Welcome!

This is Scott McManus from Seattle, Washington. I reside out here in the great Pacific Northwest where we have an abundance of year round outdoor recreational activities to fully engage ourselves in an healthy active lifestyle, no matter the season. Our vast landscape of mountains, lakes, coastlines, hiking and running trails, bike friendly roads, etc.. all provide a variety of fun-filled activity to escape from the hustle and bustle of our daily responsibilities.

My blog shares inspiring ways to truly live an active and healthy lifestyle while maximizing your time and resources effectively while in pursuit of your health and wellness goals. Inspiring Healthier Lives provides you with in depth research and knowledge based material in your journey, as well.

Please follow me on your journey of health and wellness success and let me be a source of inspiration along the way!

Thank you,

Scott R. McManus
Showing posts with label Food and Drug Administration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food and Drug Administration. Show all posts

Friday, July 1, 2011

Rev Up Your Metabolism and Keep Your Weight Down

Put your metabolism to work for you. Now’s the perfect time to incorporate some metabolism-revving tips into your daily regimen and avoid gaining weight.

Rev Up Your Body’s Engine

We eat food for fuel. When we burn it for energy to keep our bodies running, the process creates heat. Herbalife products assist the body’s engine to burn fuel efficiently, helping your metabolism run at its optimum and function well.

 

Daily Regimen Tips

  • Engage in 30 minutes of activity every day to help minimize weight gain and to raise metabolic rate.
  • Tone your muscles by weight training three days a week.
  • Start small: Try walking with one- to two-pound weights.
  • Don’t eat fewer than 1,200 calories a day. Eating too little might slow your metabolism.
  • Never skip breakfast. It might slow your metabolism.


Use Herbalife products every day, including Total Control® and Herbal Concentrate.



















Have a supply of Herbalife products on hand and reach for these when you want a snack: Protein Bars, Roasted Soy Nuts with Cardia®† Salt, Soup Mix and Drink Mix.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Sugar: The James Bond of Food



Sugar is the James Bond of food: It has code names, appears where you least expect it and leaves a trail of destruction in its wake. Oh, and we kind of have a thing for it. "It tastes good, and the more that's produced, the more we eat," says George Bray, M.D., chief of the clinical obesity and metabolism division at Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
                                                                
Since 1970, the amount of sugar in processed foods has nearly doubled, largely because sugar is cheap and readily available. Today it's pumped into pretty much everything to make food products more enticing—even ones that are already sweet, such as fruit juice. As a result, the average American gobbles up 43,800 more calories from added sugar (meaning sweeteners, like high fructose corn syrup and honey, that are added to packaged foods) per year than we did in 1977. We have consumed an average of 150 to 300 more calories per day than we used to, 50 percent of which come from beverages. And our physical activity levels remain unchanged, so those extra calories don't get burned off.


Our body isn't equipped to handle this amount sugar. People who have unhealthy sugar intake levels also consume lower levels of vital nutrients, such as zinc, iron, calcium, and vitamin A. Research has also linked increased sugar consumption to higher rates of diabetes, heart disease and metabolic syndrome. One study has suggested that too much sugar could raise blood pressure levels, as well.



 The average American consumes around 22.2 teaspoons of added sugar every day. According to the new guidelines, we should really be eating a fraction of that amount. The recommended sugar intake for adult women is 5 teaspoons (20 grams) of sugar per day, for adult men, it’s 9 teaspoons (36 grams) daily, and for children, it's 3 teaspoons (12 grams) a day.  Knowing how much sugar you should be eating is completely different from calculating what you're actually eating. Daily intakes of added sugar aren't easy to estimate as the Food and Drug Administration doesn't require that nutrition labels list the amount of naturally occurring sugars separate from the amounts of added sugars. The American Society of Nutrition's new Smart Choices Program can help you to a certain extent. Products that qualify must get fewer than 25 percent of their calories from added sugar, but some products that qualify have as many as 17 grams per serving (nearly a full day's worth for women), and the nutrition labels still don't note whether those are naturally occurring or added.



The best way to cut added sugars out of your diet is to limit processed foods as much as possible, and satisfy your sweet tooth with fruit. Indulge wisely, by curbing cravings and eliminating hidden sources. Make a practice of this, and you won't need to spend so much time staring at food labels and counting sugar grams.