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nitricoxide

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2019-11-19 09:41:58

Somewhere about the age of 2, I remember sitting on the front grass with my mom in front of our duplex Cumberland Road. It was a sunny day. I had my toes in the grass.

I noticed a different plant growing in the grass and touched it. It was prickly. I tried pulling it, but it was steadfast in the ground. My mom helped me dig it out. What came out astonished me. A bright red-purple ball with a tail.

Of course, like any toddler would, I examined it… in my mouth. What came next was a taste I will never forget.

I don’t particularly like #radishes, but I do eat them occasionally for the bitter variety. That memory remains strong as a moment when it was just me and my mom.

As I recently shared, salt can have some pretty catastrophic impacts on the brain. Tau is an essential protein for helping form axonal neurotubules. Too much dietary salt leads to neurodegenerative effects from a build up of tau plaques. Increasing nitric oxide may reverse this.

When we add taste variety, we help shake things up, even build new networks, and strengthen #neuroplasticity.

We’ll be increasing our #nitricoxide through a breath work practice in the upcoming #meditationchallenge. But a big reason it’s a radical #self-love practice is because of how we will use mantra to shut down our inner critic.

Research shows we need 3 times as many positive statements to counteract our negative inner critic. @kotler.steven in his whirlwind flow trip audio book, — Mapping Cloud Nine: Neuroscience, Flow, and the Upper Possibility Space of Human Experience— suggests 10 is better and to really feel into those 10 (like in a solid daily #gratitude practice). These kinds of practices are based in neuro-technological sciences developed by yogis and gurus like Guru #Nanak Dev Ji, celebrating 550 years this month. His monumental work is the Japji Sahib, a sacred chant of Sikhis said to instill illumination.

In #meditation using #mantra (repetitive statements, chanting) and mudras (a special hand posture) we can create transient hypofrontality (temporarily slowing down our prefrontal cortex). Quieting the inner critic sets us up for great #flowstate hygiene rituals. Join us! www.ixchel.love

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2019-11-15 06:56:53

Too much salt impacts brain function. Did you see the recent study that was released in Nature about how too much dietary salt impairs brain function in animal testing?
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Well, that could be a bummer if you like salt. It’s one of the three flavors that drives human motivation. Maybe you’ve heard of this little @NYT Best Seller by @michaelcmoss , “Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us”?
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It’s not our fault that our brains are broken.
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There’s entire industries fashioned off our intrinsic motivators, using our own emotional triggers and taste buds to keep us imprisoned in old ruts. A little of this, a little of that to keep us in a “bliss-state”.
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Except it’s not really bliss, not a real happy place.
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I’ve been developing a meditation challenge on radical self-love that includes this incredible new breathing technique to increase nitric oxide. So when this study came out that showed how too much salt decreases nitric oxide in the brain and increases this plaque build up of tau, I got really excited. .
Nitric oxide balances tau.
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Yep, this crazy simple breathing technique that’s part of my 40-Day meditation challenge is going to create a buzz… And bring you back to your true happy place.
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???? Photo by @joannakosinskadesign on @unsplash
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#nitricoxide #pranayama #brainhealth #meditationchallenge

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