6880. arkymalarky - 4/5/2007 10:36:22 PM This is just gross.
I don't remember a time when we've had more issues with contamination in food. To think a roof leaked into peanutbutter that was sold to the public. Ugh. 6881. arkymalarky - 4/5/2007 11:23:38 PM This is a cute Slate piece on Green Tea 6882. clydefo - 4/5/2007 11:40:25 PM ...fat is important element to satiety. If you eat a meal with fat, you will feel fuller faster than if you don't, thus feeling satisfied with lower calories than not.
Satiety or sluggishness? Fatty meals cause the blood platelets to clump and reduces their efficiency. As with protein, fats are vital to body chemistry and "infrastructure", but create problems when any excess is consumed. Fat is a good fuel source only in a concentration camp.
The USDA recommendation of 20-35% fat calories, partially justified by their claim that "fat is the most concentrated source of energy" is due to meat industry lobbying. Fat is the worst source of energy, in part because of the caloric concentration.
A diet of minimally processed whole grains, vegetables and fruits provides all the essential fatty acids we need. Flax seeds and walnuts are unneeded and provide too many fat calories. The "more is better" attitude usually leads to bad ends.
...grapes have a higher glycemic index of 66 vs. the snickers bar at 59. Both lead to insulin rush.
Only if you've not eaten recently. If you have been grazing all along on various CC munchies, you've been maintaining a nice steady insulin level. Unlike the candy bar, the grapes are mostly water, and the fiber is very desirable. 6883. judithathome - 4/5/2007 11:48:06 PM The Slate article was hysterical...Next in this progression will be an invisible ghost tea with the regenerative properties of fetal stem cells. Scientists may also one day discover that drinking hot water is good for you.
6884. arkymalarky - 4/6/2007 6:39:54 AM Well, the first day went pretty easily except for the exercise. I did it for a short time, even the treadmill, but I'm very out of shape. I stayed under 1500 calories without feeling particularly hungry. I need to do two more things off the bat (besides going to the doctor tomorrow and getting my allergies back under control) and add more things as I go, especially healthier food and more exercise. The first is to pay closer attention to the water. I had four glasses or so, but I should have had more, and keeping it around all the time doesn't mean I don't forget about the glass sitting there. The other is sleep. Since "Huckabee spoke" I've been getting far less sleep than I used to. Rarely do I get over 6 hours a night, and it's usually around four or five. I'd love to get 8-9, and I hope I can start to do that. I'm just not sleepy at bedtime, and I'm usually sleeping like a rock when I have to get up on work mornings. Dad, healthy as he is, sleeps until 10-11AM, but he can do that now. I always thought of him as an early-bird, but he just had to be. I don't care so much about the bedtime/waking time, but until school's out I can't sleep in, so I have to figure out how to get sleepier earlier. I've read a number of places that sleeping more has benefits, one of which is weight loss, and that women tend not to get nearly enough. 6885. thoughtful - 4/6/2007 1:28:10 PM I agree on the importance of sleep. In fact it is one of the essential steps in the schwarzbein principle. Her thinking is all about balance. Some things we do wear the body down, other things help restore it. Her thinking is that it's important to keep those in balance. Sleeping is an important element to rebuilding as is proper nutrition. 6886. wonkers2 - 4/6/2007 1:49:59 PM Cap'n Dirty sez, "Sex at least oncet a day helps, too!" 6887. arkymalarky - 4/6/2007 9:20:19 PM Day two has been a run-around day. We just got home. We ate breakfast out with Mose, and not lunch. We ate at Cracker Barrel and I didn't worry too much about what I chose (2 eggs w/bacon, one biscuit, and hash browns--AND OJ! AND IT WAS WONDERFUL! ;-)), but I didn't eat it all, I ate leftovers of it for lunch, and we got all our "town" business done, so I don't have to eat out Monday due to going from school to town for tax stuff and groceries, then to class. I can come home and eat and then go.
The most embarrassing thing for me to admit starting out is that as little as I did exercise-wise yesterday, my legs are sore and tight-feeling. I did do just a little (5 mins) on the treadmill after logging off last night.
Also, I forgot I need to do bloodwork, I am going to have to do a round of antibiotics before starting my allergy shots, and as a result I'm rescheduling my physical. I'll finish the meds and then get my bloodwork done and go in after that, sometime week after next, probably. 6888. arkymalarky - 4/6/2007 10:51:22 PM A note about rural living:
We don't just zip to the store or to do anything in town. When we go to do "town business" we do everything that needs doing, hopefully for at least a week, and the drive there and back alone takes 40 minutes or so. Planning these trips carefully has a lot of impact on how I can manage the rest of my routine. For instance, I left my prescription at another store, didn't realize it until after I got done shopping, had frozen stuff that had to get home, unloaded the car, got the message on my machine which let me know I'd been wrong about where I'd left it, drove back to town and got it, and went ahead and did my taxes (they hadn't quite finished with them when we checked right after our Wal-Mart trip), then went home. The day began before 8 and ended around 2:30. We both got haircuts, though, so that's one less thing to worry about. I was glad we actually grabbed only one meal, and that it was breakfast.
I get the impression urban living is similar, but suburban and town living is easier. You need something, you run up to the strip mall and get it. Does taking care of seemingly endless errands drive other people crazy and wear them out? I know in this town, or even the one where I work, it's no issue to run grab anything you need and be back within 20 minutes. Of course repeatedly doing that is disruptive, so planning is still valuable, but it isn't such an ordeal for every errand. 6889. arkymalarky - 4/7/2007 6:39:26 PM Judith,
Would you share what you're doing, routine-wise, with swimming? I'm going to be in class every weekday in June and I could swim as long as I wanted each day, but I wonder what a good water routine would consist of. I don't like to swim when my parents are home, but I'll either get over that, or try to time it when they're out running--which would mean before class, probably. I don't know when my class is yet. 6890. arkymalarky - 4/7/2007 6:49:17 PM Day 3: This was the day I originally planned to start, after my visit with Judith and a doctor's appointment. I am starting my antibiotics today and will hopefully get bloodwork done in the next week or so (after a 10-day round of meds). After that it's back on allergy shots and to a full physical.
I'm still going to do the exercise--calisthenics and treadmill--which has been minimal for two days, but I feel I can do more today. After my doctor's appointment I hope to ratchet it up quite a bit, depending on whether I start hurting. By then I'll have been going one to two weeks.
I'm doing lots of liquids today, including prune juice, which is very high calorie, but has been the best option for me in the past when I needed to clear out my system, to be euphemistic. I won't be doing that tomorrow and I drank my last carton of oj today.
Question: If oj is squeezed, not from concentrate, aside from the added fiber of an orange, what's the difference? It says on the carton "two servings of fruit." I'm still dropping the oj. I just wanted to know why--besides the fiber--two oranges are better. 6891. arkymalarky - 4/7/2007 7:21:44 PM What Bob lives on
Scroll down for ingredients and nutrition info. Just ordered him a case, because it's getting impossible to find. He just drove to Little Rock's Wild Oats and bought all nine boxes they had, turned around (90 minutes and 75 miles one-way) and came home. 6892. arkymalarky - 4/7/2007 7:22:59 PM Online cost is cheaper than their other cereals, at 26.99 per case of 12, plus shipping of 11.35, which amounts to about $3.20 per box. 6893. arkymalarky - 4/7/2007 7:26:31 PM At 70 calories for a cup, Bob mixes it with Lite85 yogurt and gets filled up. He varies yogurt flavors with it, though he has to read yogurt labels carefully. They're getting more variety with less desirable nutrition info and it makes it harder to get exactly what he wants. 6894. arkymalarky - 4/7/2007 7:28:32 PM One more on swimming. I'm assuming my allergies would be less an issue with swimming than walking. If not, I'd have to do an indoor pool. 6895. judithathome - 4/7/2007 9:20:32 PM I swim laps...swim two laps and then stop to do the water weights and stretching stuff. That includes arm exercises like you'd do with weights, different exercises to sort of cover all the muscle groups. I do sets of three with eight reps on each one.
Then I swim 2 more laps and stop for the leg stretches...same thing, 3 sets of eight each...front to back, side to side.
Then 2 more laps swimming. Some days I do more swimming and some days leass...whatever I can do in 45 minutes to an hour.
I had to work up to this, believe me...and I plan to increase the sets and reps as I gain more strength. Add more laps, too.
I do this and my morning walk...I do three days of swim, five days of walking. 6896. arkymalarky - 4/8/2007 12:32:08 AM Sounds like a great routine. I don't really have a winter option, but it seems like I ought to use the free summer pool, but I wasn't sure what to do once I got in it besides swim laps. 6897. arkymalarky - 4/8/2007 4:53:58 PM Yesterday's exercise was easier and I did about twice as much (not that that's much). I'm not sore this morning, either. Food and water both went well. I'm getting in about 4 16oz glasses of water, and I'll have to keep that up at work. I keep it and tea to drink anyway, because it keeps my voice going.
I LOVE the treadmill Bob brought back from his friend in NO. I love it being in the garage, as well. We're going to close in the garage and put a window unit AC in it and a television and make it our main lounging room. We'll put a portable carport out back for my car. Right now I'm doing the rest of my exercising in the living room, and with nothing but a poster, a mat, hand weights, and a little stepper, it's not in the way or hard to get out and put back. SO, bottom line is that I can increase my time and reps without any extra prep time or stuff being everywhere or needing to be by the tv.
Tomorrow starts back work after spring break, and my breakfast will be a Kashi bar, yogurt smoothie, and fruit--probably an orange. No cereal...and no juice....
Another thing I love about where I work compared to other schools I've worked in is that we have a breakfast period of 20 minutes in the high school, so after first period is when I have breakfast every day, rather than at home. This is great for high school kids who tend to skip breakfast, even if it's free at school, if it means moving more and earlier in the morning. I'm a strong advocate of later school starts for adolescents. For a non-morning person this breakfast period is a huge plus to getting a good breakfast in. Also, since it's now officially past the holiday season, people won't be leaving goodies for us in the teachers' lounge. The best strawberry pie maker south of the Mason-Dixon retired last year.
I was looking at the Health part of Yahoo, and it's fairly good as a central location for a lot of stuff, as is MSNBC's Health section, but I get sick to death of the obsession with sex. I think it's time people start doing more--or not--and talking WAY less. It's a relevant part of health and fitness, but it's not the be-all end-all of it. Maybe I'm making too much of it and it says more about me, or maybe it's just hitting me wrong this morning. Whatever the case, it's bugging me. 6898. Wombat - 4/9/2007 2:34:48 AM I can get Kashi at my local supermarket. My problem with it, is in order to eat enough to feel remotely content, and not to feel famished within an hour or two, I have at least two cups with milk (1%) and sugar. That all adds up.
My problem with breakfast is that I am a slave to routine, but get bored after a while.
I might go for months on 2-3 rye krisps and peanut butter, wheetena or oatmeal with maple syrup and a small pat of butter, or drinkable yogurt and a small bag of pretzels, or a toasted slice of whole-grain pumpernickel with an ounce of cheese or smear of peanut butter (each of which adds up to around 200 calories), and then get tired of it. They are all reasonably filling, as long as I have an early lunch. There were even several months of Mr. Salty cheeze 'n' pretzel snack packs (100 calories each) and a tangerine. 6899. arkymalarky - 4/9/2007 2:50:41 AM You might try Bob's method--the plain seven grains Kashi (no other Kashi cereal is as pure as that one, though they make good cereals. It's the only one that's low carb enough for his diabetes) mixed with light yogurt (Bob likes the vanilla flavored yogurt) as a snack, rather than for breakfast. You're getting 150 calories and a lot of pure, whole grains plus the yogurt. It also smells wonderful. For breakfast, Bob eats oatmeal with prunes and cinnamon. Our stores here have several types of Kashi, including that one sweetened, but the one that carried that particular kind with no sweetener quit carrying it.
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