Thursday, July 30, 2009

Low Back Exercises, Sleep Well

Welcome Back! I am continuing my motivation for your physical health with Eric Walden's suggestions to strengthen your core and back, and then my article to help you sleep well! Eric is demonstrating the back exercises in the pictures below.


Low Back Exercises:
By
Eric Walden

Continuing from last time, we are still talking about the core of your body. This time we will be discussing the low back. The exercises we are going to go over today can be done anywhere. I have been picking exercises that can be done anywhere to avoid the excuse of I don’t have a gym or the right equipment to do the exercises.
The low back is so important to the body. The low back houses the lumbar region of the spine. These muscles are so vital to every movement of the body. I have heard of people throwing their backs out picking up a pencil. I always joke to just leave the pencil on the floor. I actually have a neighbor that just threw out his back picking up a screw at work. I was in shock I have never actually met/known someone who hurt their back picking up something so small. I have actually trained this neighbor for a few sessions. He was unable to continue training due to the economy, but this was an area that he and I knew he needed to work on. It is unfortunate that he didn’t keep up with some of the basic exercises that I showed him. Because I know he could have avoided this incident with some of these basic exercises.


The first exercise is called the Superman. To perform this exercise lay flat on your stomach with arms out in front of you. There are different variations of the exercise that can be done. The first part we will do is just the upper body. Raise your trunk and arms off the ground as high as possible. Hold at the top for a solid 1 count. Slowly lower yourself back to the floor and repeat the action. In the beginning I have my clients do 2 sets of 12 working up to 3 sets of 20 repetitions.







The next exercise is kind of the same as the first only a variation of it. This time you will raise your right arm and left leg at the same time. Hold at the top for a 1 count and lower the arm and leg to the ground. Switch sides raising your left arm and right leg. This motion strengthens from the top of the back down to the bottom of the back. Use the same rep/set regiment as the previous exercise.








The last of the superman exercises is the full body superman. This exercise is combing the upper body and lower body. Again laying on the floor on your stomach you will raise your arms and trunk off the ground. While doing this, raise both legs at the same time. I tell my clients to think about balancing on your belly button. That is all that you want touching the ground. Hold at the top for a 1 count. This, in my opinion, is the hardest of the superman exercises.



The last exercise of the low back exercises is called pointer. Start on all fours. From here you are lifting your right arm up and your left leg up. Keep both the arm and leg as straight as possible. You will feel a squeeze in the small of your back if you are doing this right. It shouldn’t hurt when you do it. Return both arm and leg to the ground. To make it a more advanced exercise perform the repetitions without putting your arm and leg down or by adding hand weights. When bringing them back in just hover them over the ground then extend them back out. I will touch my hand to my knee to keep myself from wanting to put my hand or knee down. I usually do all my reps for one side first then I will do the other side. To make the exercise easier you can switch sides after every repetition. During this exercise keep your abs tight try not to let them be relaxed during this exercise.




These exercises are basic low back exercises. If you sit all day or are over weight you should be doing these exercises to help strengthen the low back. We definitely don’t want you throwing your back out picking up a pencil or a screw!
If you have questions please feel free to email me at eric_walden@waldospersonaltraining.com. Please do not hesitate to ask questions. If you want to learn more about me please visit my website at http://www.waldospersonaltraining.com/. Have a healthy day.


SLEEP WELL!


Tips to help you feel refreshed from your time between the sheets!

Breakfast or lunch the largest meal of the day

Many people sleep better when they have protein at breakfast and lunch, and a small light dinner. Digesting food takes energy and can diminish your quality of sleep.

Exercise regularly and walk to sleep

Exercise relieves stress, energizes and then relaxes you. Work to exercise ½-1 hour a day, and at least 2 hours before bed (so you avoid the first the first energizing effect right before bed). People who walk at least 6 blocks per day at a normal pace are 1/3 less likely to have trouble sleeping and those with quicker pace have even better sleeping habits. Walking has more effectiveness then sleeping medicine without medicine side effects.

Hydrate and drink like a fish!

Drink eight to ten eight ounce glasses of water a day and add four-six more glasses when you exercise. Even mild dehydration can lead to chronic fatigue. Don’t drink more than four ounces of water within an hour of bedtime and empty your bladder right before bed.

Eat healthy and cut back on sleep robbers

Eat lots of whole foods and cut out fast and processed foods. Do not intake caffeine, coffee, colas, chocolate, tea after 2pm. Do not drink alcohol within 3 hours of bedtime. One to two glasses of wine can make you drowsy, but will wake you up frequently at night.

Keep a sleep/wake cycle

Work to go to sleep and awake at about the same time each day, even the weekends.

Enjoy & move to the light

Get outside when it’s sunny and turn on the lights at home in the morning. This helps reset your awake/sleep cycle.

Free to nap

It is find to nap especially if you didn’t sleep well the night before. People who nap for 15 minutes feel more alert and less sleepy even after a bad nights sleep.

Go to sleep when you’re tired

If you can’t fall asleep within 15-20 minutes, try repeating a bible verse, prayer, or poetry. Then if you still cannot sleep, get up and leave your bedroom to read, sit, or think pleasant thoughts (dream vacation, hiking/outdoors, etc.). This can help calm you to be able to return to bed and sleep.


Move your television

Your bed and bedroom are for sleep and sex. No talking (especially about difficult issues or about schedules), no reading, no talking on the telephone, and no worrying.

Best nighttime posture

Your pillow should be low enough to support your head without flexing your neck, to avoid neck and shoulder aches. Orthopedic pillows with a scooped out hollow for your head help support your neck & help people with chronic neck problems.

Relieve low back pressure by putting a pillow under your knees to comfortably flex your lower spine.

Have enough blankets to stay warm, so you don’t have to unconsciously curl up to keep warm (which would leave you with a sore back).

Allow room to be able to move your arms and legs and roll over during the night. This naturally can help prevent your joints from getting stiff.

Try an herbal soother

Instead of sleeping pills, try the natural herb valerian root, which can improve your sleep quality without any grogginess. Take between150-300mg at bedtime. Allow about 2 weeks for valerian to build up in your system. Once effective, take a break occasionally to allow your sleep patterns to develop without sleeping aids. Our supplement “Natural ZZZs” is an excellent herbal sleeping aid with valerian root.

Relaxation Therapies

Autogenic Training – imagine a peaceful environment and comforting body sensations, such as warmth or heaviness in limbs, warmth in the upper abdomen, and coolness on the forehead

Biofeedback Training – visual or auditory feedback is provided to the person to control chosen physiologic parameters

Imagery Training – visualization technique with focus on pleasant or neutral images

Paced Respirations – take a deep breath and hold for 5 seconds, repeat several times; focus on the sound of the breath

Progressive Muscle Relaxation – tense and relax large muscle groups; usually begin with the feet and work your way up to the facial muscles

Repetitive Focus – repeat and focus on a prayer, phrase, word, sound, or muscle activity

Medicines

Non prescription – Melatonin, Tylenol PM, Unisom, Bendryl, and others

Prescription
-nonaddictive such as Ambien (available generic), Ambien CR (a little longer acting), Lunesta, Sonata, Rozerem
-controlled benzodiazepines for only occasional use – Restoril (available generic and longer acting), shorter acting Ativan or Xanax (both available generic)
-other medicines with sleepiness as a side effect – muscle relaxant Flexeril (available generic), older antidepressant in given in lower doses Deseryl (trazedone) and Elavil and Remeron (all available generic)
-often treating a person’s underlying anxiety problem/disorder will significantly help sleep – so many of the newer antidepressant/anti anxiety medicines can help (like Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, Celexa, Lexapro, Efexor, Cymbalta, and others)

Special measures for shift changes

Use bright lights to mimic daytime to keep you awake. Try to stay on the same shift.
If you can’t sleep when you get home in the morning, don’t force it wait until early afternoon when you have an energy drop.

I look forward to writing to you again soon, and pray for all of you all God's blessings of health, safety, and to be filled to overflowing with all the fruit of His Spirit - love, peace, joy, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, faithfulness, and self control! Gal.5:22
Dr. Lisa

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Abdominal Exercises, Shepherding A Child's Heart, Recipe of Month/Know Produce

I am happy to write in the middle of Summer, enjoying God's beautiful world and creations! This blog article will stress the importance of maintaining your core abdominal strength, review the great faith-based parenting book "Shepherding A Child's Heart", and healthy nutrition with a great fish recipe and knowing raspberries (written by Judy,a great and knowledgeable friend of my Mom). Enjoy the education, motivation, and all God's glory!

Abdominal Exercises
By
Eric Walden

Abdominal (Ab) exercise is one the most important exercises a person can do. The main reason they are so important is not to slim down belly fat, but to strengthen the core. You want to strengthen your core because the core is used for everything: standing, sitting, walking, and bending over. So many people hurt their backs so easily because the ab and low back muscles are not strong. We’ll cover low back exercises next time.
There are so many infomercials out there saying, “Use this product to get lean abs.” or, “Do this many repetitions to get a flat stomach.” Most of them are not true. The main way to get a flat stomach is to watch what you eat. Seventy-five percent of they way you look is what you put in your mouth. As I have said before, you can go the gym for 3 hours a day, busting your butt, but if you go home and eat terrible you just wasted 3 hours of your time. So eating is the most important part of your exercising routine.
When it comes to doing an ab routine there are a couple of different approaches that can be taken. You can incorporate abs into the entire routine or you can do them all at the end. A big question I get as a personal trainer is “Should I do abs every day or only once or twice a week?” It doesn’t matter which you do. When doing abs everyday, I typically won’t do as many repetitions as I would if I was only doing them once or twice a week. If I’m doing abs once or twice a week, I really pound them. I take about 30 minutes and just do different types of ab exercises.
When training my clients I typically will incorporate abs into our routine. Then at the end of the workout I’ll add some ab exercise to totally fatigue the ab muscles. Because the ab muscles are used for just about everything in life they can take a little more punishment than other muscles. I do not have a set routine that I use, but I do try to work all four of the different quadrants of the ab muscle. There are the uppers, lowers, and both sides. I make sure that my clients do the same number in each quadrant.
An example of this is doing 25 regular crunches, 25 leg raises, and oblique twists 25 on each right and left side.

Exercise Ball Crunch

Tips: Sit on top of an exercise ball with your feet placed firmly on the floor. Roll the bottom half of your glutes off the ball by sliding forward. Your lower back should be centered on top of the ball. Place your hands on the sides of your head, but don't use your hands to pull. Crunch your upper body forward and roll your shoulders towards your hips. Squeeze at the top! Then lower back to the starting position and repeat. You can hold a weight to increase the difficulty.





Oblique Twist


Sitting on the floor with your feet flat, slightly lean back. Keeping your abs tight, slowly twist from side to side, try touching the floor with your hands on each side.


















Bent-Knee Hip Raise


Tips: This is like the Reverse Crunch but with a longer range of motion. Outstretch your hands to your sides with your knees bent at a 60 degree angle and your feet just off the floor. Using your lower abs, roll your pelvis backward to raise your hips off of the floor. Your knees will be over your chest. Squeeze your abs and then return to the starting position slowly. You can straighten your legs to make it harder or wear ankle weights.




These are just a couple of exercise that work the ab muscle. I like having my clients do sets of 25. For beginners, try doing closer to 10 and working your way up to a larger number. I’ll have clients do 2-3 sets. When doing any new exercise make sure to take it slow and keep under control. Doing these four ab exercises will fatigue your ab muscles. Remember to take it easy the first time. You’ll feel it in the morning if done properly. You might have a hard time sitting up in bed the next morning, which isn’t a bad thing. It is a good soreness.
Please feel free to contact me if you have questions on the mechanics of the exercise. I can describe it better for you. I would even be willing to come show you how to do the exercises in person as well. You can contact me through email at eric_walden@waldospersonaltraining.com or you call me at 765-404-7343.

Eric Walden has been my personal trainer for the past 9 months. I had trained with a personal trainer for 2 years a decade ago, but since then weight lifted about twice weekly by myself. Last year I decided to hire Eric to train my son Brendan twice weekly for football. He has done a tremendous job with his strength and conditioning/speed. When Brendan had football practices every weekday last Fall, I decided to train with Eric because I was very impressed with Eric’s hard work and excellent results with Brendan. I wanted to challenge my body and muscles by varying my usual routine. Since working with Eric ½ hour twice weekly, my strength and tone all over have tremendously increased. I really enjoy being stronger for my posture, feeling about my body, and all my activities. Eric is so talented in utilizing varied methods of exercise to achieve results in overall strength, tone, core, and weight loss.
Eric is available to train clients in their homes (and can bring needed weights, exercise ball, bose ball, elastic bands) or in his gym at his home in the Fishers area. He has packages for 30 or 60 minute sessions, or 30 or 60 minute buddy sessions. Eric also will do an individual assessment and provide 4 days of written exercises for $75.00. Please contact him by email (see above) or phone (765-404-7343) to significantly improve your health!
Dr. Lisa

Shepherding A Child’s Heart” by Tripp

“Above all else, guard your heart, for it is the wellsping of life.” Proverbs 4:23

This is the basis of this great book on parenting, which also helps you examine and work on your own heart. It teaches you how communication and discipline work together when parents love and guide (shepherd) wisely. Mr. Tripp states that if you only focus on behavior, you miss the heart. Straying behavior displays a straying heart. “Our kids are always serving something, either God or a substitute for God – an idol of the heart.” If the problem is the overflow of the heart, then the need for grace and Jesus is established. If we miss the heart, then we miss the glory of God. “One of the most important callings God has given parents is to display the greatness, goodness, and glory of the God for whom they are made.” Mr. Tripps’ prayer for us is expressed in King David’s Psalm 78, “that not only would you teach and model these truths for your children, but that even generations unborn would arise and teach them to their children, so they might put their hope in God.”

Introduction – Parents exercise their authority as God’s agents to direct their child on God’s behalf for their good, being true servants/authorities that lay down our lives – to empower our children to be self-controlled people living freely under the authority of God. “The central focus of parenting is the gospel, and our children need to understand not only “what” they did wrong but also the internal “why” they did it.” We can help our children see that God works from the inside out, and help them understand why they sin and how to recognize internal change.

Getting to the Heart of the Behavior – “The behavior a person exhibits is an expression of the overflow of his heart – the basic issue is always what is going on in the heart. A change in behavior that does not stem from a change in heart is not commendable. We must require proper behavior and help our children ask the questions that will expose the attitude of heart that has resulted in wrong behavior (for example, children fighting over a toy are both exhibiting a hardness of heart toward each other and selfishness). Unmasking your child’s sin/improper behavior, helps him understand his straying heart - leading to the cross and his/our need for forgiveness and our Savior.

Your Child’s Development: Shaping Influences – Shaping influences are the events and circumstances in a child’s developmental years that are catalysts for making him the person he is (structure of family life, family values, family roles, family response to failure, family history, family conflict resolution). Then the person he becomes is a product of his life experience and how he interacts with that experience.

Your Child’s Development: Godward Orientation – “Whatever the shaping influences of life, it is the child’s Godward orientation that determines his response to those shaping influences. The child is either worshiping and serving and growing in the understanding of the implications of who God is, or he is seeking to make sense of life without a relationship to God and worshiping idols.”

You’re in Charge – “Teach your children that God loves them so much that He gave them parents to be kind authorities to teach and lead them. It is God who is not being obeyed/honored when we as parents are disobeyed/not honored. We must insist that our children obey God, because obeying God is good and right.” We require obedience because God says we must. God has given us a duty to perform, so endorsement of our children is not necessary. Discipline is an expression of love – and are issues of character development and honoring God. We are God’s agent to show the need for God’s grace and forgiveness, and look to God for strength and wisdom in this task.
Mr Tripp recalls many conversations that went like this
Father: You didn’t obey Daddy, did you?
Child: No.
Father: Do you remember what God says Daddy must do if you disobey?
Child: Spank me?
Father: That’s right. I must spank you. If I don’t, then I would be disobeying God. You and I would both be wrong. That would not be good for you or me, would it?
Child: No. (a reluctant reply)
We must be humble and apologize and ask forgiveness when we sin against our children. Mr. Tripp states, “On many occasions I have had to seek forgiveness of my children for my anger or sinful response. I have had to say, ‘Son, I sinned against you. I spoke in unholy anger. I said thing I should not have said. I was wrong. God has given me a sacred task, and I have brought my unholy anger into this sacred mission. Please forgive me.’”

Examining Your Goals – Our goal is to lead our child to God (and not to his own resources) and to obey and perform for God’s approval (not for approval from the parent or others) – to glorify God and enjoy Him forever. If you teach your child to use their abilities and talents to make their lives better without reference to God, we will turn him away from God.

Reworking Your Goals – “It is our task to faithfully teach our children the ways of God. It is the Holy Spirit’s task to work through the word of God to change their hearts.” Mr. Tripp states that reading the Proverbs (book of wisdom and encouragement) daily is of great benefit to children and adults. His practice was to read 1/3 of a chapter of Proverbs before school each day (and he would often act out passages in the Old Testament when his children were little). Encourage your children to see and help/minister in the needs of those around them and seek to make peace (Romans 12:17-21 teaches us that the only weapon strong enough to overcome evil is good, and to leave vengeance to God).

Discarding Unbiblical Methods – “I didn’t turn out so bad” (just repeating your parent’s good and bad parenting), pop psychology (motivating for money or things, contracts with parents), behavior modification (heart is trained to greedy self-interest and obtaining rewards), emotionalism (shaming, fear of being left alone or isolated – child may develop lifelong desire to please parents or rebellious), punitive correction (hitting, yelling, grounding – to keep child under control through the negative experience of punishment and does not require ongoing interaction or discussion), erratic eclecticism (no consistency and just skips around to different methods of parenting). For example, it is not productive long term to respond to siblings yelling by yelling at them to stop yelling. Rather you need to address the heart issues of anger and bitterness in their hearts. When “experts” tell you that you must find what works with each child, they are saying you must find the idols of the heart that will move each child – we do not want to drive our children to idols, but to the gospel message and Christ! The gospel speaks to people as broken, fallen sinners who are in need of a new heart. God has given us his Son to make us new creatures - gives us open-heart surgery to produce change from the inside out, not a face lift.

Embracing Biblical Methods: Communication – Rich full communication takes time and is a dialogue focused on understanding, not a monologue. Communication is the expression of ideas with words, and we must be good listeners first to be able to draw out our children’s ideas and help them understand themselves, the world, and who God intends them to be. So if/when there is bad behavior, we can draw out the heart and lead them to Christ’s grace and redemption (for example in seeking to draw out the internal conflict of hitting a sibling – ask what were they thinking? What feeling? How did hitting make it better or worse? What else could they have done? How did it trust in or not trust in God?).

Embracing Biblical Methods: The Many Types of Communication – Encouragement (find courage, hope, and inspiration from God), Correction (insight into what was done wrong and what may be done to correct the problem), Rebuke (censures behavior), Entreaty (earnest pleading for his child to act in wisdom and faith), Instruction (providing a lesson to understand their world and the ways of God), Warning (alerts us to danger while there is still time to escape unharmed), Teaching (actively imparting knowledge), Prayer (hearing our children praying and us praying communicates our faith in God to our children)

Embracing Biblical Methods: A Life of Communication – “The wise parent talks when the kids are ready to talk, and is first a good listener. Insightful and penetrating conversations take time, and you must regard parenting as one of your most important tasks while you have children at home. Admit when you are wrong/have sinned/weaknesses, and be prepared to seek forgiveness for sinning against your children. Acknowledge your joys and fears and how you find comfort in God. Live a life of repentance and thankfulness.”

Embracing Biblical Methods: The Rod – Proverbs 22:15 “Folly is bound up in the heart of a child, but the rod of discipline will drive it far from him.” The fool is one who will not submit to authority or God, but is driven by his wants and passions. Proverbs 23:14 “Punish a child with the rod (spanking) and save his soul from death.” The rod = spanking is to be done by parents, an act of faith in God’s wisdom, an act of faithfulness toward a child, is a responsibility by parents obeying God, is a careful and controlled use of physical punishment, and is a rescue mission (failure to obey Mom or Dad is a failure to obey God and to persist in this disobedience to God places the child at great risk). Hebrews 12:11 “No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it.” The rod(spanking) returns the child to a place of blessing. Parents need both the communication and the rod methods given by God to work together for childrearing.

Embracing Biblical Methods: Appeal to the Conscience – “Your child has a God-given conscience which is our ally in discipline and correction. The child’s conscience must be instructed with the truth of God and His ways. The central focus of childrearing is to bring children to a sober assessment of themselves as sinners and understand the mercy of God, who offered Christ as a sacrifice for sinners. You accomplish this by addressing the heart as the fountain of behavior, and the conscience as the God-given judge of right and wrong. Jesus’ redemptive work entails forgiveness, internal transformation, and empowerment to live new lives.”

Infancy to Childhood: Training Objectives – A child must learn that he is an individual under authority. He has been made by and for God and has responsibility to honor and obey God in all things. Ephesians 6:1 “Honor your father and mother that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth.” Children must be taught that they can stay within God’s circle of blessing and safety by honoring and obeying and submitting to their parents, and the function of communication and the rod is to rescue them from their disobedience back into God’s blessing. Obedience is willing submission of one person to the authority of another (and often means doing something that we do not want to do). A child must be taught to do what he is told – without challenge, without excuse, and without delay. You can teach them to make an appeal, but only when they – begin to obey immediately (not after an appeal), be prepared to obey either way, appeal in a respectful manner, and accept the result of the appeal with a gracious spirit. Knowing our native resistance to authority (selfishness) and inability to always do what God has commanded, we are confronted with our need for the grace and power of Jesus Christ. Training our children to do what they ought, regardless of how they feel, prepares them to be a person who lives by principle rather than mood or impulse. Genuine submission to Godly authority bears good fruit.

Infancy to Childhood: Training Procedures – Consistency is mandated if our children are to learn that God requires obedience (we cannot become lax). “The ‘when’ of spanking is so simple that parents miss it. If your child has not obeyed, he needs to be spanked. If he has failed to respond to your direction, he has moved out of the circle of safety. If you accept challenge, delay, or excuses, you are not training in submission. You are, rather, training your children how to manipulate authorities and live on the ragged edge of disobedience. Your children must understand that when you speak for the first time, you have spoken for the last time.”






The How of Spanking – take your child to a private place, tell him specifically what he has done wrong, get him to acknowledge what he has done wrong, remind him of the function of spanking (to restore him to God’s blessing), tell him how many swats he will receive, remove his pants so the spanking is not lost in the padding of his pants, after you have spanked him take him up onto your lap and hug him (and tell him how much you love him, it grieves you to spank him, and you hope it will not be necessary again = restoration and no carryover), pray with him (Christ’s forgiveness, and Christ can empower and enable him to obey in the future)
The Why of Spanking – Discipline addresses the heart, which is the battleground. The spanking comes only because it is God’s method of driving foolishness far from your child’s heart. Read the book to find out the answers to – what is a spanking issue? When is my child old enough? When is my child an I use time-out instead of spanking? (Mr. Tripp states we do not have the right to substitute what God has commanded with the popular ideas of culture.) What if my child says he did not hear me? Will I be spanking all the time? What if I am too mad? What if we are not at home? What if I know my child is lying? What if I am not sure what happened? What if it is too late?

Childhood: Training Objectives (ages 5-12) – The big issue during these middle years is developing Godly character. You want your child to learn dependability, honesty, kindness, consideration, helpfulness, diligence, loyalty, humility, self-control, moral purity, thankfulness, and a host of other character qualities. You need to review and help your child and his relationship with God, with himself, and with others. “The alternative to addressing character issues in your children is to structure things around rules. You the produce children who learn to keep rules, and become smug and self-righteous. They become modern Pharisees whose cup is washed and clean on the outside, but is filthy on the inside.”

Childhood: Training Procedures – addressing the heart (the when, what, and why), appealing to the conscience (what is right and get to the root issues and sinfulness), developing character (living consistently with who God is and who I am – if you don’t call him to be what God has called him to be, you end up giving him a standard of performance that is within the realm of his native abilities apart from grace and then you reduce his need for God), interpreting behavior in character terms (daily proverb reading helps with this), and a long range life-time vision

Teenagers: Training Objectives – The teen years are years of monumental insecurity and often years of rebellion. While his need for direction has never been greater, the teen will resist overt attempts to corral him. Proverbs 1 provides us with the three foundations for life we need to teach and model for our children – fear of the Lord (rather than the fear of man – true freedom is found in a holy indifference to the opinion of others/peer pressure and instead being God-centered), adherence to parental instruction (as trusted guides and people of integrity who are living daily life in the rich truth of the word of God, and family worship addressing the interests and need of the teens), and dissociation from the wicked (the most powerful way to keep your children from being attracted by the offers of camaraderie from the wicked is to make home an attractive place to be)

Teenagers:Training Procedures – Internalization of the gospel (the process of your children embracing the things of God as their own living faith and developing autonomous identities as persons under God – requires the work of the Holy Spirit in your child), Shepherding the Internalization of the Gospel (appealing to the conscience, focusing on character issues in correction and discipline, addressing the heart as the spring of life, and refusing to give them a keepable standard that would eliminate their need for Christ), Developing a Shepherding Relationship With Teens (authority vs. influence, shepherding through doubt, positive interaction, developing an adult relationship, waiting for the right time, deal with broad themes, allowing room for disagreement, beyond internalization, entrusting your children to God)


ORANGE GLAZED SALMON , by Judy

I am not a fan of salmon but as I usually do, I test my recipes before they are printed. As it was simple to prepare for my dinner guests, one of whom was a salmon aficionado, I finally tasted this dish and was won over. Hope you enjoy it.

Ingredients

2 boneless, skinless, fresh salmon fillets(6 oz)

4 tbsp McCormick's Salmon seasoning

2 teaspoons brown sugar

Pinch of Kosher salt

1 tablespoon oil (or more if needed)

1 12 oz jar orange marmalade

2 tsp lime juice

Combine:Salmon spice, brown sugar and salt in a small bowl. Rub mixture over salmon fillets and marinate in refrigerator for 2 hours, covered. Wash hands thoroughly. Saute fillets in oil in a large non-stick pan over medium high heat for 3-4 minutes. Carefully turn fish and saute another 2-3 minutes. Meanwhile, in a small pan blend marmalade and lime juice in a pan on medium heat until marmalade is melted. Carefully spoon glaze over fish on all sides. Fish is done when it begins to flake when tested with a fork. Serve immediately. Enjoy

RASPBERRIES

Raspberries are available year round with some producing areas including California, Oregon, Washington, Canada and Chile.

Due to varietal differences, the appearance of red raspberries can vary from dull and dark to bright and shiny. Good quality raspberries should be dry, plump and firm. Avoid moldy, soft and leaky berries or berries that break apart easily. Berries may leak or begin to deteriorate if they are mishandled. so handle with care. Raspberries may decay if they are allowed to stand at room temperature. Keep raspberries properly refrigerated until ready to use. They are highly sensitive to freezing and will break down if exposed to even light freezing. They should be bought for immediate use only.

If raspberries are mashed, sugared and brought to a boil the resulting sauce keeps well. They are excellent to eat as is or added to ice cream, in cakes, tarts or as syrup for pancakes.Raspberry Salad Dressing: Puree 1/2 cup fresh raspberries in blender, strain through sieve and discard seeds. Whisk puree with 1/4 cup raspberry vinegar and 1/2 cup olive oil, season to taste with garlic salt , salt and pepper.

NUTRITIONAL VALUES

Serving size 1 cup full, calories 50, calories from fat 0.

Total fat 0 g, Cholesterol 0 g, Sodium 0 mg, Total Carbs 17 g, Dietary Fiber 8 g, Sugars 12 g, Protein 1 g, Vitamin A 0 %, Vitamin C 40%, Calcium 2%, Iron 2%.

With my hugs and prayers,
Dr. Lisa