What is it like to get a snake bite?

Sunday, August 7, 2011 0 comments





In a controversial move during a game of "Would you rather...?", my son asked if I'd pick being trapped in a lion den or in a cage full of snakes. We debated whether it would be better to meet your demise with a hundred snake bites or at the claws of a hungry pride. And after viewing these up-close videos of snakes attacking, I think I might actually have to choose having my face eaten by a lion.

Take a deep breath and tune in to these videos that show or explain the spooky world of snake bites. First, this sciencey bit by National Geographic on what happened physiologically and psychologically to one man who was bitten while photographing a snake.


You won't need to watch a full episode of Discovery's show "Bitten" after seeing this trailer, complete with gory pics of a man's thumb post-bite.

Too bad there wasn't intervention of any kind available for this guy.



(Oh, how I wish I could post this video. Fair warning -- it has lots of cussing. Why? Because it's a pretty wild account of a woman from snake bite to recovery.)

Rosario Dawson: Complimented for looking emaciated

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Rosario Dawson

Rosario Dawson

"I remember everyone asking what did you do to get so thin? You looked great," actress Rosario Dawson said bluntly. "I looked emaciated."

Speaking to Shape Magazine, Dawson recalls the reactions she had when she lost weight to play a drug addict dying of HIV/AIDS in the 2005 movie "Rent."

"It's a form of violence in the way that we look at women and the way we expect them to look and be for what sake? Not for health, survival, not for enjoyment of life, but just so you could look pretty," she said.

Even when she's not portraying a critically ill character, Dawson says the standard is unhealthy and not real.

"I'm constantly telling girls all the time everything is airbrushed, everything is retouched to the point it's not even asked. None of us look like that."

While Dawson's criticisms are not revolutionary or even words we have never heard from a celebrity, they still stand out among a slew of magazine cover articles with seemingly innocuous tips from famous ladies on how they got or stay slim or generic commentary on being naturally thin, having fast metabolism, or simply eating a salad a day and drinking lots of water. We know the celebrities who have spoken out about the unrealistic beauty standard and impossible body expectations -- Kate Winslet, Drew Barrymore, Adele, Meryl Streep, Helen Mirren, and now Rosario Dawson -- because for each of them, there are hundreds of compliant stars who are smiling and nodding (at least publicly). Blake Lively, for example, said that she was at her healthiest while playing a woman dying of bulimia, a stark contrast to the "Rent" reactions.

Back to Dawson.

Although the interview focuses on the salads she eats during the interview, I love that Dawson told the magazine the food she'd never give up is homemade lasagna, that she hits the snooze button every morning, that she snacks on raw almonds and coconut water,  that she has a snappy sense of direction and she's working on the V-Day project to end violence against women and girls, and that she loves her own ears. Those quirky details round out a woman we might otherwise see as one-dimensional or even just as a size up or down from where she was in a red-carpet photo last month.

I think that might just be the key to getting out of this restrictive body-image space. I think seeing women, even if they are on-screen or onstage, as real will help us stop worrying about whether they are gaunt or hip-bony or have a belly or got a boob job. I think it's healthier.

I don't think I am alone in not caring if an actress chooses to work out daily to have the body she wants or if she got it from "good genes." I'd so much rather hear her explain what it takes to give her the energy and inspiration to walk tall and feel fabulous in whatever body she has at the moment.

Dawson does this, admitting she doesn't love working out but says she enjoys the side effects -- better posture, an endorphin surge, and feeling better in her body.

"It's meditative and calming to get your body in motion," she said of becoming an avid lunchtime yogi and practicing Pilates. "But getting back in the saddle can be the hardest thing."


Do Dawson's criticisms of the compliments she received when she looked emaciated stand out to you?

What other celebrities would you like to see get honest about Hollywood's impossible body standards?

User Post: Even McDonald's is not a happy place anymore

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I was a bit shocked today by the news that McDonald's has decided to change the Happy Meal. I am actually disturbed by how upsetting this change is to me. Three years ago, McDonald's began offering apples as a choice instead of fries with the Happy Meal. I tasted the apples once. I did not care for them as they had a bitter after-taste. Most people must have shared my opinion of the apples, because three years later only twelve percent of consumers regularly order the apples over the fries. This is where the story begins to get really disturbing. McDonald's has decided to include the apples in every Happy Meal with a smaller portion of fries. This is not because of great demand for the apples obviously. This was done to appease a group of people who believe that it is their right to govern what we feed our children.

I recognize that McDonald's food is not healthy when consumed in large quantities. A matter of fact, there is not one type of food that is good for you when consumed in large quantities. I do not see an issue with taking my four children to McDonald's on Tuesday nights. It is something that I have done since my oldest daughter could enjoy the play place. I love the fact that my three year old and my almost thirteen year old both look forward to these trips. My children are all healthy and do not suffer from any weight related issues. Commonsense dictates that one fast food meal a week will not pose significant risk to overall health. As a nurse by profession, I know that obesity is a serious issue for our youth. Obesity is complex and is caused by a multitude of genetic, internal, and external influences. Interestingly, the average school lunch has more calories than a Happy Meal.

McDonald's has removed the happiness from the Happy Meal by changing their business practices to please this fanatical group. These health nuts are not paying customers. Actual customers were presented with an option of apples or fries three years ago. This change was unnecessary as any customer is free to order whatever they may choose themselves without the interference of regulation from outsiders. I believe that this alteration is no different that some fitness crazed, food policeman standing behind you in line and forcing you to order the healthy choices only.

I am also saddened because the Happy Meal was a vestige of my childhood. I have some happy memories of enjoying the tasty burger, barely able to contain my excitement for the surprise toy. Perhaps I am a bit nostalgic, but I cherish those few childhood experiences that have seemed to survive the test of time and technology. A Happy Meal was a tradition. Take away a few fries, add some apples, pour in a heaping dose of political correctness and you get the More Healthy Meal. No matter how many times I say it, it just does not sound right.

What Your Weight Says About Your Personality

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If you're trying to lose weight, now would be a very good time for some personality adjustments. According to a new study, those of us with impulsive traits are most likely to be overweight. In fact, people who scored the highest in hasty behaviors weighed an average of 22 pounds more than their cautious counterparts.

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Researchers from the National Institute on Aging looked at data from nearly 2,000 people over the course of 50 years to determine how personality traits are associated with weight and body mass index. Their conclusions, published in theJournal of Personality and Social Psychology, found greater weight gain among impulsive people, those who enjoy taking risks and those who are cynical, competitive and aggressive.

Individuals with this constellation of traits tend to give in to temptation and lack the discipline to stay on track amid difficulties or frustration. To maintain a healthy weight, it is typically necessary to have a healthy diet and a sustained program of physical activity, both of which require commitment and restraint. Such control may be difficult for highly impulsive individuals.

A revelation that might just make sense if you're looking at a compulsive eater, but let's not confuse the issue. Not all impulsive, aggressive, risk-takers are destined to become overweight. I happen to know many people who I would consider impulsive–myself included–and none of us are at unhealthy weights. In fact, most of us are healthy, physically fit individuals. We just happen to channel our impulsive behaviors towards athletic endeavors, not food.

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Case in point: A few years ago, a friend of mine completed an awesome bike workout and felt so good afterward that he went home and immediately signed up for an Ironman (2.4 mile swim, 112 mile bike and 26.2 mile run). No massive amounts of training under his belt, no previous experience in triathlons and no idea what he was getting himself into. He just did it without thinking. Endorphin high or impulsive behavior? Probably both. Turns out, he became quite good at Ironman races and has since gone on to complete them in the top of his age group. Had he taken the time to think this through before signing up for the first race, he probably would have done what so many of us do–find every excuse in the book not to do it. Sometimes thinking is overrated. We can all be our own worse supporters–always finding reasons that we're not good enough to do something, not fit enough, not strong enough, not young enough, not experienced enough, whatever.

Ultimately, being impulsive has to do with two things: taking safe risks, but also knowing when to apply the brakes.

Crush more calories with your workout

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By Jen Ator, Women's Health

Preventing too many ice cream splurges and other summer treats from settling on your waistline comes down to simple calorie math: If you want to indulge in a few extra calories, you'll have to sweat off a few more than usual. Send 'em packing with these four explosive moves created by Kim Blake, a trainer at Nike World Headquarters Sports Center in Portland, Oregon. You'll push your body weight off the floor and then absorb it when you land. Translation? Your muscles will work hard, and you'll blast fat.

What to Expect: You'll do 12 to 16 reps of each move, resting for 15 seconds between each exercise. When you've finished all four, rest for a minute or two, then repeat the circuit two more times. Do this calorie-incinerating workout three times a week, or anytime you need a little damage control.

Print and Go: Get This Entire Routine as a Printable Workout


1.  RUNNER'S LUNGE TO KNEE SKIP 

Start in a pushup position, then bend your left knee and place your left foot between your hands (a). Push through your left foot, raise your torso, and drive your right knee and left arm into the air, hopping off the ground (b). Return to start, then switch legs and repeat on the other side. That's one rep.

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2.  PLIÉ JUMPING JACKS

Stand with your hands at your sides (a) and jump into the air, bringing your arms overhead and your feet wide, knees and toes turned out, then lower into a squat (b). Quickly jump back to the starting position. That's one rep.

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3.  QUARTER-TURN SQUAT JUMP 

Lower into a squat (a), then jump up, swinging your arms overhead and rotating 90 degrees to the left while in the air (b). Lower into a squat (c), then jump up and rotate to the right. That's one rep.

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4.  DONKEY KICK

Start in a pushup position, legs extended directly behind you and hands under your shoulders (a). With your legs together, brace your core and glutes, then kick both legs into the air, bending your knees to bring your feet toward your butt (b). Reverse the movement to return to start, trying to land softly on the balls of your feet. That's one rep.

Master a Classic: How to Do a Perfect Pushup






Tell us:  What's working in your fitness routine right now???

Top 7 Reasons You're SO Tired

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Don't be one of those women who accept being overly exhausted. Kids, house, work, life—I get it. It is still very unusual to have sheer exhaustion for an extended period of time. The physical complaint of being "worn out" is one of women's top five health concerns when they visit their doctor. Here is a checklist of seven biggies that cause an overwhelming desire for a spa day (and a well deserved one).

Related: Top Sex Drive Killers

Thyroid problems

That little gland in the middle of your neck is your energy guru. Either overactive or under active, it can create major fatigue. If it's underactive your energy just cannot get that boost. If it is overactive your energy stores burn out quickly. Thyroid problems are common in women, especially post pregnancy.

Heart Disease

Women manifest symptoms of heart disease differently than men. Twice as many women die of stroke or heart disease than any other form of cancer. If you have risk factors such as obesity, diabetes or high blood pressure be sure to have an annual physical.

Vitamin D

Vitamin D deficiency has been a large part of growing studies. For women, deficiency in this vitamin can lead to impaired bone strength. A simple blood test can help resolve the question. Reasons why we are deficient? Many women have milk allergies; we have decreased exposure to sun, which promotes vitamin metabolism; many women are vegan or vegetarian. The recommended amount is 600 IU daily for women under 70 and 800 IU for women over 70.

Related: Myths About Alcohol

Anemia

Iron deficiency can be a major cause of anemia and fatigue. Once again, following a strict vegan or vegetarian diet can decrease iron rich foods you intake. Folate is also important for red blood cell metabolism—and therefore energy. Also, a female can lose a lot of blood during her period and this can lead to chronic anemia. If you do follow a strict diet, it is worth seeing a nutritionist once to be sure that you have proper vitamin and mineral supplementation to keep your blood count adequate.

Sleep apnea

This is a major under diagnosed disorder in women. If you snore, please tell your doctor. Sleep apnea is a condition that halts your breathing through the night and your brain wakes you up to restart the flow of breathing. The result... you never get great deep sleep and feel very tired during the day. Treatment can really change your life.  If overweight, weight loss will also be recommended.

Also See: Preventing Summer UTIs

Depression

Depression and fatigue fuel one another, it seems. Biggest advice, talk with your doctor about how you are feeling. Treating depression, even beginning to acknowledge it, will help.  Why live with something treatable?

Lack of sleep

When juggling so very much, women over-burn the midnight oil. I know that after the kids go to bed I often put in another hour of work and then load/empty/reload the dishwasher and the list doesn't end. One night a week just go to bed and get that full eight hours... trust me, the dishes aren't going anywhere on their own.

User Post: Can I win the war on weight?

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Weight!  For the last month I have been doing great on Jenny Craig, I have even lost ten pounds.  I have kept up my motivation by filling myself with fruits & veggies.  So the other night my husband & I decided to go out to dinner alone, no baby.  I felt like going hog wild apparently because I ordered all the wrong things off the menu.  Salad for an appy which would normally be ok if you don't add tons of goat cheese and helpings of your husbands fried calamari.  Italian bread for dipping in that oh so delicious salad dressing and then Spaghetti Carbonara.  If that wasn't bad enough we decided to walk along the boardwalk strip in our hometown and came across a new ice cream shop with a zillion homemade flavors of ice cream.  Who am I to turn down the success of a local ice cream shop?  I ordered a small sugar cone with a child size portion of chocolate peanut butter ice cream.  What I got was a king size scoop which needed to be placed into a cup so it would not melt all over me.  Instead of portioning out a "normal" scoop I ate the whole damn thing.

This little outing trip lead to me eating two dinners that were not Jenny Cuisine.  Lucklily I weighed in this morning and didn't gain or loss any weight.  But why did I sabotage my weight loss this week?  Only to moan and complain to any sympathetic ear.  For attention?  For an extra boast of you can do it?  I'm not sure but I have 30 pounds to go and I really want to get there but I'm not sure if I can win this war.

When Walking Burns More Calories Than Running

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A writer from Runner's World magazine got to wondering about burning calories while walking versus running. Her experiment discovered something interesting about the two cardio activities.

Wearing a heart-rate monitor she ran on the treadmill at 6 different speeds. Then after a brief rest she repeated the experiment walking this time. She discovered that as the pace exceeded 5 mph, or a 12-minute mile, walking became harder than running as shown by her heart rate. Admittedly, walking above 5 mph is very difficult, but if it is easier on your joints don't feel bad that you are not running with the others. Walking at fact paces "forces your body to move in ways it wasn't designed to move," thus increasing internal friction.

Obviously, faster running burns more calories but walking is still a great way to burn off calories. The point is to do something that challenges you without leaving you exhausted. Check out the RunKeeper app for your iPhone to track your speed and calorie burn for your exercise. Read the full article for most interesting ruminations on calorie burn and exercise

6 Ways Your High-Tech Life Could Be Making You Sick

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photo credit: James Whitaker/Getty Images

photo credit: James Whitaker/Getty Images

As slick devices take over our home and homes away form home, whispers of techno-health hazards keep flying. We get to the bottom of what's real, what's not, and when to opt out.

Smartphones

The situation: Just as we were chatting on our iPhones about oursummer plans, the news broke: The World Health Organization had just classified radio frequency waves — the radiation we know most from cell phones — as "possibly carcinogenic." No new studies were hatched, just a review of existing relevant research, which led to a conclusion of "limited evidence" for certain brain tumors from cell phones — meaning there "could be some risk" and we should "keep a close watch." But alas, the ongoing wishy-washiness stems from the existing studies' being too small, too outdated, and too ill-designed to be definitive, explains Michael Wyde, Ph.D., of the National Toxicology Program. The strategy: Minimize exposure. Read more here.



photo credit: Vstock/Getty Images

photo credit: Vstock/Getty Images





iTunes Alert
Now that smartphones have replaced iPods, they're also wreaking havoc on our ears. Overworked sensory cells die and leave behind scar tissue, resulting in an errant hum and dissipating hearing. To slow the decline, listen no longer than 90 minutes a day at 80 percent of maximum volume, and trade earbuds for noise-canceling headsets to avoid turning up the volume. Read more here.




photo credit: Tetra Images/Getty Images

photo credit: Tetra Images/Getty Images



Wi-Fi Router
The situation: Can the technology that powers our Internet connection — and our lives — be the reason behind our blahs? Indeed, Wi-Fi routers emit radio frequency waves, just as cell phones do. And while we don't press them against our head, their emissions are constant and ubiquitous. Physiologists report that electromagnetic fields (EMFs) produce a biochemical stress response in cells, and some say this can, in the short term, cause those hodgepodge of symptoms known as EMF sensitivity, and, in the long term, make us vulnerable to inflammatory diseases and cancer. The strategy: Unplug your home router and avoid public places with Wi-Fi when you're not using it. Read more here.

photo credit: jean gill/Getty Images

photo credit: jean gill/Getty Images




iPad, E-Reader
The situation: Not that we're complaining, but what happened to those incessantiPad commercials? Holding up the iPad forces wrist- and finger-extension, leading to repetitive strain injuries (RSIs), says Frances Pisano, founder of ergoblog.com. Laying the iPad flat forces you to lower your head, which strains the neck. The strategy: Prop up the screen with a rack or books. Bend your neck forward no more than 15 degrees, and look down with your eyes, not head. Read more here.



photo credit: Tetra Images/Getty Images

photo credit: Tetra Images/Getty Images



GPS
The situation: If you're seeing crazier driving these days, it may be because drivers' brains are shrinking. As research out of the Douglas Mental Health University Institute in Montreal suggests, road maps encourage us to pay attention to our surroundings, to learn street configurations, to figure out where we are in relation to our target destination (a.k.a "spatial strategy") and force us to exercise the part of our brain called the hippocampus. But when people navigate by simply doing as instructed ("stimulus-response strategy") — as they might do with a GPS — the hippocampus was less active. Read more here.



photo credit: Thomas Tolstrup/Getty Images

photo credit: Thomas Tolstrup/Getty Images




Laptops
The situation: From Georgia to Kansas, headlines have breathlessly reported on laptops that "bursted into flames!" And sure, it gets hot under there, but tremendously more common are burn injuries and heat rash — or, as the October issue of the journal Pediatrics called it, "toasted skin syndrome," which feels like a sunburn. The strategy: A docking system is best from adermatologic and ergonomic perspective. Read more here.





6 Sneaky Ways To Get In Exercise

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Need to work out but can't get to the gym? Try these six easy ways to work out! The best part? You can do these moves anywhere!

At-home chair squats: Hover above a chair seat as if you were going to sit down, without letting your butt or thighs touch the seat. Hold for 30 seconds, building up to 1 minute. Do these body toning exercises whenever you get a moment, aiming for once an hour.

Squat in the Kitchen: Every time you're in the kitchen, perform triceps dips using a kitchen chair: Stand in front of a chair as if you were going to sit down, then bend knees and lower hips, placing hands on the seat edge, fingers pointing forward, arms straight. Walk feet forward, and with feet flat and torso erect, bend and straighten arms, keeping butt close to chair seat without touching it. Do 8-15 reps.

RELATED: Are Protein Shakes Truly Healthy?

Shopping squeeze: As you push your shopping cart, or whenever you're walking, contract your butt muscles as tightly as you can and keep them contracted as you walk. (No one has to know!)

Commercial crunches: Anytime a commercial comes on while you're watching television, do an ab exerciseof your choice until the show you're watching returns; pick a new ab move for each ad.

Telephone walk: Whenever you're on a cellular or cordless phone at home, walk around for the duration of the conversation. (Wear a pedometer and see the steps add up!)

RELATED: 3 Tips To Lighten Any Kraft Recipe

Balancing act: When you brush your teeth, or while standing at the kitchen sink, lift one leg slightly and bend and straighten your standing leg to perform one-legged squats . Tighten your buttocks and keep your abs contracted as you squat. After 10-15 reps of these body toning exercises, switch legs and repeat.

10 Free Apps That Truly Help You Lose Weight

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What if we told you that you don't have a pay a cent, step foot inside a gym, or hire an expensive personal trainer to lose weight? Sounds too good to be true, right? Guess again! We found ten free iPhone apps that deliver weight loss results in cool, innovative, and inspirational new ways! Download them to your iPhone for free now and get into shape in ways that are convenient (and fun!) for you!


1. Calorie Counter & Diet Tracker

Keeping track of your calorie budget is a bummer. It's cumbersome and confusing. But now, Calorie Counter & Diet Tracker does all the work for you! Choose from over one million foods to enter into this app, and it will record your daily caloric intake to make sure you meet weight loss goals. But that's not all. There's a free barcode scanner that works with your camera phone to capture important data from foods in grocery stores and your pantry!


2. Calorific Lite
If you're not jazzed about calculating calories, try Calorific Lite's super simple and fun traffic light-color coded categorizing system. Unhealthy foods are entered as red, nutritious choices are green, and everything in between shows up as yellow. It's that easy! This app increases your awareness of the types of foods you're consuming. Chances are, if you look at your records after a week of eating red foods, you'll become motivated to make a swift diet change.


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3. Nike Training Club
This polished, professional app is essentially a free personal trainer right inside your phone. With over 60 custom-built workouts from celebrity trainers, including one that works with Lea Michele and Rihanna, this app is worth the seconds it takes to download it. From the moment you being using it as a motivational exercise tool, you'll know you're in good hands. It's made by Nike after all!


4. Lose It!
A longtime favorite of ours, Lose It! has added new social components to its goal-based weight loss programs. Now, you can share achievements with friends, discuss hot topics on forums, and log into loseit.com to discover even more benefits of this free app. We're excited about this social addition because not only is it fun to brag about your accomplishments, but when people are aware of your health plan, it's much easier to stay accountable your plan.


5. RunKeeper
Nothing feels as good as a post-jog endorphin high! But if you don't have a running buddy or aren't sure how to measure your success, it can be challenging to lace up your sneakers and hit the pavement. Enter RunKeeper, a free app that tracks the distance you run, time spent, calories burned, and route you took. Just like Lose It!, RunKeeper has a Web site (runkeeper.com) where you can share successes with friends. The best part is you can program time, distance, or pace-based updates that come in through your headphones to keep you moving and grooving. Awesome!


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6. Daily Cardio Workout
Exercise routines can get boring, monotonous, and downright ineffective when you recycle the same movements over and over again. Thanks to Daily Cardio Workout, you can choose from a bunch of different programs to keep your workouts fresh! Whether you have five, seven, or ten minutes each day, there's a routine that fits your specific goals and expert level. Feel the burn with simple, in-home instructional videos. You can even set daily reminders to push yourself to keep up the pace!


7. Fooducate
Feel equipped for battle when you enter any grocery store with Fooducate, an app that allows you to scan the barcode on any food item. Fooducate's database assigns a grade to each item based on its nutritional value, reveals hidden ingredients the label may not advertise, and even provides alternative, healthier options. Phew! That's one little app that does a whole lot!


8. Fast Food Calories
It's nearly impossible to be health conscious when you're dining out at restaurant chains with friends. But with Fast Food Calories, at least you can attempt to order the healthiest item on the menu. With over 108 restaurants in its database, this app displays full menus and nutritional information so that you can make the best choice. It records the meals you've eaten for up to one year, so that you can get a sense of your eating habits and make the necessary and appropriate changes.


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9. YOGA Free
Not only is practicing yoga a great way to relieve stress and strengthen your core, but it's also proven to help you lose weight in a low-key, very zen way. YOGA Free offers photo, audio, and video guidance to make sure you're completing each of the 250 free poses correctly. There's also a calendar built in to track your activity, as well as the ability to share achievements with friends on Facebook and Twitter.


10. Get in Shape
Whether you're looking to get slimmer, complete a cleanse, improve your diet, or prevent illnesses, Get in Shape will help you achieve your goal with 75 available diets, ranging in duration from two to 28 days. That's not all. Also included are 30 workouts with photo, audio, and video guides to help along the way. Our favorite feature of this free app is the grocery list function that provides tailored shopping lists to help you stick the specific diet you have chosen. How easy is that!


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Avoid the Weight Gain Trap

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The never-ending fight against weight gain sometimes seems like a lost battle. One minute you're devastating the competition -- eating healthy and fighting off junk-food cravings. The next, you're back on the ropes, muttering to yourself, "I can't believe I ate that whole thing." For some, it's emotions and circumstances that can wreak havoc on a diet, whether it's a breakup, stress or pure boredom. For others, it's a never-ending cycle of new diets that promise results too good to be true and abs that look airbrushed.

No matter what trap you find yourself in, there's always a way out.


The Trap: Emotional Eating

If the words "emotional eating" bring to mind an image of a disheveled Bridget Jones toting a pint of Ben & Jerry's, think again. Emotional eating is not just inhaling spatula-fuls of Cherry Garcia between post-breakup sobs. In reality, 95 percent of eating is emotional, says Beth Castle, an emotional eating expert in Alberta, Canada. And when emotions such as stress, grief or boredom lure you into the kitchen, you're stuck in one of the most suffocating weight traps of all.

"When people are looking for comfort, it's easy to turn to food," Castle said. "In that moment, it makes them feel better." But as soon as you finish that slice or two or three of molten chocolate lava cake, you feel even worse than you did before. The very thing that was supposed to relieve your distress makes it even worse -- sparking a vicious cycle that only ends in extra pounds.

"We need to find something to fulfill our needs other than food," Castle said, emphasizing that social interaction is key and that "laughing is often the best comfort." Sometimes, just going for a walk outside can help take your mind off food's temptations.

The most important thing to do when you fall victim to emotional binging is to forgive yourself, says Kathie Mattison, an eating disorders therapist in Rockford, Illinois. Punishing yourself for falling off the weight-loss wagon will only make the struggle worse. The moment you forgive yourself is the moment you can start taking steps to improve your relationship with food, she says.

Sometimes, it's nearly impossible to overcome emotional eating alone. If you think you may be depressed, or if your stress starts to take over your life, Mattison says the best thing to do is see a therapist or doctor.


The Trap: The Clean Plate Club

"Finish your peas." On the surface, it's a simple request that your parents might have said every night at dinner. But underneath, it reflects America's portion problem, and it's one of the most indestructible warriors in America's battle with food.

The Clean Plate Club has its roots in a World War I campaign by President Woodrow Wilson to ensure the country's food didn't go to waste. Schoolchildren were asked to sign a pledge: "At table I'll not leave a scrap of food upon my plate. And I'll not eat between meals, but for suppertime I'll wait."

Almost a century later, many are still devoted members. Though the U.S. supply of food is far from scarce, many Americans still find themselves adhering to the traditional three-meals-a-day schedule. If you limit yourself to a certain number of meals a day, Castle says you're more likely to overeat. When you save your appetite for supper, you'll probably finish that calorie-packed plate of lasagna entirely.

Castle recommends eating several smaller meals instead of carving your day around breakfast, lunch and dinner.

"The goal is not to plan what you eat; the goal is to have a variety of healthy foods and snacks," she says.

Notorious for their never-ending bowls of pasta, restaurants are one of the most delicious foes in the portion-control fight. If you have trouble putting down the fork when dining out, Castle suggests sharing meals or ordering from the kids' menu.


The Traps: The Diet-and-Binge Cycle and Nighttime Eating

You might skip breakfast, cut out carbs or even survive a week solely on cayenne pepper and molasses. Skipping meals or cutting out food groups -- techniques promised to help "drop 5 lbs. in two weeks" or "say goodbye to belly fat" -- can leave your blood sugar imbalanced and your appetites unsatisfied.

"By ignoring our bodies' signals of hunger and fullness, food is disconnected from the body's needs," Mattison said. And when you finally respond to your need to eat, you're more likely to lose control.

These habits can make you susceptible to two of the most common traps: the diet-and-binge cycle and nighttime eating. "If we skip meals, graze, keep going with caffeine throughout the day, at night we'll be hungry, fatigued and craving food satisfaction," Mattison said.

The key to avoiding both of these traps is not skipping meals and making sure you don't go hungry throughout the day, Castle and Mattison say.

"The afternoon snack is key to making better decisions at night," Castle said, adding that a piece of fruit or a cup of coffee won't cut it. She suggests having some carbs, whole grains and protein. "By the time 5 o'clock hits, we're more likely to make better decisions about what we're having that night."

Why You Should Eat Chocolate on a Diet

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By: Sara Wells

Chocolate is healthier than you think. Here, for new reasons to indulge in the sweet stuff. (Like you need 'em!)

Related: The Best 250-Calorie Dessert Recipes

#1: To Kick a Cough

Theobromine, a chemical in chocolate, is as effective at soothing coughs as codeine, a key ingredient in manyprescription meds.

Related: 5 Foods That Fight Colds and Flu


#2: To Fight Cavities

Theobromine may also strengthen teeth better than fluoride, according to Tulane University researchers.

Related: We Tried It: The Best Ways to Whiten Your Teeth at Home


#3: To Tame Tummy Trouble


Cocoa contains potent antioxidants that bind to and inhibit a protein in the intestines that causes diarrhea, say scientists at the Children's Hospital & Research Center Oakland in California. No wonder it has been used as a remedy since the 16th century.

Related: 15 Ways to Banish Belly Bloat

#4: To Save Face

British scientists found that less than an ounce of flavanol-rich chocolate a day may help protect your skin from the harmful effects of UV rays. (Sunscreen is still a must.)

Supermarket Smarts: Ditch The Basket, Choose A Cart For Healthier Groceries

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One of the easiest ways to eat healthier is to simply ban your "bad foods" from your house. You may crave junk food, but chances are you wouldn't leave your house for it (most of the time). But the tricky part of that trick is that it's hard not to buy the bad stuff at the supermarket to begin with. (Rules about shopping while hungry are cliche, but true: On an empty stomach, I always come away with a cart full of crackers, cheese, and beer.) Researchers have found one incredibly simple way to make less unhealthy food choices at the grocery store: Push a cart instead of carrying a basket.

Weight Loss: Are Fancy Grocery Stores Better for Your Health?

You might guess that carts would encourage more impulse shopping (more room for potato chips!), but apparently flexing your arm to pick up your basket at the store entrance "leads to a preference for vices over virtues, and for smaller, earlier rewards over larger, later monetary rewards," according to a study published in the Journal of Marketing Research. Does this seem absurd to you? I mean, really, how truly bizarre. Will researchers now test whether placing baskets atop a table or something, so customers have to reach up for them instead, might work out? Will supermarkets discourage basket stacking so one has to lean further, flex more, to pick a basket up—what impact would that have on increasing impulse buys?

Scary Study: 72% of Grocery Carts Are Covered In Fecal Bacteria

The study is part of a field of research called embodied myopia, in which "seemingly irrelevant bodily actions influence consumer behavior," and apparently there is a whole body of research showing the flex/reward tie and other weird body/behavioral connections. For a little help choosing mangoes over chocolate bars during grocery trips, try reaching for a cart no matter how small your intended shopping load: Shoppers were three times more likely to choose candy over fruit if they carried a basket!

 
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