Beating the boozing trap

June 12th, 2008 20:23

booze, booze trap, dependency, alcoholic, aa, hypnotherapy, nlp, david allen Our favourite hypnotherapist, David Allen, has put together a guide on beating the dependency trap.

And no, it doesn’t just apply to booze. If you over-eat, over-stress, chew your nails or do anything else TOO MUCH you need to read this.

beer, stella, bottle, bottles, alcohol, drinking, boozeLeading hypnotherapist David Allen explains why we drink too much and how to control your relationship with alcohol. You may be suprised to learn how unhealthy your ’social habits’ can be.

Many of us drink more than we are cognitively comfortable with and do that regularly either at home or at social events and do that it in such a way, that it doesn’t appear to have a direct impact on our work, or family, or the things that we need to do in our lives.

Lily Allen has been drinking to excess to forget her miscarriage.Quirky British singer Lily Allen has been pictured recently hanging around Cannes wearing nothing but bikini bottoms.

She has also been necking her fair share of the demon drink, so much so that her ex-boyfriend Ed Simons (of Chemical Brothers fame) has spoken out about it.

Lily, 23, dated Ed for a few months at the start of the year, but their relationship ended after she had a miscarriage back in February.

Kristin Davis tells all about her alcohol addiction.Sex And The City star Kristin Davis has spoken candidly about her struggle with alcohol, and how she thought she wouldn’t make it past the age of 30.

Kristin, who plays Charlotte in the hit TV series and movie, explained that alcoholism runs in her family.

Her SATC character was often seen enjoying wine and cocktails alongside those expensive Manhattan dinners, but Kristin says that her problems were more than just social.

Wine\'s flavour can be changed depending on the music you\'re hearing.It may sound bizarre and, personally, I’d have thought it would be the other way around, but apparently music can enhance the taste and flavour of your favourite wine.

A study by Herriott Watt University in Edinburgh found that changes in taste of up to 60% could occur when differing background melodies were heard.

The heady red wine cabernet sauvignon and the light white chardonnay were two of the vinos in question.

Can vinegar really ease arthritis?

can apple vinegar ease arthritisVinegar – great with fish and chips, but can also help ease arthritis.

Well, that’s according to intrepid explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes anyway, who swears by the stuff.

The 64-year-old adventurer got the first twinges of arthritis 20 years ago in his hands and hips, which he says was caused by too many expeditions spent sleeping in cold conditions.

But Fiennes insists he no longer suffers from the ailment, and says it’s all thanks to a vinegar recipe his mother passed down to him.

And the fact in 2003 he ran seven marathons in seven days and earlier this year tackled Everest, who are we to argue.

OK, the wonder cure – named Honeygar, which consists of four parts apple cider vinegar and one part raw honey – would be no good on chips (we think), but, according to Sir Fiennes, it worked wonders for his mother, who in her mid-80s was bedridden with arthritis.

Speaking to the Daily Mail newspaper, he said: “My sisters and I encouraged her to look into an alternative cure after she showed us the doctor’s X-ray, which highlighted the arthritic band in her back.”

So she looked into it, and found it in a library book which highlighted a natural cure for arthritis that included cider vinegar, honey and black molasses. The treatment also involved bathing in Epsom salt regularly.

He added: “My mother tried this method and after 18 months her condition started to improve, which was unusual in someone of her age.”

Indeed, it successfully held her pain at bay for the remaining six years of her life.

So it was only natural that when Sir Fiennes developed the same condition that he took a leaf out of his mother’s book.

In recent years he has relied upon Honeygar, which was developed by former nurse and fellow arthritis sufferer Margeret Hills, who died in 2003.

He said: “I didn’t give up impatiently as I would have done had I not seen the effects on my mother.

“It did take more than a year before the aches gradually grew less and less and eventually disappeared.

“From time to time I’ve lapsed for a while. After two or three months the arthritis begins slowly to return. It goes away - just as slowly - when I retake Honeygar daily again.”

So how does it work? Well, this is not just some old wife’s tale, it actually does have some science to back it up.

Essentially, Hills was convinced arthritis was caused by a build-up of uric acid. And the best way to neutralise that is malic acid, which is found in apple cider. Bingo!

So where can you get some? Well, the good news is Honeygar is available from all good health food shops ¬ and some bad ones too. You won’t even need a doctor’s prescription.

However, before you go rushing to the shops you should know that not everyone is convinced.

Consultant rheumatologist Professor Robert Moots, of the University of Liverpool, said: “There is no connection between dietary acids and what happens in the body.”

Spoilsport.

Can vinegar really ease arthritis?

can apple vinegar ease arthritisVinegar – great with fish and chips, but can also help ease arthritis.

Well, that’s according to intrepid explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes anyway, who swears by the stuff.

The 64-year-old adventurer got the first twinges of arthritis 20 years ago in his hands and hips, which he says was caused by too many expeditions spent sleeping in cold conditions.

But Fiennes insists he no longer suffers from the ailment, and says it’s all thanks to a vinegar recipe his mother passed down to him.

And the fact in 2003 he ran seven marathons in seven days and earlier this year tackled Everest, who are we to argue.

OK, the wonder cure – named Honeygar, which consists of four parts apple cider vinegar and one part raw honey – would be no good on chips (we think), but, according to Sir Fiennes, it worked wonders for his mother, who in her mid-80s was bedridden with arthritis.

Speaking to the Daily Mail newspaper, he said: “My sisters and I encouraged her to look into an alternative cure after she showed us the doctor’s X-ray, which highlighted the arthritic band in her back.”

So she looked into it, and found it in a library book which highlighted a natural cure for arthritis that included cider vinegar, honey and black molasses. The treatment also involved bathing in Epsom salt regularly.

He added: “My mother tried this method and after 18 months her condition started to improve, which was unusual in someone of her age.”

Indeed, it successfully held her pain at bay for the remaining six years of her life.

So it was only natural that when Sir Fiennes developed the same condition that he took a leaf out of his mother’s book.

In recent years he has relied upon Honeygar, which was developed by former nurse and fellow arthritis sufferer Margeret Hills, who died in 2003.

He said: “I didn’t give up impatiently as I would have done had I not seen the effects on my mother.

“It did take more than a year before the aches gradually grew less and less and eventually disappeared.

“From time to time I’ve lapsed for a while. After two or three months the arthritis begins slowly to return. It goes away - just as slowly - when I retake Honeygar daily again.”

So how does it work? Well, this is not just some old wife’s tale, it actually does have some science to back it up.

Essentially, Hills was convinced arthritis was caused by a build-up of uric acid. And the best way to neutralise that is malic acid, which is found in apple cider. Bingo!

So where can you get some? Well, the good news is Honeygar is available from all good health food shops ¬ and some bad ones too. You won’t even need a doctor’s prescription.

However, before you go rushing to the shops you should know that not everyone is convinced.

Consultant rheumatologist Professor Robert Moots, of the University of Liverpool, said: “There is no connection between dietary acids and what happens in the body.”

Spoilsport.

Can vinegar really ease arthritis?

can apple vinegar ease arthritisVinegar – great with fish and chips, but can also help ease arthritis.

Well, that’s according to intrepid explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes anyway, who swears by the stuff.

The 64-year-old adventurer got the first twinges of arthritis 20 years ago in his hands and hips, which he says was caused by too many expeditions spent sleeping in cold conditions.

But Fiennes insists he no longer suffers from the ailment, and says it’s all thanks to a vinegar recipe his mother passed down to him.

And the fact in 2003 he ran seven marathons in seven days and earlier this year tackled Everest, who are we to argue.

OK, the wonder cure – named Honeygar, which consists of four parts apple cider vinegar and one part raw honey – would be no good on chips (we think), but, according to Sir Fiennes, it worked wonders for his mother, who in her mid-80s was bedridden with arthritis.

Speaking to the Daily Mail newspaper, he said: “My sisters and I encouraged her to look into an alternative cure after she showed us the doctor’s X-ray, which highlighted the arthritic band in her back.”

So she looked into it, and found it in a library book which highlighted a natural cure for arthritis that included cider vinegar, honey and black molasses. The treatment also involved bathing in Epsom salt regularly.

He added: “My mother tried this method and after 18 months her condition started to improve, which was unusual in someone of her age.”

Indeed, it successfully held her pain at bay for the remaining six years of her life.

So it was only natural that when Sir Fiennes developed the same condition that he took a leaf out of his mother’s book.

In recent years he has relied upon Honeygar, which was developed by former nurse and fellow arthritis sufferer Margeret Hills, who died in 2003.

He said: “I didn’t give up impatiently as I would have done had I not seen the effects on my mother.

“It did take more than a year before the aches gradually grew less and less and eventually disappeared.

“From time to time I’ve lapsed for a while. After two or three months the arthritis begins slowly to return. It goes away - just as slowly - when I retake Honeygar daily again.”

So how does it work? Well, this is not just some old wife’s tale, it actually does have some science to back it up.

Essentially, Hills was convinced arthritis was caused by a build-up of uric acid. And the best way to neutralise that is malic acid, which is found in apple cider. Bingo!

So where can you get some? Well, the good news is Honeygar is available from all good health food shops ¬ and some bad ones too. You won’t even need a doctor’s prescription.

However, before you go rushing to the shops you should know that not everyone is convinced.

Consultant rheumatologist Professor Robert Moots, of the University of Liverpool, said: “There is no connection between dietary acids and what happens in the body.”

Spoilsport.