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Nutrición

6 SMOOTHIES PARA TU SALUD

ESTA ES UNA PRUEBA. My kids leave for school at all hours in the morning so my goal is to make them something quick and healthy! Smoothies are the ultimate way to jam pack as much nutrition as possible into one drink. These 6 Superfood Smoothies are the perfect meal and full of vitamins which will keep them energized and their minds sharp. The key is the smoothies must taste amazing or my kids won?t drink them! I sneak in handfuls of spinach without them even detecting it since it has such a mild flavor yet is such a nutritional powerhouse.

Since smoothies are full of fresh fruits, vegetables, and protein ? the options are endless. We mix it up with lots of variety so the smoothies don?t get boring.  I am posting our fabulous six superfood smoothies which are filled with superfoods that will start your mornings off right.

AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE HEALTHY JOURNEY:

Here is where I am going to get a little personal. I was a healthy and active girl when I got hit with an autoimmune disease that rocked my world. I visited the doctor and he performed an insane amount of blood tests to figure out what was going on with my body.

I was dealing with the debilitating effects of several autoimmune diseases ? rheumatoid arthritis and Hashimoto?s thyroiditis diseases, among others.

I didn?t think I would be dealing with arthritis in my 30?s! My weight had even skyrocketed for no apparent reason (which will put any woman in a tailspin).

After many blood tests confirmed I was dealing with several autoimmune issues, I was referred to both a rheumatologist and endocrinologist to deal with the effects of my immune system going haywire.  The specialists wanted to put me on a host of medications to help with the swelling and inflammation, all with a list of negative side effects. I felt as if I was ALWAYS at the doctor. I didn?t want to just put on a band-aid.

I went home and my husband and I just sobbed together on the couch (which he may not like me admitting publicly since he is not a crier), afraid of what the future might hold. After a good cry, I felt determined to figure out what the ROOT cause of my health issues was. I started studying like crazy. I began driving around to every library in town, picking up stacks of health books, and researching everything I could about my disease. I became a full-on nerd!

I kept reading over and over about the powerful healing powers of whole foods. After much research, I decided to implement a 30-day healthy food plan.  It included only cold-pressed juices, whole food smoothies, vegetables, fresh fruit, fish, and chicken.  Nothing else.

Being the baker that I am, it just about killed me! Okay truth be told?.in reality, it gave me new life!  I supplemented my diet with a whole host of herbs that help with inflammation and autoimmune disorders.  I filled my refrigerator with the freshest ingredients and spent hours at a time creating smoothies and filling glass jars with them. I drank everything from raw fermented beet juice to cleanse my liver to lemon turmeric drinks to help calm my inflammation.

 

 656
vie. 7 jun. 2019

Actividad Física Descanso y Recreo

15 Benefits of cycling: why cycling is good for weight loss, fitness, legs and mind

Thinking about joining the cycling family? Here are 15 reasons you should get on your bike this summer

The benefits of cycling are almost as endless as the country lanes you could soon be exploring. If you?re considering taking up cycling, and weighing it up against other potential activities, then we?re here to tell you that cycling is hands down the best option.

Admittedly, we?re biased ? but there are an awful lot of good reasons to choose bike riding as your newest pass time. Here are just a few?

 

1. Cycling improves mental well-being

 

There are so many ways that exercise can boost your mood: there?s the basic release of adrenalin and endorphins, and the improved confidence that comes from achieving new things (such as completing a sportive or getting closer to that goal).

 

Cycling combines physical exercise with being outdoors and exploring new views. You can ride solo ? giving you time to process worries or concerns, or you can ride with a group which broadens your social circle.

 

Former Hour Record holder Graeme Obree has suffered from depression through much of his life, and told us: ?Getting out and riding will help [people suffering with depression]? Without cycling, I don?t know where I would be.?

 

2.Cycling promotes weight loss

Weight loss is one benefit of cycling

Weight loss is one benefit of cycling

 

The simple equation, when it comes to weight loss, is ?calories out must exceed calories in?. So you need to burn more calories than you consume to lose weight. Cycling burns calories: between 400 and 1000 an hour, depending on intensity and rider weight.

 

Of course, there are other factors: the make-up of the calories you consume affects the frequency of your refuelling, as does the quality of your sleep and of course the amount of time you spend burning calories will be influenced by how much you enjoy your chosen activity.

 

Assuming you enjoy cycling, you?ll be burning calories. And if you eat well, you should lose weight.

 

3. Cycling builds muscle

Benefits of cycling

Build muscle on the bike (Photo: Watson)

 

The resistance element of cycling means that it doesn?t just burn fat: it also builds muscle ? particularly around the glutes, hamstrings, quads, and calves. Muscle is leaner than fat, and people with a higher percentage of muscle burn more calories even when sedentary.

 

>>> How to build a core strength programme for cycling

 

To be clear ? you won?t end up with quads like a track sprinter unless you invest a serious amount of time at the squat rack. But you will develop a nice toned derriere.

 

4. Enjoy second breakfasts

 

If you decide to cycle to work, you?ve got a great excuse to add a couple of guilt free snacks to your day.

 

Since a half hour ride to work should be burning between 200 and 500 calories, you?ve got a license to enjoy a smug second breakfast at your desk.

 

If you?re serious about burning fat, you could do your morning ride fasted (sans breakfast) ? but that?s mainly a habit reserved for the most dedicated of nutters.

 

5. Better lung health

 

You won?t be alone if this point seems contradictory to common sense. But a recent study suggests that people who ride a bike are actually exposed to fewer dangerous fumes than those who travel by car.

 

A study by the Healthy Air Campaign, Kings College London, and Camden Council, saw air pollution detectors fitted to a driver, a bus user, a pedestrian and a cyclist using a busy route through central London.

 

The results showed that the driver experienced five times higher pollution levels than the cyclist, as well as three and a half more than the walker and two and a half times more than the bus user. Long story short: the cyclist won.

 

6. Cuts heart disease and cancer risk

 

 

Cycling raises your heart rate and gets the blood pumping round your body, and it burns calories, limiting the chance of your being overweight. As a result, it?s among a selection of forms of exercise recommended by the NHS as being healthy ways to cut your risk of developing major illnesses such as heart disease and cancer.

 

New evidence was presented in the form of a study conducted by the University of Glasgow, earlier this year. Researchers studied over 260,000 individuals over the course of five years ? and found that cycling to work can cut a riders risk of developing heart disease or cancer in half. The full study can be read here.

 

Dr. Jason Gill of the Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences commented: ?Cycling all or part of the way to work was associated with substantially lower risk of adverse health outcomes.?

 

7. Cycling is low impact

 

Many of the upshots we discuss when we talk about the benefits of cycling are exercise related. Reckon it might be easier to just go for a run?

 

Running is weight bearing ? and therefore injury rates are higher. Cycling, by contrast to running, is not weight bearing.

 

When scientists compared groups of exercisers ? long distance runners and cyclists, they found the runners suffered 133-144 per cent more muscle damage, 256 per cent more, inflammation and DOMS 87 per cent higher.

 

Whilst cycling is less likely to result in an overuse injury, they can still crop up. A professional bike fit is a good idea ? skimping here is a false economy if you end up spending more cash on physio.

 

The lack of weight bearing also means that cycling does not do as much to increase bone density as other sports ? so it?s a good idea to add a little strength training in to your programme.

 

8. Cycling saves time

 

Compare these three experiences:

 

Get in the car, sit in traffic, queue to get into the car park, park, pay to park, arrive

Walk to bus stop, wait for bus, complain about bus being late, get on bus (pay), watch as it takes you round-the-houses, arrive, about half a mile from your destination

Get on the bike, filter past traffic, lock the bike, arrive

Short journeys contribute massively to global pollution levels, and often involve a fair amount of stationary staring at the bumper in front. Get on the bike, and you?ll save on petrol or cash on public transport, as well as time.

 

9. Cycling improves navigational skills

 

In the world of car sat navs and Google maps, sometimes there?s just not that much incentive to sharpen your natural sense of direction (however superior or otherwise it may be).

 

Unless you?ve invested in a GPS cycling computer with mapping capabilities such as a Garmin 1000, then getting out and exploring the lanes can provide essential exercise for your internal mapping capabilities, giving you (with practice) a better idea of which way is West.

 

10. Improve your sex life

benefits of cycling

Cycling could improve your sex life

 

Most of us know that sex is a good thing, but not everyone knows that it?s actually good for your overall health. In fact, regular sex could indeed prolong your life.

 

Dr Michael Roizen, who chairs the Wellness Institute at the Cleveland Clinic, says: ?The typical man who has 350 orgasms a year, versus the national average of around a quarter of that, lives about four years longer.? Similar findings were revealed for women.

 

So can cycling improve your sex life? Well ? it builds some rather essential muscle groups. Dr Matthew Forsyth, urologist and keen cyclist from Portland, Oregon, commented: ?All these muscles [worked on the bike] are used during intercourse. The better developed these muscles, the longer and more athletic intercourse will be.?

 

Add in that ? thanks to spending plenty of time showing off all the lumps and bumps in skintight lycra (and occasionally double-oh-AND-seven) ? cyclists tend to be fairly comfortable in their own skin, and you?ve got a recipe for success.

 

11. Sleep better

 

It probably isn?t rocket science that tiring yourself out on the bike will improve your sleep ? but now it?s been proven. Researchers at the University of Georgia studied men and women aged 20 to 85 over a period of 35 years, and found that a drop in fitness of 2 per cent for men and 4 per cent for women resulted in sleep problems.

 

Dr Rodney Dishman was one of the lead authors, and commented: ?The steepest decline in cardiorespiratory fitness happens between ages 40 and 60. This is also when problems of sleep duration and quality are elevated.?

 

Looking for causes behind the link the scientists suggested it could be a reduction in anxiety, brought about by exercise, that elevates the ability to sleep. Exercise also protects against weight gain with age, which is another cause of sleep dysfunction.

 

12. Boost your brain power

 

Exercise has been repeatedly linked to brain health ? and the reduction of cognitive changes that can leave us vulnerable to dementia later in life.

 

A 2013 study found that during exercise, cyclists? blood flow in the brain rose by 28 per cent, and up to 70 per cent in specific areas. Not only that, but after exercise, in some areas blood flow remained up by 40 per cent even after exercise.

 

Improved blood flow is good because the red stuff delivers all sorts of goodies that keep us healthy ? and the study concluded that we should cycle for 45-60 minutes, at 75-85 per cent of max ?hear rate reserve? (max heart rate minus resting heart rate) four times a week. Nothing stopping you riding more, of course.

 

13. Improve handling and spacial awareness

 

Cycling isn?t just about raising your heart rate and getting you breathless ? unless you?re doing it on Zwift. There are technical elements ? climbing, descending and cornering all teach you to use your body weight to get the bike to go where you want it to.

 

Gaining the skills to manage these technical elements can provide a massive confidence boost ? especially when you start to see improvement. Plus, you might just find your abilities to manage that dodgy shopping trolley with the wonky wheels greatly improves.

 

14. Strengthen your immune system

 

Dr. David Nieman and his colleagues at Appalachian State University studied 1000 adults up to the age of 85. They found that exercise had huge benefits on the health of the upper respiratory system ? thus reducing instances of the common cold.

 

Nieman said: ?People can knock down sick days by about 40 percent by exercising aerobically on most days of the week while at the same time receiving many other exercise-related health benefits.?

 

Professor Tim Noakes, of exercise and sports science at the University of Cape Town, South Africa, also tells us that mild exercise can improve our immune system by increasing production of essential proteins and waking up lazy white blood cells.

 

Why choose the bike? Cycling to work can reduce the time of your commute, and free you from the confines of germ infused buses and trains.

 

There is a but. Evidence suggests that immediately after intense exercise, such as an interval training session, your immune system is lowered ? but adequate recovery such as eating and sleeping well can help to reverse this.

 

15. Grow your social circle

 

Cycling is an incredibly sociable sport. Grassroots cycling revolves around cycling club culture ? which in turn revolves around the Saturday or Sunday club run: several hours of riding at an intensity that enables easy chat, interrupted only by a cafe stop (or the occasional puncture).

 

 

Joining a cycling club or group is an excellent way to grow your social circle, and if you?re new to riding ? you?ll probably find all the maintenance and training advice you may have been looking for there, too.

 679
vie. 7 jun. 2019

Nutrición Descanso y Recreo

Nutrition: What is it and why is it important?

Nutrition, nourishment, or aliment, is the supply of materials - food - required by organisms and cells to stay alive. In science and human medicine, nutrition is the science or practice of consuming and utilizing foods.

In hospitals, nutrition may refer to the food requirements of patients, including nutritional solutions delivered via an IV (intravenous) or IG (intragastric) tube.

Nutritional science studies how the body breaks food down (catabolism) and how it repairs and creates cells and tissue (anabolism). Catabolism and anabolism combined can also be referred to as metabolism. Nutritional science also examines how the body responds to food.

What is nutrition?

A selection of nutritious food in bowls

As molecular biology, biochemistry, and genetics advance, nutrition has become more focused on metabolism and metabolic pathways - biochemical steps through which substances inside us are transformed from one form to another.

Nutrition also focuses on how diseases, conditions, and problems can be prevented or reduced with a healthy diet.

Similarly, nutrition involves identifying how certain diseases and conditions may be caused by dietary factors, such as poor diet (malnutrition), food allergies, and food intolerances.

Dietitian vs. nutritionist

A registered dietitian nutritionist (RD or RDN) studies food, nutrition, and dietetics through an accredited university and approved curriculum, then completes a rigorous internship and passes a licensure exam to become a registered dietitian.

A nutritionist (without the title of an RD or RDN) studies nutrition via self-study or through formal education but does not meet the requirements to use the titles RD or RDN. The two terms are often interchangeable, but they are not identical.

Dietetics

Dietetics is the interpretation and communication of the science of nutrition; it helps people make informed and practical choices about food and lifestyle in both health and disease.

Part of a dietician's course includes both hospital and community settings. Dietitians work in a variety of areas, from private practice to healthcare, education, corporate wellness, and research, while a much smaller proportion work in the food industry.

A dietitian must have a recognized degree or postgraduate degree in nutrition and dietetics and meet continuing education requirements to work as a dietitian.

Nutrition

Food scientist doing research with microscope
Nutritionists sometimes carry out research for food manufacturers.

Nutrition is the study of nutrients in food, how the body uses nutrients, and the relationship between diet, health, and disease.

Major food manufacturers employ nutritionists and food scientists.

Nutritionists may also work in journalism, education, and research. Many nutritionists work in the field of food science and technology.

There is a lot of overlap between what nutritionists and dietitians do and study. Some nutritionists work in a healthcare setting, some dietitians work in the food industry, but a higher percentage of nutritionists work in the food industry and in food science and technology, and a higher percentage of dietitians work in healthcare, corporate wellness, research, and education.

 

 725 mié. 5 jun. 2019

Nutrición

THE 6 MOST IMPORTANT THINGS YOU CAN DO FOR YOUR HEALTH

We all want to be healthy.  But there is so much information out there when it comes to your health that it?s hard to know what to focus on. Routine doctor visits are important, but only account for 10 percent of what determines your health.  Social and environmental factors are twice as important at 20 percent.  And genetics (what you inherit from your family) comes in at 30 percent.  The biggest factor, at 40 percent, is your health habits and behaviors.

Here are six of the most important things you can do for good health.

  • Be physically active. Exercise for at least 20 minutes, three times a week. Cardio is the most important type of exercise you can do. But it?s also important to incorporate resistance training, like weight lifting, into your routine.  People who exercise regularly have a lower risk of Alzheimer?s disease, live longer, have less joint pain, are in a better mood, and are at less risk for cancer. Find an activity you can enjoy. This gives you the best chance to keep it going over time.
  • Don?t smoke. Life is hard enough when you?re doing everything right.  Smoking harms almost every organ in your body.  Smoking causes cancer, and it can also cause heart disease, osteoporosis, cataracts, and even increases your chance of becoming diabetic.
  • Don?t drink alcohol to excess. Moderate drinking is one drink per day for women and two drinks per day for men.  Excessive drinking causes liver disease, high blood pressure, many types of cancer, and the empty calories increase your risk of obesity.
  • Eat multiple servings of fruits and vegetables each day. This means about two cups of fruit and two cups of vegetables.  The vitamins, minerals and fiber they provide reduce blood pressure and cholesterol as well as diseases of the intestines. They also help you repair injured tissues, reducing your risk of some cancers.
  • Wear seatbelts. Your injuries from a car crash will be worse without a seatbelt. And not wearing one during a car crash can be fatal. More than half of people ages 13 to 44 who die in car accidents don?t have on seatbelts.
  • Achieve a healthy weight. Being overweight or obese increases your risk of disease, most notably diabeteshigh blood pressurestrokeheart attack, arthritis, and many types of cancer.  Being underweight is also a risk factor for disease.  Ask your doctor about your BMI (your measure of body fat based on height and weight). A BMI of 19 to 25 is healthy.

These six health habits may not seem all that difficult, but only three percent of Americans do them all.  Talk with your doctor about your challenges.  Write down your goals and post them where you can see them every day.  If you achieve all six, you will have more energy, feel more focused and motivated, handle stress better, and have the best possible quality of life.

 655 mié. 5 jun. 2019

Descanso y Recreo

¿Por qué es importante el Recreo?

Recordamos el patio del colegio como ese lugar en el que por fin desconectábamos de las clases, comíamos, jugábamos  o charlábamos con nuestros compañeros de clase.

Pues bien, el recreo además de ser un momento de ocio para los niños, contribuye al desarrollo de nuestros hijos ya que desarrollan destrezas jugando en grupo.

Generalmente el recreo es un descanso que dura media hora aproximadamente y se realiza en el ecuador de la jornada escolar. Es un momento de ocio importante puesto que el juego es una parte fundamental en la formación de los niños.

Los niños pueden interaccionar entre ellos sin la supervisión directa de un profesor. Es un tiempo y un espacio en el que deciden qué hacer y con quién compartir sus actividades. Esto es algo que contribuye a la socialización de los pequeños a la vez que promueve las interacciones personales positivas y las habilidades para tomar decisiones.

Las actividades que se suelen realizar en el patio del recreo van desde practicar deporte como fútbol, correr, saltar, repasar tareas con otros compañeros o escuchar música, entre muchas otras.

Entre compañeros de clase es como se aprenden cosas importantes en la vida como ceder, negociar a través de los juegos, trabajar en equipo y tanto a ganar como a perder.Los niños aprenden a convivir juntos y a establecer reglas sociales. Gracias a las actividades de ocio, los niños comienzan a aprender a resolver conflictos, lo cual les hará crecer como personas.

En el tiempo de recreo, los niños de la misma edad ponen en juego sus normas sociales, sus valores y sus prioridades con otros niños, con los que puede alcanzar el acuerdo y el equilibrio.

Además, el recreo es un momento de movimiento para los niños, tras algunas horas sentados en clase. Por tanto,  desarrollan actividades motoras y físicas al conjugar sus habilidades.

Jugar es algo muy beneficioso ya que los niños también pueden desarrollar su imaginación al inventarse juegos o desempeñar distintos roles.

 786 mar. 4 jun. 2019

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