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Combat workplace stress

 

Prevent workplace stress with these simple tactics.

  • Take active breaks from work or niggling problems to let your brain get its stuff together. Try getting up and walking away from the site of the problem; you may just have an ‘aha’ moment.
  • Fix your posture. Standing tall can boost confidence and tell colleagues you’re on your game.
  • Curate facial expressions – not so much to send a message to others as to fire up feelgood neural networks. Smiling activates the pathways your brain associates with feeling happy; fake it ’ til you make it.
  • Stage dress rehearsals. If you’re giving a nerve-jangling preso, practice in the conditions you’ll face on the day. Recruit trusted colleagues so you’re used to dealing with interruptions or reactions that could otherwise throw you.
  • Journal. Physically scribbling your worries can boost performance and downplay stress.
  • Exercise outside. Even if you’re hellbent on lifting heavy, make one or two workouts a walk outdoors, which has been shown to improve attention and focus.
  • Meditate. Even a few minutes a day can quell anxiety and strengthen self-control.

Writer: Human performance expert Prof Sian Beilock, from her book How the Body Knows Its Mind.

Next: Learn how to switch off after work.

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Full body toning circuit

 

The six move workout that will firm your arms, thighs and butt.

 

 

full-body-toning-circuit-main

No time to get to the gym. Spending your group class budget on the mortgage. There are a million excuses not to get moving. All you need for this set of six toning moves from WH&F trainer Nichelle Laus is the resistance of your own body weight and a set of dumbbells.

The rules - For this workout, cycle through each exercise, one after the other, with minimal rest, aiming for 10 repetitions of each. Once you have completed the whole circuit once, rest for 60 to 90 seconds, then start again from the top. Repeat one to two more times, time permitting.

Exercises

  • Seated Bicep Curl
  • Chair Dip
  • Chair Push-up
  • Shoulder Press
  • Plie Squat
  • Curtsy Lunge

 


 

 

Curl (seated or standing)

 

full-body-toning-circuit-curl.jpg

 

Target // biceps

Sit on a chair and hold a dumbbell in each hand. Starting with your arms straight at your side, bend the elbow and curl the arm up towards your chest, hold, then lower back down. Repeat.
Note: This can be done standing as well.

 


 

Chair dip

 

full-body-toning-circuit-chair-dipl.jpg

 

Target // triceps

Face away from the chair. Place your hands behind you on the edge of the seat, shoulder-width apart. With your hands securely in place, step a foot or two away, and straighten your legs and keep heels in contact with the floor. Straighten your arms so that your body is lifted. This is your starting position.
Bend your elbows and lower yourself until your elbows are 90 degrees, hold, and re-straighten back to the starting position. Repeat.

 


 

Shoulder press

 

full-body-toning-circuit-shoulder-press.jpg

 

Target // Shoulders

Hold a dumbbell in each hand and sit on a chair.
Plant your feet firmly on the floor hip-width apart. Bend your elbows and raise your upper arms to shoulder height so the dumbbells are at ear level. Push the dumbbells up and in until the ends of the dumbbells touch lightly above your head. Lower back down to the starting position and repeat for amount of desired repetitions.

 


 

Chair push-up

 

full-body-toning-circuit-push-up.jpg

 

Targets // Chest

Get into a push-up position and place hands on the edge of a sturdy chair, slightly wider than shoulder-width apart. This is your starting position.
Bend arms and lower body until your chest reaches the edge of the chair. Push body up to the starting position, and repeat.

Variation: Knees can remain on the ground throughout the exercise to make it easier.

 

full-body-toning-circuit-push-up-variation.jpg

 


 

 

Plie squat

 

full-body-toning-circuit-plie-squat.jpg

 

Target // Glutes, hips, thighs

Hold a dumbbell at the base with both hands and stand straight up. Move your legs so that they are wider than shoulder width apart from each other with your knees slightly bent. Your toes should be facing out.
Slowly bend the knees and lower your legs until your thighs are parallel to the floor. Press mainly with the heel of the foot to bring the body back to the starting position. Repeat for the recommended amount of repetitions.

Note: Your arms should be stationary while performing the exercise.

 


 

Cursty lunges

 

full-body-toning-circuit-curtsy-lunges.jpg

 

Target // Quads, glutes

Stand with your feet hip-width apart, hands off your body. Take a big step back with your left leg, crossing it behind your right. Bend your knees and lower your hips until your right thigh is nearly parallel to the floor. Keep your torso upright and your hips and shoulders as square as possible. Return to start and repeat with your right leg.

EXTRA CARDIO TIP: Make the most of your limited hours and take the stairs instead of the elevator to get where you are going! Take two at a time for an extra burn.

NEXT: The ultimate 4-week ab workout.

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Heavy Waiters, Waitresses May Prompt Bigger Orders: Study

MONDAY, Jan. 11, 2016 (HealthDay News) — The more your waiter or waitress weighs, the more likely you may be to order dessert and alcohol, a new study suggests.

Researchers looked at 497 diners in 60 casual restaurants. They found that those served by heavier waiters or waitresses were four times more likely to have dessert and to consume 17 percent more alcohol.

“No one goes to a restaurant to start a diet. As a result, we are tremendously susceptible to cues that give us a license to order and eat what we want,” lead author Tim Doering, a researcher at the Cornell University Food and Brand Lab, said in a Cornell news release.

“A fun, happy, heavy waiter might lead a diner to say ‘What the heck,’ and to cut loose a little,” he added.

The study was published recently in the journal Environment and Behavior.

The researchers also found that the apparent effect heavy servers had on customers’ ordering was strongest on the skinniest diners.

The study doesn’t prove a cause-and-effect relationship between server size and overindulgence. Still, it suggests that the restaurant environment may influence your choices.

Previous research has shown that the lighting, music and where you sit in a restaurant affect your food and drink orders, the researchers said. But they noted there might be ways to counter the effects of such influences.

“Deciding that you’ll have either an appetizer or a dessert — but not both — before you get to the restaurant could be one of your best diet defenses,” study co-author Brian Wansink, director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab, said in the news release.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine offers tips for healthy eating when dining out.





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Small But Mighty: Everything You Need to Know About Microgreens

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

Don’t let anyone tell you that size doesn’t matter, especially when it comes to eating your greens.

You’re probably familiar with sprouts (like alfalfa sprouts) as well as baby greens (such as baby kale or baby spinach). In between those are microgreens: itty-bitty edible flowers, herbs, lettuces, and other small greens that make a beautiful garnish on salads, soups, pasta, or sandwiches.

RELATED: 13 Veggies You Only Think You Don’t Like

True to their name, microgreens are seriously tiny—they’re usually about one to two weeks old when harvested and only a few inches tall. Some varieties may look a lot like sprouts, but they aren’t quite the same. Unlike sprouts, which are grown in water, microgreens grow in soil or on a special growing mat. You can also eat sprouts whole—the seed, root, and stem—whereas microgreens are snipped above the root.

But these sweet little greens aren’t just pretty—they’re also super-flavorful and loaded with nutrients. According to a 2012 study in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, microgreens can contain anywhere from four to six times more nutrients than mature greens (including vitamins C, E, and beta-carotene). The study mentions red cabbage, cilantro, garnet amaranth, and green daikon as particularly nutritious varieties, but other popular ones to look for are basil microgreens, broccoli microgreens, kale microgreens, and sunflower microgreens.

RELATED: 31 Superfoods for a Long and Healthy Life

So, why not eat microgreens all the time? Unfortunately, they’re not cheap. For example, arugula costs around $4 per pound, but arugula microgreens can cost upwards of $32 per pound (yikes!). The good news is that you can skip the hefty price tag by growing your own at home (you can buy a starter pack of microgreen seeds on Amazon). It’s a fun, healthy way to get your hands dirty!




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Coconut bliss balls

 

Satisfy your sweet tooth with these coconut bliss balls!

What you'll need

  • 1 cup pitted or fresh dates
  • ¼ cup raw almonds
  • 1 cup walnuts
  • 5 pitted prunes
  • 2 scoops natural protein powder
  • 1 chopped protein bar (optional)
  • Shredded coconut
  • 2 tbsp chia seeds
  • Lime zest

What you'll do

Place all the ingredients in a food processor and blend until smooth. Add a touch of filtered water and some squeezed lime juice until you get the consistency right. It should be sticky and not too dry, making it easy to roll into a ball. Scoop a tablespoon out at a time, roll into a ball then roll in either sesame seeds or shredded coconut. Place in fridge or freezer and enjoy!

Hot tip: It’s a good idea to soak the nuts and dates overnight to make them easier to blend – or even 15 minutes in hot water.

Recipes extracted from Nikki Fogden-Moore’s new book, Vitality.

NEXT: Superberry Chocolate Tarts

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This Ad Proves That Every Body Is a Yoga Body

It’s easy to get caught in the trap of thinking that just because you don’t look a certain way, you don’t belong in a gym or a yoga studio. But just because your body doesn’t fit the thin, sculpted stereotype, doesn’t mean it can’t do strong, amazing, empowering things.

That’s the message behind an awesome ad from the plus-size clothing brand Penningtons, which sells Melissa McCarthy’s new Seven7 line along with other plus-size brands.

RELATED: The 20 Biggest Lessons We Learned About Our Health in 2015

The video, which features plus-sized yoga instructor Dianne Bondy, begins by listing some common stereotypes as to why plus-sized women “shouldn’t” do yoga— they can’t lift themselves. They’re not elegant. They make everyone around them uncomfortable. Meanwhile, Bondy shows off her talents, proving all of the naysayers wrong.

Penningtons’ market director, Aspasia Choremis, told People that the ad was meant to show that women can do anything, no matter what their size. “The intent of the video is not so much about inspiring plus-size women to start practicing yoga. It’s so much more,” she said. “It’s about body diversity, self-acceptance and breaking stereotypes, without having to compromise!”

 




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This Is What It’s Really Like to Do a Polar Bear Plunge

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images. People in bathing suits run into the ocean during the annual Coney Island Polar Bear Club New Year’s Day swim on January 1, 2016 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City

At The Coney Island Polar Bear Club’s New Year’s Day Swim, thousands of people gather on the beach, wriggle out of their winter clothes like demented Arctic butterflies emerging from cocoons, and rush into the freezing waters of the Atlantic. I’ve wanted to join them for as long as I’ve lived in New York City.

While the Polar Bear Club likes to take an early, private New Year’s dip first thing in the morning (they’re the oldest “winter bathing organization” in the United States, and have been communing with the elements every year since 1903), they invite less-experienced frigid swimmers to join them at 1 p.m. for a “freezin’-for-a-reason” public event that raises funds for Camp Sunshine, a retreat for kids with life-threatening illnesses. (Similar Polar Plunge events happen across the country this time of year.) Here’s what I learned when I took the plunge this year.

Safety first

As dewy-eyed, frosty-browed Leonardo DiCaprio demonstrated so tragically in Titanic, spending a significant length of time in icy water is a bad idea. Taking a quick dip in the ocean, on the other hand, is a far cry from freezing to death clinging to a raft your beloved could clearly have shared with you if she’d been thinking straight. The Polar Bear Club says none of their members have suffered from hypothermia or frostbite.

That said, the shock of hitting the cold water does cause a spike in heart rate and blood pressure, making a polar bear plunge risky if you have hypertension or a heart condition. The Polar Bear Club recommends that all participants consult a doctor before taking the plunge, and has newcomers sign a liability waiver. They also make sure everyone has a “buddy” to keep an eye on them in the water.

RELATED: 6 Running Tips To Keep You Safe This Winter

The waiting is the hardest part

I spent my late-morning train ride out to Brooklyn imagining those first electric seconds when my toes would meet the water, and the shock just afterward when I’d duck my head under the waves. That’s the moment of truth, right? Not so much.

Look, just about anyone can scamper into the ocean, turn around, and scamper right back out, even in the dead of winter; it’s essentially a variation on the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge. What really sets a large-scale Polar Plunge apart from dumping a bunch of chilly water on your head is the impossibly long wait in a roped-off pen on the beach before you’re given the signal to get moving.

In no version of my plunge fantasies did I imagine losing feeling in my extremities while milling around for half an hour with a bunch of nearly-nude bros in Viking helmets. The 50-degree water was significantly warmer than the 40-degree air that morning; getting the go-ahead to hit the waves was a relief.

RELATED: The Major ALS Breakthrough Funded by the Ice Bucket Challenge

Swearing helps

In one of my all-time favorite studies, researchers found that volunteers asked to stick their hands in icy water reported less pain and were able to keep going an average of 40 seconds longer when they repeated a swear word of their choice (as opposed to volunteers who chanted a neutral word instead).

Scientists aren’t yet sure why it helps to swear a blue streak—some say it activates fight-or-flight responses, others say it can express camaraderie or defiance—but I can confirm that each of the many, many F-bombs dropped on Coney Island Beach on New Year’s Day generated a little mushroom cloud of warmth for me and my fellow shiverers.

RELATED: 12 Mental Tricks That Fight Pain

Looks matter (but vanity is foolish)

I’m not ashamed to admit that I wanted to look good for my first Plunge; I wore my favorite swimsuit, I gave myself a slick pedicure, and I planned to abandon the thick, goofy socks a more-experienced friend had advised me to wear in the water (the Polar Bears suggest footwear, both for comfort and to protect yourself from nasty shoreline detritus).

When I got to the beach and saw how everyone else had decked themselves out—the fellow in the Princess Leia bikini and earmuff-buns was especially inspirational—I was extra-convinced that my personal game had to be strong. But as soon as I tried to ditch my ugly ski socks and bare my fancy toes, no obscenity I could shout was enough to keep me from freezing.

I tugged the terrible socks back on, ran into the ocean (where the socks ballooned around and comforted my feet like benevolent woolen jellyfish, bless them), and didn’t look back. Then I high-fived a bunch of nearly-nude bros in Viking helmets.

RELATED: 15 Warm Down Jackets That Are Also Super Stylish

Backup is a must

One of my friends didn’t want to take the plunge herself, but she did want to come along—which was fabulous, both from a moral-support perspective and because she kept an eye on everything the swimmers in our group left on the beach.

She and the rest of the spectators turned out to be unofficial lifeguards, too; no matter how pleasant the water feels (and it truly was delightful), splashing around at the beach in January temperatures scrambles your brain. You need a dry pal to utter those life-affirming words: “Hey, here’s your towel and your pants. Let’s go get a drink to warm up.”




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Even Slight Kidney Decline May Affect Heart

MONDAY, Jan. 11, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Even a slight decline in kidney function can lead to heart damage, a new study suggests.

“Mild chronic kidney disease is common, affecting over 10 percent of the U.S. population, so if kidney disease really is a cause of heart disease it may be a major public health problem,” said study senior author Dr. Jonathan Townend, a professor of cardiology at Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham in England.

The study, published Jan. 11 in the journal Hypertension, included 68 living kidney donors, average age 47, who were followed for a year after donating their kidney. They were compared with a control group of 56 people, average age 44, who did not donate a kidney.

Compared to those in the control group, the kidney donors had an expected decrease in kidney function, an increase in the mass of the heart’s left ventricle (a strong predictor of heart disease risk), and a rise in heart damage markers in blood tests, the study found.

There was no difference in blood pressure between the two groups, according to the study.

“Even in very healthy people, a small reduction in kidney function from normal to just a bit below normal was associated with an increase in the mass of the left ventricle, a change that makes the heart stiffer and impairs its ability to contract,” Townend said in a journal news release.

It has long been known that kidney disease patients are at increased risk for heart disease. But many of them have other health problems such as high blood pressure and diabetes, making it difficult to assess the effect that declining kidney function has on the heart.

The kidney donors in this study had no chronic health conditions, making it possible to assess how a small reduction in kidney function affects the heart, the researchers explained.

“This is evidence that reduction in kidney function itself leads directly to measurable adverse effects on the heart and blood vessels, even without other risk factors. More research is needed to know just what aspects of reduced kidney function are responsible for the effects,” Townend said.

However, kidney donors should not be alarmed by these findings, he and his colleagues said.

“Kidney donors are already highly selected as healthy individuals. Our paper has shown that kidney donation causes very small adverse effects on the heart and blood vessels that took careful and accurate measurements to detect. We do not yet know if these effects are maintained over the long term,” Townend said.

Even if there is a small increase in your long-term risk of heart disease after donation, it is still likely that you will be at lower-than-average risk, he added.

More information

The U.S. National Kidney Disease Education Program explains how to keep your kidneys healthy.





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Scientists Identify Sugar-Busting Enzyme in Rats

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Jan. 11, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Scientists say they’ve identified an enzyme in rats that might dampen the toxic effects of excess sugar on cells and may someday point to treatments for obesity and type 2 diabetes in humans.

At issue: Can scientists manipulate the fuel processing system inside body cells? As diabetes specialist Dr. John Wilding explained, cells try to maintain a balance between two types of fuel — glucose (sugar) and lipids (fat).

“If glucose levels are high, then the cell will use glucose as a fuel. But this switches to fat if fat levels are high,” said Wilding, who had no role in the study.

If levels of both fat and sugar are high, diseases such as type 2 diabetes can develop, said Wilding, a professor of medicine at University Hospital Aintree in Liverpool, England.

In the new study, Canadian researchers said they’ve discovered an enzyme in liver and pancreas cells in rats that they call glycerol 3-phosphate phosphatase.

“We show that this enzyme controls glucose, fat and energy metabolism,” said study co-author Marc Prentki, professor of nutrition and biochemistry at Montreal Diabetes Research Center, referring to the way the body processes fuel.

The research also shows that the enzyme has the potential to prevent cell poisoning from excess consumption of sugar and fats, said co-author S.R. Murthy Madiraju, a senior scientist at Montreal University Health Center.

This means the enzyme might have the potential to combat obesity and diabetes, he said.

Although the laboratory results are preliminary, experts sound cautiously optimistic.

“The research doesn’t only help us better understand why people develop obesity and diabetes,” said Dr. Joel Zonszein, director of the Clinical Diabetes Center at University Hospital, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, in New York City. “It can also eventually be helpful in designing new medications for the prevention and treatment of these common disorders,” said Zonszein, who wasn’t involved in the study.

But hopefulness aside, whether it could actually translate to new treatments for conditions like type 2 diabetes, obesity and metabolic syndrome — a cluster of abnormalities linked to heart disease and diabetes — isn’t known.

“The relevance to human health and disease is uncertain,” said Wilding. He also added that the research comes with many caveats.

It could be difficult to replicate the enzyme’s effects through a medication, he said. When researchers have tried to make this kind of approach work, he added, there’s either no effect or side effects.

Also, the research is in rat cells, not whole rats or people. “There is always a risk in trying to translate work done in cells to whole [animals], and an even greater step to go from rat cells to human treatments,” Wilding said. Research with animals often fails to provide similar results in humans.

The study appears in the Jan. 11 issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

More information

For more about monitoring blood sugar levels, see the American Diabetes Association.





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Sugary Drinks Tied to Increase in Deep Belly Fat

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Jan. 11, 2016 (HealthDay News) — People who drink sugary beverages every day tend to accumulate more deep belly fat over time, new research suggests.

The study, of over 1,000 adults, found that those who downed at least one sugar-sweetened drink a day had a bigger increase in deep abdominal fat over the next six years.

Researchers said the results are concerning because that type of fat — known as visceral fat — surrounds a number of vital organs and is particularly unhealthy.

“Visceral fat is the kind that’s closely associated with the risks of type 2 diabetes and heart disease,” said Alice Lichtenstein, a spokesperson for the American Heart Association (AHA), who was not involved in the study.

The findings, published Jan. 11 in the journal Circulation, are far from the first to connect sugary drinks to health consequences. Past research has already found that people who consume a lot of sugary drinks tend to have higher rates of diabetes and heart disease.

But the new findings suggest a “mechanism” behind that, said lead researcher Jiantao Ma, of the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute’s Framingham Heart Study and Population Sciences Branch.

The study results are based on 1,003 middle-aged adults taking part in a larger study on heart health. The researchers used CT scans to measure each participant’s levels of visceral fat, at the study’s start and again six years later.

At the outset, 13 percent of the study group said they drank at least one sugar-sweetened beverage every day. And on average, those men and women showed the greatest increase in visceral fat over the next six years.

Compared with people who never had sugary drinks, daily consumers accumulated about 27 percent more visceral fat, the investigators found.

That does not prove that sugary drinks, per se, were the culprit behind the fat gain, Ma said.

His team did account for other factors, such as people’s age, exercise habits, body weight and daily calorie intake. And it’s difficult to pin the blame on one diet habit, Ma said.

Lichtenstein agreed that people who drink a lot of sugary beverages probably have other less-than-healthful habits.

“People who consume a lot of added sugar also tend to eat fewer vegetables, get less exercise, and be more likely to smoke,” she said.

Sugar-sweetened drinks are just one part of that larger picture, Lichtenstein said. Still, she added, cutting out those beverages is an “easy” way to drop added sugar from your diet.

“This is one way to make a positive shift in your lifestyle,” Lichtenstein said. “And it’s not hard. For every sugar-sweetened beverage out there, there’s a non-caloric option.”

According to the AHA, one 12-ounce can of regular soda contains about 132 calories’ worth of added sugar.

The findings come on the heels of the latest U.S. dietary recommendations, which were released Thursday. For the first time, Ma said, the guidelines take specific aim at added sugars — encouraging Americans to get less than 10 percent of their daily calories from those sweeteners.

These latest findings support that advice, Ma said.

The researchers found no connection between diet soda intake and visceral fat accumulation. (They had data only on diet soda, and not other calorie-free drinks.)

That’s reassuring, according to Lichtenstein, because some past studies have found a connection between diet soda and ill health effects, such as an increased type 2 diabetes risk. But that, she said, probably reflects the fact that many people start drinking diet beverages because they are overweight or have other diabetes risk factors.

“Those previous diet-soda findings are not supported by this study,” Lichtenstein said.

More information

The American Heart Association has more on added sugars.





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