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Showing posts from July, 2015

Mindful Eating

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http://samadimd.com/ latesthealth/mindful-eating-making -every-bite-count Do you eat while driving, watching TV, or scrolling through Facebook? If so, you may be eating mindlessly. What did you eat yesterday? What color was the food? What was the texture of the food? Do you remember what it tasted like? If you can’t remember, you are a mindless eater. Switching to mindful eating is simply a matter of paying attention. You become aware of your actions while eating, why you’re eating, and how you feel when eating. Mindful eating also helps provide insight to our physical an mental health.  According to The Center for Mindful Eating, there are four principles of Mindfulness. These principles also be used in everyday life: Mindfulness is deliberately paying attention, non-judgmentally, in the present moment. In our fast paced lives, we do not typically focus on our meals. Which often leaves us feeling unsatisfied, resulting in snacking and/or less healthy decisions.   Mi

Avoiding a Sedentary Lifestyle

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Our bodies are designed to move. Unfortunately, society is designed for us to sit. Most of us sit all day at work, sit while we drive to and from work, and then sit in front of the TV. All of this sitting is detrimental to our health. Prolonged sitting everyday can increase risks for diseases such as type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, breast and colon cancer and lead to poor mental health outcomes. Even if we dedicate 30 minutes a day, five days a week to exercise, risk for these diseases is still high when we sit the rest of the day.  One way to reduce sedentary activities is to increase “NEAT” activity. NEAT stands for non-exercise activity thermogenesis. This means any calories burned from non planned activities such as daily walking, standing, or fidgeting.  In 2005, a study was conducted by Levine et al. that followed 20 self proclaimed “couch potatoes,” ten were obese and ten were not. Each person wore a device that measured activity for the day. After the st