Sunday, November 25, 2012

Health Wellness


Perfect recipes for ultimate health, from the very best experts in the world
By Trisha Calvo, Photographs by Charles Masters

Say you find yourself on a 5-hour flight to L.A., and in the course of conversation with your seatmate you discover that he’s one of the country’s leading cardiologists, or a worldfamous cancer researcher, or a nationally recognized obesity expert. Wouldn’t you peek to see which parts of his in-flight meal he ate—and what he left on his plate? Wouldn’t you just love to ask him—based on his extensive knowledge of disease and its causes—what he eats every day, how he exercises, what supplements he takes? Like a magician, he knows the secrets, and you’d like nothing more than to look into his hat. Well, consider your curiosity satisfied. We rounded up the country’s top doctors and asked them some pretty personal questions about their daily habits and favorite foods, hoping to find some lifestyle patterns that would put us—and you—on the right path toward a longer, leaner, healthier life. 


1) Antiaging

Nicholas Perricone, M.D., board-certified clinical and research dermatologist and author of Forever Young 

Dr. Perricone was one of the first experts to promote an anti-inflammatory diet for healthy skin and a healthy body. He outlined the evidence in his earlier books, The Perricone Prescription and The Wrinkle Cure. In his latest publication, Forever Young, he introduces readers to the cutting-edge science of nutrigenomics.

“By manipulating different aspects of your diet and lifestyle, you can switch on protective genes and switch off genes that may have a negative effect on health,” he says. “Eating anti-inflammatory foods at every meal—fruits, vegetables, nuts, fish, whole grains—is key.”

Skip sugar, avoid wrinkles 
“Avoiding foods that cause blood sugar spikes—such as products with sugar and white flour—controls inflammation, which my decades of research show is the single greatest precipitator of aging. Inflammation leads to wrinkled, sagging skin, heart disease, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, and some cancers.”

Commune with nature 
“Going outside, breathing the fresh air, and seeing the magnificent planet that we’re lucky to live on renews my spirits every day. Spending time in a park, at the beach, or even just on a tree-lined street is a safe and very enjoyable method for reducing the deadly, aging effects of stress. A walk outside provides benefits that your treadmill cannot.”

Mix weights with yoga 
“I’ve incorporated yoga poses into my strength-training sessions so I maintain flexibility while building muscle mass.”

Stay hydrated 
“Drink at least six glasses of pure springwater and a few cups of green tea each day. Fluid helps your body process nutrients, and the tea contains powerful antioxidants that fight aging and disease.”

Get your vitamin D naturally 
“Sunshine triggers your body to produce vitamin D, and it’s the best source of this vitamin, which helps reduce the risk of osteoporosis and many cancers. I spend about 15 minutes a day in the sun, taking a brisk walk or participating in some other activity, without wearing sunscreen. Don’t go overboard, though. Any longer than 15 minutes or so increases your risk of skin damage.”

2) Weight Management

David Katz, M.D., m.p.h., director of the prevention research center at Yale University, author of Flavor Full Diet, and principal inventor of the nuval system

Dr. Katz’s motto: Love food that loves you back. “When you develop an optimal diet and sustain it, your tastebuds quickly acclimate to less salt, less sugar, and healthful foods.” Dr. Katz says his wife Catherine’s love of food and cooking helped him confirm that when it comes to diet, “healthy” and “enjoyable” need not be mutually exclusive. Sign up for the Belly Off! newsletter to have weight loss tips and motivation delivered to your inbox weekly.

Imagine your food as part of your body 
“I never eat a food that I don’t want my cells, hormones, and enzymes being built out of. That means no soda, no junk food, no deli meats, and no fast food.”

Rethink cravings 
“Cravings are not reliable indicators of what your body needs if your diet is poor; but if your diet is very close to nature, you don’t tend to yearn for foods that are ‘bad.’”

Eat chocolate 
“Dark chocolate is antioxidant-rich. I eat it when I want it—in moderation, of course. One of my favorite chocolate treats is my wife’s Almond-Oat–Dark Chocolate Cookies. Combine 2 cups each of rolled oats and almond meal, ½ cup each of canola oil and agave syrup, 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract, and 1½ cups of bittersweet chocolate chips. Drop by rounded tablespoon on a parchment-lined baking sheet and bake at 350°F for 9 minutes.”

Follow a smart fat diet 
“After reviewing the evidence some years ago, I went from a very low-fat diet to a diet with more emphasis on healthy oils—nuts, seeds, olive oil, and avocados.”

Trade up your groceries 
“I developed the NuVal nutritional profiling system (nuval.com) to help people make healthier choices at the supermarket. Food scores are shown on shelf tags so you can compare nutrition along with prices. For instance, an apple scores a healthy 96, while applesauce is only 4.” 


3) Heart Health

Arthur Agatston, M.D., medical director of wellness and prevention for Baptist Health South Florida, and author of the South Beach Diet 

The author of the bestselling South Beach Diet series has a confession: “When it comes to sweets, I have the least willpower of anyone in my family,” says Dr. Agatston. “My wife helps me stick to the South Beach Diet Three-Bite Rule: Three bites of any dessert satisfies you without triggering your desire to keep eating.” And he notes that sticking to his signature approach—good carbs, good fats, lean protein—has meant he craves sugary or starchy foods far less often than he used to.

Eat breakfast every day 
“People who skip the morning meal tend to have higher cholesterol and insulin levels and a larger waist circumference— all risk factors for heart disease.”

Go gluten-free for a month
“As healthy as whole grains are, I realized not long ago that certain ones might be problematic for some people—including me—who can’t tolerate gluten, the protein found primarily in wheat and barley. Giving up gluten is not for everyone, but I advise many of my patients to try it for a month and see how they feel. Quite a few report that their gastrointestinal problems, skin rashes, and other health issues resolve.”

Go to bed! 
“Insufficient or poor sleep taxes your body and raises your risk of diabetes, heart disease, depression, and weight gain. You don’t metabolize food properly and have less willpower to stave off cravings for sugary and starchy carbohydrates.”

Mix up your diet 
“There are literally thousands of healthful micronutrients in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes that protect not just your heart but your entire body. They interact in complicated ways that we have been unable to reproduce in a pill.”

Know what the animal you’re eating ate 
“An animal that was grass-fed in pastures is leaner and its meat has more good omega-3 fats and less bad fat than one that was fed grain, kept in a pen, and given antibiotics and hormones.”

Snack on nuts 
“A protein- and fiber-rich snack keeps you energized, gives your body a steady stream of good nutrients to digest (which keeps your metabolism revved), and leaves you less vulnerable to blood sugar swings. Almonds, my favorite, have vitamin E and protein and more fiber than any other nut.”

4.) Emotional Wellness

Andrew Weil, M.D., director at the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona and the author of Spontaneous Happiness 

You might expect someone like Dr. Weil, who specializes in the health of the mind as well as the body, to have a complicated stay-healthy routine. But for this bestselling author, wellness comes down to three basics: “Be physically active every day, spend time in the company of positive people, and, of course, eat a diet based on whole foods, not processed ones.” To really relax, learn how to Calm Your Mind with Meditation.

Hook into fish 
“There’s growing evidence for the power of anti-inflammatory foods like fish to enhance both physical and emotional health. I choose only sustainable fish, such as sockeye salmon and sardines, that are low in mercury, PCBs, and other environmental contaminants.”

Build immunity naturally 
“I take a daily mixed mushroom supplement for optimal immunity. When I travel I take astragalus root capsules to help protect against colds and flu.”

Choose organic
“I avoid the fruits and vegetables on the Environmental Working Group’s ‘dirty dozen’ list unless I can find organic versions. These 12 are apples, celery, strawberries, peaches, spinach, imported nectarines, grapes, bell peppers, potatoes, domestic blueberries, lettuce, and cucumbers. If you can’t go organic with all your food, at least choose organic when you buy these 12 foods.”

Breathe away the stress 
“This exercise calms your nervous system. Do it at least twice a day, more often if something upsetting happens or if you are having trouble falling asleep. Place the tip of your tongue on the roof of your mouth behind your upper front teeth. Exhale through your mouth making a whoosh sound. Inhale through your nose to a count of 4, hold your breath for a count of 7, and exhale with a whoosh through your mouth to a count of 8. Repeat this cycle four times.”
source: http://www.menshealth.com/best-life-magazine/what-doctors-eat

Friday, November 23, 2012

The Last

[Girl]
Hey! How many were there before me?
[Guy]
What do you mean?
[Girl]
How many girls did you love before me?
[Guy]
Love, five, I loved five women before you.
[Girl]
What were their names?
[Guy]
Who? What? When? Where? Why?
[Girl]
Can you tell me about them?

[Guy]
Who I loved was a girl from college. I wasn’t exactly close to her, but with some superficial facts and a few interactions over a semester, you know, like most guys fantasizing over a girl they barely know, I filled in the blanks like a fairy tale author. And who she became in my head, was probably more than the reality. She was a third year sorority girl. Yeah and I was an infatuated freshman, sure, but the several times we got to spend together outside of class, it really allowed me to see she also had a good heart and a bright spirit. The only problem was, so did just about every other guy. And while she turned me down nicely, I swear there were times when it seemed like the cliche sorority girl may have felt something for the typical, awkward freshman.

What I loved was an old friend, but she was much more than just a friend. We met early in college, kept in touch through the years after. We saw each other grow and change and through multiple relationships. I saw her different boyfriends come and go. She was also there for every girlfriend and breakup of mine.
Personality, humor, taste, it was all there. Her and I were almost perfect. The only thing that wasn’t perfect was our timing. We were never single at the same time. What we loved about each other was never enough to leave who we were with. This is something we eventually had to face and accept, and we had to leave behind what we had.

When I loved was my first girlfriend in high school. It’s a bit unfair because she embodies the combination of both love and youth. The feeling of young love is unique and impossible to replace or replicate because we can only be that age once. High school was a time of innocence, discovery, and adventure. We shared these three elements together in things like our first kiss, late night sneaking out, and matinee movies, all of which now have become a nostalgic love, preserved in a time neither of us can touch, but know was there. Even though we were just kids, there’s not a doubt in my mind that when we were there, we were in love.

Where I loved was the girl I met in Los Angeles. I never intended to stay there that long. It was just a six month internship after graduating. But it all changed when I met her. Soon, a year had passed, and somehow, another year after that. I couldn’t leave the city. I couldn’t leave her. Maybe it was my desire to be on my own or prove something to everyone back at home, but she helped me accomplish it over there with a relationship reflective of the city we were in, an new energy, new experiences, that really pushed me to mature more than anyone or anywhere else. When people ask what city I love the most, I say LA. The city where I lived the most.

Why I loved was a close friend of mine who passed away. She told me after she was diagnosed that death was not what saddened her the most, but the fact that she never really felt like she had fallen in love. She wouldn’t get to have them emotions, good and bad, of being hurt and of being held. After she passed, those words stuck with me the most, teaching me to see that one of the great gifts we have of being alive is the ability to give and receive and even lose love. There are so many like her, whose lives end before having any of those experiences. What a waste if we don’t strive to love in our lives. She made me understand why. Why waste this life not loving?
[Girl]
I understand now.
[Guy]
You’re the sixth.
[Girl]
Sixth, so which one am I then?
[Guy]
You’re none of them because you’re all of them. You are who I love; the girl on the pedestal, the fantasy the make-believe things that are actually true. You are what I love; the depth, the inside jokes, the best friend. You are when I love; a new history is being started with you. We are the young lovers our older selves will someday reminisce about. You are where I love: because I’d go anywhere, just to be with you. You are why I love: because before you, I didn’t truly understand what I was looking for. Now that we found each other, you’ve given my past and future meaning. You are the sixth. You are the last.
[Guy]
So, how many were there before me?
[Girl]
Five is all.
[Guy]
What were their names?
[Girl]
Who? What? When? Where? Why?

p/s:courtessy of Wong Fu Productions

Thursday, November 22, 2012

The Importance of Being a Sharp Dressed Man

Clothes make the man.Naked people have little or no influence on society ~Mark Twain
Perhaps you’ve heard the following:
“The days of wearing a suit are gone.”
Casual Friday? It’s casual week around here. No one cares how you dress.”
“Appearances are irrelevant, only results matter.”
All of these statements ignore the fact that people have and will continue to judge you by your appearance.The harsh reality is that we make decisions about people within the first 3 seconds of meeting them; we then spend the next 90 seconds trying to confirm our first impressions.This means that before you even open your mouth you’ve been sized up and profiled. Knowing this, a person should always dress neatly, professionally, and appropriately.The fact is you never know who you are going to meet; at anytime you may run into a potential client, a future employer, or for those singles out there, the love of your life. And like it or not, they are going to form their initial impression of you based off of how you look.
Over the next few months I’m going to be writing quite a few articles on men’s style and grooming.But before getting started, I wanted to make the case for why you should care about your personal appearance.We live in a society that overall tends to dress down; our national uniform is a pair of jeans and t-shirt.If you care about your appearance and take action to improve it, you will stand out from the crowd.But that’s not a bad thing.

How Your Personal Appearance Affects You

The transformation effectOne of the powers of clothing is that it can transform an individual’s state of mind. Dress like a professional businessman and you’re more likely to act like a professional businessman. Taking a test soon? Students report that they perform better when they dress-up for an exam.Feeling sick in the morning? Women have used the power of dressing-up to shrug off sickness for years.The transformative effect is powerful and instantly effective; what’s most amazing is that so few people use it.
Dressing professionally improves self disciplineFrom the Roman Legion to the United States Marine Corps, the world’s finest militaries have known that sharp dressed soldiers are more disciplined than ragtag militias.Military dress inspections have persisted not because shiny boots win wars, but because the exercise teaches a military force to pay attention to the details. And it’s in the details that battles are won.
In the same way, a person who dresses professionally learns the value of self discipline.They learn that planning and allotting enough time are paramount for consistent results.They prepare for the day by thinking through it, anticipating their needs, and taking the proper steps to ensure they can meet the challenge. A disciplined dresser can arrange his outfit to meet his needs from 8AM to midnight, from office to presentation to drinks after work.
Appreciation and respectProperly clothing yourself takes time; shirts need to be ironed, shoes shined, and jackets brushed.Perhaps the greatest lesson this teaches is to respect the effort put forth by our fellow human beings.When you meet another well dressed man you give him an extra measure of respect because of his outfit; you notice the perfect dimple in his tie and appreciate it because it took you 15 minutes and 5 attempts to perfect your own. Mutual respect between gentleman is garnered when they recognize the efforts each has put forth.

How Your Appearance Affects Others

The power of visualsNumerous communication studies have demonstrated the power of visuals in human interaction.Some studies have shown that visual cues are 3X to 5X as powerful as audio cues.With clothing covering 90% of your body, it can’t be stressed enough as to how important a role it plays in how you are perceived by others.Want faster & better service in a restaurant?Look like you have money and wear a navy blazer.Want to increase your chances for an A on a college presentation? Wear a sports jacket and pair of slacks.Want instant credibility in a business environment?Wear a suit when making the pitch or meeting with management.
First impressionsMade within a few seconds, first impressions are powerful and should not be taken lightly. We often observe a person before we speak with them, and being human we look to make sense of what our eyes are showing us.Using our personal experiences, we categorize individuals; we pick-up on a key feature that has meaning to us and then associate that person with it. If what you are wearing is doing all the talking for you, make sure it is sending the message you want.
The power of colors and patternsColors and patterns are very powerful; certain ones grab our attention, some accentuate our natural tones, and others affect our emotions.When choosing colors and patterns a man should first understand which ones work for him and which ones do not.Next, he needs to determine what message he wants to send.A man decked out in a pin-striped navy blue suit, blue shirt with white contrasting collar and cuffs, and a red tie screams power and authority.A man wearing a solid brown suit with an earth tone shirt and light colored tie signals trust and openness.Both men were wearing suits, but two very different messages were being conveyed.
Influence and authority
Image from Silver Feast
Former San Francisco 49er Coach Mike Nolan fought to wear a business suit on the sidelines during football games.One of the reasons for this was that he wanted to make it easy to spot the man in charge.The men’s suit, whose heritage stems from military garb, was designed to highlight a man’s strengths.When cut properly and made with a fabric that compliments the wearer, it signals authority and commands attention. But this is only the tip of the iceberg – a policeman’s uniform, an airline pilot’s clothing, a doctor’s white jacket – all of these garments assure us that the person we are dealing with is an authority in their field.
Positive assumptionsWell dressed people are given a leg up in many respects – they are often perceived as being smarter, funnier, and more enjoyable to be around.Taking this a step further, dressing professionally can help you appear more important to the success of your company and may even help you hold onto your job.Assuming all other factors being even, who does management let go – the technician who dresses well and can be put in front of a client or the guy who doesn’t own a suit.In this current economic downturn, every small detail matters.

Is It Manly to Care About Your Appearance?

A few examples of manly men who cared and continue to care about their appearance:
Dwayne Wade – Does an excellent wearing suits cut to compliment his height; he also is very good at coordinating his pocket squares with his ties
Winston Churchill
Winston Churchill – He loved the “puff” pocket square and knew how to wear a polka dot bow tie.
Image from Archie
Sean Combs – P. Diddy has modernized classic style for a whole generation of young men.He wears a 3-piece suit masterfully, and pays homage to the great dressers before him. His clothes add to his commanding presence and charismatic personality.
Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan – Always dressed smartly in clean cut power suits that accentuated his shoulders; he also loved cuff links.

Final Note

You shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, but in our fast paced society a book’s cover can be just as important as its content.Of course appearances are not everything; you have to perform well to succeed.But in a competitive world it pays to understand the importance of your clothing and grooming. Investing the proper resources into your personal presentation will multiply your ability to succeed.
by ANTONIO on OCTOBER 30, 2008 ·