Mick's Up in a Search

Showing posts with label calories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label calories. Show all posts

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Mick's up Laughter

I pray you have an enjoyable Christmas, gathered with family.  If you do get to be with family, most likely you’ll be having lots of laughter.  Getting together can be a a lot of fun… and healthy.
Merry Christmas!
In a study, it was found that people “burned 20 percent more calories when laughing, compared to not laughing.”  (Laughter Can Burn Calories)
 
These calories are burned by the use of approximately 53 muscles, including abdominal and facial muscles.  (Fun Trivia) 
 
Consider the facts:  “It takes 65 muscles to frown and 13 to smile.  Why work overtime.” (B. J. Palmer)
 
Our mouths were filled with laughter,
our tongues with songs of joy.
Then it was said among the nations,
“The LORD has done great things for them.”
The LORD has done great things for us,
and we are filled with joy.

~

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Mick’s up on Fuel

Sticking to this week’s focus on sugar addiction, let’s see if carbs (aka sugars) are good fuel for exercise.

You’ve probably heard a coach or health source recommend loading up on carbs before a big game or workout.  The reason for that is to have enough energy stored up to get you through the event.  After looking further into this, you might decide it’s not as great an idea as it used to seem.

Nutrition for Peak Performance (Webinar)
In a Maximized Living Webinar on Nutrition for Peak Performance, Dr. Fred Roberto points out “for all athletes:  The fact of the matter is food does matter.  It is critically important.  Food is your fuel, and food runs the human engine, and so we have to take and convert this quality food into fuel that can then get transferred into an energy source, and that's what really runs human performance.  We want optimum performance.  The human engine is amazing.  It's a high-performance engine.  It needs to run on high-octane fuel.  You simply don't put diesel fuel inside a race car.  It just gunks up the engine.  Your body requires high-octane, quality food just the same....  It's not really a game of calories in versus calories out, as most people would think.  There's so much more to the story.  You've got to put good, quality calories inside of your body.  When you put in the food that is designed for your body to run on, your body can run so much more efficiently and effectively.”

In that same webinar, Dr. BJ Hardick warns us to “only use carbohydrates that our body is actually going to utilize.  Don't overdo it on carbohydrates, if our body is not going to utilize them.”

Dr. Roberto explains that what we want are Medium Chain Fatty Acids, like coconut oil, because they “are an excellent source of energy (used immediately for energy)... and provide the energy without all the negative effects sugar has in the body.”

He points out that consuming sugar triggers insulin, and insulin has an adverse affect on HGH (Human Growth Hormone), which is a hormone we like to spike because with exercise... for increasing lean muscle.

Dr. Roberto continues: “Foods containing processed carbs and sugars...  are anti-nutrients... The body still needs the elements, and so pulls from its stores... not to mention... these greatly reduce your PH and make your body more acidic.  Having a proper PH balance is critical for sports performance and recovery time.... That's where performance happens: at the cellular level.”

So, what is recommended is:  low-glycemic, high-fiber carbs = veggies = high energy

Instead of sports drinks, reach for some coconut water. It is a great source of electrolytes (15x more potassium than other sports drinks).  It might still have sugar, but it’s alkaline!  Dr. Hardick warns us that the glycemic index is not the only thing to look at.  We need to know whether or not what we’re taking in is causing inflammation and whether or not it causes our body to be acidic.  Remember, alkaline is better for our cells, which is where performance really happens.

Dr. Hardick clarifies that only really long duration exercise benefits from a good helping of healthy grains the day before (ie Ezekiel Bread).  Then during exercise, concentrate on low-glycemic, easily absorbable and digestable things like coconut water.

Now that you're fueled up, go for it!



...my only aim is to finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me—
the task of testifying to the good news of God’s grace.

~

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Why Mick’s Calories?

Since I missed a post yesterday, due to my computer being held hostage by a 13-year-old’s LAN party, I am combining my exercise day with my nutrition day into one topic:  Calories.

Most of us have gotten used to the formula: 
calories in < calories out = lower weight

I don’t know about you, but I was never good at counting calories.  It was way too time-consuming for me.  I was so happy to find out it isn’t necessary!

“Playing the calorie counting game doesn’t work.  It overlooks and ignores the impact stress and diet have on your hormones,” says nutrition and fitness expert Dr. Len Lopez, creator of The Work Horse Trainer.  “The reason people aren’t efficiently burning stored body fat has nothing to do with the amount of calories they ate or burned, and more to do with what regulates their metabolism.”  Dr. Lopez goes on to explain that our metabolism is controlled mostly by hormones, such as cortisol, adrenaline, insulin, and glucagon.  He offers a Calorie Burning Test and lists out ways to Stay in Your Fat-Burning Zone.


As we see in Mick’s up Exercising, we can decrease cortisol by following interval training or surge types of exercise, whereas some longer duration exercise may actually increase that stress hormone.  Exercise is obviously good for increased breathing (as Dr. Lopez suggests is good for decreasing the stress, cortisol, and adrenaline), and this style of exercise improves metabolism.

Eating the right foods also improves metabolism.  Eating a breakfast such as eggs cooked in coconut oil can be beneficial (and yummy!).  Dr. Lopez states:  “Take a look at your diet. You cannot skip meals or eat refined, junk food.  It causes your blood sugar to drop and stimulates your adrenals to make additional cortisol and adrenaline.  Make sure you eat breakfast and it includes good protein and fats.  A predominately high carb breakfast, like cereal or bagels, will throw your blood sugar off for most of the day.  Good protein and fats at each meal will help reduce the surge of insulin and will stimulate the production of glucagon, which aids in the breakdown of fats.”

Also concentrating on another hormone called leptin instead of calories will help you understand weight-loss resistance and how to find success by getting past the calories in/calories out thinking. 

Just like we can be a new creation through faith in Christ and the amazing love of God, we can feel like a new person when we live simpler, healthier lives.  Plus, we can forget about the “old” way of thinking in terms of calories, and consider the “new” way of thinking in terms of allowing our bodies to process hormones properly, the way they were meant to.  Who doesn’t want simpler?


"Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past.
See I am doing a new thing!
Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?"


~