Showing posts with label activity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label activity. Show all posts

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Control the Damage From Overeating

Here's what you need to know...
  • Any meal over 750 calories (not including the peri-workout nutrition period) results in a measurable amount of fat storage, regardless of macronutrient profile.
  • Glycogen-depleting workouts done before a cheat meal can help counteract its detrimental effects.
  • Eating a low-glycemic meal a couple of hours before a big meal can improve carbohydrate tolerance and quell the appetite.
  • Taking thermogenic and nutrient-partitioning supplements before pigging out can undo much of the damage.
  • If you ignore any or all of the preceding tips, you can do a modified Pulse Fast the day after the meal to set you right.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Your Dinner Made Healthy in 5 Steps

Your Dinner Made Healthy in 5 Steps you think you're eating healthy meals, but aren't sure?

If your weight loss has slowed, or even stopped, then there's a good chance that you haven't been eating as healthy as you should be.

I'm going to end the guesswork for you, once and for all, with my 5 steps to a healthy meal.

By following these 5 guidelines you'll know that your meals are healthy and fitness friendly. And as a result you'll experience healthy weight loss.

Here are the 5 Steps to a Healthy Meal:

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Walking Boosts Brain Health

Mind-Body-Spirit News:
Walking approximately 6–9 miles a week is associated with increased gray matter in the brains of older adults.  “Just by walking regularly, and so maintaining a little bit of moderate physical activity, you can reduce your likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s disease and [can] spare brain tissue,” Kirk I. Erickson, lead study author and assistant professor of psychology at University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. The study participants were subjects in the Pittsburgh site of the larger Cardiovascular Health Cognition Study, a longitudinal study conducted over a 13-year period.