Saturday, December 31, 2011

Stop Dieting and Start Living


Have You Made the Change?

You’ve heard it so many times that you probably say it in your sleep. "Diets don’t work; if you want to lose weight and keep it off, you have to make a lifestyle change." 


Here are the main ways a diet differs from a lifestyle:
  1. A diet is all about numbers—the number on the scale and the number of calories you eat and burn. Success is defined in terms of how well you stick to your numbers.

    A lifestyle change is all about you. It’s about lining up your eating and physical activity with your real goals and desires. Success is defined in terms of how these changes make you feel about yourself.
  2. The diet mentality assumes that reaching a certain weight is the key to finding happiness and solving other problems. That’s why messing up the numbers on any given day can be so upsetting—it means you’ve messed up on just about everything that really matters.

    The lifestyle approach assumes that being overweight is usually the result of other problems, not the cause. Addressing these problems directly is the best way to solve both the problems themselves and your weight issues. This means focusing on many things, not just the numbers on the scale or the Nutrition Tracker. Numbers only tell a small part of the story, and “bad” numbers often provide good clues into areas that need attention.
  3. Going on a diet involves an external and temporary change in eating technique. You start counting and measuring, and you stop eating some foods and substitute others, based on the rules of whatever diet plan you are using. Maybe you throw in some exercise to burn a few extra calories. You assume that it’s the technique that produces the results, not you. The results of a diet are external; if you’re lucky, you may change on the outside—but not on the inside. Once you reach your goal weight, you don’t need the technique anymore, and things gradually go back to “normal.” So does your weight—and then some. And, of course, all the problems you hoped the weight loss would solve are still there.

    Making a lifestyle change involves an internal and permanent change in your relationship with food, eating, and physical activity. You recognize that the primary problem isn’t what you eat, or even how much you eat, but how and why you eat. Eating mindlessly and impulsively (without intention or awareness) and/or using food to manage your emotions and distract yourself from unpleasant thoughts—this is what really needs to change. Learning to take good care of yourself emotionally, physically, and spiritually—so that you don’t want to use eating to solve problems it really can’t—is a lifelong learning process that is constantly changing as your needs and circumstances change.
This doesn't mean the surface level things don't matter. Clearly, controlling how much and what you eat is vital, and caring how you look... Read Article 

- By Dean Anderson, Behavioral Psychology Expert

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Christmas Eve Cowles Mountain San Diego

... more on lifestyle, climate and prime time real estate!

Cell phone photos taken by Mike Ginn

Perfect weather!

Coronado Islands & Lake Murray

Trail head, Cowles Mtn in the distance

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders Loses 94 Pounds - Men's Fitness

San Diego residents looking for inspiration to lose weight don't need to look any further than their mayor, Jerry Sanders.


JERRY SANDERS
Hometown: San Diego, California
Age: 61
Height: 5'10"
Weight Before: 276 lbs.
Weight After: 182 lbs.


With all the lifestyle changes, the pounds didn't really start to come off until his trainer, whom he works with twice a week, started making him take accountability for his progress. "He thought I was working out hard, but I wasn't losing weight fast enough, so he started weighing me every Friday and that's what turned the table."

Beyond the health benefits (his blood pressure and cholesterol dropped with his pants size), he gets constant motivation from how much he loves walking (his rep tells us his music of choice during these epic walks is Pink Floyd) and the response he's gotten from everyone around him. "It's been kind of amazing. People are really focused ... Read More

By Elizabeth Yun

Mark Bittman on what's wrong with what we eat

"In New York, an orange was a common Christmas present because it came ALL the way from Florida."

"How we got to this place, is the history of food in the United States. And I'm going to go through that, at least the last one hundred years or so, very quickly right now."

"Margarine didn't exist. In fact, when margarine was invented, several states passed laws declaring that it had to be dyed pink, so we'd all know it was a fake. There was no snack food, and until the 20's, until Clarence Birdseye came along, there was no frozen food."

Monday, December 12, 2011

20 Unusual Uses for Coffee

Can you imagine life without coffee? We'd all stumble around like drones for hours every morning, lost without our precious fix. We love coffee for its flavor, its aroma and of course its pick-me-up, but there are at least 20 more compelling reasons to stay stocked up. These tips will give you surprising and unusual uses for fresh coffee beans or grounds that have gone stale, the pounds of used grounds you toss out every week and the dregs at the bottom of your cup.

Kill fridge odor Wouldn't you rather smell coffee than two-week-old leftovers, half-rotten produce and spoiled milk? If your fridge is a nightmare of foul odors, place a bowl of fresh, unused coffee grounds inside and leave it for a day or two. The coffee will absorb the odors and you'll crave a cup whenever... read more

Reduce cellulite
Pricey cellulite creams almost always have one major ingredient in common: caffeine, which supposedly enhances fat metabolism, reducing the appearance of these fatty pockets under... read more

Erase smells on your hands
Garlic, salmon, cilantro - there are some things that smell delicious when cooking, but aren't so pleasant hours later when they linger on your hands. Get rid of them by rubbing a handful of used coffee grounds on your... read more

Make rich compost There's a reason so many gardeners swear by adding used coffee grounds to compost. The grounds are rich in phosphorous, potassium, magnesium and copper, they release nitrogen into the soil... read more

Get shiny hair
Who doesn't want shiny, healthy-looking hair? Coffee is often recommended as a simple, natural treatment to make hair extra-glossy. Brew up an extra-strong pot, ... read more

Article Link:  20 Unusual Uses for Coffee

By Stephanie Rogers

San Diego among Top 10 for best winter travel

The view from Cabrillo National Monument on Monday, Feb. 28, 2011. — Andrew Kleske

San Diego once again scored well in Travel + Leisure magazine's list of "America's Best Cities for Winter Travel," climbing from 13th place last year to the No. 6 spot this year.
The magazine called San Diego the survey’s weather champion since 2009, and noted readers picked the city as one of the safest and cleanest for travelers. San Diego ranked first place in the magazine's recent surveys for Spring Break cities and best Weather, and ranked second in the best Family Vacation, best Fourth of July and best Summer Destinations categories.
San Juan, Puerto Rico, ranked No. 3 last year, landed in first place for its beaches and weather, but also earned high grades in the cultural and food categories.
The top 10 ranked in order:
1) San Juan, P.R.
2) Honolulu
3) Phoenix/Scottsdale
4) New Orleans
5) Houston
6) San Diego
7) Miami
8) Salt Lake City
9) Orlando
10) Savannah, Ga.

By Andrew Kleske

Friday, December 2, 2011

San Diego is Prime Time REAL ESTATE...

... for year-round, outdoor fitness and adventure!

Why?  CLIMATE


La Jolla, CA - Weather




This message has been approved by San Diego's Personal Trainer / Bootcamp Instructor, Mike Ginn.


Artist Unknown

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Find Out How Many Calories You Burn After Exercise

We’ve always heard that the positive benefits of physical activity continue long after your workout session is over. More energy, less stress and those “feel good” endorphins are some of the immediate effects. But what about the mysterious “afterburn” that a lot of people talk about? Do you really continue burning more calories after the workout, or is it really just during the workout that matters? A new study finds that it’s possible to burn more calories throughout the day--in fact, up to 14 hours later.

The study, published in the journal Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, took 10 healthy males and examined... Read More


Article Link:  Find Out How Many Calories You Burn After Exercise
By Jen Mueller

Friday, November 11, 2011

11-11-1969 Celebration of San Diego Arrival!!!

A commemorative, the song upon arrival to celebrate my Parents beginning here in San Diego while crossing Mission Valley on this date, November 11, 1969. They were driving a four speed yellow Plymouth pulling a U-Haul trailer. "San Diego we have arrived!" 

Song:  Get Together Now



Veterans Day - Thank you Vets!



Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Aging Well Through Exercise


Dana Edmunds/Getty Images
“They suggest strongly that people don’t have to lose muscle mass and function as they grow older. The changes that we’ve assumed were due to aging and therefore were unstoppable seem actually to be caused by inactivity. And that can be changed.”

Thursday, November 3, 2011

The new Nordic diet: the next big weight loss trend?

Arctic fish, cucumbers, grains, fresh herbs and yogurt are staples of the New Nordic Diet. (ThinkStock Photos)

Move over cavemen and Mediterraneans, Vikings are the new diet gurus.

Claus Meyer, co-founder of the Danish restaurant Noma, twice named the best in the world, has been collaborating with nutrition experts to combat...


Eat the food grown in your region Meyer believes in eating locally, and getting creative with the food growing in your area in season. Not only does it challenge the cook to be creative but there's historical evidence that our species thrived on our regional foods long before we had processed starches in our pantry and produce shipped from across the globe.

Home-cooked meals are key He suggests preparing simple meals from scratch for between 30 minutes to an hour a day, to help rethink diet as more of a lifestyle, or hobby of sorts. Adding a cultural, familial element to food, rather than a grab-and-go notion, can psychologically change the way people think about their diet.

Eat more side dishesThe more, the merrier and the healthier, according to Meyer. Side dishes are key to long-term healthy eating, so long as they're simply prepared vegetables. "Toss yesterday's leftover boiled or steamed vegetables with a little vinegar, capers, mustard, broad-leaf parsley and olive oil,” he suggests. “Boil some red beets and put some quality salt, grated horseradish or mustard, and vinegar on the table. Use the pulse button on your food processor to mince the remainder of a portion of boiled legumes with some cumin, yogurt, lemon, mint, sugar and chili to create a cohesive and luscious thick mass, pour it into a bowl and add a splash of a high-quality virgin olive oil.” It’s the opposite of portion control, but he believes the lack of simplicity and the bevy of flavors will lead to less binge-eating out boredom.  ... Read More

Article Link:  The new Nordic diet: the next big weight loss trend?
By Piper Weiss

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

In-Your-Face Fitness: The pull to Exercise Outdoors


On a recent beautiful and sunny day, I strolled into my local gym to lift some weights. The gym is near Nose Hill Park, which is one of the largest municipal parks in North America. It has majestic views of the city of Calgary and the Rocky Mountains, which can be seen from endless miles of paths and trails.

As I made my way toward the room full of heavy things I intended to pick up and put back down, I spied the double line of high-tech treadmills. Most of them were occupied.

I looked at the indoor running enthusiasts and thought, Are you people on dope?

I hate treadmills — the view doesn't change and they make me feel like a hamster on a wheel. Even when it's cold enough to get the beginnings of frostbite on a valuable part of my male anatomy (that really happened — not my best day), I still prefer to go outside.

And it turns out there is a reason, but it's psychological, not physiological.

Much has been written about the biomechanical and metabolic differences between running on treadmills and running outdoors, and the general consensus is that both types of workouts are essentially... Read More

Article Link:  In-Your-Face Fitness: The pull to exercise outdoors

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Inspiring Woman: Triathlete and Two-Time Breast Cancer Survivor


Laurah Turner is a 29 year-old, competitive runner and tri-athlete, two-time breast cancer survivor, and biological anthropologist.

Article Link:  Inspiring Woman: Triathlete and Two-Time Breast Cancer Survivor

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

SAN DIEGO BEER WEEK 2011






The Health Benefits of Beer

Daylight Savings Time ENDS November 6

Spring Forward, Fall Back.

Don't forget to set your clocks back to standard time at 2 a.m. Sunday, November 6.

San Diego is Perfect for Sport


San Diego celebrates sport, an active lifestyle and the great outdoors - from kitesurfing to cycling, golf to American Football.


Torrey Pines Golf Course,  San Diego


Early morning “shore side” skating, swimming, cycling, kitesurfing, running or walking are part of the San Diegan psyche. 

But the true passion in San Diego is surfing. Almost everyone has learnt or – at the very least – tried it. The wild Pacific waves that crash against the Southern Californian coast attract devotees from all over the state and beyond. “Waves before your day” is an oft-repeated phrase here – and perfectly encapsulates how residents make use of the city’s natural gifts.

But if San Diegans aren’t outdoors playing sport, you can be certain they’ll be watching it.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Crisscross Your Way To A Better Life - Finding the Unexpected Connections of a Healthy Lifestyle

Happy Friday! Good stuff here... enjoy. MG

The fitness universe always talks about Nutrition and Exercise as if these are the only two options for getting in shape.

Want to lose post-pregnancy padding? Nutrition and Exercise.
Want to look 10 years younger? Nutrition and Exercise.
Want to make everyone jealous at the high school reunion? Nutrition and Exercise.
Whatever happened to good old Sleep and Stretching? That's right. Regular sleep and staying limber are just two ways you can take advantage of the Crisscross  Effect to lose weight.

The Crisscross Effect is what happens when life's building blocks hinder or help each other. 


Weight loss is just a single part of your dynamic, intertwined life. You also might have kids, a demanding boss, car problems, a nagging couch, magazine subscriptions, sports teams, fishing trips, traffic, high blood pressure, music practice, cranky relatives, noisy streets, babysitting... read more


Thursday, October 13, 2011

You are what you think - Quotes




- I don't think of all the misery but of the beauty that still remains.
Anne Frank

- Whatever the mind of man can conceive and believe it can achieve.
There are no limitations to the mind except those we acknowledge.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Healthy lifestyle may help prevent breast cancer

VIDEO Link: Healthy lifestyle may help prevent breast cancer 


(NECN/CNN: Susan Hendricks) - Adopting a healthy lifestyle today may help prevent breast cancer in the future.

Studies have shown that women who exercise 30 minutes at least three times a week are less likely to develop the disease, partly because exercise helps boost the immune system.

Studies have not shown that a specific diet lowers risk of breast cancer.

"But a healthy diet does obviously play a role in maintaining a healthy weight. And I think that's where women who eat well have a healthier weight are at lower risk of breast cancer."

And if you're going to consume alcohol, keep it to one drink or less a day.

"Women who consume two or more alcoholic beverages per day have been found to have an increase risk of breast cancer."

A risk that is 20 to 30 percent higher, partly because alcohol uses up folic acid, an important B vitamin.

Because of their genetics, some women will develop breast cancer no matter their lifestyle. But experts say cancer survivors may help prevent a recurrence by adopting these healthy habits.

Monday, October 3, 2011

5 Mind Games You Need to Stop Playing

These Common Tricks Never Motivate--Find Out Why

Motivation is like cold hard cash: You can never have too much! And when you’re trying to lose weight (for the umpteenth time for many of us) you know that you need a wealth of motivational strategies you can count on. But, with so many motivational tips and tricks to sift through, why are we so often losing our motivation rather than reaping the rewards?

One reason is that some of the most popular motivation strategies people use are mind games—games that don't really work for the long term. At first glance, they all seem helpful, but most are actually bound to fail. Instead of playing Russian roulette when you’re choosing a weight-loss strategy, read on to find out how you can beat the odds and pick a winner.

Mind Game #1:  Going for the Gold
You have your perfect weight and pants size in mind. With a big, bold goal to aspire to, you start biking to work, cooking lighter, packing your lunch, skipping that morning latte, and taking the stairs. Then, three busy, butt-busting weeks later…the scale hasn’t really budged and you’re trying on the same size  in the dressing room. Deflated, you start snacking a bit here and slacking a bit there, and your dream of a whittled waistline slowly fades from view.
 
Motivation Makeover: Going for the gold is a great way to start your weight-loss plan; setting a long-term goal can help you to keep an eye on where you’re headed. But it’s also important to remember that your goal weight is far from the only benefit of incorporating healthy eating and exercise—and it could be a long ways off. Taking note of smaller, more subtle changes (more energy, better sleep, lower cholesterol, better mood, etc.) can help you stay motivated, even if the pounds aren’t coming off as quickly as you’d hoped. Setting some shorter-term goals (1 pound, 5 pounds)—especially ones that aren't based on the scale (like getting to the gym 5 days a week) can also help you stay on track.

Mind Game #2:  Starting Out Super Strong
It’s Sunday evening and you realize that you spent the weekend indulging on brews, barbeques, and binges. A twinge of guilt has you psyched to start speeding down the road to wellness first thing Monday. So you restock your pantry with healthy eats, download a hardcore training app to your phone, and... read more



Article Link:  5 Mind Games You Need to Stop Playing, These Common Tricks Never Motivate--Find Out Why

By Megan Coatley, Behavior Expert

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Understanding Cacao (and your chocolate bar) - Chocolate is a fruit




White, dark, milk, bittersweet, semisweet - whatever your chocolate persuasion, it's easy, delicious and even healthy(!) to be livin' la vida cocoa.
But how does that perfectly unassuming cacao bean make its merry way into shiny foil wrappers around the globe? We'll let you in on a little secret: It doesn't involve tiny orange-faced, green-haired men.
Here to raise the bar on your level of chocolatey understanding is Ray Major, the head of the development team at Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker.

Five Facts About the Origin of Chocolate: Ray Major
1. Chocolate is fruit
“Cacao beans are seeds found inside the fruit or pod of the cacao tree. Roughly 500 cacao beans will produce one pound of bittersweet chocolate. To put this into perspective, it takes two men one day to harvest and prepare enough cacao to make 120 pounds of dark chocolate - a labor-intensive process, but well worth it!
Nearly 95 percent of the world’s cacao can be found +/- fifteen degrees from the Equator. Anywhere there is a tropical rainforest cocoa can grow. And, every growing region in the world produces its own unique flavor.”
2. Chocolate is like wine - it has terroir
“Genetics of the planted varieties affect cacao flavor, as does the care and techniques used in fermentation and drying the beans, and environmental influences of the growing region - what vintners call 'terroir.'
Cacao from Pará State, Brazil - for example - has notes of pear, green apple and white wine. Beans from Indonesia have bright acidity and citrus notes. Panama is characteristically earthy and spicy with a strong chocolate flavor. What you like really depends on what you are looking for in your chocolate and how adventurous you are.”
3. Blending beans gives the best flavor
“Each type of cacao has a very unique taste, but few have a complete flavor profile from start to finish. Madagascar beans have citrus, fruity front notes that then tail off in complexity; Ghana beans start slowly with big notes of chocolate in the middle; and Trinidad beans have licorice, tobacco, leathery notes that linger on in the end.
If you combine these three, the flavor profile stretches much longer in your mouth than it otherwise would by itself. The blend will make a more complex and interesting chocolate bar.”
4. The meaning of percentages
“The number you often see on premium dark chocolate bar labels is cacao content; the percentage of the bar that is derived from the cacao bean in the form of chocolate liquor, cocoa butter or cocoa powder.
If an extra dark chocolate bar label reads “82% Cacao," that means that 82 percent of the formula is derived from the cacao bean. You can normally assume the remainder of the percentage to be sugar.”
5. Cacao vs. cocoa...there’s no real difference!
“The vernacular can be confusing, but cacao and cocoa really mean the same thing. The Latin word for cocoa is cacao, so most European countries use this term while English-speaking countries have adopted use of the familiar word cocoa, as in cocoa powder.
In the artisan chocolate industry, cacao is generally used in reference to anything mentioning cacao in its raw form - the tree, bean or seeds, nibs, percentage.”

5@5 is a daily, food related list from clients, writers, political pundits, musicians, actors, and all manner of opinionated people from around the globe.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Caffeine's buzz chases away women's depression



Compared with uncaffeinated women, those who drank the equivalent of four or more cups of coffee a day are more likely to drink alcohol and smoke cigarettes and less likely to volunteer their time in church or community groups. But a new study finds that well-caffeinated women have a key health advantage over their more abstemious sisters: they’re less likely to become depressed.

In the back-and-forth world of research on caffeine’s effects, the latest study suggests that women who get several jolts of java a day may do more than get a quick boost: their mental health may see sustained improvement... 



Article Link:  Caffeine's buzz chases away women's depression

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

September is National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month


Oh by the way, 

September is National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month

While data shows that obesity numbers continue to rise, perhaps the most frightening numbers related to obesity are those among the children in the United States. More than 23 million children over the age of 2 are either obese or overweight. This month, organizations across the country are joining forces to increase awareness about this alarming trend of childhood obesity. The fitness industry can play an important and active role in educating the public about childhood obesity as well as providing resources to encourage healthier lifestyles. Additional information about what you and/or your club can do to support Childhood Obesity Awareness Month can be found online at: www.healthierkidsbrighterfutures.org.

Obesity Still on the Rise
According to a report published in the British medical journal The Lancet, half of all adults in the United States will be classified as obese by the year 2030. Reports earlier in 2011 indicated that perhaps the obesity numbers were finally reaching a plateau after years of public awareness campaigns and healthy lifestyle education programs. However, this latest information predicts that the obesity rate for males in the United States will continue to rise from its current level of 32% to approximately 50% by 2030, while the female obesity rate will rise from its current level of 35% to somewhere between 45%-52%. Earlier predictions by the WHO estimated that the potential reach of obesity would be closer to 70% of the United States population by 2030.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

10 Surprisingly Healthy Packaged Foods - Convenient Can Also Be Healthy!


- Canned Beans
- Oats and Flaxseed
- Frozen Vegetables
- Frozen Berries
- Granola Bars
... for the complete list, click Article Link

By Sarah Haan, Registered Dietitian

Friday, September 9, 2011

More on Survival Kits: How to Build Your Multi-Purpose Survival Kit

Let's celebrate San Diego! You were prepared for yesterday's power outage affecting East Valley, San Diego, Arizona, and Mexico because you had access to your Earthquake Survival Kit. From now on we'll refer to these survival kits as the Multi-Purpose Survival Kit
Make sure you are ready for the next emergency. Highlighted below are the things you need to build your Multi-Purpose Survival Kit for the unexpected earthquake, power outage, tsunami, other natural disasters, etc..  


Be safe, live happy! Life is good.
Michael Ginn


Be prepared! "The Next Big One" could occur anytime here in California. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Andreas_Fault

Japan’s massive earthquake and tsunami is alerting the US west coast that the same kind of thing could happen here. In fact, say experts who study the earth’s shifting crust, the “big one” may be past due. by Brad K.

"Earthquakes effect thousands of people every year. Have an earthquake survival kit ready for your family and sleep soundly knowing you are prepared in the case of an emergency. An earthquake survival kit is easy to make and can provide you with peace of mind. Read on to learn how to make an earthquake survival kit."

Read more:  How to Make an Earthquake Survival Kit | eHow.com

Things You'll Need:

  • Include at least $100 in cash for the kit. If the electricity goes out, credit card machines don't work. Cash allows you to purchase necessary items.
  • Storage container
  • Crescent wrench
  • Flashlights and batteries
  • Water
  • Food
  • Can opener
  • Disinfectant
  • First aid kit
  • Battery-powered or hand-cranked radio
  • Blankets
  • Clothing and shoes
  • Money
  • Fire extinguisher
  • Grill or camp stove
  • Buy at least one fire extinguisher for your house. The fire extinguisher must work on all types of fires.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Nonalcoholic Beer Aids Marathon Recovery


A new study reports that beer is an excellent recovery beverage for marathon runners. But you may not want to start a raucous celebration just yet. The beer was effective only if it was nonalcoholic.
Running a marathon is, of course, punishing to the body, causing muscle soreness and inflammation. Grueling exercise can also weaken the immune system, making athletes susceptible to colds and other ills in the weeks after the event. Some athletes, particularly in Europe, long had downed nonalcoholic beer during hard training, claiming that it helped them to recover, but no science existed to support the practice.

To study the matter, researchers at the Technical University of Munich approached healthy male runners, most in their early 40s, who were training for the Munich Marathon, and asked if they would — in the name of science — be willing to drink a considerable amount of beer. Two hundred seventy-seven men agreed, even when told that the beverage would be nonalcoholic. Only half of the group received the alcohol-free beer, however; the other half got a similarly flavored placebo. No one knew who was drinking what.

All of the runners downed a liter to a liter and a half — about two to three pints — of their assigned beverage every day,... continue reading

Article Link :  Nonalcoholic Beer Aids Marathon Recovery
By Gretchen Reynolds

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

61-year-old Vietnam vet makes the cut as a small-college kicker


At an age when many start thinking about retirement, Alan Moore is restarting his football career.
Moore, a 61 year-old Vietnam veteran, will kick this fall for Faulkner University, a small Christian school in Montgomery, Ala., 43 years after his initial college career was cut short by Vietnam. When he takes the field against Ave Maria on Sept. 10, Moore will be the oldest player ever to take the field for a four-year university.  Continue Article

Article Link:  61-year-old Vietnam vet makes the cut as a small-college kicker

By Nick Bromberg

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Can Your Brain Fight Fatigue?


Recently, researchers in England discovered that simply rinsing your mouth with a sports drink may fight fatigue. In the experiment, which was published online in February in the Journal of Physiology, eight well-trained cyclists completed a strenuous, all-out time trial on stationary bicycles in a lab. The riders were hooked up to machines that measured their heart rate and power output. Throughout the ride, the cyclists swished various liquids in their mouths but did not swallow. Some of the drinks contained carbohydrates, the primary fuel used during exercise. The other drinks were just flavored, sugar-free water.
Phys Ed
By the end of the time trials, the cyclists who had rinsed with the carbohydrate drinks — and spit them out — finished significantly faster than the water group. Their heart rates and power output were also... Read More

Article Link:  Can Your Brain Fight Fatigue?

Monday, August 29, 2011

Baby Saska

Congratulations to the Saska Family. We are excited to meet Mercy!!
Much Love from the Ginns





Saturday, August 27, 2011

Acai: Weight Loss Wonder Fruit? Acai Diet and Benefits

Acai: Weight Loss Wonder Fruit?


Surely by now you have seen the ads; Acai Berries are being marketed as one of the newest, latest and greatest cure-alls. The high antioxidant content and plausible benefits seen in relatively new study data has led to a host of claims for acai, including a role as an anti-aging agent, anti-diabetic, anti-toxin and even as a cure for weight loss. Researchers recognize that the acai berry, similar to blueberries, blackberries, and many other berries, contains antioxidants that help protect cells from reactive oxygen species, or "free radicals” formed in the body in association with oxygen and other environmental agents. Some studies suggest that the acai berry may hold additional benefits that aid in the prevention of coronary artery disease (CAD) as well as some cancers. The most marketable of all the claims, weight loss, does not demonstrate the same level of research evidence and any claim related to its efficacy is lacking scholarly support.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

healthy active billionaire!!! The Billionaire Who Is Planning His 125th Birthday

... before reading, The Billionaire Who Is Planning His 125th Birthday, here is a snapshot of who David Murdock is. Incredible man... enjoy!



Artist: Slim Aarons

- Forbes ranks him as the 130th-richest person in the "Forbes 400" list and 376th in the "World's Billionaires" list, with a net worth of US$3 billion as of March 2001.
- turned Dole into the world's largest producer of fruits and vegetables.
- Murdock's father was a travelling salesman, while his mother took up laundry and scrubbed floors to make ends meet. Murdock is the middle child of three, he had two sisters. He was particularly close to his mother, who died at 42 from cancer.
- dropped out of high school in the 9th grade.
- He was drafted by the U.S. Army in 1943 during World War II.
- after the war, Murdock was homeless and destitute.
- got a $1,200 loan to buy a closing diner, flipping it for a $700 profit ten months later.
- he acquired control of International Mining. In early 1980s, he became the largest shareholder in Occidental Petroleum by selling the company his 18 percent interest in Iowa Beef.
- After the death of his third wife, Gabriele, Murdock has been deeply committed to finding a cure for cancer, advancing nutrition, and life extension.


The Billionaire Who Is Planning His 125th Birthday


Jeff Riedel for The New York Times

One morning in early January, David Murdock awoke to an unsettling sensation. At first he didn’t recognize it and then he couldn’t believe it, because for years — decades, really — he maintained what was, in his immodest estimation, perfect health. But now there was this undeniable imperfection, a scratchiness and swollenness familiar only from the distant past. Incredibly, infuriatingly, he had a sore throat.

“I never have anything go wrong,” he said later. “Never have a backache. Never have a headache. Never have anything else.” This would make him a lucky man no matter his age. Because he is 87, it makes him an unusually robust specimen, which is what he must be if he is to defy the odds (and maybe even the gods) and live as long as he intends to. He wants to reach 125, and sees no reason he can’t, provided that he continues eating the way he has for the last quarter century: with a methodical, messianic correctness that he believes can, and will, ward off major disease and minor ailment alike.
So that sore throat wasn’t just an irritant. It was a challenge to the whole gut-centered worldview on which his bid for extreme longevity rests. “I went back in my mind: what am I not eating enough of?” he told me. Definitely not fruits and vegetables: he crams as many as 20 of them, including pulverized banana peels and the ground-up rinds of oranges, into the smoothies he drinks two to three times a day, to keep his body brimming with fiber and vitamins. Probably not protein: he eats plenty of seafood, egg whites, beans and nuts to compensate for his avoidance of dairy, red meat and poultry, which are consigned to a list of forbidden foods that also includes alcohol, sugar and salt.
“I couldn’t figure it out,” he said. So he made a frustrated peace with his malady, which was gone in 36 hours and, he stressed, not all that bad. “I wasn’t really struggling with it,” he said. “But my voice changed a little bit. I always have a powerful voice.” Indeed, he speaks so loudly at times, and in such a declamatory manner, that it cows people, who sometimes assume they’ve angered him. “When I open my mouth,” he noted, “the room rings.”
The room ringing just then was the vast, stately common area of his vast, stately North Carolina lodge, which sits on more than 500 acres of woods and meadows where a flock of rare black Welsh sheep — which he keeps as pets, certainly not as chops and cheese in the making — roam under the protection of four Great Pyrenees dogs. He got the dogs after a donkey and two llamas entrusted with guarding the flock from predators failed at the task. The donkey and llamas still hang out with their fleecy charges, but they are purely ornamental.
Murdock loves to collect things: animals, orchids, Chippendale mirrors, Czechoslovakian chandeliers. He keeps yet another black Welsh flock at one of his two homes in Southern California, a 2,200-acre ranch whose zoological bounty extends to a herd of longhorn cattle, about 800 koi in a manmade lake and 16 horses — down from a population of more than 550, most of them Arabians, 35 years ago — with their own exercise pool. He has five homes in all, one on the small Hawaiian island of Lanai, which he owns almost in its entirety. He shuttles among them in a private jet. Forbes magazine’s most recent list of the 400 richest Americans put him at No. 130, with an estimated net worth of $2.7 billion, thanks to real estate development and majority stakes in an array of companies, most notably Dole. Five years earlier the estimate was $4.2 billion, but the recession took its toll.