Healthy Cross-Quarter Greetings!

Greetings from HumanaNatura at the cross-quarter! In the natural year, we are at the halfway point between the extremes of light and darkness of the passing solstice and the relative balance and calm of the coming equinox.

Now is an ideal time to make added progress on your Natural Life Plan, taking steps to realize your goals for greater health and quality of life in the weeks ahead. In this way, you prepare yourself for our recommended review and renewal of your plan at the equinox.

If you do not have a Natural Life Plan – guiding your use and personal expression of Natural Living, the third HumanaNatura technique in our natural health system – the link above will take you to our planning worksheets and help you to begin more intentional, health-centered, and progressive life in the days and weeks ahead.

Our newest community newsletter was released today as well, which is published eight times yearly in harmony with the natural year. To receive future HumanaNatura newsletters and learn about the benefits of membership in our global practitioner-activist network, go to Join HumanaNatura.

Tell your friends about HumanaNatura…promote modern natural life!

Promoting Healthy Adolescence

University of California psychologist Alison Gopnik has written an excellent new article that summarizes our best scientific understanding of the changing nature and increasing disaffection of modern adolescence. The piece suggests why many teens and tweens today are struggling to achieve a naturally healthy, happy, and autonomous life. Importantly, she proposes what parents, community leaders, and yes, even adolescents can do to change this long-developing and seemingly pandemic trend, one now set in sharp relief by our global economic woes.

Rethinking adolescence

Gopnik’s simple but elegant distillation of developmental psychology’s current assessment of early 21st century adolescence first appeared as a submission to Edge.org and now has been re-printed by The Wall Street Journal in an expanded form, which we find the more valuable of the two.

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Natural Look at Social Networking

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By Mark Lundegren

Do you marvel at the new internet-enabled social networks we all now have, or at least all now can have? And do you feel that your network, electronic or otherwise, reflects conscious decisions and preferences on your part?

A new study of modern-day hunter-gatherers by Harvard University and The University of California encourages a broader view on both points. It suggests: 1) that modern-day online social networks are more closely linked to earlier natural human social dynamics than we may realize, and 2) that our personal social networking preferences may be much more predictable than we believe.

The new study examines how human social networks are structured in our natural hunter-gatherer setting, focusing on how people with varying propensities for cooperation and individualism naturally mix and adjust to one another. This structuring of high and low cooperators is important, since in a predominantly cooperative species like Homo sapiens, incentives naturally exist for people who are more self-interested to take advantage of our generally cooperative social setting.

But highly individualistic “free-riders” must be naturally limited and made exceptional, since excessive or normalized individualism risks threatening essential cooperation and the entire society. This problem has been with us since the beginning of social life itself, and remains one of the most important social policy issues today.

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An Integrated Outlook on Fitness

By Mark Lundegren

Are you one of those people who has it all…intelligence, physical fitness, natural good looks, lasting happiness, a personality that invites others, and maybe musical or another creative talent? If you answered, “not quite,” would you like to be this way?

The truth is not just that we can have or be all these things, but that we naturally are all these things. In an area of findings that can lead to new insights into our life and health potential, these various attributes have been shown in research to be natural aspects or qualities of a complete, integrated, and healthy human being. They have also been shown to increase or diminish together…as our natural health improves or as it is reduced.

As natural beings and highly-evolved social animals, possessing these essential features of successful human life is our expected condition and not an exceptional state – whenever we are naturally and fully expressed as people, balanced, vital, and well. When we are in the “not quite” category, or worse, this is a sign that our overall health and natural vitality have been compromised, underdeveloped, or misunderstood.

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Natural Lessons of Vitamin B12

By Mark Lundegren

Sometimes little things can teach us a lot, if we remain attentive and curious.

A recent New York Times article by Jane Brody, It Could Be Old Age Or It Could Be Low B12, highlights that elderly people can be misdiagnosed with early Alzheimer’s disease or dementia, when they are instead exhibiting a similar pattern of symptoms owing to chronic vitamin B12 deficiency.

While a cause for concern, the important lessons from our potential for a deficit of vitamin B12 extend well beyond the care of ourselves and others in elderhood. Consider these three:

Lesson #1: Perhaps the most important practical lesson of our risk of a Vitamin B12 shortfall is the importance of ensuring a vitamin-rich daily diet and that we are able to make use of the vitamins we eat by ensuring our natural physiological health. Though many of us fail on one or both counts, we actually can do each of these things quite simply through Natural Eating, which ensures a robust vitamin intake and eliminates harmful foods from our diet that compromise our health, and by adequate Natural Exercise, which encourages our tissues and chemistry to make the most of a healthy natural diet.

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Solstice Feast – Big & Healthy

An amazing mix of foods makes for an extraordinary salad meal, one that is in keeping with HumanaNatura principles for Natural Eating. This meal begins with pan-cooked curry fish, pork, and red and green onions, and is combined with a bed of arugula, julienne cucumbers, and sliced cherry tomatoes. It’s topped off with diced orange, pistachios, parsley, coriander, and black pepper. A great way to ring in the natural new year!

Learn how to make delicious salad meals like this via the Meals tab above or our popular article Perfect Salad Meals. And explore our science-based guidelines for healthy natural nutrition through the Natural Eating section of HumanaNatura’s comprehensive Personal Health Program.

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HumanaNatura Solstice Wishes!

Greetings from HumanaNatura at the solstice! In the natural year, today is the beginning of the new year in the north and its mid-point and height in the south. In both cases, we are halfway between the relative balance and calm of the spring and fall equinoxes, when HumanaNatura encourages review and renewal of our Natural Life Plan.

At the solstice, HumanaNatura instead encourages life and health-affirming celebration, in an ancient human rhythm that has its roots before recorded history. In this way, we act to powerfully balance ourselves between reflection and action, thought and feeling, and self and others.

Our newest member newsletter was released today as well, which is published eight times yearly in harmony with the natural year. To receive future HumanaNatura newsletters and learn about the benefits of membership in our global practitioner-advocate network, go to Join HumanaNatura.

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Our Focus on Ensuring Equality

By Mark Lundegren

HumanaNatura encourages communities to dedicate themselves, in principle and practice, to a new modern goal of progressive health and quality of life for all. While a community mission or focus of this kind may have seemed unrealistic or unattainable in earlier times, today it has become within the reach of most communities in the developed world and many in the developing world as well. This essential change in our human condition is a result of advancing health-related science, industrial technology and affluence, higher educational levels, and democratic political systems.

To implement health-centered action within a community in this way, we recommend that political leaders and health advocates use a repeating multi-step process that has three key features: 1) ongoing development and implementation of a community health agenda, 2) pragmatic and increasing action on more than 100 HumanaNatura community health factors, and 3) ensuring three bedrock social conditions that naturally foster human health and well-being advancement – high social transparency, reciprocity, and equality.

While the community benefits of social transparency and reciprocity are fairly well-appreciated and intuitive to most of us in modern political and commercial life, the need for relatively high social equality is often a more exotic idea and today remains difficult for some of us to accept as a community health foundation. This is in part because of culture and socialization, including our mistaken equating of free markets with free societies, and in part because, instinctively, we naturally wish to be more rather than less advantaged and secure relative to others or our environment generally.

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Mice Are Natural Socialists

New research by the University of Chicago has many journalists and even some scientists buzzing, but it really shouldn’t have caused this reaction. In the study, scientists demonstrated compassionate or cooperative behavior between lab rats, notably their choosing to free a trapped comrade over food. Many of us expect rodents to behave more selfishly, even as significant science, including key principles of evolutionary theory, predicts the reverse.

When thinking about animal behavior, we often assume the Darwinian idea of survival of the fittest implies that life in nature is unendingly nasty and brutish, to use the famous words of Thomas Hobbes. But highly individualistic and competitive behaviors are only a starting point for natural life and generally signal more primitive states of natural selection and evolutionary progress.

In nature, as plants, animals, and even whole ecosystems evolve through either implicit or explicit competition and the gradual selection and transmission of beneficial traits, environmental niches available to simple, individualistic behaviors are steadily filled and then dominated by organisms specially optimized for these niches. If we look at the world around us, we can see that natural evolution does not stop at these primitive niches and instead begins to work around or above them.

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Progressive Life & Health!

If you have begun to learn about HumanaNatura and our simple but complete system of four natural health techniques, you may be wondering about our special emphasis on seeking new health throughout our lives. The idea is different from the self-help advice we often receive, in both principle and practice. The difference comes in part because of our focus on health-centered life itself and in part due to our advocacy of a naturally open-ended and seeking approach to life and health, instead of one that is principally goal-focused and thus predetermined.

Usually, when either friends or professionals encourage us to improve our health and quality of life, we are advised to set and pursue specific goals, with a clear end in mind. We are told to turn our general desire for better life into concrete and measurable steps – whether to drop ten kilograms, stop smoking, exercise for a set time, or check stress attacks before they become unmanageable.

Growth over goals

Goal-setting in this way is of course important to modern self-mastery and has been show in research to lead to objectively higher states of health, well-being, and quality of life. This is especially true when our goals are 1) set in manageable short-term steps, and 2) placed in the context of a considered and compelling personal mission. But goals and missions alone are not enough.

Why? Because any attainable goal or cause, while perhaps useful to our health and life at a particular time, is always capable of being improved or built upon over time. This is true for individuals, for organizations and communities, and for us collectively as a species. None of us, as individuals and members of the human race, is a set or definable range of future possibilities. We all can and naturally will be improved up, just as we represent an improvement over species and cultures that came before ours.

To embrace this natural potential for growth in all living things is to mirror nature more deeply and broadly, and to become alive in a powerful new way that is at once ancient and eternal and fresh and ever new. It is to live naturally, if in a transformed way through advance human science and understanding.

Progressive health & life

That’s the principled part of HumanaNatura’s special advocacy of new or progressive health and life. In practical terms, our emphasis on new health means an ongoing commitment to growth and progress in our lives, throughout our lives, and in and throughout the groups we participate in, regardless of their size.

In this open-ended and seeking way that can underlie, elevate, and naturalize our goal setting, we create the potential for far more powerful and adaptive growth and progress in our lives and communities (and the transcendence of goal-focused life itself, as useful as goals may be to progressive life at any point in time). Waking up each day to our possibilities to new health, we expressly model our lives and groups on nature and natural evolution, especially its ceaseless forward movement toward ever new health and life.

In the HumanaNatura health technique that we call Natural Living, we use a seven-step process of self-assessment, creative visioning, and practical goal setting aimed at progressive health and life. We use a similar process for enhancing collective life and health in our Natural Communities technique. But both goal-employing HumanaNatura health techniques are intentionally cast as open-ended and set in our larger ethos of progressive health-centered life. In the most practical and important terms possible – our realized health and quality of life potential – the difference between our approach and traditional goal-focused health systems could not be more profound.

Imagine new health

Whatever your state of health and life today – whether you are sedentary and unwell or are brimming with well-being and vitality – new health and life are possible. inevitably, there is a least healthy and vital aspect of our life or shared life that can be replaced, and a most compelling new step we can take to create greater life and health. Often, there are many of each.

Imagine the possibilities of rising to the challenge and opportunity of new health each day, setting short-term goals and achieving new states of life and functioning, and then using this new state of natural life to move ahead to new health, again and again. The net effect is profound and increasing transformation, health-centered change that can far outstrip and alter even our most ambitious quality of life goals today.

We see this approach and astonishing progress in evolving nature and in evolving human science, leading to naturally intelligent  life on earth and now profound new human understanding in time. And this is how progressive life can work in our lives and communities too. We can commit to a progressive life of ever new health, intelligently seeking and seizing the possibilities unfolding before us as we grow, and creating open-ended natural life for ourselves and others.

Learn more

Learn more about HumanaNatura and our health-centered life philosophy and techniques at About HumanaNatura. When you are ready, begin our Personal Health Program and Community Health Program, in the spirit of setting and achieving health-seeking goals but always in the spirit of learning and advancing on our present goals toward new and better ones waiting beyond them.

Wishing you new health,

Mark Lundegren

Mark Lundegren is the founder of HumanaNatura.

Photo courtesy of Orange Tulips

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