Blog Dedicated to Research, Studies and Reports Regarding Acupuncture, Herbal Remedies and Traditional Chinese Health Traditions. Facilitated by Tony Burris, L.Ac., Of Eagle Acupuncture in Eagle, Idaho. Mr. Burris is a 20-Year Practitioner of Traditional Chinese Healing, Spiritual and Martial Arts.
Monday, May 1, 2017
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Benefits of Lemongrass Oil in Massage Cream (Tony Burris, L.Ac. Cited in Massage Magazine Article)
When choosing a massage cream, consider one containing lemongrass, for benefits including muscle relaxation and stress relief.
What is Lemongrass?
Lemongrass is “a grassy perennial native to tropical and subtropical environments,” according to
Lemongrass is sold in health food stores and at farmers’ markets, and it can also be grown at home. That makes this perennial readily accessible, whether you choose to use it on a personal or professional basis, or both.
Lemongrass and Massage Therapy
When speaking of lemongrass in relation to massage therapy, Schreiber says it has many valuable uses. They include “muscle relaxing, helping with muscle cramps and fighting fatigue.” He also says it is a protective agent for both the therapist and the client, helping to keep skin infections from passing from one to the other.Darshi Shah, Nutritional Therapist and Health Coach agrees and further explains that lemongrass is very beneficial to clients that are struggling with “stress, anxiety and insomnia.” Additionally, if the client is dealing with some type of sprain, injury, or back pain, its muscle relieving properties can often help ease the discomfort.
Self-care with Lemongrass
Lemongrass has practical self-care uses too. Lemongrass is well recognized for its antibacterial properties, which clinical nutrition specialist Scott Schrieber, D.C., says “are due to the citral and limonene components” found within it. These two substances provide lemongrass citrusy aroma, and also help prevent and address various infections “such as ringworm, athlete’s foot, or other types of fungus.”One study published in the Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine found that lemongrass was such a powerful antibacterial agent that it was deemed “effective against drug resistant organisms,” and research published in the Journal of Applied Microbiology found it is an effective microbial against certain types of salmonella.
Shah says ingested lemongrass can also provide benefits for those who have been diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, and other gut disorders, thanks largely to its anti-inflammatory and immune-boosting properties.
Lemongrass in Practice
Michelle Vargas, L.M.T., owner of The Welltree in Rhinebeck, New York, uses lemongrass in her creams and oils for “clients who feel achy, unwell or in pain [as it helps the pain] subside rather quickly.”Vargas says her clients benefit from lemongrass “when the winter blues creep up,” because it helps ease depression and anxiety.
Tony Burris, L.Ac., an acupuncturist at Eagle Acupuncture in Eagle, Idaho, is a 20-year practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine, which includes offering his clients tui na massage therapy. He’s used lemongrass and other essential and medicinal oils to help “injured athletes and chronic pain sufferers discover … long-lasting or even permanent relief.”
Some of his clients include members of the San Diego Chargers, Washington Redskins, Denver Broncos, Chicago Bears, Detroit Lions and Seattle Mariners, as well as Olympic medalists.
Adding lemongrass creams and oils can provide benefits to therapists and clients alike, making it a great complement to your current massage therapy products and services.
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
How Diet And Herbs Alleviate Arthritis (An Interview With Tony Burris, L.Ac.)
by Ada Kulesza
on July 18, 2015
More
than 20 percent of American adults suffer from arthritis. Joint inflammation is
painful and sometimes debilitating. Most people looking for relief from doctors
get medicines that temporarily stop the pain, but don’t really address the
cause — or stop the disease progression.
Arthritis is a condition that shows the flaws in the American medical system, and the standard American lifestyle. On the personal level, it starts with choices at grocery stores, kitchens and restaurants, and on the collective level, with toxic environments and harmful farming practices.
Chronic pain leads to stress, weakness, and depression. Does one-fifth of America have to suffer with pain, immobility, and the frustration that comes with arthritis? Are one in five people doomed to take painkillers every day, or get steroid injections to manage the condition?
Reset.Me
interviewed five natural health experts about treating the most common types of
arthritis, rheumatoid (or gout) and osteoarthritis. We’ve compiled natural and
gentle treatment options that alleviate pain and swelling without the side
effects of chemical meds.
More
importantly, the experts share herbs, supplements, and lifestyle changes that
can halt, and possibly reverse, the disease progression.
A Behind-The-Scenes Disease
Rheumatoid
and osteoarthritis share joint inflammation and pain in common. Osteoarthritis
often affects older people, where the cartilage between bones deteriorates and
eventually bone meets bone, limiting movement and creating pain. Rheumatoid
arthritis, on the other hand, can be caused by an injury, or as a result of an
autoimmune condition.
Scientific
literature shows that both types of arthritis are linked with lifestyle. Diet
is a big factor when it comes to arthritis onset and progression. Once someone
has arthritis, a healthy diet becomes the most important and effective way to
alleviate pain and slow down the disease.
“The
first thing I look at is diet,” says Dr. Matthew Brennecke, a naturopath based
in Colorado. “I always give patients a diet diary to keep track of everything
they eat for a year. It’s very important to get a real idea of what patients
actually put into their mouths every day.”
Food allergies
often cause inflammation because the immune system flares up to fight what it
mistakes as a harmful substance. Brennecke tests for allergies with food
allergy panels to get “a lab result of what foods we should take out of the
diet and what we should add. Most people have problems with dairy, wheat, and
eggs.” Meat is also known to create inflammation.
“Then we
increase anti-inflammatory foods, such as heavy vegetables, and dark leafy
greens,” he says. “By eating an anti-inflammatory diet, we see pretty good
improvements.”
The
Standard American Diet (SAD) compromises health in a number of ways. Often, it
lacks the vitamins and minerals needed to keep bodies in balance. Too much
meat, starch and processed food also result in weight gain, which makes arthritis
worse.
Much
food is produced with chemicals that create health problems. Nearly all corn,
soy and cotton fields in the United States are sprayed with herbicides, namely
Roundup, which contains glyphosate, a chemical shown to have a serious impact on
health. Its use has outpaced research, but the World Health Organization says
it’s likely carcinogenic.
Common
cosmetics such as shampoo, lotions, and soap often contain chemicals such as
parabens and phthalates, preservatives that may interfere with the body’s
hormones. Although these chemicals are commonly found in products millions of
people use everyday, their long-term effects haven’t been extensively studied.
How Modern Medicine Treats Arthritis
As we
age, our bodies get stiffer. Circulation slows. We get weaker, and cartilage
degenerates. Skin loses elasticity, muscles deteriorate, and hair turns gray.
It’s a natural process.
“Arthritis
has basically three stages,” says Brennecke. “Stage one is breakdown of
cartilage. Stage two is abnormal cartilage repair. But at stage three, the
breakdown products in stage two induce inflammation, and then you get joint
degeneration.”
Symptoms
arise when arthritis has progressed far enough to make reversal difficult.
Often patients
visit a medical doctor and get a prescription or injection for the pain and inflammation.
visit a medical doctor and get a prescription or injection for the pain and inflammation.
“Modern
medicine uses anti-inflammatories and steroids, drugs that slow down the immune
system, so people are more likely to develop infections,” says David Foreman, a
pharmacist and author.
“With decreased immunity, you’re more likely to get
colds, flu and infections.”
“With
non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs we have the potential for gastrointestinal
upset, negative effects of liver and kidneys, and sodium retention,” he says.
“Steroids have the same effects, but will often contribute to problems with the
adrenal system, so you’re more likely to burn your body’s energy out. Fatigue,
altered mood, and depression result. They also negatively affect the blood
sugar, so weight gain is a big thing. Bones become thin and brittle.”
“Steroids
are significantly more evil to the body than non-steroid anti-inflammatories,”
he says. “You just can’t keep taking cortisone for the rest of your life.”
Foreman
says that undernourished people develop arthritis when the body takes minerals
out of bones and those minerals deposit in joints, creating a situation akin to
fine sandpaper rubbing slowly over
time.
“Too
much refined food, such as pasta and bread, alter the pH of your body, and so
the body will take minerals out of bones to adjust the body’s pH. Too much or
too little protein will make this happen,” he says.
Green
vegetables are essential to preventing, and slowing, arthritis, by nourishing
the body with minerals and stabilizing the body’s pH.
“Eat a rainbow
every day — a food from every color of the rainbow. Colorful food is rich in
antioxidants, and antioxidants go a long way in preventing all diseases,”
Foreman says. “Make your food your medicine. And add more omega-3, such as chia
seeds. Omega-6 can cause more inflammation.”
Immunity And Arthritis
Rheumatoid
arthritis has the stiffness, pain and inflammation of osteoarthritis, but is
caused by injury or an autoimmune condition.
“When
people come in, I address the immune system and stabilize it, until we can
boost it,” says Dr. Jennifer Burns, a naturopath based in Arizona. “So first, I
use herbs that are a little weaker. After we build up immunity, we use stronger
ones. I use Myers’ Cocktail intravenous nutrients.”
The
gentle herbs Burns recommends for the immune system include Siberian ginseng
and elderberry. She also uses licorice in combination with other herbs, as an
immune booster and anti-inflammatory. Echinacea also helps the immune system.
“Echinacea
has cannabinoids for pain,” she says, “but it’s also anti-inflammatory,
antibacterial and antiviral. And licorice supports the adrenals.”
She also
recommends adaptogens, herbs which stabilize the whole system, such as oats,
rosemary, and Chinese astragalus.
For
rheumatoid arthritis, devil’s claw in a cream or salve works well to alleviate
inflammation and pain topically. For osteoarthritis, salves containing
capsaicin, the active ingredient in cayenne peppers, also bring fast relief.
Toxicity And Arthritis
Dr.
Susan Kolb is a plastic surgeon and author of the book The Naked Truth About
Breast Implants: From Harm to Healing. Most of her patients develop arthritis
as a result of toxicity from ruptured or leaking breast implants, but she says
that for most people, allergies and toxicity contribute to arthritis.
She uses
kinesiology, a somewhat controversial method of diagnosis, to test for
allergies and reactions to such things as wheat, intracellular infections, and
toxicity. Then she treats symptoms with supplements like curcumin, green-lipped
mussel extract, and evening primrose oil.
Most
importantly, patients need to remove the cause of the arthritis, whether that’s
a food sensitivity or infection. She also uses artificial joint injections to
rebuild cartilage.
Traditional
Chinese Medicine
“Chinese medicine views the body, our
vitality and our health, as measured in qi. It’s not a thing —
you can’t see
it. It’s a representational term for vitality in the body,” says Tony Burris,
an acupuncturist and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) practitioner. “As we
age, qi diminishes.”
![]() |
Tony Burris, L.Ac. |
Traditional Chinese medicine is a
philosophical system that views the human body as part of its environment, and
sees the systems and organs as intrinsically interlinked. As the body ages and
qi diminishes, outer forces can invade more easily. “Cold, wind, damp and heat
cause arthritis when they get into your joints,” Burris says. “They block the
flow of nutrients.”
A TCM practitioner would look at weak
teeth, hair and bones as a deficiency of the kidneys, and degenerated cartilage
a symptom of a poorly functioning liver. “The liver lubricates, nourishes and
keeps muscles supple,” Burris says. “As we age they become more brittle and
dry. Cartilage has less blood supply than muscle so it’s harder to keep plump
and moist.”
Chinese medicine assigns different
flavors different qualities, so people can easily discern what kinds of foods
and herbs can offset certain conditions. Being a result of growing older,
osteoarthritis is characterized by cold, so warmer, spicier foods and herbs help.
“Turmeric and cinnamon, which are warm
and penetrating, are good for gnarled, closed-up fingers, and will help
straighten them out,” Burris says.
Rheumatoid arthritis has a hot quality,
so cooling foods and herbs would be more helpful.
“Food can have hot or cold qualities,
but they also have flavor. Bitter is good for rheumatoid arthritis because it
has a draining quality for edema. In the West we don’t eat a lot of bitter
food, except perhaps coffee, which bears this out because it’s a diuretic and
certainly does have a draining quality,” Burris says. Other bitter herbs and
food include dandelion and bitter gourd.
Other helpful foods are acrid and
pungent, such as garlic, onions, and ginger.
The Truth About Arthritis And Aging
Aging is
inevitable and bodies deteriorate. Sadly, the American lifestyle quickens the
process — stress, sedentary work, processed food heavy on meat, toxic
environments, and a reliance on chemical pharmaceuticals to treat symptoms but
mostly ignore the cause of illness.
In a
catch-22, people who suffer from arthritis may find it difficult to exercise
and stay active, but it’s essential for managing and slowing the disease.
Overweight people are also more likely to have arthritis, so exercise is doubly
important.
Arthritis
also has links to depression, since losing range of motion can be disheartening
and frustrating. Managing arthritic pain and removing the cause of inflammation
can be key to maintaining happiness and ease in daily life. As Dr. Jennifer
Burns says, “You’re okay. You’re still a whole person, even if you need help
with simple things, even if you can’t open a jar.”
When it
comes to emergencies, allopathic medicine is amazing. But when it comes to
chronic diseases like arthritis, it’s woefully inadequate. “The word doctor
means teacher,” says Brennecke.
“When you go the conventional medicine route,
you have seven minutes with a practitioner who writes you a prescription. As a
naturopath, I spend over an hour trying to get at the root of the condition.”
Doctors
are human beings, and the medical system is a business. People who suffer from
arthritis can take their health back by changing the one habit that many people
do without thinking — eating. As Brennecke points out, “If you take anything
from me, it’s that 90 percent of all chronic illness is due to what you put in
your mouth.”
For
more information about acupuncture, herbs and Traditional Chinese Medicine,
contact Tony Burris L.Ac. at Eagle Acupuncture in Boise, Idaho at (208)
938-1277 or mailbox@eagleacupuncture.com.
Visit his website at EagleAcupuncture.com.
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Testimonials for Tony Burris, L.Ac. of Eagle Acupuncture!
Powerful Testimonials from Patients of
Tony Burris, L.Ac. and
Eagle Acupuncture
Erika Wainaina said:
Very cool first
experience with acupuncture!
Deal: One-Hour Acupuncture Session with Consultation - Boise
- 09/16/14
Reply Posted: 4/15/2015 5:25 PM
Kathy Robert said:
"I normally feel
something in my shoulders - ache, tension, pain, etc. When I drove home, I
didn't feel
anything in my shoulders. It was wonderful. "
Posted: 2/24/2015 7:29 AM
Cheryl Barton said:
"When I walked
in, I was in severe pain. When I walked out, I was in no pain (well, very
little). That was only one visit. I will return."
Donna Christensen
said:
"I appreciate the
explanations Tony gave me before starting the procedure. No surprises due to
those explanations given just prior. Even got a nap during the process :)
"
Posted: 2/21/2015 12:30 PM
christina rathbun
said:
"Thank you! I
really enjoyed my treatment today. I hope I am able to come in for another
treatment soon."
miranda risinger said:
"Amazing. Detail
oriented. Very measured and careful. Wonderful atmosphere and understandable.
"
Diane Ross said:
"Tony Burris is
great as usual. Do not plan much after acupuncture as you may feel lightheaded
and floaty."
Posted: 11/15/2014 9:18 AM
Electa Jones said:
"This was a great
education and I feel great hope that mu pain will quite ruling my life. The
office staff and Tony were very understanding of my time and why I was there I
will see them again next week calling it $$ well spent"
Tamara DeMelo said:
"My visit today
was very relaxing and not painful at all.
Ron Brown said:
"I was given
excellent treatment, information and it was a great experience.
Sheila Stinson Owens
said:
"Fantastic
session! Thank you so much!"
Posted: 5/30/2014 8:42 PM
Darrell Jackson said:
"Great business
and friendly."
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Idaho Strongwoman Preparing for Arnold Classic Using Acupuncture
At 4-foot-11, and 120 pounds, Rachel Pyron probably isn't what you imagine
when you
hear the word "strongman competitor." But pound for pound, this Idaho-native is one of the strongest women in the country. In fact,
this spring she will compete for the world title at the Arnold Sports Festival.
Pyron initially competed in marathons and then moved to the bodybuilding stage. Now she is dedicated to the rigorous training as a pure strength athlete. As she competes for the Arnold Classic in March, 2015, Rachel Pyron is using acupuncture therapy to help with her training.
“As a competitive athlete, I have tried various types of therapy and rehabilitation techniques. After a slight injury I received in the spring of 2014, I was somewhat apprehensive about trying acupuncture, but had come to the point that I would try anything. After months of receiving very little progress with other therapies, I messaged Tony Burris at Eagle Acupuncture. After my first visit with Tony, I left with more pain relief than I had felt in months, prior to my injury. I could extend my neck! I was so relieved. With weekly treatments leading up to Strongwoman Nationals, I was able to continue training and won first place in my division. I can’t thank Tony enough for his support and understanding in helping me to be a healthy individual and athlete. I would recommend Tony to anyone looking for sport therapy, as well as relief from life stress or simple relaxation. Acupuncture is nothing to fear and I am very thankful for Eagle Acupuncture and will continue to receive care leading up to my next competition, the world championship at the Arnold Classic 2015.”
Rachel Pyron US National Strongwoman Winner 2014 Eagle, ID
Go Rachel!
“As a competitive athlete, I have tried various types of therapy and rehabilitation techniques. After a slight injury I received in the spring of 2014, I was somewhat apprehensive about trying acupuncture, but had come to the point that I would try anything. After months of receiving very little progress with other therapies, I messaged Tony Burris at Eagle Acupuncture. After my first visit with Tony, I left with more pain relief than I had felt in months, prior to my injury. I could extend my neck! I was so relieved. With weekly treatments leading up to Strongwoman Nationals, I was able to continue training and won first place in my division. I can’t thank Tony enough for his support and understanding in helping me to be a healthy individual and athlete. I would recommend Tony to anyone looking for sport therapy, as well as relief from life stress or simple relaxation. Acupuncture is nothing to fear and I am very thankful for Eagle Acupuncture and will continue to receive care leading up to my next competition, the world championship at the Arnold Classic 2015.”
Rachel Pyron US National Strongwoman Winner 2014 Eagle, ID
Go Rachel!
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Your Phone vs. Your Heart
By BARBARA L. FREDRICKSON
CAN you remember the last time you were in a public space in America and didn’t notice that half the people around you were bent over a digital screen, thumbing a connection to somewhere else? Most of us are well aware of the convenience that instant electronic access provides. Less has been said about the costs.
Research that my colleagues and I have just completed, to be published in a forthcoming issue of Psychological Science, suggests that one measurable toll may be on our biological capacity to connect with other people. Our ingrained habits change us. Neurons that fire together, wire together, neuroscientists like to say, reflecting the increasing evidence that experiences leave imprints on our neural pathways, a phenomenon called neuroplasticity. Any habit molds the very structure of your brain in ways that strengthen your proclivity for that habit.
Plasticity, the propensity to be shaped by experience, isn’t limited to the brain. You already know that when you lead a sedentary life, your muscles atrophy to diminish your physical strength. What you may not know is that your habits of social connection also leave their own physical imprint on you. How much time do you typically spend with others? And when you do, how connected and attuned to them do you feel? Your answers to these simple questions may well reveal your biological capacity to connect.
My research team and I conducted a longitudinal field experiment on the effects of learning skills for cultivating warmer interpersonal connections in daily life. Half the participants, chosen at random, attended a six-week workshop on an ancient mind-training practice known as metta, or “lovingkindness,” that teaches participants to develop more warmth and tenderness toward themselves and others. We discovered that the meditators not only felt more upbeat and socially connected; but they also altered a key part of their cardiovascular system called vagal tone. Scientists used to think vagal tone was largely stable, like your height in adulthood. Our data show that this part of you is plastic, too, and altered by your social habits.
To appreciate why this matters, here’s a quick anatomy lesson. Your brain is tied to your heart by your vagus nerve. Subtle variations in your heart rate reveal the strength of this brain-heart connection, and as such, heart-rate variability provides an index of your vagal tone. By and large, the higher your vagal tone the better. It means your body is better able to regulate the internal systems that keep you healthy, like your cardiovascular, glucose and immune responses.
Beyond these health effects, the behavioral neuroscientist Stephen Porges has shown that vagal tone is central to things like facial expressivity and the ability to tune in to the frequency of the human voice. By increasing people’s vagal tone, we increase their capacity for connection, friendship and empathy. In short, the more attuned to others you become, the healthier you become, and vice versa. This mutual influence also explains how a lack of positive social contact diminishes people. Your heart’s capacity for friendship also obeys the biological law of “use it or lose it.” If you don’t regularly exercise your ability to connect face to face, you’ll eventually find yourself lacking some of the basic biological capacity to do so.
The human body — and thereby our human potential — is far more plastic or amenable to change than most of us realize. The new field of social genomics, made possible by the sequencing of the human genome, tells us that the ways our and our children’s genes are expressed at the cellular level is plastic, too, responsive to habitual experiences and actions. Work in social genomics reveals that our personal histories of social connection or loneliness, for instance, alter how our genes are expressed within the cells of our immune system.
New parents may need to worry less about genetic testing and more about how their own actions — like texting while breast-feeding or otherwise paying more attention to their phone than their child — leave life-limiting fingerprints on their and their children’s gene expression. When you share a smile or laugh with someone face to face, a discernible synchrony emerges between you, as your gestures and biochemistries, even your respective neural firings, come to mirror each other. It’s micro-moments like these, in which a wave of good feeling rolls through two brains and bodies at once, that build your capacity to empathize as well as to improve your health. If you don’t regularly exercise this capacity, it withers.
Lucky for us, connecting with others does good and feels good, and opportunities to do so abound. So the next time you see a friend, or a child, spending too much of their day facing a screen, extend a hand and invite him back to the world of real social encounters. You’ll not only build up his health and empathic skills, but yours as well. Friends don’t let friends lose their capacity for humanity.
Barbara L. Fredrickson is a professor of psychology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and the author of “Love 2.0: How Our Supreme Emotion Affects Everything We Feel, Think, Do, and Become.”
CAN you remember the last time you were in a public space in America and didn’t notice that half the people around you were bent over a digital screen, thumbing a connection to somewhere else? Most of us are well aware of the convenience that instant electronic access provides. Less has been said about the costs.
Research that my colleagues and I have just completed, to be published in a forthcoming issue of Psychological Science, suggests that one measurable toll may be on our biological capacity to connect with other people. Our ingrained habits change us. Neurons that fire together, wire together, neuroscientists like to say, reflecting the increasing evidence that experiences leave imprints on our neural pathways, a phenomenon called neuroplasticity. Any habit molds the very structure of your brain in ways that strengthen your proclivity for that habit.
Plasticity, the propensity to be shaped by experience, isn’t limited to the brain. You already know that when you lead a sedentary life, your muscles atrophy to diminish your physical strength. What you may not know is that your habits of social connection also leave their own physical imprint on you. How much time do you typically spend with others? And when you do, how connected and attuned to them do you feel? Your answers to these simple questions may well reveal your biological capacity to connect.
My research team and I conducted a longitudinal field experiment on the effects of learning skills for cultivating warmer interpersonal connections in daily life. Half the participants, chosen at random, attended a six-week workshop on an ancient mind-training practice known as metta, or “lovingkindness,” that teaches participants to develop more warmth and tenderness toward themselves and others. We discovered that the meditators not only felt more upbeat and socially connected; but they also altered a key part of their cardiovascular system called vagal tone. Scientists used to think vagal tone was largely stable, like your height in adulthood. Our data show that this part of you is plastic, too, and altered by your social habits.
To appreciate why this matters, here’s a quick anatomy lesson. Your brain is tied to your heart by your vagus nerve. Subtle variations in your heart rate reveal the strength of this brain-heart connection, and as such, heart-rate variability provides an index of your vagal tone. By and large, the higher your vagal tone the better. It means your body is better able to regulate the internal systems that keep you healthy, like your cardiovascular, glucose and immune responses.
Beyond these health effects, the behavioral neuroscientist Stephen Porges has shown that vagal tone is central to things like facial expressivity and the ability to tune in to the frequency of the human voice. By increasing people’s vagal tone, we increase their capacity for connection, friendship and empathy. In short, the more attuned to others you become, the healthier you become, and vice versa. This mutual influence also explains how a lack of positive social contact diminishes people. Your heart’s capacity for friendship also obeys the biological law of “use it or lose it.” If you don’t regularly exercise your ability to connect face to face, you’ll eventually find yourself lacking some of the basic biological capacity to do so.
The human body — and thereby our human potential — is far more plastic or amenable to change than most of us realize. The new field of social genomics, made possible by the sequencing of the human genome, tells us that the ways our and our children’s genes are expressed at the cellular level is plastic, too, responsive to habitual experiences and actions. Work in social genomics reveals that our personal histories of social connection or loneliness, for instance, alter how our genes are expressed within the cells of our immune system.
New parents may need to worry less about genetic testing and more about how their own actions — like texting while breast-feeding or otherwise paying more attention to their phone than their child — leave life-limiting fingerprints on their and their children’s gene expression. When you share a smile or laugh with someone face to face, a discernible synchrony emerges between you, as your gestures and biochemistries, even your respective neural firings, come to mirror each other. It’s micro-moments like these, in which a wave of good feeling rolls through two brains and bodies at once, that build your capacity to empathize as well as to improve your health. If you don’t regularly exercise this capacity, it withers.
Lucky for us, connecting with others does good and feels good, and opportunities to do so abound. So the next time you see a friend, or a child, spending too much of their day facing a screen, extend a hand and invite him back to the world of real social encounters. You’ll not only build up his health and empathic skills, but yours as well. Friends don’t let friends lose their capacity for humanity.
Barbara L. Fredrickson is a professor of psychology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and the author of “Love 2.0: How Our Supreme Emotion Affects Everything We Feel, Think, Do, and Become.”
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