The past week has been an adventurous one for our owner, John Greeley. He headed out to Dubai to meet with some of our customers. Not only was his week productive but he tried a lot of cool and different things. See below for some photos from his trip:
Monday, June 27, 2011
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Weekly Wellness tips: Spices
This was part of our Weekly Wellness newsletter that Ali puts together for us weekly with great tips to stay healthy through exercise, and nutrition. check it out:
Spices have played a role in everything from cooking, to cosmetics, to global exploration, but it’s often forgotten that for thousands of years spices have been used for healing purposes as well. Did you know that spices are being studied for their positive affects on a long list of diseases including cancer, diabetes and Alzheimer’s? Spices are easy to use and a treat to your tongue, so sort through your pantry and start using those spices! Your health will thank you later.
To help guide you through the hundreds of spices used in cooking, I have chosen a representative group that are great to cook with on a regular basis to reap the many health benefits spices have to offer. Whoever said, “variety is the spice of life” was right… try to include as many of these spices in your diet as possible!
Cinnamon:
Practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine have long used it to fight colds and flu, and the list of possible health benefits of cinnamon is quickly growing! Cinnamon may help relieve intestinal gas, aid digestion, decrease inflammation, and perhaps even help lower blood sugar and cholesterol levels. In addition, cinnamon possesses potent antioxidant potential.
In the kitchen:
Cinnamon comes ground and in sticks, and can be used in all types of recipes – not just baked goods. Middle Eastern and Latin American dishes, as well as curries often include cinnamon. Add a cinnamon stick to steeping hot tea for an extra kick.
Garlic:
The health benefits of garlic are widely known and well-documented. Part of the Allium plant family (onions belong as well), garlic is best known for it’s possible cardiovascular benefits, particularly its mildly positive effects on blood pressure, cholesterol and triglycerides. It is also believed to help relax blood vessels, potentially reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease, and through its antioxidant activity may help lower the risk of some forms of cancer.
In the kitchen:
It is best to use fresh garlic instead of garlic powder or garlic salt. Crush or chop garlic and cook lightly in olive oil for maximum health benefits.
Chili Peppers:
Capsaicin appears to be the active ingredient in chili peppers that makes them both hot and healthy. Chili peppers come in many different varieties and when eating them for health, the hotter the better. Scotch bonnets and habaneros are the hottest type and have the most capsaicin. Chili peppers may reduce inflammation in the body and even help lower blood pressure. When prescription capsaicin is applied to the skin directly overlying an arthritic joint it may help relieve pain.
In the kitchen:
It’s important to be careful when handling chili peppers, as the juice can burn skin and eyes. Wearing thin gloves is a smart protective measure. If you do feel the fire of the chili pepper, applying cold milk will counteract some of the burn.
Turmeric:
Turmeric is
probably most known as one of the spices used in curry that gives many Indian foods their distinct flavor. Curcumin, the compound that gives turmeric is yellow color, is thought to be the active ingredient in this spice. Turmeric provides a boost of anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activity, and is being studied as a therapeutic aid in a variety of clinical settings including cancer, autoimmune disease and Alzheimer’s.
In the kitchen:
Turmeric is delicious when added to beans, rice, curries, sauces, egg or chicken salad and salad dressings. It is often paired in recipes with dried fruits and nuts.
Spices have played a role in everything from cooking, to cosmetics, to global exploration, but it’s often forgotten that for thousands of years spices have been used for healing purposes as well. Did you know that spices are being studied for their positive affects on a long list of diseases including cancer, diabetes and Alzheimer’s? Spices are easy to use and a treat to your tongue, so sort through your pantry and start using those spices! Your health will thank you later.
To help guide you through the hundreds of spices used in cooking, I have chosen a representative group that are great to cook with on a regular basis to reap the many health benefits spices have to offer. Whoever said, “variety is the spice of life” was right… try to include as many of these spices in your diet as possible!
Cinnamon:
Practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine have long used it to fight colds and flu, and the list of possible health benefits of cinnamon is quickly growing! Cinnamon may help relieve intestinal gas, aid digestion, decrease inflammation, and perhaps even help lower blood sugar and cholesterol levels. In addition, cinnamon possesses potent antioxidant potential.
In the kitchen:
Cinnamon comes ground and in sticks, and can be used in all types of recipes – not just baked goods. Middle Eastern and Latin American dishes, as well as curries often include cinnamon. Add a cinnamon stick to steeping hot tea for an extra kick.
Garlic:
The health benefits of garlic are widely known and well-documented. Part of the Allium plant family (onions belong as well), garlic is best known for it’s possible cardiovascular benefits, particularly its mildly positive effects on blood pressure, cholesterol and triglycerides. It is also believed to help relax blood vessels, potentially reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease, and through its antioxidant activity may help lower the risk of some forms of cancer.
In the kitchen:
It is best to use fresh garlic instead of garlic powder or garlic salt. Crush or chop garlic and cook lightly in olive oil for maximum health benefits.
Chili Peppers:
Capsaicin appears to be the active ingredient in chili peppers that makes them both hot and healthy. Chili peppers come in many different varieties and when eating them for health, the hotter the better. Scotch bonnets and habaneros are the hottest type and have the most capsaicin. Chili peppers may reduce inflammation in the body and even help lower blood pressure. When prescription capsaicin is applied to the skin directly overlying an arthritic joint it may help relieve pain.
In the kitchen:
It’s important to be careful when handling chili peppers, as the juice can burn skin and eyes. Wearing thin gloves is a smart protective measure. If you do feel the fire of the chili pepper, applying cold milk will counteract some of the burn.
Turmeric:
Turmeric is
probably most known as one of the spices used in curry that gives many Indian foods their distinct flavor. Curcumin, the compound that gives turmeric is yellow color, is thought to be the active ingredient in this spice. Turmeric provides a boost of anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activity, and is being studied as a therapeutic aid in a variety of clinical settings including cancer, autoimmune disease and Alzheimer’s.
In the kitchen:
Turmeric is delicious when added to beans, rice, curries, sauces, egg or chicken salad and salad dressings. It is often paired in recipes with dried fruits and nuts.
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
5 Exercise Myths Debunked!
Quick! Let’s free associate. Complete this sentence:
Did you answer 3 and 10? Of course you did. It’s the Pavlovian response. After all, anyone who’s ever picked up a dumbbell knows that doing 3 sets of 10 reps of each exercise is the quickest way to build muscle.
Except it’s not. In fact, it’s the quickest way to get nowhere with your workout routine, says Michael Mejia, C.S.C.S., a long-time Men’s Health fitness advisor.
Truth is, today’s most sacred exercise guidelines originated in the ’40s and ’50s, a time when castration was a cutting-edge treatment for prostate cancer, and endurance exercise was thought to be harmful to women. Worse, so-called fitness experts across the country are still spewing these same old conventional wisdoms, despite plenty of research indicating that they (the experts and the wisdoms) aren’t wise at all.
Chances are, these are the rules you exercise by right now. And that means your workout is long past due for a 21st-century overhaul. We asked Mejia to do just that. Here are the five muscles myths he most commonly hears. Hopefully, we're about to bust them for good.
MYTH #1: DO 8 TO 12 REPETITIONS
The claim: It's the optimal repetition range for building muscle.
The origin: In 1954, Ian MacQueen, M.D., an English surgeon and competitive bodybuilder, published a scientific paper in which he recommended a moderately high number of repetitions for muscle growth.
The truth: This approach places muscles under a medium amount of tension for a medium amount of time—it's basically The Neither Here Nor There Workout.
Here's the deal: Higher tension—a.k.a. heavier weights—induces the type of muscle growth in which the muscle fibers grow larger, leading to the best gains in strength; longer tension time, on the other hand, boosts muscle size by increasing the energy-producing structures around the fibers, improving muscular endurance. The classic prescription of 8 to 12 repetitions strikes a balance between the two. But by using that scheme all the time, you miss out on the greater tension levels that come with heavier weights and fewer repetitions, and the longer tension time achieved with lighter weights and higher repetitions.
The new standard: Vary your repetition range—adjusting the weights accordingly—so that you stimulate every type of muscle growth. Try this method for a month, performing three full-body sessions a week: Do five repetitions per set in your first workout, 10 reps per set in your second workout, and 15 per set in your third workout.
MYTH #2: DO 3 SETS OF EACH EXERCISE
The claim: This provides the ideal workload for achieving the fastest muscle gains.
The origin: In 1948, a physician named Thomas Delorme reported in the Archives of Physical Medicine that performing three sets of 10 repetitions was as effective at improving leg strength as 10 sets of 10 repetitions.
The truth: There's nothing wrong with—or magical about—doing three sets. But the number of sets you perform shouldn't be determined by a 50-year-old default recommendation. Here's a rule of thumb: The more repetitions of an exercise you do, the fewer sets you should perform, and vice versa. This keeps the total number of reps you do of an exercise nearly equal, no matter how many repetitions make up each set.
The new standard: If you're doing eight or more reps, keep it to three sets or less. If you're pounding out less than three reps, you should be doing at least six sets.
MYTH #3: DO 3 OR 4 EXERCISES PER MUSCLE GROUP
The claim: This ensures that you work all the fibers of the target muscle.
The origin: Arnold Schwarzenegger, circa 1966.
The truth: You'll waste a lot of time. Here's why: Schwarzenegger's four-decade-old recommendation is almost always combined with "Do three sets of 8 to 12 repetitions." That means you'll complete up to 144 repetitions for each muscle group. Trouble is, if you can perform even close to 100 repetitions for any muscle group, you're not working hard enough.
Think of it this way: The harder you train, the less time you'll be able to sustain that level of effort. For example, many men can run for an hour if they jog slowly, but you'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who could do high-intensity sprints—without a major decrease in performance—for that period of time. And once performance starts to decline, you've achieved all the muscle-building benefits you can for that muscle group.
The new standard: Instead of focusing on the number of different exercises you do, shoot for a total number of repetitions between 25 and 50. That could mean five sets of five repetitions of one exercise (25 repetitions) or one set of 15 repetitions of two or three exercises (30 to 45 repetitions).
MYTH #4: NEVER LET YOUR KNEES GO PAST YOUR TOES
The claim: Allowing your knees to move too far forward during exercises such as the squat and lunge places dangerous shearing forces on your knee ligaments.
The origin: A 1978 study at Duke University found that keeping the lower leg as vertical as possible during the squat reduced shearing forces on the knee.
The truth: Leaning your torso too far forward, so that your knees stay back, is more likely to cause injury. In 2003, University of Memphis researchers confirmed that knee stress was 28 percent higher when the knees were allowed to move past the toes during the squat. But the researchers also found a countereffect: Hip stress increased nearly 1,000 percent when forward movement of the knee was restricted. The reason: The squatters had to lean their torsos farther forward. And that's a problem, because forces that act on the hip are transferred to the lower back, a more frequent site of injury than the knees.
The new standard: Watch a toddler squat. Push your hips back as far as you can, while keeping your torso as upright as possible. This will reduce the stress on your back and knees.
MYTH #5: WHEN YOU LIFT WEIGHTS, DRAW IN YOUR ABS
The claim: You'll increase the support to your spine, reducing the risk of back injuries.
The origin: In 1999, researchers in Australia found that some men with back pain had a slight delay in activating their transverse abdominis, a deep abdominal muscle that's part of the musculature that maintains spine stability. As a result, many fitness professionals began instructing their clients to try to pull their belly buttons to their spines—which engages the transverse abdominis—as they performed exercises.
The truth: "The research was accurate, but the interpretation by many researchers and therapists wasn't," says Stuart McGill, Ph.D., author of Ultimate Back Fitness and Performance and widely recognized as the world's top researcher on the spine. That's because muscles work in teams to stabilize your spine, and the most valuable players change depending on the exercise, says McGill. Read: The transverse abdominis isn't always the quarterback.
In fact, for any given exercise, your body automatically activates the muscles that are most needed for spine support. So focusing only on your transverse abdominis can overrecruit the wrong muscles and underrecruit the right ones. This not only increases injury risk, but reduces the amount of weight you can lift.
The new standard: If you want to give your back a supporting hand, simply "brace" your abs as if you were about to be punched in the gut, but don't draw them in. "This activates all three layers of the abdominal wall," says McGill, "improving both stability and performance."
_ SETS OF _ REPS.
Except it’s not. In fact, it’s the quickest way to get nowhere with your workout routine, says Michael Mejia, C.S.C.S., a long-time Men’s Health fitness advisor.
Truth is, today’s most sacred exercise guidelines originated in the ’40s and ’50s, a time when castration was a cutting-edge treatment for prostate cancer, and endurance exercise was thought to be harmful to women. Worse, so-called fitness experts across the country are still spewing these same old conventional wisdoms, despite plenty of research indicating that they (the experts and the wisdoms) aren’t wise at all.
Chances are, these are the rules you exercise by right now. And that means your workout is long past due for a 21st-century overhaul. We asked Mejia to do just that. Here are the five muscles myths he most commonly hears. Hopefully, we're about to bust them for good.
MYTH #1: DO 8 TO 12 REPETITIONS
The claim: It's the optimal repetition range for building muscle.
The origin: In 1954, Ian MacQueen, M.D., an English surgeon and competitive bodybuilder, published a scientific paper in which he recommended a moderately high number of repetitions for muscle growth.
The truth: This approach places muscles under a medium amount of tension for a medium amount of time—it's basically The Neither Here Nor There Workout.
Here's the deal: Higher tension—a.k.a. heavier weights—induces the type of muscle growth in which the muscle fibers grow larger, leading to the best gains in strength; longer tension time, on the other hand, boosts muscle size by increasing the energy-producing structures around the fibers, improving muscular endurance. The classic prescription of 8 to 12 repetitions strikes a balance between the two. But by using that scheme all the time, you miss out on the greater tension levels that come with heavier weights and fewer repetitions, and the longer tension time achieved with lighter weights and higher repetitions.
The new standard: Vary your repetition range—adjusting the weights accordingly—so that you stimulate every type of muscle growth. Try this method for a month, performing three full-body sessions a week: Do five repetitions per set in your first workout, 10 reps per set in your second workout, and 15 per set in your third workout.
MYTH #2: DO 3 SETS OF EACH EXERCISE
The claim: This provides the ideal workload for achieving the fastest muscle gains.
The origin: In 1948, a physician named Thomas Delorme reported in the Archives of Physical Medicine that performing three sets of 10 repetitions was as effective at improving leg strength as 10 sets of 10 repetitions.
The truth: There's nothing wrong with—or magical about—doing three sets. But the number of sets you perform shouldn't be determined by a 50-year-old default recommendation. Here's a rule of thumb: The more repetitions of an exercise you do, the fewer sets you should perform, and vice versa. This keeps the total number of reps you do of an exercise nearly equal, no matter how many repetitions make up each set.
The new standard: If you're doing eight or more reps, keep it to three sets or less. If you're pounding out less than three reps, you should be doing at least six sets.
MYTH #3: DO 3 OR 4 EXERCISES PER MUSCLE GROUP
The claim: This ensures that you work all the fibers of the target muscle.
The origin: Arnold Schwarzenegger, circa 1966.
The truth: You'll waste a lot of time. Here's why: Schwarzenegger's four-decade-old recommendation is almost always combined with "Do three sets of 8 to 12 repetitions." That means you'll complete up to 144 repetitions for each muscle group. Trouble is, if you can perform even close to 100 repetitions for any muscle group, you're not working hard enough.
Think of it this way: The harder you train, the less time you'll be able to sustain that level of effort. For example, many men can run for an hour if they jog slowly, but you'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who could do high-intensity sprints—without a major decrease in performance—for that period of time. And once performance starts to decline, you've achieved all the muscle-building benefits you can for that muscle group.
The new standard: Instead of focusing on the number of different exercises you do, shoot for a total number of repetitions between 25 and 50. That could mean five sets of five repetitions of one exercise (25 repetitions) or one set of 15 repetitions of two or three exercises (30 to 45 repetitions).
MYTH #4: NEVER LET YOUR KNEES GO PAST YOUR TOES
The claim: Allowing your knees to move too far forward during exercises such as the squat and lunge places dangerous shearing forces on your knee ligaments.
The origin: A 1978 study at Duke University found that keeping the lower leg as vertical as possible during the squat reduced shearing forces on the knee.
The truth: Leaning your torso too far forward, so that your knees stay back, is more likely to cause injury. In 2003, University of Memphis researchers confirmed that knee stress was 28 percent higher when the knees were allowed to move past the toes during the squat. But the researchers also found a countereffect: Hip stress increased nearly 1,000 percent when forward movement of the knee was restricted. The reason: The squatters had to lean their torsos farther forward. And that's a problem, because forces that act on the hip are transferred to the lower back, a more frequent site of injury than the knees.
The new standard: Watch a toddler squat. Push your hips back as far as you can, while keeping your torso as upright as possible. This will reduce the stress on your back and knees.
MYTH #5: WHEN YOU LIFT WEIGHTS, DRAW IN YOUR ABS
The claim: You'll increase the support to your spine, reducing the risk of back injuries.
The origin: In 1999, researchers in Australia found that some men with back pain had a slight delay in activating their transverse abdominis, a deep abdominal muscle that's part of the musculature that maintains spine stability. As a result, many fitness professionals began instructing their clients to try to pull their belly buttons to their spines—which engages the transverse abdominis—as they performed exercises.
The truth: "The research was accurate, but the interpretation by many researchers and therapists wasn't," says Stuart McGill, Ph.D., author of Ultimate Back Fitness and Performance and widely recognized as the world's top researcher on the spine. That's because muscles work in teams to stabilize your spine, and the most valuable players change depending on the exercise, says McGill. Read: The transverse abdominis isn't always the quarterback.
In fact, for any given exercise, your body automatically activates the muscles that are most needed for spine support. So focusing only on your transverse abdominis can overrecruit the wrong muscles and underrecruit the right ones. This not only increases injury risk, but reduces the amount of weight you can lift.
The new standard: If you want to give your back a supporting hand, simply "brace" your abs as if you were about to be punched in the gut, but don't draw them in. "This activates all three layers of the abdominal wall," says McGill, "improving both stability and performance."
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