Posts Tagged ‘Diets’

Nutrition Diets & Weight Loss – The Trigger Factor Exposed

Saturday, July 16th, 2011

Nutrition Diets & Weight Loss – The Trigger Factor Exposed

Nutrition Diets & Weight Loss – The Trigger Factor Exposed


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Home Page > Shape > Nutrition > Nutrition Diets & Weight Loss – The Trigger Factor Exposed

Nutrition Diets & Weight Loss – The Trigger Factor Exposed

Posted: Nov 17, 2009 |Comments: 0
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Often we fall small of the mark and do not reach our desired weight loss. We reflect and analyze the foods we did or didn’t consume and take note of our increased activity level only to be discouraged to resume our attempts again. Heredity, set point theory, sex hormones, stress hormones are perhaps our explanations of failed attempts at a healthy nutrition diet.

While there are many causative factors that play a role in nutrition diets, most are synergistic and individual. By this, I mean you cannot look at just one factor in weight loss reduction. As Berry Sears, author of The Zone, Sears states, “diets are like a religion, everyone thinks they have the right one”. We can look at scientific studies and use the data and facts we know as right to facilitate our efforts. For example, studies show that the best time to exercise is when insulin is lowest and glucagon is at it highest. In most cases, this is within one hour of waking. “This will set the bodies stout burning thermostat in motion for the day… really 200% more efficient during exercise at this time”. Another fact is that stout “preferably mono unsaturated fats such as avocado, coconut, olive oil, etc.”, combined with a carbohydrate will slow the rate at which glucose will rise in the blood stream and also will produce satiety so that no hunger ensues.

I could go on and on with the facts. But I’d rather discuss something so elementary but elemental that missing this could be detrimental in ones noble have a crack to baggy weight and have a healthy nutrition diet.

You may be doing everything right except dismissing the one factor that inhibits the needle on the scale to go to the left or zipper the top of the pants, because the tape measure won’t budge. Are you following all the rules, but have “selective exceptions”?

Let’s take for instance, a “trigger food”. Everyone has a different one. In general, women prefer the taste of sweet foods, while men prefer salty and fatty foods. Therefore, many women may find chocolate sweetie their trigger food. Men may find potato chips their “trigger food”.

A trigger food is in my definition, a consumable substance, that, when eaten in small quantities by most individuals will not produce a substantial deficient in there nutritional quest for weight loss. But in some individuals, if there is a continued desire to reach for more quantities of this nutrient whether it’s a stout, carbohydrate, protein or combination thereof it will detour the individual in many and really cause the opposite desired upshot weight gain and adversely effect their nutrition diet.

In simplest terms, some people have one food they simply can not have “a modest of”. Who can eat only 10 M & M’s and stop? Some people find this satisfying. But there are people who find this to be there trigger food which will then cause them to cascade in to a downward spiral on dipping compulsively into the M& M bags. Oops and 3 pounds of M & M’s are gone! Forget about the 1 hour 5 / day a week walks or the excellent nutrition the past few days. Because now, all the M & M addict can reckon about is M & M’s, cycle. “A special rule” and exception to the diet “M & M’s will be forgiven!” You can replace M & M’s with anything above and beyond ice cream, nachos, french fries, etc. There goes your healthy nutrition diet.

Can you see how one “trigger point food” will throw out all attempts at loosing body stout? Never mind the shape benefits that aren’t attained.

My advice to you is that you must develop a personal mantra, “I am only ____ pounds or inches away from my goal if I eliminate the habit of eating or drinking ____. It’s that unadorned “I am keeping my self from my goal by keeping this in my life.”

Next I recommend you do not taste it at all. It seemed simpler to absolutely abstain from the substance, cycle, remove it from the refrigerator, selves, get it out of the house! If your thoughts become aware of not having it, train your mind to redirect its thoughts and do something pro active and productive such as go for a walk, read a book that you’ve wanted to read, play with your animals or children, make a phone call, etc. You will find in ten minutes you will have resisted the urge and have become pleased with your resolve to stay on the path to a healthy nutrition diet.

While the concept of “trigger food” is simplistic, it is often underestimated in playing the role of the saboteur of body stout/weight loss. It is often unidentified because either one is in denial of eating such large quantities. We must bring our awareness to the forefront and honestly identify this personal enemy so we can develop a strategy to ensure the pursuit for our quest for a healthy nutrition diet.

Disclaimer: Not everyone has this problem. But, a large majority of people who fail at there attempts often overlook there “trigger factor” and attribute there attempts to something “more complicated”. Keep it unadorned…just try this. Stay away from the trigger food for one week, keep up all the other efforts toward your goal, and see if it’s that unadorned. If this is your hindrance, you will have no problem omitting this food item from your diet as your confidence increases as you baggy weight and have the optimum nutrition diet.

Find out the secrets to healthy nutrition diets and weight loss. Visit http://www.docofthefuture.com/ right now!

 

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Jenny McCarthy is Right — Autism Diets Can Help, says Julie Matthews, Certified Nutrition Consultant

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011


Cover of Wholesome Hope


San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) October 11, 2007

Oprah recently dedicated an entire show to autism featuring celebrity “warrior mom” Jenny McCarthy who encourages parents of children with autism to include special diets in their overall treatment plot. Julie Matthews, author of Wholesome Hope, a book on nutrition and diet for autism says, “Jenny is right! When you focus on getting these kids the nutrients their injured bodies need and avoiding adverse substances and foods, you can help restore shape.” The Autism Research Institute’s (ARI) ongoing survey of more than 25,500 parents indicates that dietary approaches can foster improvement in their child’s autism symptoms – finding 65% improved on the well loved GFCF diet.

“Autism diets can help these children for many reasons,” Matthews says, among them being that “particular foods cannot be tolerated due to gastrointestinal and immune system challenges that can cause an opiate-like rejoinder and/or tenderness and digestive disturbances.” These intolerances affect “fogginess” in the brain and physical shape. Correcting these imbalances helps lift the fog and alleviate symptoms, “then attention and shape can increase, which aid the effectiveness of learning and behavioral therapies.” Present day hard can identify challenging foods and substances to direct the approach, as every child’s biochemistry is unique.

Parents of children with autism, as well as practitioners from varied shape fields who want to learn more about the treatments, including diet, that Jenny McCarthy talks about can attend the Defeat Autism Now! conference, held in Anaheim, CA October 12-14, where Jenny and Julie will be speaking. Julie Matthews will be a featured speaker, presenting on the Essentials of Nutrition Intervention for Autism.

Special diets are the “how” of applying a nutrition-focused approach Julie says, “while each child is unique and not everyone will respond similarly, the overall benefit of applying diet is well researched and ‘parent proven.’” In fact, in the ARI parents’ survey of more than 60 options in three major classes of treatment (drugs, biomedical non-drug therapies, and special diets), special diets rank as the most successful intervention category, with respective diet options ranging from 50-66% showing improvement.

While particular diets are commonly effective, there is no one-size-fits all approach. Matthews states “If one diet lacks effectiveness, there are others to try and adapt. Different diets serve varied needs to help alleviate symptoms and promote healing. The key is finding and refining a diet that best serves an individual child.”

Wholesome Hope provides a scientific framework for appreciative why special diets can help and a holistic approach to getting started with dietary intervention for autism.

For more information contact NourishingHope.com.

About Julie Matthews — Julie Matthews is a Certified Nutrition Consultant specializing in autism spectrum disorder (as well as healthy pregnancy and babies). Her book, Wholesome Hope, and her work are based in extensive research and appreciative of the biochemistry of autism and the role of nutrition to restore shape. She speaks at national autism conferences, and leads cooking demonstrations on habitual healing foods. Julie has a private nutrition do and weekly radio show in San Francisco and assists clients from around the planet. See NourishingHope.com

About Wholesome Hope — Wholesome Hope is a compendium of seven years clinical nutrition experience and intense research. It outlines all of the major autism diets including GFCF/gluten-free, casein-free (wheat-and-dairy-free), Specific Carbohydrate Diet, Body Ecology Diet, Feingold Diet, and more.

The book provides a comprehensive appreciative of malfunctioning metabolic processes and clarifies the impact of nutrition on the biochemistry of children with autism. Detailed steps for dietary intervention are included and a roadmap for getting started, evolving, and customizing the varied approaches. The book contains matter-of-fact insight garnered through parents’ anecdotal experience with nutrition & diet intervention.

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Typhoid, Eat to beat illness, Indiadiets : Your guide to Health, Nutrition, Diets, Fitness, Weight loss, Diet… http://dlvr.it/D2d3B

Monday, January 10th, 2011

Typhoid, Eat to beat illness, Indiadiets : Your guide to Shape, Nutrition, Diets, Fitness, Weight loss, Diet… http://dlvr.it/D2d3Bby lovingmoorthi (lovingnisha)

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C? Mo rid of obesity | Healthy Nutrition Diets http://bit.ly/fNyQml – cool blog

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

C? Mo rid of obesity | Healthy Nutrition Diets http://bit.ly/fNyQml – cool blog – by johan_fatloss (Johan Minn)

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Nutrition for Children – Nutrition Education – Kids Diets

Sunday, November 14th, 2010

Nutrition. Food Pyramid Nutritional Categorize · Coloring Book · Nutritional Quiz · Nutritional Link, You know the importance of excellent, nutrition and exercise, but how do you feed a picky eater or encourage a child who despises sports to play outside, kids neutrition,kids nutrition,nutrition for…
Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Nutrition & Diets : Diet Tips for an Under-Active Thyroid

Friday, November 5th, 2010

People with an under-active thyroid should eliminate Splenda from the diet, which can cause long-term weight gain, and they should include omega-3 fatty acids and iodine through sea vegetables in the diet. Eat right to counteract an under-active thyroid with shape information from a registered dietitian and licensed nutritionist in this free video on healthy eating.

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Sales flat as a cookie: dealing with diets, trans fats and childhood obesity, the cookie category tries to keep from crumbling.: An article from: Food Processing

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

Sales flat as a cookie: dealing with diets, trans fats and childhood obesity, the cookie category tries to keep from crumbling.: An article from: Food Processing

This digital document is an article from Food Processing, published by Thomson Gale on November 1, 2005. The length of the article is 1176 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after buy. You can view it with any web browser.

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Title: Sales flat as a cookie: dealing with diets, trans fats and childhood obesity, the cookie category

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The Mediterranean Diet.

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Safe, Simple, Doable, Healthy Diet & Recipes. Centuries Of Verification And Its Tasty. Also Known As The Heart Diet Or Cancer Diet And Is Currently One Of The Most Respected Diets Known Today.

The Mediterranean Diet.

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