The Importance of Mental Health With Emma Ware

Emma_s School of Healthy Eating Best Nutitrionist Myrtle Beach-0446

Creating and Safeguarding a Positive Mental Spirit in the New Year and Beyond by Melissa LaScaleia Emma Ware is a maven in the worlds of nutrition, weight loss, and alternative health and holistic healing. For twenty years, she’s coached people to reach their health, weight-loss, and happiness goals, but noticed that often our mindset gets de-emphasized in the conversation about living the life of your dreams. “The past couple of years have felt heavy and overwhelming for everyone, and the number one way to combat that is through self-empowerment,” Emma says. There’s a great deal of collective social emphasis on people who rely on families or close friends for support when they’re down mentally, but little said about those who are alone. “So much of the same advice is given,” says Emma. “Connect with your family and loved-ones. But there are many people who don’t have a spouse, children, family, or friends— maybe they got a divorce, are estranged from family, lost a job, moved, or starting over. “But the number one thing you need when faced with that reality, is to know that you are strong, and you can control your life. People forget the power they have, but the only way to recall it is to create what you want for yourself. “If you see people laughing together and you want that, then create it. Don’t wait for an invitation, be the initiator. If a door closes, try another until you find the right fit, right partner, right group of friends, right career.” To get there, Emma recommends that people find something new to do in their community, like taking up a craft, hobby or sport that they enjoy, or volunteering at a charity that resonates. She also emphasizes the importance of spending quality time with yourself, doing things that make you happy. “Many people do not enjoy being alone,” Emma says. “But cultivating inner contentment and making yourself happy is what makes you able to connect with others authentically. “Find something that you can immersive yourself in, be it a craft or handy project; read a favorite book; watch a funny movie; or have some spa time at home. Be present with yourself and show up for yourself as you would for others. Collapsing on your couch and flipping through the TV lineup doesn’t count. The time I’m speaking of should cultivate joy, give you energy, and make you feel uplifted.” Another secret hack— planning. “Planning keeps you in a positive state of looking forward to something and ensures that you’ll actually do it,” she says. “Spontaneity is wonderful, but can be a pitfall because change is hard and scary for most, and if you wait to commit to doing something new to how you feel in the moment, you may never feel quite ready. In the meantime you’re waiting and wasting your life. You just need to do, and even if it doesn’t go perfectly, it’s still okay.” But perhaps the most important component of happiness is to change your attitude. The simplest way to do this is to focus on the positive, not the negative— to bring conscious thought to gratitude. “It sounds hokey, but it works,” she says. “When I first wake up, I look around and soak up the world I live in, letting myself feel grateful for everything. As I move throughout my day, I continue the practice, feeling grateful for each opportunity.” “When I meet a grouchy person, I don’t accept grouchiness in my spirit, mind, or consciousness. I won’t allow it to enter, because I’m in control of me, and that’s my choice. “It’s so easy to meet someone and start complaining, gossiping and judging. It’s so easy to get sucked into other people’s negativity, to relate to them on that level. It’s much harder to work at being positive everyday. But when I’m positive all the time, a lot of good things happen in my life. “Let go of situations that happened in the past. Instead, create a new future. Don’t dwell on what’s wrong. Dwell on what’s working well. Take ownership of and responsibility for your thoughts and what you create. “Life is constantly revealing new opportunities to us. But sometimes you can’t see that if you don’t open to it. Change is hard, because we get into routines, even if those routines don’t serve us. These are the things that will help you change mentally, and ultimately, change physically. The next thing you know, you’re able to welcome everything new into your life with less fear and greater anticipation of joy.” Emma’s School of Healthy Eating Globe Phone Map-marked-alt

Common Sense Eating From Nutritionist Emma Ware

picture of Emma Ware, standing outside of a building

Where The Name Says It All 

by Melissa LaScaleia

Emma Ware has been a certified nutritionist, clinical homeopath, and doctor of holistic nutrition for over seventeen years. Additionally, she is certified in Zone for weight loss, which teaches the art of combining proteins, starches and fats optimally, and is, according to Emma, one of the best programs for balancing foods for weight loss. 

With her business, Common Sense Eating, Emma helps people navigate through the complex world of food choices to achieve their health goals. Today, the majority of requests which she receives center around the topics of weight loss, diabetes, cholesterol and blood pressure management. 

“When you change these aspects of your health, you change and shift everything,” Emma says. “And in my approach to help clients get there, the name of my business really says it all.” 

Emma offers consultations, gives presentations, shares recipes, and teaches people how and where to shop so they can take better control of their health and ultimately, their lives. 

“I teach people how to get organized both in the kitchen, home, and their personal lives, so they can change their lifestyle and live a healthier one,” she says. “I get a lot of requests for weight loss. And often in that journey of loosing weight, my clients start changing a lot of the other health issues that they have.”  

When Emma begins a new consultation— she starts with probing questions to empower her clients. What are your challenges? Where do you think your issues for gaining weight lie? Is it with cravings, emotions, lack of time, lack of knowledge of the right foods to eat, too much fast food?   

“What I try to help them implement is a return to the basics,” Emma says. “If you look at photographs of people from the beginning of time to the 1960s, the majority were thin. Looking from the 1970s to now, they are not. The only thing that has changed is the introduction of chemical-based foods. 

“Previously, we didn’t have a lot of sprays for the environment. But today, the goal with manufacturing companies is to give foods a shelf life, and it’s these chemical additives that cause addictive eating patterns. If you want permanent results, then you have to make permanent changes to your diet, and accept that there are certain foods that you have to avoid as much as you can because these are foods that trigger your appetite and sugar cravings. 

“When people think that they have psychological problems, that they can’t stop eating and they have bad habits, it’s not coming in actuality from them in a psychological form; it’s coming because the foods they’re eating are so saturated in chemicals that they are making your metabolism go crazy.

“With that in mind, I teach new habits and how to change behavior by eating differently. I show people how to use foods to curb their appetite, their sweet tooth, and their portions. I help them learn what foods for them trigger their sweet tooth, increase their appetite, and make them feel like they’re out of control and that they can’t stop eating.”

picture of woman holding a health diagram, showing it to another woman
Emma advocates for moderation and balance in food choices, to help her clients stabilize and implement lasting changes that yield results. (Photo Meganpixels Parker)

Emma facilitates her clients’ ability to make food choices that nourish and balance the body rather than being a one-time situation or yo-yo diet. 

“What I teach is not another diet,” she says. “When people do this program, 80% of the time, it becomes a permanent shift because they see the results and they feel good. Over time, they want and begin to crave what is healthy for their body. 

“By eating better, you will start craving what’s better rather than craving the bad foods. Your taste buds change over time and you want to eat better foods, and you eat less because you feel more satiated, because you get a fuller taste.” 

Emma encourages her clients to cook at least 50% of the time, and gives them the skills so they can do so. She even wrote a cookbook to support and educate.  

“Now they have great, easy recipes to follow,” she says. “And from there, I teach them how to cheat with junk food. We take bad junk food and replace it with good junk food.  

“If you stay with the program, which stabilizes you and your life, you will gain less weight. I will teach you to eat everything you want without deprivation, without starving, without limiting your caloric intake to 800 a day, or counting points. By stabilizing your body and your life, you can live a satisfying lifestyle. It protects you from yo-yo dieting.”  

Stability for Emma means balance and moderation. 

“It can be hard for people to accept that there are foods that they are eating that cause inflammation and weight gain,” she says. “If these are foods you love, you can have them a few times a month as a treat, but you can’t have them all the time.” 

Want a soda? Go for it— once a week. Alcohol? Yes— not all the time. Love nuts? Go ahead. Just don’t eat pounds a day. It’s the practical application of common sense to eating choices.  

“The biggest challenge with all the gimmicks we have out there,” Emma says, “is that by counting calories or points, you gravitate towards eating bad food rather than the right foods that nourish your body. My approach teaches you to think differently about food. 

“By eating the right way, at least 80% of the time, you’ll feel better, and you have a better chance of not having a lot of sugar problems. Sugar causes problems with yeast and infections and weakens the immune system.  

“If you keep this lifestyle, it will help to reduce inflammation and cravings. I find that when people come to me and do not lose weight, it is because they give up too easily when trying to make changes. They believe that if it doesn’t happen fast enough, it’s not working, and that’s not true.  

“The same way that it takes time to change habits, it takes time to change the body to alter the body from before to after— from the bad to the new. You’re transforming your entire human body.” 

Common Sense Eating and Emma’s School of Healthy Eating

By appointment. 

Emma’s Health Talk: Foot Health

How Much Do We Know About Our Feet? by Emma Ware Let’s start with the obvious, they take us where we want to go! We get out of bed in the morning and the first thing we do is stand on them. Whether they are long and narrow, or short and wide, they carry our bodies, and without us even giving them much of a thought, they just do their job. But what else do we know about them?  Let’s see what the experts have to say. The following is from the desk of Eric Metcalf, MPH: it was medically reviewed by Dr. Lindsey Marcellin, MPH and Chicago area podiatrist, Dr. Paul Brezinski, DPM.  Collectively, they tell us that together our two feet contain more than 50 bones accounting for about 1/4 of all the bones in the body. Somehow, they also make room for more than 60 joints and 200 muscles, tendons and ligaments that hold them together and help them move. Simply walking around on an average day pounds them with hundreds of tons of force, bringing to our attention just how important our feet are and the amazing job they do for us every day. Without proper care, your feet can develop certain health problems because they’re the farthest body parts from your heart.  Your heart pumps blood to your feet through arteries carrying oxygen-rich blood. Dr. Brezinski adds that several medical conditions, including peripheral arterial disease, can reduce that blood flow. This disease is caused by a buildup of plaque within the arteries that reduce the oxygen rich blood flow to your feet and lower legs, severely threatening their health.  This reduced blood flow can also cause pain and swelling. When our feet hurt, we are less likely to exercise or even enjoy leisurely walking. So how can we prevent and avoid such conditions? By eating healthy and avoiding chemical additives found in packaged food to promote their shelf life. By watching our sugar intake, an excess of which can contribute to diabetes or other unhealthy results like obesity or even heart disease. Pampering our feet is not a luxury but a necessity, and can be done at home with simple ingredients we already have in our pantry. Some homemade recipes can also detox our feet, reducing stress and balancing the body’s pH level. If you have baking soda, vinegar, or Epsom salt in the pantry, you have the makings of a luxurious soaking solution. Adding essential oils to the mix will result in rewarding both our feet and our attitudes at the end of a long day. Here are some simple recipes for your soaking bath: Relaxing Foot Soak 1 cup  Epsom salt 2 cups baking soda 15 drops essential oil of choice Stir until the salt mixture is well combined. Store the additional in an airtight container of your choice for future use. For your luxury soak simply mix 1/4 cup of your mixture into your soaking vessel with enough comfortably hot water to cover your feet to above your ankles. It takes 15 to 20 minutes to receive the full benefit from your soak, so relax and let it do the work for you. For full benefits, the oils recommended are pure, not synthetic. Lavender: soothes painful feet and reduces stress Peppermint: natural pain reliever and anti-inflammatory Tea Tree: best for fighting fungus and athletes foot Rosemary: antiseptic and helpful for rheumatoid foot pain Eucalyptus: best known for anti-viral and anti-bacterial properties Detoxifying Foot Soak 2 gallons warm water 1 cup Epsom salt 1 cup sea salt 1/3 cup bentonite clay 1/2 cup apple cider vinegar Essential oil of choice (wintergreen blend, peppermint or lavender) Soak 20-30 minutes and after soaking, gently scrub your feet with a pumice stone to remove dry skin buildup or calluses. I hope this information will encourage you to add this relaxing treatment to your health routine. Let me know when you do and we can share your results. I have remained open to serve your health needs during these months of day-by-day challenges. I would love for you to stop by the office and let me know how you are managing. We are seeing clients by appointment but open for your product needs at 2798-D Howard Avenue in the Market Common. Call the office at (843) 997-7037 to schedule an appointment. Blessings,  Emma Emma’s School of Healthy Eating Globe Phone Map-marked-alt

Emma’s Health Talk: Beating the January Blues

Getting On Track With New Year’s Resolutions by Emma Ware As we enter 2019 and officially bring to an end a kaleidoscope of holiday activities, many people find themselves looking back with regret at the choices they made with their eating habits during the holiday season.  It’s a New Year’s tradition to set goals for the new year ahead, but often, instead of determining what they want now, all people can think about is what they shouldn’t have done that they did.   We can all relate to some gastronomic over-indulgence during the holidays. After leaving those awesome cookies for Santa, could we deprive ourselves of those tempting treats? Do you think he would have been as excited to get celery sticks and a few carrots? Well, I guess we wouldn’t have been either.  Instead of saturating your mind with regret, take a deep breath and look at all the positive changes you can make to get back on a healthy track.  Our awesome bodies long for a rest after the assault they endured over the holidays. What would make them happy and rejuvenated is a wonderful soup fast. I suggest once a week during the month of January. This warm, healthy and refreshing soup is filled with nutrients to restore balance to your body and help jumpstart your changes.  Organic broths, whether chicken or vegetable, are the most nourishing to use as a base. I recently had a client tell me how she makes her own broths with great success using an Instant Pot.  Whatever method you choose, when making your soup, use colorful vegetables, onions, garlic, include chicken for protein, and for a starch add rice, pasta or potatoes. Finish by seasoning with aromatic herbs of your choice. Eat this wonderful soup all day and feel the benefits it provides your happy tummy.  That is just one change but fear not, here comes more. Without some type of exercise our bodies won’t rebound as fast, so plan some fun movements to wake up your sleepy cells. Yoga or dance exercise classes with a friend make it all that much more fun. Time well spent on a brisk walk is heart-healthy and even helps your blood pressure.  Be sure that whenever and whatever changes you wish to make to your health routine, that you first check with your doctor.  Let me know what you think. Come see me at the office, 2798 D Howard Ave, Market Common Myrtle Beach, or give me a call at 843 997-7037.  -Emma

Emma’s School of Healthy Eating

Market Common School of Healthy Eating

Where Health and Practicality Walk Hand in Hand by Melissa LaScaleia Tucked away in the Market Common, down the end of Howard Avenue, is a quaint, white building with inviting wicker furniture out front. Come close to the door and subtle cursive writing indicates that you’ve arrived at Emma’s School of Healthy Eating. Inside, you’ll be introduced to all things culinary and educational for whatever ails you in the world of food and health. Emma Ware is a certified nutritionist and holistic nutritionist; certified clinical homeopath; and a fitness consultant. She is also the owner of Emma’s School of Healthy Eating. Emma helps all kinds of people with all kinds of challenges in the realm of food— those who need guidance shopping for food, cooking, feeding their children, losing weight, feeling better— even putting their kitchens together. Emma started in this field of work twenty-five years ago when she was living in Los Angeles. At that time, she contracted spinal meningitis, a disease which creates inflammation in the spine and brain, and can lead to death or severe handicaps. “Little did I know where my journey was going to take me,” she says. The numerous health issues that having meningitis created for Emma led her to seek the help of many different doctors. One of those was an internist, a doctor who specializes in internal medicine. But he also practiced alternative medicine.  He became Emma’s mentor, and began teaching her how to manage her health through alternative medicine and nutrition so she could start helping herself feel better while she was still under the care of traditional doctors.  “My first job, once I was starting to feel well enough to work, was at a health food store,” Emma says. “I learned everything about alternative products and I helped a lot of people. It was there that I met a pharmaceutical rep who introduced me to a gastroenterologist, and he gave me my first job working for him as a nutritionist.” “I mainly assisted people with weight loss,” she continues. “I learned how to cook and put formulas together to address people’s digestion problems, and I taught them how to get organized around food and the ways they nourished themselves. Integrating change is something you have to learn how to manage. It’s like anything else.” In Los Angeles, Emma found herself working for oncologists, chiropractors, M.D.s, and plastic surgeons, as well as having her own practice. “Because I had the opportunity and great experiences with many types of doctors, I learned a lot of anatomy and kinesiology,” she says. “From there, I started to implement nutrition. I’ve learned that you can try all kinds of things, but if you want to feel better all the time, and get results that last, you have to change what you eat. If the body is completely nourished, you’re less emotional and you have fewer issues. But if the body is malnourished, you’re going to have lots of issues.” After some time in LA, Emma was craving a change in surroundings. She had fallen in love with Myrtle Beach when she had lived here in the ’80s. Emma (right) in her office-kitchen. In her work with clients, she focuses on educating about the importance of selecting high quality food. (Photo Meganpixels Parker) “I loved the charm of Myrtle Beach,” she says. “It was small and quaint. I wanted to come back; I wanted something different.” She moved here in 2005, and began working with Dr. Cremer in Murrells Inlet for four years, before starting her own independent practice. “Now, I’m on my own,” she says. “Today I get a lot of referrals from a lot of different doctors in the area. I still specialize in weight loss, but I’m also helping people with digestive disorders and teaching them a better way of eating. I love what I do because I see people feeling better, losing weight, and keeping it off permanently. I see people becoming confident in how they manage their health, and knowing what foods to choose that are higher in quality.” Eventually Emma bought a house in the Market Common, and rather than commute to the Inlet, decided to move her practice to her neighborhood. “I love it here,” she says. “It’s like a little city. Everybody is walking— and everybody is walking their dogs. You have the theatre, the restaurants, and then you’re across the street from the beach. What better way to spend a weekend than shopping, catching a movie, and then dinner at a restaurant? And the Market Common has the nicest people.” Her office and consultation space has a kitchen where she teaches private cooking classes, but she now primarily teaches virtually. “The cooking classes are very important because I emphasize putting at least 50% of the effort they’re putting into change, into the kitchen. In that way they can eat better foods without the preservatives and additives. I teach them how to cook easy, quick, healthy recipes. My philosophy is to scrap the dieting, and go back to basics.” Her newly released, self-published cookbook— Fast Wholesome Cooking, was created as a tool to help her clients do just this. The book is for people who don’t know their way around the kitchen, who don’t know how to cook, and who don’t want to spend an entire day in the kitchen trying to. The recipes, as the title suggests, are all fast, easy and wholesome. It’s available at her store in the Market Common and online. “I believe these diets which today saturate our media have brought a lot of confusion to our society and I see it everyday with clients,” Emma says. “They’re very confused about what’s healthy, what’s not, and how the body works. They don’t know whom to listen to or whom to believe. When I work with people, I focus on educating them about many different types of foods and the quality of foods they select.” Emma goes over her clients’ food history and … Read more

Awesome!

Thank you for submitting your details.

If you do not receive an email from us in the next 5 minutes please check your spam/junk mail.

Thank you and have a great day!

Join our Mailing List

Be the first to know about the best eats, shops, sights and escapes of Myrtle Beach