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Nutrition for Women
Written by: Nash Jocic - Rated 3.93 out of 5, 14 people have rated it.


  • A few words about Nutrition

     
     

    Read this article if: 

    You don’t want a diet-type diet  

    • You want a long-term regime 
    • You want to achieve and maintain optimum weight  

    “I have gained and lost the same ten pounds so many times over and over again my cellulite must have déjà vu.” Jane Wagner

    Many women are on a permanent diet, or rather they try to be.  In reality, they’re ‘good’ for a while, and then binge on unhealthy stuff.  Here fitness expert Nash Jocic explains why women are going wrong, and what kind of regime they should be aiming for. In order to survive, every living organism needs a constant supply of nutrients.

    Humans are not exempt. Throughout our evolution we were constantly struggling to secure enough food and in the process adapting to the living environment. Our ability to adapt to different environments has resulted in our current shape and body content. Our anatomy, physiology and biochemistry are the results of adaptation through a period of some 4 million years. Our genetic engineering is the same as it was in our ancestors some 100 thousand years ago. We are literally the same people but living in a very different environment and very different lifestyles.

     

     

    They had to rely more on their physical strength in order to protect themselves; to walk long distances, to hunt, to gather and to fight. We use different technological discoveries (cars, machinery) today in order to preserve energy and disengage ourselves physically from every day life. We don’t walk as we used to, we don’t lift heavy objects as we did in the past, we don’t hunt, gather or fight so therefore we expend much less energy than our ancestors.  Conversely, thanks to our technological advances, we have food in abundance.  High availability of food is extremely tempting and the majority of us eat more than we need. Most of us eat more frequently during the day than we did in the past and more food is consumed individually on a daily basis than before. Also, new modern kinds of food (with dense carbohydrate content) have caused new types of diseases often chronic, unknown to our ancestors. 

    When more calories are consumed than burned daily, the body stores them as deposits known as body fat. Storing body fat is the ability of a healthy body, one of the most important functions for survival. Stored energy in the form of body fat is a good chance for survival in periods of famine and thanks to that ability we have managed to survive. But in this modern era famine is history in the developed world. So, the body cannot use stored energy in emergency situations. What the body does is keep storing more and more body fat without an opportunity to use it and starts running into difficulties because of this. In other words, we don’t have to store much body fat because we will never be forced to use it.  Most people in the developed world are overeating with huge amount of calories daily that results in different health problems caused by excessive body fat accumulation.

    One of the most obvious reasons for over consumption of calories is the composition and biological value of food that most people eat. Eaten in its natural form and properly selected, food will be very difficult to overeat. In unprocessed forms, foods like vegetables and fruit are extremely satisfying, delaying hunger pangs and easily eliminating different types of cravings. A high percentage of fibre and water in these foods gives big volume but low calorific intake.

    In combination with the right sources of protein and oils, vegetables and fruit in their natural form offer a perfect diet, full of essential proteins, oils, good carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals and enzymes. It offers all necessary macro and micronutrients, including fibre and water in the most perfect combination. Nutrients offered through this diet will be the one that the body needs for optimal functioning without the extra calories stored as spear energy in form of body fat.

    Let’s now identify the most common problems in our modern diet.  These are:
    Over consumption of carbohydrates in form of sugars and grains
    • Under eating of quality proteins
    • Dominance of processed food over fresh food

    Regarding carbohydrates, we have to first understand how the human body is responding to them. Food that has been available to humans for millions of years determined and shaped our digestive and hormonal systems. We have evolved and developed around the food that has been available and we still respond to that food perfectly. Eating the same types and amounts of food that has been eaten throughout our evolution, enables us to perform perfectly without getting fat and developing many of the chronic diseases that are devastating our race in recent times. Once we stopped eating like that and introduced more carbohydrates and processed foods to our daily diets, everything changes. Our hormonal response changes and the body becomes a fat storing machine extremely vulnerable to chronic disease.


    Fruits, vegetables and roots contain only 3 to 12% carbohydrates. Now compare that to cereals, rice, bread and other carbohydrate dense foods that are 60 to 75%! The whole picture changes instantly. Eating these high carbohydrate foods trigger totally different hormonal reactions, forcing the body to produce high amounts of the hormone insulin. The major role of insulin is to lower the high blood sugar content, transport glucose to muscle cells and glycogen stores and stores the extra glucose in the fat deposits. Not just that, but the person who overeats carbohydrates will get fat and the constant over production of insulin will cause the chain of unwanted health problems, starting with insulin resistance, diabetes, cardiovascular problems, hormonal imbalance etc.

    Under eating of high quality protein is the second most common problem in our modern diet. Dominance of high carbohydrates and fat simply creates no room for quality proteins. Absence of quality proteins triggers cravings and creates essential amino acid deficiencies that manifest themselves in damaged hair, brittle nails, skin problems, lower immunity, loss of muscle tissue, loss of strength, hormonal problems, low energy etc.  Proteins are essential macronutrients and have to be eaten daily – a few times per day. Individuals who eat enough protein everyday feel satisfied with food, have no craving for sugar and experience no sudden hunger. In combination with fresh vegetables and fruit, proteins get digested and absorbed fully allowing the body to maintain and rebuild every tissue and organ effectively. Choose your proteins from animal sources rather than plants because they are more complete, made of all essential amino acids and therefore more easily assimilated.

    Processed foods are unfortunately dominant foods in modern diets. Everything that is cooked, dried, frozen, enriched with different chemicals in order to prolong shelf life can be labelled as processed food. Once processed, food is simply denatured, stripped of everything that is supposed to enter the body in order to help digestion and assimilation. Very important food components like enzymes, vitamins and minerals will be neutralized by exposure to very high (cooking) or very low temperature (freezing). Dehydration (drying) also eliminates enzymes. This is what I call dead food. Dead food cannot offer much benefit to our health. In contrary, processed foods are difficult to digest; they put stress on the body especially the liver, kidneys, pancreas and the rest of the digestive system, lowering immunity and making the body prone to many illnesses. Food preservatives and other chemicals that are pumped into processed foods are simply toxins for the body - weakening rather than enforcing our lives.   Instead, fresh foods should be eaten, and ones that have to be cooked (meat, fish, some vegetables and roots etc) shouldn’t be overcooked. Only fresh foods bring with them essential enzymes, vitamins and minerals that make them the most powerful natural medicine without side effects.

    Nash Jocic’s Healthy Diet Tips


    Eating healthily doesn’t mean starving and over dieting. Over dieting is actually counterproductive. These are the main problems caused by over dieting:
    • A/ Decrease in production of the thyroid hormone is the last thing that you want to happen while trying to lose body fat. Thyroid hormone helps regulate how many calories your body burns each day and in the case of over dieting, thyroid hormone levels will fall forcing the body to burn less calories. Even eating less, you may not burn fat as effectively as when you were eating more calories.
    • B/ Over dieting for too long may ultimately have a negative effect on your immune system. A body with a weak immune system finds it harder to destroy free radicals. Increased levels of free radicals can lead to insulin resistance, a condition that elevates insulin levels and a contributor to the storage of body fat.
    • C/ Leptin is an important hormone that helps your body regulate its weight. Over dieting can cause a decline in leptin levels, which creates two dieting obstacles.

    First you may experience an increased intensity in food cravings (leading you to eat more than you want). Second, decreased leptin can also slow down your metabolic rate, making it more challenging to shed body fat.

    • Choose your carbohydrates. The best sources of carbohydrates for women are definitely vegetables and fruit. The percentage of carbohydrates in those foods is relatively low while the same food is rich with fibres and water, making the assimilation of carbohydrates slow and steady. If your metabolism is very fast and you feel that you can afford some complex carbohydrates, stick to the slower-burning carbohydrates such as oats, rye bread and yams.
    • Pick up your protein. Protein should be part of every meal that you have throughout the day. Chose lean sources of protein like fish, chicken and turkey breasts, egg whites, low fat cottage cheese, and very lean red meat.
    • Have enough omega-3 fatty acids in your diet. Oily cold water fish such as salmon and sardines are a rich source of two most important omega-3 compounds, eicosapentaenoic acid (E PA ) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). A third omega-3, alpha-linolenic acid ( ALA ) is found primarily in dark-green leafy vegetables and flaxseed oil. Your daily intake of these essential fatty acids that protect you from coronary disease and insulin resistance are 3-6 grams of fish oil, or 10-20 grams of flaxseed oil.

    For more information on healthy eating and optimum nutrition please visit www.ultimateshape.com.       

    Do you follow a diet, or are you sick of them, and just eat what you fancy?  Tell us in the Forum.




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