Tag Archive: work

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Janet Jackson puts new "face" on weight loss

December 15th, 2011 / tags:, , , , , / categories: Uncategorized /

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – It’s no secret that Janet Jackson has battled weight issues her entire life, but what her fans may not know is that even when the singer is on tour, sweating every night, she still has problems staying slim.

So Jackson joined the ranks of Nutrisystem users on Thursday to become the “new face” of the weight-loss program, promoting a new “SUCCESS” diet plan even as she uses it to help raise money to feed the world’s hungry.

The “Rhythm Nation” singer and member of the famous Jackson family, wrote fearlessly about self-image issues in her book, “True You,” documenting a period in 2006 when she put on weight for a movie and ballooned to 180 lbs, only to become fodder for fat jokes in the tabloid press.

But Jackson said it’s not only working as an actress that can cause her to put on pounds. Rather, it is everyday life that gets her. And even after dancing and singing nearly every night on her “Number Ones,” she still battles weight gain.

“Your body gets used to different exercises, and I’ve been performing for so long that my body’s just used to it. Actually, I have to work a little harder while doing a show,” she told Reuters.

Weight gain, she said “is something I’ve dealt with my entire life.”

In her book “True You,” which was published in hardcover earlier this year and hit stores in paperback this week, Jackson writes “eating was emotional for me; eating calmed my nerves and brought me instant gratification.”

After Nutrisystem chief executive Joe Redling read the book, he approached Jackson about his weight-loss program and gave her some of Nutrisystem’s pre-packaged foods to sample while on tour. Jackson said she was sold.

“When I was in hair and makeup, we were all taste testing. Everybody was going crazy for it,” she said.

LOVE THE CHEESE PUFFS

When asked her favorite Nutrisystem meal, Jackson said “I can’t say there’s just one thing,” then she paused.

“They do have cheese puffs,” she said. “It had been years since I wrapped my lips around cheese puffs because they were things I had to stay away from.”

Jackson joins a long list of celebrities, including Kirstie Alley and Jennifer Hudson, who have publicly battled weight loss and endorsed diet programs. Typically, the stars document how much they lose, but Jackson doesn’t want to do that.

“I’m going about this a different way by not putting a pound amount on it,” she said. “It’s about when I feel healthy, about when I feel good. That is how I want to be,” she said.

Like most people, she pops her meals into a microwave to heat them up, but is quick to add that, unlike many others, she has a trainer to help her work out. She stresses the importance of exercise, but emphasizes that people don’t need a trainer when all they really need to do is go for a long walk or do other everyday activities that get them off their couches.

Key to Jackson’s involvement in Nutrisystem, she said, is that for every pound its dieters loose in 2012, the company will donate $1 worth of food to people in need. The pair have created “Nutribank,” (http://www.nutribank.org ), to work with hunger organizations around the world. Last year, Nutrisystem users lost 10 million pounds, in total.

“I feel that my true calling is to help people,” she said. Now, that calling extends to weight loss and quashing hunger.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)

Article source: http://news.yahoo.com/janet-jackson-puts-face-weight-loss-090353492.html

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Health tips from the No-Fad Diet

December 8th, 2011 / tags:, , , / categories: Uncategorized /

For those trying to lose weight, all the sermonizing can be a turnoff. Who doesn’t already know that vending machine chocolate bars are bad, that whole grain is good? That fad diets don’t work and getting fit doesn’t come quick?

There’s no magic formula for losing pounds and keeping them off, but there are strategies that work. The American Heart Association recently published the second edition of its bestseller No-Fad Diet (Clarkson Potter, $27.99), a no-nonsense bible for anyone looking to lose weight, eat healthier and move more.

It’s a collection of advice culled from a review of current research in nutrition, weight management and behaviour modification. Much of the same advice is available from the Dietitians of Canada and the Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation, from Health Canada and Quebec’s health ministry: Exercise more and eat a healthy, balanced diet that is low in fat and includes a variety of food from each of the four groups.

No-Fad Diet puts it all together in a way that is simple and straightforward. At its core is the concept of energy balance: To keep from gaining weight, you must balance the calories you eat (calories in) with the calories your body uses up (calories out). To lose weight, change the balance in favour of “calories out.”

That’s it. No outlawed food combinations or powders, herbs, meal-replacement bars or pills. No three-week ab-building regimens. Just some commonsense advice for the road ahead.

Here’s a compilation of useful tips for losing weight from NoFad Diet, the Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation and Nutrition Quebec, a healthy-eating blog by dietitian Charlotte Geroudet:

Think smart

Be aware of your inner voice. Think about how the running dialogue inside your head encourages or excuses bad behaviour. As in: “I’ll have these french fries now, but just a salad for dinner,” or “It’s too icy/cold/ hot/humid/late/early to go out for a walk.”

Practise saying “thanks, but no thanks” to colleagues who bring in baked goods or dinner-party hosts who offer yet another glass of wine.

Learn to recognize true hunger. Before each bite of food, ask: “Am I so hungry that I would eat this even if it were something I didn’t like very much?”

Be especially vigilant around people you love. Research shows that adults tend to eat more in the company of friends and relatives, especially if they are overweight.

Don’t be hard on yourself. It takes about six weeks to form new habits. Be prepared for pitfalls and setbacks. Hitting a plateau is part of the process-the body’s way of readjusting to a reduced food supply. If you stick with it, you’ll start losing again.

Keep a food diary. Know exactly what you eat and why.

Plan ahead

Good planning, not will power, is the key to successful, sustained weight loss.

Plan meals for the next few days to avoid “unconscious eating.” Shop with a detailed grocery list and don’t linger in the supermarket.

Cook extra. Leftovers are a great way to avoid the fast food perils of the food court at lunchtime.

Eat more soup. A container of homemade vitamin-packed soup in the fridge is also excellent “emergency food” for evenings when you’re ravenous but don’t have time to cook.

Set reasonable weight loss goals. Begin by aiming to lose 10 per cent of your body weight. Losing one to two pounds a week is healthy and sustainable.

Start with small steps. Make gradual, manageable changes. Have a low-calorie lunch twice a week. Cook a healthy dinner once a week. Every second day, replace ice cream with fresh fruit.

Or go full throttle. Some behavioural experts say that starting with a strict regime, as opposed to cutting back just a few calories, helps the new habits become ingrained. Then you can ease back after two weeks.

Choose the right strategy for you

A “switch and swap” approach works for some people. Replace margarine or butter on toast with all-fruit spread or unsweetened apple sauce; or use fat-free milk instead of whole milk.

For others, especially those who eat out or travel a lot, the “75 per cent solution” is better. Continue to eat most of the things you like-just less of them. Before beginning each meal, mentally draw a line on the plate to portion out threequarters of what you normally eat. If you always have a muffin for breakfast, eat three-quarters of it. If you eat four slices of pizza at your kid’s hockey game, cut back to three.

Find more nutritious, lower calorie alternatives

Get the most return from each calorie. Eat more vegetables and fruits, fibre-rich whole grains, fatfree and low-fat dairy products and fish and lean meat, as well as unsaturated fats and oils.

Visualize your plate divided into fourths, with two sections for vegetables and fruits, one for grains and starches, and one for a protein.

Eat slowly. It takes about 20 minutes for your brain to register the signal from your stomach that it is full.

Pre-empt restaurant regret. Eat something low in calories- an apple or a bowl of low-fat yogurt-before leaving for the restaurant if you are very hungry. Or drink a glass or two of water while waiting for your food to take an edge off your hunger. And ask the waiter to take away the bread basket.

Move more

Strap on a pedometer. Recording every step will give you a realistic idea of just how active-or inactive-you really are. Wear the pedometer for one week. Add up the daily totals and divide by seven to find out your average number of daily steps. (A daily range of 2,000 to 4,000 steps is considered inactive; 5,000 to 7,000 steps is considered moderately active; 10,000 or more steps is considered very active.)

You’ve got to love a fitness expert whose exercise mantra is “make it short and sweet.”

How short? Twenty minutes, three times a week. But even less at first.

For those of us who are, shall we say, exercise averse, this is magical.

Federal guidelines advise Americans age 18 to 64 to get 2 1/2 hours a week of moderate-intensity or 75 minutes a week of vigorous-intensity aerobic physical activity.

Frank Comstock, Tucson, Ariz., doctor and author of the book “Antiaging 101,” specializes in wellness and anti-aging. He insists that all it takes to truly be fit is an hour a week. So why not start there? Anything is better than nothing!

You’ll also be happy to hear Comstock say, “If I’m out of shape, the last place I would go is a gym. You see all these machines, and you see these guys walking around. You don’t know what you’re doing. The key is to find something you like.”

So, how does this 20-minute workout do the job? It’s all about “interval training,” he says, which means short bursts of higher intensity aerobics, then returning to shorter periods of lower intensity. For instance, walk at a normal pace for two minutes than as fast as you can for 20 or 30 seconds. Then repeat. Gradually increase the fast bursts and decrease the slow ones.

Comstock recommends:

Find the exercise that is least objectionable, like walking, swimming, jump rope, jumping jacks, doing squats.

If you’re just beginning, pick a shorter time — even 5 minutes twice a week — then build up slowly.

Don’t give up. If you’re at the 20 minute/three times a week level and just don’t feel like exercising, employ the 10-minute rule. “Start your exercise session and plan on working out for only 10 minutes” that day, he recommends.

If that doesn’t work, “look in the mirror.” Sometimes, says Comstock. That’ll probably be enough to get you back off the couch and into your interval zone again.

Article source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/health/Start+with+hour+week+exercise+Doctor+author+Antiaging/5651907/story.html