Mission Thrive Summer Gears Up for Third Year
The Institute for Integrative Health in partnership with Civic Works’ Real Food Farm, is just a week away from launching the third year of our youth summer program, Mission Thrive Summer.
We look at the whole picture, the entire lived experience that influences health.
Our work examines health through many lenses that intersect, and it often helps people who are underserved or experiencing trauma — for example, veterans suffering from PTSD, children with serious illness, low-income residents grappling with systemic racism and neglect, and others.
The Institute for Integrative Health in partnership with Civic Works’ Real Food Farm, is just a week away from launching the third year of our youth summer program, Mission Thrive Summer.
This four-part series offers highlights from our recent panel on Optimizing Weight Loss, Digestion and Healthy Aging with Nutrition.
Nearly 100 attendees gathered at the Institute on March 25, to hear our power panel of experts at “Optimizing Weight Loss, Digestion and Healthy Aging with Nutrition.”
Five Times a Feast teaches concepts of daily nutrition and enables participants to practice cooking and large-batch preparation.
The final week of our Staff Wellness Challenge brought the focus back to our plates. Our goal was to eat the rainbow—specifically, the rainbow of fruits and vegetables.
Five Times a Feast is a new program of the Institute’s Mission Thrive initiative.
Registered dietitian Kathleen Zelman explains that breaking the fast provides the body with energy for physical activity, improves mental focus, lowers cholesterol, and sets a healthy tone for the whole day.
A slew of recent studies have concluded that sitting for hours at a time increases our mortality, even if we exercise.
The Environmental Working Group (EWG) created Food Scores, a tool that rates food products and tells consumers how healthy what they’re eating really is.
Recognizing that every day is not a food day for far too many people, the Institute staff is contributing healthier food for our neighbors in need.
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RT @VCUFamMed: Critically important work for #PrimaryCare by our own Dr. Etz and the @GreenCenterOrg. Read More
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Over the past thirty years, we’ve been part of a movement to shift the primary approach to health from a focus on disease to a more complete approach. As reflected in our tagline, “For Health of People, Places, and Planet,” how we are building on “person health” and looking at the context of peoples’ lives and communities as well as the health of the planet we all share.
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Healing is facilitated through safety, persistence, and trust.
Resources support us as we heal. They include reframing, responsibility, and positivity. “Making connections enabled participants to acquire and refine resources and skills that were essential in their healing journey. People also brought their own personal strengths to the journey.”
“Connection to others was an essential part of all the healing journeys.” Humans are social creatures, and even the most introverted of us need close relationships. Friends and family add meaning and value to life and help support us, in good times and bad. When we experience relational trauma, relationships can feel scary, but reestablishing safety and trust in relationships is where the healing happens. (To be clear, we do not mean reestablishing safety and trust with abusers, but rather finding other healing relationships.) “When safety and trust had been established, people were able to connect with helpers. The nature of the behaviours of helpers that fostered healing ranged from small acts of kindness to unconditional love.”
Healing probably means different things to different people, but one definition that emerged from the study is: “The re-establishment of a sense of integrity and wholeness.” Healing was an emergent property that resulted from each individuals’ complex healing journey, a result of bridged connections between resources and relationships. Healing, in this sense, does not mean cured—none of the study participants were cured of their ailments—”but all developed a sense of integrity and wholeness despite ongoing pain or other symptoms.” In varying degrees, “they were able to transcend their suffering and in some sense to flourish.” When we begin to heal, we find increased capacity for hope, renewed motivation to help others, and are more able to accept ourselves as we are.
Wounding happens when we experience physical or emotional harm. It can stem from chronic illness or by physical or psychological trauma for which we do not have the tools to cope, or a combination of those factors. “The degree and quality of suffering experienced by each individual is framed by contextual factors that include personal characteristics, timing of their initial or ongoing wounding in the developmental life cycle and prior and current relationships.”