Category Archives: weight loss

5 Sources of Toxins

 Here are the top 5 sources of toxins:

1. Food – The biggest culprit for toxic exposure is processed foods, which are full of chemical additives that can create symptoms ranging from cravings and weight gain to poor digestive health and food allergies. This includes packaged food, and also supposedly fresh, local produce which is often heavily sprayed with pesticides, or could be genetically modified, or both.

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To reduce your exposure to food toxins: Choose whole foods instead of processed foods. In addition, choose organic fruits and vegetables. Organic produce is grown without harmful pesticides and, even better, the soil is more mineral-rich. Eating organic, whole foods is a great step you can take toward health and wellness.

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2. Water – Tap water is teeming with toxins. The Environmental Working Group found over 316 chemicals in tap water, based on analysis of 20 million records from state water officials. In addition, over the past few years, studies have shown that pharmaceuticals, like prescription and over-the-counter drugs, are being found in tap water.

Many bottled waters have been shown to be just as bad as tap water in most cases—not to mention the toxins that leach from the plastic bottles themselves.

To reduce your exposure to water toxins: Avoid drinking tap water or showering without a filter.

3. Environment – Whether inside your home or outside your home, the environment is also a major source of toxins. Pollution from manufacturing, cars, and secondhand cigarette smoke can be challenging to avoid.

However, you can minimize many of the toxins inside and around your home. Too many people use harsh household cleaners containing bleach, ammonia, and other toxic chemicals that can cause health problems ranging from nausea to skin destruction, fluid in the lungs, and wheezing.

To reduce your exposure to environmental toxins: Switch your cleaning products to those with all-natural ingredients.

4. Beauty and Personal Care Products – Beauty products like toothpaste, lotion, anti-aging creams, soap, shampoo, conditioner, perfumes, and makeup are full of toxic chemicals.

To reduce your exposure to toxins in beauty and personal care products: Read ingredient labels on your personal care products. Anything you put on your skin is absorbed into your body.

5. Stress and Negative Thinking – Stress can kill the good bacteria and yeast living in your intestines that keep your immunity and digestive health strong.

To reduce your exposure to toxic stress: As the good bacteria and yeast die off, the bad bacteria and yeast are able to take over. Strengthening your inner ecosystem with fermented foods and probiotics can buffer stress and reduce the risk of illness and disease.

Eliminate toxins and Stay Healthy.

Waist circumference Better Than BMI In Determining Health Risk

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More research is beginning to show BMI isn’t as accurate at determining health as we once thought. String may work better. 

For over a century, doctors have been improving on the body mass index (BMI), their go-to method for determining whether a person has an unhealthy amount of body fat. Now, scientists are beginning to realize body mass index may not be the best indicator of a person’s fat level or the best predictor of their risk for health problems like heart disease. Instead of using BMI, a group of researchers from the UK say string will do just fine.

In their new study, researchers from Oxford Brookes University suggested a new method that’s been gaining acceptance of late: waist-to-height ratio (WHtR). They found that measuring a person’s height with string, then folding the string in half and seeing if it’ll fit around a person’s waist comfortably could be a better indicator of whether a person is overweight. Having too much fat around the abdomen has been linked to heart disease, diabetes, and other metabolic disorders.

One study from 2013, for example, found that larger waistlines correlated with lower life expectancy. In the press release, the researchers said, “We would like to show that Waist circumference is not only superior to BMI in first stage screening for the health risks of obesity, but it is also more efficient in practice and can be done by personnel with minimal training and resources.”

Waist circumference greater than 31″ in women or 35″ in men is linked to Insulin Resistance, which can lead to Diabetes.
Stay Informed. Stay Healthy.

3 Simple Tips to Burn Fat

1. Eat Fat  to Lose fat

Healthy fats, that is. Good fats contain essential omega-3 fatty acids which boost brain function, strengthens the immune system, improves mood and aids in helping you slim down.

So which fats are “good” fats? Fats from fish and nuts as well as those from avocados, peanut butter, olive oil, egg yolks, and fish oil.


2.  High Inte
nsity Interval Training

Whether you walk, run, bike or swim, the International Journal of Obesity revealed that women who, for 20 minutes alternated cycling as fast as possible for eight seconds with 12-second rest periods dropped 9.5 percent of their belly fat, while those who cycled steadily for 40 minutes gained.

So walk at a nice easy pace, then burst into as fast as pace as you can for 8 seconds, then relax into a nice easy pace, and then burst again. Pushing your body to the max with rest periods turns on your thin genes and does a world of difference for burning fat.

3. Drink Green Tea

According to a study from American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, drinking green tea has fat-fighting effects. Green tea’s high content of caffeine and catechins, stop the body from absorbing carbohydrates and helps burn more fat.

Stay Healthy!

Balance Your Hormones without Medication

Hormones, such as thyroid and insulin, are chemical messengers that affect many aspects of your health as they travel in your bloodstream throughout your entire body.  Some of the most common side effects of hormone imbalance include:

 

  • Infertility
  • Weight gain
  • Depression
  • Fatigue
  • Insomnia
  • Low libido
  • Hair loss and hair thinning

Organs and glands like your thyroid, adrenals, pituitary, ovaries, testicles and pancreas regulate most of your hormone production and if your hormones become even slightly imbalanced it can cause major health issues.

Also, new research is showing that your gut health plays a significant role in hormone regulation so if you have leaky gut or a lack of probiotics lining your intestinal wall it can also cause hormone imbalance.

The good news is there are ways to balance your hormones naturally.

The bad news is the majority of people across the world today turn to synthetic treatments such as hormone replacement therapy which can do three things:

  1. It makes people dependent on prescription drugs for the rest of their lives.
  2. Simply mask the symptoms while you develop disease in other areas of the body.
  3. Causes serious side effects by increasing your risk of stroke, osteoporosis and cancer.

If you don’t want these negative side effects, but do want to naturally balance your hormones, here’s how:

1. Eat Good Fats

Good fats are fundamental building blocks for hormone production, they speed up your metabolism and promote weight loss.

Some foods packed with healthy fats include: nuts and seeds, coconut oil, avocados, grass-fed butter, olives, egg yolks and wild caught salmon.

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2. Increase Intake of Omega-3 Fatty acids

Since the early 20th century, the use of vegetable oil in our diets has skyrocketed. But, because people didn’t boost their Omega-3 intake to balance out the elevated Omega-6s they were consuming, there is an onslaught of chronic diseases and inflammatory processes.

Research suggests that jumping from the 1:1 Omega-3/6 ratio our hunter-gather ancestors enjoyed to the astronomical 20:1 ratio most people take in today is the primary dietary factor of most diseases!

Steer clear of oils high in Omega-6s (all refined oils such as safflower, sunflower, corn, cottonseed, canola, soybean and peanut) and load up on rich sources of natural Omega-3s (wild fish, flaxseed, chia seeds, walnuts and grass-fed animal products). Better still, take a good supplement.

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3. Heal Leaky Gut 

Leaky gut is a condition that not only affects your digestive tract but also causes hormone issues and can more specifically target your thyroid. When undigested food particles like gluten leak through your gut into your blood stream it will cause inflammation of the entire body and more specific organs like the thyroid.

Probiotics actually help your body in producing certain vitamins that effect hormone levels like insulin. In addition, supplements like digestive enzymes and probiotics can aid in repairing your gut lining, which in turn can balance your hormones.

Some of the main things that damage your digestive health include processed foods, gluten, hydrogenated oils and emotional stress.

4. Eliminate Toxic Cleaning and Personal Products

Another way to eliminate toxins in your body is to stay away from conventional cleaning and body care products that are high in DEA, parabens, propylene glycol and sodium lauryl sulfate.

The use of plastic bottles should be replaced with glass and stainless steel because of BPA’s, and switching from teflon pans to stainless steel, ceramic or cast iron can make a big difference in your hormonal health.

5. Interval Exercise

One of the best all-around activities you can do for your health is High Intensity Interval Training – HIIT. This training will help reduce stress levels, enhance your immune system, regulate metabolic function and keep you at the body weight your body was designed for.

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6. Get More Sleep

Lack of sleep and sleeping at the wrong time, actually may be the worst habit people have that disturb hormone balance. To maximize hormone function, get to bed by 10:00 p.m. One hour of sleep between 10:00 p.m. and 2:00 a.m. is equal to 2 hours of sleep before or after.

7. Supplement with Vitamin D3

According to an article from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vitamin D3’s role in promoting human life is more profound than previously suspected.

Most people should supplement with around 2,000IU to 5,000IU daily of vitamin D3 daily.

8. Follow a Hormone Balancing Diet

This is a simple tweak to our eating pattern which helps balance out our hormone levels. Eat real food, avoid processed food, avoid refined carbs, eat PLENTY of brightly colored veggies and some fruit. Include sufficient protein.

Try to get in  Intermittent Fasting. Increase the gap between meals and /or skip some meals. This reduces Insulin Resistance.

9. Deal with Stress

Stress increases cortisol levels and impacts all other hormones and your metabolism. So the key to lasting good health is learning to lower your stress levels. Through Meditation, Yoga, Tai Chi, whatever works for you.

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Be happy! And be happy together. Increase ( or add in!) joyful activities in your life.

Take charge of your own health. You can do it!

 

Probiotics

The word “probiotic” is a compound of two Greek words: “pro,” to signify promotion of and “biotic,” which means life. Their very definition is something that affirms life and health. The World Health Organization defines a probiotic as any living microorganism that has a health benefit when ingested.  These encourage growth of good bacteria in the gut.

As opposed to ‘Anti-Biotics’, which are, by definiton, Anti-Life. They kill the infection-causing bacteria, but also the good bacteria in our gut. Which is why we are given vitamins whenever we take antibiotics, to protect the good bacteria.

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Plain home made yogurt (not store bought), kimchi, kefir, tempeh, miso, sauerkraut, carrot drink kanji, wheat drink Rejuvelac – these are some of the foods rich in probiotics. They are all incredibly simple to make, taste good and are health promoting.

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So what can probiotics help with?

  • Boost the immune system by enhancing the production of antibodies.
  • Produce substances that prevent infection.
  • Prevent harmful bacteria from attaching to the gut lining and growing there.
  • Inhibit or destroy toxins released by certain “bad” bacteria.
  • Produce B vitamins necessary for metabolizing the food we eat, warding off anemia caused by deficiencies in B6 and B12, and maintaining healthy skin and a healthy nervous system.
  • Allergies
  • ObesityIn 2006, Stanford University researchers found that obese people had different gut bacteria than normal-weighted people. Research shows that probiotics can help obese people who have received weight loss surgery to maintain weight loss. And in a study of post-partum women who were trying to lose abdominal fat, the addition of lactobacillus and bifidobacterium capsules helped reduce waist circumference.

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80 percent of our immune system is located in our digestive system, making a healthy gut essential if we want to maintain optimal health.

Furthermore, the gut is quite literally our second brain, as it originates from the same type of tissue as your brain! During fetal development, one part turns into the central nervous system, while the other develops into the enteric nervous system. These two systems are connected via the vagus nerve, the tenth cranial nerve that runs from the brain stem down to your abdomen. Hence the gut and the brain work in tandem, each influencing the other. And this is why our intestinal health can have such a profound influence on our mental health, and vice versa.

This also helps explain the link between neurological disorders (including ADHD and autism) and gastrointestinal dysfunction. For example, gluten intolerance is frequently a feature of autism, and many autistic children will improve when following a strict gluten-free diet.

However, even more importantly, establishing normal gut flora within the first 20 days or so of life plays a crucial role in appropriate maturation of your baby’s immune system. This happens during a vaginal delivery. Babies born by Cesarian section are unable to derive this massive benefit. That is why we must be very selective when resorting to Cesarian deliveries.

Who should take probiotics?

Everyone.

Especially those who have Digestive, Auti-Immune, Mental Health issues, Repeated Infections or after Illness or Surgery.

In the form of foods listed above, or Supplements.

Prebiotics are non-digestible fiber compounds that pass undigested through the gut and stimulate the growth of good bacteria that colonize the large bowel by acting as food for them. So including these in our diet is also beneficial.

Prebiotics are found in insoluble fiber such as inulin and resistant starch in cooked and cooled potatoes.

Simple ways to Stay Healthy!