[gtranslate]

AI Healing Data Center

You always remember, life is beautiful!

Please log in to use.

It is used to integrate the text records of your psychological Q&A sessions with AI. By collecting the content of your psychological interactions over a period of time (such as weekly Q&A sessions, monthly concerns, long-term growth trajectories, etc.), the system will use the AI dialogue model for in-depth analysis and automatically generate a psychological trend report with a clear structure and professional language.

Please log in to use.

It is used to integrate the text records of your psychological tests with AI, combine them with the selected report type (such as weekly, monthly, quarterly or semi-annual summary), automatically identify emotional themes, distress patterns and improvement suggestions, and output a personalized psychological test analysis text.

Please log in to use.

View personal course evaluation records and intelligent guidance for each subject, support deletion and viewing of details, and conveniently locate to further deepen learning and systematic management.

Please log in to use.

Summarizes painting and AI interaction data by week, month, and year, displays trend comparisons and key recommendations, and supports archiving and exporting

◉ Japanese Dietary Therapy: Salmon Porridge

Japanese Dietary Therapy: Salmon Porridge

◉ Japanese Dietary Therapy: Salmon Porridge

I. Recommended Dietary Therapy and Reasons

Recommended dishes:Salmon porridge (a gentle source of protein)

Recommended reasons:This lesson trains reaction time from one to ten seconds. The gentle protein porridge provides support, helping you pause chewing and swallowing, avoiding an immediate response and not being swayed by your first instinct.

2. Recipe and Method

Recipe (1–2 servings):

  • 60 g japonica rice
  • 850 ml of clean water
  • 60g of cooked salmon flakes
  • A little shredded ginger, optional.
  • A pinch of salt

practice:

  1. Wash the main ingredients thoroughly, and prepare the parts that need to be soaked, peeled, sliced, or cut into small pieces first.
  2. Once the white rice porridge has been cooked until soft, add the chopped cooked salmon and cook briefly to allow the fish to naturally blend with the porridge.
  3. If using fish, shellfish, or chicken, ensure the ingredients are fresh and fully cooked; if you have a sensitive stomach, prioritize steaming, boiling, or slow cooking.
  4. Keep the seasoning light, with less salt, sugar, and oil, and avoid using spicy or strong flavors that overpower the ingredients.
  5. During the cooking process, you can slow down your movements and treat washing, cutting, boiling, and serving as a small exercise to return to the present moment.
  6. Let it cool slightly after serving before eating to avoid it being too hot or too cold, thus reducing additional irritation to the stomach.
  7. Take your first bite slowly to appreciate the temperature, aroma, and texture. If you have a poor appetite that day, you can eat a small amount without forcing yourself to finish it.

3. Small rituals for body and mind

When preparing salmon porridge, you can first arrange the ingredients neatly, noticing their color, shape, and texture. This small action can help shift your attention away from emotional reactions, relationship stress, or self-blame and bring it back to the present moment.

While waiting for the food to soften or for the soup to rise, give yourself three slow breaths. You don't need to explain, respond, or fix everything immediately; just let your body know that it's safe at this moment.

When you take your first bite, focus on the temperature, aroma, and soft texture. You can gently tell yourself: I'm taking care of myself; I'm willing to slow down; I can choose my next step again.

4. Dietary Therapy Experience Record

  1. Record the time of consumption: whether it is breakfast, lunch, dinner, or a meal to settle down after emotional fluctuations.
  2. Observe changes in stomach comfort, body temperature, mental stability, and mood intensity within 30–60 minutes after consumption.
  3. If you consume it on days with high emotional reactions, relationship triggers, or significant self-blame, you can record whether it helps you slow down or gives your body a greater sense of security.

V. Instructional Videos (approximately 3–5 minutes)

Video Title:Salmon Porridge: Japanese Dietary Therapy for Digestive Health and Emotional Well-being

6. Precautions

  • Dietary therapy for gastrointestinal issues should be small, mild, and light. It is not recommended to force yourself to finish a meal when you have an upset stomach.
  • If you are allergic to fish, shellfish, soy products, yams, sesame, tea, or fermented foods, please substitute with suitable ingredients.
  • Those with gastritis, gastrointestinal diseases, pregnancy, chronic diseases, special nutritional restrictions, or currently taking medication should prioritize following the advice of medical professionals and nutritionists.

hint:This recipe is for daily physical and mental well-being and is not a substitute for any medical diagnosis or treatment. If you experience emotional distress, noticeable or persistent physical symptoms, please seek professional help promptly.

Intelligently recommend dietary therapy combinations according to the course stage, which are low-burden, highly nutritious, easy to operate and replaceable; load them to the content box on the right with one click, so you can eat well and make rapid progress.

Please log in to use.

Record key progress and reflections by unit, automatically summarize and visualize trends, support attachments and reminders, and help you steadily achieve your goals with full traceability.