Of all the things that drive men to sea, the most common disaster, I've come to learn, is women.
-- Charles Johnson, Middle Passage

Tag: Health

Thirteen Facts About Caffiene, 17th

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Thirteen Things about J. Lynne

  1. Coffee beans are actually the seeds of the berries of the coffee plant. It’s a fruit, not a vegetable. (Coffee Bean)
  2. According to Chinese myth, in 2737 BCE, Emperor Shen Nung of China discovered tea while sitting under a wild tea tree with a cup of hot water. A leaf from the tree fell into his water, creating the first tea. Then in 900 B.C., Homer makes reference to a mysterious black and bitter beverage with the power to ward off sleep … a reference repeated in several Arabian legends from the same period. (Caffeine Timeline)
  3. A major study has found fewer suicides among coffee drinkers than those who abstained from the hot black brew. (Studies on the Side Effects of Caffeine)
  4. Although it’s important to note that coffee is the most popular drug in the world. Ninety percent of Americans consume it in some form every day and over 450,000,000 cups of coffee are consumed in the United States every day. (Fast Facts About Caffeine)
  5. According to a study at the University of Georgia in Athens, Women who had the caffeine equivalent of two cups of coffee the day after their quadriceps were stimulated (as if they’d done squats) felt 48% less leg pain within an hour. Apparently, caffeine may block the body’s receptors for the pain-causing chemical adenosine. (Self Magazine, May 2007)
  6. Decaffeinated coffee does not mean caffeine-free. Decaf coffee may contain enough caffeine to affect people sensitive to the stimulant, especially after a few cups. (Self Magazine, May 2007)
  7. A moderate amount of caffeine may make you more agreeable to persuasive arguments according to a study in the European Journal of Social Psychology. Apparently Caffeine enhances not only alertness but also reasoning abilities. (Health Magazine, December 2006)
  8. Despite the fact that coffee has been described as a contributor to hypertension in the past, a study in the Journal of American Medical Association found that drinking coffee isn’t associated with an increased risk of high blood pressure after all; however, soda may be. Women who drank 3 cans or more of caffeinated regular or diet soda increased their chances of developing the condition by 16 to 44 percent, compared to those who had none. (Fitness Magazine, March 2006)
  9. Young women drinking 4 or more cups of caffeinated coffee daily reduced their breast cancer risk by 40 percent compared with nondrinkers according to a study in the Journal of Nutrition. (Self Magazine, June 2006)
  10. People who drank more metabolism-firing caffeine gained less weight over 12 years than those who cut back on caffeine according to researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston. The best choice for a healthy buzz? Black, lightly sweetened tea. (Self Magazine, August 2006)
  11. According to a study of more than 27,000 women by the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis, daily coffee drinkers of 1 to 3 cups had a 4% lower risk of dying from heart disease and other inflammatory conditions. (Self Magazine, October 2006)
  12. During the Civil War, coffee was as commonplace on the battlefields as it is in office buildings and shopping malls today. In fact, the Union army was so fueled by the need for caffeine, if there was no time to boil water, the Boys in Blue would chew on whole beans as they marched. Apparently they hadn’t discovered chocolate-covered coffee beans yet. The Confederates however were pretty much cut off from a good caffeine buzz by the Union naval blockade. While a pound of coffee in the Northern states cost about 20¢, after the pre-war supplies ran out, a pound of coffee beans in the South ran about $60. And people complained when Starbucks raised their prices a few cents this year! (How Coffee Played A Role In The Civil War)
  13. The world’s first coffee house, Kiva Han, opened in Constantinople in 1475, 496 years before the first Starbucks opened in Seattle. (Caffeine Timeline)

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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

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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


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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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