Healthy Halloween: Treats, Tricks and Tips

Candies Halloween treats are big business — $2.25 billion big. That’s the amount Americans are projected to spend on Halloween candy in 2013 according to research firm IBISWorld. For mental comparison, that’s almost as much as the federal government will send to fund child nutrition programs in California. If that number isn’t enough to make you sick, the loads of candy that your kids bring home might.

After months of trying to establish healthy habits, I cringe when all of that sugar comes flooding into our house. It’s not good for my kids, and it’s not good for me (I’m arguably the worst offender when it comes to over indulging in Halloween treats).

I’m not advocating eliminating candy all together. A treat or two every so often is fine. What I am arguing is that we should find ways to make it more balanced — to bring a few fun and healthy Halloween treats and tricks to the party. So this year we’re trying something new: a few easy changes to make Halloween a little healthier.

Step 1: Tricks or Treats

Instead of eliminating candy all together, we decided to reallocate. Half of the Halloween treats we will give out this year will be candy (albeit, healthier choices like organic snacks), the other half will be toys like glow sticks, bouncy balls and wiki stix. Each trick-or-treater will get to pick two items. I’ll report back on which items run out first.

Step 2: Trade Treats for Treasures

A lively discussion on my Facebook page this week led to a discussion of swapping treats for presents. Some parents invite their kids to leave a donation to the Switch Witch, who collects up Halloween candy and leaves a present in exchange… continue reading

The 3 Best Exercises for Shoulder Health

Shoulder When you’ve been in the fitness industry for a considerable amount of time, it becomes very clear that shoulder-joint health is super important. I don’t know any active person that hasn’t suffered from either an official injury or at least discomfort in the neck and shoulder area.

Shoulders, or the joints associated with your shoulders, are amazing. You have so much mobility and move so dynamically in that area of your body. Stop and think about how many positions you can get your shoulders in compared to other joints. However, because the shoulder joint is so mobile, it sacrifices stability. This tradeoff means taking the time to strengthen your shoulders is paramount.

When I consider the shoulders in training programs, I approach them as part of the core. It’s very easy for people to become shortsighted and think that abs are the only part of the body that makes up the core. This couldn’t be further from the truth. Additionally, because one should always look at one’s body as a unit that wants to work together, one has to realize if he or she lacks shoulder stability or rotator cuff strength, he or she may also suffer from other weakness throughout the body. Believe it or not, poor posture caused by neglected shoulder-joint work can manifest itself through hip or back pain.

One fancy term used to describe how the shoulder joint works is scapulahumeral rhythm. This term is used because the scapula and the humerus, two major parts of the shoulder joint, move together in patterns to help joint actions occur. When the rotator cuff muscles are strong, they help support the shoulder joint by holding the head of the humerus tightly in the glenoid socket as the humerus moves. Furthermore, when the deltoids are strong your arms can move well when away from the body.

I’ve simplified a lot about the shoulder above. I don’t want this to become an anatomy lesson. There are actually many more tendons, ligaments, smaller joints and an array of connective tissue that play serious roles in all the movement and health of the shoulder joint. However, the point is simply to illustrate that the shoulder joint is complicated, often not trained properly and essential to core strength and overall health.

For me, training and working out are not just about looking better. Regular exercise should help you feel better and move better, too. A proper training program should help you to stay active and possibly even continue to play sports that you enjoyed in your youth.

With those thoughts in mind, I have listed here my go-to shoulder movements. Whether for strengthening or mobility, these exercises are a regular part of my programs. I use them myself and with all of my clients. Continue Reading

Exercise Could Help Kids Do Better In School

Books Want your teen to do well in school? Encouraging him or her to hit the gym (or track, court or pavement) could help, according to a new study.

Researchers from the University of Dundee, University of Bristol and University of Georgia found that the more time teens spend exercising, the better they tend to do on tests for English, math and science.

The study included data from 4,755 youths in the U.K., part of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, who were followed as they took national exams in English, math and science at ages 11, 13 and 15/16. Researchers took note of their amount of moderate to vigorous physical activity, which was monitored with accelerometers over a three-to-seven day period when they were age 11.

They found that the more active the child was at age 11, the greater their academic performance was during the tests in the following years. This held true even after taking into account other factors such as socioeconomic status, weight and the child’s puberty status.

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8 Things You Didn’t Know About Your Body Fat

Belly Body fat: It’s soft, it’s squishy and it gets a bad rap. But fat also plays a vital role in keeping our bodies running smoothly. We store extra energy in body fat. It keeps us warm and provides padding for our interior organs. And it secretes chemicals that play a role in appetite and helps regulate menstrual cycles, among other functions.

In other words, in healthy amounts, it’s a wonder organ — but people don’t seem to be very interested in fat except for how to lose it. Read on for some of fat’s amazing abilities, as well as tips on how to treat it right.

Fat has different colors.

When you think of fat, you most likely think of the white stuff on your tummy, hips and thighs that stores energy until you need it. But there’s also brown fat, more prevalent in newborns because it helps them keep their body temperatures stable without shivering. It turns out adults have small amounts of brown fat too, although a lot of research still needs to be done to determine exactly what role it plays.

In 2012, scientists at the University of Sherbrooke published a study showing that when study participants, all men, were exposed to cold temperatures, the brown fat in their bodies kept them warm by using white fat as fuel. In other words, the brown fat burned up the white fat for energy and warmth.

Not everybody has brown fat.

However, brown fat almost never shows up in obese people, notes the New York Times, which is why researchers are investigating if the lack of brown fat causes obesity or whether their extra white body fat prevents them from activating their brown fat.

Brown fat researcher Shingo Kajimura, Ph.D., of the UCSF Diabetes Center told HuffPost that adults have about 50 grams of brown fat that can burn energy equal to roughly 10 pounds of white fat a year. However, people start losing brown fat in their late 40s and early 50s, and he suspects this could be related to age-related obesity. Kajimura has been conducting brown fat trials on mice to see if he can activate or inhibit brown fat’s growth, and in a yet-to-be published study, he explains that his team has found an inhibitor to stop the enzyme that helps brown fat grow. He is now looking for brown fat’s activator, which he hopes can lead to a cure for obesity and obesity-related diseases like diabetes and hypertension.

The research is so preliminary that there are multiple points of view about the significance of brown fat; nutritional biochemist Shawn Talbott, Ph.D., told Shape.com that the amount of brown fat in humans is so small that we can’t count it on it to burn calories or keep as warm. But Kajimura told HuffPost that a drug to stimulate brown fat’s energy-burning properties is a “realistic future” if research continues.

Fat keeps us warm, and not just by insulating us.

All fat cells — not just brown ones — can sense temperature directly, and they respond to cold by releasing their energy as heat, according to a 2013 study reported on by ScienceNOW. The heating process depends on a protein called UCP1, explains ScienceNOW, and when researchers at Harvard Medical School exposed white, brown and “beige” (a mix of white and brown) samples of lab-grown human fat cells to cold temperatures, the amount of UCP1 proteins doubled in white and beige cells.

“Now we know they can sense temperature directly,” lead researcher Bruce Spiegelman, a cell biologist at Harvard Medical School, told the publication. “The next question is, how do they do it, and can that ability be manipulated?”

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Read Ingredient Labels

Label This post is part of a series produced by The Huffington Post and the Cancer Schmancer Movement. CSM, founded by Fran Drescher, is embarking on a major prevention program through healthy lifestyle.

My name is Tichina Arnold and on March 16, 2004, God blessed me with the most beautiful baby girl (Alijah Kai). She was perfect and as I sat gazing at her in the hospital, I wondered what had I gotten myself into.

An innocent little human being was solely dependent on me! I took all the CPR and breastfeeding classes and learned quite a bit.

I breast fed Alijah for the first four months as she thrived and grew into a healthy child … so I thought. However, I was a single mom and it was time to get back to work so I decided it was time to wean her to the bottle.

I tried my best to research baby formula and after much reading I knew that I did not want to feed her any form of animal’s milk.

I then began consulting with other moms as to alternatives. A very good friend suggested almond milk because it worked well for her two daughters because it had sufficient nutrients for healthy development. Thus, I started my baby on almond milk.

To my dismay and surprise, I was feeding her the almond milk not knowing that she washighly allergic to nuts of any kind!

Her face, arms, neck and back broke out with a horrible rash, and as tiny as she was, she was scratching fervidly. She literally looked like a monster! I took pictures to document it. Aside from the the shock that I had almost killed my baby, I quickly switched to rice milk and purified water also added the help of a topical cream. Her itching was alleviated and her skin began to slowly heal. I learned through trial and error all of the many things that my baby was allergic to… and she was only four months old.

I still had a nightmare ahead of me that I could not foresee: When she was 8 months old I was feeding her from my plate that happen to have shrimp on it. Just like mother birds feeding their young, I would chew pieces of different foods and feed them to Alijah as her taste buds grew. All of a sudden, I look down at Alijah only to see her eyes watering and her scratching at her neck while she grasped for air. I quickly picked her up and forced her to regurgitate the remains of the food. Truly, I did not know what was happening this was my first! You can only imagine my fear and panic at that moment.

After much testing, I was informed that my baby had “severe allergies” and was suffering with eczema and asthma in its severest form. Our lives immediately changed forever. I have done so much research trying my best to find a more holistic, organic and healthy way of dealing with her constant outbreaks due to eczema and asthma.

I hate the fact of Alijah having to put topical steroids in addition to ingesting them, but I am caught between the opposite worlds of holistic and western medicines.

Well here I am, nine years later still dealing with my daughter’s “severe allergies.” Even as I write this blog she is experiencing a major flare up!

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