SlideShare a Scribd company logo
INTEGRATIVE HEALTH
 CARE CENTER, MOVE
      USA, LLC


C.L.E.A.N. PROGRAM
ANTI-AGING
ANTI-AGING
A – ANTIOXIDANTS
N – NUTRITION BALANCE
T – TRAIN THE BRAIN
I – INFECTION CONTROL
- (BRIDGE THE GAP: SOCIAL HEALTH)
A – ATTITUDE MORE THAN APTITUDE
G – GROWTH & OTHER HORMONES
I – INHALE DEEPLY AND EXERCISE
N – NAP & REST
G – GRACE & GIFTS
A – ANTIOXIDANTS
ANTIOXIDANT COMPOUNDS
     1. Vitamin C (Sodium Ascorbate) from fresh
     fruits and vegetables
     2. Vitamin E (tocopherols, tocotrienols)
     from unprocessed vegetable oils
     3. Polyphenolic Antioxidants (resveratrol,
     flavonoids) from tea, raw coffee beans, soy,
     olive oil, raw chocolate, cinnamon, oregano
     4. Caroteinoids (lycopene, carotene, lutein)
     from fruits, vegetables, and egg
     5. Minerals (Selenium, Chromium, Zinc…)
     6. Vitamins B1, B2, B3, B6, B12, Folate
N – NUTRITION BALANCE
Nutrient Balance Indicator
T – TRAIN THE BRAIN
Brain Training Games
   (lumosity.com)
        •   Memory
         • Attention
          • Focus
          • Speed
        • Language
    • Spatial reasoning
     • Problem solving
    • Fluid intelligence
          • Stress
      • Reaction time
Brain Exercises
  •    Brain reflection test
      • Brain creativity
        • Memory test
     • Brain stretching
• Sudoku brain stimulation
   • Spatial intelligence
      • Math problems
  • Brain concentration
       • Arrange game
    • Cognitive training
         • IQ booster
I – INFECTION CONTROL
- (BRIDGE THE GAP: SOCIAL
         HEALTH)
SOCIAL HEALTH
Definition: Is how we interact with
 people in areas around us. This
           can affect our
 physical, mental, emotional and
  spiritual health. To be socially
  healthy, you can make friends
   easily and work with people
happily and friendly together in a
               group.
“The process of creating
and maintaining healthy
 relationships through
   choices we make.”
              -momto2boys
A – ATTITUDE MORE THAN
        APTITUDE
“Your attitude, not your
aptitude, will determine
     your altitude.”
            -Zig Ziglar
Attitude
Definition:
  1. A settled way of thinking or feeling,
       typically reflected in a persons
       behavior.
  2. A predisposition or a tendency
       to respond positively or
       negatively towards a certain
       idea, object, person, or situation.
Aptitude
Definition: 1. A natural ability to do
                  something.
           2. An inherent ability, as
for         learning; a talent.
G – GROWTH & OTHER
     HORMONES
"God's Plan, The True Anti-Aging" by Dr. Gil Solijon
"God's Plan, The True Anti-Aging" by Dr. Gil Solijon
"God's Plan, The True Anti-Aging" by Dr. Gil Solijon
Hormone:
A chemical substance
produced in the body which
has a specific regulatory
effect on the activity of
certain cells or a certain
organ or organs.
I – INHALE DEEPLY &
      EXERCISE
Respiratory System
Alveolar Respiration
Aerobic Cellular Respiration
"God's Plan, The True Anti-Aging" by Dr. Gil Solijon
Anaerobic Respiration
7 Benefits of Regular Physical Activity(Mayo
                       Clinic)
            1. Exercise controls weight
   2. Exercise combats health conditions and
                      diseases
            3. Exercise improves mood
             4. Exercise boosts energy
        5. Exercise promotes better sleep
6. Exercise puts the spark back into your sex life
               7. Exercise can be fun
Types of Exercise

1.   Flexibility exercises, such as
     stretching, improve the range of motion of
     muscles and joints.
2.   Aerobic exercises, such as
     cycling, swimming, walking, skipping
     rope, rowing, running, hiking or playing
     tennis, focus on increasing cardiovascular
     endurance.
3.   Anaerobic exercises, such as weight
     training, functional training, eccentric training
     or sprinting and high-intensity interval
     training, increase short-tem muscle strength.
Categories of Physical Exercise

       •Strength training
        •Agility training
       •Eccentric training
      •Resistance training
        •Interval training
      •Continuous training
Benefits of Cellercise
•Build strength – cellercise strengthens the body
from the inside out, thus working every muscle in
your body at once.
•Melt fat and cellulite – cellercise is the most
effective aerobic activity you will find. It burns
more calories per hour than jogging, running, and
regular aerobic exercise without the impact and
stress on your joints. It melts fat in the places you
most want.
•Bounce away toxins – the average person has
between 5-10 pounds of toxic buildup in their
body. To stay healthy amidst so many toxins, we
rely on our lymphatic system as our body’s main
detoxification and filtration system. Nothing
stimulates the lymphatic system better than
cellercise.
Benefits of Cellercise
•Boost your immune-fighting cells – a 1-minute
sprint on the cellerciser boosts your white blood
cell count by 10 to 15 times.
•Resist and reduce stress – cellercising not only
improves the immune and lymphatic systems as
described above, reducing the impact of stress, but
it increases our resistance to stress as it stabilizes
the nervous system – putting the body in a state of
relaxation and rejuvenation that lasts long after
cellercising has ended.
•Skip surgery – increases circulation to your skin
and rids it of impurities. As you bounce, your skin is
gently massaged. Skin cells are strengthened and
toned and fatty deposits that cause skin to sag
disappear. Skin is tighter, firmer and has new life
and color. Cellercise is effective in firming all
sagging skin, but especially noticeable in the
face, neck, chin and breasts.
N – NAP
10 Benefits of Power Napping,
       and How to Do It
 “No day is so bad it can’t be fixed with a
                   nap.”
                             -Carrie P. Snow
1.  Less stress
2. Increased alertness and productivity
3. Improved memory and learning
4. Good for the heart
5. Increased cognitive functioning
6. Get motivated to exercise
7. Boost your creativity
8. Make up for midnight tossing and turning
9. Protect yourself from sleepiness
10. Better health
Getting the Perfect Nap
• The first consideration is
  psychological: Recognize that
  you’re not being lazy; napping
  will make you more productive
  and more alert after you wake up.
Getting the Perfect Nap
• Try to nap in the morning or just
  after lunch; human circadian
  rhythms make late afternoons a
  more likely time to fall into deep
  (slow-wave) sleep, which will
  leave you groggy.
Getting the Perfect Nap
• Avoid consuming large quantities
 of caffeine as well as foods that
 are heavy in fat and sugar, which
 meddle with a person’s ability to
 fall asleep.
Getting the Perfect Nap
• Instead, in the hour or two before
  your nap time, eat foods high in
  calcium and protein, which
  promote sleep.
Getting the Perfect Nap
• Find a clean, quiet place where
  passersby and phones won’t
  disturb you.
Getting the Perfect Nap
• Try to darken your nap zone, or
  wear an eyeshade. Darkness
  stimulates melatonin, the sleep-
  inducing hormone.
Getting the Perfect Nap
• Remember that body temperature
 drops when you fall asleep. Raise
 the room temperature or use a
 blanket.
Getting the Perfect Nap
• Once you are relaxed and in
 position to fall asleep, set your
 alarm for the desired duration.
HOW LONG IS A GOOD
      NAP?
NANO-NAP: 10-20 seconds
MICRO-NAP: 2-5 minutes (effective at shedding
sleepiness)
MINI NAP: 5-20 minutes (increases alertness,
stamina, motor learning and motor performance)
ORIGINAL POWER NAP: 20 minutes (includes
benefits of the MICRO and MINI, but additionally
improves muscle memory and clears the brain of
useless built-up information, which help with long
term memory)
LAZY MAN’S NAP: 50-90 minutes (includes slow-
wave plus REM sleep; good for improving
perceptual processing; also when system is flooded
with human growth hormone, great for repairing
bones and muscles)
AND REST
General Criteria for Circadian Rhythm
1. The rhythms repeat once a day (they have a 24-
hour period). In order to keep track of the time of
day, a clock must be at the same point at the same
time each day.
2. The rhythms persist in the absence of external
cues
3. The rhythms can be adjusted to match the local
time. The rhythm can be reset by exposure to
external stimuli (such as light and heat), a
process called entrainment.
4. The rhythms maintain circadian periodicity
over a range of physiological temperatures; they
exhibit temperature compensation.
G – GRACE & GIFTS
Grace means the blessings
  that come from above
   regardless of merit.
          -Wikipedia
Unmerited divine assistance
  given humans for their
      regeneration or
       sanctification.
         -Webster’s Dictionary
G – God’s
R – Righteousness
A - At
C – Christ’s
E - Expense
"God's Plan, The True Anti-Aging" by Dr. Gil Solijon
Reference:
photos taken from google.com

More Related Content

PPT
Body & mind_health
PPTX
Ayurvedic Treatment for Insomnia
DOCX
100th blog
PDF
New Year, New You: Motion is Life
PDF
New Year, New You: Change Your Mind, Change Your Health
PPTX
R tiller hw420-unit5-project
PPTX
Applications of Yoga for Weight Management
PDF
New Year, New You 4: Guard Your Mind
Body & mind_health
Ayurvedic Treatment for Insomnia
100th blog
New Year, New You: Motion is Life
New Year, New You: Change Your Mind, Change Your Health
R tiller hw420-unit5-project
Applications of Yoga for Weight Management
New Year, New You 4: Guard Your Mind

What's hot (16)

PDF
Yoga for everyone
PPTX
Solutions for Sleep
PDF
Yoga for everyone
PDF
Yoga for everyone
PPT
Autism and Exercise
PDF
Yoga for everyone || Biotox Gold 2.0 - 2021 Relaunch || https://bit.ly/2SlurWs
PDF
Yoga For Everyone
PPT
"SLIM" - the 2nd lecture in the Slim Sane & Sexy Lecture Series of CWI
PDF
Nikki lewis hw 420 unit 5 project
PDF
Hippotherapy module 5 EN
PDF
PPT
Yoga a boon for maternal-child health
PPT
Wellness Presentation
PPTX
Yogic Management of Obesity related diseases
PPT
YOGA FOR HEALTH IN CHILDREN
PPSX
Isha Arogya Introduction
Yoga for everyone
Solutions for Sleep
Yoga for everyone
Yoga for everyone
Autism and Exercise
Yoga for everyone || Biotox Gold 2.0 - 2021 Relaunch || https://bit.ly/2SlurWs
Yoga For Everyone
"SLIM" - the 2nd lecture in the Slim Sane & Sexy Lecture Series of CWI
Nikki lewis hw 420 unit 5 project
Hippotherapy module 5 EN
Yoga a boon for maternal-child health
Wellness Presentation
Yogic Management of Obesity related diseases
YOGA FOR HEALTH IN CHILDREN
Isha Arogya Introduction
Ad

Viewers also liked (17)

PPTX
PPT
906 neurfeedback train your brain
PDF
speed reading program for kids
ODP
Looking for an anti ageing solution?
PPT
About Zox Pro Training
PPTX
Marketing Rexona
PPTX
Going the Gym for your Brain!!!
PPTX
Train your brain
PPT
Human research and complexity theory c9 march_0114
PDF
Train the Brain - Improve overall performance
PDF
Cross train your brain a mental fitness program for maximizing creativity and...
 
PPT
7 Tips to Help Train Your Brain to Stay Positive
PDF
Intro To Mind Maps
PPTX
PPTX
Train your brain dr. farhana
906 neurfeedback train your brain
speed reading program for kids
Looking for an anti ageing solution?
About Zox Pro Training
Marketing Rexona
Going the Gym for your Brain!!!
Train your brain
Human research and complexity theory c9 march_0114
Train the Brain - Improve overall performance
Cross train your brain a mental fitness program for maximizing creativity and...
 
7 Tips to Help Train Your Brain to Stay Positive
Intro To Mind Maps
Train your brain dr. farhana
Ad

Similar to "God's Plan, The True Anti-Aging" by Dr. Gil Solijon (20)

PPT
8 Steps To Wellness
PPTX
PHYSICAL EDUCATION PHYSICAL ACTIVITY.pptx
PPTX
P.E 1- Fitness and Wellness PART II.pptx
PPSX
High Performance Sports Nutrition February 2006 Randolph Macon Women's College
PDF
TOPIC TWO and THREE VALUE OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY.pdf
PPTX
Remarkable Cancer Survivors' Guide #9 Update on the Science of Empowerment
PDF
Silent Saboteurs (Tiredness)-1
PPTX
Home Fitness Activity
PDF
Eating forenergy
PPT
Body and mind connection
DOCX
Hw499 week 3 handout
PPT
Movement & mindfulness 102
PPT
Benift keerthi ppt
PDF
Pg16 18 --fitness
PPT
Walking to slow aging
PDF
Health-Fit's Monthly Newsletter
PDF
A complete health guide
PPTX
Why one should go to gym
PDF
Wellness(건강한 삶)은 건강의 핵심이다! @프레데릭 살드만 심장전문의 의사, 작가
PPT
Movement & mindfulness 102
8 Steps To Wellness
PHYSICAL EDUCATION PHYSICAL ACTIVITY.pptx
P.E 1- Fitness and Wellness PART II.pptx
High Performance Sports Nutrition February 2006 Randolph Macon Women's College
TOPIC TWO and THREE VALUE OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY.pdf
Remarkable Cancer Survivors' Guide #9 Update on the Science of Empowerment
Silent Saboteurs (Tiredness)-1
Home Fitness Activity
Eating forenergy
Body and mind connection
Hw499 week 3 handout
Movement & mindfulness 102
Benift keerthi ppt
Pg16 18 --fitness
Walking to slow aging
Health-Fit's Monthly Newsletter
A complete health guide
Why one should go to gym
Wellness(건강한 삶)은 건강의 핵심이다! @프레데릭 살드만 심장전문의 의사, 작가
Movement & mindfulness 102

"God's Plan, The True Anti-Aging" by Dr. Gil Solijon

  • 1. INTEGRATIVE HEALTH CARE CENTER, MOVE USA, LLC C.L.E.A.N. PROGRAM
  • 3. ANTI-AGING A – ANTIOXIDANTS N – NUTRITION BALANCE T – TRAIN THE BRAIN I – INFECTION CONTROL - (BRIDGE THE GAP: SOCIAL HEALTH) A – ATTITUDE MORE THAN APTITUDE G – GROWTH & OTHER HORMONES I – INHALE DEEPLY AND EXERCISE N – NAP & REST G – GRACE & GIFTS
  • 5. ANTIOXIDANT COMPOUNDS 1. Vitamin C (Sodium Ascorbate) from fresh fruits and vegetables 2. Vitamin E (tocopherols, tocotrienols) from unprocessed vegetable oils 3. Polyphenolic Antioxidants (resveratrol, flavonoids) from tea, raw coffee beans, soy, olive oil, raw chocolate, cinnamon, oregano 4. Caroteinoids (lycopene, carotene, lutein) from fruits, vegetables, and egg 5. Minerals (Selenium, Chromium, Zinc…) 6. Vitamins B1, B2, B3, B6, B12, Folate
  • 6. N – NUTRITION BALANCE
  • 8. T – TRAIN THE BRAIN
  • 9. Brain Training Games (lumosity.com) • Memory • Attention • Focus • Speed • Language • Spatial reasoning • Problem solving • Fluid intelligence • Stress • Reaction time
  • 10. Brain Exercises • Brain reflection test • Brain creativity • Memory test • Brain stretching • Sudoku brain stimulation • Spatial intelligence • Math problems • Brain concentration • Arrange game • Cognitive training • IQ booster
  • 11. I – INFECTION CONTROL
  • 12. - (BRIDGE THE GAP: SOCIAL HEALTH)
  • 13. SOCIAL HEALTH Definition: Is how we interact with people in areas around us. This can affect our physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health. To be socially healthy, you can make friends easily and work with people happily and friendly together in a group.
  • 14. “The process of creating and maintaining healthy relationships through choices we make.” -momto2boys
  • 15. A – ATTITUDE MORE THAN APTITUDE
  • 16. “Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude.” -Zig Ziglar
  • 17. Attitude Definition: 1. A settled way of thinking or feeling, typically reflected in a persons behavior. 2. A predisposition or a tendency to respond positively or negatively towards a certain idea, object, person, or situation.
  • 18. Aptitude Definition: 1. A natural ability to do something. 2. An inherent ability, as for learning; a talent.
  • 19. G – GROWTH & OTHER HORMONES
  • 23. Hormone: A chemical substance produced in the body which has a specific regulatory effect on the activity of certain cells or a certain organ or organs.
  • 24. I – INHALE DEEPLY & EXERCISE
  • 30. 7 Benefits of Regular Physical Activity(Mayo Clinic) 1. Exercise controls weight 2. Exercise combats health conditions and diseases 3. Exercise improves mood 4. Exercise boosts energy 5. Exercise promotes better sleep 6. Exercise puts the spark back into your sex life 7. Exercise can be fun
  • 31. Types of Exercise 1. Flexibility exercises, such as stretching, improve the range of motion of muscles and joints. 2. Aerobic exercises, such as cycling, swimming, walking, skipping rope, rowing, running, hiking or playing tennis, focus on increasing cardiovascular endurance. 3. Anaerobic exercises, such as weight training, functional training, eccentric training or sprinting and high-intensity interval training, increase short-tem muscle strength.
  • 32. Categories of Physical Exercise •Strength training •Agility training •Eccentric training •Resistance training •Interval training •Continuous training
  • 33. Benefits of Cellercise •Build strength – cellercise strengthens the body from the inside out, thus working every muscle in your body at once. •Melt fat and cellulite – cellercise is the most effective aerobic activity you will find. It burns more calories per hour than jogging, running, and regular aerobic exercise without the impact and stress on your joints. It melts fat in the places you most want. •Bounce away toxins – the average person has between 5-10 pounds of toxic buildup in their body. To stay healthy amidst so many toxins, we rely on our lymphatic system as our body’s main detoxification and filtration system. Nothing stimulates the lymphatic system better than cellercise.
  • 34. Benefits of Cellercise •Boost your immune-fighting cells – a 1-minute sprint on the cellerciser boosts your white blood cell count by 10 to 15 times. •Resist and reduce stress – cellercising not only improves the immune and lymphatic systems as described above, reducing the impact of stress, but it increases our resistance to stress as it stabilizes the nervous system – putting the body in a state of relaxation and rejuvenation that lasts long after cellercising has ended. •Skip surgery – increases circulation to your skin and rids it of impurities. As you bounce, your skin is gently massaged. Skin cells are strengthened and toned and fatty deposits that cause skin to sag disappear. Skin is tighter, firmer and has new life and color. Cellercise is effective in firming all sagging skin, but especially noticeable in the face, neck, chin and breasts.
  • 36. 10 Benefits of Power Napping, and How to Do It “No day is so bad it can’t be fixed with a nap.” -Carrie P. Snow 1. Less stress 2. Increased alertness and productivity 3. Improved memory and learning 4. Good for the heart 5. Increased cognitive functioning 6. Get motivated to exercise 7. Boost your creativity 8. Make up for midnight tossing and turning 9. Protect yourself from sleepiness 10. Better health
  • 37. Getting the Perfect Nap • The first consideration is psychological: Recognize that you’re not being lazy; napping will make you more productive and more alert after you wake up.
  • 38. Getting the Perfect Nap • Try to nap in the morning or just after lunch; human circadian rhythms make late afternoons a more likely time to fall into deep (slow-wave) sleep, which will leave you groggy.
  • 39. Getting the Perfect Nap • Avoid consuming large quantities of caffeine as well as foods that are heavy in fat and sugar, which meddle with a person’s ability to fall asleep.
  • 40. Getting the Perfect Nap • Instead, in the hour or two before your nap time, eat foods high in calcium and protein, which promote sleep.
  • 41. Getting the Perfect Nap • Find a clean, quiet place where passersby and phones won’t disturb you.
  • 42. Getting the Perfect Nap • Try to darken your nap zone, or wear an eyeshade. Darkness stimulates melatonin, the sleep- inducing hormone.
  • 43. Getting the Perfect Nap • Remember that body temperature drops when you fall asleep. Raise the room temperature or use a blanket.
  • 44. Getting the Perfect Nap • Once you are relaxed and in position to fall asleep, set your alarm for the desired duration.
  • 45. HOW LONG IS A GOOD NAP?
  • 46. NANO-NAP: 10-20 seconds MICRO-NAP: 2-5 minutes (effective at shedding sleepiness) MINI NAP: 5-20 minutes (increases alertness, stamina, motor learning and motor performance) ORIGINAL POWER NAP: 20 minutes (includes benefits of the MICRO and MINI, but additionally improves muscle memory and clears the brain of useless built-up information, which help with long term memory) LAZY MAN’S NAP: 50-90 minutes (includes slow- wave plus REM sleep; good for improving perceptual processing; also when system is flooded with human growth hormone, great for repairing bones and muscles)
  • 48. General Criteria for Circadian Rhythm 1. The rhythms repeat once a day (they have a 24- hour period). In order to keep track of the time of day, a clock must be at the same point at the same time each day. 2. The rhythms persist in the absence of external cues 3. The rhythms can be adjusted to match the local time. The rhythm can be reset by exposure to external stimuli (such as light and heat), a process called entrainment. 4. The rhythms maintain circadian periodicity over a range of physiological temperatures; they exhibit temperature compensation.
  • 49. G – GRACE & GIFTS
  • 50. Grace means the blessings that come from above regardless of merit. -Wikipedia
  • 51. Unmerited divine assistance given humans for their regeneration or sanctification. -Webster’s Dictionary
  • 52. G – God’s R – Righteousness A - At C – Christ’s E - Expense