Alcohol calories ‘too often ignored’.


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A large glass of wine contains more than 170 calories .

People watching their weight should pay closer attention to how much alcohol they drink since it is second only to fat in terms of calorie content, say experts.

According to the World Cancer Research Fund, alcohol makes up nearly 10% of total calorie intake among drinkers.

Having a large glass of wine will cost you the same 178 calories as eating two chocolate digestive biscuits.

And it will take you more than a half hour’s brisk walk to burn off.

Empty calories

Eating or drinking too many calories on a regular basis can lead to weight gain.

Recent reports have shown that people are unaware of calories in drinks and don’t include them when calculating their daily consumption”

Kate Mendoza World Cancer Research Fund

But unlike food, alcoholic drinks have very little or no nutritional value.

The ’empty calories’ in drinks are often forgotten or ignored by dieters, says the WCRF.

Kate Mendoza, head of health information at WCRF, said: “Recent reports have shown that people are unaware of calories in drinks and don’t include them when calculating their daily consumption.”

Containing 7kcal/g, alcohol is only slightly less calorific than fat, which contains 9kcal/g.

Protein and carbohydrates contain 4kcal/g and fibre 2kcal/g.

Men need around 2,500 calories a day, and women around 2,000.

“Cutting down on drinking can have a big effect on weight loss or maintaining a healthy weight,” said Ms Mendoza.

It can also reduce your risk of cancer, she said.

Alcohol has been linked with breast, bowel, mouth and liver cancer.

If you don’t want to abstain entirely, there are ways that can help you cut down, including opting for smaller glass sizes, diluting alcohol with soda water or a low-calorie soft drink, alternating between alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks and keeping a few nights each week booze-free.

WCRF has produced an Alcohol Calorie Calculator for different drinks that shows approximately how much exercise you would need to do to burn off the alcohol calories you consume.

Government guidelines recommend men should not regularly drink more than 3-4 units of alcohol a day, and women should limit themselves to 2-3 units a day.

A standard 175ml glass of wine contains about two units and a large 250ml glass contains about three units.

If you have had a heavy drinking session, you should avoid alcohol for at least 48 hours, experts advise.

Source:BBC

Tomorrow’s world: A guide to the next 150 years.


BBC FUTURE_non-editable-flat

 

Source:BBC

Quitting smoking ‘reduces anxiety’.


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Researchers followed nearly 500 smokers attending NHS stop smoking clinic

Smokers who successfully quit feel less anxious afterwards – despite the belief that smoking relieves stress, researchers say.

The British Journal of Psychiatry study followed nearly 500 smokers attending NHS stop smoking clinics in England.

It found a “significant” decrease in anxiety levels among the 68 smokers who had quit after six months.

The effect was greater among those who had mood and anxiety disorders than those that smoked for pleasure.

The researchers – drawn from several universities including Cambridge, Oxford and Kings’s College in London – said the findings should be used to reassure smokers attempting to quit that concerns about increased anxiety levels were unfounded.

Withdrawal

However, the study did suggest that a failed attempt to seemed to increase anxiety levels by a modest degree among those who had mood disorders.

For those who smoked for pleasure a relapse did not alter anxiety levels.

The researchers said it seemed that smokers – particularly those that smoked to cope – were more likely to have a cigarette soon after waking up to stave off withdrawal symptoms, which include anxiety.

By quitting, they removed these repeated episodes of anxiety and felt less anxious as a result, they added.

It comes as the government has launched a graphic anti-smoking advertising campaign, which features a cigarette with a tumour growing from it, and as many smokers prepare to quit as part of their new year resolutions.

Source:BBC

 

 

‘Weight is healthy’ study criticised.


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What is a healthy weight?

 

A study which suggests being overweight can lead to a longer life has caused controversy among obesity experts.

One labelled the findings a “pile of rubbish” while another said it was a “horrific message” to put out.

The research, in the Journal of the American Medical Association, suggested the overweight were less likely to die prematurely than people with a “healthy” weight.

Being underweight or severely obese did cut life expectancy.

The researchers at the US National Centre for Health Statistics looked at 97 studies involving nearly 2.9 million people to compare death rates with Body Mass Index (BMI) – a way of measuring obesity using a person’s weight and height.

A healthy BMI is considered to be above 18.5 and below 25. However, overweight people (with a BMI between 25 and 30) were 6% less likely to die early than those considered to have a healthy weight, the study reports.

Have you ever seen a 100-year-old human being who is overweight? The answer is you probably haven’t.”

Prof John Wass Royal College of Physicians

Mildly obese people (BMI between 30 and 35) were no more likely to die prematurely than people with a healthy BMI.

The study said being “overweight was associated with significantly lower all-cause mortality”.

Possible explanations included overweight people getting medical treatment, such as to control blood pressure, more quickly or the extra weight helping people survive being severely ill in hospital.

However, the researchers point out they looked only at deaths and not years spent free of ill-health.

Unconvinced

On Tuesday, the Royal College of Physicians called for the UK to rethink the way it tackles obesity.

Prof John Wass, vice-president of the college, said: “Have you ever seen a 100-year-old human being who is overweight? The answer is you probably haven’t.”

He said the largest people will have died years before and pointed to health problems and higher levels of Type 2 diabetes.

“Huge pieces of evidence go against this, countless other studies point in the other direction.”

Other experts criticised the research methods.

“Some portion of those thin people are actually sick, and sick people tend to die sooner,” according to Donald Berry, from the University of Texas

Dr Walter Willett, from the Harvard School of Public Health said: “This is an even greater pile of rubbish” than a study conducted by the same group in 2005.

Tam Fry, from the National Obesity Forum in the UK, said: “It’s a horrific message to put out at this particular time.

“We shouldn’t take it for granted that we can cancel the gym, that we can eat ourselves to death with black forest gateaux.”

Source:BBC

Health Benefits Of Blueberries.


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With practically no fat and loads of nutritious components this is one fruit you can rely on completely for the health factor.

Blueberries are the fruit that pack in nutrition and delicious taste all-in-one, tempting blue package!

With practically no fat and loads of nutritious components this is one fruit you can rely on completely for the health factor. Read on to know how exactly blueberries prove beneficial to health:

1. Packed with Antioxidants

Blueberries are rich in antioxidants, as they contain Vitamins A, B, C and E as well as copper, zinc, iron and loads of antioxidants to keep the oxygen levels high and immune system strong. These nutrients are very important in the restoration of brain cells and the overall nervous system. What’s more, even Alzheimer’s disease is known t be cured by the consumption of blueberries.

2.Source of Manganese

Manganese is very essential for the development of bones. Moreover, it helps the body convert proteins, carbohydrates and fats into energy. Blueberries are rich in manganese, thereby making them the fruits to relish and savour as part of your regular diet.

3. Dietary Fibre

There are very few foods that provide the body with the requisite amount of fibre to keep the system in excellent condition. Fibres help the heart stay healthy and also keep the cholesterol levels in check. A bowl of blueberries consumed every day can take care of your body’s regular fibre requirement. This, in turn, aids in maintaining a healthy heart.

4. Fat-Free Fitness Food

With a host of nutritious actors that blueberries cater to, they can also be highly instrumental in the reduction of belly fat. Since the cholesterol levels are kept in check and essential antioxidants and vitamins are provided, they are definitely a healthy option.

5. Antibiotic Properties

Blueberries have another surprising health benefit. They are fruit with antibiotic properties, making them helpful in the case of infections in the urinary tract. In the case of the latter, the bacteria causing the infection can be treated with the consumption of blueberries on a regular basis.

6. Cancer Treatment

Blueberries contain compounds such as Pterostilbene and Ellagic Acid, which, in combination with other antioxidants, can work wonders in prevention as well as cure of liver and colon cancer. People who consume the fruit are known to be less prone to the risk of cancer than those who do not.

Blueberries are indeed a wonder fruit. So, stock up on them and make sure to include a generous helping in your daily diet for healthier living!

 

Source: Yahoo

Your Digestive System Dictates Whether You’re Sick or Well.


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More and more, science is finding that teeny tiny creatures living in your gut are there for a definite purpose. Known as your microbiome, about 100 trillion of these cells populate your body, particularly your intestines and other parts of your digestive system.

In fact, 90 percent of the genetic material in your body is not yours, but rather that of bacteria, fungi, viruses and other microorganisms that compose your microflora.

True, some of these bacteria can make you sick; for example, the National Institute of Allergy & Infectious Diseases recently found Crohn’s Disease may be caused by immune responses to certain gut microbiota.

But the majority are good, and they work together as helpmates to aid your digestive system and keep you well. Beneficial bacteria, better known as probiotics, along with a host of other microorganisms, are so crucial to your health that researchers have compared them to “a newly recognized organ.” For example, we now know that your microflora influence your:

  • Genetic expression
  • Immune system
  • Brain development, mental health, and memory
  • Weight, and
  • Risk of numerous chronic and acute diseases, from diabetes to cancer

According to the featured article in Time Magazine:1

“Our surprisingly complex internal ecology has been a hot topic in medicine lately. Initiatives such as the Human Microbiome Project2, an extension of the Human Genome Project, have been working tirelessly to probe potential links between the human microbiota and human health, and to construct strategies for manipulating the bacteria so that they work with us rather than against us.

…They’ve been linked to a range of nasty conditions, including obesity, arthritis, and high cholesterol. Now, two newer areas of research are pushing the field even further, looking at the possible gut bug link to a pair of very different conditions: autism and irritable bowel disease.”

Microflora Being Investigated to Ascertain Links with Autism and IBS

This is precisely what Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride‘s work centers around, and her Gut and Psychology Syndrome (GAPS) nutritional plan is designed to reestablish proper gut flora in order to heal and seal your gut – thereby reversing and eliminating ailments running the gamut from autism, ADD/ADHD, learning disorders, and obsessive-compulsive disorder, just to name a few possibilities. It’s exciting to see science is starting to take this more seriously, as autism has reached epidemic proportions.

According to the featured Time article:3

“Up to 85 percent of children with autism also suffer from some kind of gastrointestinal distress such as chronic constipation or inflammatory bowel disease. Research published in 2005 in the Journal of Medical Microbiology and in 2004 in Applied Environmental Microbiology4 reported that the stools of autistic children contained higher levels of the bacterium Clostridium,while two 2010 studies in the Journal of Proteome Research5 and Nutritional Neuroscience6 reported unusual levels of metabolic compounds in autistic children’s urine consistent with the high bacterial levels found in the stools of autistic patients.

In 2011, a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that mice with essentially germ-free guts showed abnormal movement and anxiety symptoms, suggesting that at least some active intestinal biome is essential for normal development.

‘Until a little while ago it was outlandish to suggest that microbiomes in the gut could be behind this disease,’ University of Guelph assistant professor of biology Emma Allen-Vercoe said. ‘But I think it’s an intersection between the genetics of the patient and the microbiome and the environment.'”

Recent research published in the journal Science7 may shed much needed light on the persistent and hard-to-treat nature of irritable bowel disease (IBD). The researchers infected mice with Toxoplasma gondii, a parasite associated with lethal food-borne illness.

Interestingly, when the immune system of the mouse reacted to the presence of the parasite, it also began overreacting to beneficial bacteria. In fact, while about 10 percent of the T cells in the GI tract attacked the parasite, approximately 45 percent of the T cells began attacking other gut microbes. Furthermore, once the parasite had been successfully cleared, the immune system continued to misidentify beneficial bacteria as a foreign agents, preventing the mice from ever fully recovering from the infection. As stated by Time:

“If something similar happens in humans – either with Toxoplasma gondii or another invader – it could go a long way to explaining both the existence and persistence of all of the IBD conditions.”

According to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases:8

“The team’s findings are among the first to demonstrate that T cells in the gut mount an immune response to commensal bacteria [normal microflora] during an infection. They also are the first to show that commensal-specific T cells remain in circulation after the infection is cleared. Based on their observations, the investigators speculate that, when uncontrolled, commensal-specific T cells may contribute to development of Crohn’s disease, but more research is needed.”

Who Would Have Known? Breast Milk Boosts Beneficial Growth of Gut Flora

Adding more weight to Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride’s insistence that breastfeeding is crucial to help normalize an infant’s microflora (hence protecting against disease and developmental problems), a first-of-its-kind study on human breast milk and its impact on infants’ gut flora gives new insight on why breast milk is better than formula at protecting newborns from infectious illness.9

The study’s author, William Parker, explained that breast milk appears to promote a healthy colonization of beneficial biofilms. Previous research has already established that breast milk reduces diarrhea, flu, and respiratory infections in babies, as well as lowers their risk of developing allergies, Type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis and other diseases.

According to Duke University:10

“‘This study is the first we know of that examines the effects of infant nutrition on the way that bacteria grow, providing insight to the mechanisms underlying the benefits of breast feeding over formula feeding for newborns,’ said William Parker, PhD, associate professor of surgery at Duke and senior author of the study.

Only breast milk appears to promote a healthy colonization of beneficial biofilms, and these insights suggest there may be potential approaches for developing substitutes that more closely mimic those benefits in cases where breast milk cannot be provided.”

The researchers grew bacteria in samples of three popular brands each of milk- and soy-based infant formulas, cow’s milk, and breast milk. All samples were incubated with two strains of beneficial E.coli bacteria (while some E.coli cause violent disease, other ‘friendly cousins’ actually serve helpful roles). While the bacteria rapidly multiplied in all the specimens, there was one major difference. In the breast milk specimens, the bacteria formed biofilms, whereas the bacteria in the whole milk and the different infant formulas grew as individual organisms and failed to form into a biofilm.

This is indeed important. Biofilms are essentially thin, sticky bacterial “sheaths” that adhere to your intestinal wall, where they serve as a shield, effectively blocking out pathogens and infectious agents. This is an essential part of the “healing and sealing” of your gut that Dr. Campbell-McBride’s GAPS protocol accomplishes.

According to Duke University:

“…This study adds even more weight to an already large body of evidence that breast milk is the most nutritious way to feed a baby whenever possible,” said Gabriela M. Maradiaga Panayotti, M.D., co-director of the newborn nursery for Duke Children’s and Duke Primary Care. “We know that babies who receive breast milk have better outcomes in many ways, and mother who breast feed also have improved health outcomes, including decreased risks of cancer. Whenever possible, promoting breast feeding is the absolute best option for mom and baby.”

How to Optimize Your Gut Flora

A healthy diet is the ideal way to maintain a healthy gut, and regularly consuming traditionally fermented or cultured foods is the easiest way to ensure optimal gut flora. Healthy options include:

Fermented vegetables of all kinds (cabbage, carrots, kale, collards, celery spiced with herbs like ginger and garlic) Lassi (an Indian yogurt drink, traditionally enjoyed before dinner) Tempeh
Fermented raw milk such as kefir or yogurt, but NOT commercial versions, which typically do not have live cultures and are loaded with sugars that feed pathogenic bacteria Natto Kim chee

 

Just make sure to steer clear of pasteurized versions, as pasteurization will destroy many of the naturally occurring probiotics. For example, most of the “probiotic” yogurts you find in every grocery store these days are NOT recommended. Since they’re pasteurized, they will be associated with all of the problems of pasteurized milk products instead. They also typically contain added sugars, high fructose corn syrup, dyes, and/or artificial sweeteners; all of which are detrimental to your health.

Consuming traditionally fermented foods will also provide you with the following added boons:

  • Important nutrients: Some fermented foods are excellent sources of essential nutrients such as vitamin K2, which is important for preventing arterial plaque buildup and heart disease. Cheese curd, for example, is an excellent source of both probiotics and vitamin K2. You can also obtain all the K2 you’ll need (about 200 micrograms) by eating 15 grams, or half an ounce, of natto daily. They are also a potent producer of many B vitamins
  • Optimizing your immune system: Probiotics have been shown to modulate immune responses via your gut’s mucosal immune system, and have anti-inflammatory potential. Eighty percent of your immune system is located in your digestive system, making a healthy gut a major focal point if you want to maintain optimal health, as a robust immune system is your number one defense system against ALL disease
  • Detoxification: Fermented foods are some of the best chelators available. The beneficial bacteria in these foods are very potent detoxifiers, capable of drawing out a wide range of toxins and heavy metals
  • Cost effective: Fermented foods can contain 100 times more probiotics than a supplement, so just adding a small amount of fermented foods to each meal will give you the biggest bang for your buck
  • Natural variety of microflora: As long as you vary the fermented and cultured foods you eat, you’ll get a much wider variety of beneficial bacteria than you could ever get from a supplement

When you first start out, you’ll want to start small, adding as little as half a tablespoon of fermented vegetables to each meal, and gradually working your way up to about a quarter to half a cup (2 to 4 oz) of fermented vegetables or other cultured food with one to three meals per day. Since cultured foods are efficient detoxifiers, you may experience detox symptoms, or a “healing crisis,” if you introduce too many at once.

Learn to Make Your Own Fermented Vegetables

Fermented vegetables are easy to make on your own. It’s also the most cost-effective way to get high amounts of healthful probiotics in your diet. To learn how, review the following interview with Caroline Barringer, a Nutritional Therapy Practitioner (NTP) and an expert in the preparation of the foods prescribed in Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride’s Gut and Psychology Syndrome (GAPS) Nutritional Program. In addition to the wealth of information shared in this interview, I highly recommend getting the book Gut and Psychology Syndrome, which provides all the necessary details for Dr. McBride’s GAPS protocol.

Although you can use the native bacteria on cabbage and other vegetables, it is typically easier to get consistent results by using a starter culture. Caroline prepares hundreds of quarts of fermented vegetables a week and has found that she gets great results by using three to four high quality probiotic capsules to jump start the fermentation process.

AVOID This to Optimize Your Gut Flora!

Along with eating naturally fermented foods and/or taking a high-quality supplement, it’s essential that you avoid sugar, including fructose. Sugar nourishes pathogenic bacteria, yeast, and fungi in your gut, which may actually harm you more than its impact on insulin resistance. One of the major results of eating a healthy diet like the one described in my nutrition plan is that you cause your beneficial gut bacteria to flourish, and they secondarily perform the real “magic” of restoring your health.

Remember, an estimated 80 percent of your immune system is located in your gut, which is just one more reason why “tending to” your gut microflora is an essential element of good health. A robust immune system, supported by your flourishing inner ecosystem, is your number one defense against ALL disease, from the common cold to cancer. I feel very strongly that if we can catalyze a movement to get more people to implement this ancient dietary wisdom to their normal eating patterns, then we’ll start seeing a radical change in health.

Source: Dr. Mercola

SSRI Use During Pregnancy Doesn’t Increase Mortality Risk in Offspring.


Use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) during pregnancy is not associated with stillbirth or infant mortality, according to a JAMA study.

Using national registries in five Nordic countries, researchers identified women who filled a prescription for an SSRI from 3 months before they became pregnant through birth. Of 1.6 million births from 1996 to 2007, 1.8% of mothers had filled an SSRI prescription during pregnancy.

There were increased rates of stillbirth and postneonatal mortality among children whose mothers used SSRIs, but the authors say this could be explained by the severity of maternal psychiatric disease and maternal characteristics, such as smoking. After adjusting for these factors, SSRI use was not associated with an increased mortality risk.

Source: JAMA

Amantadine Accelerates Recovery from Post-Traumatic Disorders of Consciousness.


The benefit rapidly disappeared after amantadine was stopped, leaving questions about its long-term effects.

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) often causes disorders of consciousness such as minimally conscious or vegetative states. Psychotropic medications are frequently used to promote alertness in these patients, but none has been evaluated in rigorous, randomized, clinical trials. Investigators have now performed a multicenter, placebo-controlled clinical trial of amantadine hydrochloride, an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonist and indirect dopamine agonist, for this indication. The 184 patients enrolled were aged 16 to 65, receiving inpatient rehabilitation, and in a minimally conscious or vegetative state 4 to 16 weeks after sustaining a nonpenetrating TBI. The patients were randomized to 4 weeks of treatment with placebo or amantadine, titrated to as much as 200 mg twice daily at week 4. The primary outcome was the rate of change on the Disability Rating Scale (DRS), a validated 29-point scale commonly used in this population.

The average DRS score at baseline was 22 (the lowest score that still indicates a vegetative state). During treatment, patients receiving amantadine had significantly faster improvement in arousal and function, with scores declining by 0.24 points more per week on the DRS than the placebo group. However, the groups had similar DRS scores (approximately 18) when assessed 2 weeks after the end of treatment. There was no evidence of significant adverse effects from amantadine.

Comment: Besides dispelling the notion that TBI is too complex to be properly studied in randomized clinical trials, this study provides good evidence that amantadine accelerates recovery from severe TBI. The converging trajectories of the two groups’ DRS scores after treatment cessation suggest that, rather than promoting neuroregeneration, amantadine simply stimulates patients to regain consciousness faster. Still, that difference is no small benefit given the morbidity associated with immobility after brain injury. Although the short-term benefits may be modest and the long-term benefits remain unknown, this benign and inexpensive drug appears worthwhile for patients with post-traumatic disorders of consciousness.

Source: Journal Watch Neurology

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

JC Virus in Natalizumab Users: Test for Virus Exposure Approved.


Commercial availability of a JC virus antibody assay will change practice in caring for patients with MS.

Patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) or Crohn disease who are taking natalizumab face an increased risk for progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) if they have been exposed to JC virus, the FDA warned in January. The agency also announced approval of a new blood test to detect JC virus antibodies.

JC virus is common and usually harmless, the agency said, but its presence can be dangerous in patients taking immunomodulating drugs like natalizumab. Other risk factors associated with developing PML while on natalizumab are treatment with natalizumab for longer than 2 years and previous treatment with immunosuppressant drugs such as methotrexate or cyclophosphamide (but not prior use of first-line injectable immunomodulatory agents, interferon-beta, or glatiramer acetate).

The FDA estimates that patients with all three risk factors face about a 1% risk for PML with natalizumab therapy (11 cases per 1000 patients treated).

Natalizumab’s label will be changed to reflect the new information.

Comment: Commercial availability of a JC virus antibody assay will change practice in caring for patients with MS. The risk for PML with natalizumab was previously said to be about 1 in 1000, but recent safety data provided by the manufacturer indicate that the overall incidence of PML is more than double that (2.11 per 1000 as of February 2012). The major advance for patient safety is recognition that the PML risk can be stratified by three risk factors (treatment duration >2 years, prior immunosuppressant use, and JC virus antibody seropositivity). As highlighted by the FDA, in patients with all three risk factors, the risk for PML is very high (>1 in 100). On the other end of the spectrum, the PML risk with natalizumab appears to be quite low in patients who are JC virus–seronegative. For these patients, the manufacturer estimates the PML risk to be about 1 in 10,000, with a 95% confidence interval potentially as high as 1 in 2000 and as low as zero, based on the lack of observed PML cases in JC virus–seronegative patients to date and the false-negative rate of the assay (3%). The seroconversion rate for JC virus in MS patients is about 2% per year; the optimal frequency of testing for the virus in patients taking natalizumab remains to be defined. This is a fast-moving field, so further refinement of these numbers is likely as more safety data become available.

Source: Journal Watch Neurology

 

How NOT To Run.


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“Shouldn’t you be gone by now?”

I sprung from bed like a medicine ball off a trampoline. My wife gave me a look that was half-concerned, half-amused, in a “you’re clearly an idiot” sort of way. It was the morning of my big race -a half-marathon, the longest event I was to run this year–and there was a problem. Actually, several problems.
In fact, my race this past weekend was a case study in how NOT to run. I’d planned to run the Tour de Ashland half-marathon with a friend as part of the “40 Days of Fitness” Challenge from Thanksgiving to New Year‘s Eve. But I hadn’t planned on waking up at 7:20 a.m. for a race that started at 9 a.m. -and still sat 90 minutes away from my house.

But that’s only the first example of many flagrant running fouls I committed on Saturday. Here are the others – along with tips to help you do better (i.e. to not be like me) the next time you lace up for a race.

MISTAKE #1: Not Training – I used to take running pretty seriously. To be honest, I scheduled my life around it. For most of the past six years, my calendar was plotted out according to the races I’d take on. This year? Not so much. What used to be a 30+ mile-a-week regimen devolved first into a laissez-faire “run as much as you can, when you can” schedule, then finally into a “ok, well maybe I’ll pick up the pace while walking the dogs today” free-for-all.

When I’d originally signed up to run the half-marathon in Ashland, I’d thought I’d break out of that rut by getting back to disciplined, higher mileage weeks. But “life got in the way” (I’ll spare you the excuses). By the time race morning arrived, I’d covered only a handful of miles in the previous week.

THE FIX: Develop a Training Plan that Fits Your Life – In fitness, like at the dinner table, our eyes are often bigger than our stomachs, only our “eyes” are our goals and our “stomachs” are the time and resources available to chase them. In my case, I should have realized that the long hours spent logging miles “like I used to” wasn’t going to happen and opted for something more efficient.

For example: The FIRST plan by researchers Bill Pierce and Scott Murr, which has been shown to get people to run half-marathons on just 3 days of running per week. Whatever we aim to take on, we need to be realistic about the amount of exercise we can take on in our daily lives.

MISTAKE #2: Pizza – Don’t get me wrong, with ingredients that deliver carbs, protein and calcium, pizza can be a runner’s friend –during training. But you want to know when you should NOT dig in to a pie? When the starting gun is 75 minutes away and you’re frantically driving a car down rural Ohio backroads.

In my mad dash out the door after waking up and realizing just how late I was, I did not have a chance to make my usual pre-run breakfast of peanut butter and bananas on toast. Instead, I grabbed the first thing I could find on the way out the door -a Tupperware full of cold pizza from the night before. The result? Well, I didn’t hurl, but my stomach felt like a passenger on the S.S. Minnow for the first five miles of the race.

THE FIX: Develop a Routine and Stick to It

Runners who know what they’re talking about will tell you: Never try anything new on race weekend, especially if it’s something you chew. You should use the weeks leading up to try different food combinations before, during and after running to see how your body reacts. When something works, you’ll feel good. When it doesn’t…well, you’ll know it. Once you find what’s right for you, go with that. And when race morning comes, plan ahead and make sure that the foods you want are available to you.

MISTAKE #3: Freezing

I’d only grabbed what I’d need to run as I fled the house that morning, so I hadn’t been thinking about what might happen after the run. Which was stupid. Because after all, what happens when you exercise? You sweat. What happens when you sweat? Duh, you get wet. What happens when you’re wet with sweat in Ohio in December, and stop moving? You get cold. Real cold.

So not long after crossing the finish line, a shiver started to set in. That shiver became a shake. And that shake became an irresistible HOLY CRAP LET’S GET OUT OF HERE NOW impulse to flee immediately. So instead of a proper warm-down or post-run stretches, I hopped back into my car, cranked the heat all the way up and drove off.

THE FIX: Plan Ahead

Whether your goal is to run a race, or just to get in an early workout, you can seriously increase your chances of success by preparing the night before. Lay out the clothes you’ll need, along with anything else that might come in handy – food, equipment, or in my case, something warm to wear afterwards. Being prepared allows you to rest better, knowing that everything is in place for you the next day.

It also pre-commits you in a way. After all, what’s a more embarrassing reminder of how you snooze-alarmed your way out of something than a neatly stacked pile of gym clothes waiting by your door?

Anyway, this isn’t to say that the whole day was a wash. I did run, and I did finish the race -albeit slowly. If I did anything right during the event, it was this: I listened to my body. I didn’t get hung up on faster times I used to run. I ran as best as I could within the way I felt that day. When I felt good, I pushed a bit. When it felt like too much, I backed off. But I let my body, rather than my ego, be the driver.
And along the way, I ran into an interesting character -somebody who inspired me. Around mile 4 of the race, a bigger guy in loud clothing -including a bright neon shirt and tall red socks–passed me on the right side.

“Hey!” He introduced himself. “I’m Doad Edwards. Nice to meet you.”

The outgoing Mr. Edwards had wavy hair that made him look like a larger Bill Rogers. I kept stride with him for a few miles, and heard lots of stories -about how he’d grown up in the area where we were running, about how he was a golf pro, about how he’d just started running a few years ago. That last part seemed unbelievable, because he was running so well. But that wasn’t nearly as incredible as what I learned next.

“I’m 62 years old,” Edwards said.

So waitaminute, I thought to myself. I’m in my early 30s, and I’m sucking wind to keep pace with a guy who’s 62?

That sucks.

No, wait.

That’s freakin’ awesome!

It’s not awesome because I was ill=prepared, out of shape and running on coagulating pizza. It’s awesome because this guy looks like he’s in his early 40s in his early 60s, and is crushing guys half his age while he’s at it. After a few miles he pulled away, and I realized that I’d just seen something inspiring. I’d seen what I want to be like three decades from now.

Time to work a little harder.

Anyway, so we’re approaching the halfway point of the “40 Days Of Fitness” campaign. Are you still with me? I know a lot of my tweeps out there have been kicking serious butt. You can see for yourself at the #40DaysOfFitness Twitter hashtag. Give yourself a shout out for your own workout while you’re there. And if you have a question about your own training, send it my way @BrianDSabin. I’ll see if I can get it answered by one of our LIVESTRONG.com experts.

Keep it up out there, folks. Let’s see this race through to the finish.

Source: Livestrong