“You have no idea what the world is like fifteen minutes away,” my friend said as she walked in my door today, ”It’s a single bus ride from your home to abject poverty.”  She was coming from work in the south of Tel Aviv, and she is very right – there are families living on the street here.  There are people with no blankets in this cold.  Hungry children.  We used to have a socialist government and mentality, and we still haven’t filled in the gap that was left when the capitalists took over.   

Today is International Poverty Day, and I know people who have much more money today than ever before.  I don’t begrudge them the money, but I do begrudge the economic system that creates such gaps.   We have a responsibility to others, and I would be much happier giving all the donations I make to a benevolent agency in the government which concentrated on equalizing the standard of living through education as well as social services.    

It’s always important to remember that poverty is just down the street. 

In the mean time, my friend went straight to the sink to wash up.

 

I was thinking about my next class as I rode the six floors in the elevator and listened to the conversation next to me about taking care of the family with swine flu.  Later that evening, as my energy completely failed and I took to my bed, I remembered that conversation and realized that maybe one of us had been misdiagnosed and that elevator is a great place to catch germs from strangers.  Anyway I’m enclosing the ‘rules’ for not catching it.

While you are still healthy and not showing any symptoms of H1N1 infection, in order to prevent proliferation, aggravation of symptoms and development of secondary infections, some very simple steps, not fully highlighted in most official communications, can be  practiced (instead of focusing on how to stock N95 or Tamiflu):

1. Frequent hand-washing (well highlighted in all official communications).

2. “Hands-off-the-face” approach. Resist all temptations to touch any part of face (unless you want to eat, bathe or slap someone !! ).

3. Gargle twice a day with warm salt water (use Listerine if you don’t trust salt). *H1N1 takes 2-3 days after initial infection in the throat/ nasal cavity to proliferate and show characteristic symptoms. Simple gargling prevents proliferation. In a way, gargling with salt water has the same effect on a healthy individual that Tamiflu has on an infected one. Don’t underestimate this simple, inexpensive and powerful preventative method.

4. Similar to 3 above, clean your nostrils at least once every day with warm salt water . Not everybody may be good at Jala Neti or Sutra Neti (very good Yoga asanas to clean nasal cavities), but blowing the nose hard once a day and swabbing both nostrils with  cotton buds dipped in warm salt water is very effective in bringing down viral population.
5. Boost your natural immunity with foods that are rich in Vitamin C ( eg citrus fruits). If you have to supplement with Vitamin C tablets, make sure that it also has Zinc to boost absorption.

6. Drink as much of warm liquids (tea, coffee, etc) as you can. Drinking warm liquids has the same effect as gargling, but in the reverse direction. They wash off proliferating viruses from the throat into the stomach where they cannot survive, proliferate or do any harm.

© 2012 Tel Aviv Diary: Karen Alkalay-Gut Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha