Stand up.
If you can, do it as much as possible.
According to Stand Up (more) & Eat (better), The Cooper Institute’s blog, you burn 33% more calories by standing instead of sitting.
What are you waiting for?
Stand up.
If you can, do it as much as possible.
According to Stand Up (more) & Eat (better), The Cooper Institute’s blog, you burn 33% more calories by standing instead of sitting.
What are you waiting for?
If you do drink soda, you might want to take a good look at this graphic.
If you don’t drink soda you might want to take a good look at this graphic, too. Then, you can congratulate yourself on the good habit of not drinking soda and perhaps suggest to soda drinking friends and family that they have a look.
Via: Term Life Insurance
Your workplace can be a major food landmine when you’re trying to eat well.
We spend a lot of hours at work — whether that means time at the office, at home, in the car, on an airplane, in a hotel, in a retail store, or anywhere else you conduct your business. The challenges are enormous — especially in the face of ever-present food – a good deal of which is carb and fat loaded – and an environment which can range from fast paced, stressful, and overwhelming to boring or downright exhausting.
All of this can push you into using food as a means of coping, procrastinating, or looking for energy to ward off fatigue.
The American Heart Association recommends that not more than half of your daily discretionary calorie allowance come from added sugars.
Daily discretionary calorie allowance means the number of calories you have left to use after you meet your nutrient needs without exceeding your energy needs.
In other words, they are the calories that you can use up eating various foods after you’ve eaten enough to meet your body’s nutrition needs — but not so many that they would contribute to weight gain.
Discretionary calories can come from any source of calories (protein, fat, carbohydrates, alcohol). The American Heart Association recommends that no more than half of your daily discretionary calories come from added sugars.
For most American women that’s no more than 100 calories a day, or about about 6 teaspoons of sugar. For men, that’s no more than 150 calories a day, or about 9 teaspoons of sugar.
The sugars that you eat can occur naturally or be added. Natural sugars are found naturally in the food — like fructose in fruit and lactose in milk. Added sugars are the many kinds of sugar and syrup – including sweeteners like honey, agave, and maple syrup, for example — that are added into food at the table or during the food’s preparation or processing.
Some sources are obvious – others require a bit of checking of the ingredients label. The same food item from different companies may have varying amounts of added sugar. Here are some examples of foods that usually have added sugar: