Why We Can’t Wait For Help

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The tipping point is in the past for processed foods. When Joseph Kellog invented a way to turn corn meal into corn flakes for breakfast in 1906 there wasn’t too much wrong with breakfast cereal. A stroll down the breakfast food aisle at the grocery shows pretty quickly that that isn’t true any more. At some point between 1906 and now our food production system went insane. There never has been an agency of government that ensured only safe and beneficial materials were added to our foods, and this is probably a good thing. If government had been performing this role, then dietary fats would have been eliminated fifty years ago and replaced completely by sugars in all of our foods. Hmmm. That happened anyway.

In my opinion (as you know if you have been reading my work) the problem is that our food system is taking food apart, taking away things that make the food spoil on the shelf, then adding back to the food to replace the flavors that are lost in the first process. The problem is that we are buying foods that have been monkeyed with for profit. Matters are not helped that the FDA doesn’t look into the actual physiological effects on the population of the tens of thousands of ingredients added into our foods. If these ingredients were drugs, they would have to be rigorously checked for safety in drug trials on real people. Food additives don’t have to go through any process like that.

A couple of days ago Mark Bittman of the NY Times wrote at length that the solution is not to wait for your government, or your corporate food producers to come to their senses on how bad things get into every manufactured food product created.

And yet we’re in the middle of a public health emergency that isn’t being taken seriously enough. We should make it a national priority to create two new programs, a research program to determine precisely what causes diet-related chronic illnesses (on top of the list is “Just how bad is sugar?”), and a program that will get this single, simple message across: Eat Real Food.

Bittman calls for government help. In the meantime, you and I must shout from the rooftops, and blog incessantly that everyone should cook their own meals and eat no food from a box, bag or can. We must, as a nation, make new mealtime habits, despite the fact that we are too busy to cook all our own meals. There is a way to feed yourself even if husband and wife work. Even if husband and wife work odd shifts and don’t eat together. You find this way when you are at the grocery and you don’t buy any of the convenient foods in boxes or bags. When all there is in the house is the components of real meals that must be cooked and eaten within the week or they will spoil, then ninety percent of the food fight is over for you.

The stakes are high. If you keep eating the things that our food system has created for you there is no fad diet that can help you.

“Sugar” has come to represent (or it should) the entire group of processed, nutritionally worthless caloric sweeteners, including table sugar, high fructose corn syrup and so-called healthy alternatives like agave syrup, brown rice syrup, reduced fruit juice and a dozen others.

All appear to be damaging because they’re added sugars, as opposed to naturally occurring ones, like those in actual fruit, which are not problematic. And although added fructose may be more harmful than the others, it could also be that those highly refined carbohydrates that our bodies rapidly break down to sugar — white bread, for example — are equally unhealthy. Again: These are hyperprocessed foods.

Don’t throw out all of the bad foods. Eat them, but do not replace them. Buy real food, and keep buying it. When watching “Food, Inc. there is a scene where a poor family is at the grocer and comparing the cost of brocolli to a McDonald’s sandwich. The wife says “I can get two cheeseburgers for the kids for what a bunch of broccoli costs.” What she apparently doesn’t know is that to cook an entire bunch of broccoli, with a sauce and seasoned with a little bit of meat, will feed the entire family. Not only that, it will be healthful.

You don’t need to buy organic foods, just real foods. We can’t wait for the government to enact policies that would force fast food companies to charge what it really costs the nation to produce and consume junk foods. There are a lot of externalized costs that these food producers don’t pay. They get government subsidies. There are laws being enacted that make it illegal to criticize our foods. We can’t take pictures or videos of how our foods are made. Everything is becoming more and more cloaked in darkness, when what is needed more than ever is the cleansing and healing power of light.

Well, more tomorrow, but for today, make it a goal to change one small thing.

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Meat and Plants

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When you first begin to quit eating boxed, bagged or canned foods, the hardest thing to get your mind around is that you are not denying yourself anything that you really want. Your brain is hooked up to patterns that help you get through your day in auto-pilot most of the time, and just grabbing a box of Kraft Mac and Cheese is something you might do as a matter of habit, instead of an actual rational decision that you have made. The task of breaking that habit is vastly easier as soon as that box is no longer in your pantry.

The real habit that you have to break is in the grocery store. In my Price Chopper the first gauntlet I have to run is just as I make the turn into the store. Lots of the loss-leader sale items are piled floor to ‘just out of reach’ for the first twenty yards. There are lots of old bad habits in that stretch of the store. Twelve packs are on sale, snack cakes, bags of tortilla chips are here this week if they weren’t here last week. It’s like a murderer’s row of good memories of wanton gluttony. It is something I actually have to remind myself that I don’t throw in my cart, ‘Just in Case’.

After I make it past that I am into my home in the store, the fruits and vegetables. They are right up my alley, since they have no label , no ingredients list. I will put anything at all in my cart from this section, even if I have never heard of it. For instance, I now eat parsnips. I have always loved the name of that root vegetable, but not knowing a thing about it did not deter me for a second from buying a bag of three parsnips. Now that we have youtube and google, I am an expert on every way of cooking anything, even if I have never heard of it before. The internet has given me the confidence to buy new things, natural things, trusting to nature and a powerful search engine to make my diet better, my life better, and more interesting is thrown in as a free bonus.

Here is how I would cook my parsnips that I just threw into the cart. I used Bing to search this one out, you can use whatever search engine you already know, no sense learning something new, since we are just making “One Small Change at a Time”.

As I cruise through the fresh foods aisle of the store, I keep putting things in the cart without a care in the world what I will be making with them. There is literally no plan or menu in my head, I simply trust to fate and luck that I will enjoy whatever ends up being created with them. It’s sort of like Michelangleo discovering the statue contained within the block of marble, minus all the art genius parts. I end up with green leaf lettuce, carrots, parsnips, turnips, Brussels sprouts, green onions, ginger, garlic, onion, perhaps one or two loose potatoes (I dont buy 5 pound bags any more), at least one head of cabbage, avocado and tomato. With this collection, plus some basic kitchen spices, you will never miss pasta, potato, rice or any of the boxed or bagged sides you are used to mindlessly turning to at meal time.

Cooking this way is not more time consuming than cooking out of a box, either. You are only saving yourself from having to think at all when feeding yourself and your family. You are not saving time, or money. It is forcing you to consume countless scientifically engineered ingredients whose sole function in your food is to make it last forever on a store shelf. Some of the ingredients make what has been done to the food not make it taste like the cardboard that it is contained in, which it might if unadulterated. Nobody knows if you or your children’s bodies can tolerate these ingredients, and only the ingredient manufacturer is testing them to see if they are safe. Your FDA trusts them at their word when the manufacturer tells them that they are safe. If this seems nuts, well…vegetables have no label.

Continue around the outside edge of the store and you will find frozen meats, and fresh meats. You won’t find any health claims on any of these. There will not be any added vitamins or minerals to make them ‘healthier’. Feel free to load up on these items, using the same carefree plan that you used in the previous section. You will discover what dinners you can create with them when you need to, using your computer and imagination. Someday soon you will know what to do with them without help, but only if you begin to cook for yourself.

The final place in the store where you can shop without regard for what you are getting is in the dairy section, where you can buy whole milk, whole cream, large eggs by the dozen, 100% real yogurt, full fat cheeses, and real butter. It doesn’t make any sense to eat ‘low fat’ versions of anything, because when they take out the fat, they put in sugar. Since we don’t want anything that has been messed with by food science any more than we have to, we are taking our chances that nature doesn’t add too much fat into anything it produces. Your own excess fat is there courtesy of food science, not nature.

If you wander into an interior aisle of your grocery, you are taking your own advice, not mine. In there, just remember to not buy food if it is in a box, bag or can and you won’t be going wrong. If you do buy one of those items, try to figure out if you can make the same thing using separate ingredients, because that gets rid of the mystery factor.

Well, good luck in your grocery store, good luck breaking the bad habits and making new ones in there, because that is where the change really happens. The cycle is broken once your pantry is full of fresh items that will actually spoil if you don’t use them. The fact that bacteria want to eat your food is a good sign.

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Habit, Addiction, What’s the Diff?

Amazingly enough you can become addicted to Emotional hormone reaction. Here is a kundalini yoga set for Addiction, http://www.yogibhajan.org/ybkriyas/index.php?id=90
There are essential oils that can support you through you addiction. Summary

Addiction is a dependence on a substance or behavior that appears necessary to preserve what appears as normalcy in disregard to the adverse consequences. Addictions include a number of substances such as drugs, alcohol, tobacco, pharmaceuticals as well as less threatening substances such as pop, chocolate, sugars, or even food itself. Also considered addictive are certain behavioral items such as gambling, sex, internet and other habits that cannot be controlled and may develop a psychological dependency.

Symptoms or side effects of addictions is the feeling of a compelling need to continue the negative activity. This then can lead to feelings of guilt, hopelessness, and anxiety. As addictions are addressed withdrawal symptoms such as cravings, irritability, headaches, nausea, etc. can develop.

Essential oils can strengthen resolve, reduce cravings, and address many of the negative symptoms.
Oils, blends & products recommended:

Cravings: CloveC, Cilantro, Cinnamon, GrapefruitC, Peppermint, Balance, SerenityC
Anxiety: Balance, LavenderC, SerenityC, Ylang YlangC
Withdrawal: LavenderC, GrapefruitC, MarjoramC, SandalwoodC, Wild OrangeC, other citrus oils
Essential oils based products: Life Long Vitality supplements
Also consider: On Guard, Purify

Alcohol: HelichrysumC, RosemaryC, PurifyC, SerenityC
Caffein: Basil, Slim and Sassy. (Energy drinks: Grapefruit)
Drugs: Grapefruit, PurifyC, SerenityC, Roman Chamomile. (Marijuana: Basil)
Food: Grapefruit, Slim and Sassy
Pornography: Frankincense, Helichrysum, Purify
Sex: Geranium, Sandalwood, Whisper
Sugar: Grapefruit, PurifyC, SerenityC, Slim and Sassy
Tobacco: Black PepperC, CloveC, On GuardC
Workaholic: BasilC, GeraniumC, LavenderC, MarjoramC, Wild Orange, Ylang Ylang
Note: to understand the E and C superscript go to Home and scroll to New Helps.

Suggested protocols:

General: Life Long Vitality supplements

Cravings: Use an inhaler (empty ones may be purchased and loaded with any essential oil) with an essential oil from the list above and inhale deeply as cravings come on. Applying to the feet also helps. Application techniques others have suggested or found successful are:

• Sugar – Slim and Sassy (and/or Grapefruit) in water, capsule, straight or topically with a carrier. Some recommend 5-7 drops 3 to 4 times daily.

• Tobacco – Clove blended with other oils such as Balance or Serenity. Also mentioned was putting Cassia or Cinnamon in water and drinking when confronted with an urge to smoke or chew or putting a drop on your finger and then your tongue.

• Tobacco chew – Cilantro (see Krystal’s comments in Experiences & Testimonials for some very good ideas) aqnd see Tobacco above.

Anxiety – Topical application of one of these oils to the chest and/or wrists during the day. Some rotate the oils other find one is best. Evenings topically apply Lavender to the bottoms of the feet for improved sleep.
http://www.everythingessential.me/HealthConcerns/Addiction.html#page=page-2

dcarmack's avatarOne Small Change at a Time

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I happen to think that breaking a sugar habit is best done one small step at time. Breaking this habit is just exactly the same as breaking any other habit, down to the smallest detail. I found an article in Salon.com that describes a person who did the hard work of breaking an addiction to alcohol, using a technique where he gave himself sugar when he wanted booze. He discovered by personal experience what science is beginning to document through experiment…

A bunch of recent studies suggest that some food chemicals may be even more addictive than drugs like heroin and cocaine. “Refined sugars and carbohydrates are manufactured substances that stimulate the same part of our brains that drugs and alcohol respond to,” Peeke says. “Our brains weren’t made to handle these ‘uber-rewards’.” There is some comfort in knowing that my food problem isn’t just my problem: It’s also, quite likely…

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Habit, Addiction, What’s the Diff?

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I happen to think that breaking a sugar habit is best done one small step at time. Breaking this habit is just exactly the same as breaking any other habit, down to the smallest detail. I found an article in Salon.com that describes a person who did the hard work of breaking an addiction to alcohol, using a technique where he gave himself sugar when he wanted booze. He discovered by personal experience what science is beginning to document through experiment…

A bunch of recent studies suggest that some food chemicals may be even more addictive than drugs like heroin and cocaine. “Refined sugars and carbohydrates are manufactured substances that stimulate the same part of our brains that drugs and alcohol respond to,” Peeke says. “Our brains weren’t made to handle these ‘uber-rewards’.” There is some comfort in knowing that my food problem isn’t just my problem: It’s also, quite likely, America’s problem.

Here is the problem with switching addictions. If you don’t realize that you just have an addictive personality, then you don’t realize that everything you do may become a habit for you. The same person who gets addicted to sugar is very likely to also become addicted to gambling. There is no external chemical involved in gambling, the problem is all contained within the brain of the addict. Addicts are more hooked on the thrill of getting the drug than the actual taking of the drug. Anything that gives you that rush of adrenaline will hook an addictive personality type. It might be shoplifting, base jumping, illicit sex, sneaking drinks or any other behavior that will give the addict the real chemical he craves, which his brain gets a shot of when he does the behavior.

… people with addictive tendencies, especially those of us who have already passed that point-of-no-return with one substance or another, are particularly at risk, says Peeke. “When you take away the drugs or alcohol, the brain is missing its artificially created rewards, these ‘uber-rewards,’ so binge-eating refined sugars happens in an effort to replicate the missing high.”

If you are an over-eater because you are an addict-by-nature, then you must break the habit by breaking the addiction cycle. It does you no good to break the cycle by creating another cycle that you will have to break all over again. The addict must practice breaking habits, even if they are very easy habits to break, and unrelated to his bad addiction. Teach yourself how to quit biting your nails. Teach yourself how to not have coffee in the morning. Any of these tiny things give your brain practice at breaking practices. It is something that can actually be learned.

I came to see that my food and alcohol addictions were cousins—different ways of acting out the same impulses. The programs complemented each other, and my AA recovery became stronger as I got help in OA. “You have to treat cross addictions together,” says Dr. Peeke, when asked whether one addiction is harder to treat than the other. If you try to treat one, and ignore the other, something is going to eventually bite you in the ass—at least, this was my experience.

What I am saying is that “if you try to treat one and ignore the other” is actually telling you that you are not addicted to food or alcohol–You are addicted to being addicted. The thing you have to treat is your propensity for habit, and your addiction to the thrill of giving yourself your forbidden thrill. You have to change one small thing at a time, until you know how to change your mind. Really, change your mind.

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How Close to Patent Medicine

Way, way back in the day, there were people who would put an exotic ingredient into an elixir and make health claims for the new mixture. Using state of the art advertising and hucksterism, they sold these things as health enhancing, or disease curing drugs. At the time there was no governmental body that regulated the manufacture, safety or efficacy of these ‘patent medicines’. For a little of the history, look at this article in Wikipedia.

These former ‘patent medicines’ may ring a bell, as they are still in use today:

I would say that the way our very food is made these days resembles the way that patent medicines were created in the last century. Secret, special, untested ingredients are mixed in to give the foods something worth putting in bold letters on the label. Health claims are prominent, despite the lack of scientific proof, or sometimes despite the proof of the opposite. Nothing wrong with putting ‘Fat Free’ on the label of that six inch lollipop.

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100% of your daily requirement of vitamin C! Never have to eat another nasty real orange! Gluten Free, too. So tell me how this is not exactly the same as a patent medicine, because they don’t claim to cure a disease, I suppose. Because this item sets quietly on the shelf and is not being sold by a man in tails and a top hat out of a wagon, maybe? The more things change, the more they stay the same.

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Absolute Nutritionism

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The idea that we now actually know what nutrients, minerals, sugars, fibers and proteins that are found naturally in our foods are the ‘important’ ones is a pretty exaggerated one. Food science has progressed remarkably, right along with the other biological sciences, but the interaction between man and his foods has taken many millennia to develop. We have evolved alongside the plants and animals for our entire evolutionary history. The effort to claim that natural fats were bad for us was premature. The effort to say that natural sugars is bad for us is likewise probably premature. However, to say that our effort to recreate food in an industrial process and to add in the ‘important’ parts so that we can claim it is as good as natural, like essential vitamins and minerals, is undoubtedly going to fall short of the mark.

When we eat fruits, there is an incredible amount of natural intelligence added into the product of nature that is exactly what we need, and in the correct proportions. When we eat vegetables, there are products that originate in the soil, are metabolized in the leaves by the sun, metabolized in the soil by the fungi at the roots, that we have no access to from any other process. Modern science has no idea how to reproduce these things, they are not yet even named.

The Atlantic Magazine (one of my favorites, month after month) has an article about sugars. In the article they talk at length about whether this added sugar is any better or worse for us than that added sugar. In fact, they wonder, what is the difference to our health if it is a calorie of sucrose, fructose or carbohydrate? That is an excellent point. Someday, the answer may be known. What is already known is that the foods we are eating are for some reason not serving us well. These problem foods are all out of a box, bag or can. We don’t need to wonder which ones of the 10,000 added ingredients is causing us individually to have a problem because we can quit eating foods that we find in a box, bag, or can. Eat no foods that contain a health claim on the label.

Agave nectar and fruit-juice concentrate are not “natural” in the sense that whole fruit is natural, but they defend themselves the same way. The recently proposed FDA nutrition labels include the suggestion that the nutrition information panel add in a line that notes how many “added sugars” are used in a product. Many food companies, especially those that operate in the organic and “natural” space, are lobbying that fruit-juice concentrate should not be included as an added sugar on labels. Popkin says fruit juices are at least as dangerous as any other kind of sweetener. To even consider not including it as an added sugar on labels concerns Popkin deeply.

The debate about whether or not added sugars that come from fruit juice concentrates should be labeled as added sugars is over, if you recognize that the label is the problem. There are no ingredient labels on apples. It is not humanly possible to eat enough apples in a day to equal too much sugar. Nobody will get fat eating carrots, so they don’t need a list of nutrients on the carrot label.

As Stanhope puts it, “Nature provided fructose in quite dilute packages compared to what we’ve done with our food.” Even raw sugar cane is only about ten percent sucrose. So, chomp on sugar-cane stalks all you like.“We have concentrated that fructose in ways I suspect nature never meant us to eat it.”

What else needs to be said about any ingredient? In nature, the percentages are all correct. We need to eat foods that have mostly natural ingredients. Do your own cooking and this happens for you automatically. I don’t have a jar of Xantham Gum in my pantry. I don’t need stabilizers to put in my breads. I never cook anything that I expect to last for six months on the shelf without spoiling. That would be UNNATURAL. I would not see it as an advantage coming out of my kitchen. I DONT WANT TO COOK THAT WAY. Why on earth would I then want to pay good money for food that someone else cooked that way.

Are you really so busy that you cannot plan and execute a meal that has practically no added ingredients in it? Do you not realize that if you make a stock pot of marinara sauce (spaghetti sauce without meat) that you can store it in mason jars for a year, even without any artificial ingredients? It would take a day to do. So many of the things we let them cook don’t really save much time, cost us more money or add anything at all in the way of healthfulness.

Read the article, listen to the scientists quibble over the margins of the debate, but think ‘do I have to eat either way? Can’t I just make my own and be better off?” I think you can, I think it would only require you to change your life “One Small Change at a Time”.

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Horns of the Dilemma

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I would much rather use almond milk than cow milk for my muesli in the mornings. I would rather use almond flour in breading than processed all purpose flour. I prefer roasted almonds to roasted peanuts in my mixed nuts. This is one horn of the dilemma. Modern bee-keeping practices are killing the European honeybee. Specifically, the money that beekeepers make freighting tens of thousands of hives per year to the California valley where ninety percent of the almonds are grown on the planet is killing the world’s bees. Modern farming practices that emphasize monoculture (raising just one plant on a huge area), chemical fertilizers (artificial manure), and chemical pesticides and herbicides in order to glean one more bushel per acre of crop, save one penny of expenses per dollar are destroying the honeybee. This is the other horn of the dilemma.

I don’t know of an alternative to the California almond. When I choose my beef or chicken, I can choose a pastured variety, buy from a friend. There is no dilemma when I buy meats. When I purchase lettuce or vegetables, I can pick them up at the local farmer’s market, where they are grown locally. To my knowledge, my beef provider and vegetable growers are not causing irreparable harm to the world.

How bad is the damage that modern bee-keeping is really doing to the hives of the world? Watch this documentary. In the documentary “More Than Honey” (free on Netflix) you will see that the problem is more comprehensive for the bees than any chemical, but the problem is the totality of the way that the bees are treated. The problem is money. The problem is the shortsighted way that our society treats something as vital to the world as the honeybee.

If we are willing to allow this VITAL world resource to be abused this way, then what would we not allow in the name of profit? It speaks to the warped sensibilities of the market mentality. Can I really have an effect on the almond groves in California if I go to the trouble of moving my purchases to a less reckless alternative? If I do so in this case, what about all of the similar places that the market incentives have destroyed sustainable farming? I can’t know about all of them.

I actually feel guilt, because I really worry about the bees in the world. I hate it that currently I am buying California almonds, that are made possible by rapacious bee keepers, and almond growers that don’t give a thought to their effect on the hives. The primary, the only, concern is money.

There are lots of things like this in the world today–cheap oil, because we are bringing it out of the ground so quickly that the market is in a glut; cheap salmon because the fish are farmed in pens in South America and then freighted half way around the planet, while the real salmon stocks have plummeted due to climate change; cheap electricity because we have abundant coal, the burning of which causes climate change. Low prices cause waste, and things like stores leaving their doors open so that customers will be lured in from the heat of summer by feeling the cool breeze. Forty percent of all food in the US is eventually thrown out.

As a world citizen, I feel in part helpless, but also I know that if I can get away from corporate foods I am helping myself, while at the same time sending a tiny message to the all-powerful market. The loss of dollars makes a place like Panera Bread change the foods it is buying to sell to you. We can save the bees, but it will be hard to give up my almonds.

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Gaining Habits, Enjoying Work

The goal to improving your life can’t be to lose weight or waist inches. The goal is not to eat less, exercise more, or to break habits. All of these things will be markers that you are reaching your real goal, which is to develop great new habits. Focusing on losing is short term. In football the goal is not to get first downs, it is to win the game. Unlike in a sport though, in life there is no clock to run down, no last strike to pitch. Our game doesn’t end. The things that we do for ourselves, as objectives to our goals should not be allowed to be work or punishments. Creating good new habits, that contribute to better outcomes, or better uses of our time must be it’s own reward, not something we endure until the final weigh-in day, when we declare that we won or ‘lost’.

Today in the New York Times they examine the scientifically proven fact that exercise does not cause weight loss.

For some time, scientists have been puzzled — and exercisers frustrated — by the general ineffectiveness of exercise as a weight-loss strategy. According to multiple studies and anecdotes, most people who start exercising do not lose as much weight as would be expected, given their increased energy expenditure. Some people add pounds despite burning hundreds of calories during workouts.

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It’s puzzling that people who exercise might not lose weight. We know that mathematically if you put in less fuel than you are consuming in your daily routine that you cannot gain weight. The conservation of energy would preclude you from creating mass out of an energy deficit. We know that it takes a great deal of exercise to amount to a significant expenditure of energy, 2000 calories to run a 26 mile marathon, for instance. However, expending more calories and not consuming a equal number of calories should result in a loss of weight.

Reading further in the article, we find out that a joint French/US researcher study may have figured it out…study participants that thought they were working felt that they could gorge on sweets and sweet drinks after their workout.

These … experiments underscore that how we frame physical activity affects how we eat afterward, said Carolina O.C. Werle, an associate professor of marketing at the Grenoble School of Management in France, who led the study. The same exertion, spun as “fun” instead of “exercise,” prompts less gorging on high-calorie foods, she said.

Participants that feel like their exercise is fun tended to not change their eating habits because of their exertion. I am sure that in the minds of the study participants there were one of two reasons that they felt they could give themselves permission to overeat. Possibly they felt that the WORK that they had just done gave them some cushion, allowing them to consume more calories than they normally would have (normal being the amount of calories that the control group ate after their leisurely stroll), not realizing how few extra calories that they had actually consumed. If not that, then they may have decided that they were working and earning rewards. The exercise itself was not a reward, it was a CHORE. Doing a chore gave them an excuse to permit a binge that they would not normally commit. In all cases where we eat, we are granting ourselves pleasure. If we feel that we are denying ourselves, then we may grant ourselves liberties after doing work.

The place to short circuit this is to stop calling what we are doing work.  We are not on a diet, we are changing our habits. Instead of exercise, we are strolling. The run we are on is not work, it is a perk of living better. Live in the moment and enjoy the water. It doesn’t have to be sweet water to be sweet. Life does not have to be easy to be the easy life.

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Worth Encouraging

Good news today, Panera Bread is going to no longer put any artificial ingredients into any of it’s products. That means that there will only be bread in the bread, no added flavors, stabilizers, vitamins or minerals. It won’t happen completely until 2016, but two years is not that long. The attention that we are all paying to what goes into our foods is beginning to pay off. If competitors see this pay off for Panera, then there will be a rush to copy-cat it. While this is not better than making your food at home, it is still VERY good news concerning the state of the market around artificial ingredients in our foods.

Once again, if you haven’t already gotten a copy, get the book “Pandora’s Lunchbox” to see the history and the state of food additives in the US. Eye-opening.

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Why They Add Vitamins

Did you ever wonder why they add vitamins to processed foods? They usually don’t add anything to foods that don’t add value or marketability. According to a recent article in Salon.com, practically none of the vitamins that we consume can be shown to have any effect on your health at all. There is no proof that adding ‘nutrients’ during the processing of foods to add back in nutrients that have been lost in the processing do anything to enhance the value of the foods to your body either. The fact that the additions do nothing to increase the nutritional value of the foods means that the only reason for a manufacturer to put something extra in is so that he can tout that addition on the food label.

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Adding vitamins and nutrients makes Mom think she is buying something good for the kids. They ask for it, because they have seen how happy it makes kids on the commercials. Mom knows it is candy in a box, but — look at all the vitamins! The kids are begging to take their vitamins this way.

Now the news comes along and we find that added vitamins are not responsible for making our foods better for us. The only logical thing to do would be to stop buying boxed birthday cake and feeding it to the kids for breakfast. The sugar is known to be bad for them in many different ways. The vitamins are now known to have no effect. Breakfast cereals are an expensive waste of money, and they poison us with empty calories.

Half of the children in elementary school are over weight now. Vitamins are not going to do anything about the type ii diabetes explosion in our children and young adults. This Congress will never do anything like adding regulations concerning sugar reduction in children’s foods, or concerning food advertising during children’s programming on TV, so it is up to us. We must find ways to feed our children unprocessed foods, foods with no health claims, foods that don’t come in boxes or bags.

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