December 2017 Newsletter – New Year, New You

December 2017 Newsletter – New Year, New You

How Hormones are Key to the Top 10 New Year’s Resolutions

What is it that YOU hope to change, reinvent, reconsider, move towards or away from in the coming year?

Here’s how hormone balance could well be the key to having all our Top 10 Resolutions for 2018 fall into place.

1. Lose weight – Hormone imbalances can program us to put on the pounds.
Many women, especially those in menopause and the years approaching it, have an estrogen dominance problem. As ovulation wanes and less progesterone is produced, this leads to weight gain in the hips, thighs and bottom. An imbalance of cortisol stress hormone is another roadblock to losing weight, with high levels fueling appetite, sugar cravings and the accumulation of belly fat. Low thyroid hormones can also slow metabolism, making it easy to gain weight and harder to lose.

2. Get organized – Hormone imbalances can run interference on getting your house in order.
Out-of-whack cortisol levels can make us unfocused and easily distracted. With low testosterone, it can be tough to think straight, while estrogen lows are linked with foggy thinking and difficulty putting things in order.

3. Save more, spend less – Stress hormones in particular can trigger feelings of being overwhelmed, impulse behaviors, and a lack of control.
This can lead to OVERdoing it in more ways than one: overeating, overworking, overspending, etc.

4. Enjoy life to the fullest – Hormones can play havoc with our zest for living.
Estrogen/progesterone fluctuations are notorious for unleashing a rollercoaster of moods and emotions, androgens (DHEA and Testosterone) high or low can cause us to feel on or off the edge, while stress hormones can send us spiraling around the rabbit hole.

5. Stay fit and healthy – Hormone fitness is a must.
All the hormones in our body need to be in the right proportions with one another: estrogens, androgens, adrenals and thyroid hormones work closely together to protect the health of our heart, brain and nervous system, muscles and bones, skin and hair.

6. Learn something exciting – Learning about hormones and the essential role they play in governing our physical, mental and emotional functions throughout life IS exciting!

Hormones

7. Quit smoking – Reduce stress hormones to reduce the smoking urge.
Having a smoke is synonymous with curbing anxiety, a bad habit time out that is better spent doing exercise, deep breathing, meditation, yoga, etc., all of which are deeply rebalancing when it comes to our hormonal health.

8. Help others in their dreams – To sleep, perchance to dream; this too is a hormone matter.
To dream day or night we must first sleep. Balanced levels of melatonin in tandem with cortisol regulate the rhythms of sleep and walking. A well-rested mind and body provides the inner calm and tranquility needed to help invest our own dreams, and those of others, with purpose and meaning.

9. Fall in love – When looking for love we don’t want our hormones playing out of tune.
Hormones are often compared to a symphonic orchestra; the string, woodwinds, brass, and percussion instruments all playing in perfect harmony. So too must the hormones of our internal orchestra play in tempo; otherwise we can find ourselves ut of sorts, out of libido, and out of love.

10. Spend more time with family – “Once I got my hormones balanced my family wanted to spend more time with me!”
Quality family time is often rationed by our impatience, irritability, or stress levels – all hallmark signs of hormone imbalance. When we can’t understand why we say things we don’t mean, or make so little time for the people we love most in all the world, it’s a good idea to consider the state of our hormones.

Hormone testing can identify hidden imbalances that put
us at odds with our own resolutions for selp-improvement
in the New Year.

Saliva Testing

Misty Croft
misty@flowersmedical.com