
Get ready for the Ultimate Health Checklist, because we're putting ourselves back on our to-do list Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2009, with Dr. Oz, rocking those oddly sensual blue scrubs of his. The show begins with Obama-era hope for 2009 in the form of Laura, a formerly frowsy blonde who was told last year by Dr. Roison, the less kinetic medical partner of Dr. Oz, that she may have had only 44 birthdays, but her real age is about 60. The two docs cooked up a to-do list for Laura, at the top of which was quitting smoking (duh), making better food choices and exercising. Throughout this show, Oprah wanted us all to take notes, and it was a good idea because this show was information overload. I wrote down exactly what Laura says she's doing differently. The specifics? "Breakfast: Coffee. Steel-cut oatmeal...." (anyone know why it makes a difference what kind of metal is used to cut the oats? I don't get it) ... "Yogurt. Fresh fruit. Blueberries. Sprinkle with flaxseeds. Lunch: Salad with spinach, other vegetables. Dinner: Always chicken. Plus more vegetables. Cook everything in olive oil. Walk 10,000 steps a day. Manages stress with meditation." ... Already I'm feeling constricted. Chicken every day? All of a sudden I'm fiending for the See's candy my father-in-law gave me for Christmas. Oprah posed a question to ponder during the commercials, which was: Why are you worthy of getting healthy this year? I decided I was worthy because everyone's got the right to be healthy. I don't know if this is going to help much when, like Laura, I'm facing chicken for the billionth time and I want to hurl it through the window and run in the opposite direction. After the commercial Oprah shared her own response, which was something about how health is the foundation for all other good things in life. Very nice answer. But how helpful will it be when facing a life sentence of chicken?
The next thing we had to write down was "Ingredients to Avoid," which is probably all stuff we know already: high-fructose corn syrup, sugar, the term "enriched," trans fat (hydrogenated fats), and saturated fat. The pens in the audience were back in action for "the Ultimate Health Checklist," which begins with scheduling a checkup with a doctor who probably doesn't look as good as Dr. Oz in scrubs. Then you start eating healthy foods. The easiest way to achieve this, Dr. Oz says, is to eat foods that don't have labels. You need 5 to 7 "fistfuls" of antioxident-rich foods a day: Tomatoes, broccoli, beans, blueberries, artichokes, and dry prunes... I stop writing long enough to look at my hand. My fist isn't that big, so already I'm worried about being cheated. And how do you grab fistful of artichokes, anyway? Aren't they kind of pointy? No time to think about it. Dr. Oz is rattling off more numbers: You need 3 grams of Omega 3 daily, because 80 percent of the brain is made of fat, so we need to nourish our fat heads appropriately, which means flaxseeds, walnuts, salmon, scallops, soybeans, and squash. On top of that you need 25 grams of fiber a day, coming from lentils, black beans, peas, raspberries and pine nuts, plus whole grains and oatmeal. No mention of steel blades. Beyond that you need 1 tablespoon of olive oil. No. 4 on the list is a multivitamin every day, though I swear I just read taking vitamins won't make you any healthier. The next assignment for the commercial break: Write down 3 foods you're going to stop buying and 3 you're going to start buying to improve your health. This was followed by a commercial for Blue Diamond Almonds, so I put "nuts" on the list. I wasn't sure if I should stop or start buying them, so I put it on both lists. One thing I know I shouldn't buy is cookies, but on this very day my 10-year-old daughter made me sign an agreement allowing Girl Scout cookies to enter our home, so I'm screwed there. I'm not buying other cookies, then. No other cookies. No soda. No candy. But more beans. More tomatoes. And flaxseed.
The list-o-mania continued with a Know Your Numbers segment, starting with Know Your Waist Size. A woman's should be less than half her height. How much less, they didn't say. Then... Know your blood pressure. 115 over 75 is ideal.... And Know Your Cholesterol. The LDL should be less than 100, because that's the bad one, and the HDL should be greater than 40, because that's the good one. (I never knew that before). You need to know your resting heart rate number, which I'm sure I'll never be able to figure out because I can't seem to find my own pulse. Resting heart rate is determined by putting a finger to the adam's apple area before you get out of bed in the morning. You hold your finger on the spot and count how many pulses you get a minute, and if it's more than 83 your heart's working too hard and you should probably spend the rest of the day in bed. Top athletes have heart rates in the 40s and 50s, Dr. Oz says. You want to shoot for something in the 60s. Lot of information I'll have a hell of a time using. You also need to know your Blood Sugar numbers, the amount of Vitamin D you're getting, and your C-Reactive Protein, which is important but I zoned out during the explanation. I'll be honest. Dr. Oz is a bundle of energy and he sort of wears me out. I think he even wears Oprah out occasionally. The last number he says you need to know is your TSH -- thyroid stimulating hormone -- which is the biggest hormonal deficiency in the country. Wait a minute. How come Oprah went through four doctors before she got a diagnosis of thyroid trouble? How come Dr. Oz didn't catch it? Or the other guy? Hmm.... Which leads to the next thing on your must-have-for-health list: a health advocate. This means you should bring somebody with you to the doctor who's willing to take notes and ask hard-as-nails questions, including, "Where are my medical records? I want a copy of medical records!" Oprah has Dr. Roisin serve as her advocate when she goes to the doctor, even though I'd assume he could serve as her doctor. I'm surprised she didn't pick Steadman or Gail. Interesting. She then assigned us to write down who would be our health advocate. Maybe I should pick Steadman or Gail. They're obviously available.
Dr. Oz kept the lists coming. Here's a list of Health Tests Everyone Should Have: 1. Annual Physical. 2. Every 6 Months See a Dentist. 3. Eye Exam Every 2 Years. Then for women, an annual Pap and Pelvic starting no later than age 21. Men in the same age bracket need a yearly testicular exam. Women between 35-40 need to do monthly breast self-exams plus annual mammogram. At age 50, you need to get an echocardiogram, a stress test, and a colonoscopy. People of all ages need a skin test once a year. At age 65 you need an annual hearing exam. Whew. But we're not done yet: Women need a bone density test by the time they hit 60. Middle-aged men need digital rectal exams. Everyone needs to walk 10,000 steps a day, which is equal to 30 minutes on the hoof. You want to get your heart rate up to the point that you're sweating 60 mins. a week. You need to stretch 5 minutes a day and you need to do strength training 30 minutes a week. Oprah's assignment was to write down a commitment to exercise for the week. Mine is to count my steps and no matter where I happen to be, I'm going to stop at 10,000. I'll have to bring a cell phone so I can call someone to pick me up. Maybe Gail or Steadman. The last item the doctor dealt with was sleep, a sore subject for a lifelong insomniac like me. First let's get the numbers out of the way: You need 7 to 8 hours a night. If you don't get sleep, you'll crave other things, like carbohydrates. Really? Is that why I want potatoes? Because I'm tired? I thought I just liked potatoes On the subject of sleep, Ozzy has yet another list: Keep a routine. Keep your bedroom dark and cool. Reserve the bedroom for sleep and sex only.
The next thing we had to write down was "Ingredients to Avoid," which is probably all stuff we know already: high-fructose corn syrup, sugar, the term "enriched," trans fat (hydrogenated fats), and saturated fat. The pens in the audience were back in action for "the Ultimate Health Checklist," which begins with scheduling a checkup with a doctor who probably doesn't look as good as Dr. Oz in scrubs. Then you start eating healthy foods. The easiest way to achieve this, Dr. Oz says, is to eat foods that don't have labels. You need 5 to 7 "fistfuls" of antioxident-rich foods a day: Tomatoes, broccoli, beans, blueberries, artichokes, and dry prunes... I stop writing long enough to look at my hand. My fist isn't that big, so already I'm worried about being cheated. And how do you grab fistful of artichokes, anyway? Aren't they kind of pointy? No time to think about it. Dr. Oz is rattling off more numbers: You need 3 grams of Omega 3 daily, because 80 percent of the brain is made of fat, so we need to nourish our fat heads appropriately, which means flaxseeds, walnuts, salmon, scallops, soybeans, and squash. On top of that you need 25 grams of fiber a day, coming from lentils, black beans, peas, raspberries and pine nuts, plus whole grains and oatmeal. No mention of steel blades. Beyond that you need 1 tablespoon of olive oil. No. 4 on the list is a multivitamin every day, though I swear I just read taking vitamins won't make you any healthier. The next assignment for the commercial break: Write down 3 foods you're going to stop buying and 3 you're going to start buying to improve your health. This was followed by a commercial for Blue Diamond Almonds, so I put "nuts" on the list. I wasn't sure if I should stop or start buying them, so I put it on both lists. One thing I know I shouldn't buy is cookies, but on this very day my 10-year-old daughter made me sign an agreement allowing Girl Scout cookies to enter our home, so I'm screwed there. I'm not buying other cookies, then. No other cookies. No soda. No candy. But more beans. More tomatoes. And flaxseed.
The list-o-mania continued with a Know Your Numbers segment, starting with Know Your Waist Size. A woman's should be less than half her height. How much less, they didn't say. Then... Know your blood pressure. 115 over 75 is ideal.... And Know Your Cholesterol. The LDL should be less than 100, because that's the bad one, and the HDL should be greater than 40, because that's the good one. (I never knew that before). You need to know your resting heart rate number, which I'm sure I'll never be able to figure out because I can't seem to find my own pulse. Resting heart rate is determined by putting a finger to the adam's apple area before you get out of bed in the morning. You hold your finger on the spot and count how many pulses you get a minute, and if it's more than 83 your heart's working too hard and you should probably spend the rest of the day in bed. Top athletes have heart rates in the 40s and 50s, Dr. Oz says. You want to shoot for something in the 60s. Lot of information I'll have a hell of a time using. You also need to know your Blood Sugar numbers, the amount of Vitamin D you're getting, and your C-Reactive Protein, which is important but I zoned out during the explanation. I'll be honest. Dr. Oz is a bundle of energy and he sort of wears me out. I think he even wears Oprah out occasionally. The last number he says you need to know is your TSH -- thyroid stimulating hormone -- which is the biggest hormonal deficiency in the country. Wait a minute. How come Oprah went through four doctors before she got a diagnosis of thyroid trouble? How come Dr. Oz didn't catch it? Or the other guy? Hmm.... Which leads to the next thing on your must-have-for-health list: a health advocate. This means you should bring somebody with you to the doctor who's willing to take notes and ask hard-as-nails questions, including, "Where are my medical records? I want a copy of medical records!" Oprah has Dr. Roisin serve as her advocate when she goes to the doctor, even though I'd assume he could serve as her doctor. I'm surprised she didn't pick Steadman or Gail. Interesting. She then assigned us to write down who would be our health advocate. Maybe I should pick Steadman or Gail. They're obviously available.
Dr. Oz kept the lists coming. Here's a list of Health Tests Everyone Should Have: 1. Annual Physical. 2. Every 6 Months See a Dentist. 3. Eye Exam Every 2 Years. Then for women, an annual Pap and Pelvic starting no later than age 21. Men in the same age bracket need a yearly testicular exam. Women between 35-40 need to do monthly breast self-exams plus annual mammogram. At age 50, you need to get an echocardiogram, a stress test, and a colonoscopy. People of all ages need a skin test once a year. At age 65 you need an annual hearing exam. Whew. But we're not done yet: Women need a bone density test by the time they hit 60. Middle-aged men need digital rectal exams. Everyone needs to walk 10,000 steps a day, which is equal to 30 minutes on the hoof. You want to get your heart rate up to the point that you're sweating 60 mins. a week. You need to stretch 5 minutes a day and you need to do strength training 30 minutes a week. Oprah's assignment was to write down a commitment to exercise for the week. Mine is to count my steps and no matter where I happen to be, I'm going to stop at 10,000. I'll have to bring a cell phone so I can call someone to pick me up. Maybe Gail or Steadman. The last item the doctor dealt with was sleep, a sore subject for a lifelong insomniac like me. First let's get the numbers out of the way: You need 7 to 8 hours a night. If you don't get sleep, you'll crave other things, like carbohydrates. Really? Is that why I want potatoes? Because I'm tired? I thought I just liked potatoes On the subject of sleep, Ozzy has yet another list: Keep a routine. Keep your bedroom dark and cool. Reserve the bedroom for sleep and sex only.

No caffeine 4 hours before retiring. No TV in the bedroom. Take calcium and magnesium.... Whoa, rewind that just a bit. No TV? No other activities than sex and sleep? I happen to be writing this in my bedroom and I'm neither asleep nor having sex while I'm doing it. Plus, I love having TV in the bedroom. I'm willing to go along with a lot of things, but no TV? How am I going to watch my Oprah Tivo's? Oprah's writing assignment was put down one sleep habit you'll be changing this week. And I'm working on it, I'm working on it.
"The truth is," Oprah said in conclusion, "You can have all the square footage in your house, all the knickknack paddywhacks... and it means nothing without your health." I believe her. I really do. But keep your paws of my TV.
"The truth is," Oprah said in conclusion, "You can have all the square footage in your house, all the knickknack paddywhacks... and it means nothing without your health." I believe her. I really do. But keep your paws of my TV.
Spirituality 101...
Wednesday was the spiritual Best Life show. To Oprah, spirituality is being "connected, present and alive." Today my 10-year-old and I had a little cup of fro-yo topped with tiny cubes of cheesecake. It was the highlight of my day, making me feel connected, present and alive, even though not a molecule of what we ate was on any of the lists from the Tuesday show. For me this was a spiritual interlude, a shared pleasure with no other motive than the shared pleasure itself. I liked what guest Elizabeth Lesser had to say, which was that we have an instinct saying there's more to life than meets the eye and we can look at that something with no fear (but I think that also requires faith). I wasn't acquainted with Elizabeth Lesser or Oprah's other guest, Rev. Ed Bacon, though I think I have neighbors who are part of his Pasadena congregation. But I was familar with Rev. Michael Beckwith, whose Agape services are held in Culver City. I'm feeling very smug now, knowing all this spiritual enlightenment radiates from my part of the country. Truth is, I only know Rev. Beckwith from another daytime television show, "Starting Over," a sort of a "Real World" for middle-aged ladies. One of the ladies got to go to anxiety counseling with Rev. Beckwith and I really liked what he had to say, which was something like, "Fear is misdirected attention." Very succinct and very potent -- now the only problem is how are you gonna pull that attention off the thing that's scaring you and focus it where you can be effective? There's a spiritual challenge.
Wednesday was the spiritual Best Life show. To Oprah, spirituality is being "connected, present and alive." Today my 10-year-old and I had a little cup of fro-yo topped with tiny cubes of cheesecake. It was the highlight of my day, making me feel connected, present and alive, even though not a molecule of what we ate was on any of the lists from the Tuesday show. For me this was a spiritual interlude, a shared pleasure with no other motive than the shared pleasure itself. I liked what guest Elizabeth Lesser had to say, which was that we have an instinct saying there's more to life than meets the eye and we can look at that something with no fear (but I think that also requires faith). I wasn't acquainted with Elizabeth Lesser or Oprah's other guest, Rev. Ed Bacon, though I think I have neighbors who are part of his Pasadena congregation. But I was familar with Rev. Michael Beckwith, whose Agape services are held in Culver City. I'm feeling very smug now, knowing all this spiritual enlightenment radiates from my part of the country. Truth is, I only know Rev. Beckwith from another daytime television show, "Starting Over," a sort of a "Real World" for middle-aged ladies. One of the ladies got to go to anxiety counseling with Rev. Beckwith and I really liked what he had to say, which was something like, "Fear is misdirected attention." Very succinct and very potent -- now the only problem is how are you gonna pull that attention off the thing that's scaring you and focus it where you can be effective? There's a spiritual challenge.

Oprah elaborated on her personal conception of spirituality, saying it allows you to endure anything and know you're going to be okay, because you're more than your house or your job or your marriage or any other attachment, including your very identity. One of my favorite quotes about Oprah is that "she didn't let trauma traumatize her..." as if she choose not be traumatized. Like, it could've happened, but she didn't allow it to. And all this time I didn't think you had any choice. I'd like to know how she did that.
One clue might be in the way she counseled Tanya on Skype whose bakery business is getting beaten up in the recession. Oprah asked Tanya to direct her mind to what she's still got -- she can still breathe, for example. She's still "clothed in her own mind," which is an expression I hadn't heard before. Tanya on Skype didn't seem terribly relieved, but Oprah persisted. You have to accept what is, she said. You create more stress when you resist something because it wasn't what you expected. All this hardship helps you learn about yourself, Oprah was saying, but I'm afraid most of what I've learned isn't very pretty. I'm not very good at forgiving and forgetting, I suck at letting go of the past, I've got resentments and grudges and obsessions up to wazoo.... You know, I don't really like learning such things, so I'd probably vote for no further hardship. Nonetheless, Rev. Beckwith says spirituality is never about gaining anything, it's about letting go, as in letting go of false concepts about yourself and your role in life, false identities, false habits, misconstrued ideas. So if I'm ever going to shed all my undesirable traits, I guess I need more adversity. Especially if I want to leave my "body temple" with a nice bright aura. Our intentions become the clothes we wear when we leave the physical, says Rev. Beckwith. And God knows I want the right clothes.
I felt like a glib jerk, though, when Jackie was on. I seriously cannot imagine how she copes and perseveres. She's truly a transcedent being, and I really am in awe.
Gotta love both ministers for putting out the word that being gay is a gift from God. The guy on Skype was made in the image of God, therefore he is exactly what he's supposed to be. What a concept! Now that's an attitude that doesn't grow on trees.
If you take one thought into the new year, Oprah said at the end of the show, remember you have everything you need right now, and everything that's happening is going to bring you what you need to learn. I also want to take into the new year what Mattie Stepanek's mom had to say, which was, "What you choose to think, speak and do is your life's spiritual message." I'm thinking my spiritual message so far has left a bit to be desired, so I've got my work cut out for me. Here's to changes for the better!



