Eat to Stay Young: The Anti-Aging Program

Book Image: 
Susan Mitchell Eat to stay young.jpg

Did you know that 85% of all visits to the family doctor are for stress-related illness? Is the stress of your job and everyday life making you look and feel old? Are you too tired to tango at the end of the day? Eat to Stay Young, shows you how to stop stress-aging and stay young and stress-free by harnessing the amazing age-deactivating properties of specific foods.

I'd Kill for a Cookie: A Simple Six-Week Plan to Conquer Stress Eating

Book Image: 
jacqueline mitchell I'd kill for a cookie.JPG

Overeating is usually the result of our reaction to stress. I'd Kill for a Cookie offers a proven, no-frills means to overcome stress eating and increase energy!

Fat is Not Your Fate: Outsmart Your Genes and Lose the Weight Forever

Book Image: 
Susan Mitchell Fat Not Fate.jpg

Fat Is Not Your Fate gives you the tools you need to outsmart your own genes. It is the only book tailored to your genes and the last diet book you will ever need.

Nutrition for Menopause

Discuss the best nutritional practices for menopausal women.

Eat to Fight Cancer

A wide variety of foodstuffs appear to act as protectors against cancer, including fiber, vitamins, and some sulfides contained in garlic and onions. Vegetables, greens and fruits, which are beneficial for other reasons, seem to supply substances that act as cancer shields. Conversely, fatty meat and milk products are suspected villains.

Don't Dry Up

Few of us pay much attention to the amount of fluid we drink -- it's just a part of our lives that takes care of itself, right? Wrong. The recommended daily allowance for water proposed by the National Research Council is a quart and a half a day (48 fluid ounces).

Count Cholesterol

Seventy percent of your cholesterol comes from that which you yourself manufacture, mostly in the liver; only one-third comes directly from the diet. This is why a low-cholesterol diet is not as important as a cholesterol-lowering diet.

Know When to Eat

When you eat is just as important as what and how you eat. The standard American meal pattern consists of a cup of coffee for breakfast, a sandwich and a soda for lunch, and then a mound of food for dinner. This gorging meal pattern would do a lion proud, but is it right for you?

Water

OK, since you don't eat it, it's not really a "food," but what you drink can also affect your disposition. Approximately 85 percent of brain tissue is made up of water, so it's no wonder that studies have linked depression to dehydration. Be sure to get your eight glasses of water a day.

Bananas

You've probably heard that bananas are high in potassium, which helps to control blood pressure and may fight depression. Bananas also contain tryptophan, a mood-lifter, and, because of their three natural sugars -- sucrose, glucose and fructose -- give an instant boost to flagging energy levels.

Syndicate content