Calories in Your Typical Breakfast

Friday, November 4, 2011 0 comments

Source: Calories in Your Typical Breakfast

Breakfast may be known as the most important meal of the day, but it's also my favorite. There's always something to satisfy my taste buds whether it's sweet or savory, warm or refreshing. Since I love fruit, yogurt, oatmeal, eggs, and pancakes so much, I wouldn't even dream of skipping out on breakfast, but I know many people who do in order to lose weight. If calories are on your mind, check out the list below to see which breakfast choices are lowest.

  • Omelet: Three large eggs (215) One ounce of cheddar cheese (114) Total: 329 calories
  • Scrambled eggs and bacon breakfast: Two large eggs (143) Three strips of bacon (138) 1/2 cup hash browns (207) One slice whole wheat toast (100) Total: 588 calories
  • Hard boiled egg and fruit: One large egg (78) Two cups fruit salad (200) Total: 278 calories
  • Blueberry pancakes: Three blueberry pancakes (253) One ounce maple syrup (99) Total: 352 calories
  • Yogurt with fruit and granola: Six ounces vanilla nonfat Greek yogurt (120) One cup blueberries (83) 1/4 cup granola (172) Total: 375 calories
  • Oatmeal: 1/2 cup oats (150) One small chopped apple (77) One teaspoon cinnamon (6) One tablespoon honey (64) Total: 297 calories


More from FitSugar: Hearty Whole Grains: It's What's For Breafkast


  • Bowl of cereal: One cup Kashi GoLean cereal (140) One cup skim milk (91) One small sliced banana (90) Total: 321 calories
  • French toast: Two pieces of French toast (298) 1/4 cup maple syrup (200) Total: 498 calories
  • Belgian waffle: One waffle: (390) 1/4 cup maple syrup (200) Total: 590 calories
  • Toast with peanut butter: One slice of whole wheat bread (100) Two tablespoons peanut butter (210) Total: 310 calories
  • English muffin with butter and jam: One whole wheat English muffin (130) One pat unsalted butter (36) One tablespoon strawberry jam (40) Total: 206 calories
  • Breakfast sandwich: One whole wheat English muffin (130) One scrambled egg (72) One sausage patty (120) One slice American cheese (70) Total: 392 calories
  • Bagel with cream cheese: One plain bagel (206) One ounce cream cheese (100): Total: 306 calories
What's your typical breakfast?

Sick-Day Solutions: 10 tips for parents this flu season

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Few parental rights of passage are as unpleasant as sitting up with a sick child through the night. Whether it's a case of the dreaded stomach flu or a bout of Strep throat, spending time with your ill child can leave you feeling painfully helpless. During the nine months I recently spent pregnant with my first child, I also worked as a pediatric hospital intern in a field called Child Life. Through stress-relieving approaches and expressive therapies including play, music and art, Child Life Specialists help relieve the suffering of children undergoing medical events from the relatively minor to the severe. As my internship unfolded and my belly grew, I started to think about how the remarkable techniques that I was learning could be put to use by parents anywhere. From the nation's experts on soothing sick kids, here are ten well-honed approaches to making sick days less uncomfortable for kids and parents at home.

1. Tell the Truth
Workers in the Child Life Specialty profession operate under the basic assumption that children benefit from straightforward answers to questions. Without them, young imaginations may conjure up more concern than is necessary. If they ask, it's okay to tell a child it's possible they might throw up again in the night. Even if it happens, you can explain, you promise to do everything you can to make their belly (and that sour taste in their mouth) feel better as soon as it's over.

2. Soothe Your Child First
When they don't feel well, kids look to their parents and other important grown-ups for signs of agitation or concern. When you look worried, even a common case of the flu can seem scarier than it really is. Research confirms this: One of the single greatest contributors to a child's response to feeling under the weather is the way their caretakers are handling the situation. If parents can direct their energies toward easing their child's discomfort during times of illness, that child will benefit. Parents' own concerns are best voiced to their peers — those adult friends and family members that can help and empathize.

Related: Fever? Puking? No need to stay home

3. Engage in Play
For children, nearly every day is a good day for play — even sick ones. Play is their first language: Any time you want to open up the lines of communication, appeal to what they know and love. Encourage storytelling if they're in the mood, help construct a fort over their bed and let them lead in a game of sick day make-believe, or gather their favorite stuffed animals together and serve everyone tea to help their colds. Let your child be the guide — they'll let you know what they feel like doing. In the process of playing, you may just help make them feel better.

4. When in Doubt, Distract
Sometimes, despite the best efforts of grown-ups to soothe a sick child's symptoms and engage them, they continue to feel miserable. In these cases, distraction, an important item in any parenting tool kit, can be used to great effect. When a child in the hospital must have an IV placed, Child Life Specialists might use bubbles or guided visualizations as distractions. The possibilities for parents at home are unlimited. A special viewing of a fun film, for instance, telling goofy stories, or offering up a back scratch or foot rub can all do wonders to draw attention away from immediate physical discomforts.

5. Put Your Doctor Kit To Use
Medical play is at the heart of the work Child Life Specialists do in hospitals, and ill kids at home can reap the same benefits of this activity. Medical play involves using pretend or actual medical items paired with an explanation that demystifies why they're important and how they're going to be used. Children can ask questions and even walk through the scenarios themselves. This information tends to soothe worries and leaves kids feeling better prepared for what's to come. At home, if you need to use a Neti Pot or give sour-tasting medicine, explain to your child exactly what's going to happen, and whenever possible, use soft, non-threatening language. Sensory details are important, too — for example, you might explain that mentholated ointment on the chest could smell "like minty gum or peppermint candy."

Related: How do I keep my kid's germs from my baby?

6. Encourage Creativity
Second only to medical play, those in the Child Life field rely on the healing potential of expressive therapies to help usher children through challenging days. Creating a painting, writing a short story, or sculpting a set of animals from modeling clay all engage kids in the creative process and help them to explore feelings and ideas. There's no reason parents shouldn't join in on the fun, too, especially when children are stuck at home and are in need of some engaging company.

7. Bring the Outdoors In
Even when they're bedbound, studies suggest that patients tend to recover more quickly when they can spot the natural world from their rooms. If it's not too cold or rainy, letting a sick child who feels up to it sit outside for a few moments can go a long way toward improving their spirits. When weather doesn't permit it, helping them to catch a glimpse of the outdoors at some point during the day may be just as helpful.

8. Don't Skip The Prizes
For many kids nowadays, a trip to the dreaded dentist is made sweeter because of the small prizes — stickers, packs of gum, tiny parachute men — that await them at the end of the experience. As grown-ups, it's not fair to expect that children will understand why swallowing uncomfortably large pills or making multiple trips to the doctor's office can actually be a good thing. In these cases, as Child Life Specialists know well, a small token of your parental appreciation can sometimes make the experience bearable—and occasionally, thoroughly enjoyable, for all.

Related: Got a sick child? Go online

9. Listen Closely
Parental instincts should rarely be ignored, but neither should children's. If you suspect that a persistent cough deserves an additional follow-up with your physician, trust your gut. Similarly, Child Life Specialists are always aware that the voices of children must be heeded, too. If you ask them, kids often can give you an honest assessment of how they're feeling compared to yesterday. They can also tell you if what they need most is a nap, an additional blanket, or a grape popsicle.

10. Don't Neglect Yourself
Caring for a sick child, especially during an intense or extended illness, has the potential to take a toll on any parent. During times when you're in need of a break and the time is right, going out for a good meal or a beautiful walk can go a long way towards helping to make you a more effective caregiver. And a more effective caregiver can translate into a more pleasant experience for your child, and if you're lucky, maybe even a speedier recovery.

Sweet benefits of basil

Thursday, September 15, 2011 0 comments

Corbis

Corbis

By Leslie Barrie

From busting stress to clearing your skin, this herb has some serious mind-body benefits.

Blemish eraser
Clear up that breakout with basil! The herb's oil helps combat the bacteria that causes pimples, according to a study in theInternational Journal of Cosmetic Science.

Try this blemish-fighting fix from aesthetician Rena Revivo, chief executive officer of Spa de Soleil: Boil a handful offresh basil leaves in 1 cup of water for 10 minutes; let the liquid cool. Dip a cotton ball into the liquid, pat it on your breakout zones, wait 10 minutes, then splash with water; repeat once or twice a day.

Note:
 If you're pregnant or breast-feeding, discuss basil usage with your doc.

Health.com: How to treat (and avoid!) summer skin problems

Stress stopper
Feeling frazzled this summer? This herb can mellow you out. "Holy basil has antianxiety effects," explains botanist James Duke, PhD, author of The Green Pharmacy. It contains phytochemicals that studies suggest may lower cortisol, a hormone secreted when you're tense.

Simmer down on a hot, harried day by adding the herb to your iced tea: Add 2 or 3 leaves (per serving) while your tea is steeping. Lounge chair optional.

Health.com: 3 ways to relax and refresh this summer

PMS fix
You may want to eat more basil during that time of the month: The herb is a super source of iron—a little more than 2 cups of chopped fresh basil leaves or 1 tablespoon dried provides 10% of your daily value, making it on par with spinach.

Eating it during your period can replenish some of the iron lost when you menstruate, says Dawn Jackson Blatner, RD, author of The Flexitarian Diet. Sprinkle some sliced basil over chopped pineapple (which helps combat bloat).

Health.com: 10 ways to beat PMS

Inside-out cleanser
If you overate at a backyard barbecue or threw back too many margaritas, break out the holy basil, which "has been found to help detoxify the liver," says Elizabeth Trattner, an integrative health-care practitioner in Bay Harbor, Florida. The morning after, whip up some body-cleansing pesto to top your feel-better food of choice!

Did You Buy a Wedding Dress Smaller Than Your Real Size?

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Source: Did You By a Wedding Dress Smaller Than Your Real Size?

Kim Kardashian is on a wedding diet and fitness plan, and she's enlisted the help of celebrity trainer Tracy Anderson to help her fit into her wedding dress, according to OK Magazine.

The magazine says that Kim is hoping to drop a few dress sizesbefore her upcoming wedding to Kris Humphries, and is on a serious mission to make that happen.

According to the magazine's source, in order to fit into a size-two dress for her upcoming wedding, Kim will be following Tracy Anderson's strict regimen of a low-carb diet (1,200 calories a day of mostly green juices, broth-based soups, and protein bars) along with resistance training and cardio for two hours a day, six days a week.

Kim Kardashian's wedding diet and fitness regimen sounds like a full-time ordeal. While getting in shape and feeling your best is an important goal for any occasion, we hope Kim doesn't stress herself out or turn to unhealthy practices just to be able to fit into her big white designer dress. What about you? Did you (or would you) buy a wedding dress that was smaller than your actual size for your big day? Take our poll here.

Shhh! Give noise pollution the silent treatment

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The world is getting louder, and all that racket can have serious consequences for your health. Here's how to handle the increase in noise pollution and find a little peace for body, mind, and even soul. By Holly Pevzner

My husband's snoring is a health hazard. Or so I learned last year, when I bought a jar of earplugs and found out that I could pay for them with my flexible-spending account. According to medical experts, nighttime quiet is as important to my well-being as wearing eyeglasses or getting my daily vitamins, and even low-level noise prevents deep, restorative rest. Noise also contributes to high blood pressure, strokes, circulatory problems, and distracted thinking. Plus, anecdotally at least, it makes us cranky.

Lately we seem to be on the run from unwanted sound. There are more than 500 kinds of noise-canceling headphones on Amazon.com, and the iPhone White Noise Lite app has been downloaded more than 10 million times. Writer George Prochnik'sIn Pursuit of Silence ($16, amazon.com), published last year, is a 352-page historical and scientific examination of why society has gotten louder and how we can quiet down again.

See More: 3 Quick Ways to Reduce Stress

"I felt there was less of the silence I had always found necessary and wondered whether I was just getting grouchier," says Prochnik, who lives in New York City. "I started asking people what about city life bothered them most, and noise was always near the top of the list."

The scientific evidence that noise damages our health is stronger than ever, he adds. "I think we're seeing noise tied into a host of other problems of the age—problems of attention, aggression, insomnia, and general stress," says Prochnik. "Noise is now our default position as a society. But I believe we have to make an effort to build a passionate case for silence."

See More: 8 Health Shortcuts That Work

The Sound and the Fury

Out of approximately 111.8 million households accounted for in the U.S. Census Bureau's 2009 American Housing Survey, about 25.4 million reported being bothered by street noise or heavy traffic. The World Health Organization recently published a study of the relationship in Western Europe between environmental noise and health conditions, including cardiovascular disease, cognitive impairment, sleep disturbance, tinnitus (chronic ringing of the ears), and plain old annoyance. According to the findings, about 1,629 heart attacks that occur in Germany each year are caused by traffic noise.

Even hospitals, the places we go to heal, have gotten louder. A 2004 Johns Hopkins University study found that average daytime hospital noise rose from 57 decibels in 1960 to 72 decibels in 2004. Blame the cacophony of PA announcements, beepers, heating and cooling systems, people talking to one another, and people talking into equipment activated by voice recognition.

See More: 6 Doctor-Recommended Remedies for Back Pain

And of course any discussion of the upsurge in public noise has to include the cell phone, which has made it possible for all of us to converse endlessly, anytime, anywhere. "We spew noise pollution into our phones, and all that noise only makes us noisier," says Bart Kosko, a professor of electrical engineering at the University of Southern California, in Los Angeles, who has written a book on the scourge of sound, entitled Noise ($25, amazon.com). It's worth noting that we may be deaf to our personal contributions: In a 2006 Pew Research Center poll, 82 percent of respondents said they had encountered annoying cell-phone chatter in public, but only 8 percent said they had noticed their own phone habits irritating others.

Things aren't much better underwater. Acoustic scientists at the Pennsylvania State University Applied Research Laboratory, in University Park, have found that North American right whales are calling to one another more loudly. Most likely that's a result of the commotion produced by commercial shipping.

See More: Solutions for Everday Overindulging

Alarming Developments

All this hubbub is bad news for the human brain and nervous system, which, evolutionarily speaking, aren't used to noise. "Over millions of years, we evolved in quiet environments," says Kosko. "If you heard a loud noise, it was probably something like an animal roar and meant danger was near." An encounter with a tiger, say, would set off a cascade of stress hormones, such as adrenaline and cortisol, to help mobilize our bodies to fight a threat or flee from it. The same thing happens today when we hear a car alarm.

"When you're disturbed by noise, your body reacts as it does to any stressor—your heart beats faster, your blood pressure increases," says New York City environmental psychologist Arline L. Bronzaft, Ph.D., who has been studying noise for more than 30 years. "Being surrounded by noise can affect you even when you don't realize it." To wit: In a study published in 2000 in the Journal of Applied Psychology, clerical workers were divided into two groups. One group was placed in a quiet room, the other in a space as noisy as a typical open office. The noisy-office workers had elevated levels of the stress hormone epinephrine and were significantly less motivated to try to complete challenging cognitive tasks. Yet few of them reported feeling especially stressed.

See More: How to Care for Sport's-Related Injuries

"When you're faced with a threat—and that's how your body and mind perceive noise—you automatically prioritize other functions for survival's sake," says Paul Salmon, an associate professor of clinical psychology and a codirector of the Biobehavioral Laboratory at the University of Louisville, in Kentucky. The primitive, reflexive circuits of the brain take over, while the regions involved in higher cognitive functions, such as planning and decision making, become less active. So, yes, when the kids are screaming, you actually might not be able to hear yourself think.

The Silent Treatment

Before you run screaming, listen to this: We can fight the assault of noise without crawling into an isolation tank. The latest research indicates that short periods of quiet can help us put ourselves back together again.

Most of the scientific studies on the benefits of silence focus on meditation, the practice of just sitting quietly and focusing on breathing. According to recent findings, brief periods of meditation can lower blood pressure and reduce pain. Meditation can even enhance cognitive performance; in one study, middle-schoolers who meditated were shown to have higher test scores. Studies from the University of Wisconsin–Madison and other medical schools have revealed that meditation can increase activity in the left side of the frontal region of the brain, the area associated with a more positive emotional state.

See More: 17 Ways to Safeguard Your Heart

"Silence and meditation aren't exactly the same thing," says New York City meditation teacher Harshada Wagner. "In meditation, you start with silence—or at least quiet, since total silence is almost impossible. Then, within that quiet, you turn attention to a deeper part of yourself. It's really a silence from demands." Wagner believes that the biggest misconception about meditation is that when we do it, we have to cease all thought, a virtually impossible proposition. "The mind is like an ocean," he says. "You're never going to still it. But the goal here is just to give yourself a break."

To make meditation "a little deal, not a big deal," says Wagner, start with a five-minute session. Sit in a comfortable spot (yes, it can be the couch), close your eyes, and focus on your breathing, which should be "natural and easy but deep." Starting at your toes, relax your entire body, working up to the top of your head with the in breath, then traveling back down again with the out breath in one continuous motion, like an undulating wave. With every wave, feel your body letting go of tension. "Don't worry about your mind—it may keep thinking," says Wagner. "Try to let go of your to-do list. If you fall asleep, it's fine. There's no wrong way to meditate."

See More: A Thorough Examination of Medical Clinics

Silent Partners

Silence can mean more than just shutting out the world. "It can also connect us to one another," says Katherine Schultz, the dean of education at Mills College, in Oakland, and the author of two books about silence as a classroom teaching tool. The subject first fascinated her as a teacher and a principal in Quaker schools. For the Quaker faith, silence is a cornerstone; in a worship service, participants sit quietly and speak only when they are moved to. "I learned that out of silence, both children and adults often spoke and thought more clearly and creatively," says Schultz. She is on the board of a Quaker camp and says that when discussions get intense, one member may prompt the others to stop and sit in silence. "There's often an incredible shift in the conversation as a result," she says, "because we start reflecting, not just reacting."

See More: 10 Painless Changes You Can Make for a Green Home

Sometimes, ironically enough, we have to be quiet to communicate with each other, says Schultz: "Teachers are taught to count to 10 after they ask a question because it's uncomfortable to sit in silence—you immediately start to think that no one is going to answer. But that wait time is what gives more students space to participate."

The Point Is Mute

When writer Anne LeClaire decided to spend at least a day each month without talking, she realized "so much of what I would have said wasn't particularly necessary anyway." The author of Listening Below the Noise ($14, amazon.com), LeClaire started the silent days 19 years ago as part of a "quiet little project" during a hard time when the mother of a close friend was dying. "There's a correlation between silence and slowing down," she says. "The assault of noise and busyness creates this false urgency. Now I'm calmer but also more energetic—a feeling that carries over into the nonsilent days."

See More: How to Solve 9 Sleep Problems

There are ways that the rest of us can weave quiet into our lives, says LeClaire: We can turn off the car radio, take a walk without music, cook or do some other chore in silence, or retreat to the bathroom (where one's family is less likely to invade) for a silent soak. We can take a half-day sabbatical from technology. "Or once a week, find a quiet place where you can sit and listen to nothing," she says. "Five minutes is good. Thirty minutes is even better."

LeClaire likes to think of silence not as emptiness but as space. "Imagine a page of words. If we took away the margins and the space between the paragraphs, we would have just a page of black," she says. "It wouldn't be prose anymore. Without silence, our lives don't make any more sense than that page."

The Best Snack on Earth?

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Men's Health has proclaimed full-fat cheese, of all things, the king of snacks. Sounds crazy, right? After all, cheese is often the first thing to go on a low-fat diet. It's high in fat and makes its oily presence known on pizza, cheeseburgers and other enemies of the weight loss war. Still, there is a strong case for eating full-fat cheese.

Cheese is satisfying

Alan Aragon, the Men's Health Weight-Loss Coach, says his clients actually see a reduction in appetite when they mindfully eat flavorful varieties of cheese. The protein/fat combo plus truly unique flavors and an endless array of choices could really make full-fat cheese a dieter's best friend.

Lack of taste means lack of interest

Following the mantra of low-fat dairy gets you "mass-produced, vacuum-sealed cheeses" which result in loss of taste and eventually loss of interest. Especially for the foodies among us. And what is the real difference anyway? 20-30 calories in most cases. Plus, you are never going to get an aged Gouda or a truly tart Greek feta in a reduced fat version.

Our advice: Invest in an affordable kitchen scale and weigh each piece of cheese, aiming for a 1-ounce serving (about 100 calories) to start. Enjoy with some crisp veggies or fresh fruit. Choose from Men's Health's list of favorite cheeses and take a glance at our pick for 13 cheeses you need to know. But don't stop there. Try the cheese menu at your favorite restaurant instead of a sugary dessert.

The bottom line: Put cheese back on the menu.

What happens to your body after you drink a soda every day, for a long time

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Thinkstock

Sugar rushes and caffeine highs followed by a depressing energy crash are what happens to your body if you drink a soda right now, but plenty of Blisstree readers actually seem to be okay with that. Some of you think it's alarmist to compare a caffeine and sugar rush to doing drugs, and some just don't really care about the slump they'll find themselves in after drinking 39 grams of sugar, but what makes us really worried about a soda-slurping habit is what happens over the long term.

Here's a quick snapshot of you, in a few years, after drinking soda on a regular basis:

You'll Be Fatter: According to research in the Nurse's Health Study, which monitored the health of 90,000 women for eight years, drinking a single soda every day of the week added 10 pounds over a four-year period.

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You'll Probably Have Diabetes: In the Nurses' Health Study, women who said they drank one or more servings a day of a sugar-sweetened soft drink or fruit punch weretwice as likely to have developed type 2 diabetes during the study than those who rarely consumed these beverages.

You're Much More Likely to Develop Heart Disease: According to a study published in 2007 in Circulation, the journal of the American Heart Association, subjects who drank a soda every day over a four-year period had a 25% chance of developing high blood sugar levels and a 32% greater chance of developing lower "good" cholesterol levels. The Nurses' Health Study found that women who drank more than two sugary beverages per day had a 40% higher risk of heart attacks or death from heart disease than women who rarely drank sugary beverages.

You're Probably Also Less Healthy In Other Ways: Several studies, including the 2007 study published inCirculation, suggest that diet sodas have some of the same effects on health as regular sodas, despite having none or very little of the sugar. Why? Drinking soda is typically part of an overall lifestyle that's not very healthy: We know you don't like us to compare drinking caffeine and sugar to substance abuse, but when it comes to your lifestyle, some think that soda is just like a gateway drug.

 
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