Posts Tagged ‘diet’

Getting Back on the Wagon

July 12th, 2010

Hi Everyone. :-)   Just to let you know,  I love meat and I love alcohol and I love dairy and I love sugar.  I’m not gonna lie.  This Eating for Energy is a tough one for me.   I was doing well for a while and then. . .  I fell off the wagon, and I’m trying to get back on it.  I signed up with Yuri to write this blog way back in April and I’m finally, er, setting pen to paper. . . (heh) Let’s see how it goes.

Anyway, my poor juicer had been wondering what happened to me and when I fired her up today for a little concoction of Liver Booster she almost didn’t know what to do with herself.  Let me tell you, that was some delicious juice.  If you haven’t tried it, you should.  My body was thanking me immediately.

It’s amazing how much your body can tell you about what’s going on inside when you’re tuned into the nuances of the signals it sends you.  I have seriously felt in the last couple of days that my body is completely polluted. . .    Can’t wait to start cleaning it out!  Yay!  Let’s eat for energy.

Macrobiotic Diet Explained

June 29th, 2010

A macrobiotic diet might sound like something futuristic and too scientific to be tasty, but evidence of people eating this way can be traced as far back as ancient Greece. Hippocrates, upon whose writing the medical Hippocratic Oath is based, used the term “macrobiotic” to describe some of the healthiest of his contemporaries and their methods of staying in good condition.


Of course, there is more to a macrobiotic diet than simply trying to “eat well” by the standards of an old Greek medical writer. Today’s macrobiotic diet has a few major points of interest by which it can be defined. Many of these will deviate widely from a traditional raw diet, but it is always interesting to view another impression of healthy eating, to see what can be learned from it.

For one, a modern macrobiotic diet focuses on the consumption of grains as a food staple, and using as many locally-sourced types of grain as possible. The macrobiotic diet not only encourages healthy eating, but a healthy philosophy about how the foods interact with your body, and how those foods get to you. Many followers of the diet believe that the life force of these grains can be diminished with long transportation times, and that local sources of cereal grains like brown rice are your best option. The yin and yang in brown rice is one of the most perfectly balanced relationships in food, and provides your body with a balanced supply of fuel.

Another key tenet of the macrobiotic diet is the supplementation of your diet with unprocessed fruits, vegetables and beans. Again, the concepts of yin and yang come into play, as you want to add vegetables that have a more balanced measure to them. Vegetables should be included in the diet at around a quarter of the total food intake, with grains making up another half of the diet, and beans, seaweed and other food items making up the final quarter of the diet.

A big defining point of this diet is the encouraged lack of pre-processed foods. Those who follow a macrobiotic diet tend to try to avoid foods that have too much yin to them, or foods that do not encourage balance and relaxation of the body and mind. Typically, the list of “do not eat” foods for a macrobiotic dieter would include processed sugars, alcohol, caffeine and other stimulating foods. Other foods can be too yang, or heavy for the body, and should likewise be avoided. This would include many types of animal protein, dairy products, and overuse of salt to season dishes.

The macrobiotic diet is also one of the few that not only talks to what you eat, but how you eat. Every mouthful of food should be thoroughly and thoughtfully chewed before swallowing. Other factors to consider when tailoring your macrobiotic meal plan would include the time of year – summer meals should be made with big, leafy greens, include more raw food items, as utilize lighter weight grains – as well as your age, weight, gender and activity levels.

5 Ways to Boost Your Energy

June 21st, 2010

Energy is a precious thing, something to conserve, save, and try not to waste; we are forever searching for new ways to boost our ever-dwindling supplies. But I’m not talking about turning off the lights when you leave a room, or switching to solar power. I am talking about your own personal energy, something much harder to boost and even harder to conserve. Here are five ways that you can boost your energy reserves, while staying within the boundaries of a healthy lifestyle.

The first thing you can do to boost your energy is to start eating more raw foods. Of course, a raw food diet will help with more than just energy, but it is certainly an important reason to switch from a cooked and processed foods way of eating.

Many foods lose vital minerals during the cooking process – minerals that can help to give you the energy you need during the day. Raw foods also contain living enzymes that allow your body to work cleaner and easier, conserving the energy in your food for the work you choose to do, rather than the digestive work you need to simply keep going.

Another way to gain more personal energy is to plan to get more sleep. We all know that a good night’s sleep should be around eight hours, but few of us actually manage to get that much rest. Continued lack of sleep can result in a buildup of “sleep debt”, which can increasingly effect your concentration and ability to perform at your peak. A well rested body is an energized and recharged body, able to use the energy in your raw food diet more efficiently and effectively.

Another important factor in preserving your personal energy levels is the amount of water that you drink. You may think you are properly hydrating yourself, but if your liquids come flavored or altered, you may not be getting enough pure water. Hydration is key to staying in the zone – if your body becomes dehydrated, you run the risk of wearing yourself out prematurely. Make sure to drink a few glasses of water every day, and try to never wait until you are thirsty to have a drink. Thirst is your body’s way of telling you that you are already low in liquids.

Another way to get more energy is to quit the coffee. If you are a caffeine user, the idea of having less to get more energy might sound wrong, but many studies have shown that long-term caffeine users actually gain no energy or alertness from their morning coffee; they are simply fighting the effects of overnight withdrawal symptoms. Go cold turkey, and soon enough, you won’t need the coffee anymore.

Last but not least, get your daily required amounts of vitamins to maintain and gain energy throughout the day. With a properly calibrated raw food diet, you should not have to resort to pills and capsules to supplement your food; everything you need for great energy can be found within a raw food eating plan.

How To Lose Weight With Eating For Energy

May 18th, 2010

Many say that losing weight is a chore. Well, my friends, let me tell you it does not have to be. Following a diet can be very difficult because you often get tired and feel worn down. Your mind plays games with your motivation and you wander from indecision to indecision,everyday you follow this “diet”. We have all been there and know the feeling.

Have you ever been on a diet and felt great all the time? Have you ever had the feeling of doing, instead of grudgingly going about your chores everyday? Do you get up in the morning wanting to do your exercises more than anything else? Has your diet ever become so exciting that you need to tell everyone about the benefits?

Eating for Energy is the training program you need to follow. My energy level is so high that I feel exhilarated all the time. When I exercise I am tired and ready to start all over again. I am 58 years old and have never had the constant energy that I have since I began following Yuri and what he teaches.

Learning how to eat to give me all this energy, has been an experience you need to have. Your life will never be the same. Your goal setting ability will completely change your way of thinking.

Losing weight will become so easy because Eating for Energy shows you how to have an ideal body and shows you how you are suppose to feel, not how you have been feeling most of your life. It feels so great to “feel alive“.I had completely forgotten that sweet feeling of getting up in the morning and “smelling the roses”.

  • Your body will be transformed into exactly how you are suppose to look and feel, always.
  • Your mind becomes clear and focused because your energy is not all spent on digestion.
  • Your mind is getting a tremendous boost of energy and your thinking cap is bigger than you ever thought it could be.

If you are sick and tired of being sick and tired you need to listen to Yuri.

If you are sick and tired of all the diets, the failures, the feelings of frustration, the looks of disgust and shame, you need to listen to Yuri.

Eating for Energy is like beginning all over again. It is like going to school and learning to write, count, and read all over again. Just imagine going back and having a fresh start? That is what following Eating for Energy will do for you.

No pills, no diet, no drugs, … Just great health.

mem_pics.phpPierre & Pierrette Trudel: from http://www.theequest.com

Thee Quest Perfect Health

Difference Between Raw and Alkaline Diet

May 12th, 2010

One of the difficulties with something as positive and helpful as a raw food diet is that there is going to be a lot of information out there for you to digest, if you will pardon the pun. Starting a raw food diet is enough of a challenge without having to decipher all of the details, words and jargon that can be tied to something that can be as complex as raw foods.

One of the areas that tends to throw off new raw food enthusiasts is the apparent overlap between a raw food diet and an alkaline diet. These two areas share a lot of common points, but it is like comparing apples to oranges in some ways – they’re very different, but they are both still fruits.

If you want to learn how to eat a raw diet, you should have some understanding of the differences, first and foremost. By definition, a raw diet is simply that – eating nothing but foods that have not been cooked, heated or processed by raising their temperatures. Raw food diets are largely about the natural living enzymes that exist within the foods we eat, and trying to preserve those enzymes so that they can be consumed by our bodies, not by the cooking process. A raw diet may include a great number of foods that help to reduce the body’s pH levels, but that is not the focus.

An alkaline diet focuses on the pH levels of foods, and how those foods affect your overall health and their impact on your body’s acidity or alkalinity. An alkaline diet tries to get you to consume foods that will reduce acidity in the body, bringing you closer to a more natural and health-preserving base or alkaline pH level. Many of the foods that help you to keep an alkaline body pH are raw fruits and vegetables that are staples of the raw food diet – but keeping raw is not the main focus of the alkaline diet.

People tend to seek out raw food help for a number of reasons, including finding an increase in energy and helping to strengthen their immune systems. But one of the key points of interest for many raw food practitioners is those living food enzymes. Consuming these enzymes aids the body in the healthy absorption and digestion of food, and the elimination of waste products.

The alkaline diet has a different goal, that of reducing the acidity of the body as a whole. Many people seek out the alkaline diet because of problems such as acid reflux, which causes them a great deal of discomfort. Creating a more alkaline system can help to eliminate acidic problems like gas and heart burn.

Both ways have their benefits, and can incorporate aspects of the other plan in order to create a full and functional eating program that will give you the benefits that you desire. Lowering your acidity and increasing your intake of living food enzymes can aid you in becoming a stronger, healthier person.