Mellor Health Solutions Newsletter
November 2014
www.doctormellor.com

Halloween Tips for Trick or Treat Night
rd411

When you arrive home from work on Trick or Treat night, it seems like the bewitching hour already has hit you house at full tilt. The kids are so excited for the evening's events that they have magically changed into their costumes and are levitating to the door, drifting past any plans you have made for dinner.

Your mind is quickly assaulted by the following questions:

-Should I make my children eat dinner or is it not worth the battle?
-How many houses equate to an adequate candy supply?
-What about the increase in childhood obesity?
The holidays are endless from now until Valentine's Day, and each one has its own sweet fest! You certainly do not need all of this candy around the house. Can you throw half of it out when your children are not looking? Do your dentist's kids go trick or treating?

One night of trick or treating does not make a fat child or a bad parent! Here are a few simple suggestions to help you get through Halloween night and the other 364 days that follow.

Have a plan
Make a plan after asking for your children's input. Feed your children a nutritious dinner. A group of hungry, dehydrated, sugar-intoxicated goblins is a frightening picture for any parent! Plan dinner ahead of time with your children?s help. Let them know that you will eat early on Halloween night, so that they will have all the energy they will need to for a successful Trick or Treat night. Make sure they drink enough fluid. Children can get overheated in Halloween costumes, especially when it is combined with running from house to house throughout your neighborhood.

Set limits in advance
Ask your children to help you decide on the route you will take, how many doors you will knock on, and what hour they will turn back into 'pumpkins.' Having an end goal will help you avoid the 'just one more' or 'but we have not gone to..' meltdown that persists all the way home.

Agree on a candy consumption limit
Agree on how much candy your children are allowed to eat on Trick or Treat night and each day thereafter. You may want to make a similar confidential agreement with yourself. Note: 'Unlimited access' or 'until the chocolate is gone' is not a good plan.

Provide healthy snacks
Keep healthy between-meal snacks in view and accessible. A bowl full of juicy red apples, bananas, or seasonal fruit is a better center piece than Skittles?, M&M?s?, and Tootsie Rolls?. Keep the candy out of sight. Assign a kids? shelf in your refrigerator and fill it with low-fat yogurt, low-fat cheese cut in interesting shapes, and fresh cut vegetables.

Teach and model moderation
Do not give candy more status than it deserves. In some instances, the more something is forbidden or overly restricted the more desirable it becomes. Teach and model moderation. All foods can fit, if we are reasonable about the amount and frequency.

Do not attach emotions to candy
Try not to use candy to reward, bribe, punish, or convey love. By attaching emotions to certain foods, you may inadvertently set the stage for disordered eating in the future, including undereating, anorexia, and overeating, obesity.

Begin some new family rituals
Do not make the holiday all about the candy. Make it a time to begin new family rituals, such as stuffing a scarecrow full of leaves for the front porch. Carve pumpkins and roast the seeds. Hold an annual scavenger hunt for fall items, such as acorns, pinecones, wooly caterpillars, animal tracks, and colorful leaves. Begin a new photo album that holds pictures of Halloween celebrations, past and present.

Get moving
The weather starts to grow cold, and you naturally want to slow down, conserve heat, and eat hearty meals. Make sure you choose after-school activities that make both you and your child move. Rake leaves into piles and jump for fall! Try a new sport, visit one new park each week, or return to the zoo now that the weather is cooler and the animals are more active. Keep sedentary activities, such as TV, computer, and handheld games, to a minimum.

Keep it safe
Above all, have a safe and fun Halloween. Your children are only small for a short while!





Our newsletter is created as an educational resource that provides patients with education, information and the best choices in natural Health care and Wellness.



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About Our Practice
At Mellor Health Solutions our focus is on the Whole Family and their Best Health. We are a successful Health and Wellness Clinic with three decades of experience. We excel at Designed Clinical Nutrition programs for every individual in the Family and every need of the individual. We utilize the "Cellular Healing Diet" from Dr.Pompa, Nutrition Response Testing, Neural Organizational Technique, Meridian BioFeedack analysis , Nutritional supplements, Herbal supplements, and Homeopathy to restore Your Health. We are excited about of our very successful and popular comprehensive Weight loss program that we have combined with Dr.Pompas "Cellular Healing Diet". Our program is available for restoring your lean body mass, youthful looks and optimum Health. Better yet the combination of the two lifestyle changes grant you the ability to maintain not only your natural lean body mass and weight, but true Health as well! And we offer Chiropractic care that helps remove interferences within the body and helps reestablish neurological organization and balance with emphasis on identifying the underlying cause. Please contact us with any questions and for a consultation to see what we can do for you and your Health concerns. We are looking forward to talking with you soon.

Mellor Chiropractic and Mellor Health Solutions Clinic  33 Madison Professional Park Rexburg ID 83440 Phone: 208-356-6009 Fax: 208-356-4466
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