2 Products Helping Me Improve My Health—Easily!
February 17, 2009 by Bonnie Boots
Filed under Pain Relief Products
I never paid much attention to my health until I became a pain patient. Until then, my body seemed to take care of itself effortlessly. Since then–well, lets just say I always seem to be patching this or mending that.
I long for those days when everything came easy. So I’m always looking for the easy way out. Last month, I found two easy ways to deal with some tiny but troubling issues and thought I’d share them with you.
I love coffee in all its forms. I used to spend more money on coffee in a year than most people spend on their car. My kitchen was packed with filter coffee pots and Italian cappuccino makers and the mailman brought me weekly deliveries of roasted beans from around the world. And then something terrible happened… I started having a problem with caffeine.
It crept up on me slowly, but one day, I had to admit it. Drinking caffeinated beverages like coffee and cola was giving me all sorts of problems from jittery nerves to sleeplessness. And finally it started giving me acid reflux. That’s when I absolutely had to change my coffee swilling ways.
I tried tapering off in all sorts of ways, like drinking decaf and even Sanka. Yuck! Just shoot me. Then last week I found a coffee substitute that really does have rich, round flavors. I could probably tell it from coffee in a blind taste test, but it’s close enough to the real think to pass. And it’s own flavor is so full and satisfying that I honestly like it for itself, not just because it works as a coffee substitute. 
The product name is “Teecino.” It comes in 10 flavors. Right now I’m drinking the Mediterranean Mocha Herbal Coffee flavor. It’s tasty all by itself, with a dark chocolate aftertaste. It’s doubly delicious with a dollop of cinnamon-flavored creamer in it.
I chose the Mediterranean Mocha flavor because the Teecino website said “coffee lovers who are adapting their taste buds to herbal coffee find that Mocha can make that transition easier. We find that coffee drinkers who say they don’t like any flavors, love both Mocha and Maya Chocolaté.”
Teecino is widely available in many health food stores and natural food supermarkets. I easily found it available at five locations in my big city. I bought the 11-ounce bag of Mediterranean Mocha locally for $8.99, so the per-cup price is about what I was paying for gourmet coffee brews.
The website says Teecino can be brewed in whatever way you normally brew coffee. I'm brewing it in a Bodum French Press. I've always preferred using a French Press for brewing coffee because it's so easy to brew each cup fresh rather than letting a whole pot get cold and bitter. I'm delighted it's just as good for brewing Teecino. (And I discovered this morning, when my Teecino grew cold while I was on the phone, that Teecino reheats in the microwave without developing a bitter aftertaste, as coffee often does.)
Call around. If you can’t find it locally, check out the Teecino website to order online. It also has a search bar to find stores in your location. http://www.teeccino.com The web site offers a sampler pack of all ten flavors for $12.99 so you can taste test before you buy a larger bag. Now I have the best of both worlds—a hot drink with rich, satisfying flavors and better health. How easy! 
Here’s another product I just discovered that solved a troubling problem for me. Since the death of my dearest friend last November, I’d been struggling just to get though the days. I thought my lack of energy was due to grief. But when I finally asked my doctor for a physical, he told me I had the lowest Vitamin B12 blood level he’d ever seen in a patient. “This is serious,” he warned. “B12 levels this low can cause nerve damage.”
The lack of B12 accounted for my lack of energy. The body produces B12 as a byproduct of processing the foods we eat each day. My doctor agreed that grief might have impacted on my digestive system and caused the problem. But suggested it could also be my age. People over 50, he said, often show lower B12 levels.
My doctor gave me an injection of B12. A week later, after checking new lab results, the doctor told me I’d need a B12 injection once a week, possibly for months. This news did not make me a happy camper. The long trip to his office once a week just for an injection was going to be a problem. And the cost wouldn’t be covered by my insurance. So I did what I always do—I turned to the internet to look for alternatives.
Out in Cyberspace, I found a product called the B12 patch. The patches are small, about the size of a dime or small coin, and are placed on the skin behind the ear lobe. The B12 is absorbed through the skin, thus bypassing my uncooperative digestive system. The patches are left on for 24 hours, and then discarded.
A box holds 4 patches, a one-month supply, and sells for $24.95 a box. I felt a slight difference in using the first two patches. Compared to the injections, I had slightly less energy. So I tried using a patch every 5th day instead of every 7th day and felt slightly better.
If the patches work–something I won't know for sure until my next blood test–getting the amount of B12 my body needs, without the trouble of an office visit and only a fraction of the expense. How easy!
The Vitasceince B-12 Patch appears to be a relatively new product. I did not find it for sale anywhere locally. I did find several web sites devoted to selling it when I Googled “Vitasceince B-12 Patch.” I purchased the Vitascience B-12 Patch online at a site that offered a discount refill program. Since I’ll be using this product for some time, I wanted that extra savings. That site is http://store.vitasciences.com/category/3/B12-Patch&skin=dp_b12
I strongly urge you to consult a doctor before you use this or any vitamin, mineral or herbal product as many natural products can impact on pain medications.
The B-12 Patch is just one example of the many new products hitting the market every day, bringing us better and easier ways of caring for our good health. If you’ve recently found something new that is making your life healthier, and doing it easier, share it with us by using the comment boxes. I’ll filter out anything I think is just marketers linking to affiilate products, but anyone recommending products they truly use and love is warmly welcomed!
UPDATE: After a two-month trial of the B12 patches, my blood levels of B12 were still low. My doctor's office instructed me in giving myself B12 injections at home. I did this once a week for a couple of months and now do it once a month. For many people, sublingual B12 supplements, which are held under the tongue until they are absorbed, are a good alternative. Only your doctor can help you determine which is best for you.
### Bonnie Boots publishes Pain Health News to provide information, motivation and conversation to people dealing with chronic pain. To keep in touch with me, fill out the subscriber form in the upper right of this page.
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Hi Bonnie,
Congrats on getting off the coffee…I know that wasn’t easy. I learned many years ago, to stop drinking it by about 10am, and then it doesn’t seem to bother me too much at night, and I don’t get the jitteriness either. I quit drinking sodas 3-4 years ago, and only rarely do I drink a coke or something.
The other thing I wanted to mention….I have chronic anemia and have taken B12 shots for years. Your doctor can write you a scrip, if you’re on a 1cc dose, a bottle would last for about 30 doses. The first time I tried to do it, I sat there holding the syringe over my leg for like 20 minutes before I got up enough nerve to stick myself. Then I started laughing so hard, I pulled the needle back out before I actually injected myself…LOL! After the first time, I’ve never hesitated to give myself that shot. Get the little insulin syringes, you can’t even feel them. Think about the poor diabetics that have to shoot themselves every day! That would come out waaay cheaper than spending $25 per month, and there’s a good chance your insurance would cover some or most of the prescription price. And really…..after you’ve made yourself do it once, you’ll never be scared to do it again.
Hi Bonnie do add b complex to what your taking for if you use only one of the bs you stop them working for they tend to work in conjunction with one another.I tend to find a B complex and a vitamin c once a day does wonders and keeps any stress at managable levels for me. diabetics here in Australia need to do it about three times a day and the biggest comments is that everything feels sore
Love and light
Aura
Thanks for sharing that information, Kathi. It never occurred to me I could do B-12 injections at home, so I naturally didn’t ask the doctor about it. That’s one of the bugaboos of medical care—9 times out of 10, you don’t get something unless you ask for it. And if you don’t know to ask for it, you don’t get it. That’s why I spend so much time researching pain management—to help people walk into the doctor’s office armed with notes so they can ask, “What about trying this? What about trying that?”
So I’ll talk to my doctor. The thought of sticking a needle in myself makes me cringe, but I certainly know I can get used to it. I’ve seen enough friends master the art of insulin injection!
It’s only really scary the first time!!!!!! I promise! Maybe you can talk to a couple different friends who take insulin, for advice and pointers about how to do it. In the beginning, I used regular, full size needles and shot the front of my thigh, but I’m so skinny, it left bruises. Now I use the ultra-fine insulin needles, and you really can barely feel them. Also, I learned to shoot them in my hip where I’ve got a little bit of ‘padding.’ One of my diabetic friends injects in her stomach, but she is extremely obese…..I don’t think I could do it that way.
Don’t even get me started on the bugaboos of medical care….!! I worked for doctors for years–and have concluded they are mostly idiots!!! One doc was a raving lunatic, meanest boss I ever had, but a very gifted doctor. The other one was one of the nicest bosses I’ve ever had, but he didn’t have a clue……! I think I knew more about a lot of medical stuff than he did (I was a secretary…LOL..not a nurse!)
Hi Bonnie,
About the B-12. I have some info about studies made about that. I can sent you links and I can tell you most of us will get a problem with B-12 decrease,because our bodies will use the vitamin in a different way when we pass say 50 years. And we cann’t eat enough meat to keep the right level needed in our body.
So I use supplements containing vitamin B-12to support my level of B-12.
Not so long ago I was together with two women in their 30ties who had to get injected with
B-12 because their body didn’t produce enough.So it happens more often thean I thought.
Let me know if you’re interested to read these info/reports and findings and I can also provide the supplements I use my self too if you happened to be interested in using supplements containing vitamin B-12.
I wish you all the best with your knee and hope you’ll find peace with what happened to you and don’t let that keep influencing your thoughts. We all have the power to direct our thoughts to where we want to, we are all born with that power,only we are not all teached about it. We need to raise the awareness of that in our children. I do that since I know that now.
Why don’t they teach us these things in school?
Thanks for your input, Deanna. If you’d like to add links to B12 studies here, I’m sure they would be of interest to many people. Like most writers, I’m a voracious reader, so when I found I was lacking B12 I read a half dozen books and went through every study I could find in the online archives of the Mayo Clinic and Harvard Medical Review. I was surprised to learn how common low B12 levels are in people over the age of 50 and how many health problems it can cause. I’m now recommending to all my friends and family that they ask their doctor for a B12 test anytime there is a health concern for anyone over the age of 50. In my case, I did a trial with massive doses of oral supplements which revealed that the B12 receptors in my intestines are not doing their job. When that happens, B12 must be supplemented by injections. And as I’ve discovered, that’s very easy to do once you get past the initial fear of sticking the needle in that first time.