Read Women's Bodies, Women's Wisdom Online
Authors: Christiane Northrup
Tags: #Health; Fitness & Dieting, #Women's Health, #General, #Personal Health, #Professional & Technical, #Medical eBooks, #Specialties, #Obstetrics & Gynecology
Uterine Prolapse
Fibroid Tumors
Anatomy
Ovarian Cysts
Polycystic Ovaries (PCO)
Ovarian Cancer
We Are Sexual Beings
Our Cultural Inheritance
Reclaiming Our Erotic Selves
9 Vulva, Vagina, Cervix, and Lower Urinary Tract
Our Cultural Inheritance
Anatomy
Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)
Herpes
Cervicitis
Cervical Dysplasia (Abnormal Pap Smears)
Vaginal Infection (Vaginitis)
A Note on Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Chronic Vulvar Pain (Vulvodynia)
Interstitial Cystitis (Painful Bladder Syndrome)
Recurrent Urinary Tract Infections
Stress Urinary Incontinence
Our Cultural Inheritance
Anatomy
Breast Self-Exams
Benign Breast Symptoms: Breast Pain, Lumps, Cysts, and Nipple Discharge
Treatment for Benign Breast Symptoms
Mammography
Breast Cancer
Program to Promote Healthy Breast Tissue
Cosmetic Breast Surgery
Abortion
Emergency Contraception: Abortion Prevention
Conscious Conception and Contraception
Transforming Infertility
Pregnancy Loss
Adoption
Fertility as Metaphor
The Transforming Power of Pregnancy
Our Cultural Inheritance: Pregnancy
Preventing Premature Birth
Preventing Preeclampsia
Turning a Breech Presentation
Our Cultural Inheritance: Labor and Delivery
Birth Technologies
Mothering the Mother: A Solution Whose Time Has Come
How to Decrease Your Risk for a Cesarean Section
My Personal Story
Turning Labor into Personal Power
13 Motherhood: Bonding with Your Baby
Postpartum: The Fourth Trimester
Circumcision
Formula Versus Breast Milk
Mothering in a Dominator Culture: The Hardest Job in the World
Menopause: A Crossroads
Our Cultural Inheritance
Creating Health During Menopause
Adrenal Function: What Every Woman Should Know
Kinds of Menopause
The Hormone Therapy Question
A Hormone Primer
Symptoms of Menopause
Hot Flashes
Vaginal Dryness, Irritation, and Thinning
Osteoporosis
Sexuality in Menopause
Thinning Hair
Mood Swings and Depression
Fuzzy Thinking
Long-Term Health Concerns
Alzheimer’s Disease
Deciding on Menopausal Treatment Self-Care During Menopause
Menopause as a New Beginning
Part Three
Women’s Wisdom Program for Flourishing and Healing
Imagine Your Future: Change Your Consciousness, Change Your Cells
Step One: Uncover and Update Your Legacy
Step Two: Sort Through Your Beliefs
Step Three: Respect and Release Your Emotions
Step Four: Learn to Listen to Your Body
Step Five: Learn to Respect Your Body
Step Six: Acknowledge a Higher Power or Inner Wisdom
Step Seven: Reclaim the Fullness of Your Mind
Step Eight: Get Help
Step Nine: Work with Your Body
Step Ten: Gather Information
Step Eleven: Forgive
Step Twelve: Actively Pursue Pleasure and Purpose
16 Getting the Most Out of Your Medical Care
Why You Must Take Responsibility for Your Health Care
Choosing a Treatment: From Surgery to Acupuncture
Creating Health Through Surgery
Creating Optimal Body Composition and Vibrant Health
The Wonders of Magnesium
Creating a Supplementation Program
Other Common Concerns
A Word About Smoking
Appreciate the Energy of Food
Our Cultural Inheritance
Benefits of Exercise
Exercise and Addiction
Exercise, Amenorrhea, and Bone Loss
My Exercise Story: Making Peace
Getting Started
19 Healing Ourselves, Healing Our World
Our Mothers: Our Cells
A Ritual of Reclaiming
Transforming Our Fear of Our Shaman Past
Our Dreams: Earth’s Dreams
Making the World Safe for Women: Start with Yourself
Fig. 1: Earth’s Energy Going Upward
Fig. 2: Chakra Diagram with Female Figure
Fig. 3: Menstrual Cycle (Days)
Fig. 4: Lunar Chart for Menstrual Cycle
Fig. 5: The Female Mind-Body Continuum: Interactions Between the Brain and the Pelvis
Fig. 6: Adhesions in Pelvic Organs
Fig. 7: Acupressure Points for Gynecological Problems
Fig. 9: Uterus, Ovaries, and Cervix with Anatomic Labels
Fig. 15: Fertility Awareness: Ovulation and Basal Body Temperature
Fig. 16: The Causes of Female Infertility
Fig. 17: Acupuncture or Acupressure Points to Turn a Breech
Fig. 19: Hormone-Producing Body Sites
Fig. 20: Body Mass Index Chart
Table 1: Characteristics of the Addictive System
Table 2: The Body as a Process Versus Medical Worldview
Table 4: Energy Anatomy: Mental and Emotional Patterns, the Chakras, and the Physical Body
Table 5: The Anatomy of Women’s Wisdom
Table 6: Comparing Contraceptive Methods
Table 7: Potential Risk Factors in Childbirth
Table 8: The Effects of Hormone Therapy on Breast Cancer Risk
Table 9: USDA Suggested Weights for Adults
Table 10: Calculating Your Daily Protein Requirement
Table 11: Recommended Daily Supplementation
Introduction to the Fourth Edition
One of the central outmoded ideas governing our health care system is the notion that the processes of a woman’s body are designed to cause suffering and pain, and that women require a great deal of medical care and testing to stay healthy. Though this is certainly the experience of countless women, there is another way—a better way.In fact, the female body was designed by our creator to be a source of pleasure, fertility, movement, strength, and well-being. Our bodies connect us with the moon, the tides, and the seasons. We are meant to flourish. We, the human race, have come to a crossroads, a turning point when old, unsustainable ideas and behaviors are breaking down all over the planet. The current health care crisis is just one example of this breakdown—an example with which I’m intimately familiar. There is no need to fear the crumbling of the old, for it opens a space for new, more sustainable, and healthier systems and ideas to be created in all aspects of the human experience on earth, including how we handle the experience of living in a female body.
Over the past three decades, my experiences as an ob-gyn physician, new mother, and midlife woman have led me to a revolutionary new approach to women’s health and wellness that acknowledges the seamless unity of our bodies, minds, and spirits. Though this wasn’t obvious to the mainstream medical community back in the 1980s and ’90s when I was first field-testing the approaches outlined in this book, it is now abundantly clear to us all that a woman’s state of health is highly influenced by the culture in which she lives, her position within it, her experiences, and her day-to-day thoughts, beliefs, and behaviors.
It is possible to thrive in a female body instead of simply waiting for disease to happen. It boils down to this: Regardless of our individual circumstances, our pasts, or our ages, each of us has inner guidance available that we can tune in to in order to create vibrant health—now. We are born with this inner guidance, which comes in the form of the emotions and desires that lead us toward things (including thoughts) that feel good and are good for us, and away from things that feel bad and are bad for us. It’s that simple. We are hard-wired to seek love, joy, fulfillment—and health. Though we’ve too often been talked out of our desires as children, I’ve learned that we can trust those feelings that make us want to get up in the morning. Our desires are the way that the healing life force comes through us and replenishes our bodies. They are what make life worth living. They make up our hopes and dreams. And they invariably hold the keys to healing not only our bodies but our entire lives.
As a physician, I’ve seen time and time again how our inner guidance also comes in the form of bodily symptoms and illnesses—especially when we are living lives devoid of pleasure, joy, and hope. Our illnesses are designed to stop us in our tracks, make us rest, and bring our attention back to the things that are really important and that give our lives meaning and joy— aspects of life that we often put on the back burner until “someday.”
The insights catalyzed by decades of medical practice as well as my own health problems challenged everything I learned in medical school and residency training about women’s health. Over the years, it became abundantly clear to me that premenstrual syndrome (PMS), pelvic pain, fibroid tumors, chronic vaginitis, breast problems, and menstrual cramps were related to the contexts of an individual woman’s life and her beliefs about herself and what she thought was possible in her life. All of these factors are associated with very real biochemical changes in our cells. Learning about their diets, work situations, and relationships often provided me with clues to the source of women’s distress—and, more important, what steps needed to be taken to relieve that distress. Over the years, I have learned to appreciate the thoughts, beliefs, and behavioral patterns behind medical conditions in ways that simply aren’t addressed in medical training. These insights are the missing link to optimal health on all levels.