Archive for the tag: Good

The #1 Exercise To Lose Belly Fat (FOR GOOD!)

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“How to lose belly fat” is one of the most common questions out there. And that’s understandable. Belly fat is really easy to gain and notoriously hard to lose. It can seem as though no matter what exercises you try to lose belly fat and no matter how well you eat, the belly fat just won’t budge. And unfortunately, with exception to surgery, there is currently no proven method of being able to spot reduce fat from the belly. There is an exercise, however, that is incredibly underutilized yet powerfully effective when it comes to losing even the most stubborn belly fat. Today I’ll share what that is and how you can start using it right away to lose belly fat.

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Why is belly fat is so hard to lose in the first place? Well, it comes down to the fact that certain areas of your body are easier to lose fat than others, and is largely determined by genetics. Now having your genetics stacked against you may seem problematic if you’re looking to develop a slim or lean looking abdomen, but there is a solution. As long as you create a calorie deficit, you will continue to lose fat. Eventually, if maintained long enough, you will lose excess fat from all areas of your body, even if your genetics put your belly fat at the back of the line.

While diet should be your main way of creating a calorie deficit, adding additional exercises could help you to lose belly fat by keeping your metabolism high, even as you’re losing weight from dieting. That said, not all exercises are created equal. While things like running, rowing, cycling, or even HIIT workouts tend to burn calories very quickly, the truth is, the overwhelming majority of people can’t actually stick with traditional cardio long enough for fat loss to reach stubborn areas. And it’s not that these methods don’t work if you stick to it, because they do. The problem is simply that they’re brutal. They require a lot of willpower.

Now don’t get me wrong, these forms of cardio definitely do have their place and some people have no problem sticking to them. In fact, I still do these intense sessions once or twice a week for conditioning. But I no longer rely on them as my main form of cardio to lose fat and nor should most people. Because if you want to lose your stubborn belly fat, and more importantly keep it off once it’s gone, then you need something you can stick to for life. What’s the solution?

The best exercise to lose belly fat is walking. It’s the easiest to maintain, lowest stress, lowest fatigue, and most versatile form of cardio. According to research, intense forms of cardio like HIIT or running, while time efficient, didn’t provide any superior fat loss effect when compared to longer yet less intense forms of cardio such as walking. Which makes sense. It’s simply a numbers game. Your body doesn’t care whether the calories you burned were from some crazy intense fasted cardio session or from plain old walking. What matters most is what you can do consistently over time. And if you crunch the numbers, you’ll actually find that the calories burned from simply walking can very quickly add up to a meaningful amount.

So now that I’ve hopefully convinced you of the power of walking, let’s dive into the specifics of how to lose belly fat from walking. The first step is to determine an average of how many steps you’re currently taking. You can use the health app on your iPhone or use Google Fit if you’re on Android. After a week, see what your daily average comes up to. Some of you however might be surprised with how few steps you’re taking, but this is a good thing, as it means you have a big opportunity to bump that up.

Set a realistic goal and first aim to do an extra 2,000 steps a day. Given that the average individual takes about 1,200 steps during 10 minutes of walking, all you have to do is throw in two 10 minutes walks into your day to accomplish that. Once you’re consistent with that, try bumping it up by another 2,000 steps, and continue doing this with the goal of consistently getting at least 8,000 steps or even up to 15,000 steps, which seems to be the range that provides the greatest fat loss and health benefits.

Trust me, the little things add up. Apply these tips and you’ll be surprised with just how much they increase your step count and even more surprised by how much of a difference it makes towards your fat loss overtime. That said guys, I want to emphasize that walking or any form of cardio is only effective for fat loss if it’s used in combination with a diet. So use your diet as the primary way to create a calorie deficit and supplement it with walking to help speed up the process.
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BREAKFAST SAUSAGE **HOMEMADE** SECRET INGREDIENTS FOR GOOD FOOD (OAG)

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BREAKFAST SAUSAGE **HOMEMADE** SECRET INGREDIENTS FOR GOOD FOOD (OAG)

DO YOU KNOW WHAT CHEMICALS ARE IN STORE BOUGHT SAUSAGE?
ARE THOSE CHEMICALS GOOD FOR US?
One famous brand lists this on its packaging: Corn Syrup, 415 mg salt, spices, Monosodium Glutamate, Natural Flavor.
The question is: Are these added items healthy for us?
I don’t think they are and I avoid them by growing my own food or making it, in this case made at home breakfast sausage.
SAUSAGE SPICES (For: 1 pound of meat) 1/2 Tablespoon Dried Sage, 1/2 to 3/4 Teaspoon salt, 1/2 Teaspoon Dried Basil, 1/2 Teaspoon Garlic powder, 1/2 Teaspoon Onion powder, *1/2 Teaspoon Poultry seasoning, 1/8 Teaspoon Black pepper, 1/8 to 1/4 teaspoon Red pepper flakes, *1/2 Teaspoon Maple syrup (Optional).
* SECRET INGREDIENT
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Brain Foods for Brain Health – Boost Brain Health with Good Eats

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Brain Foods for Brain Health - Boost Brain Health with Good Eats

Good Food is Good Medicine blog: https://health.ucdavis.edu/good-food/

Dr. Liz Applegate’s presentation discusses specific foods and dietary supplements that may enhance brain health and transform diet to one that supports healthy aging and memory performance. Dr. Applegate is Director of Sports Nutrition and a Distinguished Lecturer at the University of California, Davis. Her educational focus is eating for optimal health and performance. She writes a column for Runner’s World, appears on national TV & radio and speaks to people of all ages about practical and science based approaches to optimizing oneself through diet.

This lecture is part of UC Davis Health System’s Alzheimer’s Disease Center 2016 Community Lecture Series sponsored by Sunrise Senior Living and Aegis Living. It was delivered live at the Lesher Center for the Arts in Walnut Creek, California on November 29, 2016.

Farm-to-fork meals reinvent hospital food: https://ucdavis.health/f2f
Smart snacking during coronavirus quarantine – https://ucdavis.health/smartsnack
How to Eat Healthy as You Age: https://ucdavis.health/HealthyAging
Health Benefits of Tea: https://ucdavis.health/tea
Tips for Good Gut Health: https://ucdavis.health/GutHealth
UC Davis Health’s Alzheimer’s Disease Center: https://health.ucdavis.edu/alzheimers/
See the latest news from UC Davis Health: https://health.ucdavis.edu/newsroom

#brainhealth #eathealthy #nutrition #snacking

(USMLE topics, neurology) Effect of aerobic exercise on cognitive functions, depression treatment, and neuroplasticity, mechanisms involved. This video is available for instant download licensing here : https://www.alilamedicalmedia.com/-/galleries/narrated-videos-by-topics/health-and-fitness/-/medias/cda1328b-3332-43e4-ba2d-04c5042ffe26-effects-of-exercise-on-the-brain-narrated-animation
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Apart from body fitness, physical exercise also has beneficial effects on the brain. A regular routine of aerobic exercise can improve memory, thinking skills, moods; and have protective effects against aging, injuries and neurodegenerative disorders.
It is noteworthy that these effects are specific to “aerobic” exercise – the kind of exercise that accelerates heart rate and respiratory rate, such as running, cycling, swimming… Non-aerobic activities, such as stretching or muscle building, do not have the same effect. The effects appear to result from increased blood flow to the brain and subsequent increase in energy metabolism. A certain degree of intensity is required to achieve the beneficial outcome.
Aerobic exercise increases the production of several growth factors of the nervous tissue, known as neurotrophic factors, among which BDNF, for Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor, has a central role. BDNF exerts a protective effect on existing neurons, and stimulates formation of new neurons from neural stem cells in a process called neurogenesis.
BDNF appears to coordinate its action with at least 2 other growth factors: insulin-like growth factor 1, IGF-1, and vascular endothelial growth factor, VEGF, whose expression levels also increase following aerobic exercise. BDNF interacts with IGF-1 to induce neurogenesis, while VEGF stimulates growth of new blood vessels, a process known as angiogenesis. Together these processes improve survival of existing neurons, produce new brain tissue, and constitute the brain’s enhanced plasticity that underlies the exercise-induced protective effect against aging, degenerative diseases and injuries.
Changes in BDNF levels are observed throughout the brain but are most remarkable in the hippocampus, the area that is responsible for memory retention and learning. In fact, regular exercise has been shown to increase the size of the hippocampus and improve cognitive functions.
While acute exercise, defined as a single workout, can produce significant changes in BDNF levels and subsequent improvements in learning performance; a regular exercise program progressively increases BDNF baseline level and make its response steadier overtime. It appears that some cognitive functions are enhanced immediately after a single workout, while others only improve following a consistent exercise routine.
The immediate effect of acute exercise is most remarkable on the body’s affective state. A single bout of exercise can promote positive emotions, suppress negative feelings, reduce the body’s response to stress, and sometimes, after intense exercise, induce a euphoric state known as “runner’s high” sensation. These effects may persist for up to 24 hours, and are thought to result from exercise-induced upregulation of several neurotransmitters involved in mood modulation. These include:
– Dopamine – a neurotransmitter of the brain reward pathways;
– Serotonin, commonly known as the substance of well-being and happiness, whose low levels in the brain have been associated with depressive disorders;
– Beta-endorphin, or endogenous morphine, an endogenous opioid;
– and anandamide, an endogenous cannabinoid, a substance related to psychoactive chemicals in marijuana. Endogenous opioids and cannabinoids are involved in pain modulation, stress and anxiety reduction and are believed to underlie the “runner’s high” sensation.
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How To Diet To Lose Fat FOR GOOD (4 Phases)

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If you’re watching this video, chances are, you’re wondering how to diet to lose fat for good. Most people have been taught to use approaches that set themselves up for failure in the long run, by physiologically messing up their bodies with diets that leave them in a position where it’s now very hard to strip off that excess fat. But, in this video, with the help of Dr. Eric Trexler, pro body-builder and PhD researcher, I’m going to show you exactly how to diet properly so you can undo the damage you may have done from your previous dieting attempts (i.e. maintenance calories are too low) and break through your weight loss plateau. I’ll also show you how to keep the weight off so that once you strip off that excess fat, it’s gone forever.

The first thing we want to do here is something called a recovery phase, which helps with 3 goals: restore the lean muscle mass that you lost, restore any hormonal imbalances (related to cutting your maintenance calories too low), and to just get you in a better mindset. To accomplish this, all you’re going to do is simply bump up your calories to whatever your maintenance calories currently are or even slightly above this, while also cutting back on your cardio. As for how long you should stay in this recovery phase for, Eric recommends at least a couple months for most people.

When you’re ready though, phase 2 is where we can give dieting another shot – but this time we need to do it right. Which means that we need to set up our fat loss phase in a way that minimizes muscle loss AND minimizes the metabolic adaptation we typically experience throughout our diet. And as outlined in Eric’s research papers, there are a few ways to do this. First, you need to avoid using a very aggressive calorie deficit. This equates to roughly only a 15-25% calorie deficit, but just keep an eye on how your bodyweight progresses and adjust accordingly. Next, we want to use an approach called intermittent dieting. And lastly, you need to ensure that you’re eating a high protein diet (1.8-2.7 g/kg bodyweight) along with high volume, low calorie, filling foods. So basically, you apply these 3 steps until you’ve successfully pushed past your weight loss plateau.

Then, it’s time to transition to phase 3. What we want to do here is simply find a way that you can maintain your weight loss in a sustainable way. One option is a reverse diet. Although the effect this has does seem to vary individually, often times what happens is even though you’re adding more and more calories back into your diet, your body counteracts this by essentially gets out of that “dieting” mindset and tends to start burning more calories through subconscious increases in daily activity, or NEAT to slowly bump up your metabolism. Imaginably, this is the crucial step when it comes to how to keep the weight off after your diet. However, keep in mind that again this does vary individually as people respond to increases in calorie intake differently.

And then, from here, it really is up to you where to go next. You could either maintain your new physique with relative ease with new your higher calorie intake, or you could choose to now focus more on muscle growth. Now although this whole ‘how to diet to lose fat for good’ process may seem very complex and you may be feeling as if there’s no hope for you, that just simply isn’t true. I’m not going to lie it will take time, but by following these 4 phases, remaining patient, and combining this with a solid training and nutrition plan, then you can and will be able to strip off that fat for good.

On that note though guys, for those who do need that extra bit of help when it comes to learning how to diet properly, my step-by-step programs have been designed to guide you through each of these phases in detail. It comes fully equipped with software that enables you to actually know exactly what your metabolism is at and how its changing week after week as you strip off fat, so that you can easily break through any plateau you encounter along the way and lean down in the most efficient way possible just like several of our Built With Science members have done with their programs. To get started today, simply take the analysis quiz below to discover which specific program is best for your body and where it’s currently at: https://builtwithscience.com/bws-free-fitness-quiz/gender?utm_source=Youtube&utm_medium=Video&utm_content=Description%20box&utm_campaign=Diet%20to%20lose%20fat%20for%20good%20June%2019%2F2020

Diet Hacks Video:

View Dr. Eric Trexler’s Work Below:
https://www.instagram.com/trexlerfitness/?hl=en
https://jissn.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1550-2783-11-7

Filmed by: Bruno Martin Del Campo

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Music by Ryan Little – Body Language – https://thmatc.co/?l=A37F6F3E

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Good News: Low-fat food for dieters

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Para sa mga gustong maging sexy, heto

ang ilang low-fat recipes na maaari

niyong subukan, kabilang na ang lemon

and pepper tilapia at kalabasa pasta.

GMA News Online: http://www.gmanews.tv
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This Happens to Your Stomach Fat When You Plank – 6 Good Reasons Why You Should Do Plank Daily

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Please watch: “How to Lose Belly Fat Fast in a Single Night”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMK_RPvFSwY –~–

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6 Good Reasons Why You Should Do Plank Daily. When you do the plank exercise your body burns fat faster, especially your belly fat. Watch this video to see excactly what would happen to your stomach and your entire body with this proven fat burning exercise – Waysandhow.

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Hey guys these workouts really help you get ride of LOVE HANDLES and work your ABS and OBLIQUES. If you want the workout list dm me..also do this twice a day with 200 crunches at night for FAST RESULTS.

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