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What are Traffic Film Removers?

Ok, so I’ve decided to expand the brief of my blog beyond weight loss. I want to use it to showcase a little bit of  my work, particularly in the areas of content writing and SEO. So to begin, here is an article I wrote on Traffic Film Remover, or TFR:

What is Traffic Film Remover & Why Do You Need It?

If you ever wondered why your car can still look dirty even after you have washed it, this article will explain why…

If you are regular visitor to my blog, don’t worry, diet related goodness will continue to be provided, as and when I can write it!

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Do You Have a Drinking Problem?


A selection of drinks - most of which are sugary and not that great for you!

Thought I would start adding images to my posts - good idea or not? Tell me.

Principle 6 in the Principles of Good Nutrition:

  • Only drink non-calorific drinks

There are mountains of reasons why this is essential, but lets just outline the key ones, otherwise you’ll only get bored.

It’s Too Easy To Fill Up

Take your average 330ml can of Coca Cola. This contains 139 calories, or around 5% of a male’s daily recommend intake, according to the UK government. That may not sound like a lot, but it is the nutritional equivalent of removing 5% of your income from your pocket and giving it to a person of dubious character, along with your debit card and PIN. Why?

To start off, those 139 calories have no nutritional value. They do nothing to help your body repair itself or operate – you really might as not have had them. Worse though, is the fact that those 139 calories are composed almost entirely of sugar. Pure sugar is not your friend. It release energy too quickly, leading to a “sugar high” followed by a crash – which can destabilise your appetite and make you more hungry. Not good.

Alcoholic beverages just amplify this issue – a pint of lager for example is around 210 calories – 4 pints – a reasonable and restrained night out for many – could therefore represent nearly half of your calorific requirements for that day.

While these calories still count in terms of intake, none of them have any value nutritionally – as a result, the natural tendency is to want both those calories in addition to your usual intake.

Diet Drinks Then?

You’d think so, but, alas, not a good idea. Evidence (both scientific and my own experience) suggests that while containing little in terms of calories, the artificial sweeteners used can confuse our bodies, making us craving sugary items – not a road you want to go down really…

You’re Going To Say Water, Aren’t You?

Well, yes and no. Water is great – if you want to lose weight, feel better and have a great complexion, it is the cheapest, most cost effective thing you can consume! The other fantastic thing about water is it regulates appetite – so often when you think you are hungry, chances are you are actually thirsty, so try this golden rule that works great for me:

If you feel hungry, drink a large glass of water and wait 10 minutes – eat after that if you still feel hungry, then tuck in.

But water isn’t the only option – green tea is possibly the most amazing drink ever. It has been shown to:

  • Boost mental alertness
  • Improve endurance
  • Burn body fat
  • Lower stress hormone levels
  • Improve memory
  • Combats cancer & diabetes
  • Boosts your immune system
  • Destroys bad breath (I have more friends now)

Who doesn’t want that? Even if you can’t stand the stuff, give it a try, it will make a difference if consumed regularly and its not all hocus pocus – those benefits have been backed by modern science.

So what’s stopping you? Get your drinking problems sorted now!

 

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Yes, I know it has been a while. You are probably wondering if I am going to update again, if indeed you have subscribed to the blog in the first place!

Well, the answer is yes, I will be continuing with Not Another Diet imminently. My mission to share my experiences of how I lost so much weight without relying on faddy diets will resume.

I’ve been a little busy, setting up a new business, with a colleague. Things are now settling into a routine, so expect more very shortly, once I have drawn breath.

If you are reading this, thanks for bearing with me!

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Fat Isn’t The Enemy

The Fifth Principle of Good Nutrition: Ensure 25-35% of your energy intake comes from fat. That isn’t a typo. I didn’t mean to type “dust”. I meant FAT.

Trouble is, fat gets a lot of bad press and misrepresentation these days, typically along the lines of:

  • A high fat diet makes you fat
  • High levels of fat in your diet cause heart disease, obesity and all other kinds of associated malarky
  • Maintaining a low fat diet will make you fitter and healthier

From childhood, the vast majority of us have been exposed to the thinking above. Even if we struggle with our weight, we all know the points above are inescapable facts. Right?

Wrong.

The Truth About Fat

Let’s set things straight: None of the things in the list above have been proven to be true. Not a single one. Don’t take my word for it – if you have the time and inclination, trawl through this article, which contains some sound studies on this subject (but finish reading this first, it’s much more interesting).

If you don’t have time to read the article, just do a little bit of impartial scientific analysis of your own:

We live in a time where low fat everything is all the rage. I dare you to find a supermarket that does not stock products labelled “low/reduced/virtually no fat”.

We also live in a time where obesity levels have never been higher, despite loads of us eating all these “low fat” goodies.

So what is going on?

Perhaps the idea that eating fat makes you fat comes from the fact that it has more calories per gram (9 kcals per gram) than both carbohydrate and protein (each weighing in at a svelte 4 kcal per gram). We’ve already established that eating too many calories will increase your weight, so the reasoning “eating fat makes you fat” is a no brainer, surely?

You would think so, but fat also has the wonderful property of making you feel full much more quickly than carbs and protein, making it harder to eat more calories that you need in total. I’ve also found it keeps me feeling fuller for much much longer than say pasta, which I use to eat in bucket loads and despite that, always felt hungry soon after the bloated feeling subsided.

Fat is a Nutrient

Remember too that fat is a nutrient – we need it in our diet as much as minerals, vitamins and everything else. It provides energy, helps keep your hair and skin looking amazing (along with that super complexion enhancer – water), helps your body to absorb vitamins (such as Vitamin A) and is used to build cell membranes – which believe me, you want to have. It also helps keep your joints supple, which is really important for training.

Convinced? Well, if you are not quite, I can only say I have found all of this to be true and the results speak for themselves. Give it a try and see for yourself if you don’t believe me.

Where to get your fat

It’s pretty easy to get good quality fat into your diet, and broadly speaking, you want to try and split it equally between saturates (found in animal fat), monounsaturates (olive oil is good for this) and polyunsaturates (such as flax oil and fish oils).

I always use either olive, rapeseed or walnut oil – either when cooking or dressing salads. Not only do they taste great, but are all high in monounsaturates. Olive oil also has mild anti-inflammatory properties, which is a bonus if you suffer with joint pain, like I use to in my knees.

Nuts are good too and have a excellent balance of fats – the table below gives you a rough idea of what you can expect from each.

Type of Nut Saturated Fat (%) Monounsat. Fat (%) Polyunsat. Fat (%)
Almonds 8 68 20
Brazil Nuts 25 33 37
Cashews 20 59 7
Hazel Nuts 7 78 10
Macadamia Nuts 15 79 2
Peanuts 16 49 31
Pecans 8 62 25
Pistachios 10 68 20
English Walnuts 9 23

I always have some mixed nuts and raisins nearby to keep me going – the great thing is, they make you feel full quickly with no pangs, so much better than a packet of crisps when you fancy a nibble.

Adding a bit of butter into the mix is a sensible and tasty way to get animal fat intake, along with red meat. A nice bit of steak, with some buttered garlic mushrooms and a dressed salad is a cracking way to deliver all the elements you need!

Finally, fish and fish oil supplements, along with flax seed oil, sort out your polyunsaturate needs, and again help with joints. I struggle with most fish, so tend to get this from tuna (which I do like) and supplements, but that is only due to personal taste.

Not Atkins

So give it a try and see how dramatically a sensible consumption of fat stabilises your appetite and helps you lose weight.

Bear in mind that what I am not advocating here is a variation on the Atkin’s diet. For a start, it has the word “diet” in it, and we don’t do that. Remember, diets don’t work. Second, it is not a balanced approach to eating and will therefore end in failure, you need to include other elements in diet which we have already discussed and Atkin’s prohibits.

Third, it makes your breath smell.

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