Cells throughout your body are capable of burning a number of different fuels for energy, including carbohydrates (in the form of blood glucose or muscle glycogen), protein, fat, and ketones (by-products of fat burning). By putting yourself on a carbohydrate budget, you’ll consume fewer carbohydrates than your body uses for energy. After 2 or 3 days on our eating plan, your body will have burned through its store of carbohydrates in your muscles and liver. Once your carbohydrate gas tank reads “empty,” insulin drops and stays low. Think of insulin as a switch. When it’s high, you burn carbohydrates for energy and store excess calories as fat more easily. When it’s low, your body can burn fat rather than storing it, and it will also burn triglycerides—fat in the bloodstream-lowering your risk for heart disease.
Thursday, November 30, 2017
Thursday, November 23, 2017
The importance of the right amount of movement at the right time.
On our #StubbornFatFix plan, you exercise only once you feel ready. For many people, that’s only after losing a considerable amount of weight. Trying to force your body through intense cardio or weight lifting routines from the very beginning of a diet usually backfires. Why? In the beginning, with your metabolism out of balance, exercise just causes even more imbalance by keeping you in a burned-out state. It taxes your body at a time when you need rest. Plus, you feel tired. Who wants to exercise when they’re tired? It’s much better to change your eating first and then slowly add in exercise once you feel more energetic.
Thursday, November 16, 2017
MEAT: NOT WHAT IT USED TO BE
Since the 196os, most meat has come from factory farms. Animals are usually raised in feed
lots, where they are crammed into a small space
with little ability to move. Instead of grazing on their natural diets of
grass and shrubs, most factory-farmed cattle, for instance, eat grain,
soy, and corn. This unnatural diet changes the nutritional value of the
meat, making it higher in pro-inflammatory fats and lower in heart- healthy fats such as omega-3 fatty acids and conjugated linoleic acid
(CIA). Grain-fed beef is also lower in vitamin E, beta-carotene, and
vitamin C, important antioxidants that protect your body against
serious illnesses such as prostate cancer.
Factory-farmed meat usually also contains trace amounts of
antibiotics. With animals crowded together in small lots, diseases
spread rapidly. To combat disease, ranchers routinely give antibiotics
to livestock, even when the animals display no signs of illness. The
antibiotics, by the way, also make animals gain weight, possibly by
killing their intestinal bacteria. The problem is that the antibiotics
make their way into an animal’s fat and muscle tissue. The farming
industry, of course, will tell you that there are no antibiotics left in
meat by the time animals go to slaughter. However, the Food and
Drug Administration has admitted that meat and poultry are not
routinely tested for antibiotic residues and that antibiotics almost
undoubtedly end up in the meat you purchase at the store. The agency
is generally short staffed and under-funded, which prevents it from
being everywhere it should. The scientists at the FDA have also
mistakenly assumed that antibiotics in our food supply are harmless.
#meat #meatIndustry #stubbornfatfix
Thursday, November 9, 2017
FAT: THE WHOLE TRUTH #DrKeithBerkowitz
Besides improving the taste and texture of food, dietary fat is
vitally important for good health. Dietary fat:
• Is critical for proper brain and nerve function,
eyesight, skin health, and even sperm count.
• Slows the progression of age-related memory loss
and other cognitive disorders.
• Bolsters mood and prevents depression.
• Is used to make cell membranes, hormones, and
hormonelike substances.
• Carries the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K.
(Without fat, you’d become deficient in these
vitamins.)
• Helps convert carotenes into vitamin A.
• Enables mineral absorption.
• Allows the body to fill in bone with calcium and
other minerals.
Sunday, November 5, 2017
Avoiding High Fructose Corn Syrup can be tricky.
In recent history, we’ve gone from 20 teaspoons of sugar per person per year to about 150 pounds of sugar per person per year.
High fructose corn syrup is the real driver of the current epidemic of Increased sugar consumption, heart attacks, strokes, cancer, dementia, and of course, Type 2 diabetes. But avoiding it is not as simple as it sounds, Manufacturing companies rename the HFCS so
In addition to “corn syrup,” watch your food labels for…
– Maize syrup
– Glucose syrup
– Glucose/fructose syrup
– Tapioca syrup
– Dahlia syrup
– Fruit fructose
– Crystalline fructose . #ingredients. #DrKeithBerkowitz #healthymindset #healthybody