Tuesday, January 29, 2008

 

It's 2008  many Americans are heading back to the gym or perhaps making first time appearances. It’s very important for us to choose the most comfortable fitness apparel for our fresh start. You’ll be less likely to put that pricey gym membership to waste if you’re equipped with the appropriate clothing. CoolMax and Lycra are two prominent materials in the world of fitness apparel, that will help to provide comfort for your workouts.

 

CoolMax: This is the fabric designed for a super sweaty workout like the jogging or playing basketball. CoolMax moves moisture away from the body and enhances fabric drying rate, keeping you feeling cool and dry.

 

Lycra: Is the ideal material to wear if you’re looking for freedom of movement. Lycra would be perfect for a gymnast, yogi or dancer. It’s meant to be close-fitting and stretchy, yet maintain its own shape, it’s often added to other fabrics in order to enhance stretchiness.

 

You may want sneakers lined with CoolMax to keep your feet from dampening during your 30 minute run on the treadmill. You could prefer a Lycra based pant for your stretchy yoga class. Whatever you comfort needs might be, choose the apparel that suits you best!

All | Clothing | Fitness | Tips
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On Saturday – after a long struggle with anorexia – Kirsten Haglund looked curvy, toned and confident as she strutted her way to the Miss America crown.

Afterward, the 19-year-old Broadway hopeful, who belted out "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" for her talent, said she will devote her yearlong reign to raising eating-disorder awareness with the Childrens Miracle Network.

At the height of her illness, anorexia wreaked havoc on her body and threatened her relationships with others, the Farmington Hills, Mich., native told the Associated Press.

"I would feel fatigued walking up six stairs," she said. "I was a completely different person. It's not a pretty sight."

Now, thanks to regular exercise and a healthy lifestyle, Haglund is proud of developing a healthy relationship with food – and her own body.

"You have to have curves, you can't look like a stick-thin model," said the new title-holder, who confirmed that before the competition, she happily ate the chocolates left on her pillow in her Las Vegas hotel suite.

"Yes, oh my gosh, yes," the 5-foot 8-inch blonde (who doesn't disclose her weight to avoid setting standards for scale-obsessed youths) told the AP. "I love chocolate. Chocolates are a girl's best friend."

While Haglund said she wasn't about to "let myself go," she says she doesn't plan on skipping any meals over the year. "I'm going to enjoy my food."

SOURCE: PEOPLE

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 Monday, January 28, 2008

These 7 useful tips will help you to stay full longer:

Whip up a side of potato salad.

Surprise! White potatoes aren’t the dietary demons Atkins devotees led us to believe. Potatoes contain a type of starch known as natural resistant starch that acts a lot like fiber once it’s in your digestive system, according to Katherine Beals, PhD, RD, a nutrition professor at the University of Utah. That means they make you feel full longer, keep your blood sugar level after a meal, and may even reduce body fat.

But there’s a trick to maximizing this benefit: Chilling cooked potatoes nearly doubles the amount of natural resistant starch in a serving. Try an Italian-style potato salad. Boil peeled, sliced potatoes until they’re fork-tender; drain, and toss them with salt, pepper, and your favorite red wine vinaigrette. Cool the salad in the fridge, and garnish it with chopped parsley before you dig in. Not a spud fan? Try black beans (or any other bean) or split peas, warm or cold, for the same benefit.?

Front-load your day’s calories.
We all know that breakfast helps keep your waistline trim, but here’s more solid proof: In a recent study, University of Texas at El Paso researchers found that people who ate break-fast took in five percent fewer calories over the course of the day. That’s only about 100 calories (if you typically eat the 2,000 calories per day recommended for adult women), but, over time, it adds up. Saving 100 calories a day for one year equals a loss of more than 10 pounds. Experts estimate most of us eat 20 percent of our daily calories at breakfast, 30 percent at lunch, and 50 percent at dinner. “You would probably be better off shifting more of your total daily calories to the morning,” says lead author John de Castro, PhD. If you can’t stomach a bigger breakfast (keep it healthy with a combo of low-fat protein, whole grains, and fruit or veggies), add a mid-morning snack (a container of yogurt, some fruit and a few whole-grain crackers, or half a sandwich).

Pull out the blender.
Froth beats fat. This is one of the best and least-known discoveries of professor Barbara Rolls, PhD, author of The Volumetrics Eating Plan. Rolls found that study subjects who drank smoothies and other drinks blended for at least twice as long as necessary ate 12 percent less?—?and felt fuller—than those who drank beverages blended for a shorter period. Why? Blending is a no-calorie way to increase serving size by adding air. Adding low- or no-cal ingredients to entrees (such as lettuce and tomato on top of turkey burgers or alongside broiled fish) has a similar effect: They work by increasing the amount of water instead of air.

Fool your sweet tooth with scent.
A whiff of vanilla may be the antidote for your craving for a double dip of Ben & Jerry’s New York Super Fudge Chunk ice cream. Here’s the theory, according to experts: The inherent sweetness of vanilla sends neuropeptides (gut-to-brain messengers) into a kind of sensory overload that fools you into feeling like you’ve satisfied your sweet tooth. Any vanilla scent?—?extract, body lotion, or a candle?—?has a similar effect. A special spray designed to curb appetite may work, too. One to try: Scentology’s Crave Control (read more about here), which was developed by Rachel Herz, PhD, a psychologist at Brown University’s Medical School and author of The Scent of Desire.

Stock up on lentil soup.
According to a new study from The Cochrane Collaboration, an independent health-research organization, people on diets that call for fiber-rich, complex-carb-loaded foods like lentils, sweet potatoes, and apples lost a little over two pounds more in five weeks, compared with people on low-fat or other types of diets. These foods rank low on the glycemic index (GI), which means they’re less likely to cause blood sugar spikes and leave you feeling hungry.

>>Get a list of food low on the glycemic index.

Snack smart.
By now, you know that snacking doesn’t have to be a bad thing for your waistline. But did you know that the right snacks can actually suppress ghrelin, the hunger hor-mone? James Kenney, PhD, nutrition-research specialist at the Pritikin Longevity Center and Spa in Florida, says low-calorie, nutrient-rich foods like strawberries (49 calories a cup), broccoli (20 calories a cup), and sweet potatoes (103 calories—and ready in a microwave minute) are your best defense. “They make you feel satiated on a lot fewer calories than Pringles do,” Kenney says.

Breathe hunger away.
Stress causes your body to pump out cortisol. And this, ultimately, creates a resistance to leptin, a hormone that helps you feel full. As a result, says Mark Hyman, MD, integrative-medicine specialist and author of Ultrametabolism, the more stressed out you are (and the more often you feel that way), the less able you are to tell when you’re full. Short-circuit the problem with this stress-reducing breathing exercise: Exhale fully, counting to 5 as you release tension from your body; let your shoulders slump as if you’re a deflated balloon. Then, count to 5 as you inhale gently, fully, down through the lungs into your belly; hold for a 4-count. Exhale again, repeating the first step. Continue for 5 minutes; practice a few times each day—or whenever you feel inclined to make tracks to the snack stash.

SOURCE: Health.com

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 Saturday, January 26, 2008

 Read the story of one beautiful journalist's journey to try several extreme weight loss methods. The great weight race: Which extreme weight-loss methods really work?

 Try Fitness magazine's Drop a jean size workout.

 Watch Ricki Lake workout with Richard Simmons.

 Pledge to help the dog you love stay fit!

 Tips to Stop Yoyo dieting.

 Madonna spends 12 million dollars on her private gym?

 Read this touching story written by a husband who watched his wife struggle with anorexia. “Anorexia nearly killed my wife”

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 Thursday, January 24, 2008

In a recent study U.S. researchers found that diets high in protein help to keep hunger in check.

They found that protein does the best job at keeping a hunger hormone in check, while carbohydrates and fats may well deserve their current nasty reputation.

The study, which will appear in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, looked at the effectiveness of different nutrients at suppressing ghrelin, a hormone secreted by the stomach that stimulates appetite. Suppression of ghrelin is one of the ways that you lose your appetite as you begin to eat.

The researchers gave 16 people three different beverages, each with varying levels of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. They took blood samples before the first beverage, then every 20 minutes for six hours afterward, measuring ghrelin levels in each sample.

The Findings:

  • Fats were the worst at suppressing ghrelin.
  • Proteins were the best suppressor of ghrelin in terms of the combination of the depth and duration of suppression.
  • They found that eating carbohydrates resulted in a strong ghrelin suppression at first, but ghrelin levels rebounded with a vengeance, rising to an even higher level. Basically carbohydrates proved to eventually make people hungrier.

SOURCE

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