Category Archives: Exercise

Sitting is the new Smoking

 How Can I Fit in Exercise at Work?

Fortunately, the way to cure sitting disease is simple: Wake up your muscles (especially the big ones in your legs, butt and core) with just two minutes of movement every 30 minutes!
Here are 10 ways to integrate a little stand-up into your workday and at home:

Set a timer. Use the alarm clock on your phone to remind you it’s time to rise up. Set it, then put your phone out of reach. When you get up to turn it off, try the moves below. Aim for a walk around every hour. Easy!

Strike a plank pose. We’re big fans of this multitasking yoga pose. It’s the ultimate one-move routine that quickly works three major muscle groups — your arms, legs, and core. Lie on your stomach with your feet together and forearms placed on the ground. Your arms are straight down from your shoulders to your elbows. Your toes are tucked as they are in a push up. Tighten up stomach and glutes. Then raise your body off the floor so you form a straight line from your feet to shoulders — keep your head in line. Hold the position for a few seconds — 25 is good, but 45 is better, and build toward 2 minutes….BRAVO!

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Take a quick walk. Head to the bathroom, water cooler, grab a cup of Joe, or meet a coworker to discuss a work issue. Tiny breaks are proven to help. Extra points for a glass of water!

Challenge yourself. How far can you walk at work and still be back at your desk in two minutes?

Head for the stairs. You’ll burn about 29 calories climbing stairs for three minutes — proof that the steps in your office or home are really exercise equipment hiding in plain sight!

Sit on an exercise ball. Keep the big muscles in your legs, butt, and core engaged while you work by perching on a big exercise ball instead of your office chair. Do it for 10-15 minute periods every hour or two throughout the day.

March in place. Tethered to your headphones? Stand up and start marching. Lift those knees! Keep it up for a minute, then do this…

Stand up, sit down, repeat. Keep your back straight and your arms at your sides or held out in front of you (in other words, don’t push off with your hands). Use your thigh and butt muscles to rise from your seat, then slowly sit down again. Repeat as many times as you can.

Just stand up. Your body works 30 percent harder when you’re on your feet. Try a standing desk at work—they’re available these days. Or get a treadmill desk!

At home: Take a commercial break. Prime time’s 14-21 minutes of advertisements every hour give you plenty of time to move around without missing a minute of your favorite shows.

Get Healthy!

Top tips to manage cholesterol naturally

A few simple lifestyle tweaks can keep the cholesterol numbers in the happy zone.

1. Fiber

Increase the intake. Beans, fruit ( not juice), vegetables, whole grains and oats. Psyllium husk and inulin supplementation if necessary.

2. Omega 3

Oily fish ( not fish cooked in oil!!!) such as salmon, mackerel, sardines thrice a week , OR omega 3 capsules as supplements.

3. Nuts

Any nuts but especially walnuts and almonds, they contain good fats. The amount contained in a closed fist. Not salted, sugared or roasted but plain, raw. Nuts are very high in calories and its easy to overdo it, so beware.

4. Olive oil and Vinegar

Olive oil contains a potent mix of antioxidants that can lower “bad” (LDL) cholesterol but leave “good” (HDL) cholesterol untouched. Studies showed that apple cider vinegar can lower cholesterol and triglyceride levels, and also help in improving insulin sensitivity. So make a simple vinaigrette and go for the salad!

4. Exercise

In addition to lowering LDL “bad” cholesterol, regular physical activity can raise HDL “good” cholesterol by up to 10%. The benefits come even with moderate exercise, such as brisk walking, at least 5 days a week.

Get a pedometer and aim for 10,000 steps a day. If you work at a desk, get up and walk around for five minutes every hour.

5. Green tea

Green tea contains compounds that can help lower LDL cholesterol. In a small study conducted in Brazil, people who took capsules containing a green tea extract were able to reduce their total cholesterol.

6. Garlic

Several studies have indicated that garlic and its constituents inhibit key enzymes involved in cholesterol and fatty acid synthesis.

7. Plant sterols or stanols

These are added to foods such as orange juice or yoghurt drinks, and are known to help maintain cholesterol balance.

8. No Smoking

Smoking lowers good – HDL cholesterol and is a known risk factor for heart disease.

9. Soy protein

25g/day of soy protein is FDA approved in lowering of cholesterol and balancing of HDl / LDL.

10. Statins

In some middle-aged men, especially smokers, with coronary artery disease or familial hypercholesterolemia, statins are an important option. They should always be supplemented with CoEnzyme Q10.

Simple ways to Stay Healthy!

 

12 Signs You Need to Eat More Protein

musclemanProtein is an essential macronutrient. We can’t make it. We need to consume protein to stay healthy, fit, happy, and long-lived. But we need to consume the right amount at the right times.

Age

The elderly aren’t as efficient at processing protein. An older person is going to need more protein than a younger person – all else being equal. That goes for resistance training oldsters, puttering around the garden oldsters, and taking an hour to walk around the block oldsters. More protein is better than less.

You’re always hungry.

Of all the macronutrients, protein is the most satiating, and high-protein diets (which are usually also low-carb) are most efficient in reduction in calories. You don’t consciously stop eating. You’re not fighting your desire for food. You simply don’t want it. That’s the perfect antidote to insatiable hunger.

Just try it. Make a point to add an extra 20 grams of protein each meal. So if your stomach resembles a bottomless pit, try increasing your protein intake.

You’re cutting calories.

Traditional calorie-restricted dieting certainly can help you lose body weight, but it also causes the loss of lean muscle mass. That explains why so many people who simply reduce calories to lose weight end up skinny-fat. Luckily, increasing the amount of protein you eat can offset some of the muscle loss caused by calorie restriction.

You’re lifting heavy weights.

With resistance training you can leverage higher protein intakes into more muscle mass and greater strength gains. The more protein available, the greater the response.

You’re exclusively eating plant protein.

For the most part, plant proteins are less efficient than animal proteins. They’re often missing essential amino acids. So increase your overall protein intake to make up for the inefficiencies of plant protein.

You’re engaged in chronic cardio.

If you’re doing endurance training, you’re going to need more protein to stave off the loss of muscle.

You’re craving meat.

Animal research suggests that a specific appetite for protein exists in mammals. So if you’re craving meat, give into it. Don’t ignore the craving.

You’re eating lots of muscle meat.

Muscle meat is a rich source of methionine, the amino acid that is supposed to be carcinogenic, inflammatory, and anti-longevity. Animal studies show that “methionine toxicity” can be countered by glycine supplementation from cartilaginous cuts of meat.

You’ve got achy joints.

Increase omega-3 consumption because that quickly curtails inflammation. Next option is to consume gelatin. Gelatin is connective tissue; it’s made of the stuff we use to repair and build our own cartilage, tendons, ligaments, and fascia. A few studies indicate that eating gelatin can improve joint pain:

You’re on bed rest.

Bed rest eats at lean muscle mass. It makes sense from your body’s point of view; since you aren’t using it, you don’t really need it. Placing individual limbs on bed rest also has the same effect. The answer is to increase your protein intake to mitigate the inefficiency.

You’re experiencing chronic stress.

Stress hormones increase muscle and tissue protein breakdown. If you’re experiencing an acute stressor, like a tough workout, this breakdown is normal and necessary and gives way to muscle buildup. That’s how we get stronger, faster, fitter, and more capable. But if that stress becomes chronic, and the stress hormones are perpetually elevated, the balance tips toward muscle breakdown. Until you’re able to get a handle on the stress, eating more protein should mitigate the damage and might even reduce the stress itself.

You’re coming off surgery, recovering from burns, or trying to heal a wound (or all three).

Traumatic damage to your tissues requires more protein to make the necessary repairs and recovery.

Stay Healthy.