1. Crazy health tricks that really work
Many methods to improve your
health are pretty straightforward: to lose weight, eat less and exercise
more; to boost your energy, get more sleep; to prevent dehydration,
drink more water. Others, however, are totally counterintuitive. The
following 12 tips really do work—but they may leave you scratching your
head.
2. Drink coffee to have a better nap
In a Japanese study that
examined how to make the most of a nap, people who took a “coffee
nap”—consuming about 200 milligrams of caffeine (the amount in one to
two cups of coffee) and then immediately taking a 20-minute rest—felt
more alert and performed better on computer tests than those who only
took a nap.
Why does this work? A 20-minute nap ends just as the caffeine kicks in and clears the brain of a molecule called adenosine, maximizing alertness. “Adenosine is a byproduct of wakefulness and activity,” says Allen Towfigh, MD, medical director of New York Neurology & Sleep Medicine. “As adenosine levels increase, we become more fatigued. Napping clears out the adenosine and, when combined with caffeine, an adenosine-blocker, further reduces its effects and amplifies the effects of the nap.”
3. For healthy teeth, don’t brush after eating
Don’t brush your teeth
immediately after meals and drinks, especially if they were acidic.
Acidic foods—citrus fruits, sports drinks, tomatoes, soda (both diet and
regular)—can soften tooth enamel “like wet sandstone,” says Howard R.
Gamble, immediate past president of the Academy of General Dentistry.
Brushing your teeth at this stage can speed up acid’s effect on your
enamel and erode the layer underneath. Gamble suggests waiting 30 to 60
minutes before brushing.
4. To wear a smaller size, gain weight
Muscle weight, that is. If two
women both weigh 150 pounds and only one lifts weights, the lifter will
more likely fit into a smaller pant size than her sedentary counterpart.
Likewise, a 150-pound woman who lifts weights could very well wear the
same size as a 140-pound woman who doesn’t exercise. The reason:
Although a pound of fat weighs the same as a pound of muscle, muscle
takes up less space, says Mark Nutting, fitness director of SACO Sport
& Fitness in Saco, Maine. “You can get bigger muscles and get
smaller overall if you lose the fat,” he says. “The bulk so many women
fear only occurs if you don’t lose fat and develop muscle on top of it.”
Cut back on calories and add weight to your workout to lose inches.
5. To eat less, eat more
Grabbing a 100-calorie snack
pack of cookies or pretzels may seem virtuous, but it’s more likely to
make you hungrier than if you ate something more substantial, says Amy
Goodson, RD, dietitian for Texas Health Ben Hogan Sports Medicine.
“Eating small amounts of carbohydrates does nothing but spike your blood
sugar and leave you wanting more carbs.” Goodson recommends choosing a
protein such as peanut butter or string cheese with an apple. “They are
higher in calories per serving, but the protein and fat helps you get
full faster and stay full longer—and you end up eating fewer calories
overall,” she says.
6. Skip energy drinks when you’re tired
Energy drinks contain up to
five times more caffeine than coffee, but the boost they provide is
fleeting and comes with unpleasant side effects like nervousness,
irritability, and rapid heartbeat, says Goodson. Plus, energy drinks
often contain high levels of taurine, a central nervous system
stimulant, and upwards of 50 grams of sugar per can (that’s 13 teaspoons
worth!). The sweet stuff spikes blood sugar temporarily, only to crash
soon after, leaving you sluggish and foggyheaded—and reaching for another energy drink.
7. Drink water when you’re bloated
When you feel bloated, drinking
water sounds as if it would only make matters worse, but it can often
help, says James Lee, MD, gastroenterologist with St. Joseph Hospital in
Orange, Calif. If you’re on a high-fiber diet, for instance, then your
body needs more water to work more efficiently, says Dr. Lee. “Water
mixes with water soluble fiber and makes it into a gel like substance.
This affects the motility of the gut and reduces the symptom of
bloating.” Drinking more water also
relieves bloating caused by dehydration. When you’re dehydrated, your
body clings to the water your body does have, causing you to puff up.
8. Ditch diet soda to lose weight
You should ditch all soda,
including diet. Research from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health revealed that overweight and obese adults who drank diet
beverages ate more calories from food than those who drank regular soda.
Additionally, a University of Texas study found that diet soda drinkers
had a 70% greater increase in waist circumference than non-drinkers
over the course of about 10 years.
9. Drink a hot beverage to cool off
Which will cool you off faster
on a steamy summer morning: iced coffee or hot? Two recent studies say
the latter—and so do other cultures where drinking hot tea in hot
weather is the norm, like in India. When you sip a hot beverage, your
body senses the change in temperature and increases your sweat
production. Then, as the sweat evaporates from your skin, you cool off
naturally.
10. Exercise when you’re tired
After a long, exhausting workday, exercising sounds like the last thing you’d want to do, but getting your sweat on will actually energize you. Fatigue along with mood and depression improved after a single 30-minute moderate intensity exercise session, according to a study published in Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. “Everything we do uses oxygen, so when you exercise it helps you work more efficiently and you don’t tire as easily,” says Nutting. “You also function better mentally.”
11. Handwrite notes to boost your brainpower
Typing notes enables you to jot
down more material, but you’re more likely to remember those notes if
you handwrite them, according to research from Indiana University. “To
learn something means you have processed it,” says Dr. Towfigh. “And
when you take handwritten notes you ‘process’ or learn more information.
You begin the learning process as you listen to the lecture.” Plus,
since you look at the page on which you are writing, you naturally
review the material and reinforce the information you’ve already
processed, Dr. Towfigh says.
12. To improve your relationship, spend less time together
Jumping from one social event
to another without any time to come up for air could sacrifice the
quality of your relationships. Spending time alone allows you to process
your thoughts rather than act impulsively and, as a result, you get to
know yourself better, says Elizabeth Lombardo, PhD, author of Better Than Perfect:
7 Strategies to Crush Your Inner Critic and Create a Life You Love.
“Alone time enables you to be more in touch with yourself and can
better give and receive,” Lombardo says. “In addition, it reduces stress
and anxiety, which could also contribute to relationship strains.”
Meditate, go for a walk, sit in a café and people watch, or even clean
out your closet, she suggests.
Source: healthdigezt.com
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