Aim and objective: Overcoming emotional over eating for good / personal growth, hence the title!
Tuesday, 24 May 2011
Monday, 23 May 2011
fitness tips!
HOW TO START REVERSE RUNNING
Here are James Bamber’s tips for
running in reverse:
running in reverse:
- Choose a flat, wide running surface free of potholes.
- Identify a distance of 50m to 100m in a straight line and walk it first to check for dips or rocks.
- Beginners often find it helpful to run with a partner. As one runs backwards over a short distance, the other runs forwards.
- Lean back, pushing off from your forefoot to drive backwards.
- Try not to look behind too often.
- Begin by incorporating backward running into your warm-up or cool down. Increase the time and distance you are running in reverse.
- More details: reverserunning
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1389790/Want-fitter-Running-backwards-way-forward.html#ixzz1NBJXKPOb
Saturday, 21 May 2011
Naturally Organic!
Organic food 'can help you lose weight and live longer': How natural fruit and vegetables are packed with more nutrients
By Sean PoulterSwitching to organic produce could help you live longer as well as keeping you healthier and slimmer, say academics.
Fruit and vegetables grown without artificial fertilisers have significantly more key nutrients, including vitamin C.
As a result, going organic can extend average lifespans, typically by 25 days for men and 17 days for women.
Healthier: Fruit and vegetables grown without artificial fertilisers have significantly more key nutrients, including vitamin C
The University of Newcastle study argues it is on a par with the benefit for the country from the national breast cancer screening programme.
It also suggests eating organic is likely to improve general health, highlighting the higher levels of compounds which encourage the body to burn fat. This can help devotees shed the pounds.
The conclusion challenges the Food Standards Agency, which has long dismissed the health gains of organic food.
More...
The results were welcomed by organic advocates who say better health is just one reason shoppers buy the produce.
A reduced use of chemicals, better animal welfare and improved husbandry of the countryside are also cited. The researchers, based at Newcastle’s highly respected School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, reviewed all the most up-to-date research on nutrients found in organic food.
They found that fruit and vegetables grown this way are richer in most of the beneficial substances called secondary metabolites and vitamin C.
Secondary metabolites are said to boost the immune system and protect the body from cell-damaging free radicals.
They include phenolics, tannins, flavanones, carotenoids and fat-burning resveratrol, which are said to help guard against cancer, diabetes and heart disease.
The team took these findings to estimate the life-enhancing effect of switching from eating only conventional fruits and vegetables to the organic versions in the same amounts.
Lead researcher Dr Kirsten Brandt, a senior lecturer in food quality and health, said the figures represent a ‘best guess’ based on all available information. She suggested most people probably would not live any longer but a lucky few could add many months, and even up to five years, to their lives.
Resveratrol is associated with fooling the body into burning fat. As a result, the study said, devotees could live longer because of ‘a corresponding weight loss, or lack of weight gain’.
Peter Melchett, policy director at the organic farming body, the Soil Association, said: ‘There are lots of reasons people choose organic, not least because it is better for the environment, animal welfare and wildlife.
‘Here we have research which demonstrates a significant health benefit.
‘As more science is conducted, we see evidence showing beneficial nutritional differences associated with organic food.’
The FSA caused an outcry in 2009 when it published research stating there was no significant increase in nutrients in organic produce.
The Newcastle study will be published in the next issue of the journal Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences.
Saturday, 14 May 2011
organic fuel
Vegetables carrots brocoli kale chard beets lettuce green & red peppers zucchini onions garlic spring onions tomatoes avocados spinach cabbage dandelion Fruits apples, fresh berries bananas oranges grapefruits grapes kiwi pineapple coconut mango currants pears peaches Grains buckwheat groats oats rye brown rice millet Sea Plants kelp nori sweetness raw honey brown rice syrup raw agave syrup raw coconut mectar stevia Seasoning sea vegetables, miso, nutritional yeast flakes cayenne cumin garlic Himilayan pink salt, sea salt Flavours carob powder, raw cocoa vanilla cinnamon powder nutmeg allspice Eating food it it's natural state is healthy,especially for cancer patients, dietary fibre, living enzymes, nutrients, vitamins and minerals are important to give the immune system a boost and thus make the cells sing with vitality! l | |||||||||
Sunday, 8 May 2011
Tips!
Three changes that will have a big impact
1. Start each morning with some protein - eg eggs, meat, almonds and natural yoghurt.
2. Drink a squeeze or slice of lime in water.
3. Stretch for five-10 minutes before bed. This will help you unwind and consequently help you sleep better.
1. Start each morning with some protein - eg eggs, meat, almonds and natural yoghurt.
2. Drink a squeeze or slice of lime in water.
3. Stretch for five-10 minutes before bed. This will help you unwind and consequently help you sleep better.
Sample menu
Breakfast: green beans with quarter of an avocado and 100g protein.
Lunch: a two-egg omelette made with spinach and protein, green salad.
Snack: 50g protein.
Dinner: protein (100g) with spinach, broccoli and red peppers.
Snack: Five brazil nuts.
Breakfast: green beans with quarter of an avocado and 100g protein.
Lunch: a two-egg omelette made with spinach and protein, green salad.
Snack: 50g protein.
Dinner: protein (100g) with spinach, broccoli and red peppers.
Snack: Five brazil nuts.
tummy-trimming tips(take note wee piggy)!
YOUR 14-DAY DAY TUMMY-TONING CHECK LIST
- Have three meals and two snacks a day.
- Do 90 minutes of exercise a week.
- No work-outs at weekends.
- Drink two to three litres of still, room-temperature water each day, ideally filtered.
- No alcohol or fizzy drinks.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/you/article-1383046/Health-plan-How-flat-stomach-fast.html#ixzz1LlwXp4oN
Thursday, 5 May 2011
bingeing make you eternally fat / obese(take note)!
A short period of gorging on junk food has a more permanent effects on body size and the way it stores fat – even after the initial weight is lost, the study found.
The gluttony changes fat mass – the percentage of fat in the body – for more than two years making it harder to keep weight off.
A team of researchers from Linköping University, Sweden, asked 18 individuals to stop exercising and eat excessively for four weeks – increasing their energy intake by an average of 70 per cent.
A separate control group ate and exercised as normal.
The binge eating group gained an average of one stone in body weight, which was mostly lost six months later.
However, one year on this group showed an increased fat mass compared to those who ate and exercised normally, the differences were even greater after two and a half years.
The study, published in Nutrition and Metabolism, concluded that it provides evidence that even a short period of excessive eating and a lack of exercise can potentially change an individual's physiology, causing it to be harder to lose and keep off weight.
The study, published in Nutrition and Metabolism, concluded that it provides evidence that even a short period of excessive eating and a lack of exercise can potentially change an individual's physiology, causing it to be harder to lose and keep off weight.
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