Tuesday, 31 March 2020

This home workout experiment could transform the way you exercise.

We have a workout experiment for you.

It’s simple. It’s effective. And it’s tailor-made for people who work from home.

If that’s your situation right now, there may be no better time to try it.

Give it a shot, and it might help you:

  • Move more frequently throughout your day for better overall health
  • Make working out seem “easier” while improving your fitness
  • Do lots of exercise—without needing an hour of uninterrupted time
  • Take short work breaks that invigorate your mind
  • Have fun trying out a new approach to exercise

+++

Let’s start with the background.

Most well-rounded workouts last about an hour and total around 100 to 200 reps at most.

Okay, that might not be what most people do on their own. But as the exercise program director here at Precision Nutrition, it’s how I design workouts for our clients.

In one of these workouts, you’ll do about 25-50 total reps of primary exercises—movement like squats, deadlifts, pullups, and presses.

You may do 10 sets of three, five sets of 10, or the ole reliable “5×5” template (or any variation in that range). A very high-volume workout might feature 10 sets of 10 repetitions.

After this, you might do some accessory work: core exercises, lunges, or some isolation work for your arms or hamstrings.

These are typically lighter movements done to provide more total work.

Overall, you’re looking at a total training volume of about a hundred reps or so for any single workout. All wrapped up in about an hour.

But what happens after this hour of hard work? 

Chances are, you go sit in your chairs for the rest of your day.

Chairs? As in plural?

Well, yes.

There’s probably the chair where you do your work and the chair where you eat your meals. And the chair where you relax in front of your TV. (Or don’t relax, if you’re watching the news.)

And before quarantine, you probably had even more chairs, like the one you commuted to work in.

We can cram a lot of movement into an hour of exercise.

But that one hour is still a brief intermission in a day that’s otherwise defined by stillness. 

Modern workers can spend as much as 15 hours per day in a chair.1 This takes a toll on our bodies and our minds.

Some research has shown that even an hour of intense exercise isn’t enough to counteract all the effects of a sedentary lifestyle.2

What would happen if we reversed this?

What if we spent most of the day physically moving, with only an hour or two of stillness in the middle?

What if we moved continuously and did thousands of reps of movement over the entire day? 

This may sound ludicrous, but think of people who do manual labor for a living.

Construction workers, furniture movers, military personnel and agricultural workers regularly see long days of almost continuous movement. Professional and Olympic athletes may spend much of their day training.

Our bodies can handle an incredible volume of work. 

I know first hand.

Several years ago, I found myself testing out an absurd version of this idea.

When we created the Precision Nutrition exercise library of over 400 exercises, we spent 2.5 weeks professionally filming every movement and pose.

Each exercise was filmed from multiple angles, with both demonstrations of good repetitions and flawed repetitions from each angle.

For every shot, we’d do a few practice reps first, and we’d usually need multiple takes. We averaged about 35 exercises a day.

This worked out to around 1,000 repetitions per day on the low side and as much as twice that on longer days.

We used real weights for all the dumbbell-based exercises. So most of my reps were done with 50-pound dumbbells.

(Despite this, the worst single day was when we did bodyweight-only movements and filmed all the ab stuff.)

To review, that’s 1,000+ repetitions per day of different exercises, spread over about 10 hours per day, 5 days per week, for 2.5 weeks.

Fortunately, I was able to eat well (a PN specialty, you might say) and get quality sleep during this time. If those two pieces weren’t in place, things would have gone much differently.

So, what happened? 

Here’s me at the start of the shoot, in all my double-chinned glory:

And here I am on one of the last days of the shoot:

My body went through quite a transformation in a short amount of time. I gained muscle and got leaner, and even after a few rest days, my work capacity was through the roof.

The obvious conclusion: If you’re serious about getting in shape, you should quit your job and spend 10 hours per day working out.

I’m kidding, of course.

But…

What can we learn from this, and what can you take from it that can be used today, in a realistic way?

Let’s run through some of the factors at play here:

  • I reversed the standard formula. Instead of an hour of exercise squeezed into an otherwise full day of inactivity, I spent most of my day doing physical work punctuated by occasional stillness.
  • My activity was intermittent. We filmed male and female versions of each exercise, so each of us rested while the other was on camera.
  • I wasn’t “working out.” I didn’t do a single pushup or carry a dumbbell around because I wanted to induce physiological stress. It was the opposite. I did that stuff to finish the day’s filming. Plus, I had the mental perspective of trying to make every repetition cost me as little as possible.
  • The movement was open-ended. There was never a fixed number of repetitions. I was never doing a set of 5 or 10 reps because that was in my plan or because it was all I could do. I just did reps until the videographer told me to stop. In other words, I went on as long as I had to.
  • I was using submaximal loads. Yes, I did a ton of reps. But most were with a weight that was generally less than half of what my max effort would be (for the dumbbell-based movements).

Let’s take a closer look at these.

Why reversing the formula works

Physical activity produces a lot of changes in the body, even after a relatively short time.

Muscles contract, circulation increases, nutrients are shuttled into cells, and energy expenditure climbs. The body’s management of insulin improves, and we also see changes in hormonal function and energy metabolism.3-5

The benefits don’t stop at your muscles.

Our brains also change in response to movement. Physical activity, ranging from traditional gym exercise to simple walking, can improve mood and cognitive function, and helps reduce the effects of aging on the brain.6-10

In one study—which we discussed in this article about the benefits of reverse dieting—a group of people were fed an extra 1,000 calories above their baseline for eight weeks.11

Based on simple calorie math, they should have each gained 16 pounds by the end of the study. Instead, some gained as much as 9.5 pounds, while others added less than a pound.

The main difference? The people who gained the least weight compensated for the extra calories by moving more throughout the day.

This doesn’t mean they went to the gym for longer. 

Instead, it was “non-exercise physical activity” that made the difference.

The people who gained the least weight did the most fidgeting and walking spread throughout the course of their day.

Remember, our bodies are in a state of constant flux. We’re always adapting to whatever we’re doing in a given moment.

So if we’re sitting still for hours on end, we’re getting better at… sitting still for hours on end.

But if we’re moving around a lot—and then recovering from that movement—we’re getting better at that instead.

The real beauty of open-ended workouts

It might be tempting to think the body is sort of like a car: When we “run out of gas,” we stop moving. But our perceptions of effort and fatigue—and our ability to do physical work—are actually far more complex.12,13

Fatigue is essentially a complex emotion derived from an ever-changing milieu of past experience and current data.

During activity, our brains take into account things like:

  • our hydration status
  • the ambient temperature and humidity
  • our blood glucose levels
  • body temperature

Then it compares these factors against our prior experiences under similar circumstances.

It uses this information to regulate how much effort we can produce and how tired we feel.

For example, runners on a hot humid day will begin their race at a slower pace than they would on a cool, dry day—even though they haven’t yet accumulated mechanical fatigue.

Our minds are constantly referring to what we did in the past to decide what we can do today.

Most exercise is done using fixed, known quantities, and there’s generally an element of “chasing” pain or fatigue involved. (Read: You’re trying to exhaust your muscles.)

When we plan to do five sets of five squats, it creates an association in our minds: “This is a reasonable estimate of the most squats we can do.”

In the case of five sets of five squats, completing 25 total reps is known, safe territory. More than that is unknown and therefore potentially threatening.

But when physical activity is shifted away from fixed quantities—and into open-ended performance (that is, it goes on for as long as it has to)—these associations change.

Your brain no longer sees your effort level as “this is the most I can do for X time or Y reps.” It sees your effort level as being set at “sustainable for as long as necessary.”

This altered association changes your stress response. Not just in the moment, but also in the future—when your brain reflects on past experience to decide how hard an activity should feel.

As an example, imagine how you’d feel if someone told you to do alternating step-ups on a box in the gym for as long as you could.

Now compare that to someone asking you how long you’d be willing to hike up a steep mountainside in a beautiful forest.

You may spend hours happily doing a similar movement on the hike, but if you were counting numbers in the gym, you’d quickly be miserable (or at least bored out of your mind).

And you’d likely feel far more exhausted in the gym.

How to stress to your advantage (finally)

The stress response that you’re producing when you exercise—and that you’re teaching your brain to associate with exercise in the future—is an important piece of the training process.

We can think of that stress response as being either distress or eustress.

Distress, as you’re no doubt aware, is thought of as negative stress. It can feel overwhelming. This can break you down.

Eustress is considered positive—it’s usually short lasting and in a “dose” that feels manageable. This can build your resilience.

The division between distress and eustress is driven largely by our perception of two variables: predictability and control.14-17

Predictability is essentially our brain’s answer to the question, “Do I know what’s happening, and do I have the resources to cope with it?”

Control is our perception of how much influence we can exert over a situation.

In a distress state, our sense of predictability and control is low, and the situation is seen as threatening.

Our brain is sufficiently uncertain of our ability to handle it. As a result, it ramps up a strong epinephrine (a.k.a. adrenaline) and cortisol-heavy response.

In a eustress state, we have a strong sense of predictability and control.

Our brain reads the scenario as challenging rather than threatening.

Our physiological response is also different. Rather than epinephrine, we produce predominantly more norepinephrine, and less cortisol.

The response is more accurately matched to the “mere physiological demand” of the situation, rather than the “better safe than sorry” adrenaline response we feel in a threatening situation.

And, once the event has passed, we return more quickly back to baseline.

For an example of a eustress-based response, think of someone who spends their day tossing hay bales on a farm or carrying bricks on a construction site.

Their body will do what it needs to get the work done and no more. There’s no anxiety, no maxed out heart rate—just efficiency. And a huge work capacity.

The vastly underrated benefit of intermittent activity

Pavel Tsatsouline, founder and chairman of StrongFirst, made some aspects of this training approach famous when he coined the term greasing the groove.

Greasing the groove is as much about motor learning and skill acquisition as it is about stress responses and physiological adaptations. It’s a way to strengthen a motor pattern by practicing it more frequently.

Pavel has people practice a strength skill such as a kettlebell swing or a pushup in regular intervals spaced throughout the day.

An important piece of this is that you’re not trying to beat yourself up. You’re deliberately staying relaxed and not training to failure.

You simply mix in sets of technically crisp, high-quality reps throughout your day.

It’s a fantastic way to improve your skill in strength movements.

We used a similar technique in the special operations community. (I spent six years in Naval Special Operations as a Special Warfare Combat Crewman.)

In training, when pushups made up a significant portion of our day, we’d often do pushups on our off days using a timer.

Anywhere from every 10 minutes to every hour, we’d knock out a few easy sets of pushups. We’d slowly build up how many we could do in a set while still making it feel relaxed and easy.

Over time, our capacity for pushups became remarkably high. 

Once we made it through training, this remained a regular feature, but often in the form of a pullup bar.

Most any team house that a unit lives in would have a pullup bar in front of it somewhere, and we’d all make a habit of doing at least a set of pullups every time we walked past.

How to build your own intermittent workout

We call this idea of doing a set or three of an exercise every time you walk past a certain object or are reminded by a timer a trigger workout. (It’s way easier to say than “intermittent.”)

PN coaches have been doing this internally with certain clients for years.

It’s a great way to improve fitness and motor skills. And, as discussed above, it may even be more beneficial for certain aspects of health than a one-hour workout done once per day (if you’re otherwise sedentary).

It’s also a sneaky way to get in a lot of exercise on days when you otherwise wouldn’t have time for a full workout.

Here’s what you do.

Step 1: Establish your trigger.

This can be anything from a timer to an object in your house.

Lately, I’ve been putting a kettlebell on my floor near the stairs. I run into it whenever I’m either going to the kitchen or the bathroom.

Every time I walk by it I do a few sets of swings, snatches, or ab movements.

In the past I’ve had gymnast rings in my garage and would do a few sets of pullups every hour when a timer went off.

Whatever you choose, make it somewhat frequent.

Ideally, you’ll be moving around about once per hour. 

If you’re working from home (like millions of others right now), this gives you enough time to do focused work, while still keeping your body from fusing with your chair.

It also gives you a brief, regular break from the mental demands of work.

Step 2: Pick an exercise.

Generally, choose a movement that works a lot of big muscle groups (sorry bros, not a good place for curls) and that can be done safely without a warmup. Read: It’s not the best time to test your personal best deadlift.

Consider exercises like:

  • Kettlebell swings or snatches (only if you’ve been well-trained in the technique)
  • Goblet squats
  • Bodyweight squats
  • Lunge variations
  • Pushups
  • Dumbbell rows
  • Ring rows
  • Pullups
  • Overhead presses (if your shoulders do well with them)
  • Band movements like pull-aparts or no-moneys
  • Ab movements like roll-outs or planks

You can also mix in some favorite stretches or mobility drills.

Come up with a handful of movements, and try to get about an equal mix of upper and lower body movements.

For the sake of your shoulders, it’s often helpful to do about twice as many reps of pulling movements—such as rows and pull-aparts—as you do pushing movements like pushups and presses.

Step 3: Decide how many reps and sets to do.

The specific number here isn’t critical.

You’re just trying to make physical work feel easy. Stay at a level where you don’t feel a significant “burn,” and you’re nowhere near failure.

As a general rule, it’s better to do multiple sets of lower reps than one long set of a bunch of reps. For most exercises, try starting with 5 reps at a time.

An example day:

8 am: 5 pushups, 5 dead bugs (per side), repeated for 4 total rounds

9 am: 5 goblet squats, 10 kettlebell swings, 5 lunges (per side)

10:30 am: 10 band pull-aparts, 5 pushups, repeated for 3 total rounds

11:30 am: 5 goblet squats, 5 dumbbell rows (per side), repeated for 4 total rounds

1:00 pm: 5 ab wheel roll-outs, 5 banded no-moneys, 5 pull-aparts, repeated for 3 total rounds

2:30 pm: 10-second side plank (per side), 5 dumbbell lunges (per side), repeated for 2 total rounds

3:30 pm: 5 dumbbell rows (per side), 5 single-leg dumbbell deadlifts (per side), repeated for 3 total rounds

5:00 pm: 5 dumbbell overhead presses (per side), 10 band pull-aparts, repeated for 2 total rounds

Total repetitions: 359

Of course, you can also just pick one or two exercises, or a single circuit, and repeat that over the course of the day.

You don’t have to give up other types of exercise altogether.

In fact, don’t.

Where possible, use trigger workouts with some conventional training, and go play outside.

This training method works best when it’s done in combination with the type of maximal strength training and periodic high-intensity work that’s done in a gym (even if that’s your home gym). At least over the long term.

It’s also best when balanced with dynamic, open-ended, and enjoyable activities outdoors. The kind that put you in situations that require more movement variability.

So once in a while (or as often as you can), go for a real hike.

We hear that’s pretty good for you, too. 

References

Click here to view the information sources referenced in this article.

The post This home workout experiment could transform the way you exercise. appeared first on Precision Nutrition.



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5 ways to live (and thrive) while social distancing

The novel coronavirus has dramatically changed how we spend time and share physical and virtual space with each other. On Friday, March 27, conflict mediator and author Priya Parker joined head of TED Chris Anderson and current affairs curator Whitney Pennington Rodgers on TED Connects to discuss what we all can do to stay connected and sustain relationships while apart during the pandemic. Here’s some advice to help you get through this uncertain time:

Bring intention to planning a virtual gathering

As platforms like Zoom, Slack and email become more integrated into our lives, it’s clear that technology will play an important tool in helping us keep in touch. Whether you’re organizing a Zoom dinner party or Facetiming a friend, Parker invites us to consider how we can elevate the conversation beyond just check-ins. In planning a virtual gathering, ask:

  • Who’s joining and why?
  • What are your community’s needs?
  • What’s the reason you’re coming together?

As the pandemic evolves, these needs will likely shift. Stay attuned to the kinds of connections your communities are seeking.

Include fun themes to elevate your digital get-togethers

Parker suggests centering your gatherings around themes or activities to encourage more meaningful and purposeful conversations. Incorporate elements of the physical world to create a shared experience, like asking everyone to wear a funny costume or making the same recipe together. Though screens don’t quite replace the energy of in-person gatherings, we can still strengthen community bonds by reminding ourselves that there are real people on the other end of our devices.

Set healthy boundaries to maintain wellbeing

As we’re figuring out the best way to exist in the digital world, it’s also crucial we put in the effort to meaningfully connect with those we’re quarantining with. The distinctions between time to work, socialize and rest can grow blurrier by the day, so be sure to set boundaries and ground rules with those you live with. In having this conversation with your roommates, family or partner, reflect on these prompts:

  • How do you want to distinguish time spent together versus apart?
  • How do you want to share time together?
  • Since we look at screens most of the day, could it be helpful to set no-screen times or brainstorm new, non-digital ways to hang out?

Allow yourself to reflect on the unknown

It’s important to acknowledge that this is not a normal time, Parker says. The coronavirus pandemic has transformed the world, and as a global society we’ll experience the reverberations of this period as they ripple across every sector of human life. Make sure to create space for those conversations, too.

Take time to wander through the unknown, to talk about how we are being changed — individually and collectively — by this shared experience. It’s perfectly normal to feel worried, vulnerable, even existential, and this may be a great time to lean into those feelings and think about what really matters to you.

Recognize the power and feeling community brings — no matter the size

While the coronavirus pandemic has physically isolated many of us from each other, our ingenuity and resilience ensures that we can still build and forge community together. Across the world, people are gathering in new and amazing ways to set up “care-mongering” support groups, sing with their neighbors, take ceramics classes, knit together and break bread.

Now is the time to discover (or rediscover) the value and power of community. We are all members of many different communities: our neighborhoods, families, countries, faith circles and so on. Though we’re living in unprecedented times of social isolation, we can forge stronger bonds by gathering in ways that reflect our best values and principles. In the United Kingdom, a recent campaign asked people across the country to go outside at a synchronized time and collectively applaud health workers on the frontlines of the crisis; a similar effort was made across India to ring bells in honor of the ill and those caring for them. During this crisis and beyond, we can use thoughtful ritual-making to transform our unease and isolation into community bonding.

“Gathering is contagious,” Parker says. “These small, simple ideas allow people to feel like we can shape some amount — even a small amount — of our collective reality together.”

Looking for more tips, advice and wisdom? Watch the full conversation with Priya below (and join us for TED Connects, weekdays at 12pm ET):



from TED Blog https://blog.ted.com/5-ways-to-live-and-thrive-while-social-distancing/
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Fresh Roasted Asparagus With Parmesan and Sea Salt

Asparagus is one of my favorite vegetables. My husband, on the other hand, grew up hating asparagus because he’d only ever had it from a can. (Think about the difference between a fresh green bean and a canned one!) When we got married and I made this roasted asparagus for him, he realized what he had …

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Peanut Butter Energy Balls

bowl of peanut butter energy ballsThese peanut butter energy balls are everything you’ve ever wanted in a snack. They’re made with real ingredients in less than 10 minutes! So, whip out your food processor and make the best healthy peanut butter balls on the planet. The Best Snack on the Planet So these balls. These ...

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Black Beans and Rice

Vegan rice and beans are a classic combo that's easy to make, healthy, filling and versatile. Enjoy them on their own, topped with avocado and salsa or added to tacos, burritos and salads. This recipe is gluten-free and oil-free. The post Black Beans and Rice appeared first on Running on Real Food.

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Monday, 30 March 2020

Turkey Taco Quinoa Skillet + Weekly Menu

I spent Sunday working in the emergency department doing COVID-19 patient screenings. The time went fast and the extrovert in me is L.O.V.I.N.G meeting all these new people that I wouldn’t cross paths with otherwise. My new girl, Bessie in Patient Accounts – we bonded this weekend. And you guys…in my next life, I want to work in the ED. The stories…you just can’t make this stuff up. Also, thank goodness for plentiful and readily available security officers in the ED…

What I can tell you is that Mark called during my shift. He never calls, so I knew I needed to pick-up. Piper had stuck a bead up her nose and he couldn’t see it after he’d shined a flashlight up there. Shea confirmed that the bead went up and had not come back out and Mark was calling asking me what to do.

With all that’s going on in the world, I first said, “DO NOT bring her here unless she’s having difficulty breathing.” I then said, “It’s all connected – she’ll either blow it out or cough it up.” Well, the former happened just a moment after we hung up. I got the photo confirmation as proof. Crisis and COVID exposure averted.

I’ve got to tell you, though…the grocery store has GOT to be a more “dangerous” place than the ED, it seems. I’ve been to both during this pandemic and for me, personally, at this stage of the emergency anyway, the grocery store scares me more than screening patients for COVID. I hate to share the few grocery delivery slots that are available…but please, stay home.

The soonest grocery delivery is tomorrow and so tonight I’m making the one recipe I don’t need an ingredient for. Poor planning on my part, but it works. We certainly won’t go hungry in this house. I took inventory of our freezers today and I’m going to get to work on clearing them out, just a bit at a time.

Just today, Mark was giving me a hard time about all the “random frozen vegetables” we have on hand. I mean, hellooooo, I am a dietitian. Vegetables are LYFE. Beside that obvious fact, having things on hand, like frozen corn, makes recipes like this full of staple ingredients – canned/frozen goods and just a bit fresh. This meal is ready fast, big on flavor, and uses lots that you likely stock in your pantry, on your shelves, and in your fridge. I served this as-is with avocado slices and it was devoured!

Turkey Taco Quinoa Skillet
Author: 
Prep time: 
Cook time: 
Total time: 
Serves: 5 servings (~1½ cups each)
 
Ingredients
  • 2 tsp olive oil
  • 1 onion, diced
  • 1 lb ground turkey breast
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 (4 oz) can diced green chiles
  • 1 Tbsp chili powder
  • 2 tsp cumin
  • ½ tsp salt
  • black pepper, to taste
  • 1 (15 oz) can black beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 (14.5 oz) can diced fire roasted tomatoes
  • 1 cup frozen corn
  • ½ cup mild jarred salsa
  • ½ cup rinsed quinoa
  • ½ cup water
  • ½ cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese
  • ½ cup shredded cheddar cheese
  • ½ cup chopped cilantro, for garnish
Instructions
  1. Heat oil in a large, deep skillet over medium heat. Once hot, add the onion and cook for 2-3 minutes or until softened. Add in the ground turkey and cook until the meat is almost cooked through, breaking it into crumbles with a spoon as it cooks, about 5-6 minutes. Add garlic and stir, allow to cook for 30-60 seconds or until fragrant.
  2. Stir in the diced green chiles and all the spices (chili powder through salt), cooking for another minute. Add in the black beans, fire roasted tomatoes, corn, salsa, and quinoa, stirring until everything is combined.
  3. When the mixture starts to bubble add in the water, cover the skillet with a lid and lower the heat to medium-low. Simmer for about 25-28 minutes or until the quinoa is cooked.
  4. Sprinkle the shredded cheese on top and cover with the lid cooking until the cheese is melted. Garnish with cilantro and serve.
Notes
Recipe from Spoonful of Flavor
Nutrition Information
Serving size: 1½ cups Calories: 425 Fat: 11.2 Carbohydrates: 45.4 Sugar: 11.0 Sodium: 949 Fiber: 10.2 Protein: 36.8 Cholesterol: 76

Weekly Menu: March 29th – April 4th

Be well,



from Prevention RD https://preventionrd.com/2020/03/turkey-taco-quinoa-skillet-weekly-menu-2/
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Vegan Lentil Recipes

This collection of vegan lentil recipes covers all the best ways to use different types of lentils in your kitchen. From tacos to soups and curries and even desserts, you will love these healthy, pantry and budget-friendly lentil recipes. Types of Lentils The most common types of lentils used in the recipes below are red […] The post Vegan Lentil Recipes appeared first on Running on Real Food.

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Bodyweight Conditioning Workout

Work the entire body and challenge your cardiovascular fitness with this fun and sweaty, no-equipment bodyweight conditioning workout. Perfect for at home or an outdoor workout. The post Bodyweight Conditioning Workout appeared first on Running on Real Food.

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326: The Catastrophic Consequences of Sitting Too Much and What to Do About It With Dr. Turner Osler

The average American spends 8 hours a day sitting… just let that sink in… If there’s anything we spend that much time doing, we should be sure we know what it’s doing to our bodies! Dr. Turner Osler, a retired academic trauma surgeon turned research epidemiologist, who has published over 300 peer-reviewed medical papers, is …

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Triple Berry Breakfast Bread

This triple berry breakfast bread is a moist, perfect for a quick morning breakfast, and it is so easy to make! Make a pan of this breakfast bread and top it with your favorite nut butter or Greek yogurt! Breakfast for the Week To eat breakfast or not to eat ...

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Sunday, 29 March 2020

Healthy Kung Pao Chicken

kung paoWe are the queens of stir fry and you are going to love our Healthy Kung Pao Chicken recipe! It’s made with just 10 simple ingredients and in less than 30-minutes! 30-Minute Meal If you are looking for the perfect weeknight meal, you have to try this kung pao chicken ...

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Sriracha Chicken Salad

This sriracha chicken salad is a delectable combination of fresh greens, spicy chicken, and a tangy Greek green goddess dressing! If you’re looking to add a flavorful and healthy salad recipe to the menu, here it is! Get those veggie in this week and make this sriracha chicken salad! We ...

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Saturday, 28 March 2020

Vegan Whole Wheat Banana Nut Pancakes

So, you’ve been doing some pandemic cooking and baking? That’s okay!

I was doing a live Peloton ride the other day with one of my favorite instructors (who just so happens to be a type 1 diabetic on an insulin pump), Robin Arzon, and she was talking about extending grace to yourself. We aren’t doing what we’d normally do because we aren’t living a life we’ve ever lived. Her words were much more inspiring but it certainly resonated with me.

I went to make a banana cake yesterday only to discover I was out of powdered sugar. Okay then. I decided I’d try for an almond cake…only to discover I didn’t have enough almond flour. I then proceeded with a lemon tart, and half way through prepping, determined I was going to be short on lemon juice.

Now, more than ever, CHECK YOUR STOCKPILES before placing your grocery delivery order! I’ve learned the hard way x3 recipes.

While baking didn’t go so well for me without an emergency delivery of food, these Whole Wheat Banana Nut Pancakes are not only vegan but short on ingredients and big on flavor – and texture. I added in the walnuts and I gotta say…that addition really made these unique.

Not knowing a few weeks back that we were heading into a pandemic, I had doubled the recipe and froze the leftovers. Lucky for me, I’ve enjoyed them a few mornings since. I highly recommend serving with fresh banana slices and pure maple syrup. Delicious!


Vegan Whole Wheat Banana Nut Pancakes
Author: 
Prep time: 
Cook time: 
Total time: 
Serves: 10 pancakes
 
Ingredients
  • 2½ cups whole wheat pastry flour or white wheat flour
  • 2 Tbsp sugar
  • 2 tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 large over-ripe banana, mashed
  • 2 cups unsweetened vanilla almond milk
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • ½ cup chopped walnuts
Instructions
  1. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, baking soda, and salt.
  2. In a separate medium bowl, mash the banana against the side of the bowl using the backside of a fork until smooth-ish. Whisk in the almond milk and vanilla until well-incorporated.
  3. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and mix until just combined. Fold in the chopped walnuts.
  4. Preheat a nonstick skillet or griddle to 375 degrees F (medium heat). Scoop batter onto hot skillet or griddle and cook for 2-3 minutes or until golden on the underside and bubbles appear. Flip and cook and additional 2-3 minutes. Repeat with remaining batter and serve hot.
Notes
Recipe adapted from Thug Kitchen
Nutrition Information
Serving size: 1 pancake Calories: 172 Fat: 4.6 Carbohydrates: 28.1 Sugar: 4.0 Sodium: 394 Fiber: 3.8 Protein: 1.1 Cholesterol: 0

Be well,



from Prevention RD https://preventionrd.com/2020/03/vegan-whole-wheat-banana-nut-pancakes/
via Heart Based Marketing

Healthy Chocolate Peanut Butter Muffins

chocolate pb muffinsIncredibly moist healthy chocolate peanut butter muffins are made with whole wheat flour, naturally sweetened with coconut sugar and maple syrup, and flavored with all-natural peanut butter! We are muffin ladies at Fit Foodie Finds and used our healthy muffin base recipe to bring you this lovely chocolate peanut butter ...

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from Fit Foodie Finds https://fitfoodiefinds.com/healthy-chocolate-peanut-butter-muffins/
via Holistic Clients

Friday, 27 March 2020

ADAPTing: Creating Health and Joy in the Face of Uncertainty and Challenge

The ability to cultivate joy and be resilient are important life skills at any time, but they are vitally important during times of crisis. I held a live webinar on March 24, 2020, to focus on tools and resources we all can use to build these skills and manage stress in difficult times. Join me as we focus on mindfulness, exercise, pleasure, connection, and being of service to others.

The post ADAPTing: Creating Health and Joy in the Face of Uncertainty and Challenge appeared first on Chris Kresser.



from Chris Kresser https://chriskresser.com/adapting-creating-health-and-joy-in-the-face-of-uncertainty-and-challenge/
via Holistic Clients

How to Keep Kids Active With Adventure Points

Imagine a world where kids happily keep themselves busy and learning while doing activities that they love and learning math at the same time. A place where kids compete in a friendly way by doing athletic activities, creative games, and reading books. Sounds too good to be true, right? I’ve always heard that necessity is the …

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from Wellness Mama® https://wellnessmama.com/120815/adventure-points/
via SEO Derby

COVID-19 Prep: How to Stock up Your Paleo-Friendly Pantry and Freezer

How can you maintain a healthy Paleo diet without easy access to fresh foods? In this article, I discuss your options for COVID-19 prep and the best shelf-stable and frozen foods out there.

The post COVID-19 Prep: How to Stock up Your Paleo-Friendly Pantry and Freezer appeared first on Chris Kresser.



from Chris Kresser https://chriskresser.com/covid-19-prep-how-to-stock-up-your-paleo-friendly-pantry-and-freezer/
via Holistic Clients

Instant Pot Pork Tenderloin

This flavorful and tender Instant Pot Pork Tenderloin is ready in under an hour! It is the perfect easy dinner recipe that the whole family will enjoy. There is nothing better than comfort food home-cookin’! This pork tenderloin is not the dry and stringy pork tenderloin that you grew up ...

The post Instant Pot Pork Tenderloin appeared first on Fit Foodie Finds.



from Fit Foodie Finds https://fitfoodiefinds.com/instant-pot-pork-tenderloin/
via Holistic Clients

Thursday, 26 March 2020

45-Minute No-Equipment HIIT Workout

This no-equipment HIIT workout involves 45 minutes of high-intensity circuit training broken into 3 15-minute segments, one focusing on abs, one on lower-body and one on cardio. You will need less than 1 hour to complete this workout. Warm-Up Run through this quick warm-up before starting the HIIT workout. Complete 2 rounds: 10 bodyweight squats […] The post 45-Minute No-Equipment HIIT Workout appeared first on Running on Real Food.

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from Running on Real Food https://runningonrealfood.com/45-minute-no-equipment-hiit-workout/
via Enlightened Marketing

How TED-Ed is helping families, students and teachers navigate the COVID-19 pandemic

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic’s unprecedented impact on education systems worldwide, TED’s award-winning youth and education initiative TED-Ed is focused on providing free, high-quality educational resources to millions of families around the globe. TED-Ed’s existing library of free, video-based lessons has been built by a network of 500,000 educators, spans all ages and subjects and features interactive lesson plans that complement thousands of TED-Ed Animations, TED Talks and other carefully curated educational videos.

By providing a variety of educational resources and engaging learning experiences, our hope is to help students, teachers and families replace feelings of anxiety, isolation, chaos and exhaustion with healthier and more sustainable feelings like curiosity, connectivity, predictability and rejuvenation. Here’s how you can follow along:

Announcing TED-Ed@Home

Launched last week, TED-Ed@Home is a daily newsletter that’s leveraging the collective expertise of thousands of TED speakers, TED-Ed educators and animators, and TED Translators to provide high-quality, online learning experiences for students, teachers and families everywhere — for free.

To get free daily lesson plans delivered to your inbox — organized by age group and spanning all subjects — sign up for the TED-Ed@Home newsletter. The newsletter features interactive, curiosity-invoking, video-based lessons around subjects commonly taught in school. The lessons are tagged to the appropriate grade levels, and subjects cover the arts, literature, language, math, science, technology and more. Most featured videos will offer translated subtitles in dozens of languages, and each lesson will include interactive questions, discussion prompts and materials to dig deeper. Teachers and parents can use the lessons as-is or easily customize them to meet their learners’ needs.

… and the TED-Ed Daily Challenge!

School closings don’t just keep students away from the classroom; they also keep students away from each other. While it’s critical that young people stay at home right now, it’s equally vital for students to see and hear from other young people — and for them to experience play in safe and meaningful ways.

On Instagram, we’re creating a fun way for students and their families to use their brains and common household items to creatively respond to educational challenges issued by TED speakers throughout the world. Each weekday at 2pm, head over to @tededucation for a brief educational talk and challenge from a new TED speaker. We’ll be handing over our account to TED speakers of all ages, who will use Instagram Stories and Instagram Live to deliver brief educational talks and issue creative, interactive, family-oriented challenges to Instagram users around the world. Viewers can respond using their own Instagram accounts, and TED-Ed will feature the most creative responses on our channel.



from TED Blog https://blog.ted.com/how-ted-ed-is-helping-families-students-and-teachers-navigate-the-covid-19-pandemic/
via Sol Danmeri

No-Bake Superfood Energy Bars

These no-bake superfood energy bars with chocolate are vegan, gluten-free, oil-free, packed with nutrition and have the most amazing flavor! Easy to make and customizable to whatever you have on hand. The post No-Bake Superfood Energy Bars appeared first on Running on Real Food.

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from Running on Real Food https://runningonrealfood.com/superfood-energy-bars/
via Enlightened Marketing

Simple Batch Cooking Meal Plan

As a busy mom, I sometimes feel like I spend hours in the kitchen each day and that I finish cleaning up from one meal just in time to prepare the next. I’ve learned that a little careful meal planning can greatly reduce the amount of time I spend figuring out what to cook and buy at …

Continue reading Simple Batch Cooking Meal Plan...



from Wellness Mama® https://wellnessmama.com/1106/batch-cooking-meal-plan/
via SEO Derby

325: Hashimoto’s Update: How I Got to Remission & What I Do to Maintain

Today I’m going to give you all an update on my decade-long journey with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, one of the reasons I got into health and started a blog and a podcast. I’ll revisit from beginning to end all of the steps I tried, what worked and what didn’t work, and where I currently am with …

Continue reading 325: Hashimoto’s Update: How I Got to Remission & What I Do to Maintain...



from Wellness Mama® https://wellnessmama.com/podcast/hashimotos-update/
via SEO Derby

Wednesday, 25 March 2020

Banana Oatmeal Pancakes

Start your morning off right with these fluffy banana oatmeal pancakes! This incredible stack of pancakes is made with a combination of oat flour and rolled oats, in addition to eggs, coconut oil, and of course, mashed banana! Weekend = Pancakes! You bet your bippy my Sunday fun day starts ...

The post Banana Oatmeal Pancakes appeared first on Fit Foodie Finds.



from Fit Foodie Finds https://fitfoodiefinds.com/banana-oatmeal-pancakes/
via Holistic Clients

Healthy Carrot Cake

carrot cake recipeOur healthy carrot cake recipe is ultra moist and made with whole ingredients such as white whole wheat flour, maple syrup, warm spices, and Greek yogurt. We know you guys love carrot cake recipes because some of our most popular recipes on FFF are our Chocolate Chip Carrot Cake Loaf ...

The post Healthy Carrot Cake appeared first on Fit Foodie Finds.



from Fit Foodie Finds https://fitfoodiefinds.com/lightened-carrot-cake/
via Holistic Clients

Mexican Sweet Potato Quinoa Casserole

Whip up this healthy vegan Mexican quinoa and sweet potato casserole for the best meal prep recipe that can feed an army! It is made up of pantry staples, root vegetables, and all of our favorite ingredients! So many times do I look in my cabinets and think…”I have nothing ...

The post Mexican Sweet Potato Quinoa Casserole appeared first on Fit Foodie Finds.



from Fit Foodie Finds https://fitfoodiefinds.com/mexican-sweet-potato-quinoa-casserole/
via Holistic Clients

No-Equipment Strength Training Workout

This no-equipment strength training workout can be performed anytime, anywhere and is perfect for an at-home workout that targets the entire body. All you need is a wall and a chair, bench or low table. The post No-Equipment Strength Training Workout appeared first on Running on Real Food.

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]


from Running on Real Food https://runningonrealfood.com/no-equipment-strength-training-workout/
via Enlightened Marketing