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Netflix binge leads to new diet for David Johnson – NFL.com – NFL.com

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:44 pm

If I had a nickel for every time someone asked me this summer if I've seen the Netflix documentary What The Health, well, I'd be approximately 35 cents richer. (Someone should really adjust that adage for inflation.)

Point is, What The Health -- a 92-minute dissection of diet and disease -- is a buzzy water-cooler subject right now, and that chatter has extended to NFL locker rooms. Cardinals superstar running back David Johnson is a perfect example.

Johnson and his wife, Meaghan, moved to a plant-based diet after binging on What the Health and Forks Over Knives, another Netflix documentary. Johnson is part of a growing trend of professional athletes who are cutting back on or entirely removing meat from their diets.

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady is probably the league's poster boy of this movement; a part of his fledgling lifestyle empire is built around meat-free dietary choices. Aaron Rodgers has followed a similar path.

"It wasn't as hard as I thought it would be," Johnson said, per ESPN.com. "I thought it would definitely be hard just because, as Americans, we're taught to eat a whole bunch of meat. It's not even just eating meat, it's the portions. What I've learned is that we're taught eating like 24 ounces of steak is a manly thing, when really you're only supposed to eat 8 to 10 as a portion."

So while you shouldn't expect the Johnsons to be lining up at Chick-fil-A any time soon, just know that plantmania hasn't taken full hold on the Arizona Cardinals. Take it away, Uncle Brucie:

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Netflix binge leads to new diet for David Johnson - NFL.com - NFL.com

75-Year-Old Woman Defies Aging Process With Raw Vegan Diet – NBC 6 South Florida

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:44 pm

At 75 years young, Annette Larkins says the key to radiant youthfulness and physical vitality is a raw vegan diet.

"I know that I'm not going to live forever, but I'm forever trying to live well," Annette said.

She's been a vegetarian for 54 years, but over the last 30 years she has perfected her raw vegan diet. Her plant-based diet does not include any animal products. The food she eats is unprocessed and uncooked. Her dishes include vegetarian nut loaf, zucanni chips, and savory okra crisps. Annette says it's never too late to reap the benefits of a vegan lifestyle.

"If you eat something in it's natural raw state, opposed to processing it and cooking it, I think it stands to reason that you'll get more nutrients, Annette said. Your enzymes are intact. That's why I eat the way I do. I may not be considered vegan in all areas because I do consume honey."

Annette has written three journey to health books and appeared on multiple television and radio shows, including "The Steve Harvey Show" and the "Tom Joyner Morning Show."

"I don't consider it a secret. It's my lifestyle," Annette said.

Most of her vegetables and cooking ingredients are grown in her backyard in Miami-Dade County. Growing season in South Florida is from October to May. During this time Annette's garden is full of lettuce, tomatoes, and ginger. Caring for her garden keeps Annette busy.

"You know, I get in like 1,800 steps per day," Annette said.

Amos Larkins is Annette's husband. At 84 years old he takes medication for high blood pressure and diabetes. He only recently caught the vegan bug after 58 years of marriage. Amos wishes he started decades ago after noticing a big difference.

"Oh my God, everything is better. My blood pressure everything," said Amos.

Published at 4:57 PM EDT on Aug 18, 2017 | Updated at 6:45 PM EDT on Aug 18, 2017

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75-Year-Old Woman Defies Aging Process With Raw Vegan Diet - NBC 6 South Florida

I sent in my DNA to get a personalized diet plan. What I discovered disturbs me. – Washington Post

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:44 pm

Today is National Ice Cream Pie Day. (Its also the third week of National Crayon Collection Month, but whos counting?) You know whose arteries ice cream pie is good for? No one. Plain and simple. But Habit, one of the latest disrupters in the food tech sector, suggests we rethink the very notion of foods that are good for everyone or bad for everyone. Its part of a movement toward what is called personalized nutrition.

Habit, based in the San Francisco Bay area, tests for biomarkers and genetic variants using samples you provide, then generates a personalized report about how your body responds to food. Its your unique nutrition blueprint. Then the company pairs you with a nutrition coach and offers you custom-made meals, containing your ideal ratio of carbs, fats and protein, delivered to your home. All in the name of sending you on the path to a new you.

[Breakfast was the most important meal of the day until America ruined it]

I had to see for myself. So I endured the home test and shipped off my blood and DNA samples. (Gulp.) Then the companys chief executive walked me through the results of my newfound eater identity, and I observed how the diagnosis began to affect my relationship with food. Heres what happened and what it could mean for the future of eating in America.

Digesting the news

The Habit home kit is not for the faint of heart. After fasting for 10 hours, you answer lots of deeply personal questions, scrub DNA samples from your cheeks and puncture your fingertips with a self-pricking button (technical term: lancet). This sounds rough, but my lowest moment is actually chugging their special Habit Challenge Shake. It clocks in at 950 calories, 75 grams of sugar and 130 percent of daily saturated fat intake. It has a taste and smell I can only liken to Kahla. It makes me feel god-awful while drinking it nose pinched, pinkie out, face scrunched and even worse afterward. It was bad enough I had sacrificed my Saturday morning frittata ritual.

By the third blood sample, my dining table looks like a crime scene. Ive got bandages on two fingers, mini disinfectant pads strewn around, and cherry red blood dripping down my forearm. Im angling my elbow like a helicopter hovering over the little blood collection card, just trying to fill the darn box one last time so I can move on with my day. Finally, I pack it up and mail it all off in a rather alarming biohazard bag. The whole ordeal takes about three hours and costs $309.

[No food is healthy. Not even kale.]

Im told Ill receive my results in a few weeks. While I wait, I wander back to the Habit website and take a closer look at those pages and pages of fine print. I start to have second thoughts at sentences like, You may experience stress, anxiety, or emotional or physical discomfort when you learn about health problems or potential health problems.

Then theres this: Recommendations regarding diet provided to you may or may not be beneficial to you and may cause or exacerbate certain medical problems.

Say what?

Thankfully, when the results come in, I get labeled a Range Seeker. In official Habit-speak, it means you can be flexible with your macronutrient intake and thrive on a range of foods. Well, thats a relief.

[Heres how much giving up beef helps or doesnt help the planet]

There are seven Habit types, each with dozens of more specific sub-variations, varying from Slow Seeker (best suited for foods rich in fiber and carbs that are absorbed slowly) to Fat Seeker (fat is a valuable fuel source for you). Along with receiving your tribal designation, youre assigned a personalized eating plan, depicting your ideal plate, suggested nutrient goals and daily calorie target.

Id be lying if I said the results havent been affecting my food choices, or at least the way I feel about my food choices. For instance, since being told I have a genetic risk variant associated with slow production of omega-3s, I have been seeking salmon like a grizzly bear. Apparently, Im also genetically predisposed to caffeine sensitivity. Many a morning, this news has me sitting at my desk thinking I must be tripping out on my cup of joe despite the fact that I have consumed the exact same amount of coffee every day of my adult life.

Conviviality, an endangered species

On the face of it, personalized nutrition makes sense. Why wouldnt I want to understand the unique dietary yearnings and land mines of my own DNA? Many people seem to feel that the existing national dietary guidance of one-size-fits-all has failed them. Theyre sick, and theyre confused about what to buy and what to order.

But in reducing food to individualized nutrient optimization equating food with fuel, really what are we sacrificing? What are the implications for our food culture and the future of dining? Oh, gosh, Id love to go out for sushi with you, but I have to scurry home to my prearranged Range Seeker box in the fridge.

[Why your humble bowl of oatmeal could help feed a growing planet]

Neil Grimmer, Habits founder and chief executive, recognizes that food is social. He tells me that it knots us together culturally, so Habit is in the process of facilitating online communities for people with the same Habit type. Through a private Facebook page, they could share tips and the like. Its better than going it alone, I guess, but a far cry from actually sharing a meal.

Remember the $300 you put down for the home test? It includes a coaching session, so a nutritionist helps you put all your information into practice. During my session, Jae Berman, a registered dietitian, nutritionist and head coach of Habit, is a great help. But things dont look so rosy when I ask her how Im supposed to integrate Habit into regular life.

The family conversation has been one of the most common questions we have gotten, she says. It doesnt occur to me as a problem because I just want people to take ownership of their story ... have the empowerment to say, This is what my plate looks like; thats what your plate needs to look like, and move on. Even, she says, if that means everyone at the table eating something different. Have you ever tried being the short-order cook in that scenario? It all but requires outsourcing the meal making.

Imagine, Berman says, a mom whos stressed out, with kids running around, a husband who is a rail, all the while she has no time for herself, is struggling with her weight, and trying to figure out what on earth to cook for dinner. Most people dont want to talk about uncomfortable things, Berman says. But let your kids eat mac and cheese, let your husband do what he needs, and let you have this plate for your dinner. You dont need to do anything its going to show up at your door.

This desire to customize our food experiences stems from the uniquely American trait of individualism. Often subconscious, its a desire to be exceptional, distinct from those around us, as opposed to being part of a larger collective. By contrast, many other cultures around the world are characterized by interdependence. It turns out, individualism shapes our eating habits in stunning ways, from the rise of solo dining to customization as a firmly expected attribute of eating out.

Habit is the latest example of a new technology enabling that innate premium on personalization, and over time, these tools are pulling us further and further from the table. Think smartphones making us feel less alone while eating alone, and mobile ordering apps allowing us to tailor our meal delivery times and our restaurant orders with greater precision. With roughly half of all eating occasions now taking place when were by ourselves, were getting less and less practiced at eating with others.

This reality has major implications for our food culture, and for the rising rates of social isolation in the United States. You know what the single greatest predictor of happiness is? Social connectedness. And guess what: Its one of the greatest predictors of longevity, too.

Of course I want people to eat food thats right for them. But we also have to ask ourselves: Which is really going to make us live longer, and live better? The ability to pay more granular attention to our triglyceride levels, or the more holistic benefits of eating with family and friends?

My grandmother turned 100 this year. Between the birthday parties and the bridge club, her standing dinner dates and the three times a day she picks up her neighbors in their retirement home hallway to take their walkers down to the dining hall, a thriving social life is Almas secret to a long life. Whether Im chomping on my salad, face glued to my iPhone, or waving off her breakfast offer by citing the low-glycemic Kind bar I just finished off, she tells me time after time: Shed take the cake and the friendships any day.

Egan is author of Devoured: How What We Eat Defines Who We Are (William Morrow/HarperCollins), recently released in paperback.

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I sent in my DNA to get a personalized diet plan. What I discovered disturbs me. - Washington Post

Study touches on how diet high in sugar might affect mood – Idaho State Journal

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:44 pm

I have always enjoyed the chicken versus egg question. Which came first? One chicken or egg question I hear quite frequently, in my line of work, is the sugar or depression question.

Was it the depression that, through the act of self-medication, caused increased sugar to be consumed? Or was it the act of eating sugar that caused the depression?

It seems this chicken or egg question has been answered by a recent study, titled the Whitehall II study. A research team from the University College of London collected data on over 10,000 men and women over the course of 30 years.

Their analysis compared amounts of sugar intake with the time of the diagnosis of depression or other mood disorders.

According to their data, high sugar-intake caused the changes in mental function that we call depression and mood disorders.

I would be very slow to hang my hat on one study.

However, it does, once again, place emphasis on the fact that a diet high in sugar can be detrimental far beyond concerns of the waistline.

Next time you're feeling down, and feel the need to self-medicate, go for a walk outside or play a game with a loved one. The side effects of this form of self-medication have benefits that far outweigh any risks.

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Study touches on how diet high in sugar might affect mood - Idaho State Journal

Weight Loss | Runner’s World

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:43 pm

Despite lots of arguments about the details, most experts agree that weight loss is a matter of energy balanceconsistently burn more calories than you take in, and youll lose weight. (And, unfortunately, vice versa for gaining weight.) Because it allows you to burn a good amount of calories in a relatively short time, running can be a key component of an effective weight-loss program.

If you have weight to lose, you didnt gain it overnight. Instead, it was probably a gradual accumulation that at some point became significant. Thats worth keeping in mind when coming up with a weight-loss programresearch shows that your best bet for long-term success is combining exercise with reasonable calorie restriction, and focusing on the long view. Crash diets, in contrast, can result in more dramatic short-term weight loss, but generally arent sustainable for long, and can place your health at risk.

Although we dont advocate over-concentration on precise calorie counting, its worth keeping in mind the general figure of a mile of running burning 100 calories. If youre trying to lose weight, the calorie-burning effect of running 20 miles a week can be negated by just a few chocolate chip cookies. We point this out not to be depressing, but to emphasize that running alone might not bring the weight loss you want, especially in the short term.

Another thing to keep in mind when using running for weight loss: Being active during other parts of the daytaking stairs instead of elevators, walking instead of driving to stores, doing yard work by hand, etc.will compound the calorie-burning benefits of running. Thats a better approach than being sedentary except when youre running.

The articles below are full of inspiration and advice for runners looking to lose anywhere from a little to a lot of weight.

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Weight Loss | Runner's World

Surgeries to remove weight-loss devices on the rise – Reuters

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:43 pm

Reuters Health - Doctors are doing fewer weight-loss procedures to implant adjustable bands around the stomach and more operations to remove the devices or alter them, a U.S. study suggests.

Researchers focused on a type of weight-loss surgery known as laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding, a minimally invasive procedure that involves placing an inflatable belt around the upper portion of the stomach that reduces the amount of food it can hold. People are advised to eat portions about the size of a shot glass post-surgery.

Nationwide, a total of 28,202 patients underwent procedures to implant laparoscopic adjustable gastric bands (LAGB) from 2007 to 2015, the study found. Over that same period, 12,157 people had gastric bands removed, or explanted.

Starting in 2013, though, surgeons did more procedures to take bands out than to put them in, the study team reports in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.

A newer alternative in weight-loss surgery known as a laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy that appears to be safer and more effective may be driving this trend, said senior study author Dr. Ninh Nguyen, chief of the division of gastrointestinal and bariatric surgery at the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine.

Compared to the adjustable gastric banding, the laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy is associated with improved weight loss and lower incidence of late complications, Nguyen said by email. The late complication rate requiring revision (procedures) after sleeve gastrectomy is one-fourth that of gastric banding.

More than half of weight-loss procedures done today use the sleeve gastrectomy, which reduces the stomach to the size of a banana, according to the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

Procedures to remove or adjust gastric bands were associated with longer hospital stays, a greater number ofserious complications and more admissions to intensive care units compared withoperations to implant the devices, the study found.

Researchers didnt find any difference in death rates or costs between implantation procedures and operations to remove or fix the bands, with both types of surgery costing an average of $11,600 to $12,000.

One limitation of the study is that researchers only examined procedures done at academic medical centers, although the authors suggest that trends might be similar at community hospitals.

Another drawback is the lack of data explaining why bands were removed. That makes it impossible to say if the removal happened after complications or because patients elected to switch to a different, newer alternative such as the sleeve gastrectomy to see if they could achieve more weight loss.

Most often, when the gastric bands are removed its either because patients couldnt tolerate the devices being tightened or because they didnt lose enough weight, said Dr. Anita Courcoulas, chief of minimally invasive bariatric and general surgery at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Because the sleeve is still relatively new, however, its too soon to say whether it will achieve better weight loss or fewer complications over the long term, Courcoulas, who wasnt involved in the study, said by email.

Enthusiasm for the sleeve as a replacement for the band should be tempered with the knowledge that longer-term outcomes are still sorely lacking, Courcoulas added. It will take time, patience, and a dynamic evaluation of the evidence as it evolves to draw more final conclusions about the longer-term comparative effectiveness of bariatric procedures.

SOURCE: bit.ly/2vL18Pf Journal of the American College of Surgeons, online July 25, 2017.

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Surgeries to remove weight-loss devices on the rise - Reuters

Jordaan Lost 160 Pounds and She Doesn’t Even Exercise Anymore – POPSUGAR

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:43 pm

Weighing 310 pounds at her heaviest, it wasn't until Jordaan Spark was looking through holiday photos in January 2015 (Jan. 6, to be exact) that it hit her. "I just was in shock of what I saw. I knew I was bigger, but I didn't know I was THAT big," she told POPSUGAR. That was the day her weight-loss journey began. Jordaan has dropped an impressive 160 pounds since and has gone from a tightly fitting size 26 in jeans to a size six.

To lose the weight, Jordaan focused on changing her eating habits, exercising here and there. By playing around with a lot of different dieting concepts, Jordaan was able to figure out what worked best for her: low-carb. She also cut out junk food like chips, sweets, soda, and fast food.

Jordaan also had lap band surgery six months after starting her journey, but she says that it didn't affect anything. She could still eat as much as she used to and was still hungry constantly. "The nurse said there was two percent of people that the lap band doesn't work for," Jordaan said. "She thinks I am one of those two percent."

As far as working out went, Jordaan says, "I started by doing little exercises around the house that I found on Pinterest that had minimal impact on my joints," such as wall sits, planks, and crunches. "From there, I started doing at-home workout DVDs, and then felt comfortable enough to go outside and walk/run." Surprisingly, she says, "I don't work out anymore. I have two jobs and two kids that keep me plenty busy."

Aside from the number on the scale, one of Jordaan's favorite nonscale victories is people being able to pick her kids up. "I love it, it's an absolute confidence boost," she said. Jordaan also loves the freedom of being able to "go into any store and find my size, being able to do things such as jump on a trampoline without fear of breaking it." But more than anything, Jordaan credits her children for her success and motivation, citing them as the reason she decided to lose weight in the first place.

Jordaan says, "I love the crockpot, so I find recipes that fit my low-carb diet and make them, and sometimes I'll have the leftovers for lunch the next day. I try not to snack, but when I do, it's usually on some nuts."

Jordaan shares that she got discouraged for a month, worried about her loose skin, but she says, "Do NOT let that fear stand in the way of your journey. I kept telling myself I can hide my loose skin really well. I couldn't hide being fat."

Since Jordaan has definitely been through the ups and downs of a weight-loss journey, we appreciate any advice she can share. She says, "When you get discouraged, don't quit, then you'll be back to where you were, wishing you were at where you're at now."

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Jordaan Lost 160 Pounds and She Doesn't Even Exercise Anymore - POPSUGAR

Weight loss: Size 20 Sheffield woman lost a whopping SEVEN stone following this diet plan – Express.co.uk

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:43 pm

Claire Orridge, 38, at her biggest weighed 18st 7lbs and wore a size 20. S

he realised her health was at risk and she couldn't continue at that weight for long. Speaking about her struggles, she said: "Ever since I can remember my weight has been up and down.

"My turning point was when I reached over 18st and a dress size of 20, my health wasnt good and I was tired all the time.

"I was juggling two jobs taking care of my mum (Im her carer) and support work, both of which can be physically and mentally difficult."

Claire said she knew she had to do something about her unhealthy weight and lifestyle.

She saw an advert for SlimFast on TV and thought she'd give it a try.

Speaking about the diet plan, she said: "The plan looked simple and flexible plus you could eat up to six times a day I remember thinking surely it couldnt be that easy!

"As soon as I began using the SlimFast products the weight started to come off, I was thrilled.

"On a typical day I would have a chocolate shake for breakfast a meal replacement bar for lunch and a healthy 600 calorie meal, plus snacks. Within a year I had shed two stone and I was already feeling better."

With her weight loss going well, everything looked rosy for Claire.

But in November 2015 the unimaginable happened; she tragically lost her brother Darren at the age of 39.

Speaking about the loss, she said: "It was the hardest thing to deal with and I took some time off to deal with it."

After weight weeks, Claire had a new-found determination. She said: "I was going to make Darren proud of me and went back to SlimFast to continue my weight loss.

"I focused and started to track my activity, going to the gym as much as I could. I was enjoying the products, especially the chocolate Vitality shake, thats my lifesaver!

"In the back of my head I knew I was doing it not just for myself but for Darren too."

It comes after Heidi Klum revealed what she ate for breakfast to stay in shape and boost her health.

Over the next few months Claire started to lose weight and gain a more healthy attitude to eating.

She said: "I even had to request a new work uniform and people were noticing and commenting on my weight loss every day.

"To date I have lost 100lbs, going from over 18st and a size 18 to just over 10st and a size 10.

"I feel like a different person, bursting with energy and determined to make each and every day count."

Claire's current weight loss stands at over seven stone.

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Weight loss: Size 20 Sheffield woman lost a whopping SEVEN stone following this diet plan - Express.co.uk

Ace of Cakes Star Duff Goldman Shows Off His Dramatic Weight Loss Transformation – Men’s Health

Posted: August 19, 2017 at 2:43 pm

Like many other commenters, we wanted to know exactly what he did to drop the pounds. In response to one comment, Goldman revealed that his plan has been surprisingly simple: eating clean, riding my bike, lifting weights. Old school, he wrote on Instagram.

You hear about eating clean all the time, but that doesnt mean you have to stop enjoying the foods you loveor strip out every form of dairy and gluten to lose weight. As Goldman has demonstrated on his own Instagram, it just means youre limiting the junk and focusing on real, whole foods.

Take a look at one of his meals below (kudos to him for sticking with his eating plan on July 4th, were not sure we could have shown the same restraint). His plate is full of protein-packed elk and bison burgers and vegetables like grilled zucchini, pickles, and jalapeos. (Here are 13 easy ways to get more protein in your diet.)

As for exercise, it seems like Goldman is sticking with workouts he actually enjoys, like taking long bike rides and lifting weights. Since he even showed off his own Dwayne The Rock Johnson impersonation during an early morning strength training session, we can bet the fitness legend is a main source of Goldmans inspiration.

(No weights? No problem. Melt fat using just your bodyweight with the exercises below.)

Plus, while hes only three months into his journey, Goldman has already hit the I-need-new-clothes milestone. That feeling when you lose so much weight you drop a shirt size so all your friends send you new t-shirts, he wrote in a recent post.

If he keeps it up, were sure this wont be the first time he reaches for a new shirt size.

Ready to get in shape yourself? Check out Metashred Extreme from Mens Healthit will help you burn fat and build muscle at the same time.

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Ace of Cakes Star Duff Goldman Shows Off His Dramatic Weight Loss Transformation - Men's Health

This is the best time of year to lose weight here’s why – Daily Star

Posted: August 18, 2017 at 1:44 pm

GETTY

We hate to say it, but summers nearly over.

And with winter just around the corner, there really hasnt been a better time to startlosing weightthan right now.

This research comes from weight loss app Lose It who revealed that the start of the school year is the optimum time to slim down.

Click through our gallery on the best ways to burn calories without exercising

1 / 10

Chew gum - A super-easy way to burn some extra calories is popping a few pieces of gum now and then. The act of chewing keeps your jaw muscles moving, andnot only will you be burning caloriesyoull stop yourself from consuming more calories.

To come to this conclusion, the company looked at the average monthly weight loss of their users over the course of the year.

They found the most pounds are dropped in the first few months of the year usually due to New Years resolutions.

However, they also found that weight loss picks up again in September so why is that?

Our conclusion is that people who started their weight loss journey in the New Year, or in April before the summer, probably let go of their restrictive diets while on holiday.

But as the warm days draw to a close, slimmers think now is the perfect time to pick the diet back up again.

Good news dieters! The 23 foods that contain NO calories because you burn more than you consume as you eat

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APRICOTS - Calorie content: 12 kcals per apricotEating apricots is said to help reduce the risk of strokes, and heart attacks. They're also full of vitamin C, potassium and dietary fibre, which all promote good heart health

Keri Gans, R.D., author of The Small Change Diet, told Womens Health: After a fun, busy summer, the fall offers that back-to-school feeling, even for adults.

You can use this time to get back on track for things that fell by the wayside during the summer, like your meal prep or your workouts.

Even people who havent stuck to their weight loss goals this year should use autumn as a kick-start to a healthy lifestyle.

By starting now, you will have formed good habits by the time December (read: temptation season) rolls in and wont feel as bad about having a slice of Christmas pudding.

But if you arelooking to lose weight, you should stick to ahealthy diet and exercise regularly forget fad dieting.

Its all about finding wholesome habits that suit you and sticking to them and you dont need to hear the chimes of the new year to kick start a positive change.

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This is the best time of year to lose weight here's why - Daily Star


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