Reflexology For The Spirit

spirituality of one's health

Is it a Cold, the Flu, or Coronavirus?

For months we’ve all been reading and hearing about a resurgence of  the coronavirus combined with the flu.    So…what does this mean?

Every year I hear the same question at the beginning of flu season:  HOW DO YOU KNOW WHETHER IT’S A COLD OR THE FLU?  This season, the question is a little different:  HOW DO YOU KNOW WHETHER IT’S A COLD OR THE FLU OR CORONAVIRUS?

There are some real differences.

Fever is rare with a cold.  Fever is common with the flu.  It’s usually high and lasts three or four days.

Headaches are rare with a cold but common with the flu.

Cold sufferers may have slight aches and pains.  Flu sufferers have definite aches and pains which may be severe.

Extreme fatigue and/or weakness is just not a factor with a cold.  Exhaustion is common with the flu – especially at the onset of the illness.

Sore throat, stuffy nose, and sneezing are common with a cold.  A person suffering with a cold may have mild symptoms to include a hacking cough.  With the flu, these symptoms can become severe.

With colds, treatment includes antihistamines, decongestants.  With the flu, the patient needs to consult with a physician about any needed medication.

Coronavirus complicates things.

Many people experience fever as the first symptom of Coronavirus.

The second  symptom is often  a combination of a cough and muscle pain.

Nausea and vomiting make up the third tier.

These symptoms are usually followed by diarrhea.

And, that’s not all.  Some people experience a loss of taste or smell.

And, some people experience deeply reddish-blue toes (chillblains).

Others  have headache and dizziness.

The bottom line here is that coronavirus has many symptoms while colds and flu

are much less complicated.

If you suspect coronavirus, go get tested.  Waiting around while you try to decide you are sick and contagious or not is not good for you and it’s not good for those around you.

There  are several tools at your disposal which can help you early on.

A thermometer is essential.  Take your temperature daily.

When I’m out in the community, my temperature is the key to getting into the office  where I have an appointment.

The no-touch forehead fever thermometer gun has become ubiquitous on  receptionists’ desks wherever I go.

There’s no reason why you shouldn’t take your temperature every morning.  Your temperature can accompany your blood pressure reading.  You can keep your thermometer gun beside your blood pressure cuff.

Then, you only need one other item: a pulse oximeter.  A pulse oximeter estimates the amount of oxygen in your blood.

If you have coronavirus, your pulse oximeter will register a lower oxygen level in your body.  This is because with coronavirus, your lungs are inflamed.  (Actually, with coronavirus, inflammation is all over your body).

So, if you are concerned about your health because you may become exposed to coronavirus, you can help yourself with your temperature,  your blood pressure, and your oxygen level.

If you feel ill, you will help your healthcare professional with  these three scores.

For those who aren’t really familiar with an oximeter, it is the little plastic  clip  placed on your finger when you get your blood pressure measured.

These devices are not that expensive, are easy to use, and you can find an explanatory chart which will explain the meaning of the score.

Whatever you decide, prevention is important.  Wash your hands often, wear a mask always when you leave your home, use hand sanitizer and don’t go anywhere around other people if you can help it.

Thanks for reading this blog post.  If you liked this article, please forward it to your favorite social media networks.

Thanks again,

Thurman Greco

The Spirituality of Fear

Full-blown fear isn’t really in my personal vocabulary, so I don’t often feel it.  But, when I do feel fear, I feel it 100%.   I feel fear for us,  and the earth.   This is the spirituality of fear.

When I felt fear in my life, fear interfered with my grounding mechanism.  And, that wasn’t all.  It  took control and moved and directed me throughout every single day.

That is not to say that I have not ever experienced fear.  I have, definitely, lived with fear.  But, this post is not about that fear.  It is for us, our fear, and our Earth.

I feel in my spiritual core that fear is directing many of us nowadays.  Through the guise of the Coronavirus, fear is totally in charge of many of us and our lives.

I am suggesting, no – pleading –  that fear has no place in our lives at this moment.  For one thing, when fear controls us, it wrecks our immune systems.   Not one person on our planet today needs an immune system compromised in any way.

Instead of fear, focus on our planet.    In my inner core, I feel that I need to focus on our precious planet earth because she’s the only planet we’ve got.

With all the cars, factories, ships, and planes grounded and parked, our Earth is getting a very much needed time-out.

During this time, our Earth’s streams, lakes, and oceans are cleaning  themselves up.

The atmosphere surrounding our planet is cleaning itself out – finally!  The humans on our planet are, for the moment, generating less smog.

We are using the dirt – fields, meadows, mountainsides – in different ways now.

So, while our medical, and governmental leaders are figuring out how to combat this pandemic, I can’t help but be grateful for this time out, this cleansing experience on and in  our Earth.

In my spiritual center, I feel we are on the verge of a whole new world.  I am not longingly looking back on the return of the old reality of the past.  The past is gone – a memory which we can write, paint,  and sing about in the future.

Instead,  I look forward to our new world and its cleaner, healthier, reality.

Please join me.

Let us celebrate our  future together.

Let us ponder things learned and create better ways to live our lives daily.

Let us rejoice in a cleaner, more beautiful tomorrow.

If you feel moments of fear, there are things you can do:

Meditate on a future you would like to see.

Seek grounding through bodywork.

Find gratitude in lessons learned and beauty to experience.

Thank you.

Thurman Greco

Thank you for reading this blog post.  Please refer it to your favorite social media network.

Let us all embrace the beauty we will experience.

Thurman Greco