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    Walking is good!

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    • B Offline
      Bernard Hagan
      last edited by

      Walking is good, not only for getting the most out of a healthy diet - weight-wise, but it also helps maintain my general health - physical and mental. I also intend to start some light weight training to improve muscle tone.

      Having said this I still find it difficult to keep it up over long periods, as something always seems to come up to derail my good intentions. Computers, SketchUp and an obsessive personality don't help!

      Bernard

      Our fantasies keep us safe and sane in an incomprehensible, indifferent universe: inevitably we comprehend them as reality itself.

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      • B Offline
        Ben Ritter
        last edited by

        Stu and Bernard,

        Thanks for the encouragement and tip to Mayo Clinic.

        Ben

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        • T Offline
          thoscon
          last edited by

          I'm starting a walking program with my neighbor/buddy today.

          Need to lose 100 lbs. ❗


          Trust in the LORD with all your heart and do not lean on your own understanding.
          In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make your paths straight.

          Proverbs 3, 5-6

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          • R Offline
            Ross Macintosh
            last edited by

            You can do it thoscon! Great to hear you have a buddy to walk with -- it will make it easier to get motivated and more enjoyable. Since you are just starting one thing you can do is mark the distances on a calendar or a log book. Soon you will get enjoyment in totalling the distances up. Seeing the totals can be motivating too -- allowing you to set goals. You can match your total distance goals to things like the distance across Texas, or the length of the Nile if you get really ambitious. Have fun & think of ways to stay motivated.

            Those little step counters can be motivating too.

            Regards, Ross

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            • boofredlayB Offline
              boofredlay
              last edited by

              @ross macintosh said:

              You can match your total distance goals to things like the distance across Texas, or the length of the Nile if you get really ambitious. Have fun & think of ways to stay motivated.
              Regards, Ross

              That is a great idea Ross.

              thoscon, definately keep us informed of your progress. We are here to walk with you too.

              I have started my weight loss journey as well. My first hurdle was getting off caffeine. The headaches were not fun but subsided after about 6 days. Now that I only drink water and maybe 8 oz of a diet caffeine free soda I am less hungry. I have been eating less and have lost 6 pounds.

              http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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              • R Offline
                Ross Macintosh
                last edited by

                That's great news Eric! Please stop drinking the diet sodas. You don't need them and their chemical cocktail can't be good for you. Celestial Seasonings make lots of good fruity herbal teas -- they all make very enjoyable ice teas without any sugar.

                Regards, Ross

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                • boofredlayB Offline
                  boofredlay
                  last edited by

                  Yeah I know. Actually my wife bought the diet caffeine free mt. dew because that is what I used to drink most of the time, with caffeine however.
                  I tried a couple glasses over the weekend of the caffeine free and it did nothing for me. I actually had an annoying film in my mouth.

                  It is amazing how much my body is craving water now that I have introduced it. I am looking forward to finding some Rooibos.

                  Have you tried the Kashi brand cereals? My wife has been eating them for a while. I tried some recently and I enjoy it. I am also using soy milk which does not taste much different than skim to me.

                  http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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                  • 3 Offline
                    3eighty
                    last edited by

                    Glad to see this topic here..It's hard to find a place where you can talk to actual 'Guys" and not all the professional lingo..I live in Rio Rancho, NM, USA...Does anybody know what stores might sell the tea in the US? Iam a BIG Diet-Mt Dew drinker..I can drink 3-4 cans a day..I gather you all feel that this is a bad thing even though it is diet?
                    Richard

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                    • M Offline
                      Maggy
                      last edited by

                      http://www.strandtea.com/rooibos.htm , http://www.newlands.ca/Pricelist.htm and http://www.port-trading.com/order.html sell Rooibos in the US, Google told me.

                      Mountain dew diet contains: CARBONATED WATER, CONCENTRATED ORANGE JUICE, CITRIC ACID, NATURAL FLAVORS, CITRUS PECTIN, POTASSIUM BENZOATE (PRESERVES FRESHNESS), ASPARTAME, POTASSIUM CITRATE, CAFFEINE, SODIUM CITRATE, ACESULFAME POTASSIUM, SUCRALOSE, GUM ARABIC, SODIUM BENZOATE (PRESERVES FRESHNESS), CALCIUM DISODIUM EDTA (TO PROTECT FLAVOR), BROMINATED VEGETABLE OIL, YELLOW 5

                      Sorry for the capitals, cut and paste from their website. I've never seen this stuff in Amsterdam, but the ingredients do not invite me to search for it.

                      The best ingredients for a good health are:
                      walk/bike a lot
                      eat 3 meals a day, no in betweens, no grazing
                      eat and drink natural, fresh ingredients
                      eat balanced with enough fibres

                      poster-Maggy

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                      • J Offline
                        jeff jacobs
                        last edited by

                        Tea can block the bodies ability to absorb iron.

                        http://health.ivillage.com/eating/evita ... x1,00.html

                        It's always something.

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                        • R Offline
                          Ross Macintosh
                          last edited by

                          Jeff - unfortunately that tea-related link is dead.

                          It is the tannins in regular black tea that have been linked with interference with iron absorption. Rooibos and the other South African tea called Honeybush both feature extremely low levels of tannins and so should have no negative impact on iron absorption. By the way coffee is also known to interfere with iron absorption.

                          Regards, Ross

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                          • M Offline
                            Maggy
                            last edited by

                            Yes, tannins do block iron absorption. But you'd have to drink an absurd amount of of tea and/or wine to block so much iron that it would cause a health risk. In the contrary, too much iron absorption creates free radicals in the blood that speeds up aging and even increases the risk of cancer.
                            BTW phytates also block iron absorption. And guess which food products are rich in phytates? Primarily cereal grains, legumes, and nuts.
                            Wanna ban these from your diet??? C'mon, givusabreak.

                            BTW I found out today that the English word "legumes" stands for something different than in French, where legume=vegetable. For those who didn't know, like me:
                            Legumes include alfalfa, clover, peas, beans, soy, lentils, lupins and peanuts.
                            Cereals include maize (aka corn), wheat, rice, barley, sorghums, millets, oats, rye, triticale, buckwheat, fonio, quinoa.

                            As I said: eat balanced.

                            poster-Maggy

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                            • J Offline
                              jeff jacobs
                              last edited by

                              @ross macintosh said:

                              Jeff - unfortunately that tea-related link is dead.

                              It is the tannins in regular black tea that have been linked with interference with iron absorption. Rooibos and the other South African tea called Honeybush both feature extremely low levels of tannins and so should have no negative impact on iron absorption. By the way coffee is also known to interfere with iron absorption.

                              Regards, Ross

                              I brought it up because my Mother is getting a knee replacement in a week. Her iron is low anyway, but the doctors told her during "knee camp" that she should avoid tea with her meals because of this issue. They told her all teas caused this problem.

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                              • M Offline
                                Maggy
                                last edited by

                                According to Wikipedia Rooibos contains no tannins. Wine can contain a lot of tannins and phytates block just as much iron or more than tannins. So it's a bit strange, selective advice unless the doctor would know that your mother usually drinks an awful lot of tea.

                                poster-Maggy

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