A Moment’s Peace Book Party Blue Willow Bookshop

What a beautiful evening at the adorable Blue Willow Bookshop. We toasted champagne, enjoyed delicious cupcakes by Sister Bells and I gave my three  best  tips for creating peace everyday. Thanks Blue Willow for your continual support!

See all the photos

What: Book Party at Blue Willow Bookshop

When: Tuesday, May 4, 2010 7 p.m.

Where: Blue Willow Books

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A Moment’s Peace: A Mom’s Guide to Creating Calm Amidst Chaos Book Party at Indulge

What: Book Signing Party at Indulge

When: Wednesday April 24th 5-7 p.m.

Where: Indulge Boutique

This unique shop in River Oaks is a breath of fresh air!

Book signing, shopping, refreshments and friends. Go on indulge yourself…


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Health Care Reform- PREVENTION is key

In 2003, my family returned to the United States after living abroad in England for fifteen years. After only a few days in the humid, allergen-laden Houston air, our little boy Sam had an asthma attack. Luckily, a precautionary “emergency” inhaler quickly dilated the bronchi in his lungs, and he recovered.

Within less than a week Sam was back to normal and breathing easy

Based on my experience in integrative medicine, I also realized that in this city, our new home, we were going to need some help to keep Sam’s body in balance. My first stop was locating a couple of good complementary practitioners who practiced natural medicine—an acupuncturist and a homeopath. This was followed by a trip to the grocery store to stock up on fresh food and naturally “allergy-proofing” his bedroom.Within less than a week, Sam was back to normal and breathing easy. His “emergency” inhaler put back in the cupboard– and wasn’t ever needed again.

The American magic bullet was a culture shock

My background as a registered nurse taught me much about conventional medicine. The birth of my third child, whose illness was the catalyst for me to look outside the boundaries of conventional medicine is the reason my life’s work has accumulate to what it is today. The combination allows me to care for my body, all the while remaining true to the most basic doctrine of medical law: “First, do no harm.” I speak and respect both the language of complementary medicine—such as Ayurveda, acupuncture, homeopathy—and conventional medicine. Returning to the U.S. and seeing how we Americans use conventional medicine—as a magic bullet enabling us to keep up with the pace of society—was a culture shock.

America’s health care seemed uncomfortably foreign to me

Initially, I felt alone in a place that was supposed to feel familiar. However, what ultimately felt right was a “knowingness” allowing me to stand firmly in my belief of holistic health and happiness. Today in the dawn of America’s new health care overhaul—our crippling problems with costs, childhood obesity, and the fear of interdependence on a fragile system—reminds me of those first few weeks after returning back home, returning to a place that felt uncomfortably foreign for me.

Reclaim the wisdom lying dormant in your own body

Use the current Health Care Reform as your catalyst to  empower you to reach beyond the boundaries of conventional medicine as a quick fix, and reclaim the wisdom lying dormant in your own body. You will find yourself both healthier and happier, and interconnected to our world.

This blog is excerpted from my new book Healthy Mother Healthy Child: Creating Whole Families from the Inside Out

I proudly serve as Dr Andrew Weil’s educational partner for Weil Baby. Check out Dr Weil’s Health Care Call to Action Plan from his latest book Why Our Health Matters.

Do you understand the new health care bill? What is one thing you do everyday to keep yourself healthy?

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New books coming soon

Who doesn’t want a healthy happy child? How best to achieve that goal is the real mystery. Stuck between prescriptive medical guides and a tangle of unfamiliar alternate therapies, what’s a mom to do?  Elizabeth Irvine has the answer.

Borrowing from ancient wisdom and building from a scientific base

As a former ICU nurse and devoted practitioner of complementary medicine and yoga, Elizabeth has based her entire career on bridging the gap between traditional Western medicine and alternate practices in search of whole health and wellness. Borrowing from ancient Eastern wisdom, building from a solid scientific base, and adding a good dash of a mother’s common sense, Healthy Mother, Healthy Child offers solutions for every family. In this comforting, easy-to-follow guide, Elizabeth tackles topics from childhood obesity to calming techniques for children to ways your family can go “green,” offering practical tips and a positive philosophy that will help your entire family build physical and emotional health from the inside out.

Andrew Weil, M.D., best-selling author of Spontaneous Healing, says,

“I am always pleased when I find others who are passionate about providing an integrative approach to health care which encompasses body, mind and spirit.”

Miriam Peskowitz, author of Daring Book for Girls and host of PBS’ “Daring Kids” says,

“For everyone caught in the daily scramble-and-spin, here’s a calm and lilting guide to achievable stress-busting, wellness and health.”

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Dr. Andrew Weil’s Education Partner WeilBaby

For me, when something in my life happens by chance in a beneficial way: it validates for me that I am in my groove– living in a way that feels peaceful and contented. Serendipity feels like magic.

My new job

Recently I accepted the new role as Andrew Weil’s educational partner for Weil Baby. This direction for my work felt completely right. I had literally just finished the manuscripts for my two new books, Healthy Mother Healthy Child: Creating Whole Families from the Inside Out and A Moment’s Peace: A Mom’s Guide to Creating Calm Amidst Chaos ( Bright Sky Press April 2010) when I received the invitation to work with Weil Baby.

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Allergy-Proof Your Home

Understanding and Managing Allergies
Part Two of Two: Allergy-Proof Your Home

As a little girl growing up in a small midwestern town, I can still hear my mother saying, “Open the windows, and let’s bring some fresh air into the house.” Now I am the mom, living in a large metropolis, tagged as one of the most challenging places to live with allergies. Yet, as bad as that outside air might be, surprisingly, it’s the indoor air that is much worse. According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), our indoor air quality is 4-5 times worse than our polluted outdoor air. What’s a mother to do?

Why do we care?
It’s estimated 15 million Americans have asthma (including 1 in 13 school-aged children), 35 million suffer from upper respiratory symptoms that are allergic reactions to airborne allergens and allergies are the 6th leading cause of chronic disease– costing our health care system $18 billion annually.

Weighing in
With 25 years of experience as a health care professional, an advocate for healthy living and as a mother of an allergic child– my passion lies in helping others help themselves. And, when it comes to allergies, one of my favorite topics is how to put our bodies (or our children’s) in a place of strength, allowing it to perform as nature intended, allowing it to self-heal from a place of prevention.

Our body is like a reservoir
In understanding the way allergic triggers can affect us, I like to use the example of comparing our body to a reservoir. In regards to our environment, life presents us many different scenarios. Sometimes our environmental conditions are controllable (such as our home) and sometimes they are not (school or work). For an allergy sensitive person, our environment affects the “reservoir.” Different factors can affect the reservoir: high pollen, grass or mold count and pet dander to name a few. Exposure to these factors fills the reservoir, and when the reservoir is full, it causes the dam to break. The allergy sufferer’s body is able to handle one trigger perhaps, but the combination of too many factors — several triggers in the environment, stress, or a period of poor eating habits — tips it over the edge. When the dam breaks, the symptoms of an allergic response appear: running nose, itchy watery-eyes, eczema, wheezing and asthma. This analogy may help explain why it’s hard to predict your body’s allergic reaction and why it can sometimes be more severe than others.

Allergy-proofing your home is do-able
Creating the best possible environment in our home is one positive step we can take to help our families lower their “reservoir” and manage their allergies from a place of prevention. Decreasing the exposure of these pesky allergy-triggers can make a significant, sometimes almost magical difference in your allergy “reservoir.” The good news; allergy-proofing your home is within everyone’s reach and do-able.

Where do I start?
There are numerous ideas when it comes to allergy-proofing your home. In this article I focus on eliminating the top three allergic triggers: dust and dust mites, pet dander and mold. The following three suggestions come from my research and personal experience in creating the best “allergy-trigger-free” environment for my family. Here are some of my favorites:

• Whole-House Air Filtration System
According to the results of a health impact study completed by scientists at Environmental Health & Engineering Inc., in collaboration with professors from the Harvard School of Public Health, Trane CleanEffectsTM, a whole-house air filtration system removes up to 99.98 percent of particles and allergens from the filtered air and more than 99 percent of the common flu virus, or Influenza A. This whole-house air filtration system removes things like, pollen, dust, mold and pet dander to name a few. The cost comes in at approximately $800-$1,100 installed. If you think this is pricey, weigh-out the cost of putting multiple portable units in your home to cover the space a whole-house air cleaner covers, in addition to regularly replacing expensive HEPA filters. The good thing about the Trane CleanEffects system is that it’s 8 times more effective than a HEPA filter and when it comes to cleaning it, all you have to do is either vacuum it or hose it down. You don’t have to replace the filter. The unit simply tells you when it’s time to clean it out.

Allergy-Free Bedroom: Use allergy-free bedding, remove curtains/carpets, eliminate stuffed toys
You will spend one-third of your life in bed. Therefore, it makes sense to create a sleeping environment that is as allergy-free as possible. Dust mites lurk in bedding, soft furnishings and high pile carpet. Invest in allergy-free bedding which encases your pillow and mattress. Wash your bedding and one chosen stuffed toy once a week in hot water (160 degrees F) or use special laundry detergent that allows you to wash at any temperature. Remove carpets and curtains and replace with wood, tile or elements that don’t hold dust and mites.

Pets live outside, or at a minimum, out of the bedroom
Dander from your dog or cat can float around in the air and be a trigger for allergies. 36 percent of Americans have dogs and 31 percent have cats. Cat allergens especially are “sticky” and adhere to clothing and other surfaces. If you’re going to have pets, at a minimum, keep your pets out of the allergy sufferer’s bedroom.

The bottom line
If the above suggestions appear drastic, just keep in mind the benefit ratio of incorporating some of these changes in exchange for living a potentially healthier, allergy-free life. Creating the best, allergy-trigger-free environment, contributes to keeping your environmental “reservoir” low. Prevention is the key. Be aware of your surroundings. Factors that may have previously “tipped you over the edge,” now removed, create a healthier environment, giving your body a chance to respond as it’s capable–naturally, beautifully and allergy-free.

For more information about allergies and how to “Allergy-Proof Your Home”, see Article: Allergy 101. and my book, 2nd edition coming spring 2010 Bright Sky Press, Healthy Mother Healthy Child For more information on cleaner, healthier living, go to Trane.com

New Books Coming Soon

It’s been a nice relaxing summer– no school schedules or commitments and able to enjoy a quieter pace and more time to spend with the family. Even though the pace has been more relaxed I have managed to stay busy writing.  I just completed my two new books manuscripts! A complete new edition of Healthy Mother Healthy Child: Creating Whole Families from the Inside Out, and a brand new book, titled A Moments Peace: A Mom’s Guide to Creating Calm in the Midst of Chaos. I met my Sept 1 deadline– YEAH!  I am so excited to share them with you. They will be released in the Spring 2010 but I will be sharing some of the new content and ideas with you. Watch my blogs this fall.