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October 2008 Archives

Miami Shine

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Tracy Wilson Mourning, the wife former NBA star Alonzo Mourning, is no superficial player's wife, even if she does wear impressive footwear and tools around town in a drop-top Bentley. Her Honey Shine charity, started in 2002, is serious about its stated mission, which is working with disadvantaged girls in the Miami area.

To that end, Mourning has bi-weekly workshops throughout the year and Camp Honey Shine during the summer. "Our young girls are going through tough stuff," Mourning says. "Images are being portrayed to our young girls that education isn't a priority. We want to change that." Honey Shine has a simple application process that allows any interested girl from 8 to 18 to participate. "It's about girls lifting each other up and really empowering each other," Mourning says. Visit www.honeyshine.org for more info on applications and volunteer opportunities.
 
Tracy's Guide to Miami:
 
Mayda Cisneros Couture Collection -- 305-264-2601
Studio LX -- 305 666 0748 (clothing)
Hand and Foot Company "best pedicure and manicure in Miami" thehandandfootcompany.com
Mandarin Oriental Spa (part of Miami's Spa Month promotion) www.mandarinoriental.com
Prana Yoga www.pranayogamiami.com
Table 8 - www.table8la.com
Nikki Beach www.nikkibeach.com (restaurant/club)
Literary Café and Poetry Lounge -- 786-234-7638
Miami Children's Museum - www.miamichildrensmuseum.org
 
 
Tours:
Food Tours and Tours of Black Miami (Little Haiti, Overtown, Liberty City, historic Cocoanut Grove) Robbie gives a fantastic tour of Black Miami and does food tours as well:
Dragonfly Expeditions/Robbie Bell
Robbie@GoToRobbieBell.Info.
 
Eats:
Garcia's - best oysters in town
305-375-0765

 
Santo's Restaurant (Lincoln Road)
www.santomiamibeach.com
Wednesday nights :  Miami Live hip-hop and R&B, great tapas-style menu
 
La Marea - Tides Hotel http://www.tidessouthbeach.com/dining/lamarea.html Mediterranean cuisine, modern design restaurant with cool ambiance, great people-watching out front or when it gets too breezy on Ocean Drive you can eat inside and great food and service
 
Hotels:
 
Anglers
www.theanglersresort.com
A cool, modern hotel close to the beach but not on it near the South Beach strip. The lobby restaurant and deejay make for a fun, party atmosphere, but if you want to go to20bed early, ask for one of the rear rooms away from the front. If you do want to party, this hotel will make you feel as thought you've stumbled onto a hot friendly group of friend who've invited you along for the ride.
 
The Setai
www.setai.com
One of the most exclusive hotels in Miami with the city's highest room rate, the Setai is strictly for those who want to and can afford to hang with Jay-Z and Beyonce, who've been spotted by its pool. But given the price of the rooms (and for some a bathtub in the middle of the room is a bit much) taking in the spa, which is part of the Spa Month promotion, or the hotel's luxurious bar and restaurants is worth forgoing pool access. (P.S., You still might get catch a celeb, as the spa overlooks the pool area.)
--Tonya Pendleton


Men on Fragrance

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I took to the streets to find out which scents made the guys swoon and which just made then yawn. The clear winner?  Sean John Unforgivable Woman. The guys all seemed intrigued by the elegant floral scent.  Philip Oliver, an administrator for a Washington, D.C.-based non-profit o rganization, sums it up, " Wow! Now that's a classy scent!  It's a nice floral but it isn't overpowering."
 
Burberry The Beat, a sparkling floral, garnered attention for being an energetic scent. "It's a first date perfume," Oliver laughs.
 
While Yves Saint Laurent Elle and Bond No. 9 Andy Warhol Lexington Ave. were continually singled out as sophisticated smells, Calvin Klein Secret Obsession was racking up comments great, good and not so good as a seduction scent.  The woody oriental was a bit much on a 90-degree day, but most of the men conceded it had potential. 
 
Anthony T. Kirby, a salesman for a tony menswear boutique in New York City comments, "The perfume has inviting, c'mon, baby, get closer vibe that's kinda nice!"  
 
My response was a simple, "Yeah, but did it make you want to get close enough to buy me a bottle?" 
 
All of the perfumes mentioned are possible Christmas gifts, according to the men, but as one unnamed brother put it, "The real deal is to smell like Junior's cheesecake. Now that's delicious!"
--Jenyne M. Raines

Thumbnail image for Angie_Stone_cover.1061001.jpgHeart & Soul magazine is celebrating its 15th anniversary!  As a gift to our readers, you can sign up for a 2-year subscription for $15.  See how you can take part in this on-going celebration of health, wealth and wellness!!
 
a.) Get your very own subscription!
 
b.) Get a subscription for the women in your life!!  (They make great holiday gifts!!)
 
c.)  Forward this email to every woman you know!!!
 
Go to www.heartandsoul.com and enter this special promotions code: HS15.  Happy reading!!! 

Bounce Back From a Bad Review

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Annual review season could make you feel like a kid again: unsure what kind of grades you'll receive on your report card. While this is a typical reaction, human resources expert Carl C. Jefferson, president of the National Association of African Americans in Human Resources and a vice president at Wachovia, says the review process is a positive experience that really creates a chance for employees to do well.  

The evaluation is "an opportunity to perform better by going into the future with it," Jefferson explains. Below, the five steps he believes employees should take after a less-than-desirable review.

  1. Assess your feelings.Take inventory of how you're feeling after receiving a bad review. Are you angry? Confused? Sad? These are the questions Jefferson says you should ask yourself. During this step, assess whether you can still do the job, and determine if anything has changed since you took the position. Are there fewer resources available, did a work team decrease in size or did the velocity of your work increase and you were not ready, able or capable of doing the work? This is the period where you are determining what may have contributed to the negative review.

  2. Analyze differences you and your supervisor(s) have about your job performance. Write down any discrepancies between how you thought you=2 0were performing and what's expressed in the review. It is important to close the gap between what your employer thinks and what you believe about your work performance. Be completely honest with yourself. The two of you could not jibe over something such as punctuality or meeting deadlines.

  3. Consider your options. Now that you've completed a self-assessment of your feelings and outlined the performance gaps, it's time to determine what you're prepared to do in response to the review. Do whatever helps you prepare for a time of reflection--whether it's meditating, sitting alone or re-reading the review. "It's not about the job; it's about you. It may take a few hours (to figure this out); it may take a day," Jefferson says. During this stage weigh your options and "come up with a whole laundry list of things you need to consider." This is where you should ask yourself whether you find a mentor, coach or sponsor, or consider additional education to help you perform better at work, or if you need to look for a new job. You may even decide your current line of work isn't fulfilling your life's purpose and opt to switch to a new industry. Be honest with yourself and trust your spirit. Don't allow fear to keep you imprisoned in your current position if your spirit is pointing in another direction.

  4. Create an action plan to impro ve your performance or plan to make an exit. "What action are you willing to take?" Jefferson asks. If you had trouble meeting deadlines, get clarity from your manager on when projects are due. If punctuality is an issue, the action plan would say you're going to arrive 10 minutes earlier for work. If you are planning to resign from your position, take the proper steps to find new employment or income stream.

  5. Commit to improving. This is for two people: yourself and your supervisor. "It's a decision to surrender to the decision to make a com­mitment to improve," Jefferson says. "If you made a commitment to leave, you need to commit to your decision. If you're going to stay, put all of your actions into your improvement."  
 
Aisha Iman is an Atlanta freelancer who writes frequently about business.

Best Jobs for Single Moms

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Ninth-grade teacher Danna L. Kiel enjoys popping over to her son's school in the middle of the day just to say hi. Ali, 6, enjoys visiting his mom's classroom and writing on the chalkboard. Both very simple things, but both very meaningful moments to the single mother, who traded in a writing career in Tinseltown to give her son a consistent and predictable schedule.

"I learned the hard way that routine is one of the greatest things I can give my child," Kiel says. "Teaching is not the 7 a.m. to 2:20 p.m. job everyone thinks it is, but it certainly offers me a more than viable way to provide a living."

Genia Spencer, managing director of human resources and operations for Randstad USA, says for single moms, the key to matching a job to your life is knowing your skills and values, and she agrees that teaching and other knowledge-based careers, like accounting, editing or proposal writing, provide great opportunities. "Companies are more interested in whether you get the job done well rather than face time," Spencer says. "Some work can be done from any desk, at any computer."

Spencer also suggests sales for single moms. "A field-based sales job, like in the pharmaceutical or manufacturing industries, allows a person to make her own schedule and, to a large degree, control her earnings, since it's commission-based. Plus, these jobs often provide a single parent the ability to be home every night."

The health care industry, Spencer says, is another great field for single moms. It has incredible shortages in the workforce and unlimited opportunity. Home health care offers a great deal of flexibility because it's based on the hours the care provider selects. Occupational therapy, physical therapy and X-ray imaging are also viable areas. And if you're interested in working in an office, try medical practice management, which focuses on billing, risk management and human resources.

But Spencer warns people not to get locked on new job excitement and the salary offer. "In this economy, be cautious making a move in order to ensure it's going to be a good long-term fit," she says. Learn about tuition reimbursement, student-loan repayment, teleworking, onsite daycare centers, paid leave, company culture, health insurance deductibles, per-visit payments, how often the family can go for well visits and whether the company has flex spending accounts and 401(k) matching programs.

"It's really important to do a complete balance sheet before you accept the offer," Spencer says. "It has an impact on both your finances and your quality of life." 
 
-- Kennedy Spencer is an Atlanta freelancer.

Where to Go for Foreclosure Help

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  • (888) 995-HOPE (4673) This hotline is available to any homeowner having trouble paying her mortgage. It is in operation 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.  The sponsors are two well-respected, non-profit housing organizations, Homeownership Preservation Foundation and Neighborhood Works America.

  • Department of Housing and Urban Development This federal agency's hotline provides help and a link to a list of HUD-approved housing counseling agencies. The toll-free number is (800) 569-4287.

  • National Foundation for Credit Counseling The NFCC is another source for homeowners trying to avoid foreclosure. The toll-free help line, (866) 845-2227, offers links to NFCC-certified housing counselors or assistance online at housinghelpnow.org.

  • Foreclosure Prevention Resource Center This Web site, sponsored by the Mortgage Bankers Association, offers basic information on the process of foreclosure as well as links to helpful sources for homeowners in trouble. Homeloanlearningcenter.com will take you to a link for foreclosure assistance. 

Pick up your copy of the October/November Heart & Soul for additional foreclosure assistance.

--Shawn Kennedy 

Tame Yeast Infections

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You worked out at the gym and kept your sweaty clothes on too long. Now your vulva is itching like crazy. Yep, it's the dreaded yeast infection.

A yeast infection is caused by a fungus and likes to grow in warm, dark moist places, says Michele Curtis, M.D., an associate professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of Texas-Houston Health Science Center Medical School. "It's characterized by itching and a cottage-cheese type of discharge," she says.

A yeast infection can be caused by too-tight clothing, antibiotics, stress or illness, Dr. Curtis explains. It can be treated with over-the-counter medications or a prescribed pill that will knock it out in a single dose. But see a doctor if symptoms persist--it may signal something else.  "It's important not to self-diagnose," she says, "because the itching could signal diabetes, vulvar cancer or other conditions."

Dr. Curtis suggests several tips to avoid yeast infections:
  • Wear 100 percent cotton underwear
  • Don't wear underwear to bed
  • Rest and eat a balanced diet
  • Eat yogurt several times a week.  
-- Beverly James

Diabetes Management 101

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Staying healthy with diabetes means taking small steps each day to keep body, mind and spirit strong. Here are the basics:

  1. Commit. Diabetes can be handled only with the help of a medical professional. You cannot do it alone. Your team should include an endocrinologist (diabetes specialist), podiatrist (to keep feet healthy and avoid complications), eye doctor, a nutritionist and an exercise expert to help you manage weight. Call (800) DIABETES to get a free copy of the American Diabetes Association's guide "A Doctor Visit Planning Tool."
  2. Control. To manage diabetes, you have to know your body and know your numbers:  Normal blood sugar after random testing ranges from 70 to about 120. If you're between 150 or 200 you have pre-diabetes and are at high risk. Higher than 200, you probably have diabetes. Your A1C test should be done every three months. It tells your blood sugar levels over time and helps keep watch for heart disease and other risks.  
  3. Learn. The more you know, the more control you have over diabetes. To read about the disease, find support groups, understand medication, go to: diabetes.org or cdc.gov/diabetes and look at all of the great resources available to you. 
  4. Move. Being sedentary dramatically increases your risk of diabetes and makes it tougher to manage the disease. Aerobic exercise helps your body use insulin, so make sure you get at least 30 minutes a day (60 to lose weight). 
  5. Relax. Some studies show stress may increase your risk of developing diabetes, and it may make the disease worse. So find a way ease tension and anxiety. Meditate, pray, do yoga--whatever it takes to make time for you. -- Sheree Crute
By Joy Duckett Cain

At first, the lump in Jasmine's left breast was so small she didn't even feel it. Her doctor discovered it last summer during a physical prior to her freshman year at Florida A & M University. We were told that, particularly among African-American teens and young adults, small lumps in the breast (called fibroadenomas) are fairly common. But as the months progressed and Jasmine's lump grew from half a centimeter to more than 3 centimeters, my daughter and I realized something had to be done. After consulting a few doctors, we decided to have the lump surgically removed. Jasmine was 18 years old.

Whatever our age, all of us need to take care of "our girls."  "If you look in the mirror and see the breast or the nipple is changed in some way, get examined," says Fannie Gaston-Johansson, Ph.D., professor of nursing at Johns Hopkins University. While the majority of lumps and bumps will prove to be non-cancerous, it's better to err on the side of caution. Here are some other things to keep in mind on your journey toward breast health.

Be Proactive 
  • Good health starts with your decision to take control. 
  • Give yourself monthly BSEs (breast self examinations); go to breastcancer.org, click on screening and testing, then click on breast self exam for directions.  
  • Get annual mammograms if you're older than age 40, and tell the radiologist if you are taking hormone replacement therapy (HRT) or birth control pills. These medications can make breasts denser and hinder your doctor's ability to read the mammogram.
  • If breast cancer runs in your family, avoid HRT and schedule annual mammograms after the age of 30. 
  • Lack of health insurance is no excuse to let mammograms slide; the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program can help. To learn more, call (800) CDC-INFO (232-4636).

Know Your "Normal" 
  • Medicinenet.com reports that fibrocystic breast condition (characterized by lumpiness and discomfort) affects more than 60 percent of women between the ages of 30 and 50, so it is important to know what your body considers normal. 
  • Some have lumps, tenderness or pain in the breast before and during menstruation, but they usually stop by period's end. 
  • Some pregnant women experience breast lumpiness as their milk glands increase and get larger. 
  • During menopause, changing hormone levels can make breasts feel denser or lumpier than before. 
  • If you have doubts about what you're seeing or feeling, contact a doctor.

Eat Right, Drink Right
Deborah Gordon, M.D., co-author of Breast Health the Natural Way, believes vitamin D is effective in reducing the risk of myriad diseases, including breast cancer. "I think there is a high rate of breast cancer in African Americans because of vitamin D deficiency," she says. Taking 2,000 IUs of vitamin D3 per day may lessen your likelihood of getting breast cancer. And check this: The American Cancer Society reports only 5 to 10 percent of breast cancers are due to heredity; the vast majority of cases are due to environmental, diet or lifestyle factors. Some cancer-fighting steps you can take include: 
  • Introducing more raw fruits and vegetables, nuts, whole grains and dried beans into your diet;
  • Eating 30 grams or less of fat a day;  
  • Avoiding fried foods, salt, sugars, animal products, tobacco and white flour;
  • Eliminating caffeine (coffee, tea, chocolate); and
  • Limiting alcohol to one drink a day.

Live Right 
Studies indicate even moderate exercise--3.2 hours of running or 13 hours of walking per week--lowers the risk of breast cancer by 23 percent, so... 
  • Exercise, exercise, exercise. 
  • Maintain a healthy weight.
  • If you have fibrocystic tendencies, avoid wearing push-up or tight bras; if you must wear a bra, wear sports bras and not for more than 8 hours a day. 
  • Don't smoke. 

The Challenge of Diabetes

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By Sheree Crute

As the waters released by Hurricane Katrina enveloped Joyce Taylor's home, she and husband Leroy were already on the road to Baton Rouge.  New Orleans natives, the Taylors knew when folks said a storm was coming, it was time to go.  "We live between a lake and a river in East New Orleans--almost like a little island," Joyce explains.  "Our area was the first to be hit."       

Like so many of her neighbors, family members and friends, the storm was just the beginning of years of displacement and loss for Joyce. Still, as she packed her bags and considered the struggle ahead, she knew there was one thing she absolutely had to do--control her diabetes no matter what else happened. "I was going through one catastrophe, I didn't want another crisis caused by diabetes," says Taylor, who left home with a month's worth of diabetes medication and her blood sugar monitor in her bag.  

While living day to day in a Baton Rouge hotel, she got creative.   "I'd take the stairs at the hotel and walk up and down the block [to maintain most of the 100- pound weight loss from a few years earlier].  I had to eat in restaurants, so IE2d order baked and broiled chicken and lots of vegetables, and I stayed away from my weakness--soda and sweets."  

Taylor also met stress with prayer. "Our faith gave us strength," says Taylor, 55, a retired teacher whose husband is a minister.   
It would be more than two years before she could move back home, and while her mom and daughter survived the storm, both of them passed away before the ordeal was over, leaving Taylor a full-time mom to her 4-year-old grandson. 

Yet through it all, she kept the diabetes under control. "You see people lose limbs," Taylor says. "Things like that motivate you to take care of yourself." Back home since last December, and with her blood sugar down to a healthy 118 and her weight in check, she's finally ready for a happier chapter of her life. 

Diabetes and Black Women 
Millions of African-American women are not as fortunate as Taylor when it comes to handling diabetes.  While diabetes is increasing in every American population, the number of cases among African-American women rose 69 percent between 1989 and 2005--the highest rate among any group in this country, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).  Millions of black women older than 20 also have the disease, yet one-third has yet to be diagnosed, the American Diabetes Association reports. Am ong older black women, one in four older than 55 have the disease.  

Left unmanaged, diabetes will ruin your health and eventually take your life. "Diabetes is the No. 1 cause of adult blindness, kidney failure and lower limb amputation," says Ann Albright, Ph.D., director of Diabetes Translation at the CDC. "And it is a huge contributor to heart disease."  It is also the fourth leading cause of death for African-American women.

This situation has become so serious, experts say, because many of us just do not realize that in many cases, diabetes can be prevented. And even if you have the disease, it does not have to threaten your life. 

Sugar and Your Health
Beating diabetes means understanding it. The disease develops when your body is unable to properly use the sugar we take in every day when we eat carbohydrates. Once you eat a carbohydrate--bread, for example--it becomes sugar (glucose) that travels through your bloodstream and enters the cells of your body to be used as energy. "To get into your cells, sugar needs the help of a hormone called insulin," Albright says. Insulin is made in a gland called the pancreas.  

Without enough insulin, the sugar builds up in your blood and damages your blood vessels by making them thick and inflexible, cutting off the blood supply to your heart, kidneys, eyes and other organs.20Nerves can be damaged as well, causing numbness and other problems. 

In type I diabetes--an autoimmune disease most often diagnosed in children--the immune system attacks the pancreas and stops insulin production. Type I is inherited. In type II diabetes--the type most common in African-American women--the pancreas makes some insulin, but not enough and cells are insulin resistant.  

Stop Diabetes Before It Starts
Every African-American woman should know type II diabetes is preventable in many cases. "The most important thing for anyone to know is that [excess] weight creates insulin resistance," says Larry Deeb, M.D., immediate past president of medicine and science for the American Diabetes Association. 
In addition to being overweight (especially abdominal fat), if you have a parent or sibling with diabetes or develop it during pregnancy (gestational diabetes), you're at risk. "That risk also increases as you age, so prevention is a progressive process that you should begin as early as possible," Albright adds.       
"If you have diabetes in your family, you don't have to get it and we can help," says Michelle Owens, head of the Women and Diabetes Initiative at the CDC.  "Through our program, The Power to Prevent, we give people the tools they need to reduce their risk."  For free materials you can use at home, log=2 0onto www.yourdiabetesinfo.org or call (800) 860-8747.

Living Well With Diabetes
The best news about diabetes is that there's tons of great advice and new research about the best way to eat, the benefits of exercise and the proper way to use medications. And free information and support groups can be found just about anywhere in the country.  Staying healthy with diabetes is a challenge, but it's definitely one you can meet.  "I've lived with type 1 diabetes for 41 years," Albright says. "There are many things you can do to live a long and healthy life."    

Sheree Crute is a Heart & Soul contributing editor.

For more living with diabetes information, visit http://diabetes.palmbeachpost.com.
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