Superfoods for Fighting the Flu

October 20, 2006 on 2:45 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments Off

Breakouts of the flu are responsible for millions of lost hours at both work and home each year, not to mention many miserable days trying to recover. If you’re wondering what you can do to naturally boost your immunity and prepare your body’s defenses, study the foods you’re eating, look at your family’s meals, and make the changes needed to ensure everyone is eating a well-balanced diet abundant in nutrient-dense fruits and vegetables, low-fat proteins, and complex carbohydrates.
Black currants are even richer in vitamin C than oranges, containing approximately three times the recommended daily intake for adults. It’s imperative that you get plenty of vitamin C since it helps prevent infections and helps keep the immune system healthy.

Pork has high levels of zinc and selenium, both of which help keep your immune system strong. It’s also one of the best sources of B vitamins and contains only a little more total fat than beef. So be sure to include lots of pork entrees in your menu planning.

Mix up your morning breakfast with a glass of grapefruit juice instead of orange juice for a vitamin C-rich drink that’s both sweet and tart. However, you should check with your doctor if you’re on certain medications for blood pressure, AIDS, anxiety, or hay fever, as mixing grapefruit juice with certain drugs can lead to dangerous toxicity.

Brussel sprouts are a great vegetable source of vitamin C, are high in fiber and contain lots of folate as well. They improve anticarcinogenic glucosinolates, which have important cancer-fighting properties. They’re a great addition in a stew to provide lots of fl-busting nutrients.

Yogurt that includes live cultures has a positive effect on your GI tract, and as a result, helps the body purge the germs from the body more quickly and effectively and fight the flu. You want your yogurt to contain the active culture L. acidophilus, which is also helpful in fighting off yeast infections.

Potatoes are one of the most affordable sources of vitamin C, and nicely complement any entrée with their high levels of potassium and fiber. The skin contains the most fiber and the flesh just under the skin contains the most vitamin C. Fresh potatoes are the best source of vitamin C. Be careful of how you choose to prepare them, as soaking them in water robs them of their germ-busting vitamin C.

Whole wheat pasta is also rich in niacin, fiber, and iron. Its complex carbohydrates are an essential part of a healthy diet that will keep your immune system strong. Simply substitute recipes calling for traditional pasta with the whole wheat variety instead for a delicious and nutritious twist on your favorite pasta dishes.

Brad Bahr is the editor of many health related websites and publications. He has been testing and reviewing nutritional supplements for over 20 years. After trying hundreds of products, he recommends one supplement above all others for renewing health and energy: http://www.hgh-facts.com

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Superfoods that Squash Stress

October 19, 2006 on 8:18 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments Off

Life has a way of getting the best of us some days. Whether it’s working too many hours, shuffling your kids all over town for their activities, taking care of your household, or dealing with personal or family matters, stress can take its toll on you physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. But there are simple steps you can take to combat stress, starting with the foods you eat.

Avoiding caffeine and alcohol is a good start when life’s particularly stressful. Stimulants and depressants like these can both zap your energy and rob you of the fuel you need to successfully cope with tension. Sugary foods should also be avoided as well, as they cause your blood sugar levels to spike then dip rapidly, which can in turn make your energy levels spike and dip at the same rate.

However, there are several superfoods out there that provide you with the energy and nutrition your body needs to keep stress in check

Asparagus, which is high in folic acid, can help level out your moods. Folic acid and vitamin B are key players in producing serotonin, a chemical that gets you into a good mood.

And though we may hear negative things regarding red meat, it’s actually a wise dinner option for a stressed-out family. Beef’s high levels of iron, zinc and B vitamins not only help get you into a good mood, but help you stay there as well. Your local butcher can help you select lean cuts for the healthiest options

Milk really does a body good. Chock full of calcium, protein, antioxidants, and vitamins B2 and B12, it helps strengthen bones and promotes healthy cell regeneration. Paired with a healthy whole-grain cereal choice in the morning, low-fat milk is a great way to start your day and arm yourself to do battle with the stressors that await you. Cottage cheese is also another great dairy choice, and when coupled with a fruit that’s high in vitamin C, it helps the body battle free radicals that run rampant during your most stressed periods.

Almonds are also an awesome choice when it comes to arming yourself against stress. They’re high in magnesium, zinc, as well as vitamins B2, C, and E and unsaturated fats, all which are great warriors against free radicals, which have been shown to cause cancers and heart disease.

Brad Bahr is the editor of many health related websites and publications. He has been testing and reviewing nutritional supplements for over 20 years. After trying hundreds of products, he recommends one supplement above all others for renewing health and energy: http://www.hgh-facts.com

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Knowing Your 5 Primary Senses

October 18, 2006 on 2:15 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments Off

How well do you know your senses? Do you know which of the five primary senses; visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory, taste, is your strongest? Do you maximize this chosen sense to your best advantage in your recreational pastimes? How about in your choice of vocation? Do you choose your partners, friends or work colleagues according to their preferential sense?

We see, hear, touch, smell and taste the world around us and even though we use all our senses to various degrees, we are dominant in one. Our choice of words reveals immediately our preferential sense. There are many ways our vocabulary describes different sense processes and the way we think.

If we know someone who is clever at mimicking voices or is always humming or singing, we say, ‘they have a good ear.’ If someone is gifted at drawing we may say, ‘they have a good eye for detail.’ Apart from knowing more about ourselves, it is interesting to discover which senses are dominant in those around us and then matching them to different ways of thinking.

An easy method to find out is simply to recognize words and phrases that are commonly used. Just turn on the television or radio and listen to an interview. Who is using these phrases?

Someone who is visually dominant may say:

I see what you mean.
I can see the problem.
There is another way of looking at it.
I am glad to see that…

Whereas the person who is aurally dominant may say:

I hear what you are saying.
I am listening to you.
Tell me again.
Spell it out.

On the other hand, the person who prefers tactile and movement may say:

Let’s go through that step by step.
Walk me through the solution.
Let’s take it one point at a time.

When you have become familiar with identifying these sense words and phrases in a conversation, listen and detect which ones you mostly use and then identify those spoken by your conversational partners. Are you similar or different? How does it affect your conversation? If different, do you both express different opinions and viewpoints or does it provide a point of disagreement?

These are big clues in letting you recognize which sense is dominant and how that person thinks; whether they tend to be visually or aurally dominant. You can now use this knowledge at home, work and play.

At Home.

If you are visually dominant, is your partner similar or different? For recreational pastimes, one of you may prefer seeing films, taking photos, drawing or painting, visiting galleries or changing lighting so maximizing visual sense whereas the other may love listening to music and needs to have the background noise such as radio or TV for maximum auditory stimulation.

One partner may enjoy splashing through waves, feeling sea breezes and smelling salt spray to satisfy tactile and olfactory senses, whereas the other prefers to sit on a rock listening to the waves and seabirds.

At Work.

Similar analysis can be made with your work colleagues. Do you work best with someone with similar or different dominant sense? In your work team or office staff, do people have jobs where they can use their strongest sense to best advantage? Do you have a variety of people on your team with different sense preferences?

At Play.

We share pastimes and select friends according to both our own and friend’s dominant sense. Often we have different friends for different pastimes. For example;

Visual dominance:
seeing films, book reading club, decorative and art classes

Auditory dominance:
concerts, singing, foreign language lessons,

Taste dominance:
sharing recipes, trying new foods and wines,

Tactile dominance combined with movement:
dancing, yoga, swimming, jogging, walking, gym

When you have discovered which sense is dominant, you can then use this knowledge to your advantage. All you have to do is listen to the words people use, then choose activities to match their preference. Friends, family and work colleagues will appreciate your sensible approach.

Brad Bahr is the editor of many health related websites and publications. He has been testing and reviewing nutritional supplements for over 20 years. After trying hundreds of products, he recommends one supplement above all others for renewing health and energy: http://www.hgh-facts.com

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Flush the Fat With Smart Food Choices

October 17, 2006 on 7:47 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments Off

Flushing the fat? As crazy as the concept might sound, the Fat Flush Plan can help you reshape your body while detoxifying your system. This low-carbohydrate, three-phase diet regimen was created by nutritionist Ann Louise Gittleman, Ph.D., C.N.S.

Phase 1 of the plan, called The Two-Week Fat Flush, lasts 14 days and is designed to jump-start weight loss. Phase 2, The Ongoing Fat Flush, helps you continue to lose weight, and Phase 3, The Lifestyle Eating Plan, focuses on maintenance.

The Fat Flush Plan was designed to increase metabolism, flush out bloat and to boost the fat burning process. At the core of the plan is the commitment to promote a balanced lifestyle and encourage simple healthy habits that seem to have gone by the wayside in our modern and hectic everyday life.

Every aspect of each phase of the plan is focused on accomplishing this goal: helpful essential fats, amounts of protein, antioxidant-rich vegetables, moderate amounts of fruits, calorie-burning herbs and spices, cleansing diuretic beverages, exercise, journaling and even sleep are addressed.

The Two-Week Fat Flush is based on an average of 1,100 to 1,200 calories daily, and is designed to jumpstart weight loss for dramatic results. It will transform your shape by accelerating fat loss from your body’s favorite fat storage areas - your hips, thighs and buttocks.

The Ongoing Fat Flush is the next step for those individuals who have additional weight to lose but who also want to pursue a more moderate cleansing program and enjoy a bit more variety in food choices while still losing weight. This part of the program is designed for ongoing weight loss, with approximately 1,200 to 1,500 calories each day. This is the phase that will be followed until you reach your desired weight or size.

The Lifestyle Eating Plan is your maintenance program for lifetime weight control. This phase offers over 1,500 calories daily, providing a basic lifelong eating program designed to increase your vitality and well-being for life. You’ll add up to two dairy products and up to two additional friendly carbs.

Phase 3 friendly carbs include more choices from a variety of starchier veggies and nongluten hypoallergenic grains. Foods are always introduced one at a time to make sure there are no allergic reactions and you’re your body tolerates the food well.

Brad Bahr is the editor of many health related websites and publications. He has been testing and reviewing nutritional supplements for over 20 years. After trying hundreds of products, he recommends one supplement above all others for renewing health and energy: http://www.hgh-facts.com

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Top 10 Tips for Gym Newbies

October 17, 2006 on 1:52 pm | In Uncategorized | Comments Off

Beginning a workout regime at the gym can be overwhelming in many different ways. If you haven’t been before (or haven’t been for a long time) it can seem as though everyone knows what they’re doing but you. You worry about looking stupid, or about what people will think about your body, or about whether you’ll remember everything you’ve been told.

The first day is usually okay (because most gyms provide an introductory session on how to operate the machines) - but the second day can be confusing and even embarrassing, unless you’ve signed up with a personal trainer. You’re quite likely to find that you can’t remember which machines you’re supposed to use, or even how they work.

Relax. Everyone goes through it. You’ll find it easier on the third day, and by the fourth you’ll be feeling quite confident. Within weeks you’ll be powering through your exercises as though you were born in the gym!

Here are a few tips that might ease the way in the first few weeks:

1. If you’re a complete beginner, it might be worth your while to sign up with a personal trainer for at least a couple of sessions, until you’re feeling more confident. Otherwise, go with a friend. If you’re both new, you can muddle through together. If your friend is experienced, he or she will help you out.

2. Take a notepad and pen with you for your introductory session. Write down the name of the machine and its position in the gym as well as a few words that will remind you what you’re supposed to do on it. (Some machines can be used in several different ways.)

3. Don’t hesitate to ask a staff member for help if you can’t adjust the machine for your weight and height, or if you can’t remember exactly how it works. They won’t mind showing you again. They want their customers to keep coming back!

4. Don’t push yourself too hard to begin with. If you work out so hard that you can barely walk, you’ll be tempted to miss a day while you recover. One day doesn’t matter much, but if you continually skip days because you’re too sore, you’re likely to drop out altogether. What’s the hurry? After a few weeks, when your body is getting used to the extra exercise, you can increase the intensity.

5. If your knees and ankles react badly to increasing the speed on the treadmill, try increasing the grade instead. You might be pleasantly surprised to find that a slower speed, with the treadmill on an incline, burns more calories than jogging.

6. Smile and nod to the other gym users, but don’t hold up their workout programs by chatting. As you become recognized as a regular, you will find that you gravitate to your own little group - probably people who have the same goals and needs as you do.

7. Wear comfortable clothing - either loose or with plenty of stretch. Avoid the temptation to buy workout gear that’s two sizes too small in the hope that you’ll lose weight quickly. (You might well shed those pounds fast - but if it takes longer that you’d anticipated, you’ll always be conscious of those too-tight clothes.)

8. Don’t worry about being overweight. In a way, it’s good to start off with quite a few excess pounds to lose - your success is much more noticeable than it is on slimmer gym users, and you’ll find the positive comments really motivating. Make sure you get a ‘before’ photo of yourself at the gym when you start out. After a few months, you’ll be amazed at the difference.

9. If you’re considerably overweight, you are likely to find that your stomach gets in the way on some machines. Just do what you can. You might feel better just increasing your fitness and losing some weight on the treadmill for the first month or so, then moving on to the machines when moving and stretching is more comfortable. Consider doing a few laps in the pool (either walking or swimming) as well as your other gym work. The water will help to support your weight and provide variety.

10. Try to find a happy medium between challenging yourself and resting on your laurels. If you can easily manage three sets at the current weight, try increasing it for the first set. If you can do twenty minutes on the treadmill without sweating, then increase either the speed or the grade (or both!) Remember… “if nothing changes, then nothing changes!”

One final tip: once you have decided on your regular gym days, resolve that nothing but an emergency will stop you going. Make your gym attendance a habit - and before too long, the exciting results will have you trying to convert all your friends to becoming exercise lovers too!

Brad Bahr is the editor of many health related websites and publications. He has been testing and reviewing nutritional supplements for over 20 years. After trying hundreds of products, he recommends one supplement above all others for renewing health and energy: http://www.hgh-facts.com

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