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MBM

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Posts posted by MBM

  1. The sugar lobby in the US is extremely powerful. Their purpose is to buy influence which means to outright obtain or purchase legislation that is favorable to them. This is how lobbying works.

     

    Many government agencies are overseen by former leaders of private industries who are less concerned about the consumer and more concerned with helping their industry (captured agencies). It sounds cynical but buying influence is how they get their way.

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  2. I understand, Dawn. My mom taught elementary school for years and loved teaching. I always felt that she was born to teach. She made squat, though, and there were just so many unnecessary problems that came with the job. I would have gone into teaching as well but not after I saw what my mom dealt with. My hat is off to all the good, caring teachers who are out there trying to make a difference despite all the difficulties.

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  3. I was talking about average salary at New Trier. I don't know what the salaries at Chicago Heights have to do with that. Maybe I missed something in one of your earlier posts.

     

    Here is a 2012 article from a local newspaper which gives a little more info.

     

    "More than 200 teachers at New Trier High School District make more than $100,000 a year in base salary. The district superintendent explains that as the cost of having good schools."

     

    https://patch.com/illinois/wilmette/new-trier-superintendent-explains-high-salaries

     

    New Trier HS takes in students from five suburbs. Small compared to Chicago Public Schools but still over 4,000 students altogether.

     

    Frankly, I think teachers should get good salaries. My mother was a teacher, chemistry and music major and an advanced degree, and she made peanuts. It was pathetic.

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  4. Could you please remove their personal names from your post?

     

    Also, those salaries you posted are Chicago Heights salaries which is a city south of Chicago but in the same county as Chicago. If you want to look up New Trier's teacher salaries, go to the second field of the first link I posted. It should say "Find A District." In the box, type in "New Trier Twp" without the quotes. Then, at the bottom on the left, click on New Trier Twp HSD 203. That should take you to New Trier.

     

    I do not know exactly why the salaries are all over the place. What I can tell you is that most are teachers. I cannot say for sure because the school is very large and I only knew some of them. Some are also coaches and they get a salary for coaching as well. Almost all of them have advanced degrees (around 96%) and some also have PhDs. Some have many years of experience which would explain the higher salaries as well.

     

    Here is the link to the Chicago Tribune article which mentions New Trier's average salary as well as the percentage of teachers who have a masters.

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-teacher-salary-comparison-met-20161008-story.html

     

    "In the affluent and top-performing New Trier Township High School District, 96 percent of teachers have master's degrees. In contrast, 57 percent of CPS teachers have master's degrees."

     

    "New Trier's average salary was $105,850 in 2014-15, according to average teacher salary data published by the Illinois State Board of Education. "If you look at our teaching staff, it is extraordinarily experienced. We don't have a lot of turnover and over 95 percent our teachers have master's degrees," Dizon said."

  5. I have no idea how to use that chart to see salaries other than just names and salaries and I have no way of knowing who those folks are (board members, superintendents, etc...)

    The majority are teachers. My son's math teachers made in the 130s, a history teacher/fencing coach 160, etc. That's not what everyone makes, of course, but even starter salaries are not too bad.

     

    Avg teacher salary in 2014-15 was $105k+.

     

    COL is high in the area around the high school but it is possible to find more affordable homes not too far away. They're more likely small and fixer uppers, though.

  6. No way that is the AVERAGE at all:

     

    https://www.cnbc.com/2017/07/14/the-5-highest-and-lowest-paying-states-for-teachers-in-the-us.html

     

    Where is this? Even Silicone Valley doesn't pay this high.

    Some high school teachers make that at New Trier HS in Winnetka, IL. Most teachers have advanced degrees in the subject they teach and quite a few even have PhDs but choose to teach at NT because it pays better than the offers they received from universities. It was ranked the best place to teach in the US. I believe it. They offer not only good salaries but also an excellent child care facility on campus, specially catered teachers' meals, plenty of extra time during the day for lesson planning/grading and good benefits. But, no, definitely not average.

     

    2012 salaries:

    http://www.familytaxpayers.org/salary.php

     

    NT also spends about $20k per student and works very hard to learn the best ways to deal with problems that teens might encounter. One of my kids went there. It's a fabulous school, I think.

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  7. That I would believe, but I don't think it holds true at the high school level?

    One of the highest paid public high school teachers in our former suburb is the football coach. $130k but not sure that includes coaching as well. To be fair, he teaches shop class. This is the high school just north of Evanston, btw.

     

    Other schools, probably not the same.

  8. You can get someone trained in TRE, doesn't have to be a psychologist. Sounds like you might want a licensed social worker instead, someone who is planning to spend time, do counseling. You could have a team of people, one person trained in TRE, one licensed social worker, and they could work together in a practice.

    This is a terrific suggestion and something I'm almost certain could work long term.

     

    Thanks.

  9. I'm not following. Are we talking about a random child? And we're foreseeing their classmates' future? Like 8 year old Johnny is going to graduate with the best and 8 year old Susan is going to graduate with people that can't get a job? I thought the point was that they would all get the same education so that it would help shape their chances of employment, etc. I find it hard to believe 80% are that bad.

     

    Yes, it's possible to predict fairly accurately who will do well in life and who won't. Some of the indicators are whether a child exhibits secure attachment, the number of early traumatic events and whether they come from a home that values education. Paul Tough has written about this in his book How Children Succeed. Ideally, vulnerable children need intervention well before they enter school. Thankfully, there are some good programs out there, and in the long run, they are proving to be far less expensive than the consequences that not intervening yields.

  10. Thanks for the resources. I will be looking into those.

     

    I've been reading about trauma (Bessel van der Kolk, Bruce Perry, Berceli, Levine, etc.) and working with a group from my old reservation to help prevent mental health issues, especially suicides. Abuse is rampant. The professional help available there is practically non-existent--a whopping two-day visit per year from someone in Florida. We're trying to line up some well-qualified psychologists who will live there for a few years to offer therapy and set up programs. I live right by Northwestern U where they are setting up a Native American program so we're going to try to see if that can be expanded to include something from their psychology department.

     

    I've been trying the exercises. Definitely interesting.

    • Like 1
  11. From a nursing perspective (I am not a doctor and you should not take this as medical advice!), distilled water is not only a terrible idea, it may be the reason people die when fasting. Either electrolyte issues, or more likely, their blood pressure drops so low they pass out, hit their temple, and internally bleed to death. That was the reason for the last fasting death I heard about, and it's completely not ethical to insist on distilled water solely to make side effects worse and make you require supervision.

     

    If you want to fast for up to three days, as long as you're in a climate controlled environment you should be just fine. Obviously don't get overheated, sweat out all your salt, and then suck down gallons of water - that's a recipe for water poisoning.

     

    After three days you're going to need to be a bit concerned about electrolyte ratios, as well as your blood pressure dropping too low to be safe. This is true even if you started with blood pressure that is too high. This is because for most people blood pressure issues are either triggered by salt, stress, or pain from other inflammation, all of which tend to drop rapidly when you fast.

     

    So after that most people should still be just fine, but if you're concerned you can get a home blood pressure cuff (harbor freight sells them for cheap) that will give you a rough estimate. If you have a history of low blood pressure and know what the warning signs of fainting are, obviously watch out for them. Take some salt - a pinch or two in your palm, swallowed down with a big glass of water should help get blood pressure back up. You can also use something like powerade zero - no calories, but good potassium and sodium. Technically a 50/50 mix of "Lite salt" and table salt has the same ratio of sodium to potassium as blood. You could mix a few pinches in some zero calorie sugar free flavored drink (the last time I did this I used Walmart's generic sugar & calorie free fruit punch).

     

    Realistically though, as long as you obey your body and not a calendar, it's probably safe and healthy to fast until you no longer feel good. Seriously, doctors prescribe fasting ALL THE TIME in hospitals. Most frequently for pancreatitis. They sometimes get IV saline to stay hydrated, but aren't allowed to eat for days on end. Mostly all that happens is their vitals are taken 3 times in 24 hours to make sure they don't have blood pressure issues, and they have a big sign on their door that says (in code) they aren't allowed to eat. In one patient I had, he was kept in the hospital fasting for 22 days, but in the end he was fine.

    I am not suggesting people do distilled water fasts on their own. If not carefully monitored, they can be dangerous. However, it is what Seyfried and Longo do in their studies for particular reasons but always under close supervision in a medical setting. They are each doing outstanding research in cancer and autoimmune diseases.

     

    Alan Goldhamer's clinic has not lost a single patient in over 30 years. He works with researchers. Patients there are monitored 24/7 by MDs and other medical staff.

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  12. but distilled water has no electrolytes, so you would quickly develop an electrolyte imbalance which can be life threatening. How can that be good?

    How does regular water that contains minerals tell the body "food is close by"?

    That is why both Longo and Seyfried recommend medically-supervised distilled water fasts. These are done in special clinics like Alan Goldhamer's where patients are always monitored. People don't necessarily immediately go into a life-threatening situation. It's highly individual. But again, these should be done at a place like Goldhamer's clinic. Here is an interview with Goldhamer if anyone is interested:

     

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4684131/

     

    I probably didn't word the second part well. I am not at home and don't have access to my articles that explain this but the idea behind distilled water fasting is to remove nutrients so that the body will then respond to what is not there.

  13. The best fast for a serious health problem like cancer would be distilled water in a medical setting. The reasoning is that anything ingested other than distilled water tells the body that food is close by which changes the body's reactions. Valter Longo is the researcher who designed the fasting protocols used alongside the treatment of cancer and he used distilled water. Thomas Seyfried, another researcher, recommends the same thing for cancer. Always in a medical setting.

     

    Alan Goldhamer has been running a fasting clinic for years. He works with excellent researchers as well and none of Goldhamer's studies have been published. Fung's studies haven't been published either. The reasons their studies haven't been published is not because they're poorly designed.

     

    Longo also designed two special diets-in-a-box. One is for people with cancer -- because there is still some benefit even on a low calorie diet -- and the other is for other medical problems or just better health.

     

    Longo also is seeing good results in fasting studies of autoimmune diseases like MS. These are now being done on humans. Fasting for a period of time causes your body to create new stem cells, as many as 40%. These can be used all over the body.

     

    Seyfried's work with cancer shows that it's the mitochondria that damage the nucleus and not the other way around. Fasting helps repair or dispose of damaged mitochondria. And it does other things but you'd want to read all this yourself. The short articles on the internet do a good job explaining.

     

    Seyfried and Dominic D'Agostino work together on certain studies. Recently they've shown that adding hyperbaric oxygen treatments (hbot) gives even better results while fasting for cancer treatment. I believe those were not human studies, though. Can't remember.

     

    I fast just to improve my general health. When I do, I always start by measuring my blood glucose. Then, the following night I start measuring my blood ketones. My goal is to get the ratio of glucose to ketones as close to 1.0 or below. This is what Seyfried calls the autolytic state and what he recommends. If my glucose falls too much, I eat olives and continue. My muscle does not deteriorate either according to scans. Fasting and starving are two different processes. Fung explains the difference and you can find a lot of his info on his blog. He has a great sense of humor, too, so it's not heavy reading.

     

    Pregnant and nursing women, children, people with eating disorders, people with certain medical problems or taking certain kinds of medications should not fast. It is best to work with someone.

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  14. Interesting. Had not heard of these before. I'll have to look into it! Recently started reading about CranioSacral therapy, which is also fascinating!

    It's very interesting. I did my third routine last night and had a lot of upper spine involvement but didn't feel emotionally different. It can take awhile to get to that point, though.

     

    There was an older MD in Phoenix, I think? who did craniosacral therapy. He was amazing and charged very little for his services. Hospitals would send some of their sickest patients to him often with very good results.

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  15. I intermittent fast all the time, eating in a 6 to 12 hour window, usually 2 meals and no snacking. The main reason for me is to reap the benefits of autophagy.

     

    Sometimes I do longer fasts of 3-4 days of water, black coffee and unsweetened tea to induce even more autophagy. Fasting under the right conditions is extremely healthy.

     

    Jason Fung (an MD) has written a book explaining how to fast, including intermittent, but you might be able to find the same info online.

    • Like 4
  16. Sounds like he has hemochromatosis and is also iron avid. People in that situation tend to have wonky iron panels. It is a tricky situation because someone with HH needs to be careful taking in more iron. Has your dad had to do the phlebotomies?

     

    What momacacia said -- giving up gluten/dairy -- might be worth trying. Gut issues can cause iron problems.

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