Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Blog Lovin'

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Having been blogging lately, not due to lack of content but laziness, too darn lazy to take pictures. That and my opinions, not sure if I should or shouldn't blog about certain things in my mind. Anyway I'll work on blogging more frequently... Something I seem to say in every blog post lol.

Anyway as some of you may know, google is getting rid of google reader, RSS, google friend connect (I think) which I find so silly! I've had to find another RSS reader and BlogLovin' is the best one for me, so many fashion bloggers signed up to it and it's easy to use. I've moved all RSS subcriptions from google reader to bloglovin.

So............. If you're like me and obsessively keep track of your favourite blogs, sign up to bloglovin and don't forget to subscribe to my little ol' blog (That's if you want to continue reading stuff that I will eventually get around to blogging about....)

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Calorie Counting

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I was so keen to show you series of workouts I do at the gym, food recipes and my overall fitness tips I've learnt from my partner, his mum and uncles who are fitness fanatics and can cook amazing healthy meals, his grandparents who are nutritionists (Were featured in a Thai magazine!), gym junkie friends and the fabulous internet.

I stuffed up both my knees, so the work out bit will have to wait (I'm not too good but Mac's friends have taught me things!) But in the meantime, I found this article about calorie counting on tumblr yesterday and had to share.

Here are 10 reasons why counting calories doesn’t always work:

1. Counting calories over-simplifies healthy eating. Eating a healthy diet is complicated and nutrition labels over-simplify it. We are led to believe that low calorie foods are good and high calorie foods are bad. But it is a lot more complicated than that. This way of thinking can lead to eating disorders, infertility, illness, and depression because it encourages the consumption of processed foods instead of nourishing foods.


2. Counting calories prevents a positive, healthy relationship with food. Always being calorie-conscious changes your focus from how you eat to how much you eat. This can prevent you from having a positive relationship with food. Instead of thinking of food as life-giving nourishment, counting calories can make you feel apprehensive toward food, or even make you think of food as being bad for you as if it is the enemy.


3. Counting calories creates a stressful relationship with food that can interfere with digestion. Feeling stressed while eating is bad for you because it can interfere with digestion. The sympathetic nervous system triggers responses in the body that can shut down the digestive system so the body can deal with the stressful situation.


4. Counting calories can also increase your feelings of depression. You may feel depressed when you feel you’ve eaten too many calories because you ate that burger and chocolate shake you feel you shouldn’t have. The constant pressure from tracking calories and feeling like you’ve let yourself down when you go over your daily caloric intake can increase feelings of depression.


5. Counting calories is extremely inaccurate. Not only is it wrong to think calories from different foods are the same, but you shouldn’t always believe the numbers of calories printed on labels because they are often wrong. The calorie tables we use today are outdated. Dietitian Rick Miller says, “We’ve known for some time that the calculations for certain foods such as vegetables and high-fiber foods are inaccurate. The calorie figures you see on a food label aren’t always the amount you will ingest.”

6. Quality of calories is more important than quantity. If you count calories, you may become obsessed with calorie counting. You may buy low-fat this and fat-free that, but these foods lack much needed vitamins and nutritional value. Can you lose fat by eating low-fat and fat-free foods? Yes, but it’s far from eating healthy because you are not getting all the nutrients your body needs. Plus, these foods often replace the fat with sugar, which then gets stored as fat in your body. Your calories should mainly come from whole, natural foods that don’t have labels—the foods that are made by Mother Nature. And, you should avoid eating processed and packaged foods as much as possible, including those that are labeled as low-fat and fat-free. In many cases, these foods are worse for you than the full-fat products.

7. Calorie counting adds more work to your already busy life. It’s work to constantly tabulate calories for every meal, or record everything you eat in a food diary or journal. You probably don’t need to add more work to your already busy life, so forget calorie counting and focus your efforts elsewhere like exercising or cooking healthier meals for your family.


8. Counting calories encourages calorie-restriction, which slows metabolism and makes it difficult to lose weight. The biggest problem with using linear calorie equations for fat loss is that the fewer calories you consume, the fewer calories your body burns. When you start a calorie-restricted diet, you will probably find that you lose a pound or so in the first week but less in subsequent weeks. This phenomenon is believed to be a metabolic adaptation to prevent starvation and keep your body balanced. But a slower metabolism means slower weight loss, and counting calories encourages this.

9. Counting calories is not a way to guide your nutritional health. Counting calories should be used as just one tool for weight loss and should not be used as a long-term solution. It should be used as a learning tool to become more aware of how many calories are in junk foods and sodas, for instance, but it’s not a tool for guiding your nutritional health.

10. Calorie counting interferes with “intuitive eating.” Humans are, by design, intuitive eaters. This means that if you knew nothing about calories, carbs, fats, proteins, vitamins or minerals contained in foods, you would naturally eat the foods your body needs to stay healthy. Sometimes your body may crave carbs while other times it may crave fats, and there are reasons for this. Your body intuitively knows what it needs to stay healthy and balanced, and counting calories interferes with this intuitive ability to eat healthfully.

Original source: here.

I am in no way a professional and my information may not be effective or reliable for you but I'm just sharing things I find interesting! 

XOXO

Monday, June 3, 2013

Nail Tutorials

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If anyone remembers, back in my xanga days I used to love decorating my nails or making nail sets. These days though I haven't been consistent with doing my nails any more and oh the shame I feel when I'm out and about with chipped nails!

Well now it's going to be the end of shitty nails for me! I'm planning to start making nail tutorials, starting easy first until I get all my nail needs in the mail. I will be doing tutorials for different styles on different lengths, on real nails, acrylics and even gel nails! Some designs just using nail polish and others using little deco parts.

Here's a little sneak peek of easy mode nails:

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I wasn't planning on making a tutorial with this, so no captions.

XOXO

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