Food For Thought
Hello
There,
Talking
about moving… How often do you use the stairs instead of the lift to go up or
down one floor? That is where it starts or the bike instead of the car to go
and get the newspaper around the corner? Do you smoke?
Physical
exercise is a tricky thing. It is not something that can be done as a one time
remedy. It is an ongoing process..
What I did
some 6 months ago was start slow but regularly. Not overstretching my muscles
like in: I do it hard now and then sit in the sofa with sour muscles for the
rest of the week… No! Wrong, building up is the key. Start with achievable
goals. So I made myself a small game plan in the gym here at the hotel. Walk,
run, walk for 20 minutes; first 5 walk, run 10 and walk again 5. Then afterwards
some machines, arms, legs and belly to start with. Again here start with
weights that you can handle well without too much effort. The aim is that you
increase after time. For example after the first week I would be walking 3
minutes, run 15 and then walk again 2 minutes. The week after I would walk one
minute, run 18 and walk again 1 minute. And this on different speeds of
running; to start I was on 9 km per hour. The week after, if you feel confident
you can run at 10, and so on. BUT, never go back down and note; every person is
different and has a different condition. If there is a person in the gym
available to set together with you a small program up, please use this
facility. The best part: stretching afterwards, when you know the torture is
finished and then, a good, long sauna or a little swim. It is then that you
realize your body and your mind have done something and the happiness hormone
is produced. You will feel happy after a good exercise in contrast with the
pain you had during.
Figure this,
that exercising is, as mentioned before, a thing of regularity. In order to do
exercises the body needs energy and building blocks. This energy comes in the
fast form, from sugars and in the slow form, from fats and in the worst form
from your own muscle tissue. When you exercise and you start sweating very fast
or get a ticklish, prickly feeling on the skin, this means that you are burning
sugars very fast. This will result then in hunger attacks and even
aggressiveness as our brain should not be deprived from sugar. Note also that
the body is capable of reducing its own muscle tissue to use it for energy.
This you want to avoid at all costs.
Coming to
the point that you will burn your own fat reserves, demands discipline in
regards of the eating habits. For instance when you eat a candy bar before
exercising, this sugar readily available in the blood will be burned first and
the fat reserves will not even come into view. So less sugar intake or
carbohydrate intake and exercise in order to loose fat go hand in hand. In
order to use fat as pure energy the body needs a substance called L-Carnitin
Fat burning
happens when the fat available in the blood is transported into the cells. In
the cells the fats will go to the mitochondria where they are burned. L-Carnitin
is the fat transporting vehicle. This substance is ready available in our
muscles and comes through the absorption from muscle tissue (meat) and or milk
products. L Carnitin is also available in tablet form from most pharmacies. It
is however not a substitute for a healthier way of life, food intake and
physical activities….So here we see that eating meat or milk products is
necessary to sustain certain intakes of certain products including L-carnitin
and protein.
When
exercising, we need to build up more muscles and for this the body needs
protein. Again this is protein from meat, milk products, pulses, fish and
chicken. So we have to eat protein when doing physical activities our body
needs this. Quick math on protein to end this letter: if you weigh about 150
pounds, 75 grams of protein a day is more then sufficient. (Take your body
weight in pounds and divide it by two in grams). Protein provides
structure to all of the organs, nerves, hormones, muscles, antibodies, and
enzymes. If vitamins and minerals are analogous to workers who help to
construct and maintain a building, protein represents some of the concrete and
steel that provide a building with its foundation and structure. Plant foods
like vegetables, legumes, nuts, seeds, grains, and even fruit come with some
amino acids (building blocks of proteins). But there is no single plant food
that comes with all eight essential amino acids (which the body needs and
cannot make by itself). You can get all eight essential amino acids from a
plant-based diet, but only if you eat a wide variety of plant foods. All animal
foods like eggs,
fish, chicken, red meat,
and dairy come with all eight essential amino acids. In other words, one
serving of just one animal food will provide you with all eight essential amino
acids.
Regards,
Wouter
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woutkok@yahoo.com
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wouter.liekens@cherto.be