Archive for diet


May
24

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I happened to be in Upstate New York this past weekend for my sister’s nursing graduation. She is the first registered nurse in our family and I am very proud of my baby sis! I told her I’ll be needing a loan since she is going to be making big bucks, but maybe I won’t need a loan per se, she can just pay me back the money she borrowed years ago. I guess we’ll work it out and both parties will be satisfied.

Out of your element

Isn’t it funny how you find yourself doing things in excess, while on vacation? I found myself partaking in some food I don’t normally eat, but even fitness gurus have to enjoy themselves and besides, how often does your sister graduate and become a registered nurse? I justified my eating of cake and ice cream with the above statement and it made great sense to me at the time, until I awoke the next morning feeling like “doo doo” on a stick because sugar and dairy really don’t agree with me. I tend to do weird things with no justification when I am out of my element…what about you?

TV sparring with a 3 year old

When you are thirty something it just doesn’t make sense to fight with a three year old, or does it? I deserve to watch TV too,even if it is his house. I don’t think a 3 year old understands that not everyone wants to watch Nick Jr. It might be entertaining for them, but its like the equivalent of hearing my old college professor talk about rocks. Did I say rocks?  I meant to say Geology…isn’t that the “edumacated” way to say it? Anyway, 3 year olds have bedtimes and I finally got my chance to grab the remote and watch something for the big kids! l can’t believed I was celebrating my nephews bedtime because I wanted to watch TV. I felt guilty but only for a minute, and then it set in that he was sleep and “Uncle D” finally was in peace.

Channel Surfing

I was flipping through channels and started watching a health report. It caught my eye because they were talking about the amount of sugar in soft drinks, but took it a step further. The report went as far as to predict how many pounds you could lose if you gave up soft drinks and it was as much as 20 pounds in one year! I knew this and if you have been reading the blog, ya’ll know how I feel about soda ,so I won’t go into it. After the report finished I started thinking about other drink rituals contributing to extra poundage. Hmmmm?

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The morning coffee

Could I give up coffee? Could you give up coffee? I asked myself that very question and you might want to ask yourself the same one. I don’t think coffee is bad, but some people take it to the extreme. For instance, I have observed people at Starbucks who put enormous amounts of sugar in their coffee. I wonder if they like the coffee or is it the sugar they like? Is this the only cup they are going to drink? I am going to make an assumption, and it is based on my own experience and here goes… no one only drinks one cup of coffee! Most people I know are two “cuppers” and you have a select few who are multiple “cuppers”. I don’t think they know how many added calories they are taking in with their coffee addiction. If you think I am off my rocker and too obsessed with this, take a look at all the sugary things you eat or drink before 12 pm in the form of coffee, danish, doughnuts, and even that innocent cup of juice. If your regular morning diet consists of any of the items I just listed, it will stall your weight loss efforts. Remember, the little things add up and can work for you, or against you. See you on the lean side!

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Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist
Certified Nutrition and Weight Management Specialist
Certified Exercise Foundations Specialist
Certified Fitness Testing Specialist

Categories : diet
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Hey… I took a break from posting today. I asked a good friend of mine to do a guest post for me. Check out my friend Bobbie and run on over to Bobbie’s Babbles at bobbiesbabbles.blogspot.com

Find your own Loveliness

Why do I desire to be thin? To be honest, because I like the way I look and feel when I am “thin”. Right now, thin would be 132 pounds. I presently weigh 139 pounds. When I got married 20 years ago, my thin was 126 pounds. Let me say here, it’s not that I want to be 126 pounds or 132 pounds. It’s just that when I felt my best, my most attractive, my healthiest and happiest with the way I looked and felt in my clothing, I got on the scale and those were the numbers. I didn’t work towards those numbers, those numbers reflected my body at that time. Although I try not to let numbers rule my life, the scale does play a pretty large role. My scale and I are friends though, not enemies. How do I feel about 139 lbs? At 48 years old, with 2 children and a sluggish thyroid being treated with medication, pretty damn good. Not totally satisfied, to be truthful, but happy. I continue to try to improve upon my physique with exercise and healthy eating; however, I do these things to attain the body I feel best in, not a body that I saw in a magazine.

The media play a very large role in how women think they should look. Models are stick thin, and actresses, if not stick thin, are extremely svelte [to be kind]. If it’s really true that TV puts ten pounds on you, well then, some of those actresses must be emaciated because on the television they appear [very] thin. Let us remember, their livelihoods are based on how good they look. They spend hours a day working on their bodies, not just with exercising and grooming, but massaging them, regulating their diets, spray tanning to hide flaws… and lest we forget, potentially nipping, tucking and lifting. Plus, they have personal chefs and nutritionists on staff to help them eat well. How can we non-Hollywood, non-runway ladies attain perfection when having a “perfect body” includes knowing someone with an airbrush? No matter how “perfect” they get in real life, what we see in a magazine has been airbrushed and Photoshopped.

If society slowly began to show untouched ”normal” sized woman modeling and “normal” sized women on television, would our vision of ourselves change too? In a sense, yes. In another sense, no. I think we would still aspire to look like those glamorous, beautiful, and sexy women we see. However, we would just be a little larger — which would probably make a lot of women starving themselves, healthier.

It’s so ridiculous, though. Why do we try to be someone to whom we are not ethnically or chronologically or genetically alike? This is what it really comes down to. You need to aspire to your “own” greatness and not that of someone else. If you are 5’2″, how can you ever hope to look like the model who is 5’11″? If you are from an Hispanic ancestry that for generations has been popping out black haired, black eyed beauties, you are just setting yourself up for heartache and years of frustration if you are looking for a Nordic complexion and blond hair. Ironically, my Nordic looking girlfriend went to a university in Texas where a large majority of the girls were blonde and blue-eyed, and it was the brunettes and girls with dark complexions who stood out and were sought out. Look inside yourself. Look at your outside self. YOU know when you are looking and feeling and dressing your best. Follow that feeling. Strive for your own loveliness and not someone else’s.

If you’ve ever loved another, you know that you accept them for their wonderful qualities as well as their faults. You try not to be judgmental.  You don’t expect them to be what they aren’t, nor what they can’t be. Your love for them allows them to be themselves. Well, see yourself with those eyes, those non judgmental eyes. Not the eyes of someone who wants to love that person if they were only…

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Check out this video which points out two things:

You really don’t need large amounts of protein all the time to build muscle like “they” would have you believe.

Muscle is lost through inactivity ( hint hint) and not through protein consumption.

c3da32e4c1392a43cd93b49f87fb971f Exercise Training: The Protein Paradox
Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist
Certified Nutrition and Weight Management Specialist
Certified Exercise Foundations Specialist
Certified Fitness Testing Specialist

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I had something totally different to post for you today, but I came across this and wanted to share it. This comes from Mike Geary who is the author of Truth About Abs. I know many of you might work in offices and pop your food in the microwave to warm it up without thinking much about it. Its time you start thinking! I gave up my microwave over 4 years ago and I don’t miss it at all. Check out the article and if you are interested in Truth About Abs you can go HERE

Is Your Microwave Cooking Making You Sick?

A look at how microwaved food can negatively affect your health
by Catherine Ebeling – RN, BSN & Mike Geary – Certified Nutrition Specialist
co-authors – The Fat Burning Kitchen

Do you know what (besides a television) is in almost every home in America? It’s a microwave oven. Because microwave ovens are quick and easy and don’t take up much space, they are used for meal preparation in the home, at the office, and even restaurants. Even your favorite healthy restaurant may depend on these electrical devices to quickly heat up or cook foods. So, the question here is —

Are microwave ovens safe, and is it ok to eat the food cooked in them?
Before we look at the science of how microwaved food can affect your blood chemistry and negatively affect your health, let’s look at a bigger picture, common-sense thought process about this…
If you think about it from this perspective, the human digestive system evolved over tens of thousands of years to digest food that was either raw or cooked in water or by heat.  However, food cooked via microwaves is a totally alien and unknown cooking method to the human digestive system.
It’s just common sense that such a radically different cooking method will alter the chemistry of the food to negatively impact our health.
Now onto a little more science…

Let’s take a look at how microwaves ovens work
Microwaves are a part of the whole electromagnetic spectrum of energy that includes light waves and radio waves. They travel at the speed of light–which is about 186,282 miles per second. So how does that oven heat up the food so fast?
Inside the microwave oven, there is a “magnetron” which is a tube full of electrons. The electrons in the microwave oven react with magnetic and electronic energy and become micro wavelengths. This is the radiation that interacts with the molecules in food.
Food molecules have a positive and negative end, kind of like the way a magnet has a north and a south polarity. The electrons from the magnetron produce wavelengths that react with the positive and negative parts of the food molecules. The food molecules then start vibrating, up to several million times a second. This molecular “vibration” is what creates the heat in the food.
This agitiation deforms the molecules in food and creates new unnatural radiolytic compounds previously unknown to nature. These strange foreign compounds in microwaved food have been shown to damage the blood, the digestive system, and our immune systems.
Microwave ovens have been actually been around for about 40 or so years, but so far, only a couple of in-depth scientific studies have been done on them.

Research showing negative health impacts of eating microwaved food
Extensive research, though, was conducted in both Switzerland and Russia on microwaved foods and their effects on the human body. Both studies concluded that microwaving foods significantly deteriorated the nutrient value of the food, distorted protein molecules in the food, and created new, radically unnatural compounds. Most alarming, however, was that the subjects’ health deteriorated from eating the microwaved foods.
Their findings included:

  • Blood hemoglobin (the extremely important oxygen-carrying component of the blood) decreased significantly after eating microwaved foods.
  • White blood cell count rose, (as it does in response to an infection).
  • LDL cholesterol (the bad cholesterol) increased, and HDL cholesterol (the good cholesterol) decreased.
  • Carcinogenic (cancer-causing) agents in foods increased.
  • Higher incidence of digestive system cancers.

The Russian scientists found the microwave oven significantly scary enough to actually ban its use–up until recently.
When food is cooked in a microwave oven, it has:

  • Significantly less B vitamins, vitamin C, vitamin E, essential minerals and fats.
  • Broken down and de-natured proteins.
  • Loss of vital enzymes and phytochemicals.

And here is a really interesting study—done on grain germination:
The grain watered with microwaved (and cooled) water would not not even germinate or grow! It’s pretty obvious that microwaving changed the water chemically and destroyed its ability to nourish a plant.

Ok, so maybe it’s ok to just heat leftovers in the microwave oven once in a while?

NO! Actually, food heated in a microwave is heated unevenly creating super-heated spots and cool spots. Those cool spots may actually harbor bacterial growth such as salmonella, and you end up with food poisoning.
In addition, when you use plastic containers or plastic wrap in contact with your food, you end up getting all sorts of nasty chemicals like di(ethylhexyl)adepate, or DEHA, (a carcinogen), Bisphenol-A or BPA (a cancer-causing agent in plastics) and xenoestrogens (synthetic estrogens) in your food!
In one recent study, it was found that carcinogenic ingredients in plastic wrap were 10,000 times the FDA limit for safety!
Exposure to BPA, used in the manufacture of polycarbonate and other plastics, has been shown to cause reproductive problems and erectile dysfunction, and has been linked with cardiovascular disease and diabetes in humans.
Xenoestrogens are really nasty synthetic estrogens that seem to show up everywhere. In men, xenoestrogens can cause low sperm counts and feminization (like the dreaded “man boobs”) and breast cancer and reproductive problems in women. Xenoestrogens promote weight gain around the belly and chest in men, and in women, it shows up as fat in the butt, hips, thighs and the back of arms.
So, in addition to being really unhealthy, microwaved foods can make you fat!
Parents should never warm breast milk or formula in the microwave oven—not only can it superheat the milk and burn the baby, but microwaving destroys the very valuable nutrients, enzymes and protein vital to babies’ growth!
And here is something really scary: in 1991, a patient received blood that had been warmed in a microwave oven. That patient died of a severe anaphylactic reaction to the blood. The microwaving created something totally unrecognizable by the body!
If you want to be safe, healthy and LEAN, avoid your microwave—totally.  Personally, I threw out my microwave about 6 years ago and haven’t even missed it!
There are far healthier and better alternatives:

  • Eat vegetables and fruit raw preferably, or if cooked, sauté lightly (with a little water and some grass-fed butter) or steam until tender crisp in a pan on the stove.
  • Heat water for tea, etc in a pan or tea-kettle instead of the microwave—or, better yet– is to get a steaming hot water tap—I love these things!
  • Plan ahead and defrost frozen foods in the refrigerator.
  • Heat up ALL leftovers over low heat in a pan or in a toaster oven in aluminum foil (it still only takes 4-5 minutes to heat leftovers)

If you must use a microwave (and I don’t know why you would!), use only glass containers instead of plastic.
Or you may want to try this–small countertop convection ovens are great for cooking foods faster and more evenly than a regular oven or on the stove. My favorite little convection oven is the Flavorwave oven from US Wellness Meats, a GREAT site for grass-fed beef too!
You can actually cook a frozen 15-oz. ribeye is in 20 minutes, and it is delicious; browned, tender and juicy. These little convection ovens will broil, bake, fry, roast, grill or steam your favorite foods, including meat, chicken, and vegetable. It takes 20-30% less time than a regular oven, and uses about 75% less energy.
This is a far healthier option than a cancer-causing, nutrient-robbing, microwave oven!

I hope you enjoyed Mike’s article!
Darren McDuffie
Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist
Certified Nutrition and Weight Management Specialist
Certified Exercise Foundations Specialist
Certified Fitness Testing Specialis

Categories : diet
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Hey… check out this video I recorded. What do you think? Do diets work? What are your struggles or successes with diets. Leave me a comment on the blog.

Darren McDuffie
Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist
Certified Nutrition and Weight Management Specialist
Certified Exercise Foundations Specialist
Certified Fitness Testing Specialist

Categories : diet
Comments (1)
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