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This is delicious! Serve with a fresh green salad with a dressing of orange juice, lemon juice, olive oil and a touch of garlic and you ...
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I posted a few days ago about Sean O'Malley, who will forever be Coach Sean to me, and how he inspired so many people with his workouts....
Friday, December 21, 2012
Asylum 2/Combat Rotation
Combining two of the best workouts out there!!
Week 1:
Day 1: Combat 30: Kick Start
Day 2: Asylum 2: Upper Elite
Day 3: Combat 30: Kick Start
Day 4: Asylum 2: Power Legs
Day 5: Combat 45: Power Kata
Day 6: Asylum 2: Back and Six Pack
Day 7: Rest
Week 2
Day 1: Combat 60: Extreme Cardio
Day 2: Asylum 2: Upper Elite
Day 3: Combat 30: Kick Start
Day 4: Asylum 2: Power legs
Day 5: Combat 45: Power Kata
Day 6: Asylum 2: Back and Six Pack
Week 3
Day 1: Combat 60: Extreme Cardio
Day 2: Asylum 2: Upper Elite
Day 3: Combat 45: Power Kata
Day 4: Asylum 2: Power Legs
Day 5: Combat 60: Live
Day 6: Asylum 2: Back and Six Pack
Week 4
Day 1: Asylum 2: XTrainer
Day 2: Combat: Power HIIT
Day 3: Combat 45: Power Kata
Day 4: Asylum 2: Sports Challenge
Day 5: Combat: Shock Plyo HIIT
Day 6: Asylum 2: Back and Six Pack
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Day 14: Reset Results
Hi All -
This is a quick post to let everyone know how I'm doing on the reset! It's day 14 and I'm actually down a total of 14.5 pounds!!! I'm so excited. I'm getting lots of comments at work and other places, and I'm really seeing the difference. And best of all, I'm not starving myself. I'm eating a great quantity of good, clean, healthy foods!
This is a quick post to let everyone know how I'm doing on the reset! It's day 14 and I'm actually down a total of 14.5 pounds!!! I'm so excited. I'm getting lots of comments at work and other places, and I'm really seeing the difference. And best of all, I'm not starving myself. I'm eating a great quantity of good, clean, healthy foods!
Why the Campaign to Stop America's Obesity Crisis Keeps Failing
Why the Campaign to Stop America's Obesity Crisis Keeps Failing (links to original article)
The nation’s most powerful anti-obesity groups are teaming up for a new HBO documentary—but it pushes the same tired advice. Gary Taubes on the research they're ignoring.Most of my favorite factoids about obesity are historical ones, and they don’t make it into the new, four-part HBO documentary on the subject, The Weight of the Nation. Absent, for instance, is the fact that the very first childhood-obesity clinic in the United States was founded in the late 1930s at Columbia University by a young German physician, Hilde Bruch. As Bruch later told it, her inspiration was simple: she arrived in New York in 1934 and was “startled” by the number of fat kids she saw—“really fat ones, not only in clinics, but on the streets and subways, and in schools.”What makes Bruch’s story relevant to the obesity problem today is that this was New York in the worst year of the Great Depression, an era of bread lines and soup kitchens, when 6 in 10 Americans were living in poverty. The conventional wisdom these days—promoted by government, obesity researchers, physicians, and probably your personal trainer as well—is that we get fat because we have too much to eat and not enough reasons to be physically active. But then why were the PC- and Big Mac–-deprived Depression-era kids fat? How can we blame the obesity epidemic on gluttony and sloth if we easily find epidemics of obesity throughout the past century in populations that barely had food to survive and had to work hard to earn it.
The nation’s most powerful anti-obesity groups are teaming up for a new HBO documentary—but it pushes the same tired advice. Gary Taubes on the research they're ignoring.Most of my favorite factoids about obesity are historical ones, and they don’t make it into the new, four-part HBO documentary on the subject, The Weight of the Nation. Absent, for instance, is the fact that the very first childhood-obesity clinic in the United States was founded in the late 1930s at Columbia University by a young German physician, Hilde Bruch. As Bruch later told it, her inspiration was simple: she arrived in New York in 1934 and was “startled” by the number of fat kids she saw—“really fat ones, not only in clinics, but on the streets and subways, and in schools.”What makes Bruch’s story relevant to the obesity problem today is that this was New York in the worst year of the Great Depression, an era of bread lines and soup kitchens, when 6 in 10 Americans were living in poverty. The conventional wisdom these days—promoted by government, obesity researchers, physicians, and probably your personal trainer as well—is that we get fat because we have too much to eat and not enough reasons to be physically active. But then why were the PC- and Big Mac–-deprived Depression-era kids fat? How can we blame the obesity epidemic on gluttony and sloth if we easily find epidemics of obesity throughout the past century in populations that barely had food to survive and had to work hard to earn it.
At its heart is a simple “energy balance” idea: we get fat because we consume too many calories and expend too few. If we could just control our impulses—or at least control our environment, thereby removing temptation—and push ourselves to exercise, we’d be fine. This logic is everywhere you look in the official guidelines, commentary, and advice. “The same amount of energy IN and energy OUT over time = weight stays the same,” the NIH website counsels Americans, while the CDC site tells us, “Overweight and obesity result from an energy imbalance.”
The problem is, the solutions this multi-level campaign promotes are the same ones that have been used to fight obesity for a century—and they just haven’t worked. “We are struggling to figure this out,” NIH Director Francis Collins conceded to Newsweek last week. When I interviewed CDC obesity expert William Dietz back in 2001, he told me that his primary accomplishment had been getting childhood obesity “on the map.” “It’s now widely recognized as a major health problem in the United States,” he said then—and that was 10 years and a few million obese children ago.
There is an alternative theory, one that has also been around for decades but that the establishment has largely ignored. This theory implicates specific foods—refined sugars and grains—because of their effect on the hormone insulin, which regulates fat accumulation. If this hormonal-defect hypothesis is true, not all calories are created equal, as the conventional wisdom holds. And if it is true, the problem is not only controlling our impulses, but also changing the entire American food economy and rewriting our beliefs about what constitutes a healthy diet.
Oddly, this nutrient-hormone-fat interaction is not particularly controversial. You can find it in medical textbooks as the explanation for why our fat cells get fat. But the anti-obesity establishment doesn’t take the next step: that fat fat cells lead to fat humans. In their eyes, yes, insulin regulates how much fat gets trapped in your fat cells, and the kinds of carbohydrates we eat today pretty much drive up your insulin levels. But, they conclude, while individual cells get fat that way, the reason an entire human gets fat has nothing to do with it. We’re just eating too much.I’ve been arguing otherwise. And one reason I like this hormonal hypothesis of obesity is that it explains the fat kids in Depression-era New York. As the extreme situation of exceedingly poor populations shows, the problem could not have been that they ate too much, because they didn’t have enough food available. The problem then—as now, across America—was the prevalence of sugars, refined flour, and starches in their diets. These are the cheapest calories, and they can be plenty tasty without a lot of preparation and preservation. And the biology suggests that they are literally fattening—they make us fat, while other foods (fats, proteins, and green leafy vegetables) don’t.
If this hypothesis is right, then the reason the anti-obesity efforts championed by the IOM, the CDC, and the NIH haven’t worked and won’t work is not because we’re not listening, and not because we just can’t say no, but because these efforts are not addressing the fundamental cause of the problem. Like trying to prevent lung cancer by getting smokers to eat less and run more, it won’t work because the intervention is wrong.
The authority figures in obesity and nutrition are so fixed on the simplistic calorie-balance idea that they’re willing to ignore virtually any science to hold on to it.
The first and most obvious mistake they make is embracing the notion that the only way foods can influence how fat we get is through the amount of energy—calories—they contain. The iconic example here is sugar, or rather sugars, since we’re talking about both sucrose (the white, granulated stuff we sprinkle on cereal) and high-fructose corn syrup. “What’s the single best thing I can do for me and my family?” asks one obese mother in The Weight of the Nation. The answer she’s given is “stop drinking sugar-sweetened beverages.” But the official wisdom—that all we need know is that a calorie is a calorie is a calorie—doesn’t explain why that might be so.
Left unsaid is the fact that sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup have a unique chemical composition, a near 50-50 combination of two different carbohydrates: glucose and fructose. And while glucose is metabolized by virtually every cell in the body, the fructose (also found in fruit, but in much lower concentrations) is metabolized mostly by liver cells. From there, the chain of metabolic events has been worked out by biochemists over 50 years: some of the fructose is converted into fat, the fat accumulates in the liver cells, which become resistant to the action of insulin, and so more insulin is secreted to compensate. The end results are elevated levels of insulin, which is the hallmark of type 2 diabetes, and the steady accumulation of fat in our fat tissue—a few tens of calories worth per day, leading to pounds per year, and obesity over the course of a few decades.
Last fall, researchers at the University of California, Davis, published three studies—two of humans, one of rhesus monkeys—confirming the deleterious effect of these sugars on metabolism and insulin levels. The message of all three studies was that sugars are unhealthy—not because people or monkeys consumed too much of them, but because, well, they do things to our bodies that the other nutrients we eat simply don’t do.
The second fallacy is the belief that physical activity plays a meaningful role in keeping off the pounds—an idea that the authorities just can’t seem to let go of, despite all evidence to the contrary. “We don’t walk, we don’t bike,” says University of North Carolina economist Barry Popkin in The Weight of the Nation. If we do exercise regularly, the logic goes, then we’ll at least maintain a healthy weight (along with other health benefits), which is why the official government recommendations from the USDA are that we should all do 150 minutes each week of “moderate intensity” aerobic exercise. And if that’s not enough to maintain a healthy weight or lose the excess, then, well, we should do more.
So why is the world full of obese individuals who do exercise regularly? Arkansas construction workers in The Weight of the Nation, for instance, do jobs that require constant lifting and running up ladders with “about 50 to 60 pounds of tools”—and an equal amount of excess fat. They’re on-camera making the point about how the combination is exhausting. “By the time the day’s over,” one tells us, “your feet are killing you; your legs are cramping. You can’t last as long as you used to.” If physical activity helps us lose weight or even just maintain it, how did these hardworking men get so fat?
There are two obvious reasons why this idea that working out makes you skinny or keeps you skinny is likely to be just wrong. One is that it takes a significant amount of exercise to burn even a modest amount of calories. Run three miles, says Cornell University researcher Brian Wansink in the documentary, and you’ll burn up roughly the amount of calories in a single candy bar. And this brings up the second reason: you’re likely to be hungrier after strenuous exercise than before and so you’re more likely to eat that candy bar’s worth of calories after than before. (When the American Heart Association and the American College of Sports Medicine jointly published physical-activity guidelines back in 2007, they described the evidence that exercise can even prevent us from growing fatter as “not particularly compelling,” which was a kind way to put it.)
Finally, the anti-obesity establishment embraces the idea that what are really missing from our diet are fresh fruits and vegetables—that these are the sine qua non of a healthy diet—and that meat, red meat in particular, is a likely cause of obesity. Since the mid-1970s, health agencies have waged a campaign to reduce our meat consumption, for a host of reasons: it causes colon cancer or heart disease (because of the saturated fat) and now because it supposedly makes us fat as well. The lowly cheeseburger is consistently targeted as a contributor to both obesity and diabetes.
But when David Wallinga of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy tells us in The Weight of the Nation that the USDA has established the cause of the obesity epidemic and it’s “an increase in our calorie consumption over the last 30, 35 years,” he also tells us where those calories come from: a quarter come from added sugars, a quarter from added fats (“most of which are from soy”), and “almost half is from refined grains, mainly corn starches, wheat, and the like.” What Wallinga doesn’t say is that the same USDA data clearly shows that red-meat consumption peaked in this country in the mid-1970s, before the obesity epidemic started. It’s been dropping ever since, consistent with a nation that has been doing exactly what health authorities have been telling it to do.
At the moment, the government efforts to curb obesity and diabetes avoid the all-too-apparent fact, as Hilde Bruch pointed out more than half a century ago, that exhorting obese people to eat less and exercise more doesn’t work, and that this shouldn’t be an indictment of their character but of the value of the advice. By institutionalizing this advice as public-health policy, we waste enormous amounts of money and effort on programs that might make communities nicer places to live—building parks and making green markets available—but that we have little reason to believe will make anyone thinner. When I asked CDC Director Thomas Frieden about this, he pointed to two recent reports, from Massachusetts and New York, documenting small but real decreases in childhood-obesity levels. He then admitted that they had no idea why this had happened. “I’m doing everything I can do,” he said, “to assure that we rigorously monitor the efforts underway so we can try to understand what works and what doesn’t.”
If the latest research is any indication, sugar may have been the primary problem all along. Back in the 1980s, the FDA gave sugar a free pass based on the idea that the evidence wasn’t conclusive. While the government spent hundreds of millions trying to prove that salt and saturated fat are bad for our health, it spent virtually nothing on sugar. Had it targeted sugar then, instead of waiting for an obesity and diabetes epidemic for motivation, our entire food culture and the options that go with it might have changed as they did with low-fat and low-salt foods.
So what should we eat? The latest clinical trials suggest that all of us would benefit from fewer (if any) sugars and fewer refined grains (bread, pasta) and starchy vegetables (potatoes). This was the conventional wisdom through the mid-1960s, and then we turned the grains and starches into heart-healthy diet foods and the USDA enshrined them in the base of its famous Food Guide Pyramid as the staples of our diet. That this shift coincides with the obesity epidemic is probably not a coincidence. As for those of us who are overweight, experimental trials, the gold standard of medical evidence, suggest that diets that are severely restricted in fattening carbohydrates and rich in animal products—meat, eggs, cheese—and green leafy vegetables are arguably the best approach, if not the healthiest diet to eat. Not only does weight go down when people eat like this, but heart disease and diabetes risk factors are reduced. Ethical arguments against meat-eating are always valid; health arguments against it can no longer be defended.
If The Weight of the Nation accomplishes anything, it’s communicating the desperation of obese Americans trying to understand their condition and, even more, of lean (or relatively lean) parents trying to cope with the obesity of their offspring. Lack of will isn’t their problem. It’s the absence of advice that might actually work. If our authorities on this subject could accept that maybe their fundamental understanding of the problem needs to be rethought, we and they might begin to make progress. Clearly the conventional wisdom has failed so far. We can hold onto it only so long.
About the Author

Gary Taubes is is the author of Why We Get Fat and What to Do About It (Knopf 2010) and Good Calories, Bad Calories: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom on Diet, Weight Control and Disease (Knopf 2007). He’s a contributing correspondent for the journal Science and a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Independent Investigator in Health Policy Research at the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health. Taubes has won numerous awards for his journalism including the International Health Reporting Award from the Pan American Health Organization and the National Association of Science Writers Science in Society Journalism Award three times, the only print journalist to do so.
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Ginger-Lime Kale with Squash & Chickpeas
Ginger-Lime Kale with Squash & Chickpeas
From Clean Eating Magazine!
Roasting butternut squash enhances its creamy texture. With a tart and tangy combination of ginger, garlic and lime, this dish boasts immune-boosting benefits plus a zesty flavor profile, providing a quick pick-me-up.
By Nicole Hamaker | Photo: Nicole Hamaker
INGREDIENTS:
- 2 cups chopped butternut squash, peeled and seeded (cut into 3/4-inch cubes)
- 1 1/2 tbsp olive oil, divided
- 1 medium onion, diced
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 tbsp fresh grated ginger root
- 8 cups thinly sliced kale leaves
- 1 1/2 cups organic canned chickpeas, drained and rinsed (TIP: Opt for BPA-free canned beans such as Eden Organic.)
- 1 tbsp fresh lime juice
- 1/4 tsp sea salt
- 1/2 cup fresh pomegranate arils
INSTRUCTIONS:
- Preheat oven to 400°F. In a medium bowl, toss squash with 1/2 tbsp oil. Spread squash onto a parchment-lined rimmed baking sheet and roast for about 25 minutes, or until squash is fork tender and lightly browned. Remove squash from oven and let cool.
- Heat a wide and deep skillet over medium-low heat. Add remaining 1 tbsp oil to coat skillet. Add onion and cook, stirring, for 5 minutes. Add garlic and ginger, stirring for 30 seconds. Add kale, stirring for 1 minute until kale begins to wilt. Reduce heat to low, cover and cook for 10 minutes, stirring once or twice. Add chickpeas and stir, then cover and cook for another 5 minutes or until chickpeas are heated through. Remove pan from heat and add squash, lime juice and salt. Transfer mixture to large serving bowl and sprinkle with pomegranate arils. Serve immediately.
Monday, May 7, 2012
Sweet Potato and Roasted Red Pepper Bisque
Ingredients
DirectionsPeel and cube sweet potatoes. Cook in boiling water until tender. Drain and set aside. Meanwhile, roast a whole red bell pepper on gas stovetop or grill, turning frequently until evenly charred on the outside OR in your oven at 400 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes, turning every 10 minutes or until skin is charred.
Put pepper in bowl and cover with towel for 10 minutes to steam. Clean off skin and seeds by running under cool water. Remove seeds, cut in quarters, and chop one quarter into ½-inch cubes. (Set remainder of pepper aside for another use.)
Place sweet potato, pepper, broth or water, ginger, oil, and miso in blender. (If you want chunky soup, set aside some chunks of pepper.) Blend thoroughly, adding more liquid to achieve desired soup consistency. Transfer to a pot and gently heat on low until hot. Add tamari or aminos, salt, and seasoning as desired. Serves 1.
Nutrition
- 1 sweet potato (aka garnet yam)
- ¼ red bell pepper
- 1 cup vegetable broth or water
- 1 tsp. finely grated peeled ginger root
- 1½ tsp. extra virgin olive oil
- 2 tsp. miso paste, diluted in 1 tsp. hot water
- Tamari or Bragg® Liquid Aminos, Himalayan salt, and herbal seasoning (to taste)
DirectionsPeel and cube sweet potatoes. Cook in boiling water until tender. Drain and set aside. Meanwhile, roast a whole red bell pepper on gas stovetop or grill, turning frequently until evenly charred on the outside OR in your oven at 400 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes, turning every 10 minutes or until skin is charred.
Put pepper in bowl and cover with towel for 10 minutes to steam. Clean off skin and seeds by running under cool water. Remove seeds, cut in quarters, and chop one quarter into ½-inch cubes. (Set remainder of pepper aside for another use.)
Place sweet potato, pepper, broth or water, ginger, oil, and miso in blender. (If you want chunky soup, set aside some chunks of pepper.) Blend thoroughly, adding more liquid to achieve desired soup consistency. Transfer to a pot and gently heat on low until hot. Add tamari or aminos, salt, and seasoning as desired. Serves 1.
Nutrition
- 220 calories
- 7 g fat
- 1 g saturated fat
- 0 mg cholesterol
- 530 mg sodium
- 35 g carbohydrate
- 6 g fiber
- 3 g protein
- 509 mg potassium
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Recipe of the Day: Forbidden Black Quinoa
Forbidden Black Quinoa
Comments: 0Rating: 0 ratings
YIELD: 5 x 1-cup servings
PREPARATION TIME: 15 minutes
COOKING TIME: 30 minutes
Details
Intrigued? You should be! This quinoa has a unique flavor that will keep you coming back for more. In fact, it’s so good you might want to keep it your little secret. Shhh!
Ingredients
• 1 tsp / 5 ml extra virgin olive oil
• 2 tsp / 10 ml whole cumin seeds
• ½ onion, finely chopped
• 1 jalapeno, seeds and ribs removed, thinly sliced into half circles
• 2 cherry peppers, seeds and ribs removed, thinly sliced into half circles
• 1 Tbsp / 15 ml finely grated fresh ginger
• 2 cloves garlic, minced
• 1½ cups / 360 ml black quinoa*, rinsed and drained
• 2¼ cups / 540 ml low-sodium vegetable broth or water
• ¼ tsp / 1.25 ml ground coriander
• ¼ tsp / 1.25 ml ground turmeric
• 1/8 tsp / 0.625 ml ground cloves
• 1 stick cinnamon
• 1 bay leaf
• ½ cup / 120 ml chopped cilantro
Preparation
- In a medium pot with lid, heat olive oil on medium. Add cumin seeds and stir in oil until fragrant. Add onion, jalapeƱo, cherry peppers, ginger and garlic, and cook, stirring occasionally, until soft, about 3 minutes. Add remaining ingredients, except for cilantro. Stir to combine.
- Increase heat and bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer, covered, for about 20 minutes or until all water is absorbed and quinoa is plump. Remove from heat and keep covered for 5 minutes to allow all water to absorb. Remove cinnamon stick and bay leaf and discard. Stir in cilantro and serve.
*Can’t find black quinoa? White or red quinoa will work too.
Nutritional Value per Serving (1 cup):
Calories: 223
Calories from Fat: 38
Total Fat: 4 g
Saturated Fat: 0.4 g
Total Carbs: 38 g
Fiber: 5 g
Protein: 8 g
Sodium: 71 mg
Cholesterol: 0 mg
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Day 7 of the Ultimate Reset
I just could not be happier. Day 7 and I am down 9.8 pounds. I'm down a total of 11 pounds since the previous Sunday. I'm not hungry, the food is delicious and I'm so glad I did this!!!
In just three weeks, the Beachbody Ultimate Reset will restore your body to its original "factory settings," so you'll have more energy and greater focus, experience better digestion and a more positive mood, you'll notice that your body is functioning more efficiently, helping you lose weight and improve your overall health.
And you'll do it all without drugs . . . without fasting . . . naturally and painlessly. You'll do it with Ultimate Reset.
The Beachbody Ultimate Reset
No starvation diets. No harsh laxatives. No running back and forth to the bathroom all day long. The Beachbody Ultimate Reset doesn't punish or deprive your body—it feeds your body with all the nutrients you've been craving.
How to feel fantastic
in 3 simple steps.
The secret behind the Beachbody Ultimate Reset.
Reclaim. Release. Restore. In just 3 weeks, you can rid your body of toxic compounds that could be making you ill–while dramatically improving the way you feel and function.
5 Sure signs that your
body needs a tune-up.
The Beachbody Ultimate Reset can help fight these common symptoms.
Are you tired? Have you been feeling sick? Run-down? Having trouble with your digestion? Do you have hard time losing weight? If you answered "yes" to any of these questions, it may be time to treat your body to an Ultimate Reset.
Considering a cleanse? Here's why
you should Ultimate ResetTM instead.
Watch the Ultimate Reset Cooking Class Video!NO FASTING. NO HARSH LAXATIVES. THE BEACHBODY ULTIMATE RESET DOESN'T STARVE YOU . . . IT FEEDS YOU.
Typical "cleanses" can do as much harm as good—by starving your body of exactly the nutrients it needs. On the Ultimate Reset, you'll eat better than you have in years—and feel good doing it!
Your body already knows
how to make itself better
-Isabelle Daikeler, Co-DeveloperThe Beachbody Ultimate Reset gives your body just what it's been asking for.
The Ultimate Reset will never ask your body to do anything it doesn't already know how to do. You'll be amazed at how delicious the right foods for your body can taste.
Now your body has a Reset Button
Imagine your body had a Reset button—like the one your computer has. A button you could just hit . . . and it would clear away the toxic junk that's been slowing your system down. How great would that be?
If you've been feeling tired, run down, or just plain lousy lately . . . if you're having trouble with your digestion or difficulty losing weight . . . if your body just isn't working the way you want it to . . . the solution may be simpler than you think. The solution may be an Ultimate Reset™ .In just three weeks, the Beachbody Ultimate Reset will restore your body to its original "factory settings," so you'll have more energy and greater focus, experience better digestion and a more positive mood, you'll notice that your body is functioning more efficiently, helping you lose weight and improve your overall health.
And you'll do it all without drugs . . . without fasting . . . naturally and painlessly. You'll do it with Ultimate Reset.
The Beachbody Ultimate Reset
is NOT a typical cleanse
No starvation diets. No harsh laxatives. No running back and forth to the bathroom all day long. The Beachbody Ultimate Reset doesn't punish or deprive your body—it feeds your body with all the nutrients you've been craving."...you'll have more energy and greater
focus, experience better
digestion and a more
positive mood..."
What is the Beachbody Ultimate Reset?
The Ultimate Reset is a complete, 3-phase daily program that provides you with everything you need to Reclaim your body's natural balance, Release the harmful materials you may be storing within you, and Restore your system to its maximum health.
Six Supplements
Detox, alkalinize, oxygenize, mineralize, optimize, and revitalize—just what your body needs for an Ultimate Reset.Extensive Support
from your Team Beachbody® Coach and other team members available online anytime.Participant Guidebook
with all the information you need, plus a three-week eating plan with recipes, cooking tips, shopping lists, and more.Two DVDs
How To Reset, explaining how to get started on the program, plus the Beachbody Ultimate Reset Cooking Class!, showing you just how easy it is to prepare healthy Reset recipes.Reset Bracelet
symbolizing your dedication to transforming and ultimately resetting your life—and reminding you to give thanks for all you have.Reset Caddy
to make sure you'll never have to worry about forgetting your supplements.Why 3 phases of Ultimate Reset?
Reclaim
In Phase 1, you Reclaim your body, balancing its inner chemistry and preparing it for change—much like soap loosens grime.Release
In Phase 2, you Release the toxic compounds that are clogging your cells and stored within your tissues—like a purifying surge of clear water that flushes away years of impurities.Restore
In Phase 3, you Restore your metabolism to maximum efficiency, while fortifying your body with the nutrients, enzymes, and probiotics it needs to maintain healthy performance in the future.Ultimate Reset Success Stories
My cholesterol was 237 before I started the program and now it's 162. A 75 point drop! I feel like I hit the lottery!
-- Luisa R. Watch Video
I feel fantastic! I was tired and sluggish most of the time prior to using Ultimate Reset. Now I have an incredible amount of energy. More energy than I've had in years.
-- Patricia K. Watch Video
I lost thirty-one pounds in three weeks with Ultimate Reset. Incredible! I've never lost that amount of weight in such a short time, doing anything. I never felt hungry.
-- Keith H. Watch Video
Ultimate Reset FAQs
Will I be hungry all the time during the Ultimate Reset?
No. You'll eat three healthy, satisfying meals every day. Most participants found the meals provided them with plenty of food. Just in case, though, we also give you a list of tasty snacks you can eat while still maintaining your Reset.What's the difference between the Ultimate Reset and most cleanses on the market?
During the Ultimate Reset, you'll eat three healthy, satisfying meals every day and take supplements. You won't starve, drink only juice, or eat only meal replacements. You'll become familiar with delicious new foods and recipes that will help you maintain your health gains beyond these 21 days. In other words, the Reset isn't a quick fix. It's a path to real, long-term change.Will I lose weight on the Ultimate Reset?
Probably. Most Reset participants have lost weight. However, they're even more excited to have acquired new, healthy habits and released unhealthy ones. They've eliminated cravings for sugar and caffeine, learned delicious ways to prepare fruits and vegetables, and grown more aware of how different foods affect their moods and energy levels, making it easier for them to continue eating healthily.Can I work out during my Ultimate Reset?
No, for the 21 days of the Ultimate Reset, we suggest you refrain from strenuous exercise. The Reset is already giving your body a serious internal workout. After your Reset, you'll be ready to resume your Beachbody® workout program and benefit even more from your efforts.I'm on medication. Can I do the Reset?
Check with your physician before beginning the Reset to make sure that it won't react negatively with any medication you're taking.I'm pregnant. Can I do the Ultimate Reset?
No. Your body's systems are already working hard. Wait to do the Reset another time.What if I have questions, or need help understanding something in the Reset?
Don't worry! You'll have the support and guidance of your Coach every step of the way. And because your Coach has already completed the Reset, she'll know how to answer your questions from experienceMonday, April 30, 2012
What You Really Need to Succeed
I'm including this on my fitness blog because I think it's all part and parcel - emotional, physical and mental - all roll together and what you eat and how you use your body (exercise) all rolls up to how well you do...
What You Really Need To Succeed
Albert Einstein’s was estimated at 160, Madonna’s is 140, and John F.
Kennedy’s was only 119, but as it turns out, your IQ score pales in comparison
with your EQ, MQ, and BQ scores when it comes to predicting your success and
professional achievement.
IQ tests are used as an indicator of logical reasoning ability and technical
intelligence. A high IQ is often a prerequisite for rising to the top ranks of
business today. It is necessary, but it is not adequate to predict executive
competence and corporate success. By itself, a high IQ does not guarantee that
you will stand out and rise above everyone else.
Research carried out by the Carnegie Institute of Technology shows that 85
percent of your financial success is due to skills in “human engineering,” your
personality and ability to communicate, negotiate, and lead. Shockingly, only 15
percent is due to technical knowledge. Additionally, Nobel Prize winning
Israeli-American psychologist, Daniel Kahneman, found that people would rather
do business with a person they like and trust rather than someone they don’t,
even if the likeable person is offering a lower quality product or service at a
higher price.
With this in mind, instead of exclusively focusing on your conventional
intelligence quotient, you should make an investment in strengthening your EQ
(Emotional Intelligence), MQ (Moral Intelligence), and BQ (Body Intelligence).
These concepts may be elusive and difficult to measure, but their significance
is far greater than IQ.
Emotional Intelligence
EQ is the most well known of the three, and in brief it is about: being aware
of your own feelings and those of others, regulating these feelings in yourself
and others, using emotions that are appropriate to the situation,
self-motivation, and building relationships.
Top Tip for Improvement: First, become aware of your inner dialogue.
It helps to keep a journal of what thoughts fill your mind during the day.
Stress can be a huge killer of emotional intelligence, so you also need to
develop healthy coping techniques that can effectively and quickly reduce stress
in a volatile situation.
Moral Intelligence
MQ directly follows EQ as it deals with your integrity, responsibility,
sympathy, and forgiveness. The way you treat yourself is the way other people
will treat you. Keeping commitments, maintaining your integrity, and being
honest are crucial to moral intelligence.
Top Tip for Improvement: Make fewer excuses and take responsibility
for your actions. Avoid little white lies. Show sympathy and communicate respect
to others. Practice acceptance and show tolerance of other people’s
shortcomings. Forgiveness is not just about how we relate to others; it’s also
how you relate to and feel about yourself.
Body Intelligence
Lastly, there is your BQ, or body intelligence, which reflects what you know
about your body, how you feel about it, and take care of it. Your body is
constantly telling you things; are you listening to the signals or ignoring
them? Are you eating energy-giving or energy-draining foods on a daily basis?
Are you getting enough rest? Do you exercise and take care of your body? It may
seem like these matters are unrelated to business performance, but your body
intelligence absolutely affects your work because it largely determines your
feelings, thoughts, self-confidence, state of mind, and energy level.
Top Tip For Improvement: At least
once a day, listen to the messages your body is sending you about your health.
Actively monitor these signals instead of going on autopilot. Good nutrition,
regular exercise, and adequate rest are all key aspects of having a high BQ.
Monitoring your weight, practicing moderation with alcohol, and making sure you
have down time can dramatically benefit the functioning of your brain and the
way you perform at work.
What You Really Need To Succeed
It doesn’t matter if you did not receive the best academic training from a
top university. A person with less education who has fully developed their EQ,
MQ, and BQ can be far more successful than a person with an impressive education
who falls short in these other categories.
Yes, it is certainly good to be an intelligent, rational thinker and have a
high IQ; this is an important asset. But you must realize that it is not enough.
Your IQ will help you personally, but EQ, MQ, and BQ will benefit everyone
around you as well. If you can master the complexities of these unique and often
under-rated forms of intelligence, research tells us you will achieve greater
success and be regarded as more professionally competent and capable.
Albert Einstein’s was estimated at 160, Madonna’s is 140, and John F.
Kennedy’s was only 119, but as it turns out, your IQ score pales in comparison
with your EQ, MQ, and BQ scores when it comes to predicting your success and
professional achievement.
IQ tests are used as an indicator of logical reasoning ability and technical
intelligence. A high IQ is often a prerequisite for rising to the top ranks of
business today. It is necessary, but it is not adequate to predict executive
competence and corporate success. By itself, a high IQ does not guarantee that
you will stand out and rise above everyone else.
Research carried out by the Carnegie Institute of Technology shows that 85 percent of your financial success is due to skills in “human engineering,” your personality and ability to communicate, negotiate, and lead. Shockingly, only 15 percent is due to technical knowledge. Additionally, Nobel Prize winning Israeli-American psychologist, Daniel Kahneman, found that people would rather do business with a person they like and trust rather than someone they don’t, even if the likeable person is offering a lower quality product or service at a higher price.
With this in mind, instead of exclusively focusing on your conventional intelligence quotient, you should make an investment in strengthening your EQ (Emotional Intelligence), MQ (Moral Intelligence), and BQ (Body Intelligence). These concepts may be elusive and difficult to measure, but their significance is far greater than IQ.
Emotional Intelligence
EQ is the most well known of the three, and in brief it is about: being aware of your own feelings and those of others, regulating these feelings in yourself and others, using emotions that are appropriate to the situation, self-motivation, and building relationships.
Top Tip for Improvement: First, become aware of your inner dialogue. It helps to keep a journal of what thoughts fill your mind during the day. Stress can be a huge killer of emotional intelligence, so you also need to develop healthy coping techniques that can effectively and quickly reduce stress in a volatile situation.
Moral Intelligence
MQ directly follows EQ as it deals with your integrity, responsibility, sympathy, and forgiveness. The way you treat yourself is the way other people will treat you. Keeping commitments, maintaining your integrity, and being honest are crucial to moral intelligence.
Top Tip for Improvement: Make fewer excuses and take responsibility for your actions. Avoid little white lies. Show sympathy and communicate respect to others. Practice acceptance and show tolerance of other people’s shortcomings. Forgiveness is not just about how we relate to others; it’s also how you relate to and feel about yourself.
Body Intelligence
Lastly, there is your BQ, or body intelligence, which reflects what you know about your body, how you feel about it, and take care of it. Your body is constantly telling you things; are you listening to the signals or ignoring them? Are you eating energy-giving or energy-draining foods on a daily basis? Are you getting enough rest? Do you exercise and take care of your body? It may seem like these matters are unrelated to business performance, but your body intelligence absolutely affects your work because it largely determines your feelings, thoughts, self-confidence, state of mind, and energy level.
Top Tip For Improvement: At least once a day, listen to the messages your body is sending you about your health. Actively monitor these signals instead of going on autopilot. Good nutrition, regular exercise, and adequate rest are all key aspects of having a high BQ. Monitoring your weight, practicing moderation with alcohol, and making sure you have down time can dramatically benefit the functioning of your brain and the way you perform at work.
What You Really Need To Succeed
It doesn’t matter if you did not receive the best academic training from a top university. A person with less education who has fully developed their EQ, MQ, and BQ can be far more successful than a person with an impressive education who falls short in these other categories.
Yes, it is certainly good to be an intelligent, rational thinker and have a high IQ; this is an important asset. But you must realize that it is not enough. Your IQ will help you personally, but EQ, MQ, and BQ will benefit everyone around you as well. If you can master the complexities of these unique and often under-rated forms of intelligence, research tells us you will achieve greater success and be regarded as more professionally competent and capable.
Research carried out by the Carnegie Institute of Technology shows that 85 percent of your financial success is due to skills in “human engineering,” your personality and ability to communicate, negotiate, and lead. Shockingly, only 15 percent is due to technical knowledge. Additionally, Nobel Prize winning Israeli-American psychologist, Daniel Kahneman, found that people would rather do business with a person they like and trust rather than someone they don’t, even if the likeable person is offering a lower quality product or service at a higher price.
With this in mind, instead of exclusively focusing on your conventional intelligence quotient, you should make an investment in strengthening your EQ (Emotional Intelligence), MQ (Moral Intelligence), and BQ (Body Intelligence). These concepts may be elusive and difficult to measure, but their significance is far greater than IQ.
Emotional Intelligence
EQ is the most well known of the three, and in brief it is about: being aware of your own feelings and those of others, regulating these feelings in yourself and others, using emotions that are appropriate to the situation, self-motivation, and building relationships.
Top Tip for Improvement: First, become aware of your inner dialogue. It helps to keep a journal of what thoughts fill your mind during the day. Stress can be a huge killer of emotional intelligence, so you also need to develop healthy coping techniques that can effectively and quickly reduce stress in a volatile situation.
Moral Intelligence
MQ directly follows EQ as it deals with your integrity, responsibility, sympathy, and forgiveness. The way you treat yourself is the way other people will treat you. Keeping commitments, maintaining your integrity, and being honest are crucial to moral intelligence.
Top Tip for Improvement: Make fewer excuses and take responsibility for your actions. Avoid little white lies. Show sympathy and communicate respect to others. Practice acceptance and show tolerance of other people’s shortcomings. Forgiveness is not just about how we relate to others; it’s also how you relate to and feel about yourself.
Body Intelligence
Lastly, there is your BQ, or body intelligence, which reflects what you know about your body, how you feel about it, and take care of it. Your body is constantly telling you things; are you listening to the signals or ignoring them? Are you eating energy-giving or energy-draining foods on a daily basis? Are you getting enough rest? Do you exercise and take care of your body? It may seem like these matters are unrelated to business performance, but your body intelligence absolutely affects your work because it largely determines your feelings, thoughts, self-confidence, state of mind, and energy level.
Top Tip For Improvement: At least once a day, listen to the messages your body is sending you about your health. Actively monitor these signals instead of going on autopilot. Good nutrition, regular exercise, and adequate rest are all key aspects of having a high BQ. Monitoring your weight, practicing moderation with alcohol, and making sure you have down time can dramatically benefit the functioning of your brain and the way you perform at work.
What You Really Need To Succeed
It doesn’t matter if you did not receive the best academic training from a top university. A person with less education who has fully developed their EQ, MQ, and BQ can be far more successful than a person with an impressive education who falls short in these other categories.
Yes, it is certainly good to be an intelligent, rational thinker and have a high IQ; this is an important asset. But you must realize that it is not enough. Your IQ will help you personally, but EQ, MQ, and BQ will benefit everyone around you as well. If you can master the complexities of these unique and often under-rated forms of intelligence, research tells us you will achieve greater success and be regarded as more professionally competent and capable.
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