Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Edamame and Corn Succotash

This is a great recipe to use on the go.  It travels well (without avocado) and stays fresh for a few days.  I keep it in the fridge as a snack too.  Its great to “pick at” if you needs something quick.  It is a perfect meal to take to work, camping, or anywhere you need to bring a delicious and easy meal.  It’s Vegan and very high in protein. 

3/4 cup frozen edamame
1/2 cup frozen corn
1/2 shallot, diced
1/2 red bell pepper, diced
1/4 red onion, diced
1/2  Avocado
4 cherry tomatoes cut in half
1 TBL Rice vinegar
1 TBL Extra Virgin Olive Oil
2 TBL Fresh Lime Juice
2 TBL Fresh Cilantro
Himalayan Salt / herbal seasoning
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. and arrange corn in single layer on baking sheet.  Roast for 10 minutes, or until caramelized and beginning to brown, but not harden.  Remove and let cool.  Meanwhile, bring water to a boiland cook edamame for 5-7 minutes. Drain and set aside. Saute onion, shallot, and bell pepper in oil for 10 minutes or until soft.
Add corn and edamame to onion mixture, cook on medium for 5 minutes. Add vinegar and remove from heat. Stir in Lime juice, Cilantro, Salt and seasoning.
If serving cold, add avocado and tomato (my modification)

5 Ways to Breakthrough Dreaded Weight Loss Plateau

By Justine Holberg
You’re tracking calories, working out each day, then bam! For a week or two, the scale refuses to budge…and you realize you’ve hit a dreaded weight loss plateau. Now what?
Even though it’s completely normal to hit a snag in your fitness journey, a perceived setback like this can send even the most dedicated dieter off course, away from healthy eating and toward cookies, cake, and pizza. But you can be strong and start getting back on the weight-loss track again. Try at least one of the following techniques, and there’s a good chance you’ll burst through your plateau in no time.
Here are five important things to know about hydration and exercise:

1. Zigzag your daily calorie intake.
In theory, you’ve got to eat less to lose more, but this isn’t always the case. Sometimes you just have to shake things up. Here’s one way to do it: If your average daily intake is 1,400 calories, try dropping to 1,200 one day, going up to 1,800 the next day, and then dropping back to 1,400. The idea is to keep your metabolism guessing. There’s no magic number that works for everyone, so you’ll have to experiment until you find the right calorie levels for you.
According to Beachbody Director of Results Steve Edwards, what happens when you zigzag is that you force your body to choose how many calories it needs to recover from the rigors of your exercise program. “Most people who hit a plateau are undereating. If you are indeed undereating, adding calories for a few days, then lowering them again, will help you force your body into a hormonal response that will not only help you break out of a plateau, but—as you learn to recognize the signals—will teach you how much food you should be eating.”
2. Switch up your exercise routine.
If you do the same workout each day, eventually it can start to become less challenging, and (unfortunately) less effective. If you push yourself to new levels of strength or exhaustion, you’ll almost certainly see a shift. Here are some ways you can challenge your body:
  • Swap your jog for a bike ride.
  • Try weights with your cardio routine. (ChaLEAN Extreme® or RevAbs® can help you do this.)
  • Add intervals of high intensity to really make you sweat. (INSANITY® is a great workout for this.)
  • Drop to the floor for 10 push-ups right now!
The idea is to try something different. According to Edwards, “The better you get at something, the easier it becomes. That’s why we’re always telling you to add more weight as you get stronger, and to move faster and jump higher as our programs progress. But it’s also why all of our programs have phases of training. As your body adapts to stimulus, you need to change that stimulus in order to keep results happening.”
3. Eat some almonds.
Almonds are a great snack, plus there’s some research that indicates that they can help you burn fat. That’s because they contain fiber and fatty acids—the good kind of fat that helps you lose weight. A study published in the International Journal of Obesity compared two groups of people who ate a 1,000-calorie-a-day diet. As part of their daily diet, one group ate 3 ounces of almonds every day. The other group ate a mix of complex carbs. What happened? The group that ate the almonds lost more weight.
So next time you grab a snack, try a small handful of almonds, or as Edwards says, “Any nut, really. While almonds are one of the better nuts, all of them have a similar nutritional profile and make excellent snacks. That research probably would have turned out similarly if they’d used walnuts or filberts or whatever.”
4. Get more sleep.
This may seem like the opposite of number 2, but the truth is is that you could be training too hard, which is about the quickest way to hit a weight loss plateau, because an over-trained body holds on to weight as if it were starving to death. There’s no better way to test this than to try and sleep more. The reason is that your body recovers much more quickly from exercise while it’s asleep, and if you’re burning the midnight oil while trying to do INSANITY, you could easily plateau from lack of recovery time.
In a recent study at the University of Chicago Medical School, researchers found that during a period when study participants were deprived of sleep, they metabolized glucose less effectively. Additionally, they had higher levels of the hormone cortisol, which has been shown to impair memory, increase insulin resistance, and slow recovery in athletes. “There’s a good reason why five-time Tour de France winner Eddy Merckx said, ‘The Tour is won in bed,'” says Edwards. Your body’s recovery response during deep sleep is only rivaled by performance-enhancing drugs. When you’re on the borderline of overtraining, getting more sleep is the first thing anyone should try.”
5. Relax.
Believe it or not, the one big thing besides diet and exercise that can cause you to plateau is stress. When you’re stressed, your body sends out higher levels of the hormone cortisol that, as stated in number 4, can encourage your body to hang on to fat. “Cortisol is actually a performance-enhancing hormone,” says Edwards. “But it’s gotten a bad rap because we’ve begun living our lives at too high a volume. Cortisol is released at times when the body is in an emergency state. It increases performance, but only over a short period of time. When cortisol is released and forced into action at regular intervals, it causes your body to wear down and switch to more drastic means of survival, like holding on to excess amounts of body fat. Your life shouldn’t feel like one big emergency. As a society, we need to learn to be more tranquilo, as the Spanish say.”
We get stressed for many reasons, almost all of which are influenced by the society around us. One of the best ways to combat stress is to get some alone time to chill. If you’re the type who can’t let go, try some forced relaxation techniques, of which yoga seems to be one of the most effective. There’s something special about the mind/body interaction of yoga that forces a relaxed state even from the most stressed of us.
If you feel you need a lot of help, dig into an intense course, like P90X Yoga X. For others, something lighter, like Yoga Booty Ballet® Pure and Simple Yoga, will do the trick. If you’re not into yoga, then consider at least adding some stretching into your schedule. Most of Beachbody’s programs have at least one stretching session. TurboFire® even has two!

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

How Our Food Quality has Changed

What we EAT has changed MORE in the last 50 years, than in the last 10,000. The calories we are eating, as Americans are not only EMPTY, but they are processed, artificial and contain harmful chemicals. It’s no WONDER diseases like Cancer, Diabetes, Heart Disease and Obesity are more prevalent than EVER. What if we could turn back time, and go back to BASICS. What if we could combine all the best NATURAL whole-food ingredients, vitamins, and holistic medicines from around the WORLD, that have been used for centuries and package them in a way that they MAINTAIN their integrity and are bio-available and can be broken down in our body. What if we had something that already has ALL the nutrients and health benefits our body craves, and was AFFORDABLE and tasted great. Even if you were to JUICE all 70 of these ingredients, think of the TIME and MONEY it would cost you. 
Shakeology is the ONE meal that you CANT AFFORD to dismiss. Completely natural, healthy, back to the basics, easy and affordable. If you “can’t afford” to be healthy, you SURE cannot afford to be SICK. Why NOT try it for a month and SEE how you feel….

Monday, March 27, 2017

Secrets of Longevity: Hundreds of Ways to Live to Be 100

In this health book by Dr. Maoshing Ni, he gives secrets of Longevity and Living to be 100. On page 94 he speaks of Astragalus. Just LOOK what this DOES! Seriously amazing. ASTRAGALUS is in once a day, SHAKEOLOGY!
Secrets of Longevity is full of surprising, all-natural ideas for living a longer, healthier life, happier. As a 38th-generation doctor specializing in longevity, Dr. Mao (as he’s known to his patients) knows the answers—and they’re surprisingly simple and powerful. It’s amazing how a little honey in your tea can aid internal healing. Or how taking a walk after dinner each night can reduce the risk of stroke and heart disease. The tips are organized into chapters on diet, healing, environment, exercise, and relationships so you can easily dip into the areas you’d like to address.
Marrying wisdom from the East with the latest scientific advances from the West, Secrets of Longevity puts at your fingertips a whole host of ways to make your stay on earth longer, healthier, and much, much happier.
Click Here to find this book on Amazon.

Shakeology No Bake Chocolate Cookies

- 1 cup of natural peanut or almond butter
- 1 cup of quick-cook oatmeal
- 1/3 cup of agave nectar or all unfiltered natural honey
- 1 cup of chocolate Shakeology powder
Mix in a bowl with your hands, shape into cookies and refrigerate! You can also change up the flavor by rolling them in unsweetened coconut ,whole grain graham-cracker crumbs, or chopped nuts!
ENJOY…withOUT the guilt!

Do You Need a Health Coach?


When it comes to living a healthy lifestyle, it’s more than just what you eat and how you exercise. The quality and quantity of your sleep, how you deal with stress and your emotional well-being also play a role in your overall health. While doctors and physicians can diagnosis and treat illnesses, health coaches can teach preventative measures that thwart a visit to a doctor altogether.
“Physicians don’t have enough time to spend with their patients going over nutrition, lifestyle and stress reduction,” says Kerrie Martin, a holistic health and nutrition counselor and founder of health coaching practice Live In Rhythm. “Health coaches serve to fill that gap.”
Health coaches are a relatively new phenomenon in the health and fitness world and the practice differs from personal training. A personal trainer tends to tell clients how much to exercise and in some cases, what to eat, a health coach will do that plus discuss ways to reduce stress, increase rest, and focus on improving the overall quality of life—not just in the gym.
Health coaches are commonly found in corporate settings as part of wellness programs, but they are slowly infiltrating the private market. These coaching sessions, which can cost anywhere from $50 to $150 an hour, tend not to be covered by medical insurance, the growing demand and interest from doctors could change that down the road.
According to Melinda Huffman, principal at Miller & Huffman Outcome Architects and co-founder of the Notational Society of Health Coaches, demand for health coaches has grown exponentially, largely because research has found it’s more effective to discuss a treatment plan with a patient than to simply prescribe a medicine and hope that they take it.
“When you manage a patient you give them this or that information and send them on their way,” says Huffman. Health coaching gives patients the opportunity to figure out how a treatment plan will impact their life, she says.
For many people, health coaching is about how to eat better, lose weight or feel more energized. But it can also be used for more specific problems. According to Martin, people use health coaches for digestive problems, fertility issues and even chronic or terminal diseases like cancer or heart disease. “There’s so much conflicting information out there that a health coach can help individuals decipher all the information,” says Martin.
Health coaches aren’t for everybody. On top of the cost, which can get expensive the longer you see a health coach, people typically have to commit to more than one session. While a person can see a health coach just one time, many recommend entering a three to six month program—after all, change doesn’t usually happen overnight.
Health coaches aren’t doctors, which means they can’t prescribe medicine nor are they able to diagnosis illnesses. Many health coaches are certified through education programs like the Institute for Integrative Nutrition.
According to Dr. Roger Jahnke, chief executive of consulting and training firm Health Action, which uses the The Circle of Life Health & Wellness Coaching Method, the fact that they aren’t doctors is a benefit for the people seeking health coaches. “People with medical degrees think about health intervention,” says Jahnke. “It’s an allusion that medicine is prevention–it’s intervention. Prevention is people taking care themselves.” Jahnke details health coaches support participants by creating and executing a plan–not telling them a generic plan that doesn’t take into account different situations and life parameters. “The coach is there to support a person making reasonable plan.”