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The Rockstar Remedy: A Rock & Roll Doctor's Prescription for Living a Long, Healthy Life
The Rockstar Remedy: A Rock & Roll Doctor's Prescription for Living a Long, Healthy Life
The Rockstar Remedy: A Rock & Roll Doctor's Prescription for Living a Long, Healthy Life
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The Rockstar Remedy: A Rock & Roll Doctor's Prescription for Living a Long, Healthy Life

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From the woman known to some of the most famous bands in the world as the “Rock n’ Roll Doctor” comes a holistic prescription to achieving health and balance—even when you don’t live like a saint.

As a holistic practitioner and therapeutic masseuse to the music industry's elite, Gabrielle Francis has helped famous rockers to repair, recover, and refuel from the demanding schedules and occasional overindulgences that come along with the rock star lifestyle. Now for the first time, Gabrielle shares her sought-after, insider secrets with readers everywhere. Because being overscheduled, sleep-deprived, on the road, or occasionally eating or drinking to excess aren’t lifestyle habits unique to the music industry: they are the same challenges faced by all of us, every day.

In The Rockstar Remedy, Gabrielle shares her unique strategies for boosting your energy and looking and feeling your best—even when your schedule doesn’t seem to allow it. She shows readers that their health exists on a spectrum, and the simple act of making better choices every day—even if they’re not the best choices—helps us achieve balance in both mind and body. With tips for improving energy levels, lists of foods to aim for and avoid, a simple no-starvation detox, and her popular “damage mitigation techniques,” which show you secret ways to reverse the damage causes by less-than-perfect choices, Gabrielle offers a simple, effective plan for staying healthy and happy amid the chaos of our daily lives.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 30, 2014
ISBN9780062310620
The Rockstar Remedy: A Rock & Roll Doctor's Prescription for Living a Long, Healthy Life

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    Book preview

    The Rockstar Remedy - Gabrielle Francis

    DEDICATION

    This book is dedicated to the rock star in you!

    That rebellious spirit that refuses to settle for the status quo . . .

    The fire within that ignites transformation in body, mind, and spirit . . .

    The desire to create the life of your dreams . . .

    So that you can fulfill your true destiny . . .

    Join me on the adventure . . .

    CONTENTS

    Dedication

    FOREWORD The Opening Act, by Michael Franti, of Michael Franti & Spearhead

    INTRODUCTION Sound Check: YOU Are a Rock Star

    PART ONE:The RxStar Remedy Philosophy

    CHAPTER 1 You Don’t Have to Miss the Party: The 90/10 Rule

    CHAPTER 2 The RxStar Remedy Revolution

    CHAPTER 3 Total Health Transformation in Five Stages

    PART TWO:Stage One: The RxStar Detox: Start with a Clean Slate

    CHAPTER 4 Detox 101

    CHAPTER 5 Detox Your Diet

    CHAPTER 6 Detox Your Body, Mind, and Home

    PART THREE:Nourish and Revive

    CHAPTER 7 Stage Two: Health Food Rocks!

    CHAPTER 8 Stage Three: Rock Star Body

    CHAPTER 9 Stage Four: Think Like a Rock Star: Don’t Act Your Age!

    CHAPTER 10 Stage Five: Socialize and Celebrate Good Times!

    PART FOUR:Heal, Restore, and Recover

    CHAPTER 11 The Cures: Alternative Remedies for Rock Stars Like You

    CHAPTER 12 Rockers and Recovery

    The RxStar Detox Tear Sheet

    Special Guest Appearances

    Resources and Information

    Reading Recommendations

    Encore!

    Index

    About the Authors

    Credits

    Copyright

    About the Publisher

    FOREWORD

    THE OPENING ACT

    The terms healthy living and rock star are rarely used in the same sentence. In fact when most of us think of the rock & roll lifestyle, the first word that comes to mind is excess—too much partying, too many wild nights, too much sex, drugs, and rock & roll.

    The truth is that while all of those things do indeed exist, those of us who have managed to sustain careers in music that span many decades have at some point found a way of eating, exercising, relaxing, and sleeping that keeps our bodies functioning at their peak and our minds at their creative best.

    You may be surprised to learn that the rock & roll lifestyle is not that much different than that of a very intense business traveler: living out of airports, taxis, and hotels; dashing from appointment to appointment; working very late; getting up too early; answering emails; taking phone calls; and eating on the run. Sound familiar? Apart from the two hours onstage performing, the stresses of life on the road may be very similar to those you find in your own life.

    I don’t want it to sound as though being a musician is more stressful than other jobs, but rarely being in the same place for more than one night in a row does make eating well, exercising, and sleeping a challenge that takes thought, planning, and a bit of tenacity.

    When I met Dr. Gabrielle Francis, I was twenty-five pounds heavier, borderline diabetic, fatigued all day, and had permanent acid reflux. I had trouble sleeping, caught every cold and flu that came near me, and generally felt pretty crappy most of the time.

    MICHAEL FRANTI

    (DANNY CLINCH)

    Dr. Francis showed me that by altering what I ate, exercising regularly, and supplementing with some nutrients that my body was lacking, I could shed pounds, get my blood sugar under control, sleep better, boost my immune system, and generally feel more energetic. She taught me that living a rock & roll life didn’t have to mean being unhealthy. The recommendations she shares in this book have helped me feel stronger onstage and more present, focused, and creative in my professional and personal life. All of this has led to my feeling happier, healthier, more youthful, and more inspired than I ever would have imagined after twenty-five years of life on tour.

    In this book, Dr. Francis will show you how to make the same kinds of simple and effective changes that will enable you to feel your best and most vibrant so that you can step confidently onto the most important stage of all . . . your life.

    —Michael Franti, of Michael Franti & Spearhead

    INTRODUCTION

    SOUND CHECK: YOU ARE A ROCK STAR

    I am not your average physician. I do not have a traditional medical office or wear a crisp white lab coat or write prescriptions on an Rx pad. My remedies come from Mother Nature, not pharmaceuticals. And for the past thirty years, I have been practicing natural medicine, chiropractic, acupuncture, and massage while traveling from city to city around the country and around the globe. My clients have some of the most demanding jobs in the world: They’re rock stars.

    I surround myself with people who make health a priority. When you are healthy, your music becomes healthy with it. When your spirit is strong and you support the body and mind, the art follows. That has been a key factor in how I live my life on the road and how everyone I surround myself with lives, too. The priority is being healthy.

    —SAUL SIMON-MacWILLIAMS, KEYBOARDIST, INGRID MICHAELSON

    I work backstage, in hotel rooms, at music festivals, and on planes and buses. I am a rock & roll doctor. That means that the plan I’ve created for you in this book has been road-tested on some of the most extreme lifestyles in the world.

    While there’s a lot of fantasy surrounding the way my clients live, the truth is that myths are much sexier than the facts. The best-kept secret of the music industry is probably the one that will shock you the most—the majority of the musicians I know are as full-on committed to their health as they are to partying, like, well, rock stars.

    I play rock & roll, I play punk, and I play hip-hop. You want to stay in shape so that you can communicate that basically your body is your instrument. And the same way that I will polish my guitar and take care of that . . . you sort of have to treat your body that same way.

    —KIRK DOUGL AS, GUITARIST, THE ROOTS

    Most of the time, that is. As is the case with your life, there are always outside influences in musicians’ lives that set them back a bit, making it impossible to be perfect in their goals for healthy living. After all, rock stars lead highly stressful lives, especially when they are on tour. The glamour you see onstage is far from their experience on the road. Their hard-core schedules require long days that end at 4 a.m. and the days, which can include an 8 a.m. lobby call, are filled with travel between cities, little sleep or exercise, back-to-back media interviews, and preparation for the next show. Now, imagine keeping that intense pace over twenty-four months: U2’s 360 tour launched in 2009, consisted of several hundred concerts, and spanned more than two dozen countries and six continents over two years. (Cher, yes, Cher, in her sixties, has also kept up one of the longest tour schedules ever, performing to over 5.88 million fans in twenty countries in 2004–2005.) A touring rock star’s daily life is extremely stressful on the body and mind. They must have the stamina and endurance of a professional athlete to keep up with the grueling pace. Maintaining their health is the only way to achieve that. Even if all they can manage on the road is stress management and minimizing the harm they are doing to their bodies, when it comes to health, even a little effort is better than nothing! Eventually, when the tour ends and the pendulum swings back from the extreme to the normal range, they are able to focus on repairing and rebuilding their bodies.

    KIRK DOUGLAS

    (DANNY CLINCH)

    YOU FACE THE SAME CHALLENGES AS ROCK STARS

    I got back together with one of my old bands, Los Desaparecidos. We’re all in our early thirties now. And the last time we did it, we were, like, twenty-one. So after, we’d get up in the morning, no one can walk, no one can bend over. Everyone’s necks are all crooked. It is a super-intense workout. We’ve known people who have gotten even more energetic as they have gotten older, like Bruce. How the hell is he doing this? He’s sixty-whatever years old, sliding on his knees across the stage and doing a three-hour show and killing it. That’s rock & roll, baby! That’s the real deal.

    —CONOR OBERST, SINGER, SONGWRITER, BRIGHT EYES, LOS DESAPARECIDOS

    My guess is that your life can get pretty crazy, too, and probably also follows a similar ebb-and-flow of extremes. Whether you’re a working professional or a full-time parent, you are in demand. The pressures you face may vary in intensity by the minutes or hours or days, and last weeks, months, and even years. And like life, your health exists on this type of spectrum, with complete vitality, energy, and happiness on one end and sickness and disease on the other. Most of us, celebrities included, are somewhere in the middle, moving toward perfect health when we take good care of ourselves, and toward sickness when we don’t. My goal for you, the same one I hold for my rock star clients, is to constantly shift away from the disease side of the spectrum and toward good health. In other words, my focus is to keep you balanced. Look at stars like Carlos Santana, Mick Jagger, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, and Tina Turner. They are living proof that a balanced approach can keep you vibrant and energetic decade after decade.

    BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN AND CONOR OBERST

    (DANNY CLINCH)

    Balancing the enjoyment of life’s pleasures with being mindful of your health is the secret to achieving vitality when you’re living a demanding, work-hard, play-hard life. And it’s also the key to achieving your health goals.

    If you are like me, my clients, or 95 percent of the people who try mainstream diets and fail, you are not perfect. The traditional one-size-fits-all plans don’t work because we are not all one size. Each of us thinks, acts, and lives differently—we may be able to conform to a one-size-fits-all approach for a short time, but over the long erm, we will revert back to who we are as individuals and fail in the one-size-fits-all program.

    Music since the beginning has always been our vehicle to speak to the higher power. Cavemen howling to the skies, slaves working in the cotton fields singing the gospel hymns, cultures of Latin origins like mine . . . everywhere the same message. Singing to God to get through the day. The gospel became R & B and the blues became rock & roll. Once you separate spirit from the music, you’re dead.

    —RUDY SARZO, BASSIST, OZZY OSBOURNE, QUIET RIOT, WHITESNAKE

    You are unique, and so is your situation, by the hour and the day, the week, and the month. Different people have different rhythms. That’s normal. And that is exactly the reason The Rockstar Remedy approach is so successful: It’s all about you. It meets you where you are, based on your life situation, from your current state of health to your career, your relationships, and your goals. My plan teaches you to realistically assess the essence of who you are, where you are now, and what your needs will be in the future. It then gives you the tools to make the appropriate changes for your lifestyle.

    Looking at health from this balanced perspective gives you a real shot at the vitality, focus, and level of performance that a full-on rock star life demands. This is the philosophy I use with my clients. It’s how I live as a practicing natural medicine physician. And it’s what I’m about to teach you.

    MY STORY FROM NATURAL MEDICINE DOCTOR TO TOUR DOCTOR

    My first gig treating rock stars came when I was fresh out of massage school, a ripe nineteen years old. Around that time, a cousin who worked in concert production called me and said that the hugest name in rock & roll wanted a massage in Cleveland and she had volunteered me. Sure, I was in a state of shock, but I gladly accepted the offer. Weirdly enough, I was not nervous. I arrived at the Coliseum with my massage table and confidence in check, secretly looking forward to the massive parties backstage.

    To my dismay, backstage was surprisingly quite quiet. All the artists were in their private dressing rooms and keeping to themselves. Instead of sex, drugs, and, of course, rock & roll, there was meditation music and a spread of organic, vegetarian food, which in those days was very rare and almost unheard-of. There was not an ounce of alcohol backstage. The most intoxicating beverage was Coca-Cola. I was blown away. You mean no one was going to be tearing up hotel rooms? Where were the groupies? Instead, I met their wives. The myth was shattered!

    One of the artists, the sax player, had transformed his dressing room into an Indian temple, complete with incense and candles—he had replaced the placard with his stage name on the door with the spiritual name his guru gave him. I knocked on the door and was welcomed in to where he sat inside, meditating beneath a picture of his Indian guru, who stared at me throughout the massage. As the day went on, I met the rest of the band. Each artist was so thoughtful and down-to-earth. I was taken by their humility and realness. This was not what I had expected. It was so relaxed and focused, a true ego-free zone.

    Most of the band got massages from me, and a medical doctor gave each member B12 shots to help with extra energy for the big performance. And it was big. The band put on a super four-hour marathon show that night as I watched from backstage in awe. The group gave energy to the audience, and I saw how the audience fed appreciation and more energy back to them. In turn, the band got high on the energy from the crowd. It seemed like it could go on forever. And it almost did. The band only left the stage because the venue told them they had to go.

    I will never forget that night as I saw the power of music elevate the energy of a theater to a higher vibration. It’s no wonder that some people feel that going to a concert can be like a religious experience. In that moment, I decided it would be one of my religions, too. It would blend very well with my Catholic upbringing. I was taught to revere saints, so why not add a few more? There was Jimi Hendrix, Patron Saint of the Wah-Wah Pedal; Santana, the Archangel of Long Instrumental Grooves; Keith Richards, Holy Father of the Rhythm Guitar; and, of course, Our Lady Madonna.

    After the show, the band asked me to tour with them as their massage therapist. I had to say no because I was committed to finishing medical school, a decision I regretted for a very long time. Luckily, I had the chance again almost seventeen years later. In the meantime, my decision to massage the band that night changed the course of my life. Production companies stayed in contact with me and booked me whenever bands toured through my cities for the next seventeen years.

    THE RUDE AWAKENING

    I remember sitting in naturopathic school with other students and hearing them talk about how their future practices would be. They would say things like If my patients eat at McDonald’s, I won’t work with them, or I can only work with people who are open to raw food and vegetarianism, or Coffee is the root of all things evil and my patients will not drink it.

    It led me to wonder how these future doctors were going to pay off their student loan bills. Who would be their patients? It hadn’t crossed my mind that my first practice would be touring with rock bands and I would have this dilemma, too.

    When I graduated from seventeen years of medical school, I was so burned out that I decided to take a few months’ sabbatical and do the traveling I had always wanted to do. So I sold my possessions, closed my chiropractic practice, and headed to Europe with a backpack and no hotel reservation. Several months later, one of the bands I had worked with previously got wind I was in Europe. They wanted someone to go on tour and do some natural medicine for them. What a day it was to take a taxi from the youth hostel in Paris where I was sharing a room with six people to the very swanky Paris hotel where I would meet the group!

    I had my massage tables sent to Europe along with a natural medicine pharmacy of herbs, vitamins, and acupuncture needles. I was excited about the prospect of incorporating all of the healing modalities I had learned into one practice.

    I was in for a rude awakening! My visions of the ultimate natural medicine practice quickly vanished. After Paris, the band headed to Amsterdam. Need I say more? It became clear that these musicians were just as committed to revelry and debauchery as they were to their health. The preventive medicine I knew turned into harm reduction for hangovers and sexually transmitted disease. What to do? Although this wasn’t the kind of natural medicine I intended to practice, I put my judgments aside and learned to use my medicines any chance I got. As a doctor, I needed to experience this. This is how I learned to meet people where they are and make small changes where I could. I discovered it is possible to be healthy and have a lot of fun, too.

    Eventually I returned to the United States and began practicing holistic medicine in a proper practice in San Francisco and now in New York City. Through these practices and my interactions with my clients, I began to realize that the issues of normal people were very much the same as the issues and circumstances faced by my celebrity clients. As I treated more and more patients with crazy work schedules, demanding parental duties, and an array of social obligations, I realized that just about everyone is living extreme lifestyles these days. That’s why it’s so important to take advantage of opportunities to improve our health wherever they appear. I found myself using the same harm reduction techniques and negotiations with my patients as I had used on tour to keep musicians functioning when they were under the stress of grueling schedules. I learned to teach patients that they could improve the quality of their lives without changing the essence of who they are and what they love to do. This is the philosophy of The Rockstar Remedy: improve the quality of your life and health so that you can keep doing what you love to do.

    WHY ROCK STARS MAKE INCREDIBLE SELF-HELP GURUS

    Aside from the fact that musicians face many of the same stressors as we do, why should we look to them as models of health and wellness? Let me give you two reasons.

    1  Rock stars don’t believe in aging. People always talk about how great musicians look for their age. Think about it—Madonna, Mick Jagger, Bruce Springsteen—none of them seems to look their age, and all of them can perform with as much energy and intensity as they did decades ago. You know why? Because rock stars don’t buy into the idea of aging. Legendary artists don’t wake up every morning thinking about the birth date listed on their driver’s license. They couldn’t care less. To be honest with you, neither could I.

    Most people define their health based on what statistics tell them should be happening to their bodies at a certain age. But just because you are older doesn’t mean a certain condition is normal for you. Is arthritis common for someone who is seventy years old? Yes. But it’s not normal. I want you to consider where you want to be in terms of your health, regardless of your age or current medical situation, and I will help you achieve that state. The program in this book will stretch your imagination about what’s possible for your optimal health, raise your expectations about how incredible you can look and feel, and enhance your longevity in the same way rock icons have learned to live forever.

    I am inspired daily by the younger generation, both creatively and personally. Most of my friends are half my age. Those are the people who have bold new ideas.

    —DAVE NAVARRO, GUITARIST, JANE’S ADDICTION

    You have to get serious with life at some point. With most people, it doesn’t happen until they’re old. When you’re a teenager, you just deny it. Forty years of denial and when this teen finally hits fifty, he’s confronted with a doctor who tells him the truth.

    —STEVEN TYLER, SINGER, SONGWRITER, MULTI-INSTRUMENTALIST, AEROSMITH

    2  Rock stars are revolutionaries. They realize that the negative experiences in life can be even more powerful and transformative than the positive ones. And people with revolutionary spirits are generally willing to take responsibility for the negative places they have reached in their lives and make positive efforts toward change.

    That’s why so many rock stars are drawn to natural medicine. They don’t think inside the box, and through years of trial and error, they’ve learned that they can’t make their symptoms go away with chemical treatments or a handful of pills. Most of the artists in this book have experienced some sort of physical issue that has led them to alternative medicine. Once there,

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