2011 October


Maximize Your Cardio Exercise in 12 minutes – Dr. Nathalie Beauchamp

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Maximize Your Cardio Exercise in 12 minutes

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Easy ways to go raw

If you’re a person who pays attention to nutrition and diet, you’ve likely heard of the raw food phenomenon and wondered what the deal is and how you can incorporate it into your daily life. Basically, a raw diet is based on eating unprocessed and uncooked plant foods. Foods can be heated, but only until 116F as it is believed that they will lose their natural nutrients above that temperature.

Why go raw? The most widely cited reason is that cooking may deactivate many of the important enzymes and nutrients in foods such as fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds and herbs. These are vital for improving metabolic function, breaking down and digesting certain nutrients, and fighting off disease. As well, there are the side benefits of saving the fuel and the extra cost of the salts, oils and sweeteners often required in cooking.

However, a completely raw diet may not be for everyone, as it can sometimes be difficult to digest (as writer and natural foods expert Nancy Lee Bentley writes: “The higher proportion of nutrients in raw food is useless if the food can’t be digested, absorbed and assimilated.”)

So if you’re looking for a few ways to eat more raw foods and take advantage of the health benefits of a raw diet, but you’re not sure you can handle a full-on switch, here are some easy tips:

1. Juice up: Juicing is a tasty way to load up on fruits and vegetables, especially as you’ll be breaking down some of the hard-to-digest fibres. Try different combinations to find your favourite flavours – a zesty apple, carrot and ginger juice can be a great start to your morning, or maybe, as Dr. Oz suggests, a banana spinach smoothie that’s high in potassium, folate, vitamins K and A, and magnesium.

2. Get a little nutty: Nut and seed butters are a terrific substitute for other processed spreads, provide a good source of protein and fats and are really easy to make. Simply grind up your choice of nut or seed (make sure to look for the unroasted kind) into a fine powder in a coffee grinder, then transfer to a food processor. Add a tablespoon of oil until it’s a little runnier than you’d like, add some salt or honey to taste, then refrigerate in a jar.

3. Become a souper-man or -woman: If you’re looking for a delicious way to fill up on raw vegetables, look out for recipes for gazpachos and other cold soups. Blend together ingredients like sundried tomatoes, bell peppers, cucumbers and garlic until smooth and top up with coarsely chopped tomatoes, onions, avocado or corn kernels.

4. Salad days: Of course, salads are the easiest way to eat your fruits and veggies raw. To spice up your greens, try adding in fresh herbs like parsley and oregano, chopped raw nuts, chunky bits of avocado, raw sunflower or sesame seeds, or drizzle with lemon juice and olive oil.

There are lots of great raw food resources on the Internet; I like Rawmazing and Raw Food Nation, both of which have lots of handy recipes for newbies and hardcore raw foodists alike.

Do you have any good raw food recipes? Share some of your favourites in the comments section!

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Strength training…where are the women?

I just came back from the gym and it’s Sunday. I was chocked (yet again) to see that the weight room was busy enough but with only men? Why is it that the women mostly do the cardio machine and no weight training? So often I hear women say they don’t want to try strength training because they don’t want to get big and “bulky” like Arnold Schwarzenegger. I have news for you…it just won’t happen – women don’t have the testosterone levels required to get that big!
One of the many advantages of strength training is that it increases lean muscle mass. A greater lean muscle mass positively impacts the efficiency of our metabolism to burn calories. Here is the example I often give: two women weigh 150 pounds; one has 36 percent body fat and 98 pounds of muscle, the other has 22 percent body fat and 118 pounds of muscle. The one with the higher muscle mass will burn more calories. So even though the two women are the same weight, the one with the higher muscle mass will be able to have a higher caloric intake than the other woman while maintaining her weight. How great is that! But there’s more to it …strength training is empowering; it feels good to be strong!

13 Benefits of Strength Training

1. Increases strength of muscles, tendons and ligaments
2. Increases stability of joints
3. Increases muscle mass
4. Increases bone density and bone mass
5. Improves body composition
6. Improves motor coordination
7. Reduces the risk of osteoporosis
8. Reduces the signs and symptoms of chronic diseases such as Arthritis and Type 2 Diabetes
9. Improves sleep and reduces sleep disorders
10. Reduces depression
11. Improves flexibility
12. Reduces the number of falls in older adults
13. Reduces severity of injuries by strengthening supportive structures, developing muscle balance around joints and increasing your muscles’ ability to absorb energy

So what are you waiting for ladies? Are 13 benefits not enough to convince you? If you want to “tone-up”, grab some weights and start lifting. Don’t be shy! The benefits will be huge for both your health and your confidence. Not sure if you should do free weights or machine – keep on reading and find out about the pros and cons of both. Have fun and see you in the weight room!:)

Free-Weights vs. Machines
Strength training with free-weights, when done properly and with good form is generally more beneficial than training with machines. This is primarily because most machines can’t be adjusted perfectly for your size. This can cause you to a) do the exercise wrong; b) do it in a way that hurts you; and c) do it in a way that doesn’t benefit you. The range of motion is also more limited on machines. In comparison, the range of motion with free weights resembles the movements you do in everyday life: this will benefit you more. Still, there is controversy and disagreement over which is better; some personal trainers prefer machines as a safer alternative when clients aren’t used to lifting weights.

Free-Weight Pros
Increases the use of your stabilizing muscles, thereby increasing your core strength
The range of motion when using free-weights is similar to everyday activities
Hones your perception of balance and the location of your body in the space around you
It’s convenient and inexpensive!

Free-Weight Cons
Increases risk of injury if you don’t use proper form
You spend a lot of time changing weights
If your gym doesn’t have a lot of free-weights, you may spend a lot of time waiting for the ones you want

Machine Pros
Can be great for beginners
Offers an array of weight choices
Can prevent some injuries since the machines control the range of motion
Faster workouts – easier transition from one machine to another

Machine Cons
Increases the risk of overuse and injuries
Mistaken sense of safety – you can overload your muscles with too much weight
Locks your body in place with specific movement patterns – with free weights you can respect the body’s natural range of motion

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The Top 12 Health and Dietary Habits that Contribute to Headaches

Headache sufferers- this blog is for you!

As you read the text below,  circle the habits you are guilty of. Though some of them may shock you, they are all known causes of headaches! One by one, work on eliminating the habits you have circled from your life. Take the time to notice your progress. The more habits you can eliminate, the more you are moving towards a headache-free life! Visits to your chiropractor with the elimination of bad habits and you’ll be headache free in no time!

 1.  Processed foods cause headaches 

Processed foods cause headaches by causing inflammation; the more inflammation, the more frequent you’ll have headaches. The way that processed foods cause inflammation is by the chemicals in them called advanced glycation end products, or AGEs. These AGEs are worse than free radicals, causing mini explosive reactions inside the body’s organs that lead to aging, heart disease, cancer, diabetes
and inflammation.

Once you commit to not eating processed foods, your life actually becomes simpler and you end up saving money on the grocery bill. Your lunch and dinner meals are similar: protein food (meat), grain, vegetable, and fruit for dessert. The simpler they are, the easier they are to prepare. For example, one meal could be chicken breast, brown rice, green beans with almonds, applesauce, and beverage.

While you’re cutting out processed foods, you’ll also start to notice that you aren’t aging fast anymore. Your waistline is returning without trying. You have more energy and more concentrated brain power. And you’re headache free!

2. Too much caffeine and/or chocolate causes headaches

Scientists don’t know exactly what it is about caffeine that can cause a headache, but they do know that there is a clear connection. The big question is what is too much coffee? If you’re drinking six cups a day, that’s too much! Four cups a day is too much! Three cups of coffee a day may be too much as well. For some people, any coffee is too much; the caffeine triggers a headache and keeps them away from a headache-free life.

If you are drinking too much coffee, it’s important that you decrease your coffee consumption slowly. DO NOT STOP COFFEE COLD TURKEY! If you stop drinking coffee cold turkey, you will get a headache and it won’t be just an ordinary headache.It will be a monstrous headache!

The best way to cut your coffee consumption is to decrease slowly by 1/2 cup a day.

The same principle can be applied to chocolate. If you eat chocolate every single day three times, decrease it one time a day. Chocolate contains caffeine and you can develop that monstrous headache from its withdrawal.

 3. A diet that contains too much monosodium glutamate (MSG), NutraSweet, Aspartame, diet sodas   causes headaches

Very clever researchers discovered that certain chemicals, especially MSG added to Chinese food is a strong headache trigger in many people.

Foods that contain MSG might not necessarily list “MSG” or “monosodium glutamate” on the label. Instead, you’ll see: hydrolyzed vegetable protein, natural flavorings, sodium caseinate, yeast extract, hydrolyzed yeast, autolyzed yeast,
hydrolyzed oat flour, calcium caseinate, hydrolyzed plant protein, hydrolyzed protein. Protein isolates of any type may contain MSG, even soy protein. If you eat processed foods, it will be rare for you to see a label without one of
these! Every fast food chain uses it in their food ingredients!

You may lose to gain. What I mean by this is that you may lose your present life in the meal department to gain a headache-free life. What you gain is learning how to cook and prepare foods from scratch. You gain the freedom to do things you couldn’t do before and you can do them without restriction. You gain the affection lost by family members who didn’t understand your headaches.

In a few months, you will have adapted so much to your new diet, that your family and friends will want to come over to see what you’re cooking that tastes so good! Natural food cooking is different than what it was like a decade ago. It’s
easier to find cookbooks, share recipes, and find near ready-made alternatives at the health food stores and whole food superstores.

NutraSweet and aspartame are unnatural sugars synthesized in the laboratory. There have
been thousands of reports about headaches and even brain tumors linked to aspartame.

The “sugar-free” label really isn’t so sweet after all. Avoid anything that has a list of chemicals in it! If you’re truly serious about eliminating your headaches, try one week without any chemicals. That includes diet sodas, which
are nothing more than a chemical concoction!

When you go one week without chemicals, you will be amazed at how different you feel
and besides that, you will have a week free from headaches. Tell me what happens because I will want to write it down so other patients will be motivated.

4.  Low blood sugar from not eating regular meals causes headaches.

When you don’t eat regular meals, you get energy from stored fats and carbohydrates. This happens automatically in response to low blood sugar from not eating. Keep a journal of your diet and look for a pattern of headaches that appear when you don’t eat breakfast, skip lunch or dinner, or go to bed hungry. The best diet you can eat is one that supplies you with three meals a day and snacks in between.

5.  Low blood sugar from eating too many carbohydrate foods in a meal causes headaches.

Carbohydratefoods are foods such as breads, pasta, cakes, cookies, candy, muffins, rice,beans, whole grains, tacos and tortillas. Starchy vegetables such as peas,corn, potatoes, acorn squash, and other winter squashes also contain high
levels of carbohydrates. Milk products are another good source.

It’s okay to have carbohydrate foods in your diet, but limit them to a maximum of three or four servings per meal. Some people must limit them to one or two to become headache-free. Watching your diet for the number of carbohydrates eaten in any one meal can be a big revelation into why you have headaches. Too many carbohydrates cause headaches by raising insulin levels that lower blood sugar too fast and also increase inflammation in the body.

Here’s an example of too many carbohydrates in a meal:
Oatmeal with raisins, orange juice, a muffin, and an apple.

You may think that the oatmeal meal is a healthy meal but it contains too many carbohydrates. The headache-free breakfast would be oatmeal with milk and an apple. You could even add an egg to this new meal.

Here’s another example:
Steak, big baked potato with butter, green beans, peas, corn, salad, and apple pie a la mode.

Here’s your headache-free meal:
Steak, 1/3 to 1/2 baked potato with butter, green beans, salad, one-fourth slice of apple pie a la mode.

6.  Low blood sugar from not enough protein in the meal or in the diet causes headaches

Many people believe that it’s not a good idea to eat red meat, so they eliminate it from their diet. Grass-fed red meat is an excellent source of nutrients, including omega-3 fats that prevent headaches! The problem is that when many
people eat less meat, they don’t substitute other protein foods for the red meat. Other protein foods include fish, chicken, turkey, wild meats, eggs, cheese and dairy products.

If you don’t have enough protein in a meal, your body cannot repair itself. Without enough protein in a meal, the composition of that meal is primarily carbohydrates and fat. And we already know what too many carbohydrates in a
meal can do: cause a headache!

Make sure you eat some form of protein at every meal. Even adding one or two eggs for breakfast can change your life and your headaches! See how good your day goes when you have enough protein! Eat at least three ounces (about the size of
a computer mouse) at each meal and you’ll have the minimum amount you need each day.

7.  Food allergies cause headaches

Food allergies will trigger a headache quickly. If you’re allergic to a food, whether it’s yeast, milk, peanuts, wheat, or sugar, it’s possible that you will have a headache after eating that food. In children suffering from migraines and epilepsy, eliminating offending foods will result in a reduction of seizures.

What makes food allergies more complicated is that a food essentially stays in the body for four days so you could be reacting to a food eaten four days ago!

While you may not necessarily be allergic to a certain food, you can still be sensitive. Many of us are
sensitive to foods and don’t even know it. Food sensitivities differ from allergies as a true food allergy requires the presence of IgE antibodies against the food, while a food sensitive does not. Nonetheless, symptoms can be
rather similar. Oftentimes food sensitivities can result in fatigue, headaches, skin irritations, respiratory issues, nausea, abdominal cramping, and so on. It is important to remember that food sensitivities differ from allergies, and as
such cannot be tested for in the same manner. If you have any of the symptoms above, ask your doctor or naturopath if they feel a food intolerance test would be right for you.

8.  Faulty elimination causes headaches

For a minute, think back to a time when you were constipated. How did you feel? Miserable! I must tell you how important it is to have a bowel movement at least twice daily. If you don’t, you are constipated!

What happens inside the body when you are constipated is not pretty! All that waste matter sitting inside your intestines is rotting! Forgive me for being so graphic, but I want you to understand this. There is a process in the body called diffusion that happens inside the cells that works like this: wherever you have a higher concentration of something, it will flow to an area of lower concentration. When you have a high concentration of wastes in the intestines,
they start “polluting” the rest of the organs in your abdomen. This is part of the reason why so many men have prostate problems!

Those wastes in your colon are in such a high concentration that they start “flowing” to other places in the body. Countless patients have told me over the years that part of the reason why they got headaches was because they were
constipated.

So stop carrying around those old meals as a suitcase in your colon and start feeling better. You will clearly have fewer headaches as a result. Some simple ways to do this:

  1. When you get up in the morning, drink two to
    three 8-oz glasses of water within five minutes. This will result in a bowel
    movement within about 30 minutes.
  2. Consume food high in natural fiber (such as
    various seeds, vegetables, and fruit)
  3. Obtain a colon cleanse formula and use it for
    at least six weeks.
  4. Take a probiotic daily for proper digestion
    and absorption and to maintain a normal flora.
  5. Add 3 oz. aloe vera juice to every meal.

9.  Dehydration causes headaches.

Your body uses water to dissolve EVERYTHING except fats and fat-soluble vitamins. When you don’t have water, you
can’t dissolve toxins and get them out of the body. Your blood has a high percentage of water. When your water levels are only 5% lower, your efficiency suffers by 30%. Aim for 1 oz. water for every 2 pounds you weigh. For example, if you weigh 150 pounds, you need a minimum of 75 oz. water per day. That’s equivalent to a little over nine 8-oz glasses water. If you drink three in the morning when you wake up, you only have six more to go for the rest of the day.
That’s easy!

10.  Malnutrition causes headaches

Vitamin and mineral deficiencies cause headaches. I’m not going to go through every one of the vitamins and mineral
deficiencies that do this because you’ll rush out and try to buy them. The problem with that thinking is that it doesn’t work. You must have balanced nutrition, a balanced amount of vitamins and minerals to make nutrients work. A
good vitamin/mineral supplement plan is important.

11. Stress causes headaches

I understand that you may be experiencing a very difficult time in your life; during difficult times, there’s a lot of stress. For every problem, there’s a solution. Some of the top ways to beat stress are:

  1. Exercise! When you exercise, you purposefully stress your body, teaching it how to overcome this
    stress. That’s why you feel so good after exercising!
  2. Let all your frustrations be dissolved by taking a walk in the mountains or by visiting a
    lake or river. Go somewhere peaceful; the energy of that place will be transferred to you.
  3. Play an instrument,  listen to music or sing.
  4. Meditate
  5. Jump up and down on a rebounder and yell at the top of your lungs! With three or four screams,
    you’ll notice the stress is gone.
  6. Add an extra B vitamin to your diet: pantothenic acid. This B vitamin, which is vitamin B5,
    helps support the adrenal glands and makes a big difference in stress levels in three days. Take 500 mg.
  7. Laugh belly laughs!

12. Bad sleep habits cause headaches

Sleeping on your stomach or with your pillow bunched up is a sure way to a headache. What happens is that your neck
becomes twisted for long periods of time as you sleep, putting pressure on the nerves, blood vessels and vertebrae in your cervical (upper) spine. That pressure sends messages to the brain that there’s something that needs to be
addressed, and a pain signal is sent to your head. Presto! You have a headache and your neck hurts as well.

The solution is sleeping on your back with a pillow that supports your neck fully. You may also sleep on your side,
but check with us at the office about the proper sleeping position that won’t create headaches. If you bring in your pillow to our office, I’ll check it to see if it’s part of the reason you have headaches. For example, a pillow that
is too thin or too fluffy will contribute to headaches because it doesn’t support the cervical curve in your neck. The cervical curve is a natural S-shaped curve in your neck. If the pillow is too flat, that pillow flattens your cervical curve. If the pillow is too fluffy, it exaggerates your cervical curve.

Did you circle one or more of these bad habits? Did anything you read surprise you? Leave me a comment below!

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drnathalie@drnathaliebeauchamp.com

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