Wednesday 26 June 2013

Talk on the Donkey Sanctuary



On Tuesday 9th July our WI meeting will include a talk on the work of the Donkey Sanctuary.  


Our competition for the evening is to write a short poem about a donkey.

Haven't been to Higher Teignmouth WI before?  Don't worry - it's open to all women and we'll make you welcome.  Just turn up on the night – Richard Newton Hall, Higher Buckeridge Road, Teignmouth TQ14 8QP.  Meetings are held on the second Tuesday of the month at 7.30pm. There is full disabled access. We request a £1 donation from non-members.  Tea, coffee and refreshments provided.



Be Inspired

Go to the Flower Festival at St Michael’s Church Teignmouth for a lovely experience.  The Festival has as its theme Inspirational Women through the Ages.  There are over 40 floral exhibits all dedicated to women who have inspired others. Each exhibit really catches the personality of the individual through the medium of flowers. 

 Higher Teignmouth  WI members have created a beautiful WI exhibit and congratulations must go to Janet Williams, Doreen Rogers and Carole Wood for their stunning display.





If you can, get along to St Michael’s Church – the festival runs from today the 26th  to the 30th of  June, open from 10am to late.  Admission is free and there are refreshments and a gift stall.


Mamma Mia!





A great time was had by all when members of HTWI went out for a meal at The Coliseum restaurant on Tuesday 25th June.  The food was excellent and the ambiance was buzzing with a lovely guitarist playing background music.  We particularly enjoyed the huge slices of delicious tiramisu and the wide range of wines and liqueurs!

Angela Parkes whose birthday it was the following day was delighted with a sparkler, a complimentary Limoncello followed by a round of Happy Birthday sung by the whole restaurant.

Our next meal will be for Ladies who Lunch so watch this space!  Join us if you can for another enjoyable social get together.

Osteopathy comes to HTWI


Maria Trylska came to talk to the Higher Teignmouth WI on Tuesday 11th June and spoke to a packed room of WI members. Her talk was extremely interesting and informative.

Maria started her talk by describing her background and her desire to study Osteopathy.  She is a Londoner born to Polish parents and despite repeating her desire to become an Osteopath, found herself studying for a degree in Ecology at Norwich University and then becoming a teacher for twenty years.  She finally achieved her aim and became a mature student doing what she had always wanted to do – studying Osteopathy.

She then gave us a brief history of Osteopathy which is relatively recent addition to medical practice.  Andrew Taylor Still, an American born in 1828, introduced it on 22 June 1874.  He realised from studying animals that even when an injury had healed, the habits created by the injury persisted.  Andrew Taylor Still was looking for alternative ideas to conventional medicine and he set up a school with two main precepts – Know Your Anatomy and Hands On Healing.  From these ideas he invented Osteopathy in 1874.  Osteopathy came to England in 1898 and by 1993 it had achieved legal status.

The main principles of Osteopathy are:

The body is a unit – it will naturally compensate for injuries.

Structure and Function are reciprocally related – if there is less range of movement in one part of the structure, there will be an impact on other parts

The Body has self-regulatory mechanisms – given the right conditions, the body can repair itself. This leads to the maxim “Find it, fix it, leave it alone”

The practitioner takes the whole case history from the client, carries out posture analysis and then uses touch to assess for tenderness, temperature, assymetry and restricted movement.

The movement of fluids is essential to good health

 

Maria illustrated these principles using activities which members were encouraged to join in – stretching comparisons before and after; a wobbleblock; bags of objects to show how sensitive touch is and photos showing misalignment of posture.