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Archive for May, 2013

“Your Purse is Germier than a Toilet”

By Melissa Dahl at NBC Today Health

If you carry a purse, you are essentially toting a big bag of bacteria around with you everywhere you go. That’s the finding of a new study, which claims that women’s handbags hosted more bacteria than the average toilet flush.

We should note that the research was conducted by a cleaning and “hygiene services” company called Initial, which sells hand sanitizers and surface wipes and has a pretty clear financial incentive here. (The press release helpfully suggests that you purchase their sanitizers and wipes to keep your nasty handbag clean.) But  your purse is still coated in germs, microbiologists not connected to the study confirm.

“About a third of them have fecal bacteria on them,” confirms Charles Gerba, a University of Arizona microbiologist who has studied bacteria living on handbags, plus all sorts of delightfully disgusting things like E. coli on shopping carts and germy office break rooms. Gerba’s research found that the bottoms of handbags were the nastiest, likely because women placed them on the bathroom floor (that is what the little hooks on the back of the doors are there for, people!).

The study found that the handle was a bacteria hotspot, and the stuff in the inside of the bag like makeup or hand cream had the toilet-flush levels of bacteria.

Bacteria, of course, are all around us all of the time, and most of the germs are helpful for us in keeping our immune systems strong and warding off dangerous diseases. But there is a chance that your bag could be picking up something nastier, like norovirus — such was the case last year, when an entire youth soccer team came down with norovirus, and the bug was traced back to reusable grocery bags.

To keep your bags clean, you can always use a disinfectant wipe if it’s plastic, leather or a hard surface, Gerba says. Cloth bags are tougher, so be sure to practice good hand hygiene — and don’t put your bag on the bathroom floor!

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Relationships!

We have a dual nature within us; we must think of ourselves and our immediate family first in order to survive but we require getting outside relationships right between ourselves and others in order to thrive.

Peace of mind and long-term happiness stem from ALL of our relationships.

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Finished Reading: The Righteous Mind

Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion

Book Description:

Release date: February 12, 2013 | Series: Vintage

As America descends deeper into polarization and paralysis, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt has done the seemingly impossible—challenged conventional thinking about morality, politics, and religion in a way that speaks to everyone on the political spectrum. Drawing on his twenty five years of groundbreaking research on moral psychology, he shows how moral judgments arise not from reason but from gut feelings. He shows why liberals, conservatives, and libertarians have such different intuitions about right and wrong, and he shows why each side is actually right about many of its central concerns. In this subtle yet accessible book, Haidt gives you the key to understanding the miracle of human cooperation, as well as the curse of our eternal divisions and conflicts. If you’re ready to trade in anger for understanding, read The Righteous Mind.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Righteous-Mind-Politics-Religion/dp/0307455777/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1369542809&sr=8-1&keywords=the+righteous+mind

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Brisk Walk as Good as a Run!

Maggie Fox, Senior Writer, NBC News April 4, 2013

Walking really is just as good for you as running – but only if you compare it in terms of calories burned and not merely on time spent, researchers reported on Thursday.

Studies have gone back and forth on the question for years – is a stroll as good as a run? Does a brisk walk strengthen your heart as much as a pounding jog?

Paul Williams of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California and Paul Thompson of Hartford Hospital in Connecticut think they’ve answered the question, finally. They did it in the best way possible, by comparing tens of thousands of runners to tens of thousands of walkers.

The answer is what common sense would dictate – it’s how much a person exercises in terms of energy spent, not how long he or she spends exercising, that matters.

“It takes longer to walk a mile than to run a mile. But if you match them up on the energy expended, they are comparable,” Williams said in a telephone interview. “If you do the same amount of exercise – if you expend the same number of calories – you get the same benefit.”

They studied 33,060 runners taking part in the National Runners’ Health Study and 15,045 walkers in the National Walkers’ Health Study. They measured their blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol at the beginning, and then watched for six years to see who got diagnosed with high blood pressure, unhealthy cholesterol or diabetes.

People who exercised equally in terms of energy output got the same benefit, regardless of whether they ran or walked, Williams and Thompson report in the American Heart Association journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology.

Williams said it made sense to study dedicated walkers and runners, because they usually keep careful track of distance and time spent running or walking. Most other people have trouble accurately estimating how much time and effort they spend exercising, he says.

They used a measurement called a MET. “One MET is how much energy you expend when you are sitting,” Williams said. Walking at a brisk pace burns 3.8 METS, or 3.8 times as much energy spent sitting for the same time. Running burns anywhere between 7 and 12 METS.

One MET of walking is roughly equivalent to a kilometer, or just over half a mile, Williams estimates. But running is less efficient than walking, so runners do tend to burn more calories over the same time.

“A person would need to walk 4.3 miles at a brisk pace to expend the same amount of exercise as running 3 miles, and it would take about twice as long (an hour and 15 minutes by walking instead of 38 minutes by running),” Williams says.

In general, the runners were younger and fitter than the walkers were. The male runners were 48 on average, versus 62 for the walkers; female runners were about 41 on average versus 53 for the walkers. The runners were 38 percent less likely to develop high blood pressure, 36 percent less likely to have high cholesterol and 71 percent less likely to develop diabetes than the walkers.

But this all seemed to be because the runners actually exercised more than the walkers did, Williams said.

“We have sort of known this all along,” said Dr. Gerald Fletcher, a cardiologist at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., who was not involved in the study.

Running can burn more calories in a shorter time, so it’s good for people who are crunched for time. “But walking is certainly easier than running,” Fletcher said. “As long as people get out there and do it.”

The Institute of Medicine says Americans should try to get at least an hour of moderate exercise such as brisk walking every day to stay healthy. The Heart Association has similar guidelines.

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People Think They’re Eating Less Than They Are!

By Maggie Fox, Senior Writer, NBC News

People may realize that fast food isn’t health food, but they don’t realize just how fattening it really is, researchers report.

They surveyed people eating at 10 burger, chicken, sandwich and doughnut chains and found they greatly underestimated just how much they were chowing down. The worst was Subway, which promotes itself as a healthier alternative, the researchers at Harvard Medical School found.

“At least two thirds of all participants underestimated the calorie content of their meals, with about a quarter underestimating the calorie content by at least 500 calories,” Harvard’s Jason Block and colleagues wrote in the British Medical Journal.

They interviewed more than 3,000 adults, children and teens visiting six different fast-food chains in Boston; Providence, Springfield, Mass. and Hartford, Ct., asking  them how much they ordered and how many calories they thought they were getting. The surveys were done in 2010 and 2011, before some regulations about calorie labeling came into effect.

People ate a lot. Checks of the receipts showed adults ate on average 836 calories in a meal, while teens and children ate more than 700.  But they estimated, on average that they were getting 175 calories less.

“The mean underestimation of calorie content was larger among Subway diners than those at other chains for adults,” Block’s team wrote.

The average U.S. adult needs about 2,000 calories a day, and kids need less. So people were getting more than a third of their day’s calories in a single fast-food visit. And studies show that eating just 100 calories in excess a day can add up to several pounds of extra fat over a year.

Many states and cities have passed tough calorie and fat-labeling laws. The 2010 health reform law will require major restaurant chains to provide clear calorie labels on menu boards.

Consumer advocates have complained for years that Americans don’t get the information they need to make healthy food choices. Not only are fatty, sugary foods everywhere, but it’s often hard to find out how many calories and how much fat  and sugar these foods pack.

Chain restaurants often list their nutritional information on websites or on menus kept behind the counter. What advocates want – and what governments are starting to require – is information listed right next to the food items on the menu board, so people are forced to see it when they order.

Block’s team looked at the biggets national chains: McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s, KFC, Dunkin’ Donuts  and Subway. “We excluded pizza restaurant chains (such as Pizza Hut) because of the difficulty in determining the quantity that an individual bought for personal consumption,” they wrote.

About two-thirds of the adults taking part were overweight or obese – reflecting the actual U.S. population, the researchers found.  About a third of the teens were, while 57 percent of the school-age children were.

“Over 40 percent of participants in each sample ate at the chain restaurant where they were interviewed at least once a week,” the researchers wrote.

Fewer than one in five had even noticed any calorie information, and only 5 percent said they used that information to help them choose meals.

Subway advertises itself as a healthier option. “Branding could be an important component of Subway’s ‘health halo’,” the researchers said.

They believe the new labeling requirements will do a lot to help people understand how much food they really are getting in a fast-food restaurant. “Previous research has found that information can be most powerful when it contradicts previous expectations (in this case, improper estimation of calorie content of foods with a ‘health halo’),” they wrote.

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ClimbMax Climbing Gym!

Arizona’s Largest Rock Gym!

 

Their climbing walls and routes are crafted to provide a rewarding experience, one that is fun and challenging; they’re designed to be effective as both an introduction to climbing for beginners and for honing the skills of the seasoned climber as well. Check them out if you’re looking for something different! Stay Active!

Location:  1330 W. Auto Drive, Suite 108  Tempe, AZ 85284 Phone:  480.626.7755

http://www.climbmaxclimbinggym.com/

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Currently Readng: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior

V.S. Ramachandran is a neuroscientist known for his work in the fields of behavioral neurology and visual psychophysics. The author of The Tell-Tale Brain, He is the Director of the Center for Brain and Cognition, and is currently a Professor in the Department of Psychology and the Neurosciences Graduate Program at the University of California, San Diego.

This delightfully accessible yet intellectually rigorous book transcends traditional boundaries between neuroscience, psychology and philosophy, to tackle the riddle of the unconscious mind. Freud bashing is a popular intellectual pastime these days (I myself have been guilty on occasion) but Mlodinow shows that by emphasizing the unconscious he was on the right track: we are completely unaware of the vast majority of events going on inside our brains. The book presents compelling evidence gleaned from a variety of sources to show that much of our behavior is governed not so much by our conscious mind – which is prone to claim credit – but by a cauldron of motives, drives and unconscious propensities of which we are largely oblivious. Indeed, most of our actions are carried out by the unconscious mind (or minds ) which exists in peaceful harmony with the conscious person “inside” your body.  The question of why we are conscious of the tip of the iceberg of neural activity continues to remain elusive but, perhaps, the answer can be found by asking what you can do without being conscious; What’s the IQ of the unconscious mind?  Here Mlodinow offers dazzling new insights into what the unconscious can and does do, to influence our lives.

 

http://www.amazon.com/Subliminal-Unconscious-Rules-Behavior-Vintage/dp/0307472256/ref=sr_sp-atf_image_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1368844751&sr=8-1-spell&keywords=howyour+unconciosu+mind

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Fitness Can Protect Men From Cancer!

By Maggie Fox at NBC News:

Fitness can protect you from cancer — even 20 or more years down the road, researchers report. And men who were the most fit in middle age were the least likely to die a quarter century later even if they were unlucky enough to get cancer, a new study finds.

Men who were the most fit at age 50 back in the 1970s were the least likely to develop lung or colon cancer 20 to 25 years later, the study, which will be presented next month at a meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, or ASCO, found. And among the men who did get lung, colon or prostate cancer, the fitter they were in their early 50s, the less likely they were to die of it.

This is good news for people who want to lower their risk of not only heart disease but cancer, says Dr. Susan Lakoski of the University of Vermont, who led the study. She’s a cardiologist who studies fitness and its effect on disease.

“Two things you can’t change are your genes and your age,’ she said. “But you can get more fit.”

Lakoski studied data on more than 17,000 men who attended the Cooper Institute in Dallas. Dr. Kenneth Cooper, who coined the word “aerobics”, founded the research institute in 1970. The men all took fitness tests on their first visits to the institute, and the institute later acquired their medical records.

Their fitness was measured by metabolic equivalent of task, or MET.

“One MET is sitting on the couch,” Lakoski said.

On a treadmill test that involves making someone walk briskly on an incline, the average middle-aged person, she said, can get up to about 9 METs, while athletes can achieve up to 15 METs and elite triathletes can get to about 20 METs.

In this study, the least fit men were able to stay on the treadmill at full tilt for less than 13.5 minutes if they were 40 to 49 years old, less than 11 minutes if they were 50 to 59, and less than 7.5 minutes if they were 60 or older.

Over the next 20 to 25 years, 2,332 of the men were diagnosed with prostate cancer, 276 got colon cancer and 277 were diagnosed with lung cancer. And 347 of the men died of cancer while 159 died of heart disease.

Lakoski’s team divided the men into five groups based on their fitness at that first visit, when they were around 50 years old. Those who were the most fit were 68 percent less likely to develop lung cancer and 38 percent less likely to develop colon cancer 20 years later. And if the men did develop cancer, those who were the most fit were significantly less likely to die of any of the three cancers.

Every increase in fitness as measured by MET lowered the risk of dying from cancer by 14 percent and from heart disease by 23 percent, Lakoski found. And obesity had little or nothing to do with it, she found.

“This important study establishes cardiorespiratory fitness as an independent and strong predictor of cancer risk and prognosis in men,” ASCO president Dr. Sandra Swain said in a statement.

“While more research is needed to determine if similar trends are valid in relation to other cancers and among women, these results indicate that people can reduce their risk of cancer with relatively small lifestyle changes.”

Lakoski doesn’t know if it’s possible to be out of shape at 50 but then get into shape later and lower cancer risk. “Can you turn things around?” she asked. But people who were fit at 50 were likely lifelong exercisers. “People who enjoy being fit tend to stay fit,” she said.

Many studies have shown that exercise lowers the risk of cancer, but this one is one of the first to show it can also reduce the risk of dying from cancer. ASCO says more than 50 studies involving 40,000 people have found that people who exercise regularly have a 40 percent to 50 percent lower risk of colon cancer, for instance. And women who exercise at moderate-to-vigorous levels for more than three hours a week have a 30 percent to 40 percent lower risk of breast cancer.

It’s not likely that the fittest men were somehow just stronger and better able to survive disease, Lakoski and ASCO both say. Hormones such as prostaglandin and insulin likely play a role, as well as the immune system and a process called oxidation, which damages cells and DNA.

Lakoski argues people need to be told something a little more specific than simply to exercise. They need a precise fitness goal, and doctors need to help them measure it. Current guidelines are very imprecise, she noted.

“Tell someone to do 150 minutes of moderate exercise a week, is that right for you? Is that right for me?” Lakoski asked.

But there are precise measures. Lakoski uses one in her lab, where she is the director of Cardiovascular Prevention for Cancer Patients at the Vermont Cancer Center. She works patients to the point of exhaustion, and measures how long it takes to get there. “If I can put you on a treadmill and say ‘You went this many minutes and you burned this many METs and that is associated with X reduction in cancer risk and cardiovascular risk’,  that’s very meaningful,” she said.

“Then I can say you need to do this much exercise training to get this fit. People can get their heads around it. It is a personalized prescription.

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The Burden of Aging Parents?

Aging parents can certainly be a huge burden; this article shares poignantly in this experience.

Atlantic Monthly Magazine “Daddy Issues”

“Why caring for my aging father has me wishing he would die”

Recently, a colleague at my radio station asked me, in the most cursory way, as we were waiting for the coffee to finish brewing, how I was. To my surprise, in a motion as automatic as the reflex of a mussel being poked, my body bent double and I heard myself screaming:

“I WAAAAAAAANT MY FATHERRRRRR TO DIEEEEE!!!”

Startled, and subtly stepping back to put a bit more distance between us, my co-worker asked what I meant.

“What I mean, Rob, is that even if, while howling like a banshee, I tore my 91-year-old father limb from limb with my own hands in the town square, I believe no jury of my peers would convict me. Indeed, if they knew all the facts, I believe any group of sensible, sane individuals would actually roll up their shirtsleeves and pitch in.”

The remainder of the article can be found here:

http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2012/03/daddy-issues/308890/

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Nature’s Bakery Fig Bar!

A great on the run snack or treat! Currently at Costco for best price.

Check them out at Amazon as well:

http://www.amazon.com/Natures-Bakery-Whole-Wheat-24-Ounce/dp/B006BHRV1W/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1368736386&sr=8-1&keywords=fig+bar

Product Details

 

Nature

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Finished Reading: The Little Black Book of Violence

Foreword Magazine Review:

Best Books Award Finalist – USA Book News
Every time you engage in violence, no matter how small or trivial it may appear to be at the time, it has the potential of escalating into something extraordinarily serious. What is really worth fighting for when you might find yourself spending the rest of your life behind bars, confined to a wheelchair, or trying to dig yourself out of bankruptcy from beneath the crushing weight of a civil lawsuit? It is important to ask yourself, “Is this really worth fighting over?” While in some instances the response could legitimately be “Yes,” more often than not it ought to be “No.
http://www.amazon.com/The-Little-Black-Book-Violence/dp/1594391297/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1368735743&sr=1-1-fkmr0&keywords=violence+and+lil+black+book

 

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Chew Your Food More!

Several times per week I’ll hear someone complain that “healthier” food (vegetables or beans for instance) cause personal digestive pushback.

Well, produce requires considerably more mastication (chewing) than highly processed foods because of their natural indigestible fiber walls.

If you still recognize a food item after a bowel movement… you certainly aren’t chewing your food enough.

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A Waste of Time!

Physical work, without mental work, is a waste of time!

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Soccer Lover’s Fundraising Trek Ends in Tragedy

Don’t Turn Your Back to Traffic!

Fitness does NOT require turning your back to traffic! In fact, if your choice of fitness requires that you expose yourself directly to vehicle traffic, I strongly suggest that you find another method. When you expose yourself directly to vehicle traffic, you allow every single driver who’s approaching you to dictate your future.

Soccer Lover’s Fundraising Trek Ends in Tragedy

By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

A Seattle man who felt “destined” to go on a 10,000-mile fundraising journey to soccer’s World Cup in Brazil, dribbling a soccer ball along the way, has died just two weeks into his journey.

Richard Swanson, 42, was hit by a pickup truck in Lincoln City, Ore., on Tuesday morning, along Highway 101, Lincoln City police said. Swanson left May 1 on a trip that would have taken him through 11 countries before he reached Sao Paolo, Brazil, the site of soccer tournament.

For the full story follow the link below:

http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/05/15/18267898-soccer-lovers-fundraising-trek-ends-in-tragedy?lite

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Change Your “Default” Thoughts!

How you see things, is only one of many ways to see things; is it working for you or against you?

Make a conscious choice to control your thoughts, don’t let them control you.

The video below is worth your time:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmpYnxlEh0c

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Stepping on Others?

Positive and productive people don’t see the “pie” as having a limited number of pieces. Instead, they see a pie with pieces enough for everyone, and it doesn’t bother them to watch others get their slice. While we cannot escape the fact that we live in a competitive culture—or that we are a competitive species—there’s quite a difference between healthy embodiment of competition, and petty pursuit of selfish ends. People who love what they do are competitive. They wouldn’t be able to reach their goals if they weren’t. But they don’t invest their time and energy in scheming and undermining; they don’t try to deny the other guy his piece of the pie. Loving what you do—no matter how competitive you have to be to attain your goals—does not require stepping on others to get there.

Excerpt from Psychology Today (Issue: June 2013):

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