-- Charles Johnson, Middle Passage
Tag: Health
Thirteen Facts About Caffiene, 17th
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About this entry
- Published:
- 08 Nov 2007 / 12:31 AM
- Category:
- Facts of Life, Health, Thursday Thirteen
- Comments:
- 4 Comments »
Has The Internet Made You Healthier?
1 in 4 — Number of Americans who say they’re healthier because of the Internet
45 — Percentage who want to e-mail their doctor
89 — Percentage who can’t reach their doctor by e-mail
Source: Health Magazine, June 2007
About this entry
- Published:
- 07 Nov 2007 / 07:26 AM
- Category:
- Facts of Life, Health
- Tags:
- Health
- Comments:
- No Comments »
Chocolate Does A Heart Good
I’m not a big chocoholic like I know a lot of people are. Today I’m craving some really good milk chocolate — nothing out of a vending machine or from that questionable corner store half a block away. We’re talking European Grade-A Quality stuff here, the kind you have to go to a specialty shop for, the kind you buy by the ounce, the kind you take tiny, savoring bites of so it lasts forever.
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Veggies Make You Smart
I knew that I’d been feeling so much smarter this past year since I became a pescetarian (vegetarian + fish). According to research published in the journal Neurology, folks who eat more than two servings of vegetables a day have brains that function as if they are five years younger. The best veggies for honing sharp minds apparently are grean, leafy types such as spinach, kale, or romaine. Yum!
Source: Self Magazine, April 2007
About this entry
- Published:
- 14 Oct 2007 / 07:43 AM
- Category:
- Facts of Life, Health
- Tags:
- Health • neurology • nutrition • vegetables
- Comments:
- 2 Comments »
One Change A Week
We’ve all been there — whether it’s New Year’s Resolution time, the start of some sort of competition, or we feel the overwhelming need to make a change in or an overhaul of our life, we commit and jump feet first and plunge enthusiastically into whatever life-changing project; we start off extremely gung-ho and then after a few weeks, the enthusiasm wanes, usually as we become overwhelmed by the cold-turkeyness of the whole thing, and we slip back into old habits and then life returns to normal, generally with some feelings of guilt and failure.
The truth is that we’re more likely to be successful at making permanent changes in our life if we make small changes in our life one at a time over a period of time. Like Weight Watchers™ leaders are fond of saying, you didn’t put the weight on overnight so you can’t take it overnight; the same is true of habits. You simply can’t expect to become a whole different person in 24 hours because you want it. It takes time. Some studies say that it takes 21 days to change a habit.
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