10 Habits For the Healthiest,Slimmest Version of You
10 Habits That Will Help You Become The Healthiest, Slimmest Version Of You
Looking to get in the best shape of your life this year? Here are 10 foods and habits to help you get there.
1. Eat protein.
It's
essential because your body uses it for muscle and tissue repair, and
it breaks down into the amino acids used to synthesize feel-good
neurotransmitters in your brain responsible for good mood, sex drive,
appetite control, sleep, and regulating cravings.
Lack
of quality protein is one of the most common factors I see with clients
having difficulty with weight loss. They're either eating too many
grain-based foods for their physiology (and the lectins present in
grains can cause inflammation that prevents weight loss), or they’re
just not eating enough protein with meals, so they’re not satisfied.
Examples
of quality protein are: grass fed beef and lamb; organic poultry; cage
free eggs, preferably from a local farm; and wild fish. For vegetarians,
legumes are not a complete source of protein, meaning they do not
provide all essential amino acids, so combine with quinoa or brown rice.
2. Eat good fats.
If
you are fat phobic, listen up: eating the right kinds of fat will not
make you fat. You know what will? Sugar. Gluten. Processed foods (and
yes, that includes your "healthy" morning boxed cereal). Good fats stoke
your metabolism and encourage weight loss! Your brain is mostly fat,
and your cell membranes need fat to stay permeable, allowing nutrients
to enter. Good fats are coconut oil, olive oil, grass fed butter,
avocado, and fats present in organic meat. Avoid refined vegetable oils
and hydrogenated fats.
3. Get some cinnamon.
This
amazing and antioxidant-rich spice has a blood sugar and insulin
balancing effect for stable energy and reduced hunger, and it may lower
cholesterol and reduce inflammation. Add 1 teaspoon to your morning smoothie.
4. Drink green tea.
It's
thermogenic, contains antioxidants, and is an all around miracle
beverage as far as I’m concerned. Drink it in the mornings instead of
coffee, which jacks your blood sugar and can leave you with a crash
accompanied by wicked sugar cravings in the afternoon. Green tea gives
you a pleasant boost and may reduce cravings. Have a cup after lunch to
ward off the dreaded 3pm crash.
5. Drink more filtered water.
It
flushes toxins and helps regulate metabolism. We sometimes confuse
thirst for hunger, so if you’re feeling hungry when you shouldn’t be,
drink a glass of water. Add cucumber slices and lemon wedges to spice it
up.
6. Do some burst training and yoga.
Instead
of pounding the pavement for hours (I can’t tell you how many
marathon-training clients have come to me befuddled by the fact that
they’re actually gaining weight), try medium to high intensity interval
training.
How it works: Walk for 1 minute;
sprint for 30 seconds. Repeat this circuit for 15 to 20 minutes at
whatever intensity is right for you. It’s a much more effective way to
burn fat than running for hours. Alternate with yoga to elongate muscles and center yourself, and you're golden.
7. Sleep 7 to 9 hours every night.
Seven
to nine hours of sleep is essential to maintain healthy body
composition. Your body perceives lack of sleep as a stress, which raises
cortisol, increasing sugar cravings and fat storage. Ever notice how
you crave sugar and carbs the day after you haven’t slept well? Also, if
you’re chugging coffee
because you’re not sleeping enough, you’re burning out your adrenals
and driving up cortisol. Unplug from your devices, and get to bed by
11pm latest.
8. Enjoy some dark chocolate.
It
may contribute to lower overall blood glucose levels; it makes you feel
good; and it is chock full of antioxidant-rich dreamy deliciousness.
Various studies show that dark chocolate eaters have lower body fat.
Choose 70% or higher dark chocolate, which has far less sugar than milk
chocolate, and doesn't contain dairy.
9. Eat 35 to 50 grams of fiber daily.
Fiber
binds to toxins in the gut and helps to whisk them out of the body,
scrubbing your colon clean in the process. I’ll spare you a lecture on
insoluble and soluble fiber, but you need a certain amount of both
because soluble fiber (fruit, legumes) makes you feel full and
stabilizes blood sugar, and insoluble fiber (grains, leafy greens) feeds
the good bacteria in your gut and fosters regularity.
10. Eat probiotic foods.
Studies show that probiotics,
the beneficial bacteria in your gut, play a role in weight loss and
help prevent weight gain. Probiotics are essential for synthesizing
certain vitamins, good digestive function, and immune health. Get them
from raw kraut, beet kvass or kombucha, or kefir if you tolerate dairy.
Valuable information, thank you.
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