Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Frightening Amount of Calories in Children's Menus

Great article in USA Today by Nanci Hellmich, who has written about me in the past.

They looked at kids choices at many popular chains and fast food establishments and found that many options contain more than 1,000 calories, and that is for ONE meal.

This is what should happen:

1. ALL restaurants should be forced to list the calories on each item
2. Parents should be very careful of what they allow their children to order
3. Check out the websites in advance.

I have said that before, but we should all have a file with the printed menus for each fast food restaurant with the calorie and sodium counts. That way, we can make intelligent choices and NOT allow the restaurant to determine what the kids are eating. We should make that decision.

The more we educate ourselves, the more we will stop this obesity epidemic.

Jim

Friday, August 01, 2008

Another Reason To Only Exercise In Intervals

Did you know that:

1. If you exercise for one hour and perform steady state aerobics, you get a 4 hour boost in your metabolism called EPOC, Excess Post-Exercise Oxygen Consumption.

2. If you perform intervals, done through cardio OR strength training, you get a 72 hour EPOC.

That is a huge difference and truly supports my theory that you should only exercise in intervals. Add to that the HUGE benefits of strength training and you have to ask all your cardio friends, "What are you doing????????"

Just leaving LA for a big speaking conference in New York. I'm happy to say that I turned the new book in last night and just have some pictures and footnoting to do and then I am DONE and can give all of you more attention on this blog.

Enjoy the weekend. Don't eat to much. Exercise, Yada, Yada, Yada.

Jim

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

My First Earthquake

Well, I am in LA finishing up my next book, which is due on Friday. About an hour and a half ago, the light fixture in the dining room start to swing, and the flowers on the table start to shake and move.

I am staying on the 15th floor in Marina Del Rey and I have to say, it was scary. This is my first earthquake and the thought of it going on for a long time would have freaked me out.

It was above a 5 on the scale, so that is a significant "shake."

Just wanted to share.

P.S. No, I'm not drinking!!!

Jim

Monday, July 28, 2008

Travel

One of our comments was just about how to stay on plan while traveling, and this person is off to Greece, which I LOVE (and not just because I'm Greek).

When traveling, you have to:

1. Pound the water. The plane flight is dehydrating, the food is salty, you are probably moving more (I hope!) as you walk around exploring. Please stay hydrated.

2. You MUST exercise. It's essential that you do it first thing in the morning, or it won't happen. Bring your SPRI tubing. It's easy to pack and light. Use it everyday and you will feel so much better.

3. Read the menu. Don't just randomly order. Think. In Greece, there are TONS of fish and vegetable options. Order them. You will have a great time AND lose weight.

Jim

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Appetizers

Just got back from dinner with friends in Chicago. It was six of us, and we all sat down and, of course, had some wine.

Then I spoke up and said, "Look, let's order a bunch of appetizers, munch, and then decide what we want for dinner."

So, I ordered some hummus, shrimp, chicken skewers (sp?), tomato and cucumber salad and sliced, raw beef (I couldn't figure out how to spell carpaccio - Help if anyone knows).

Well, it was great. We ended up ordering more chicken and beef and then called it a day.

Funny, but these are people who love food, so don't think they are odd. But we all sat for three hours, tipped like we HAD eaten a bunch of entrees, and left feeling great.

It really works. Give it a try.

Jim

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Serious Flaw In This Study

You have probably heard about this study comparing diets, but here it is:

New Diet Study Paints Bleak Future For Obese People

July 18, 2008 by admin

According to a new study published in Thursday’s edition of the New England Journal of Medicine, obese people on average lose between 6 to 10 pounds in a period of two years when put under strict dieting.

This was after a firmly controlled dieting experiment carried out at Israel’s Nuclear Research Center in Dimona, a very isolated agency that boosts of having its own medical equipments.

The study that involved 322 dieters, 277 men and 45 women was meant to determine which of three types of diets works best. However, researchers where shocked when the study instead highlighted the difficultly of weight loss using strict dieting.

According to an insider, the dieters were given strict orders to follow one of the three diet types provided. The study that was majorly financed by the Atkins Research Foundation had dieters choose from a diet with about 30% fat, based on American Heart Association guiding principle, a low-carbohydrate diet based on the Atkins diet plan and a Mediterranean diet.

It was not until five months that the biggest weight loss was noticed. Dieters on low fat and Mediterranean dieters lost up to 10 pounds whereas the low-carbohydrate dieters lost about 14 pounds.

However, the dieters had regained some of the weight lost by the end of two years. Dieters on low fat regained the most weight with a net loss of six pounds and the low-carbohydrate dieters both lost about 10 pounds.

Although the researchers acknowledged little success, they were quick to point out that there were improvements in cholesterol and various health markers due to the weight loss.

The study also revealed that men generally lost more weight when put on low carbohydrate diets with weight loss of around 11 pounds. Men on Mediterranean diet lost about 9 pounds.

A loss of 14 and 5 pounds were registered amongst the women when put under mediterranean and low-carbohydrate plans respectively. According to Ms Shai, one of the researchers, the study has highlighted the health benefits associate with a health diet.

The MAJOR problem with this study is that it didn't include strength and resistance exercise. You are DOOMED to gain most of your lost weight back when you don't enhance your metabolism.

We know that when we restrict calories, your metabolism will go down. We also know that strength training will stop this from happening.

I wish studies would stop looking at the effects of dieting alone. It doesn't work. Again, it doesn't work.

Jim

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

The Morning Show with Mike and Juliet

I am on the show, LIVE, tomorrow, Thursday, July 17th. If you are around or want to TIVO it, it should be interesting.

Jim

Eating Salad

As I have been traveling even more than usual, I find myself alone on a plane or sitting in a restaurant more often than I can count.

So, I spend my time observing the behavior of my fellow passengers/diners.

It has become blatantly clear that most people who order a salad REALLY don't eat the salad.

I watch people on the plane eat the grilled chicken or shrimp salad, which really means eating the chicken or shrimp and tossing all the lettuce, tomato, carrots, etc.

Same applies when eating out. SO many people order tuna, chicken or egg salad (which I hope you all know is a caloric disaster to the tune of 700-800 calories because of all the mayo), eat the mayo laden scoop and leave all the greens.

Everyone, salad means greens, veggies, tomato, etc. That is what is so healthy about the salad.

Just thought I needed to make that clear.

Jim

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

From TIME - Are Fat Calories More Fattening Than Carbs?

Are Fat Calories More Fattening Than Carbs?

If you're one of millions of Americans trying to lose weight, you probably wish you had a more effective diet than the one you're on now. And if you're wondering whether Dean Ornish's low-fat diet will help you shed pounds better than Dr. Atkins' low-carb menu, the answer is simple: it doesn't matter. Scientists know that on a molecular level, different types of starch and different types of fat have varying effects when they hit the body. But in terms of weight loss, low-fat diets and low-carb diets overall are equally effective (and, most of the time, neither will help you keep the weight off long-term), says Walter Willett, chair of the department of nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health. Here's why.
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Q:Will eating a calorie of fat make you fatter than eating a calorie of carbohydrate?

A: From many kinds of studies conducted over years, we are quite confident now that a calorie from fat will cause a similar amount of weight gain as a calorie from carbohydrate. There are some interesting questions about whether eating carbohydrate calories versus fat calories will make you eat more calories, but based on what you put into your mouth, it's pretty clear that the source of the calories is really not important.

[Whether fats or carbohydrates are more filling] is one issue that's been raised - but it's been raised on both sides. The best way to get to the bottom line is to look at long-term studies where we randomize people to a high-fat/low-carb diet or to a low-fat/high-carb diet and follow them for at least a year or more. That kind of study takes into account the possibility that one kind of diet provides more satiety; so, over the long run you would see more weight loss on that diet. But those studies - half a dozen or more such studies have been done - show quite clearly that the percentage of calories from fat has very little effect on long-term weight loss.

One possible footnote to this issue relates to some recent evidence on trans fats. We have seen in our studies that people who eat more trans fats seem to gain more weight, even when the total calories are the same. I was a little skeptical about that, in part because we're not quite sure we can measure calorie [intake] precisely enough. [It's hard for people to track their portion sizes to the gram, or even be sure of exactly what they're eating, especially if they ever eat out.] But in recent five-year feeding study in monkeys - they're animals so you can control their diets - the monkeys on the high-trans-fat diet gained more weight. They gained about 7% of their body weight over a five-year period, compared to the monkeys on a low-trans-fat diet, who gained about 1.5% of their body weight over five years.

So there may be something more complicated going on there. But there's not any good data [to explain why a calorie of trans fat should cause more weight gain than a calorie of something else]. It may be that on the high-trans-fat diet you're more likely to push those calories into your fat cells rather than your muscle cells - and muscles burn calories 24 hours a day. In the long run, that could make a difference in weight gain. But that's speculation. We're really not sure.

We've now looked at over 250,000 men and women for up to 30 years, and we [also] haven't seen that the percentage of calories from fat or from carbohydrates in your diet makes any difference in relation to heart attacks, various cancers, or stroke. Having said that, the type of fat is very important, and so is the type of carbohydrate. So we find that trans fats, again, are particularly harmful with regard to type 2 diabetes and heart disease. On the other hand, unsaturated fats are actually beneficial in terms of reducing the risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes. It's the same with carbohydrates. The total amount is not important. But high intake of refined starch and sugar is related to a higher risk of heart disease and diabetes, whereas high-fiber whole-grain carbohydrates are related to a lower risk. That's not too surprising, as we know that high intakes of sugar and refined starch have an adverse effect on blood glucose levels.

So the quality of the diet is really important, but just looking at fat versus carbohydrate misses where all the action is. View this article on Time.com

Monday, July 14, 2008

Has Anyone Lost 50 Or More Pounds On This Plan

If so, please contact my office in Chicago at 773-244-0123. It's about a potential press opportunity.

Thanks in advance.

Jim

Sunday, July 13, 2008

The Beach

I spent part of the day today at Oak Street Beach in Chicago with my kids and some friends.

It truly is shocking to see the size of most of the people on the beach, with the exception of those not speaking English.

Honestly, you could immediately tell who was American and who wasn't. Give the strength of the Euro against the dollar, there were tons of German, French and Swiss people out there. I should know as I took pictures for many of them.

But the Americans are SO much bigger, and it goes across all ages from the kids to the seniors.

I keep reading all the info on the government, schools and other organizations that are supposed to help kids lose weight. My take? It should start at home, so please, anyone seeing a child struggling with his or her weight, help them out.

Jim

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Music And Mood

I am in LA working on the new book, and am in the process of writing a chapter on the benefits of music.

WOW, is it compelling. We all should be listening to music all the time, as it enhances mood, increases concentration, releases tension and anxiety and gives us lots and lots of energy.

So crank it up.

And when you want to chill out, nothing beats the benefits of Mozart.

Enjoy,

Jim

Monday, July 07, 2008

Darra Torres

I am in Irvine, California as I have a speech here in the morning.

I just finished watching World News Tonight with my old buddy, Charlie Gibson.

He just did a feature on Darra Torres who is 41 and will compete, AGAIN, in the Olympics.

They showed her workout regime which included a LOT of strength training to enhance her strength and her flexibility.

I keep tell people that a properly balanced strength training program provides TONS of flexibility. That is so critically important to our bodies as we age.

So, keep watching her at the games. I'm sure she will be amazing.

Jim

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

One More Comment on the Wii

Okay, as you can tell, I am obsessed with these games.

The great thing about the tennis (I don't know about any other games as I can't stop playing this) is that as you get better, the players get better.

That's what is so much fun. I clearly am improving (anyone would who has devoted the hours I have to this game, but it is the perfect break from writing) and what is challenging is that the players really step up.

See, you get rated after each game or match, and as your rating improves, so does that of the opponents.

You know how passionate I am when it comes to strength training. Well, the same applies to any sport and that's what is motivating and that is also what gets the best results.

Bottom line - Make SURE you are progressing with your strength training.

Jim

Monday, June 30, 2008

The Heat

You know, I almost always lose a few pounds in the summer.

I just don't eat as much as I usually do because I really can't take the heat.

I also drink more water than ever and just naturally gravitate to more fruit and vegetables.

It's also a great opportunity to get out and do things, though I must confess, I have lost my mind with a Wii that my kids borrowed from their nanny.

Do any of you have one? I am obsessed with the tennis, and between that and watching Wimbledon, I am dying to get back out on a tennis court.

The only problem is time. I already devote three hours a week to lifting and would never give that up.

Maybe on a Saturday or Sunday I should schedule a game and a court. That is the only way that it will happen.

Enjoy the summer!

Jim