 71.2km-long highway to be built between Dumai and Pulau Rupat, the closest connecting point.
“The project was discussed during the 10th Chief Ministers and Governors’ Forum (CMGF) of the Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle (IMT-GT) convened in Koh Samui, Thailand, on Sept 12.
 
“The forum took note of the economic potential and strategic positioning of the IMT-GT with the construction of the Malacca-Dumai Bridge,” Idris said yesterday.
Insights on a feasibility study on the bridge undertaken by Strait of Malacca Partners Sdn Bhd were given during the meeting.
The company had earlier appointed the Hunan Provincial Communi-cations Planning, Survey & Design Institute of China to prepare documents pertaining to the study.
The idea of the bridge was first mooted in 1995 to foster new economic opportunities, especially in trade and tourism, between the two countries but died down during the Asian financial crisis in 1997.
In 2006, then Chief Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Ali Rustam restored interest in the project by saying that the groundwork for it had started and that studies showed that the bridge was technically feasible.
He also announced that the Export-Import (Exim) Bank of China had agreed to finance 85% of the link’s total cost, then estimated at RM44.3bil.
 
The proposal was submitted to the Economic Planning Unit with details on how the bridge would stimulate economic activities between the peninsula and Sumatra.
However, the plan came under strong objection from various quarters, including environmentalists.
Works Minister Datuk Fadillah Yusof, when contacted, said he was yet to be briefed on plans to revive the project.
Source:  http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Nation/2013/10/16/Malacca-revives-straits-bridge-project-Full-details-will-be-revealed-when-all-mechanisms-in-place-sa.aspx

Wednesday 18 September 2013

KATHINA Robes Offering Ceremony 20 OCT 2013





KATHINA 20 OCT 2013 
Robes Offering Ceremony making the end of the 3-month that Bhante Mahinda and Ven B Dhammananda spent their Vassa (Rain Retreat) in BMSM Samadhi Vihara, 1B, Jalan Pegaga, U12/B, Section U12, Kawasan Perindustrian Bukit Raja, 40170 Shah Alam, Selangor.

Monday 16 September 2013

Cancer inspires a Healthy Diet



Eating a well-thought out diet is playing a more central role in the overall care of cancer.  CHEMOTHERAPY took its toll on Steven Satterfield. The co-owner and executive chef of Miller Union in Atlanta, US, lost his hair, his spunk, and his skin turned grayish-green.

But Satterfield, a local and nationally acclaimed chef, battled back by turning to what he loves and understands well – the health benefits of eating nutrient-dense, fresh, and locally grown fruits and vegetables.

Diagnosed in February 2012 with stage III testicular cancer, Satterfield underwent surgery and three rounds of chemotherapy – one week on, and two weeks off. By day six and seven during the on-weeks, Satterfield, known for boundless energy, was virtually bedridden.

During chemotherapy, Satterfield gave in to weird cravings – like sudden urges for spicy Thai food. But he also satisfied his continuous yearning for carbs by filling up on vegetable-laden pasta dishes and a Gumbo z’Herbes, a green gumbo, traditionally served with greens – collards, kale, turnip greens and spinach.

The way he nourished his body during his cancer journey helped him get through a tough time and paid off in health.

Just one week after completing chemotherapy in June of last year, Satterfield returned to work at the restaurant full-time. During a recent afternoon, clad in jeans and plaid shirt, and sipping sparkling water, the chef said he believes his vegetable-and-fruit diet helped him bounce back fast.

Satterfield is part of a growing number of cancer patients paying closer attention to nutrition every step of their journey. It’s no longer considered “alternative” care, according to doctors. Instead, eating a well-thought out diet is playing a more central role in overall care.

Shayna Komar, a registered dietitian who works at the Cancer Wellness centre at Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta, said healthy foods keep the body strong during treatment.

Studies show people who are well nourished have shorter hospital stays after surgery compared to those who arrive at the hospital malnourished, she said. Healthy eating also helps wounds heal faster.

On the flip side, patients with poor diets, including those who lose too much weight during chemotherapy sessions, may need to put their treatments on hold.

Dr Omer Kucuk, professor of haematology-oncology and urology at the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University, said patients today take more control over their health, researching information online and doing their homework.

“They ask me what should I eat?” said Dr Kucuk. “And generally, the first thing I say is ‘eat a healthy diet.’ Eat eight to nine servings of fruits and vegetables a day, or at least five.”

But knowing the importance of healthy eating is just the first step. Dr Kucuk believes doctors need to help patients turn that knowledge into changes in diet. He said he makes good nutrition a priority, giving the subject just as much attention as discussing chemotherapy, radiation and treatment side effects.

Dr Kucuk believes the vast majority of doctors still fall short in giving nutrition enough consideration when discussing care with patients.

He said the anti-cancer properties of a diet full of fruits and vegetables can help prevent disease, as well as offer therapeutic benefits while a patient undergoes cancer treatments. He’s seen first-hand how soy and tomatoes help minimise side effects from treatment.

So, when a prostate cancer patient complains of losing muscle or feeling depressed, he doesn’t immediately think of a pill to make them feel better. He encourages the patient to drink more soy milk – a protein and vitamin-rich drink.

Of course, it’s not always easy to eat a well-balanced diet during cancer treatments. It’s common for cancer patients to experience side effects such as nausea or food might taste “off”. Sometimes, food tastes too salty, and Komar suggests drizzling the food with agave nectar to help offset that. She encourages a colourful plate with lots of colour – reds and greens and yellows, like a rainbow.

She also recommends lean protein such as chicken, fish, nuts, seeds and eggs. And she encourages five to six mini-meals throughout the day, which can be easier on the stomach.

Satterfield has teamed up with Komar to teach a healthy cooking class revolving around fresh produce. The summer-time cooking demonstration included a zucchini dish with mint and garlic-chili oil, and a mix of purple and golden heirloom new potatoes with a lemon vinaigrette.

Attendance for Satterfield’s class quickly filled up, and healthy cooking classes at Piedmont’s Cancer Wellness centre has doubled or even tripled in recent years, Komar said.

Now 43, Satterfield has been cancer-free for one year. He is working on a cookbook he calls a “field guide to Southern produce”, that will include a guide to shopping at farmer’s markets and making the most of community-supported agriculture programmes, where buyers pre-pay to get boxes of whatever is fresh off local farms.

Satterfield’s obsession with the freshest seasonal produce continues to be the centrepiece at his restaurant, which has been featured in US magazines such Food & Wine.

The menu includes a cucumber, tomato and blackberry salad along with a griddled pastured chicken with grilled squash, cherry tomatoes, feta cheese, mint and almonds.

These days, he’s on the go. He tries to either run before work or bike to work when the weather is nice.

He continues to work on his book, and he’s at his restaurant at least 10 hours a day. The chef often begins his day with a fruit smoothie made with banana, frozen organic berries and almond milk.

From there, he fills up on generous helpings of in-season fruits and vegetables, and small amounts of protein, ie organic, humanely-raised chicken and fish.

He snacks on peaches and almonds. But he still gives into cravings from time to time – whether it’s fried food or ice cream.

“I think it’s all about balance,” he said. “I try to make the most of my day by appreciating the amazing ingredients we get to work with... It’s nice to be able to truly enjoy life and be thankful for what you have.” – The Atlanta Journal-Constitution http://www.thestar.com.my/Lifestyle/Health/2013/09/15/Cancer-inspires-a-healthy-diet.aspx

Bhante Mahinda's Dhamma Talk "What the world really needs today..." on 4 Oct 2013 at 8pm and at 5 & 6 Oct enrolled Bhante Mahinda's Metta Workshop — at Pahang Buddhist Association.Pahang Buddhist Association & Pahang Buddhist Association Hemodialisis Centre

Sunday 15 September 2013

4 Different Races on eve of 50th Malaysia Day !



Just coincidence that the four and three of us are of  different races on eve of 50th Malaysia Day in Kuantan, Pahang ! http://dktan.blogspot.com

Thursday 12 September 2013

PVC/GHHS Health Management Preview on 27-28 Sept 2013 (Fri-Sat) at M S Garden Hotel Lot 5, 10 Lorong Gambut, Kuantan


Kuantan here we come ! Our Palace Vacation Club/Golden Horses Health Screening Team will at M S Garden Hotel from 27 Sept 2013 (Fri) - 28 Sept 2013 (Sat) at
Lot 5, 10 Lorong Gambut Off Jalan Beserah, 25300 Kuantan
* To receive a 2D1N free stay at Palace of the Golden Horses worth RM800, you need to attend our 60 minutes PVC/GHHS Health Management preview with valid credit cards. Your age group should be 28-55 years old.

Visit our website for more details or call Mr. David 0162231066 for details:-.


http://www.palacevacationclub.com http://www.ghhs.com.my or contact us at Shahzan Inn Kuantan
Lot PT240, Jalan Bukit Ubi/Jalan Masjid, Kuantan City, Kuantan, Malaysia after 10pm onwards.

Sunday 8 September 2013

Palace Vacation Club





Join Palace Vacation Club ! Palace Vacation Club is the only timeshare membership that offers more than just fascinating dream vacation destination for your entire family. Call Retreat Consultant, Mr.David Karuna Tan +6016 2231066 for more details. http://dktan.blogspot.com

Thursday 5 September 2013

[Up to 62% Discount off] Ayurveda Full Body Therapy at Mines Wellness Hotel from RM149



 [Up to 62% Off] Ayurveda Full Body Therapy at Mines Wellness Hotel from RM149


Highlights
  • Full body massage with essential oil improves blood circulation, relaxes muscles, and detoxifies the body.
  • Herbal oil scalp massage soothes migraines while nourishing scalp and reduce hair loss.
  • Includes anti-stress upper body massage for shoulder and back. 
  • Uses traditional Ayurveda products from India.
  • Located at 5-star Mines Wellness Hotel.
  • Groupons displayed on Android and iOS devices are accepted.
Fine Print
IMPORTANT
  • Customers are advised to avoid consuming alcoholic beverages 24 hours and strenuous exercises 3 hours prior to therapy.
  • Meals should be taken after customers have undergone therapy.
  • Customers experiencing fever or any form of illness should inform therapists prior to undergoing therapy.

GENERAL
  • Redemption period: Sep 7, 2013 – Oct 31, 2013. 
  • Bookings must be made between Sep 4, 2013 – Oct 27, 2013.
  • Min. 3 days prior booking required. Bookings subject to availability.
  • Rescheduling must be made at least 2 days prior to original booking or Groupon will be forfeited.
  • Valid Tue – Sun: 9am – 7pm (including public holidays).
  • Last appointment: 6pm.
  • May buy and use many.
  • Groupon for 2 people must be redeemed at the same time.
  • Male or female therapist available but subject to availability. Customers with therapist preference may have to wait.
  • Results may vary depending on individuals.
  • Valid at Ayurtheeram Ayurveda, Mines Wellness Hotel:
    -Booking enquiries: 03-8943 6688 ext: 60120 / 018- 203 9149 (Call Tue – Sat: 10am – 1pm / 2pm – 5pm).
    -General enquiries: ayurveda@mwh.com.my / ayurveda.mines@gmail.com.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Tuesday 3 September 2013


Healthy and delicious Chinese Cuisine at Cheng Ho Court, Level 3, Mines Wellness Hotel ~ Famed for being the finalist for "Best Chinese Cuisine in a 5-star Hotel". Cheng Ho Court offers the best in Oriental Chinese cuisine. Besides its signature dumplings and seafood delights, Cheng Ho also serves vegetarian dishes, freshly plucked from our very own Organic Garden.
http://www.mineswellnesshotel.com.my/dine.html                                                                                                                    With Double Boiled Baby Winter Melon Soup with Eight Treasures, Baked Cod Fish with Cheese & Coconut Cream, Deep Fried Golden Mushroom with Fresh Scallop and Shimaji in Broccoli, Deep Fried Golden Mushroom, Shimaji mushroom, Fried Prawns with Butter Sauce and Egg Floss, Stir Fried Venison Hakka Style, Stir Fried Kailan with Ham, Black Mushroom and Shredded Leaves, Black Pepper Udon with Venison, Chiller Green Tea Pudding, Durian Pudding for our Family Dinner at Cheng Ho Court, Mines Wellness Hotel Location: Level 3, Mines Wellness Hotel, Jalan Dulang, Mines Wellness City, 43300 Seri Kembangan, Selangor.
http://www.MinesWellnessHotel.com.my/
Reservations and enquiries:
(+60)3-8943 6688 ext. 1311










Friday 30 August 2013

Malaysia Independence Day (Merdeka Day)



Independence Day (Hari Merdeka)
31 Aug 2013
Hari Merdeka (Independence Day) commemorates the independence of the Federation of Malaya from British colonial rule in 1957. It is celebrated on August 31 each year.

Venue:
Nationwide

Sunday 25 August 2013

Understanding the human mind

Some experts argue that each half of the brain generates a fundamentally different way of experiencing the world. -AFP Relaxnews
Some experts argue that each half of the brain generates a fundamentally different way of experiencing the world. -AFP Relax news

Crossing the mind-body divide: when philosophy meets psychiatry.

WITH its battered desks, fluorescent lights and interactive whiteboard showing an odd creature that, depending on how you look at it, could be either a duck or a rabbit, this could be a class in any university philosophy department.
But this is a class with a difference. It is the Maudsley Philosophy Group, a seminar that meets regularly on the grounds of the Maudsley Hospital, Britain’s largest mental health teaching hospital, which is affiliated with the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London.
Participants at the last session included psychiatrists, psychologists, philosophers and an actor who had just finished working as a chaplain in a locked men’s ward at the hospital and who was about to organise a storytelling group there.
“We started out as a reading group for trainee psychiatrists,” said Dr Gareth S. Owen, a researcher at the Institute of Psychiatry who co-founded the group in 2002. “Then, gradually, we developed and started inviting philosophers – at first it was quite low key. We would talk about our clinical experiences and then they would relate those experiences to their way of thinking.”
Dr Robert Harland, another co-founder of the group, said he had known Dr Owen since they “cut up a corpse together at medical school”.
“The analytic philosophers brought a real clarity to our discussions,” Dr Harland said. “We were looking at various models to help us understand what we were doing as psychiatrists.
“There is lots of applied science now in psychiatry: neuroimaging, genetics, epidemiology. But they don’t have much to say about sitting with a patient and trying to understand that person’s experiences.”
Tania L. Gergel, a philosopher whose work stretches from Ancient Greek ideas about ethics to dilemmas in contemporary medicine, was drawn to the Maudsley seminar out of intellectual curiosity. She also relished the chance to “come into contact with people who have actual clinical experience”.
“You can only learn so much from reading journal articles,” Gergel said. “The problem is that, as you move towards abstraction, it’s easy to lose sight of the fact that people are dealing with real suffering and real dysfunctions. We need to remember that those dysfunctions – whether of the brain or of the mind – are linked to a real individual who is going through a devastating crisis.”
plato...
For Plato, the mental world was the real world.
The question of whether a mental illness has a bodily, physical cause is one aspect of what philosophers call the mind-body problem.
For Plato, the mental world was the real world, while Descartes argued that mind and matter were distinct.
More recently, some scientists have tried to locate consciousness in different parts of the brain. But the dispute over its location and origins is not just confined to philosophy or neurology departments.
A longtime member of the Maudsley seminar, Richard Sykes, a social worker who has studied both the physical and mental sides of chronic fatigue syndrome, or CFS, said there was a “terrific animosity between psychiatrists and patient groups”.
“There is an immense hostility to psychiatrists because they have got CFS wrong for such a long time,” he said. “At first, they thought it was hysteria. Then they said it was depression. But the absence of a medical explanation is not a good reason for saying it’s a psychiatric illness.”
For Sykes, the Maudsley group “is a chance to make use of my own philosophical background”.
The mind-body problem also preoccupied Dr Jacqueline P. Owen, a clinical lecturer in child and adolescent psychiatry who is married to Dr Owen of the Institute of Psychiatry. Her own doctorate on functional neuroimaging charted which networks in the brain lit up while performing certain tasks.
When she graduated, she discovered that “psychology in its pure form didn’t help very much when you are seeing patients”.
“A lot of what I studied was based on subjects who had damage to specific parts of the brain,” she said. “But in psychiatry, your patients often have no discernible brain damage.”
The Maudsley seminar offered “a different way of seeing things”. she said.
How different? Dr Iain McGilchrist, the group’s most recent visiting lecturer, started on familiar ground, describing recent research showing how differences in the structure of the two halves of the human brain are reflected in the way the brain functions. But Dr McGilchrist, who taught English literature at the University of Oxford before training as a psychiatrist, soon left the strict confines of neuroscience to touch on poetry, politics, painting and anthropology.
He eventually circled back to his announced topic: “What the reciprocal organisation of the cerebral hemispheres could tell us about some problems in philosophy.”
In his book, The Master and His Emissary, published in 2009, Dr McGilchrist argues that each half of the brain generates a fundamentally different way of experiencing the world. The left “constructs a virtual world, a self-enclosed world” whose representations we can manipulate and analyse, while the right sees “things as they are” in a more fluid way.
DESCARTES BEFORE THE HORSE ... the French philosopher, in his Principles of Philosophy, argued that mind and body are really distinct substances.-- Photo of Rene Descartes taken off the Web
Descartes argued that mind and matter were distinct.
He compares the “gestalt” perception of the right hemisphere to a master who relies on the emissary of the left hemisphere for information to make sense of his experiences. He also argues that, since the Renaissance, the emissary has become more and more assertive.
At the Maudsley seminar, he invited his listeners to consider what it might be like to live in “a world where knowledge has been replaced by information, where skill and judgment has been displaced by abstraction”.
“Our lives would be governed by bureaucracy, losing any sense that each of us is unique,” he said. “It would be a world where quality no longer matters and quantity is the only criterion of success,” he added, suggesting provocatively that the condition he had just described was the world in which we all now live.
Not everyone in the group seemed convinced by some of the more sweeping historical claims, which set off a vigorous debate that continued through dinner.
Dr Jacqueline Owen said that the talk offered a new way to think about a problem she often encountered in her work. “I’m on a ward with teenagers – boys and girls – who complain of hearing voices,” she said. “So how do I discriminate between the ones who are really having hallucinations and those who are just listening to their own thoughts?
“Perhaps what we need to do is step back and think about what they are experiencing in the first place. Philosophy can provide a way into that – something that isn’t a gene, or a drug, but that can still be useful.”
“Psychiatry crosses domains,” Dr Gareth Owen said. “So it is important that the people who do it can cross domains as well. Our aim with the seminar is to provide a kind of third space – outside academic psychiatry or clinical practice or academic philosophy.” – IHT

Saturday 24 August 2013

Early Symptoms and Common Signs of Breast Cancer

Every person should know the symptoms and signs of breast cancer, and any time an abnormality is discovered, it should be investigated by a healthcare professional.
Most people who have breast cancer symptoms and signs will initially notice only one or two, and the presence of these symptoms and signs do not automatically mean that you have breast cancer.
By performing monthly breast self-exams, you will be able to more easily identify any changes in your breast.  Be sure to talk to your healthcare professional if you notice anything unusual.
breast cancer symptoms and signs early detection women
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A change in how the breast or nipple feels

  • Nipple tenderness or a lump or thickening in or near the breast or underarm area
  • A change in the skin texture or an enlargement of pores in the skin of the breast  (some describe this as similar to an orange peel’s texture)
  • A lump in the breast (It’s important to remember that all lumps should be investigated by a healthcare professional, but not all lumps are cancerous.)
breast cancer early detection signs and symptoms feels
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A change in the breast or nipple appearance

  • Any unexplained change in the size or shape of the breast
  • Dimpling anywhere on the breast
  • Unexplained swelling of the breast (especially if on one side only)
  • Unexplained shrinkage of the breast (especially if on one side only)
  • Recent asymmetry of the breasts (Although it is common for women to have one breast that is slightly larger than the other, if the onset of asymmetry is recent, it should be checked.)
  • Nipple that is turned slightly inward or inverted
  • Skin of the breast, areola, or nipple that becomes scaly, red, or swollen or may have ridges or pitting resembling the skin of an orange
breast cancer early detection signs and symptoms appearance
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Any nipple discharge—particularly clear discharge or bloody discharge

It is also important to note that a milky discharge that is present when a woman is not breastfeeding should be checked by her doctor, although it is not linked with breast cancer.
breast cancer early detection signs and symptoms discharge
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If I have some symptoms, is it likely to be cancer?
Most often, these symptoms are not due to cancer, but any breast cancer symptom you notice should be investigated as soon as it is discovered. If you have any of these symptoms, you should tell your healthcare provider so that the problem can be diagnosed and treated.

If I have no symptoms, should I assume I do not have cancer?
Although there’s no need to worry, regular screenings are always important.  Your doctor can check for breast cancer before you have any noticeable symptoms. During your office visit, your doctor will ask about your personal and family medical history and perform a physical examination. In addition, your doctor may order one or more imaging tests, such as a mammogram.