British Columbia Lung Association on Asthma with Sara Troy

Meet Sara, who loves life by knowing her limits
Sara Troy, who lives with asthma

Meet Sara Troy, a podcaster and producer on Self Discovery Radio/Video from the UK who now lives in Esquimalt, BC. Sara has lived with asthma for her whole life and spoke with BC Lung Patient Advocate Darcy Murdoch about how she’s learned to know her limits and take care of herself by enforcing her boundaries. (Editor’s note: Sara refers to an “asthma pump,” which is the UK term for a puffer.) 

Where do you live, what do you do, and what is your age?

I’m 63 young, I live in Esquimalt on Vancouver Island, and I own and operate a podcast video network. I interview people who are making a difference in the world, in the lives of others. So, people all over the world, who have embraced their journey, their struggles, and who decided to embrace life and now be of service to others by sharing that knowledge and wisdom that they’ve learned.

What lung disease do you live with?  

I’ve been an asthmatic since the age of 2 when Asian flu went around England and I ended up with asthma. I was a very healthy, plump happy baby before then. It apparently came from my father’s side. Everybody obviously thinks you out-grow it, but I never did. So I’ve been an asthmatic for 61 years.

How does that impact your daily life? 

I had to live my life with limitations — the things I can and cannot do — you know, avoid hills, I can’t run, certainly, air is going to have an effect on me. Walking past The Body Shop for one, and all the fumes coming from there. But it’s just knowing your limitations and it can be frustrating, but at the same time, if you don’t and you get into an asthma attack, that is more frustrating.

Are you on medication of any kind? 

I’m on Ventolin and I have been since I was 14. Ventolin only, because I know how to monitor myself with it. Before I do a show, I always take a puff to make sure my lungs have got extra power, but I can still run out of air during a show. Always before  I go to bed, and I always carry one around with me incase — I know when I am reacting to something, so I can take it and use it as a preventative as well as when I get into an attack.

Were you ever on oxygen? 

Yes, when I would go into hospitals and things like that, they’d have me on oxygen. Not at home though.

That’s a good thing. I was on oxygen for 3 and a half years while I was waiting for my transplant, not 24-hours a day, but whenever I was walking or exercising I had to be on it, and it saved my skin. It took me a while to get used to it because there’s a stigma that goes along with it. I’d walk outside with my nose plugs, and people would stop and stare. I remember one day, a woman came up to me and said, “Oh, I’m so sorry, I’m going to go to my church group and we’re going to pray for you.” I’d never met her before. I certainly got a lot of looks, that’s for sure. 

And they kind of knew something was wrong with you, whereas with me, I’d say, “I can’t do…” and people will look at me and say, “Well, why not? You look perfectly healthy.”

It’s hidden. 

I’d say, “This is my limitation,” and they’d say, “Well, push yourself through it!” I know my limitations. I’ve been with my body a long time. I know what I can and cannot do, and I also know what price I’m willing to pay.

It sounds like there was a little bit of bullying going on there, back in the day? 

Oh yes, and it still happens. People still expect you to do, and it’s, “Sorry, I can’t. Sorry, I won’t.” That’s it.

Do you feel you have adequate care from your doctor and the health system? 

Yes. I mean, they tried to put me on the generic pump, but that didn’t work for me — it literally didn’t work. I think I’ve been on Ventolin for far too long, 40 years now, but I think it’s because I’m just so used to being on it.

I’ll tell you one thing that really did help was that I found an allergist, that is, looking at biorhythms and resetting your body, and she did a whole complete cleanse of things I was allergic to. I used to not be able to be in a house with a cat, I’d be wheezing and getting to a point where I wouldn’t be able to breathe, but after working with the allergist, I think it boosted my immune system. So now I can be around cats and dogs, and that really was a godsend. I didn’t realize the impact of it — there’s so much more I can be subject to now without a reaction.

What about other things? Are you allergic to pollen, and dander and dust? 

Dust? Yes. Certain pollens and dander – the seasonal stuff. I would actually say, my skin reacts more than my asthma. Certain chemicals and things. You have to be careful.

What about last year when the forest fires were taking over the province, with the particulate in the air? 

Yeah, the smoke definitely was a problem. I was in Port Coquitlam, and you could really start feeling it there. I tried to avoid going out and took my pump if I did, making sure I was being preventative. It’s not worth jeopardizing your health.

It’s true – people don’t realize that the smoke actually has those fine particles of wood and it can get into your lungs and give you a problem. Do you have any advice for others living with asthma, on how to deal with it and lead a normal life? 

I would say, go get tested with your allergies, because if they can help clear some up for you. I’ve done the prick test several times but this other way with the allergist I found to be more effective. It’s helped a lot because a lot of the problem with asthma is that I’m so sensitive to so many things that it aggravated asthma. So if you take away some of those other sensitivities, it helps to let you just look after the asthma.

The other thing is knowing your limits – don’t push yourself beyond what you know you can do. Never leave home, anytime, anywhere without your apparatus. I have 3 – one by my desk, one by my bed, and even if I’m just going out for five minutes, that pump has to be with me. It takes only one attack.

I don’t go anywhere without it — even when my kids were young, they knew that if mum started having an asthma attack, to run to the bedroom to get the asthma pump.

Are you able to exercise at all? 

Again, my limitations. I go for walks, as long as it’s flat — no hills — and I watch the air quality. No running, obviously. Biking, again, as long as it’s flat. Swimming, I love. Swimming is really good for me because I find it opens up the lungs and I can do way more in the water.

Do you feel there’s anything missing in BC’s health care system for asthma sufferers? 

I would love to see more prevention. I wish they would look to other alternative ways of healing, like with the allergies, and not stick to the same old thing.

I think it’s being open, not just being restricted to one channel — being open to alternatives and things like acupuncture, anything that can help relax the body, because as you know, anytime you get tense, it tightens the body.

Sleeping better, relaxing better. It’s not always looking to drugs, because there are other alternatives that can be so much more sustainable and longer lasting than just a drug. That’s a problem with the medical system — it’s always treating the symptom, rather than realizing that there’s a whole body, rather than just the lungs, and rather than just putting a band-aid on, there are many reasons for something and we need to go deeper and treat the whole body.

Have you seen a respirologist here in BC? 

No, actually, I don’t. If I’m having a bad bout, my doctor has an ongoing prescription with him for my pumps, and though I’ve seen lung specialists, but my asthma is pretty well under control because I don’t put myself in environments or do things that I know will aggravate it. I know to stop and rest, and rejuvenate, and pace myself.

It sounds like you’re a perfect example of someone who manages to live with asthma because you know your limitations. 

Knowing your limitations, understanding that everyone has health challenges along the way, it’s not letting it define you – I am not asthma. I happen to have asthma, and yet I can still live a very productive life. I’ve just got to know my triggers, my limitations, and live within those parameters. I can’t go at the same speed as other people, I can’t do what other people do, but that’s their journey and this is mine.

It doesn’t mean I’m crippled by it. I am limited. But I can still go and do things that I can enjoy in life. I seek to do things more abundantly in some areas that I am lacking in other areas. So you learn to pace yourself, to live within your limitations, and you can still have a very good life, but it won’t be defined by my labels of health. Those are just my challenges in life. If I live and I honour my body and my parameters in life, then I still can get out and be productive. Most of my productivity is online, not physical, but I still consider it very productive.

I can see that you have a very positive attitude as well, which goes a long way. 

Why not? I know my limitations, but I can still live abundantly in other areas. I still get those times where you feel, “Why now?” Those down days, especially if you’re in pain, but I think that’s just the time for love and nurture for yourself and to honour your body and do what it needs to rejuvenate.

Find something that you love to do. For me, it’s music: listening to music is very calming and soothing for me, switching off from the world, and finding that something that takes you to that centre space where you can re-group.

Is there anything else in life that you embrace? 

I love to dance, though I don’t know – because I’m 63 with fibromyalgia, which has become another health issue, the asthma is just another thing that there, I’d say I’m more limited now by the fibromyalgia than the asthma, but I love to dance. I love to really get out and enjoy life. Sometimes it’s frustrating when I cannot do as much as I used to do, and that is aggravating.

I want to get out and do things, but I can’t because my batteries run out too quickly, but I think again, it’s knowing your triggers: pollen, scents, don’t get over-stressed, because those exacerbate the asthma.

Watch your anxiety, your stress level, do activities that calm you, even if it means switching off from the rest of the world. That’s something that others are just going to have to understand, and if they don’t, I’m afraid that that’s their problem. Don’t let it be yours. You can still get out and enjoy life while you know your triggers

You’ll have good days where you can do a lot more than you thought you could, and you’ll really enjoy it! But that might means that the next couple of days you’ll need a bit more downtime, in order to regroup. Just go with that flow.

What does the future hold for you, and your condition? 

Since the allergy testing, it’s been better. The fibromyalgia is my nemesis at the moment, and there are things that I’m trying to deal with it. But my lungs are all right now, and if I maintain this level as I get older, then I’m in control and I don’t let it control me.

I hope it doesn’t get worse because in fact, it has got better in the last few years. I still get triggers, still get out of breath, but it’s knowing when to push yourself. You can still have a very productive life, you’ve just got to know those limitations, those triggers, and how to honour your body.

Sara Troy of Self Discovery Radio

Interviewed By Darcy Murdoch who was interviewed by Sara on his double lung transplant. new-lungs-gives-singer-bobby-bacchus-a-new-life

18-30 Tradition, do we keep them even if the are archaic?

Sara Troy on Sara’s View of Life, on air from July 24th

 

Tradition, just because it was does that mean it still should be?

We follow traditions as if they are carved in stone, but just because they have been, does not mean they should be. Some traditions have totally lost their meaning, some so archaic they have no meaning anymore, yet we hold on to them for the fear of our world coming apart it f don’t.

I love the tradition of respect, of values and considerations. I love Christmas but it means something different for us, it became a tradition of family and friends, a togetherness in gratitude and love for our gift of life. I love the tradition of respecting our elders, our parents and the respect of opening a door for someone, of being courteous, of manners in general.

Some traditions have been modernized, so simply adjusted, but some held onto so tight as an excuse for their actions. Like child marriages, it is a tradition, and it is one that has to go. Husbands lording over their wives, one that has to go. Like non-equel pay, it has to go, also its a mans world, a tradition that needs to be very much adjusted.

There are so many things we need to look at in our daily lives as to why do we hold on to tradition? Is it fear of letting go, is it too easy to use them as an excuse? like it has always been this way so why change it now excuse, you need to change it because it is wrong. Some simply need to be adjusted, but many traditions have had their day and need to go bye bye.


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IG18-30 Igniting our Voice to Movement with Bisia Belina

Ignite your heart and soul with Sara Troy and her guest  Bisia Belina, on-air from July 24th

bisia

To clear your mind and release your stress, you have to follow your ‘out breath’ and your body will respond and find the ‘flow ‘ again. Join Sara and Bisia on how movement and sound helps you find your ease.

We are going to talk about breath – specifically the out breath, the exhalation, that brings you back to center.

When working with my clients as an RMT, the focus is helping them to let go of their ‘out breath’, to let go of the breath because with exhalation comes relaxation. You become heavier and more connected to your body Breath and body connect, you leave your mind behind and find space between your thoughts.

When teaching how to use the voice in singing, the focus is on the

‘out breath’ as well. Here, breath and sound connect. Sound and singing is all based on allowing the sound to ride the out breath. Emotion is what gives sound, texture, colour and feel. Through movement, the body gives rhythm and time.

Why is movement a part of VoiceWorks and SoundBody studio?

Movement is a way to challenge the fear that keeps us in the box of self-limitation and fear.

Movement connects voice and emotion through the body.

Sound Body Studio, teaches how tuning into your body, sensing your anatomy, coming back to alignment gives you a more ‘ lived sense’ of your instrument.

As a singer, “You are the instrument”. Your body is the instrument and getting in touch with it, is one more way back to center, back to self.

Sensing Anatomy and Vocal Anatomy workshops teach people how to get reacquainted with their bodies by exploring the flesh, the bones and space of their instruments. They learn how to be ‘in their bodies ‘and how to be present to ‘its’ needs. Questions explored in workshops:

How do you connect with your body?

Do you live with pain?

How do you manage your pain?

How does pain affect your breath, your instrument?

As Sound vibrates, resonances increase in a relaxed body. There is less of an effort and more ease, more air and more joy.

When you connect with your body, it supports your song and movement.

Improvisation is about self-trust, granting oneself permission, curiosity and exploration. All these skills apply to daily living.

Working with the Entry Points to Improv help us to be ‘present’ to the lives we are living. This is mindfulness not in meditation but in action.  Examples of entry points are:

Using words to begin explorations- such as syncopation of words, words and time, words and rhythm.

Using story – personal or storytelling – using musical skills – How rhythm, time, melody, harmony are the skills we use to help us create “music that composes us.”

Using body/movement – understanding one’s movement and understanding ones pain.- expanding movement vocabulary sourced from Chi Gong, Feldenkrais, Yoga and a variety of movement practices ex: Laban/Bartinieff movement patterning and dance.


SARA AND BISIA WILL EXPLORE OUR CONNECTION TO OUR SPIRITED SELVES THROUGH BREATH MOVEMENT AND VOICE.


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 Bisia Belina is a Healthcare practitioner, Health and Wellness Educator, Vocal and Movement Coach and Founder of SoundBody Studio. Where she offers body-centred therapy and expressive movement arts to
“ tune in, tune-up and compose yourself”….
Thirty-one years as a practising Registered Massage Therapist and twenty years as an active singer, performer and vocal body coach, Bisia has combined both her consuming interests and developed an approach to health and wellness by using a fusion of voice and movement strategies that help people access and maintain their physical, emotional and mental health.
Bisia is also actively engaged in creating and performing VocalBody Arts .
She recently produced and was the artistic director for a multimedia performance “ Sound is a Wave” at Metro Studio Theatre in November of 2017. This was a showcase of 9 original voice and movement pieces, performed by students and teachers of SoundBody Studio. It was also an opportunity for Bisia to present three of her artistic compositions that merge original music, video and movement: Cracking Wide Open, Toi Moi and Water.
SoundBody Studio offers expressive vocal movement arts and body awareness classes as
* a way to get back to centre
* as a creative personal practice
* as artistic development and expression
* as a professional stress management system for adults who have forgotten the
the restorative power of playfulness.
Offerings at the studio are open to all who are interested in expanding their
experience of voice and its intimate connection to their body.
VoiceWorks classes; Anatomy, Vocal Anatomy and VocalBody Arts series and
workshops.

www.facebook.com/SoundBodyStudio

RC18-29 Spiritual Life Lessons for Kids with Ariane de Bonvoisin

Raising Our Gifted Children with Sara Troy and her guest Ariane Bonvoisin, on air from July 17th

 
 Delightful Trio of Children’s Books Highlights Spiritual Life Lessons for Kids on All Paths, Through Inspiration, Fun and Wisdom, from Bestselling Author
 
Imagine tapping into the beauty of a child’s innate wisdom through the sharing of sweet and wise words of guidance and valuable life skills. Ariane de Bonvoisin’s series entitled Giggles and JoySpiritual Life Lessons for Kids does just this, with a healthy dose of enlightened humour and profound, yet simple, messages for babies and children up to ten years old. The series includes three special books: Giggles and JoyYou Are Loved and Being You.

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Giggles and Joy gives new perspectives on everyday life, by celebrating topics like Mother Earth in unique ways, a child’s growing body and all its remarkable abilities, and the importance of sleep. The book lovingly articulates the power of subjects like kindness and gratitude, and also of bad days as well. She helps the reader transform tough moments by infusing them with a new light, paving the way for an unexpected, yet welcome lesson. Giggles and Joy demonstrate the power each child carries within. Through the words found in this delightful book, images are created of a world beyond what is in front of the reader. She has created a world that gives voice to a child’s spiritual nature.
You Are Loved centres on the concept that love is everywhere, breaking it down into examples so practical and relatable that speaks to a child on a soulful level. This radiant book transcends the mysteries of life into a thing of beauty; life can be happy and sad, confusing and exciting. Difficult experiences like illness, scary issues like dealing with change, and confusing matters like coping with grown-ups’ emotions are all touched on with meaningful morsels of wisdom, tapping into the soul, helping children remember their inner light.
 
Being You breathes energy into a child’s essential connection to nature, terrestrial and spiritual. Touching upon subjects like God (while honouring the abundance of diverse spiritual beliefs), in telling the truth and the importance of breathing, this sweet book empowers children to believe in their strength of character. Readers are encouraged to take charge of their lives by listening to their heart and thinking for themselves. Being You nurtures the children who read it, wrapping them in a cloak of love and light, teaching them that they have the tools on the inside to heal, to overcome, to be who they are.
 
Ariane describes the books as being “‘spiritual’ in that they are imbued with love, optimism, humour, honesty and common sense.” They do not promote or offend anyone’s sense of God or the Universe. They exist beautifully next to anyone’s beliefs. It is urgent that we take care of our children’s spirit as much as their minds and bodies.”
 
Ariane also works with grown-ups on similar topics! She has embarked on a mission to integrate amazing transformational content into bite-size daily practices for busy people. Her new iOS and Android app, Mindful365, is a program that helps boost your spirit one day at a time. It provides a daily practice to focus on: a question to ask, an idea to contemplate, an emotion to focus on or let go of, or an action to take. Mindful365 allows you to do one small thing each day to know more about yourself.
 
Ariane writes, coaches and speaks frequently on issues of personal and professional change, happiness and inspiration, entrepreneurship, women in the workplace, parenting and the topic of mindful living and conscious business. She is passionate about helping raise happy, conscious, healthy and empowered kids. She is a bestselling author, a speaker and has previously worked in the varied fields of consulting, big media, Venture Capital and startups. She considers herself a global soul having lived all over the world. Ariane has appeared on dozens of TV and radio shows, including NBC’s Today Show, the CBS Early Show, CNN and ABC News Now. She recently completed a TED Residency in New York and her TED Talk on Life Skills for young kids will be available soon.

http://www.arianedebonvoisin.com

http://www.gigglesandjoy.com

facebook.com/Ariane-de-Bonvoisin

For more information visit http://mindful365.com

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18-29 Love is Simple so Simply Love

Sara Troy on Sara’s View Life, on air from July 17th 

Love makes the world go round; it is as simple as that. You can not live in hate with love in your heart and veins, for they are two different vibrations. So many have been hurt in the name of love; I understand that, but why do you let those who hurt you take away your passion for life, living, and loving yourself?

It is the simple things that bring us back to love; Joy is one of them, simple joy in the simple things in life. A child’s laughter, animals, playing just enjoying themselves, music in the air, the wind in our faces, the sun on our cheeks, the rain watering our land, the moon guiding our night. When we step into joy, it is so hard to hate, so we become happier people and build a better life for ourselves in that joy.

Gratitude; we moan about what we do not have, but if we paid attention to what we DO have, we would, in gratitude, know that we are so lucky to have what we have. Gratitude for friends, family, choices, and abilities, and to pay it forward by helping others.

Kindness; if we showed kindness to each other and cared, we would connect to one another, and loneliness would not take hold. Kindness is a friendly smile, a hand in need, a soft approach, kind words, and loving action; we are all capable of it.

Owning ourselves, we will make mistakes, choose the wrong people in life, and fall, but all that matters is that you get back up. Get up stronger, wiser, with more heart for self and humanity, for only when we hold ourselves accountable and choose to care for ourselves will we discover the meaning of self-love.

Giving back and being of service to the world is really what love is. You will know joy, gratitude, and LOVE when it is not all about you but about your community and what you can contribute to it. I always say, find your instrument, your calling, your meaningful purpose; you see this by being willing to take the journey of life in that self-discovery. Once you have found that instrument, your I AM, you perfect it in your way and then join the WE ARE and the orchestra of life and create in harmony the resonance that will become a symphony of love and inspiration to all.

Taking the time to hear another and care about what you are hearing is also simple and impactful. We all want someone to listen to us, someone to respond to us, and that interaction, in its simplicity, can change someone’s day someone’s life.

So take the time for people, a hello, a smile, a how are you and can I do anything for you, for you have no idea how much it can change someone’s life.

LOVE is simply an attitude to life; I know there are down days, sad days, and angry days, but there also are glorious days that show us why we are here and just how beautiful life can be when we choose it to be with an attitude of love joy and kindness.

Lin-Manuel Miranda, Jennifer Lopez.

Lin-Manuel-Miranda-and-Jennifer-Lopez-backstage-hamilton-billboard-1548


 

Jennifer-Lopez-Lin-Manuel-Miranda-Love-Make-The-World-Go-Round- VIDEO 


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