Image Map

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

I'm Back.....Let's Revamp our Lives!

Hi,

I put together a video to let you know that I revamped my website. This new platform will allow for easier access to the resources I provide. Lots of cool things are in the works in the future so bookmark my page and keep coming back.
I also wanted to let you know my direction and goals so that you can gain the most out of your visits.

The coolest thing I wanted to share was that I started attending an amazing school called Institute For Integrative Nutrition and it is intense like medical school. I know many doctor’s who attend this one year program just so they can become well versed on the whole dynamics of true nutrition. Dr. Oz even sent his kids there. I love this school.
A lot of what I will be learning will be shared with you in some way.

I plan on posting a Vlog once a week to teach you something new or motivate you to do something new. I will also take time to blog periodic bits of information that helps me stay healthy.

STAY TUNED
And
STAY HEALTHY

If you haven’t done so already become a fan of my Facebook fan page and post your thoughts. Don’t just be a lookie-loo…because something you might say can positively change another person’s life. We all have something healthy to share and I need your help to build this sharing community. I can’t do this myself…I NEED YOU!

If your not a Facebook user then follow me on Twitter. If you haven't done so already go over to the left and become a fan of this BLOG....I appreciate it.

I would love to say more, but I have to go…I need to go revamp someone’s life!


Friday, November 5, 2010

Wake Up Call For Parents!

It's 8:00 am, do you know what's happening in your child's body? OK, disregard the time, I was just trying to get your attention. Actually, look at the time...and realize that it is never too late to start your child on the road to good health! People ask me all the time: "Iva, why do you do this? Why do you send all these messages about nutrition out? Why did you write a book about being healthy? Why?" I have a very simple answer for you. I love my kids. I love my kids and I know you love yours. We want the best for our children and shouldn't that include the best nutrition? Would you buy your teenager a car that you knew was unsafe? Then why feed him or her food that is unsafe?? I'm not even talking about GMOs or pesticides or any of that...yet. I'm talking about sugar, fat, high fructose corn syrup, partially hydrogenated oils...there is so much scary, scary stuff out there that is in our food and going into our children's bodies! If you think it has no effect on their health, you're wrong. Sorry to tell you, but you are just plain wrong. Just take a look at type 2 diabetes, alone.

Type 2 diabetes used to be called "Adult onset" diabetes because it usually hit in the mid 30's to 40's. There has been an incredible jump in the number of type 2 diabetes cases...and it's been in children. Yes, that's right, it is no longer adult onset - it's happening in our kids. Why is that important? What's the difference between type 2 and type 1?

According to the Mayo Clinic:

Type 1 diabetes (formerly called insulin-dependent diabetes or juvenile diabetes) results when the pancreas loses its ability to make the hormone insulin. In type 1 diabetes, the person's own immune system attacks and destroys the cells in the pancreas that produce insulin. Once those cells are destroyed, they won't ever make insulin again.

There is no way to prevent a child from getting type 1 diabetes, there is no known cause, it just happens.

Type 2 diabetes (formerly called non-insulin-dependent diabetes or adult-onset diabetes) is different from type 1 diabetes. Type 2 diabetes results from the body's inability to respond to insulin normally. Unlike people with type 1 diabetes, most people with type 2 diabetes can still produce insulin, but not enough to meet their body's needs.

Type 2 diabetes can be prevented! There are ways to safeguard your child from this dangerous disease! The Mayo Clinic suggests:

* Make sure kids eat a healthy diet. Encouraging your kids to eat low-fat, nutrient rich foods -- like whole-grain cereals and breads, fruits, vegetables, dairy products, and lean proteins -- can help prevent excessive weight gain, a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes.

* Limit sugary foods and beverages. Consuming lots of sugar-filled foods and beverages -- like sodas, juices, and iced teas -- also can lead to excessive weight gain.

* Encourage increased physical activity. Staying active and decreasing the amount of time spent in sedentary activities -- like watching TV or playing video or computer games -- can also reduce the risk of weight gain and help prevent the onset of type 2 diabetes. Being active can be as simple as walking the dog or mowing the lawn. Try to do something that gets you and your kids moving every day.

So ask me again, why I write about health, why I tweet about nutrition, why I wrote a book about being healthy...I wrote it out of love for our kids.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Food and Your Mood

I was talking recently to a friend who has three children. She was telling me about how she had terrible post-partum depression with each of her births. It got to be so bad that her obstetrician suggested that she go on an anti-depressant. Well, as a breast-feeding mommy, she was wary of medications and how they would affect her baby, so she did some research and she talked to some mommy friends and one friend suggested a book to her that changed everything.

Before I tell you the name of this book, let me ask - how many of you have experienced that midday slump? You know, the one around 2pm where you just want to fall asleep? How many of you have unexplained surges in your temper, when you know that you shouldn't be mad about something, but for some reason you just can't control the anger? What about self-esteem issues, anybody suffer from those? Do you think you are lazy? Are you exhausted, but don't know why? What about the blues, do any of you just get sad for seemingly no reason? Well, there IS a reason and it's on your plate! What we eat affects more than just our waistlines, ladies - it affects our moods as well! You don't have to feel this way. So many people come up to me and ask how I can be so positive all the time. I will tell you it's not that I just have a "sunny disposition"; it's in the way I choose to eat.

White flour, white rice, white pasta, white sugar...they need to be eliminated from your diet! The book I was talking about is called "Potatoes, Not Prozac" by Kathleen DesMaisons, PhD, in addictive nutrition. Now, I am not saying go run out and buy this book, or that it will change your life. I have not read it, I just heard about it from a friend whose life it did change. However, from what she was telling me, the premise of the book is about how what you put into your body affects your brain chemistry and your blood chemistry and can wreak havoc with your mood and your metabolism and cause you to crave even more of these unhealthy white foods. It becomes an endless cycle. You eat the white foods, you feel tired and depressed...so what do you do? You go to the fridge and you look for something to boost your energy and your mood. What is it that we crave when we are depressed? Ice cream? Cookies? Cake? Comfort foods! We get a quick burst of energy and feel better for a little while, maybe we even get something done, but then what? We CRASH! The big sugar let down! We are exhausted again, we are depressed again, maybe we are even beating ourselves up for eating what we ate. So what happens? We go to the fridge again! And what do we eat this time? Carrots? Celery? Some yummy berries? Nope! We go for the soda, the pretzels, the chips...the comfort foods again! Are you seeing a pattern here, ladies? White sugar, white flour, white, white, white! Get rid of it!

OK, now there are some of you who are saying "But Iva, I don't eat that stuff and I still feel moody, depressed or exhausted!" Well, then it's time to look further into your diet. If you have gotten rid of the overt sugar and white flour and such in your diet, it's time to look for the covert suckers! They hide from you in seemingly innocuous places. Ketchup - loaded with sugar; wheat breads - most on the market are made with wheat flour...that's white people! You have to look for "whole grain" if you want to get away from the white. The so-called power bars - they are filled with several types of sugar. You can be eating "healthy" and sabotaging yourself without even knowing it! These foods trigger cravings for more of the same unhealthy white foods and it becomes an endless cycle!
It does the same to our kids. We let them snack on this junk and then we wonder why they can't stop running around, hitting each other and swinging from the chandelier! Or we wonder why they need to sit around watching TV all day or playing their video games. It's hidden in the food we feed them. Do you want to be healthy? Do you want your kids to be healthy? Then your job is simple...get the white out! Now, nobody is saying it's going to be easy (simple, yes...easy, no)! Going back to my friend for a minute, she told me that the end result was that she was no longer depressed, that her weight came off and stabilized, that she was able to boost her energy and take care of her family and herself. BUT - it was hard work. There were withdrawal symptoms that sometimes were worse than what she was going through while she was eating badly. But she knew that the end result would be a happier, healthier mommy...and one that would understand how to feed her family to keep them healthy and energized. She was lucky enough to have a buddy to talk to and to cry to when she was feeling her worst. So nobody is telling you that turning Mrs. Hyde back into Dr. Jekyll is going to be easy. There are steps that you need to take to ensure that you can do this, but it all starts with taking a good look at what you put in your mouth! Now, any of you who are snacking right now...did you just put the cupcake down?

Thursday, October 14, 2010

When Trick or TREAT Becomes Trick or CHEAT

When trick or TREAT becomes trick or CHEAT
by Iva Young on 10/14/10

When does having a treat become cheating?

Does it have to do with what the food is?

The calorie count?

The amount of carbs?

The amount of sugar?

Does it have to do with your age?

Your health?

Your weight?

How about the frequency with which you "treat" yourself?

Or the amount of food you consider a treat?

Or is it all about perception? What one may perceive as a treat can be seen as a cheat by another. One candy bar, once a week can be a treat, when you are on your fifth candy bar of the day...definitely a cheat. A small bowl of ice cream for dessert at night...a treat; a whole carton of ice cream...a cheat! If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so is portion size! The amount of treat you allow yourself and the frequency with which you treat yourself can change your "treat" into a full blown "cheat". The key here is moderation. A little bit of something "naughty" every once in a while is a fine treat, but when you go overboard often, that's just flat out cheating on your health plan. If you feed yourself filling, healthy foods, then having a treat once in a while it is just that - a treat. If you eat empty calories and junk all the time, then you are just cheating yourself out of years of your life, as far as I am concerned.

So, how do we control this urge to CHEAT? One thought is to give yourself permission to cheat once a week. I have a friend who follows a healthy eating plan all week, but allows herself one cheat day to eat whatever it is she is craving. Now that is not to say she goes overboard and eats a whole cake! But she gives herself permission to have that piece of cake that she wants, not just a sliver, but a whole piece - once a week. She finds it is much easier to stay on her eating plan when she knows that in x amount of days; she can have what she is craving.

There is also the school of thought that there is no such thing as "cheating". If you view your way of eating as a healthy lifestyle, and not as a diet, then there is no "cheating". The "cheating" part only matters if you don't go right back to eating healthy. If it kicks you off track and you don't resume your healthy way of eating then you are cheating yourself out of good health. In this case then, I don't think I would call it cheating so much as "falling off the wagon". In this scenario, if you have something you are "not supposed to" then it is just a case of moderation. A little bit of everything, once in a while. A good example of this would be that once a year state fair, you know the one...the one with the deep fried Twinkies. If you indulge in something that is not "of the best nutritional value" at the fair once a year, would you call that a treat or a cheat? Here we go back to the concept of perception. If you are living a healthy lifestyle and you allow yourself a little something yummy once in a while, regardless of its nutrient value, then I would say that you are treating yourself. However, if you are on a "diet" (which is an event, by the way, not a lifetime commitment to health) and you let yourself have that yummy treat at the fair, then you might perceive that as a cheat.

Maybe it's not a matter of perception after all, but a matter of commitment to your health...think about it!

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

What A Rush!

Runner's high, chocolate coma, afterglow...it's called so many different things. But what is it? What causes that delicious sensation after sex or eating chocolate? What makes you run that extra mile just when you thought you couldn't take another step? Is it something that comes from deep, down inside you? In a way, yes!

What it is is an endorphin rush and there is a physiological cause for it. Endorphins are small chains of amino acids that are produced in the pituitary gland and hypothalamus. They resemble opiates when they attach to the sedative receptors in our brains. Endorphins can do many things. They can help block out severe pain when there is too much stressing the system, they can help control cravings for addictive substances, and they can help control stress and frustration. Endorphins are the "rush" you feel when you skydive or race cars, they are with you on every roller coaster ride and in that scary movie that you love so much. They are the driving force behind bungee jumping.

So why am I telling you this? Because...certain foods can induce endorphins! So can exercise! See where I am going with this?? Being healthy isn't just good for you, it can be a RUSH! Do you know of someone who just can't go a day without running or going to the gym? How about a friend who is "addicted" to chocolate or spicy foods? There is a good reason behind this. You guessed it! Endorphins! There are at least 20 different endorphins made in the human body. The one that seems to be brought on by exercise is called Beta-Endorphin; that's the one we're going for here!

So, how do you get your body to increase the production of this wonderful polypeptide? Endorphins can be produced by:

*Meditation

*Sex

*Deep breathing

*Spicy food (hot peppers - the hotter they are, the more endorphins are produced)

*Acupuncture

*Chiropractic adjustment

*Chocolate (Dark chocolate...one of the many wonderful health benefits!)

*Laughter

*Massage

I could go on, but I think I would rather go for a run and then get some spicy food and dark chocolate!

Seriously, though...this is why when we are down in the dumps we tend to look for something chocolate, ladies! And yes, I have an ulterior motive here, too. If we want chocolate because of the endorphin rush...what else can we do to get that rush without going and eating a pound of chocolate? C'mon now, you know this...look at the list! We can meditate...we can laugh...we can get a massage...we can have sex! (yes, I left that one for last for the effect) So, when you are in need of an endorphin rush, you can exercise those blues away. You may not feel like doing it when you start out, but when you are done...what a RUSH! You will feel so much better about yourself than you will if you eat a whole chocolate bunny. Seriously...how many of us binge then beat ourselves up for it? There is a reason you are binging...it's a need for endorphins. The cure for that is to find those peppy polypeptides somewhere else. Now, I'm not saying you need to go out and bungee jump, but try taking a walk, going for a run, joining a yoga class...and if you still find after that that you need a little more of that euphoric feeling --THEN go have that piece of dark chocolate you wanted. All you will need by then is ONE!

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Someone has to say STOP!

Growing up, many of my friends thought that vegetables came in a can.... no, seriously, THEY DID! Vegetables were supposed to be mushy, and mostly gray. They were tasteless globs that sat on their plate, untouched and unloved...poor veggies! They came from a can, got warmed in a microwave and sat untouched and uneaten on their plates, their final destination: the garbage disposal. Their parents tried to get them to eat them; they threatened, they pleaded, they covered them with Velveeta, but to no avail!

So what was wrong with the veggies we grew up on? They weren't FRESH. They were processed and salted and shoveled into cans that sat on shelves for months, sometimes years! Who wants to eat that???? Seriously folks, do you want to eat salty, overly processed, months old food? EWWWWWW!!!!!! So why in the world are you serving it to your kids?? An alternative to canned veggies is frozen. It's almost as good as fresh, as the veggies are usually flash frozen right after being harvested. If you are a busy mom, as most of us are, then frozen veggies can help you keep your family in the healthy veggie business.

We do what we learn, what we grow up with, what we are used to as the norm. If you grew up on veggies from a can, then you are probably pleading with your kids to eat the mushy peas on their plates. Peas come in PODS, people! Buy them fresh, let the kids help take them out of the pods (yes, they will actually think this is fun), let them taste them raw...then steam them, lightly, just a bit to warm them, but not enough to take the crunch out of them. Yes! Peas have a crunch! Most vegetables can be eaten raw and are very tasty that way. If not raw, then steam them or stir fry them lightly in olive oil. You will be amazed at the colors; veggies are not meant to be gray, or washed out, their colors are vibrant and attractive! The Skittles commercial is right in one thing: Eat the Rainbow! Vegetables come in a rainbow of colors, greens and yellows and oranges and reds and even purples and we are meant to eat them all!

It's time to put a stop to the mushy vegetable brigade. Just say NO! No, I won't feed my kids canned veggies! No, I won't microwave the veggies to death! No, I won't deny my kids the delicious crunch of a fresh vegetable prepared with love and care! No, I won't over-salt the veggies! As a matter of fact, I won't salt the veggies at all! Stop the vegetable insanity and start serving fresh, crunchy, colorful veggies...your kids will love them!

Now...don't get me started on canned fruit.......

Monday, September 27, 2010

You Don't Have To Go Bananas Over Potassium

Seriously, you don't! There are plenty of other ways to get the Potassium your body needs. You could take a supplement....nah, who wants to pop a horse pill when all you have to do is eat a balanced diet? Orange juice, avocados, tomatoes, beet greens, brazil nuts, beans....all are good sources of potassium. So why take a pill?

Potassium is considered a critical electrolyte and something our bodies need to function properly. Our bodies can't store potassium, so it is something we must get through our diet. Potassium strengthens the arteries and is essential for the healthy functioning of the brain. It helps balance out the fluids in our bodies and may reduce blood pressure as well. Potassium is important for the proper contraction of our muscles as well. There is a vitally important muscle I need to mention here....one that if it stops contracting, we have a life-threatening problem....and that would be? Bueller? Bueller? Anyone? Bueller? That's right! THE HEART!!! What more important muscle do we have? Potassium is a key ingredient to the proper contracting of your heart and the pumping of blood throughout your body. Anyone feel like that banana now? How about some tomatoes? Brazil nuts? Brussels sprouts! No? Ok, I can see I have more convincing to do....

Potassium is necessary for the proper functioning of our cells and a deficiency in our bodies can lead to a decrease in the levels of oxygen in the cells. It also regulates the transfer of nutrients to our cells and helps regulate kidney function as well. A lack of potassium can wreak havoc with our bodies. Potassium deficiencies (hypokalemia) are rare, but not unheard of. The human body requires approximately 2-4 grams per day, which is easily achieved through a balanced diet. Signs of a potassium deficiency are diarrhea, sweating, muscle weakness, increased heart rate and nausea. A severe deficiency can lead to heart failure or even stroke.

Too much potassium (hyperkalemia) can also be dangerous. It is essential to get the right amount of this electrolyte and get it in its most natural form. If you are eating a balanced diet, then there is no need to rush out and get a potassium supplement. The 2-4 grams we need are easily obtained through a healthy, balanced meal plan. Potassium toxicity is rare; the signs can include muscle weakness, heart complaints, fatigue and a tingling sensation. Mild hyperkalemia will not change the rhythm of your heart in a measurable way, but moderate hyperkalemia can cause changes on an EKG and sever hyperkalemia can cause the heart to stop beating. Another symptom worth mentioning, which is rare, but can be frightening is periodic paralysis. If the onset of hyperkalemia is rapid, then, in rare cases, a sudden paralysis can occur. The cause of this phenomenon is not clear, but experts in the field believe it could have something to do with the suppression of electrical activity in the muscles.

So, are you convinced yet of the importance of this critical electrolyte? The key here is moderation. We don't want to have too much potassium but we don't want too little, either.

The best way to balance your intake is to eat....tah dah! You got it! A well-balanced diet with whole foods, not processed junk and fast fixes! Here are a few examples of potassium rich whole foods:

BEST:
Baked Potato, flesh and skin
Tomato products
Beet Greens
Brazil Nuts
Dates
Raisins
Whole Tomatoes
Grapefruit
Quinoa
Lima Beans Cantaloupe
Soy Milk/Beans Spinach
cooked Refried Beans

GREAT:
Trail Mix
Soybeans
Nuts
Halibut
Spinach
Plums
Papayas
Beans
Peas
Carrots
Cauliflower
Broccoli
Beef
Blackberries

GOOD:
Dairy products
Barley
Mushrooms
Pumpkin
Kiwi
Duck
Bananas
Oranges
Mango
Red Grapes
Plums
Corn, sweet

Getting the correct amount of Potassium doesn't have to mean eating a banana every day (though that's not that bad of an idea); there are many other foods you can eat to acquire an adequate amount. A diet rich in whole foods will almost guarantee you the best balance of potassium without you ever even having to worry about it....the only thing you have to worry about now is not slipping on all the banana peels. Ha, Ha!!

* The recommended daily allowance for a woman 24 years and older is 1875 - 5625 mg per day.

Source: USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference, Release 18 - Nutrient Lists

http://www.ars.usda.gov/Services/docs.htm?docid=9673
 

Blog Design By Lucky Girl Design Studio © All Rights Reserved.