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Ren's Fitness/Starchild Yoga Spirit Blog
by ren

33 blog entries; 17 entries per page; 1 pages; viewed 253,778 times
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  • getting back on track   by  ren     17 y     3,573       5 Messages Shown       Blog: Ren's Fruitarian Fitness 26 week challenge/100 Day Reality C
    My body ran amok a while back with stress. I do feel a certain equilibrium coming back to me thanks to meditation, prayer, running and evening primrose oil pills. Now that my knee is in good shape again, I'm going to start riding my bike in the morning again. I feel it's time to get moving again and continue with the program. My funds are really short and thankfully my mom sent me off with a bag of grapefruit and oranges. I've cut out soy milk, opting to drink rice milk which cheaper and almost as good tasting in coffee and tea. I've started using matzoh as my 'bread'. I still eat cereal. I'm just going to go with the flow of things and just keep adding more raw/living foods. I keep saying I'm going 100% raw but it never happens and so I'm not holding myself up to any unrealistic standards anymore.
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    • How's it going??   by  drpr     17 y     1,828
      Getting back on the wagon- I'm getting good at that. I hope things are going well for you. Knee injuries are no fun, and neither is stress.
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      • Re: How's it going??   by  ren     17 y     1,740
        It's tough when you are facing depression, financial trouble,etc. I find that focusing on what I have and working out is helping me. I've planting a substantial garden to have access to fresh vegetables. This 90 day challenge has been challenging in ways I didn't expect. It's not been about rawfood,fruitarian living or anything. It's been about overcoming my mental challenges of negative thinking and how I approach the challenges facing my young marriage. I'm happy to see you posting again Allison!
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        • Re: How's it going??   by  Corinthian     17 y     1,978
          Here is something I came across.  You might be interested in the findings.

          Public release date: 8-Jun-2007

          Contact: Amitabh Avasthi
          axa47@psu.edu
          814-865-9481
          Penn State

          Calorie density key to losing weight

          Eating smart, not eating less, may be the key to losing weight. A year-long clinical trial by Penn State researchers shows that diets focusing on foods that are low in calorie density can promote healthy weight loss while helping people to control hunger.

          Foods that are high in water and low in fat – such as fruits, vegetables, soup, lean meat, and low-fat dairy products – are low in calorie density and provide few calories per bite.

          “Eating a diet that is low in calorie density allows people to eat satisfying portions of food, and this may decrease feelings of hunger and deprivation while reducing calories” said Dr. Julia A. Ello-Martin, who conducted the study as part of her doctoral dissertation in the College of Health and Human Development at Penn State. Previously, little was known about the influence of diets low in calorie density on body weight.

          “Such diets are known to reduce the intake of calories in the short term, but their role in promoting weight loss over the long term was not clear,” said Dr. Barbara J. Rolls, who directed the study and who holds the Helen A. Guthrie Chair of Nutritional Sciences at Penn State.

          “We have now shown that choosing foods that are low in calorie density helps in losing weight, without the restrictive messages of other weight loss diets,” explained Ello-Martin, whose findings appear in the June 2007 issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

          The researchers compared the effects of two diets – one reduced in fat, the other high in water-rich foods as well as reduced in fat – in 71 obese women aged 22 to 60. The participants were taught by dietitians to make appropriate food choices for a diet low in calorie density, but unlike most diets, they were not assigned daily limits for calories.

          At the end of one year, women in both groups showed significant weight loss as well as a decrease in the calorie density of their diets. However, women who added water-rich foods to their diets lost more weight during the first six months of the study than those who only reduced fat in their diets – 19.6 pounds compared to 14.7 pounds. Weight loss was well maintained by subjects in both groups during the second six months of the study.

          Records kept by the women showed that those who included more water-rich foods ate 25 percent more food by weight and felt less hungry than those who followed the reduced-fat diet. “By eating more fruits and vegetables they were able to eat more food, and this probably helped them to stick to their diet and lose more weight,” said Ello-Martin.

          ###

          “Choosing foods that are low in calorie density helps to control hunger and is a healthy strategy for losing weight over the long term” said Rolls. Practical information on incorporating foods with a low calorie density in daily diets can be found in Rolls’ books “The Volumetrics Eating Plan” (2007) and “The Volumetrics Weight-Control Plan” (2000).

          The Penn State researchers added that increasing the consumption of water-rich foods such as fruits and vegetables is not only in tune with current dietary guidelines, but may also help reduce the risk of chronic illnesses.

          Other researchers in the clinical trial, which was funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health, include Liane S. Roe, research nutritionist; Jenny H. Ledikwe, post-doctoral research fellow; and Amanda M. Beach, study dietician, all at Penn State.

          The Penn State Laboratory for the Study of Human Ingestive Behavior is at http://nutrition.hhdev.psu.edu/foodlab/index.html

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