Miami Vegan Blog

Miami Vegan Blog

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

How to get thin on the Ambrosia Diet!



I think first you have to know what I mean by "diet".

[yes] food and drink regularly provided or consumed
[no] a regimen of eating and drinking sparingly so as to reduce one's weight

People would consider me thin or petite.

Here is the "Ambrosia Diet":

I eat - beans, grains, legumes, fruit, soy and vegetables
I avoid - bread, pasta, rice, cheese, nuts, sweets, soda, refined sugar
I can't get enough - avocados, naval oranges, applesauce, romaine, corn, potatoes
I rarely drink coffee or alcohol.
Never do energy drinks.
I drink green tea almost every day.
Tons of water.

Somehow that's the recipe for being thin.


The trick is to avoid fatty foods. The five minutes it takes to eat it will cost at least 4 hours of cardio, not worth it right? Don't think you have a handle on it by cutting down. You don't. Something inside your body always wants more of what it had yesterday. Its called food addiction.

If you don't eat it, you don't have to deal with the consequences. What doesn't go in, doesn't stay in. Isn't it funny how simple that is?

See, I didn't even mention being vegan ... =)

~inga~

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posted by Inga Ambrosia at 2/05/2008 0 comments



Thursday, May 17, 2007

Walk after greasy food!

Lucy Danziger, SELF Editor-in-ChiefSo You Ate a Burger and Fries. Now What?

Posted by Lucy Danziger, SELF Editor-in-Chief on Thu, May 10, 2007, 8:43 am PDT

We all have those moments...and the last thing you might want to do after a filling grease bomb is to go walk it off, but science says it's the smart thing to do - and not just for the sake of fitting into your skinny jeans.

Greasy foods can cause your arteries to lose elasticity for six hours, but exercise can come to the rescue. In one recent study, people who walked for 45 minutes within two hours after munching on fast food maintained the same healthy heart function as those who ate fat-free and lounged afterward.

Did someone say do it for your heart? Well, yes! Speaking of which, we may be more compelled by the number on the scale than the measure of our ticker, but there are other digits that you should know for your health, and one of those is your resting heart rate.

It's how fast your heart beats per minute when you're sitting totally still or just woke up in the morning, which is a measure of how trained your heart is. To find yours, take your pulse - ideally, first thing before you get out of bed.

Count the number of heartbeats for 10 seconds, then multiply that number by six to determine your heartbeats per minute (bpm). The normal range for an adult is between 60 and 80 bpm, although it can be lower in more physically fit people.

[Source]

I have an idea, don't eat greasy food. ;-)

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posted by Inga Ambrosia at 5/17/2007 0 comments