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Wednesday 21 June 2017

15 Hidden Reasons You’re Not Losing Weight

Reason #1: You Don’t Realize That Sugar Lurks Everywhere


Many foods that we don’t think of as sweet, like pasta, soups, cereal, salad dressings and sauces, contain sugar and often it goes by another name like agave nectar, high-fructose corn syrup, evaporated cane juice, fruit juice concentrate(s), glucose, dextrose, sucrose, honey, malt syrup or molasses -- just to name a few!. If your diet is high in sugar you may be missing out on important nutrients and overeating more often than you realize since sugar stimulates taste. A high-sugar diet can also cause a rapid rise and fall in blood sugar, which can zap your energy and make you feel hungry again.
Solution: Read nutrition labels and steer clear of cereals and sauces that have more than 8 grams of sugar per serving. If you need a sweet fix, choose fresh fruit as often as possible. Skip sodas in favor of water (plain or flavored with a bit of lemon, lime or juice essence) and unsweetened teas.

Reason #2: You Choose “Healthy” Processed Food

Foods labeled “low sugar,” “low sodium,” “multi grain,” “organic,” “natural,” “vitamin-enriched,” “high fiber,” or “sweetened with honey or agave” may be high in calories or hidden sweeteners or unhealthy additives. And if you assume it’s healthy, you may eat more of it.
Solution: Switch to whole foods like fresh produce, fish and meat and beans and legumes and limit consumption of processed foods.

Reason #3: You Snack On Nutrition Bars

How often do you eat a nutrition bar as a snack rather than to fuel a workout? If it’s often, you could be downing 400 or more calories without realizing it. Although touted as healthy, many nutrition bars are no better than a candy bar. If you use them for fuel, choose carb-loaded bars for aerobic exercise and protein bars for weight training. If you eat them in the normal course of your day, choose 100-calorie bars for a snack and 350-calorie bars for a meal (and don’t combine with them other high-calorie foods) and avoid bars with trans fats.
Solution: Eat whole- food snacks, like sliced apple and peanut butter, and reserve bars for emergencies.

Reason #4: You Exercise Too Leisurely

If you rely on the calorie counts on machines or the numbers of calories you’ll burn promised to you by instructors you could be exerting too little effort to jumpstart weight loss. To burn 100 calories an hour, you need to maintain a high level of aerobic activity the entire hour.
Solution: Determine your target heart rate for optimal exercise then check your pulse several times during workouts (or wear a heart-rate monitor) to make sure you’re consistently in that calorie-burning zone. Try interval training (a mix of fast and slow pace), fun classes (Zumba anyone?) or outdoor exercise to keep you engaged and burning calories at maximal capacity. Choose exercises that offer a challenge or cross train on different equipment to push your body out of weight-loss plateaus.

Reason #5: You Ignore Fiber

Fiber-rich foods are good for weight-loss in two ways: They require more calorie-burning effort during digestion and they are filling and satisfying, which helps curb cravings.
Solution: Aim for 30 grams of fiber a day. Good sources include fruits, vegetables, unprocessed whole grains, beans and legumes and unprocessed nuts.

Reason #6: You're Seduced By "Diet" Foods

Beware of baked chips, whole grain pretzels, low carb dressings, diet sodas, frozen prepared diet entrees and fat-free deli meats. Many of these "diet versions" are actually high in sodium, which can cause fluid retention; or sugar, which can create a rapid rise and fall of blood sugar, triggering another cycle of eating.
Solution: Stick to fruits, vegetables, beans, legumes and nuts, fat-free dairy products, portion-controlled whole grains and a bit of healthy fat. Prepare your own food as often as possible so you know exactly what how much sugar, fat and salt you are eating.

Reason #7: You Skip Breakfast

More and more research shows that breakfast eaters lose weight and keep it off more easily than those who skip the morning meal. And the heartier the breakfast, the better – you'll be less likely to overeat later in the day.
Solution: The ideal breakfast is a combination of protein, carbs and fat, and adds up to 400 or 500 calories. Try whole-grain, high-fiber cereal, with low-fat Greek yogurt, berries and nuts; a whole-grain waffle with homemade peanut butter, banana slices and a skim latte; or two scrambled eggs with peppers and shredded part-skim mozzarella cheese on a whole grain tortilla.

Reason #8: You Forget About Fat

Pizza isn’t the only food that’s high in oil and fat. Muffins are, too. A lot of processed and refined foods have hidden trans fats, which are partially-hydrogenated oils that can clog and damage your arteries. These fats are predominantly found in fried foods and processed baked goods, stick margarines and shortenings.
Solution: Because manufacturers can claim “zero trans fats” if the food contains less than .5 grams of trans fats per serving, read nutrition labels carefully. If you see “partially hydrogenated oil” in the ingredient list, put it back on the shelf.

Reason #9: You Eat Out Too Much

Studies suggest that eating out socially often means eating more. Between bread or chips, appetizers, wine and dessert -- on top of an entree -- you can consume a lot of calories without realizing it. You may also feel pressure to clean your plate to get the full value of the meal or not waste any food.
Solution: Commit to eating at home more. Invest in cookbooks for beginners or look for simple recipes online. Plan your meals for the week and create pre-measured snacks ahead of time so you have something healthy to grab on the go. Limit eating out to once or twice a week.

Reason #10: You Eat “Unclaimed” Calories

Do you take candies or treats from bowls at work? Do you sample food from your partner’s plate? Do you nibble and taste as you cook? These unaccounted for calories add up.
Solution: Keep a food journal and jot down everything you eat so you can see how often you nibble, sample and taste. Make a point of cutting back on those unclaimed calories and keep healthy snacks on hand so you’re less likely to munch on empty calories.

Reason #11: Your Environment Encourages Eating

The color of the room, the amount of lighting and whether you listen to music or watch TV can all affect your appetite, according to research by Brian Wansink in the Cornell Food and Brand Lab. Warm colors like red and yellow stimulate appetite while cool colors like blue and green suppress it. Listening to music and watching TV or reading may cause you to overeat either by increasing your appetite or promoting mindless eating. Bright lighting makes you eat faster while eating outdoors slows consumption.
Solution: Dim the lighting, turn off any distractions like the radio, TV or the computer and eat your meal at a set table as often as possible.

Reason #12: You Drink Alcohol Before or During Meals

If you have a drink or two most nights before dinner, your ability to gauge fullness may be blunted making you more likely to overeat, especially at a buffet. You also need to add those liquid calories to your day’s tally -- at average of 100 calories per drink, it's easy to rack up a few hundred empty calories.
Solution: Drink an occasional glass of wine or wine spritzer, but remember to count those calories and be aware of appetizer, entree and dessert portions.

Reason #13: You Don’t Discriminate Against Condiments

Calories from condiments like mayonnaise and ketchup, salad dressing and other add-ins like croutons, add up, especially since most of us eat more than one serving. A tablespoon of mayonnaise, which is mostly fat, and one ounce of croutons is 132 calories.
Solution: Choose condiments wisely, substituting lower-calorie mustard, hummus or avocado for mayonnaise, and measure by the teaspoon.

Reason #14: You Graze All Day

Grazing can be healthy but it can also go haywire, if you’re not keeping track of how much you’re eating or paying attention to hunger signals.
Solution: Keep a food journal (or download an app) to track how much you eat, how often you eat, the specific amounts or serving sizes of carbohydrates, fats and proteins you are eating daily and be mindful of how often you graze.

Reason #15: You Think Gluten-Free Equals Calorie-Free

Many people who aren’t allergic to gluten are still choosing gluten-free foods because they equate them with lower calories. The same goes for “diabetes-friendly foods” and foods labeled with terms like “low carb” or “low fat.”
Solution: Skip gluten-free foods if you’re not allergic to gluten. They won’t help your waist, wallet or overall health. If you are allergic to gluten, keep track of your carbohydrate consumption and make sure you get enough protein.

10 Bad Skin Habits that can Damage Skin

Every person wants to have beautiful and glowing skin. They must be spending too much money and time on it. In order to have a smooth skin people are required to take care of the skin or otherwise they will have to say goodbye to their beautiful skin.
Here are few skin bad habits that should be avoided to have good skin.
  1. Forget to Put Sunscreen:

    Sunscreen is very important in every season. In summer season sunscreen helps to protect the skin from harmful rays of sun and in winter season the sun rays reflect from the snow and the skin is double exposed to the sun rays. In winters sunscreen helps to protect the skin from double exposure to sun rays. Sun rays can damage the Elastic Fiber of skin which can cause Wrinkles and brown spots.
  2. Drinking too much Alcohol:

    Drinking one glass of Red Wine daily provides Antioxidants that are good for skin but too much use of Alcohol can be harmful to the skin. Alcohol causes Dehydration, Wrinkles and dryness on the skin.
  3. Lack of Sleep:

    Lack of sleep causes the body to produce Stress Hormones. These Stress Hormones creates the dark circles under Eyes, makes skin dull and cause puffiness. Sleep provides beautiful and glowing skin and prevents Wrinkles too.
  4. Smoking Cigarettes:

    Smoking decreases the flow of Oxygen in the skin, it also speedup the aging process and the complexion becomes dull. Smoking creates lines around the mouth. Smokers look 10 years older than their original age.
  5. Sleeping with Makeup:

    Whenever you put makeup, never forget to put that off before sleeping otherwise it can cause Blocked Pores, breakouts on the skin and makes it dry.
  6. Too much Skin Exfoliation:

    Skin requires exfoliation once a week. Too much exfoliation like more than one or twice a week is not good for the skin. It wipes away those oils which skin needs to make the skin glow.
  7. Eating Food not Good for Skin:

    Use of too much salt can dehydrate the skin while too much use of Sugar can cause wrinkles on the skin. Try to increase the use of Vegetables and Fruits in your diet. Well balanced diet will help to make your skin glow.
  8. Gaining or Losing Weight too Fast:

    Gaining and losing weight too fast is not good for skin because it can weaken the Fiber of your skin. It can cause Premature Aging, creates Stretch Marks and lines on the skin.
  9. Compressing Pimples:

    Pimples can be caused by Bacteria and Viruses and if you compress the Pimples and then touch somewhere else on the skin, it will create new Pimples so, avoid pressing Pimples as it can lead to Scars and large Pores.
  10. Facial Expressions:

    Facial movements that are repeated like laughing, frowning cause the contraction and Wrinkles on the Skin muscles. It is best to minimize the excessive facial movements.
Skin is the best part of everyone’s body features and one can make it beautiful and glowing with a little possible effort.

Married Female Teacher, 27, Charged With Raping Middle School Boy

A 27-year-old Kentucky teacher has been charged with two counts of rape after allegedly carrying on a months-long sexual relationship with a male middle schooler, whose identity is not being disclosed to the public. 
Holding hands with her husband of three years, the accused teacher, Lindsey Jarvis, pleaded not guilty at the Fayette County Courthouse. As noted by The Daily Mail, Jarvis is also being "charged with rape, sodomy and unlawful transaction with a minor in neighboring Woodford County, where she was accused of sexually assaulting the boy in May 2016."
The 27-year-old was arrested on Friday, after police officers found evidence of a "romantic relationship" between her and the middle schooler via messages on the victim's phone. 
The victim, who is under the age of 16, was allegedly sodomized by Jarvis last May. The accused was teaching social studies at Woodford County Middle School at the time of the incident, says the indictment. 
Jarvis then allegedly had sex with the middle schooler in June, before resigning from her teaching position later that month.
But cutting ties with the school allegedly didn't stop the affair: Jarvis is said to have picked up the sexual relationship with the boy as soon as August, after snagging a new job at Veterans Park Elementary in Lexington as para-educator. 
When she was arrested on Friday, Jarvis simultaneously resigned from the elementary school. 
Fayette County Schools spokeswoman Lisa Deffendall said administration is "aware of the matter" and confirmed that the alleged perp is no longer teaching at the school. 
Jarvis' husband, Andrew Jarvis, is apparently still standing by his wife's side. 
"So thankful for your wonderful heart, which teaches me so much about compassion and kindness," Andrew wrote of Jarvis in a post on her 25th birthday. "So thankful for your wisdom and discernment that help guide us through life....Love you with all my heart, and so thankful to have you as my best friend."

White staffer at college newspaper: ‘If you’re white, you’re probably racist’

The opening salvo from Marissa Cornelius — opinions editor of the University of Alabama’s campus paper, the Crimson White — is hard to miss.
“If you’re white, you’re probably racist,” she writes in her recent op-ed, “White people must examine their own racist attitudes.
“I don’t necessarily mean you say openly bigoted things or that you like spending your weekends defending Confederate monuments (though you might be that brand of racist, too),” Cornelius continues. “I just mean that you probably have a lot of internalized racist beliefs that you most likely haven’t spent a lot of time unpacking.”
Cornelius — who notes she herself is white — goes on to call out examples of white people being afraid of going into certain neighborhoods, calling black people “articulate” after hearing them speak, and even shouting out the N-word while listening to a rap song. “Well, if they say it, why can’t I!” she adds.
“You being racist might not be entirely your fault. We’re raised in a society that devalues people of color with pretty much every opportunity it gets. We’re raised in a country where black people could literally be owned as few as four or five generations ago, and where they were actively being denied the right to vote during many of our parents’ lifetimes,” Cornelius continues. “We’re exposed to media that has type-casted people of color into a very narrow range of characters and tropes.”
However, she points a finger at whites who fail to acknowledge “the fact that, yes, you have racist beliefs and attitudes, and these might even sometimes be manifested into racist words or actions” before bringing up Bill Maher’s recent use of the N-word during a “Real Time” episode on HBO.
Cornelius declares that Maher “like almost all of white America, wants to believe that he is post-racial. But by holding on to this belief, we engage in a dangerous sort of erasure of the racism that still plagues this country, extinguishing any chance we might have to address these issues and to attempt to fix them. When we pretend we are post-racial, we ensure that this will never be the case.”
More from the op-ed:
It’s time for us as white people to accept that racism is embedded in all of us. This isn’t to say that you should be any less embarrassed and ashamed of any of your racists words or actions, it is to say that you should stop reacting with so much disbelief, with so much “I don’t have a racist bone in my body!” with so much “I would have voted for Obama for a third time if I could have!” When all your energy is going into denying and defending, you will have none left to go into reflecting and revising.
Campus Reform asked Cornelius to elaborate on her views, specifically whether or not only whites can be racist. She told the outlet that racism a “learned, internalized behavior that all white people develop” amid living with forces such as the media and criminal justice system — and that such forces should be resisted.
In addition, Campus Reform reported that Cornelius said non-white Americans cannot be racist since racism requires power, which is held by and large by whites.

Woman punched 39 times by attacker who waited 8 hours to assault her. It was caught on video.

A Rochester, New Hampshire woman was brutally attacked outside of her place of employment, a local Planet Fitness, after her attacker waited eight hours for her shift to end to assault her.
Erin McCarthy, 18, told CBS Boston that she was just finishing up her shift at the fitness facility when an unknown male, who had been waiting in the parking lot, followed her to her car and punched her no less than 39 times.
The attack occurred on the evening of Jun. 12, and McCarthy noted that after her attacker had finished pummeling her, he threw her to the ground.
“He just kind of came up and hit me in the back of the head and wouldn’t stop,” she said. “He didn’t say a word and he didn’t have a reason behind it. I asked ‘Why? Who are you?'”
Despite the vicious attack, McCarthy admitted that she walked away with minor bruises and scrapes.
“I mean, he threw me around like a rag doll, so I kind of just let it happen,” McCarthy explained.
The suspect has not been apprehended, and local law enforcement are seeking a white male who, at the time, was dressed in a white t-shirt, shorts, and white sneakers, as well as a hat and sunglasses.
McCarthy said that she did not recognize the man who pummeled her in the parking lot.
“I want to beat the crap out of him, definitely, but that’s about it,” McCarthy said.
McCarthy told WMUR that she thought she hit him back, but she’d actually hit the ground instead.
“I had no idea until I watched the video – I had no idea,” she said. “I didn’t even know he hit me 39 times – 39! Like, why? Just why?”
About her injuries, she said, “There’s a bunch of bumps on my head. There’s bumps on the back of my head. It was all in the back of my head at first. And then I have this black eye.”
Rochester Police Captain Jason Thomas said, “It was pretty violent video, pretty graphic.”
See the shocking video below.

Christian college employees fired over ‘racially insensitive’ parody

Three employees at a small Christian college in Winona Lake, Indiana, lost their jobs after a work-sponsored photo drew criticism for being racially insensitive.
The photo in question features five white Grace College and Seminary employees posing for a parody rap album cover. The mock photo — which was posted to Facebook — was taken as part of “wrap day,” a themed day for the school’s marketing team that also included lettuce wraps for lunch, the Indianapolis Star reported.
Six days later, three Grace employees were fired.
In the image, one employee is seen wearing an Afro wig, another has “thug life” written across his knuckles along with a fake tear drop. Other employees are wearing bandanas, chains, and backward baseball hats. “N.G.A.” — Not Grace Appropriate —  is scrawled across the top left corner of the mock album cover.
The bottom right corner reads: “Homeschool advisory: Gangsta content.”
Evan Kilgore, who appeared in the photo and served as the college’s special projects director before being fired, said the three-letter acronym is jokingly used around campus to refer to behavior deemed “sinful” by the religious school.
“When we named our fake album,” he explained to the Star, “we never were implying that how we looked or what were dressed like was ‘not Grace appropriate.’”
Kilgore, a 2016 graduate of Grace who, criticized his alma mater, saying the firings weren’t “handled in the most graceful manner.” And he told WPTA-TV that he is unsure why only he and two other employees were fired when five people participated in the parody.
When he first saw the backlash from the photo — and the school’s response to it — he felt “overwhelmed and hurt.” He said he and his co-workers were just trying to create “a funny parody of the Grace College culture.”
But not everyone who saw the photo, which has since been removed from social media, felt that way.
“What point are you trying to make? That you’re gangster, thug or hood? … And the only time they [the terms] seem to be okay is when white people use them to make light or fun of the situation,” one commenter wrote.
And Dr. Bill Katip, president of Grace College, seemed to agree.
“Earlier this week, an insensitive and inappropriate photo was posted by a Grace College employee on the employee’s personal Facebook page,” he wrote in a statement. “A Grace College department was referenced in the post and Grace employees were pictured in the photograph posted. This post elicited a significant amount of criticism, concern and hurt from our alumni, students, parents, friends and others.”
The president reiterated that his college is “committed deeply to diversity and inclusiveness” and said behavior that exhibits “insensitivity” will not be tolerated moving forward.
“It is apparent that we can and must do more to help ensure people of all backgrounds are treated with respect and feel welcomed on our campus,” Katip concluded.

Valedictorian’s rogue speech cut off by principal — but he gets to finish it for way bigger audience

Sometimes it’s wiser just to let certain things go.
That appears to be the case concerning a Pennsylvania high school valedictorian who took his speech off script at his commencement Friday — and was then unceremoniously shut down by the principal as a video camera rolled and family members and friends reacted with a chorus of boos and protests.
Peter Butera — also class president at Wyoming Area Secondary Center in Exeter, Pennsylvania — cleared his speech with administrators, the Washington Post reported, but he also brought to the podium unapproved text.
Thing is, Butera — who’s headed for Villanova University in the fall — hadn’t been happy with a school administration that seemed to shoot down every idea class officers proposed, leaving them with little to oversee beyond event decorations, the Post said.
So Butera decided to use his time behind the microphone to point that out — and offer an alternative mindset for the adults in charge.
When the 18-year-old got behind the podium, his speech moved along in garden-variety fashion. No surprises. Principal Jon Pollard, seated just to Butera’s left, stared straight ahead.
Then Butera, likely knowing it was now or never, went rogue.
“However,” he began, stating his first unapproved word.
“At our school the title of class president can more accurately be class party planner,” Butera continued. “Student council’s main obligation is to paint signs every week.”
At that point Pollard visibly reacted with a frustrated frown, turning his head upward toward Butera.
The kid kept on: “Despite some of the outstanding people in our school, a lack of a real student government combined with the authoritative attitude that a few teachers, administrators and board members have —”
Pollard was then seen turning his head away from Butera, apparently speaking to someone about the unapproved direction the speech was headed.
Butera was still going: “— prevents students from truly developing as leaders. Hopefully, this will change.”
Then the microphone was turned off, leaving Butera alone with only the volume his voice would provide — but the video still picked it up.
“Hopefully, for the sake of future students, more people within our school who do not do so already —” he kept on.
But that was all she wrote. Pollard stood up, moved right next to valedictorian and said something that no one else heard.
“He said, ‘Alright Peter. You’re done,’” Butera told the Post. The crowd was hollering in response, clearly angry at the principal.
Pollard then waved his right arm downward across his body, presumably encouraging Butera to leave the podium, which he did. Cheers then rang out for the class president who didn’t do what he was told.
Here’s the clip:



In the back, by Butera’s mother, father, girlfriend, grandmother, aunt and uncle, the Post reported that someone said, “I’m so proud.”
The paper said Pollard didn’t immediately respond to its inquiries, but Superintendent Janet Serino said the principal’s actions were justified.
“The young man submitted his graduation speech to his principal and delivered a speech different than the speech that was submitted,” she wrote to the Post, which added that Serino has since reached out to Butera to discuss his concerns.
Butera’s shut-down speech ironically began gaining traction on social media — far beyond the crowd who heard his rogue words live. Then TV host Jimmy Kimmel caught wind of the incident.
He had Butera as a guest via video Tuesday night and had an idea: Give the valedictorian a chance to finish his speech on TV — and for a way bigger audience than he stood before Friday. Which is just what Butera did:
Hopefully, for the sake of future students, more people of power within our school who do not do so already will begin to prioritize education itself as well as the empowering of students. Because at the end of the day, it is not what we have done as Wyoming Area students or athletes that will define our lives but what we will go on to do as Wyoming Area alumni. And I hope that every one of my classmates here today as well as myself will go on to do great things in this world and achieve true happiness and success. Thank you all for coming out to this great celebration here today.
Kimmel’s studio audience cheered, and he asked Butera if he learned his lesson that he “should always carry a bullhorn” in his pants.
“Keep being a pain in the ass,” Kimmel told Butera. “I think we should encourage this sort of thing. He’s a good American.”