Showing posts with label 4.Balance Diet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 4.Balance Diet. Show all posts

Teach Your Kids Healthy Habits with Dr. Joseph Mercola

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You are what you eat. And what you eat, your children are bound to eat too.
A survey conducted two years ago by the America On The Move Foundation showed that 71 percent of children get information about how to be healthy from their mothers and 43 percent from their fathers.
Even without this survey and other related studies, it’s a no-brainer that good health for children starts with the parents. For osteopathic physician and natural health expert Dr. Joseph Mercola, getting yourself healthy and adopting healthy attitudes about food are two of the best things you can do for your children.
As a parent, you will need to explain proper nutrition to your children and why they need to eat the right kinds of food. Take the time to cook and prepare nutritious meals and snacks and more importantly, be a good role model for them. After all, it is completely unfair to ask them not to eat things they later see you eating.
Here are some simple tips from Dr. Mercola to help your children get started on a healthy lifestyle:
Exercise as a family – Make exercise part of your daily schedule. Take walks, play tag in the backyard, enroll in some martial arts class and simply set aside time each day as a family to sweat it out and get your bodies moving!
Stop being a couch potato – Turn off the TV, computer and video games. Not only is watching too much TV associated with obesity, but limiting these things will also give you more time to do physical activities with your family instead.
Prepare healthy meals and set family mealtimes – Staying fit is next to impossible if your diet is mostly fast food or processed foods. Let your kids help in meal preparation as this makes them more likely to eat the healthy foods you’re serving. Studies show that families who eat together have better overall nutrition. Kids with family mealtimes are less likely to smoke, drink, do drugs, get depressed, develop eating disorders and consider suicide. They are also more likely to do well in school and delay having sex.
Don’t limit healthy fats – There is no such thing as a fat-free diet, for you or for your child. Your child needs healthy fats from animal sources, coconut oil, raw nuts and seeds, olive oil, avocado and others for his/her development. Introduce some healthy fats into your child’s diet by adding butter, raw cheese, or olive oil to lightly steamed veggies.
Don’t use food as a reward – Don’t get your child thinking that eating unhealthy foods is necessary for their emotional fulfillment.
Don’t force your child to finish everything on his/her plate – No matter how healthy and well-balanced the food, there’s no need to make your child eat every last bite. Most kids will naturally stop eating when they’re full. If your child starts overeating early, there’s a good chance he/she will overeat later in life too. Just serve them small portions or save what they don’t finish for later.
Stay away from junkfood – “Kid’s foods” like pizza, French fries and macaroni and cheese are bad from a health perspective – don’t give in to their cravings. You are not “depriving” your child by not giving them soda and fries; you are doing them a huge favor.
Nutritional Typing – Nutritional typing is an essential tool for you to find out which types of foods are best for your unique biochemistry, and it also works for kids of all ages too.
Raising healthy children in a country with a fast food culture and where junk food is available in every corner is easier said than done. But it is possible. You just have to make a firm decision, stick by it and take control of your own health!
Mercola.com, the world’s most popular natural health website, provides free health information for people of all ages. Visit Mercola.com now and find out what’s in store for you!

HEALTHY DIET

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Eight Tips for Eating Right


Choose good carbs, not no carbs. Whole grains are your best bet.

Pay attention to the protein package. Fish, poultry, nuts, and beans are the best choices.


Choose healthy fats, limit saturated fat, and avoid trans fat. Plant oils, nuts, and fish are the healthiest sources
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Choose a fiber-filled diet, rich in whole grains, vegetables, and fruits.

Eat more vegetables and fruits. Go for color and variety—dark green, yellow, orange, and red.


Calcium is important. But milk isn't the only, or even best, source.

Moderate drinking can be healthy—but not for everyone. You must weigh the benefits and risks.


A daily multivitamin is a great nutrition insurance policy. Some extra vitamin D may add an extra health boost.

How to Get to Your Healthy Weight

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Introduction

When it comes to nutrition, it's easy to spend a lot of time worrying about what to eat. But how much you eat puts as much of a stamp on your long-term health as picking the right kind of fat or choosing the right mix of vitamins.

How much you weigh (in relation to your height), your waist size, and how much weight you've gained since your mid-20s strongly influence your chances of:
Related Articles

Many Paths to Successful Weight Loss: The latest study showing that a low-carb or Mediterranean diet are just as good as a low-fat diet for losing weight

An Epidemic of Obesity: A brief look at the rapid rise in obesity over the past twenty years, in the U.S. and abroad

Excess Weight Is Not Good for You: Cutting through the confusion around the latest studies on obesity and disease risk

Defensive Eating: Strategies to defend against over-eating

Can You Be Too Thin?: Understanding the relationship between low body weight and health

* dying early,
* having, or dying from, a heart attack, stroke, or other type of cardiovascular disease,
* developing diabetes,
* developing cancer of the colon, kidney, breast, or endometrium,
* having arthritis,
* developing gallstones,
* being infertile,
* developing asthma as an adult,
* snoring or suffering from sleep apnea,
* developing cataracts, or
* having a poorer quality of life.

Although researchers are quibbling about just how many people die each year as a direct cause of excess weight and what it costs our health-care system, excess weight takes an enormous toll—all the more worrisome, given that we are in the midst of an obesity epidemic.

If your weight is in the healthy range and isn't more than 10 pounds over what you weighed when you turned 21, great. Keeping it there—and keeping it steady—by watching what you eat and exercising will limit your risk of developing one or more of the chronic conditions noted above. If you are overweight, doing whatever you can to prevent gaining more weight is a critical first step. Then, when you're ready, shedding some pounds and keeping them off will be important steps to better health.

 

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