Archive for the ‘Food For Thought’ category

Perfect Health-Passion For Life vs Passion For Food

October 11th, 2010

There comes a point in your life when you will have to choose. Yes, their is this tremendous temptation to hook on to foods that we love and reach for the stars that make you feel good inside. We all have had those moments, the ones when you eat that great tasting hamburger or those incredible nachos with cheese or that home made spaghetti your grandmother bakes…You all know what I mean?

Without knowing it you were hooked. Yes, you keep on looking and searching for that great taste and especially the feelings in your mouth of succulence and the temptation to want more becomes overwhelming.

That is when the Passion in your mind takes over and you know what? Your in the zone, that feel good zone, the one you are carrying in your head maybe right now. Yes, the one you just don’t want to give up.

passion for life

When my best friend introduced me to a fast food chain in 1969 and I ate my very first hamburger  it was a moment I will never forget. I even stated to him that one day I would work for them. You know what I did work for them, many years ago. My point is that I was hooked on the taste, that sensation many of you share  with food. The Passion that goes through your body is and can be incredibly great.

How do you compare eating all those great tasting foods with eating green juices?

How can having raw foods like corn, instead of corn on the cob cooked and served with butter and salt be compared you may ask? This is where it becomes tricky.

I know what you are thinking, because I was right where you are maybe right now.

I also had to make incredibly hard decisions. What was my life worth? How could I survive without all that great tasting food?

How important was my Passion For Life vs my Passion For Food?

PassionLoveLife

That is when Pierrette & I began our search. We needed to try and find that balance. We asked ourselves if we could have both? We where willing to try and find both even if it meant having to make a choice between the two. Life had become a real question mark for us at that point.

If you are caught up in your feelings and desire to finding the solutions that are right for you start by reading Yuri’s book called Eating For Energy. Their are many more great teachers out their but Yuri takes it one bite size piece at a time. He combines instruction and knowledge. He shows us the way and gives us the tools to help us make the right choices.

Pierrette & I found that we could have both, a great Passion For Food + a fantastic Passion For Life. Do you want both also? It can be so.

Let Eating for Energy be a new beginning. The one choice you need to make might be much easier than you think.

Take our word for it. You will be amazed. Just give yourself a chance.

Pierre & Pierrette:from http://www.theequest.com

Thee Quest For Perfect Health

Eating For Energy-Why The Focus,Focus,Focus on Obesity?

October 5th, 2010

images (1)All the fuss about obesity is turning the world upside down. What is all the fuss about?

  • The fact we do not see all the fat people around us?
  • Chances that we are obese ourselves?
  • Medical cost over-runs?
  • Lack of proper seats on airplanes?
  • Kids that eat pizza for breakfast at school?

Hundreds of studies are being funded, right now, everyday to try and solve the problem of obesity!

Thousands of articles are written, making observations concerning obesity, right now!

Millions of people are obese at this very moment. How many of them are even aware of the dangers they face everyday? Less than you think.

Yes, you read it here, less than you think. Ask those around you and see for yourself. Are you part of the problem or part or the solution?

We, at Thee Quest, are committed to tell the world the truth about obesity and weight related problems. Are you with us? All avid readers of this blog know where we stand and we ask for your help to build awareness about how serious this obesity crisis is on all our health.

I asked my daughter’s boyfriend if he was obese at 220 lbs and he is 5’8″. His answer, heck no he is in great shape. He is only 31. Most people refuse to admit it but do they really know any better? Most of us are “Junk Food Addicts” and have been for at least the last generation.

I have asked myself the same question over and over again,”Why do people refuse to admit they are obese and need help or at least guidance?” You know what, the answer is simple, no one has told them!

Well I am here to tell you, “Wake up and admit you have a problem, then, and only then can I help you really focus on how to prevent, stop and cure this deadly disease.”

The very first thing you need to do is to have a good look at yourself and admit that you do not feel great all the time. If you do, and you are obese, tell me your story. I do not believe you, yet I am willing to listen and try to understand you.

The second thing you need to do is to ask yourself a very simple question,”Why am I obese, how did I get this way and what can I do to turn my life around once and for all?”

Now, have you asked yourself the question? What is your answer? Write it down and have a good look at it. Do you realize what you just did? You have  taken the first step towards eliminating this reality from your life, right now. Focus on the words you have just uttered and this is a new beginning. Stay with me here, this is the first step and being able to focus on it is only the beginning.

  1. That’s right, the problem as always been your inability to focus on what is important, your health.
  2. Why have you been unable to concentrate on what is really important? Because of the way you eat.
  3. How can you start focusing on what is really important? By changing what you eat and understanding the reasons why you eat.

Focus, focus,focus is only a beginning. Needing to understand the reasons why we are all so darn unaware of the obesity crisis needs to be addressed before you can start to move forward.

Here is a great book called Eating For Energy, by Yuri Elkaim. Buy it today, yes today, and startfocusing on the reasons you need to change. Now, don’t start now, just read the book and try to understand why you need to change. Focus now, that is all I want you to do. The book will become the”eating bible encyclopedia” that will change your life.

Are you still with me?

If you are tell me, write a comment just telling me now you are with me. Then, and only then, will I  be able to help you.

Focus is the first key to the rest of your life. Let’s just start with that and until you really understand the need to focus, you are only wasing your time going from one diet to another and one gym program to another.

Are you still focused? Hard to do right? You just want  to leave right now, right? Focus, are you still here? Good, now you are starting on the path to greater Perfect Health.

Join Pierrette & I and the whole Thee Quest For Perfect Health Team.

Focus, this is were it all begins.

Pierre  & Pierrette: from http://www.theequest.com

theequest.com

P.S. Can you believe it has taken you only three minutes to read this? Are you still focused? If you are great.If you are having a tough time of it, ii is because of what you eat, yes it is. Stay tuned for more, tomorrow. Are you focused?

Metabolic Diet with Andrew Stearns (part 3)

October 1st, 2010

Yuri: Very cool, very good points. Now, this might be a little bit tricky to answer based on, you know, your approach with metabolic typing, but what would you, in general, what would you recommend as five foods that the majority of people avoid or remove from their diet and why?

Andrew: Whoa, five? That is a little tricky question. I’ll do my best with that. What you find when you do go through the metabolic-typing process is that there are some foods that are gonna be restricted from you even though they’re good foods.

So, the first thing that really jumps into my mind right now is a quote by Jack LaLanne, who I don’t necessarily know his nutritional approach other than this quote I’m about to say, but I know the man’s in superior shape at a pretty old age and sells a lot of juicers, but that’s neither here nor there.

He said, “If man makes it, don’t eat it,” and that’s a great, you know, a basic definition of food. So, if it comes from Mother Nature, that’s a food, first and foremost.

What you have to do and what I have a lot of clients do is take anything refined out of their body to start off. Some people, like you said, can handle certain pastas or grains. What I do is kind of take that out immediately and start to add some foods back in if they’re able to.

So, the first one that pops into my mind would be breads. I would take breads out and incorporate something such as a sprouted-grain bread. The best one I found out there is Ezekiel bread. The spelling is just like it is in the Bible, Ezekiel.

They have different flavors, if you will, low sodium, sesame, cinnamon raisin, and the benefit of that it’s sprouted and the grains have gone through the necessary process to be assimilated or digested properly. What you find in a lot of those refined carbohydrates is that it spikes the insulin up quite a bit, the blood sugar raises, drops, and then you’re hungry for anything.

You’re left full from, like, a stomach perspective, but at a brain level, you’re not, ’cause you’ve eaten a lot of calories in bread, you know, refined carbohydrates, and you haven’t gotten any nutrition in there.
So, breads is one of the things I would take it. I talked about it before, nonfoods. So, once we get a good definition of what a food is, what a food isn’t—feel free to use that Jack LaLanne definition. That would be a great approach to, if you don’t know what your metabolic type is—to start making conscious decisions.

Big, huge controversial topic, which we could probably discuss on another series for hours, which would be supplements. I would take not necessarily supplements, but protein shakes, protein bars out of the diet. That’s not to say that I haven’t recommended a few to clients, but those are very few and far between.

Most of the people that come to me aren’t eating as much natural, organic, healthy foods as they should be, and they’re relying a lot on these quick, easy bars and protein shakes, most of which are garbage.
I would get those things out of there, and then talk to somebody if you really have a true need to incorporate them back into the nutrition. What are we at? That was maybe three of them?

Yuri: Three. Two more, buddy.

Andrew: I can do it. Fat-free foods. Fat-free; if it says fat-free, get away from it. There is a direct correlation between the onset of fat-free foods being marketed—at least in the United States—and the rise in obesity, both child and adult.

Fat-free is a marketing ploy; fat is essential to our bodies. You need to eat fat to lose fat. The trick is what kind of fats are those. So, without, again, going into healthy fats or unhealthy fats, I would stay away from things that are marketed as fat-free.

If you have to market something that it’s low in fat, you know, it really shouldn’t be presented that way in my opinion. Fats are there for a reason, and if it’s an organic, good-quality source, than the fats are good.
I have to borrow one more definition ’cause it’s on my mind right here, from Paul Chek. He gives it the eyes test; so, if something has a set of eyes, then it has good fat in it. There’s an exception, such as nuts and avocadoes, which would also be good fats.

But what you have to question is what kind of fats are in that animal. If it’s not free-range and organic, fats attract toxins, and that’s where the danger lies. Not in the animal or the fat itself; it’s with the raising of the animal. Again, that may be another topic that we might or might not wanna get into right now, but, again, I would stay away from these heavily marketed fat-free foods.

I’ll give you an example: rice cakes. Some of the worst things you can put in your body; it would spike your insulin up even faster than table sugar, but it’s marketed as a low-carb, fat-free, healthy food. And they can get away with this because there’s a lot of money involved. So, those are the things I would stay away from there.

Yuri: Interesting, interesting. What about, you talked about replacing traditional breads, refined breads with sprouted grains, Ezekiel and stuff.

What are some other, maybe three or four other healthy foods that you would replace some of the foods you just mentioned with or maybe just, you know, adding back into the diet of people who are already eating these foods? So, what would be, like, maybe three or four really good foods?

Andrew: Great question and what I’m gonna do is kinda go a little bit off the beaten path, so to speak, because a lot of the resources can tell you, you know, “Eat more chicken; eat more this, that, and the other thing,” but that’s fairly easy, and to truly understand that is not that difficult.

I would start off with things such as whole eggs, free-range, organic whole eggs. A lot of people get into the habit of, for whatever reason—well, I know the reason; it’s the fear of fats—getting away from whole eggs, and they throw the yolk away.

Yet if you take a look at, you know, the benefit of yolks in nutrition, it’s not even a comparison when you’re comparing what’s in the yolk compared to the white. In the yolk you have Vitamins A, D, and K, you have magnesium, zinc, copper, phosphorous, iron, fats, proteins. I can go on and on.

You have very little nutrition—maybe some protein—in the white. These are meant to be eaten together. The fear of fats, I think, is one of the biggest problems with the traditional American diet, and that is something I would incorporate in—free-range, organic, whole eggs.

If you think you’re getting too much calories or too much fat from that, meaning your metabolic typing shows you that you shouldn’t be eating that much fat, have one less egg. Little side note too: The best way to prepare an egg would be anything other than scrambled.

Sometimes what you do when you scramble the egg is vigorously mix the proteins, the nutrients together with the white and the yolk, and it makes it a little bit harder to digest and to assimilate. So, I would, you know, have it fried, poached, hard-boiled, soft-boiled.

Another food that I would introduce would be coconut oil. I think we’ve gotten into a habit of cooking in nothing but olive oil, for those who are making healthy choices. I think it’s pretty well-known now to stay away from a lot of these vegetable oils and a lot of these deep-fat frying oils.

But coconut oil is something that got a very bad rap years ago, and, you know, the history of that goes back to the sixties, when the edible-oil industry started marketing this whole “stay away from saturated fats” approach, which, again, there was a lot of money involved, and coconut oil kind of fell into that category.

But coconut oil has a much higher smoke point than olive oil; it’s a more appropriate oil to cook with at high heat, and the benefit of that far outweighs most of the oil out there today. So, coconut oil would be something I would incorporate immediately.

Dark-green vegetables, I think that’s something people don’t get enough of, dark-green, organic vegetables. Certain vegetables you do wanna cook, though, dark-green, for example, like broccoli, Brussels sprouts, kale, and spinach.

What they do is contain what is known as goitrogens, which are enzyme inhibitors. So, if you’re not bringing them up to a certain temperature—you don’t wanna burn them, but you wanna incorporate them into the diet either sautéed, lightly steamed, or very, very lightly baked, you know, at a lower temperature.

And a couple other would be beets; beets is a great detoxification food. That’s something I like to incorporate raw, actually, in the form of a juice.

I think it might be a little difficult to eat a raw beet as a human being, but that’s something that is incredible for the kidney, incredible for elimination, and also a category that I call a super food. So, a red, specifically, if not a golden beet.

And I think the last, which could even be first on this list, would be raw butter or raw dairy in general. One that is not homogenized, not pasteurized, and contains all the nutrients in the form in which it’s supposed to be available to us.

It can be a little difficult to get, at least here in the United States, raw dairy, but if you wanna look at the Weston A. Price Foundation site and do a little research there, they may be able to help you find raw dairy.

Yuri: Very cool. It’s always interesting to see different points of view. I think at the end of the day, whoever you’re talking to who has any kind of idea about holistic and whole food nutrition usually come back to the same points, which, for everyone who’s listening should be a little ding-a-ling-a-ling, a light going off.

So, that’s some awesome stuff, Andrew. Just before we finish off, where’s the best place for people to follow your stuff? Is it Andrewfit.com? Is that the main site?

Andrew: Yeah, that’s the site that you can go to get any information on me, contact me, and I do still see clients, both exercise and nutrition. So, you can go to Andrewfit.com, and feel free to reach out.

Yuri: Cool, awesome. It’s been a great interview so far, and I just wanna thank you again for taking the time. Is there anything else that you wanna just kinda leave us with that we haven’t touched upon?

Andrew: Wow.

Yuri: We pretty much covered everything.

Andrew: Yeah, we covered quite a bit. All I would really urge people to do is: Don’t be overwhelmed. If you’re trying to make a change in your lifestyle, whether it be how you look, how you feel, how you perform, one step at a time.

Link up with a good practitioner, don’t be overwhelmed. ’Cause sometimes it’s just that first step, incorporating one thing each meal that’s organic. If you’re working on a budget and organic food can be overwhelming, it doesn’t have to be your entire meal right off the bat until you can get to that point. Incorporate one thing, you know?

Sit out and plan on a Sunday, Wednesday, whatever day you choose, say, “Hey, I’m gonna go shopping on this day, and I’m gonna start making some healthier choices. I’m gonna put in the back of mind that hey, I’m gonna start eating natural foods. Not ’cause the can says it’s natural, but ’cause I know this came from the earth, it came from a tree, it came from, you know, a field, raised the right way, organically,” and go forward from there. Don’t be intimidated; it’ll come.

Yuri: Awesome. Well, that’s great advice, guys. And again, if you need to get in touch with Andrew, which I highly recommend you do at least check out his stuff. See what he’s doing at Andrewfit.com.
Again, I just wanna thank you very much for taking the time tonight, and I look forward to seeing you in Vegas in a couple weeks.

Andrew: You’re welcome, Yuri. I’m looking forward to it, as always.

Yuri: All right, buddy. Have a good one.

Andrew: Excellent, take care. Thanks a lot.

Metabolic Typing with Andrew Stearns (Part 2)

September 27th, 2010

Yuri: That’s pretty cool. And, I mean, this is something that really interested me because, you know, I’ve worked with a lot of people of different ethnic backgrounds, and I’m not a huge advocate of wheat, for instance, but I’ve noticed that a lot of people of Italian background are fine with refined pasta…at least some of the people that I’ve worked with.

Many of the athletes, who are, you know, Italian, a lot of soccer players and stuff and, you know, looking at their diet profiles and noticing, like, a lot of wheat, a lot of bread, a lot of pasta, and for them they seem to respond, you know, decently well to it compared to other people who might be, you know, of Northern European descent or Southeast Asian descent.

So, it’s really interesting to see how, you know, the same nutrients, the same foods, as you said, responds in different manners in different people, which is really fascinating.

Andrew: Sure, sure. The example I give, Yuri, to a lot of clients who, you know, just want the very basics of metabolic typing—they don’t wanna dive into the science of it.

It’s, “Hey, I have a busy life. I have kids, I have a job, I have a wife, I have a husband. I have things going on in my life. Tell me what to eat, but explain a little bit why. Why am I making this commitment to my nutrition and going, you know, a complete one-eighty-degree turn and incorporating these different foods?”
I explain to them and it’s said ’cause most people, believe it or not, take—well, you would know—take better care of their car than they do their bodies. No one that I know puts sand or salt water into their car; they put fuel.

And many people know the exact octane that should go in there. Is it high-grade? Do you need medium-grade or does it run better on low-grade? So, if you’re gonna give that much attention to your automobile, which you probably consider very valuable, why would you put the wrong fuel in your body?

In other words, if that Northern Italian man can have some pasta, yet someone else from Ireland, you know, with an Irish background, is eating that, gaining weight, feeling lethargic, then you’re putting the wrong fuel in your body, and you need to know what goes in there.

Like you said, it’s sometimes difficult to self-assess when your lineage isn’t that clear-cut; you have parents that are mixed, you know? There’s multi race in your background. So, again, get tested and find out what foods are best for your body and how they behave. That’s definitely an example I would give for somebody.

Yuri: Interesting. Also, is there a correlation between metabolic typing and, for instance, the blood-type diet? So, you know, if you’re O-positive, you should be eating these foods and avoiding these foods. Is there a correlation or has there been research that’s looked at a correlation between the two?

Andrew: Yes.

Yuri: ’Cause I know a lot of people are always asking, you know, “I’m B-positive or O-positive. What should I be eating?” So, these are thoughts.

Andrew: Yeah, Dr. D’Adamo wrote a book called Live Right for Your Type and also a follow-up to that, which was called Eat Right for Your Type. He based a lot of his findings on blood typing, and we give plenty of credence to that but not too much.

What I believe in—and others who teach metabolic typing—it isn’t necessarily what you should eat based on your blood type; it’s more what you should avoid. When I go over clients’ reports, if they’re able to get their blood type—if not, I’ll take that for them—we get a small list—it’s pretty small—of restrictions based on that.

Not to get too deep into it, but there are lectins in food that mix with blood, and it’s kinda like, you know, the opposite sides of Velcro when it gets into your bloodstream and when you’re trying to digest it.

So, certain foods just are gonna be difficult to assimilate or digest if you’re eating them and they conflict with your blood type. So, there is, like I said, some importance to it but not too much.

Yuri: Interesting. So, in general, why is it that you think that most people have a tough time eating healthy consistently?

Andrew: Wow, that is, that’s an incredible question, and that’s something I have asked myself and kept myself up many nights thinking about, whether it be a particular client, whether it be society in general. I would have to say—let me give you another example, and this is probably gonna hit home with a lot of people.

Statistically, as of two years ago, fifty percent of Americans will have one form of cancer in their lifetime, which is absolutely mind-blowing to me. So, half of the population will have cancer.

So, if somebody said to me, for example, that, “You have cancer but it’s a hundred percent curable. All you would need to do is eat these foods and stay regimented in your nutrition. If not, you’re gonna have to suffer the consequences,” you’d better believe I am going to go as far as I need to go to drive and get those foods.

If I have to go to a farm, if I have to eat a hundred percent organic, raw, whatever it is, if I have to do detoxes, I’m going to do that, ’cause I know exactly what the consequences are.

The trick is, we aren’t given those kind of second chances a lot of times, okay? The warning signs are there.
So, your question was: What causes people to veer from these diets and not stay consistent with it?

I think, first, people need to understand what food is and what a nonfood is, okay? I’m gonna borrow a quote from Paul Chek when he describes, you know, a nonfood as something taking more energy from you than it delivers, okay?

It takes more nutrients to digest, you know, that food, whether it be through nutrition, vitamins, minerals, enzymes than it delivers. So, it’s kinda like a bank account, where if you’re taking out more money than you’re putting in, you have a negative balance.

So, if you’re putting a food or, you know, a nonfood in your body and it’s drawing from you… People have to understand that. If you are putting something in your body and it is taking—you know, if you put an Entenmann’s cake, you know, or some cookies in your body, that delivers zero nutrition, not to mention it takes vitamins, minerals, enzymes, water to get rid of it, to detoxify it.

So, the opposite of that is: A food is something that delivers more vitamins, minerals, energy, enzymes than it takes to remove from your body. So, once people have a good idea of what a food is, of what a nonfood is, I think they have to respect how powerful food is, okay?

What good food can do for you and what a bad food cannot do for you. And at that point it’s acceptance, so why don’t people stay on these, you know, healthy diets or someone who is doing real well kind of veer off from it? There’s emotional reasons. And, Yuri, I’d love to give you an exact answer.

This one thing, it’s just two things, but I think it’s, again, like I said, understanding food, accepting it. In other words, if you have goals, you’re gonna make those strides to eat and put the right food in your body.

And the third, going about it with the same vigor, the same importance as you would if someone told you you were sick, you were dying, or you were gonna suffer some consequences if you don’t live your life this way. This is something I take serious, as serious as serious can be, and this is something I try to instill in my clients.

I’m not trying to scare ’em; I’m trying to tell them that the importance of food is, it goes way beyond taste, and it goes way beyond aesthetics. So, that may not be the answer you’re looking for.

And there’s a whole other emotional reason, you know, emotional eating and so forth. It’s deep and if I could answer it with one response, I could probably retire.

Yuri: We’ll leave it as the eighth wonder of the world.

Andrew: Exactly.

Yuri: No, but it’s good to get your insight and seeing, you know, from your experience what have been some roadblocks, so that’s pretty helpful. I guess along those lines, what would be three tips you would give somebody to stay on track with a healthy diet?

Andrew: Okay, and that’s another great question too. I think the first thing you have to look into is: If you don’t know what you should be eating, you have to get yourself that information.

I believe wholeheartedly and practice metabolic typing, so I’m gonna be a little biased, but if you don’t have access to a metabolic practitioner for some reason—although you can work remotely with somebody—or at least a very, very good holistic nutritionist, find someone; find someone immediately.

We hire people all the time to do things that we don’t specialize in, whether it be build our house, fix our plumbing, teach us throughout high school, universities, and beyond.

At our job we have a boss and coworkers that are gonna show us things that we can’t do yet, and once we’re able to, we can pass that on to somebody else. So, I think the old adage “You must give away what you have in order to keep it” holds true.

So, hire somebody, get somebody who’s gonna motivate you, stay on top of you, and show you, “Hey, this is what you’re going to eat, these are the times you’re going to eat it, and if you hit a roadblock, I’m gonna be there to help you through that.”

If you’re traveling, “Hey, this is what you’re gonna bring with you. This is how you’re gonna order healthy when you’re out and you can’t get to your kitchen.” So, you know, someone once said to me, I remember I was going to get a lawyer for a situation I found myself in, and I kinda questioned him.

I said, “Do you really think I need a lawyer for this?” He looked me dead in the eye and said, “Well, if you were getting heart surgery, would you perform it on yourself?”

I said, “No,” and he goes, “Well, you’re not a lawyer; you’re not gonna defend yourself nor should you.” And he made a lot of sense; so, go hire somebody.

The second thing kinda ties into what I just said: planning. You have to make nutrition, what goes into your body—as important as anything else, but in order to make it important, you know, to take that action, it doesn’t take that much time throughout the day, and a good practitioner will show you that.

So, the planning is much less than work. If you’re working an eight-hour day, you’re dedicated to those many hours Monday through Friday, so what I tell people to do is plan a day of shopping once a week, twice a week. Okay, that’s it.

Go get your food, plan, package, bring it with you. Cook it ahead of time, cook a little bit more than you need so you have leftovers. Work it into your schedule, make it an intricate part of your schedule, and hold it at such a high regard that you would never, never miss a day of shopping, you would never miss your mealtimes or your cooking.

And the third one is—something totally psychological—you need to believe in the approach you’re taking, in that if you’re not seeing results today, it will come. If you’re diligent about it, if you’re putting the right foods in your body.

I’ve told everybody, I’ve never ever, ever met an overweight person who ate the right foods, ate high-quality foods, organic foods, and that were overweight. It’s just not there.

When you’re eating metabolically appropriate foods, you’re eating high-quality foods, those people look good, perform good, they have high energy, so you need to believe in it. Just have that acceptance that this is going to work and it’s gonna be worth it in the long run.


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Stay tuned for PART 3 of this interview coming your way tomorrow!

3 Short Words To Help You To Lose Weight

September 25th, 2010

helpNow if you’ve been struggling to lose weight for quite some time – then you are going to want to read this. Because trying to lose weight around a demanding work and home life can certainly be a tricky thing to achieve.

So if I was share with you 3 short words that are going to help you to lose weight, would you be interested to learn what they are?

Well I’m going to tell you anyway and they’re called … Firing Your Diet!

So if you are on some kind of diet – whether it’s the cabbage soup diet, the lemon juice diet, the purple diet, the low-carb diet – whatever it is, just fire it!

Because you are never going to achieve a healthy weight (and be happy) – by constantly dieting.

Whenever you just mention the word diet, it brings up messages of having to “deprive yourself” of something. And to overcome this feeling of deprivation, the only way to fix this is to “cheat”.

And this of course makes it even worse.

Ultimately fad diets don’t work because they focus on a number on a scale. Remember it’s not about the number on the scale – it’s about being healthy. There is no magical number.

And what’s even more interesting, is that whenever you’re on a fad diet – the weight loss that you do achieve is only temporary. In fact, studies have shown that two-thirds of the weight that was lost through some kind of diet, is actually regained within 1 year.

So just remember, there is no quick fix to losing weight. It’s about changing your eating habits for life – not just for a day, a week or a month – for life.

Adopt the 80/20 rule. Eat healthy foods 80% of the time, and enjoy your life (and food) – by eating the foods that you love, the other 20% of the time.

If you need some help or inspiration then get yourself a copy of Yuri’s book – Eating for Energy - it has lots of healthy recipes to help get you started.

So get cracking – Fire Your Diet and throw away your scales. You will find that you will have a lot more energy because you are no longer stressing about being on a diet. And that has certainly got to be a good thing.

Kind regards,

Audra Starkey
[The Healthy Shift Worker]