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The website of Author/Writer and Psychic Medium Astrid Brown. Making the most of 'YOU' i.e. how to achieve well-being and beauty from within ourselves. A truly holistic blog providing information on all aspects of psychic mediumship, spiritualism, philosophy, holistic therapies, nutrition, health, stress, mental health and beauty with a little bit of Wicca for good measure. Feeling and looking good is as much a part of how we feel inside as the outside.

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I am a great believer in Karma, but just what is it? Karma comes from the Sanskrit and ancient Indian Language with the underlying principal that every deed in our lives will affect our future life. For example, if we treat others badly during our lifetime we will have negative experiences later on in that lifetime or in future lifetimes. Likewise, if we treat others well we will be rewarded by positive experiences.

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ASTRID BROWN

Saturday 15 September 2012

BLOOD (ANATOMY FOR BEGINNERS)





Blood is divided into two parts cells 45% and plasma 55% although mostly water it carries nutrients, such as minerals, proteins, glucose, hormones and oxygen and carbon dioxide around the body. The three main type of cells are erythrocytes (red blood cells) leucocytes (white blood cells) and platelets (thrombocytes) The red blood cells main function is to carry oxygen to the body's cells, these contain haemoglobin (which contains iron) that helps these cells bind to the oxygen molecules to carry it around the body. White blood cells function is mainly defending the body from infection and platelets are tiny little fragile cells that when damaged as in an injury release substances to cause the blood to clot thus stemming the flow of blood.

There are 4 main groups A, B, AB and O and these can be either Rh positive or Rh negative so blood can be one of 8 types

The ABO system
Blood groups are defined by the ABO system.
  • Blood group A has A antigens on its red blood cells and anti-B antibodies in its plasma.
  • Blood group B has B antigens and anti-A antibodies in its plasma.
  • Blood group O has no antigens but both anti-A and anti-B antibodies. This means that group O red cells can safely be given to anyone. It is the most common blood group in the UK.
  • Group AB has both A and B antigens but no antibodies, otherwise it would destroy itself.
Receiving blood from the wrong ABO group could be life-threatening because antibodies in a person with group A blood will attack group B antigens and vice-versa.
The Rh system
Red blood cells sometimes have another antigen, a protein known as the RhD antigen. If this is present, your blood group is RhD positive. If it is absent, you are RhD negative. This means that you can be one of eight blood groups:
  • A RhD positive (A+)
  • A RhD negative (A-)
  • B RhD positive (B+)
  • B RhD negative (B-)
  • O RhD positive (O+)
  • O RhD negative (O-)
  • AB RhD positive (AB+)
  • AB RhD negative (AB-)
Around 85% of the UK population is RhD positive.



96% of us rely on the other 4% to give blood. Please don't leave it to someone else.
DO SOMETHING AMAZING TODAY GIVE BLOOD
Register as a blood donor
Register as a blood donor
Receive an information pack, containing all you need to know about giving blood.

















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ANOTHER REASON TO GIVE UP SMOKING

Article below from the Daily Mail and another reason why smoking is detrimental to your health. With Smoking you don't only risk cancer from inhaling all the toxins in cigarette smoke, the chemicals such as Nicotine affect the circulation thus decreasing blood supply to the extremities and paralysing the Cilia (little hairs that line the respiratory tract) in that this renders you unable to effectively cough up those tarry cancerogenic substances inhaled when smoking. Smoking also deprives your body's cells of the oxygen it needs to maintain good health. Lack of sleep also affects health and will be detrimental to your immune system as lack of sleep leads to stress and stress hormones damage our immune system. We are born with our quota of nerve cells in the brain, once they die they are not replaced so why cause their premature death by depriving them of oxygen.  I can't understand why young people in particular want to take up this stupid practise when so much is known about it.


Get help now to stop smoking

Eight practical, quick and simple steps you can take NOW to quit smoking

Smokers get fewer hours sleep and a lower quality of rest than non-smokers, scientists claim

  • 17% of smokers get fewer than six hours of sleep each night, compared with just 7% of non smokers
  • 28% of smokers reported 'disturbed' sleep, while only 19% of non-smokers felt their sleep was poor quality

Smokers may get fewer hours of sleep and have less restful slumber than non-smokers, according to study.
Researchers found that of nearly 1,100 smokers surveyed, 17 per cent got fewer than six hours of sleep each night and 28 per cent reported 'disturbed' sleep quality.
That compared with rates of 7 per cent and 19 per cent respectively among more than 1,200 non-smokers who were also surveyed.
Researcher: Seventeen per cent of smokers surveyed got fewer than six hours of sleep each night and 28 per cent reported 'disturbed' sleep quality
Researcher: Seventeen per cent of smokers surveyed got fewer than six hours of sleep each night and 28 per cent reported 'disturbed' sleep quality
Lead researcher Stefan Cohrs, from Charite Berlin medical school in Germany, said: 'This study demonstrates for the first time an elevated prevalence of sleep disturbance in smokers compared with non-smokers in a population without lifetime history of psychiatric disorders even after controlling for potentially relevant risk factors.'
The findings cannot prove that smoking directly impairs sleep, since smokers may have other habits that could affect their shut-eye such as staying up late to watch TV or getting little exercise, he said.
But there is also reason to believe the stimulating effects of nicotine may be to blame.
'If you smoke and you do suffer from sleep problems, it is another good reason to quit smoking,' Mr Cohrs said.
Poor sleep quality may not only make your waking hours tougher. Some studies have also linked habitually poor sleep to health problems like obesity, diabetes and heart disease.

'More than one-quarter of smokers had a score than landed them in the category of disturbed sleep'

The study included 1,071 smokers and 1,243 non-smokers who were free of mental health disorders, since those conditions may make a person both more likely to smoke and more vulnerable to sleep problems.
The researchers, whose work appeared in the journal Addiction Biology, used a questionnaire that gauges sleep quality. 
Overall, more than one-quarter of smokers had a score than landed them in the category of 'disturbed' sleep, meaning they had a high probability of insomnia.
Many things can affect sleep quality, and Cohrs's team was able to account for factors such as age, weight, and alcohol abuse. Yet smoking was still linked to poorer sleep quality.
It's still possible there are other things about smokers that impair their sleep, but Cohrs said he thinks the most likely culprit is nicotine - and the prospect of better sleep could provide smokers with an additional reason to quit.



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ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY FOR BEGINNERS "THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM"

ENDOCRINE SYSTEM PART ONE

DIAGRAM OF THE ENDOCRINE GLANDS


It is often said that it is the Pituitary Gland that controls the Endocrine system however this is not strictly true although it plays a big part in it. It is the area of the brain known as the Hypothalamus that maintains homeostasis (balance) within the body and one of its functions is to regulate the pituitary gland. You can see from the diagram above the Endocrine system organs which are known as ductless glands meaning their hormones (chemical messengers) are excreted directly into the blood and not through a duct. 

As the Hypothalamus is trying to maintain balance within the body it is constantly check our blood analysing what's needed to help it function at its best so if it detects a fall in certain hormones it will send a message to the pituitary gland say and that pituitary gland will send a hormone to its target organ for example Thyroid Stimulating Hormone that is then excreted into the blood stream to target the Thyroid gland to produce Thyroxine, the Hypothalamus will be constantly checking levels of Thyroxine in the blood and when the levels are correct, it will send a message to the pituitary gland to stop secreting Thyroid Stimulating Hormone and if the levels drop again the same thing happens all over again. This is known as a 'Feedback System' and that is basically how our hormone levels are maintained.

Obviously the subject matter of the Endocrine system is vast and I am only giving the basics and keeping it simple but one thing that affects us all is stress and the endocrine system really is worked.

CORTISOL OFTEN KNOWN AS THE 'STRESS HORMONE' 

Cortisol is a steroid hormone produced within the adrenal cortex in the adrenal glands, these are cone shaped organs sitting on top of the kidneys. It's a very important hormone and responsible for proper glucose metabolism, helping regulate blood pressure, has a part to play in insulin and blood sugar levels and is part of the inflammatory response. It's often known as the stress hormone but as you can see that's only part of its functions, and this is because it's secreted in higher levels as part of the 'Fight or Flight response'. When secreted in short bursts its beneficial to the body as due to it's actions, it helps mobilise energy reserves, heightens memory and lowers response to pain. This is how and why it's beneficial in the 'Fight and Flight response', it acts quickly and helps survival, however today's stresses are not the same as yesteryear and therein lies the problem.

When there is prolonged secretion of this hormone, when stress is on going, it causes blood sugar imbalances, affects bone density, causing it to decrease and also causes a decrease in muscle tissue. It raises blood pressure affects the body's immune system making us more susceptible to infection and leads to poor healing. It also causes shifts in body fat by increasing more fat around the abdominal areas and leads to higher levels of cholesterol.


The Hypothalamus & the Relationship to the Endocrine System in ‘Stress’

Below the flow chart illustrates how our minds' emotions and feelings trigger a reaction in the Hypothalamus to instigate what happens in the 'Fight or Flight' response. The Hypothalamus then in turn influences both the Autonomic Nervous System and the Endocrine system. This is fine short term it helps us cope in dangerous scenarios and was designed as a protective response, however the stresses of today are not those of yesteryear. No harm comes to our bodies in the short term, this is not the case in long term stress. All is not lost for there are ways we can influence the Hypothalamus to prevent the long term damaging effects of stress on our health. I shall be exploring this under Holistic Therapies. 






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Friday 14 September 2012

SIMPLE ANATOMY THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM




Since I am keeping this simple I won't go into much detail of how it is an area of our brain that controls respiration but it is suffice to know that when the diaphragm contracts (it is a large muscle that separates our chest from our abdomen) it increases the volume in our chest cavity. At the same time the little intercostal muscles between our ribs contract and lift up the rib cage. Because the air pressures are different and due to various natural scientific laws this draws in more air into our lungs and due to certain receptor nerve cells they send a signal back to our brain instigating the opposite, diaphragm relaxes and we breathe out carbon dioxide. It is the Alveoli (see diagram above) where the interchange of gases takes place into and out of the blood stream for surrounding these tiny little balloon structures are tiny blood vessels known as capillaries, these are merely one cell thick to facilitate the body's waste carbon dioxide to pass into the alveoli and the oxygen in the air in the alveoli to pass into the blood stream.

This happens continuously throughout our lives automatically the average healthy adult 12 to 18 respirations per minute. It's important to remember that each system of the body is dependent on the others to function as they all interact with one another eg. The brain stem controls respiration and respiration is vital to bring oxygen to the body's cells and remove waste and its specialised nerve receptor cells within the aorta that lets the brain know when to evoke inhalation.

You can also see in the diagram the left lung is slightly smaller than the right this is to allow for the heart. As we breathe in through our nose the air is moistened and the whole of the respiratory tract is covered in little hairs 'Cilia' these trap debris and help waft up mucus from the lungs. The Uvula is a fleshy piece of tissue that stops food going into our Trachea (wind pipe) and the trachea leads to the Bronchus which divides into two Bronchi eventually getting smaller and smaller to becoming Bronchioles to which are attached the Alveoli.

Incidentally smoking paralyses these little Cilia rendering them unable to function and they are not able to move the mucous up out of the lungs, this is what leads to the classic smokers' cough.

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Thursday 13 September 2012

SIMPLE ANATOMY URINARY SYSTEM




The Urinary system's function consists of two kidneys two ureters leading down to the bladder and the urethra leading to the external body. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood through tiny specialised structures known as nephrons. These are very delicate structures than can be damaged through continuous high blood pressure. The kidneys regulate electrolytes (salts) within the body and remove waste such as urea, they also help regulate blood pressure. They excrete this waste as urine. Incidentally urine is sterile until it leaves the body when bacteria acts upon it. The urine then passes down the ureters to the bladder where it is stored until its convent to be emptied. They are placed at the rear of the abdominal cavity and are protected by an area of fat just below the waist.


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BASIC HUMAN ANATOMY PLACEMENT OF MAJOR ORGANS

Placement of the major organs and structures following on from the last two articles on here.



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SIMPLE ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY, THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM

Digestion as I mentioned previously begins in the mouth, food is chewed up assisted by the teeth and tongue and mixed with saliva. Saliva helps moisten the food and helps us swallow it, but the enzymes within Saliva, amylase and pytalin break down carbohydrates, which are complex sugars into disaccharides.  This chewed up food is now known as a bolus and is pushed down the oesophagus by the tongue. The oesophagus is a hollow muscular tube commonly known as the gullet. that leads to the stomach. The stomach is a muscular hollow organ that produces hydrochloric acid, to help break down food further and kill bacteria, it also produces Pepsin an enzyme to break down proteins. The stomach's muscular action churns up the food and it is now known as chyme as it passes into the first stage of the small intestine, the Duodenum, it is in the small intestine where the vast majority of digestion takes place.

The accessory digestive organs the pancreas and the liver now assist the process of digestion. The liver produces Bile, this is released and stored in the gallbladder and it is from there it is released into the duodenum its function is to emulsify fats and acts as a deodourant and gives faeces their brown colour. At the same time the pancreas produces digestive enzymes to further break down carbohydrates into simple sugars monosaccharides (amylase, lactase, sucrase) and (trypsin and chymotrypsin) break down proteins into polypeptides. Lipase breaks the fats down into fatty acids. 

As the broken down food continues along the small intestine the lining is covered in small projections known as Villi, these increase the absorbent area and the nutrients from the food are absorbed through those into the blood stream. Obviously its a lot more complex than this as I'm trying to keep this simple. 

The main function of the large intestine is to absorb water from the faeces and any remaining nutrients and the end result faeces is stored in the rectum until voided.

The Liver does have a very important role in the body besides manufacturing Bile as does the Pancreas and that will be explained in another blog.

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ANATOMY FOR BEGINNERS (AS A SURVEY REVEALS HALF OF UK POPULATION ARE IGNORANT) BEGINNING WITH THE MOUTH

I saw this in the Daily Mail (below) and I can't believe how ignorant some people can be about their bodies so I thought I had better enlighten them.

Starting with the mouth and keeping this relatively simple.

Beginning with the teeth a full grown adult has 32 teeth, though some people are born without the 4 third molars commonly known as wisdom teeth, they usually erupt around ages 14/15. We also have 20 milk teeth (our first deciduous teeth) which we begin to lose around ages 5 to 6 and are gradually replaced by our permanent teeth.


Diagram of the mouth, digestion begins within the mouth where food is chewed (masticated) and the action of salivary amylase and pytalin (enzymes that break down carbohydrates)

Tonsils are part of our immune system (lymphoid tissue) to help protect us from infection. The tongue as well has helping us to speak aids digestion by helping us move and chew food and is divided up into areas that help us detect flavours such as sweet, salty, sour and bitter.

Article from the Daily Mail below


Half of Britons are so clueless about their own bodies they are unable to point out where their HEART is


More than half of Britons are so clueless about their bodies that they cannot pinpoint the correct location of their heart, it emerged today.
Not only that, but we do not know how much blood we have, how many teeth are in our mouths or what roles our vital organs perform.
Many of the 2,000 respondents questioned by researchers were unable to say what our correct body temperature should be, while nearly 10 per cent were unsure of the number of kidneys we have.
There it is: Half of Britons are so clueless about their bodies that they cannot pinpoint the correct location of their heart, according to a study
There it is: Half of Britons are so clueless about their bodies that they cannot pinpoint the correct location of their heart, according to a study
Additionally, the study found 60 per cent could not name their own blood type.
The research was commissioned by the Museum Of London to mark the launch of its October exhibition Doctors, Dissection And Resurrection Men.
Jelena Bekvalac, Curator of Human Osteology at the museum, said: 'It seems we have a depressing lack of anatomical awareness.
'Perhaps we have a tendency to rely on medical authorities to do all they can for us without really understanding the way that we work.
'We are reassured by expertise and don’t take the time to understand the basics of how our own bodies function or are structured.
'The Museum of London’s new exhibition, Doctors, Dissection And Resurrection Men explores the extreme lengths 19th century medical pioneers went to to increase anatomical understanding.
'Surgeons faced a torturous dilemma - learn their skills on stolen corpses or practice on a living patient.
'And so began a gruesome trade. Body-snatchers stalked the city’s graveyards to supply fresh corpses for medical dissection.

OUR LACK OF KNOWLEDGE ABOUT OUR OWN BODIES

  • 50% don't know where their heart is (centre-left of the chest)
  • 75% don't know how many bones are in an adult body (206)
  • Just under 50% don't know how many teeth we have (32)
  • 40% don't know where their kidneys are
  • Just under 10% don't know how many kidneys we have
  • More than 50% don't know where their gall bladder is
  • 60% of Britons don’t know their own blood type
  • 66% did not know that the average adult has between five and six litres of blood
  • 18% think a visor was a type of tooth (it's a surface that protects the eyes)
  • 75% do not know that the liver is our biggest internal organ
  • 40% think a single lung is of a greater size
'It is therefore sobering to consider our less than exemplary knowledge of basic biology.'
The study found just half of those polled could correctly identify the heart’s location in the left-centre of the chest.
And three-quarters were stumped when it came to guessing how many bones are in the adult human body. There are 206.
Nearly half were unsure as to how many teeth we have - 32 - while 40 per cent haven’t a clue where their kidney is located.
More than half couldn’t tell you where their gall bladder can be found and one in thirteen people didn’t know how many kidneys we have.
Worryingly, six in ten Britons didn’t know their own blood type.
A third of people could correctly state that the average adult has between five and six litres of blood.
Nearly a fifth of Brits, 18 per cent, thought a visor was a type of tooth.
Three-quarters of the respondents did not know that the liver is our biggest internal organ, with four in ten thinking a single lung was of greater size.
And nearly half the study couldn’t get anywhere near to guessing the healthy temperature of the human body, 37C.
Jelena Bekvalac said: 'Doctors, Dissection And Resurrection Men will provide a fascinating insight into a crucial period in our medical and social history.
'It may also help those who are a little confused by their own anatomy.'





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Wednesday 12 September 2012

POPEYE FIGHTS OFF DEMENTIA

Well I've always known the importance of green vegetables in the diet Spinach being one of those and here we see how it's valuable in fighting off dementia. Recently I wrote how Marmite is good at fighting dementia because of Vitamin B complex, Vit B12 injections are given in the early stages of dementia to help delay it, so I believe we should be armed with as much information as possible to help delay this condition.

Article from the Daily Mail below.


It's the news Popeye's been waiting for: Spinach could help fight off dementia (and carrots and apricots too)

  • Researchers have discovered a link between low vitamin C, beta-carotene levels and dementia
  • Antioxidant rich fruit and vegetables - such as spinach, carrots and apricots - could help fight dementia

It's welcome news for Popeye.
Spinach could help beat help beat dementia, according to a study.
Researchers have discovered a link between low vitamin C, beta-carotene levels and dementia.
So antioxidant rich fruit and vegetables - such as spinach, carrots and apricots - could help fight the disease’s devastating symptoms, their findings suggest.
Music to Popeye's ears: Antioxidant-rich fruit and vegetables - including spinach - could help fight the dementia symptoms
Music to Popeye's ears: Antioxidant-rich fruit and vegetables - including spinach - could help fight the dementia symptoms
German scientists from the University of Ulm looked at the differences between 74 people with mild Alzheimer’s disease and 158 healthy subjects.
The participants, aged between 65 and 90, underwent neuropsychological testing, answered questions about their lifestyle and had their blood examined and their body mass index calculated.
The team, led by epidemiologist Professor Gabriele Nagel and neurologist Professor Christine von Arnim, found the serum-concentration of the antioxidants vitamin C and beta-carotene were significantly lower in patients with mild dementia than in control group.
There was no such difference between the groups in levels of other antioxidants including vitamin E, lycopene, coenzyme Q10.
Dr Nagel said although more studies were needed to confirm the results, the findings suggested fruits and vegetables could play a role in fighting the disease.
'Longitudinal studies with more participants are necessary to confirm the result that vitamin C and beta-carotene might prevent the onset and development of Alzheimer’s disease,' he said.
'Vitamin C can for example be found in citrus fruits; beta-carotene in carrots, spinach or apricots.'
Beneficial: Apricots and carrots could also prove beneficial in the fight against dementia
Beneficial: Apricots and carrots could also prove beneficial in the fight against dementia
Alzheimer’s disease symptoms including forgetfulness, lack of orientation and cognitive decline and are caused by alterations in the brain including amyloid-beta-plaques, degeneration of fibrillae and a loss of synapses.
However, oxidative stress, which constrains the exploitation of oxygen in the human body, is also suspected to promote the development of the disease.
This led scientists to investigate whether antioxidants might protect against neurodegeneration.
The study - supported by the German Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts of Baden-W|rttemberg and the European Union - was published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.




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PSYCHIC QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

PSYCHIC QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

IS IT REALLY POSSIBLE TO FORECAST THE FUTURE AND OTHER QUESTIONS?

I am often asked various questions pertaining to the spirit world and various aspects of the psychic, here are some of them: I will in time feature more questions and answers as this webpage evolves

Q. Is a psychic or medium a fortune teller?
A. It may surprise you to know psychics and mediums are not fortune tellers
Q. Is it possible to forecast the future?
A.Well not 100% and this is because of free will.
Q. What is free will?
A. Free will is YOUR right to decide what you want to do about a situation, it is a choice
Q. How does free will affect a situation?
A. Well before we incarnate as Spirit in a human body, we decide on what experiences and challenges that will benefit our spiritual growth. However we are given the choice (free will) as to whether we go through with the experience or challenge. In effect we are allowed to change or mind.
Q. So are you saying we all know what lies before us?
A. Well in a way we all do. Remember we are 'Spirit' in a human body and your spirit does retain a memory but it is deep in our subconscious. This memory is retained deeply for a reason to help us fulfill our experiences and challenges we ourselves chose. However it is also at this deep level so we are not so aware. If you knew what lay before you would you go through with it? Probably not but we still retain this memory deeply and this reflects in our Aura.
Q. So what is the Aura?
A.The aura is The Aura is an electromagnetic field that surrounds living bodies, this includes people, animals, plants and crystals and is composed of several layers that are constantly moving. The Aura links us to whats known as Universal energy i.e. that is all the knowledge in the Universe past, present and future. It is on this aura that psychics are able to tap into and access your past, whats going on in the present and the possible future and I say possible specifically if your goal or desire is dependent on other people, for remember every person involved in a situation has free will.