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Healthy diet plan for summer

Well it is that time of year again, you are a little pale and the spare tire is a little bit bigger than it was in the fall and now you want to lose some and look better in those skin showing summer clothes.

What you need is a plan and a bit of a change in schedule.

Here is a simple list of things that you can do starting today to make sure that you are buff and ready as the summer and summer activities come in a couple of months.

Eat Smarter

smart eating is better eatingThe key to a healthy diet plan is to eat smarter than before.

Over the winter you may have been eating a little badly, keeping on track but cheating.

Now is the time to start eating in a very structured and focused way.

No matter how you have been eating you must now start eating every couple or three hours.

Really this just means toad snacks, good for you snacks.

Let’s say that you eat breakfast at 8, lunch at 12, dinner at 6. Now all you have to do is add snacks (really just smaller meals) at 10 am, 3 pm and 8 pm. Now you must be wondering, what you should be eating?

The next important thing is to be sure to eat smaller meals and small snacks. The idea of eating so often is that your body will be better able to use the food that you are eating and a side effect of this is that it will raise your metabolism.

Raise the Protein, Drop the Carbohydrates

What you eat is the next thing that is important. You should get a good idea of what is a carb based food and what is a protein based food and we all know what is fatty and these high fat foods should be avoided when you are trying to lose weight.

I said that you need to eat small meals but most importantly you need to make sure that you have lots of protein and less carbohydrates than you are used to.

This may be initially harder than you expect but in the end this adjustment will pay great dividends in having a healthy diet plan for summer.

Stay Hydrated When You Exercise

When you are working out you will want to of course drink water and sports drinks so that you can keep not only your liquids up but the magic of sports drinks like Gatorade is that they bring back the electrolytes that you are losing by sweating.

Getting dehydrated will drop your energy and in the end will stop your body from functioning normally.

These steps to a healthy diet plan will make a big difference this spring and summer to make you healthier and more fit.

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Tips For Maintaining A Low Carb Diet

The measurement for a successful low carb diet plan is to lose weight. Right? Well actually no, it isn’t.

The real measurement is that you are able to keep the weight off year after year. A diet is not just for today and tomorrow but is actually a lifestyle change.

So, what is the real important parts of a low carb diet plans?

A simple foundation that can be relied upon is to ingest fewer foods that have a high calorie count such as foods that contain processed flour and sugar.

You then replace the high calorie foods with foods that have fewer calories. This can be accomplished by eating healthy sources of protein, whole grains and of course fresh vegetables and fruits.

The next thought that comes into your head is “Easier said than done”. Actually it is not quite as hard to accomplish as you might think. These tips will help you get off to a good start and keep the off successfully for years to come.

Tips for making low carb diets work for you

Tips For Maintaining A Low Carb Diet

1. Reduce the size of the portions. By measuring your healthy portions of proteins, vegetables and fruits you will reduce the carbohydrates and maintain the proper level of calories needed daily.

2. Eat four to five times a day. You accomplish a couple things by eating this often. As you digest your food your metabolism rate will be increased by the activity, thus burning more calories. In addition to that you will find that you won’t be as hungry each time that you eat.

3. Avoid eating after six o’clock p.m. If you must eat or snack after 6 p.m. do so with low carb foods, such as yogurt, organic fruits and veggies.

4. Eat foods with high unsaturated fats, such as olive oil, nuts and fish. These foods are a natural barrier to diseases that can attack your body.

5. Enhance your low-carb diet plan by eating organic foods when possible. Foods such as raw honey, wild smoked salmon, tomatoes, rye bread and there are even organic red meats, pork and chicken.

6. Prepare the menu for the week ahead. This enables you to do your shopping for the healthiest foods without being rushed.

7. Broil and grill your meats when possible. Prior to broiling or grilling the meat, make certain to trim off excess fat and remove the skin where possible. Enhance the flavor of meats using your favorite natural spices.

8. Drink bottled water or filtered water. This will keep your body hydrated and cleansed. For the best effect with the low-carb diet it is suggested drinking 64 oz. per day.

9. The Dreaded Tip: Exercise. A mild exercise such as walking at least 30 minutes a day will increase the metabolic rate of your body.

10. Positive attitude. This tip perhaps may be the most important tip of all. Believe in your ability to follow a plan and to lose weight.

By implementing these tips you will have more success with your long term weight loss when using your low carb diet plan.

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Fitness and Blood Pressure

High blood pressure, alias hypertension, is a leading killer. It has no respect for sex, occupation, social status or religion. Cardiovascular diseases account for approximately 50 percent of deaths in this country.

Not only is hypertension one of the leading cardiovascular illnesses, but it is an ancillary hazard of many other illnesses.

People suffering from obesity, heart disease, kidney disease, diabetes, and a long list of other illnesses are susceptible to high blood pressureand to its complications.

High blood Pressure and Fitness

What is High Blood Pressure

What is High Blood Pressure

Although no precise blood pressure reading demarcates normal from high, North American adults at rest may be in for trouble if their blood pressure is consistently higher than 140/90.

Not so with “low blood pressure.” In fact, statistically speaking, persons with “low blood pressure” have a greater life expectancy.

“Low blood pressure” is truly “low” when a person is gravely ill and in shockdue to haemorrhage, severe coronary attack, terminal disease, or serious injury. Many normal people have normally low blood pressure readings.

When a physician “reads” blood pressure by means of his “blood pressure cuff” and stethoscope, he arrives at two figures systole (high) and diastole (low).

Thus a normal reading might be 130/80. This indicates that the pressure in the blood vessels is 130 mm. of mercury during the squeezing forward action of blood along the arteries when the heart contracts.

When the heart relaxes and while it is being filled before the next contraction or heartbeat, diastole is said to occur. This relaxed state, or diastole, is 80 mm. of mercury in this case.

Blood pressure, whether normal or high, fluctuates widely during the day and is influenced by normal daily occurrences.

While these rises and dips are transient and almost without clinical significance, they are important as barometers to indicate the adequacy of an individual’s ability to weather the physical and emotional highs and lows which he experiences.

Effect Of Physical Exercise On Blood Pressure

In the untrained subject, a typical or average response of blood pressure during exercise is to riseperhaps reaching a maximum of 200/100 after two or three minutes. And this then might persist for the duration of the exertion.

This is an average change. It signifies a rise in both systole and diastole, but a greater net difference (by subtraction) between the two. This greater net difference indicates that a greater blood flow is being channelled across the muscles, since a larger pressure gradient is being observed.

An increased need for nutrient to the muscles with an increased need to remove unneeded residues of burnt fuels from the muscles makes this seem logical.

The athlete is much more efficient. His blood pressure too increases during exerciseand to about the same “readings”for two to three minutes. Then his diastolic pressure tends to drop precipitously, perhaps to a final combined “reading” of 200/10.

The pressure gradient between systole and diastole is now greatly increased, making for more efficient perfusion of his muscle mass.

An athlete thus does not contract his heart more vigorously (systole), but has educated his heart and arteries to relax more completely (diastole). Exercise has long been known to have a beneficial effect on blood pressure.

The flexibility of the blood vessels during exercise is maximal (high systole and low diastole), with a decreased tendency obviously to “hardening of the arteries.”

The Effect Of Age On Blood Pressure

Although high blood pressure begins at readings over 140/90, this applies only to North American adults. Normal infants have blood pressures of approximately 75/40.

During childhood and adolescence blood pressure gradually rises and it is not until late teens and early twenties that 140/90 becomes the upper limit of normal.

There is a time-honored adage that your blood pressure rises one point per year as you grow older. This is far from true. As the years go by there is a normal tendency toward “hardening of the arteries” (arteriosclerosis). In fact, early evidences of “hardening of the arteries” begin in the twenties and early thirties.

As the arteries become “hardened,” they necessarily lose their elasticity and flexibility.

When the heart contracts, the arteries are less able to “give” or stretch a little, resulting in greater pressure along this more rigid system.

Systolic blood pressure does therefore increase slightly with advancing age. Systole of 140 mm. of mercury at age thirty-five might well rise to 160 at age sixty-five.

But being “hardened,” the arteries are likewise unable to shrink down when the heart is relaxed, or during diastole. Having lost the ability to firm up during diastole, the pressure drops even further.

A normal diastole of 80 mm. of mercury at age thirty-five may become 70 at age sixty-five. Blood pressure is influenced by age. Systole rises slightly and diastole falls.

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