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Showing posts with label nutrition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nutrition. Show all posts

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Holistic Cleansing: A Complete Guide to Superior Nutrition, Weight Control, Optimum Health & Wellbeing

There's no greater gift than the gift of health and wellbeing. 'Holistic Cleansing: A Complete Guide to Superior Nutrition, Weight Control, Optimum Health & Wellbeing' is out and full of amazing information on the many ways in which you can cleanse and reclaim your youth from the inside out!

BOOK LINK AMAZON


SYNOPSIS/ BACK COVER

Whether you’re looking to change your eating habits, make a smooth transition into a more plant-based diet, bring your body back to perfect health, lower your stress level, increase your focus and concentration, enhance your fitness level, or simply lose weight, this step-by-step guide can take you there!
A healthy and balanced diet and an effective exercise program are instrumental in attaining objectives of lasting health and well-being. Still, external factors can easily compromise that delicate balance. Over time, stress and environmental factors build up toxins and weaken our immune system, leading to a general lack of energy and dis-ease in the body. A holistic cleanse and beneficial lifestyle changes can help you turn that around.
This manual offers simple and practical tools to help you regain control over your health and well-being. Filled with accessible information on holistic body detoxification, superior nutrition, intelligent exercising, and on how to implement a comprehensive awareness program (breathing, meditation, and other conscious living practices) into your daily life, it supports all objectives directed at better living.
A truly versatile methodology, you pick and choose the elements you want to integrate based on your own personal circumstances and goals, and add more as you continue to grow on the wellness path. In the same manner, you may also use this program as a cleanse or only implement the most useful components into new daily healthy habits.
This book is perfect for anyone who wants to take their health and well-being to the next level. Novices and wellness experts alike will enjoy its simplicity and depth of knowledge. Read it and empower yourself to enjoy endless benefits and achieve your highest potential in life!

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Miami Based Yoga & Nutrition Company launches "Virtual" Holistic Cleanse

Miami Based Yoga & Nutrition Company launches "Virtual" Holistic Cleanse
By Alessandrina Lerner, The South Beach Detox
www.thesouthbeachdetox.com
Dated: Feb 11, 2011
The rise in degenerative and stress-related ailments and diseases has health experts and people all over the world looking for permanent solutions to this epidemic.  The South Beach Detox, a Miami-based leader in health & wellness programs which offers its services worldwide is sharing its knowledge on how to remain healthy, prevent illness, and find long-lasting happiness. 
Miami, FL (Feb 7, 2011) The past 2 years have seen tremendous interest and emphasis on integrating a preventative approach to healthcare.  As the first lady, Michelle Obama's "Let's Move" initiative progresses within public schools, proper nutrition and exercise remain at the heart of its successful implementation. To attain the objectives set forth by the Obama Administration and achieve permanent changes, mentalities need to change and people must become aware of the direct relationship between their nutrition and exercise regimen and their state of health.  The South Beach Detox has made it its primary objective to support this reform and provide an affordable and non-invasive detox program that can benefit as many people as possible. Both parents and children need to be educated on the value of health and how to achieve it if sustainable changes are to take place.

The South Beach Detox has integrated yoga, breathing, mantra chanting and meditation to a line of powerful nutritional and cleansing products in order to offer the most effective and powerful holistic cleanse possible. Further, the pioneering company is now offering the detox as a 'virtual' program which can be done in the privacy of your home.  Not only has this made  The South Beach Detox very convenient for people who cannot spend 4 days in-studio but it has also cut down the cost to a third of what you would pay for it before.  In-studio and private options remain available for those clients who prefer group settings for motivation or need the support and counseling of an expert by their side throughout. 

While The South Beach Detox primarily aims at achieving long-lasting health objectives and developing a more balanced and healthy lifestyle, the benefits both short-term and long-term are multi-dimensional and far-ranging. On the physical front, you'll lose weight, feel lighter, more energetic, boost your immune system in order to prevent the on-set of disease or be better equipped to rid your body of it.  Mentally, you'll be at peace and worry-free; having balanced the energy in your body and replaced old cells with new ones that have attained a perfect state of balance through optimum nutrition. Emotionally, you'll be feeling cleansed and open as you let go of the old feelings and emotions that often keep you feeling a slave to your past.  Spiritually, you'll feel more aware than ever and clear about your priorities and intention for your life.

While our modern and busy lifestyles may leave us feeling like we don't have time for a detox or simply to just relax and reflect on ourselves, it's essential that we shift our perspective, re-prioritize our life and realize the essential values of health and well-being for without them we cannot support other objectives and endeavors.

 “A lot of clients come with health and weight-loss as their primary objectives, others are looking for stress-relief and peace or even a spiritual awakening.  No matter what your objectives are, The South Beach Detox affects you on all levels of your being and it will completely change the way you think about food and nutrition.', says Alessandrina Lerner, co-owner and director of The South Beach Detox.

Unlike other cleansing programs, the four-day detox offered by The South Beach Detox provides the benefits of a real fast without the nutritional deprivation and psychological consequences.  The cleansing program includes optimum nutrition through a live blue-green algae product that taste great and leaves you feeling completely satisfied and satiated.

The South Beach Detox is looking to improve the health and outlook of Miamians all across the board. By day four you'll full of energy, your skin will be glowing like never before and you'll feel a sense of ease and contentment that may have been missing thus far.  With our undivided attention and support, you'll make it through the program like a breeze and it will change your life forever.”

Ranging from just $99 for a home-based basic package up to $299 for a private package, the detox includes all the nutritional and cleansing supplies, yoga, breathing, mantra chanting, and meditation practices as well as a full-size manual and informative tracks to maximize your detox. Private options include one-on-one detox consultations with the detox expert, Fred Busch or Alessandrina Lerner. The education is priceless. Participants will learn about the benefits of cleansing and beyond. “We wouldn’t recommend it or provide it if we didn’t believe in it ourselves,” Alessandrina Lerner. “Being healthy and content is so much more than just not being ‘sick’ or 'depressed'– it’s about putting only the very best stuff into your body so you feel your best all the time.”
About The South Beach Detox

The South Beach Detox - formerly part of Miami Yogashala - is an established leader in health & wellness which offers detox products and services to a local and international clientele to help them achieve a balanced and healthy life. 

The South Beach Detox works together with Miami Yogashala to offer group classes in a welcoming atmosphere in order to complement and support their detox objectives. 
Private instruction, corporate wellness programs, events and educational workshops are also available at Miami Yoga's locations. 
Explore the world of Miami Yoga anytime, by logging on to
www.miamiyoga.com
Category: Lifestyle, Event, Beauty, Weight-Loss, Fitness, Health
Tags: detox, yoga, fitness, Wellness, nutrition, miami, south beach, cleanse, cleansing, weight-loss, personal transformation, health, healing, life coaching, spiritual counseling
Email aleslerner@hotmaill.com
Phone 786.308.9552
Address 739 2nd st, Suite 3
City/Town Miami Beach
State/Province Florida
Zip 33139
Country United States


Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Living a long and healthy life: "Foods to stay away from to keep strong bones"

Food, Vitamins and Nutrition

Maintaining strong healthy bones does not only depend upon eating healthy foods and exercising regularly, it also entails staying away from foods that deplete your calcium reserves.  Contrary to popular beliefs (a direct result of relentless advertising campaigns and misconceptions), foods which were once thought to keep your bones in great shape into advanced age have been identified as main culprits in calcium depletion, while other foods prevent absorption of new supplies.  For more, read below.


Foods That Calcium Reacts With
Livestrong.com, December 20, 2010



A variety of foods react with calcium and inhibit the absorption of this mineral into the body. Food containing oxalates, which are high in protein, sugar and salt, and drinks such as coffee and soda can react unfavorably with calcium.

Foods Containing Oxalates
Rhubarb, spinach, strawberries, chocolate, wheat bran, nuts, beets and tea have been found to contain the highest percentage of oxalates. While they shouldn't necessarily be avoided because of the other valuable nutrients they provide, anyone suffering from kidney stones should look for alternatives.
High Protein Foods
Excesses of protein, especially those in meat, when digested produce acids that must be neutralized by calcium. According to Paul Pitchford's "Healing With Whole Foods," animal protein contains excess phosphorus and sulphur, which deplete calcium absorption.
Excess Sugar and Salt
Excess sodium in the diet leads to excretion of calcium in the urine. Excess sugar not only inhibits calcium absorption but promotes excess bacteria and candida in the body. Pitchford recommends consuming celery, lettuce and chlorophyll, plants rich in silicon (a natural fiber), to help to diffuse buildup of yeast in the body and encourage calcium absorption. Sugar, already shown to be a major contributor to diabetes, also depletes phosphorus, another mineral important in facilitating the absorption of calcium.
Coffee and Soda
Phosphoric acid, present in coffee and soda, is found to lower bone density and deplete calcium and phosphorus. In a study published October 2006 in the "American Journal of Clinical Nutrition" of over 3,000 men and women, results showed that daily consumption of soft drinks lowered bone density. Phosphoric acid is a food additive commonly used in processed foods and in combination with caffeine, a diuretic, and sugar, weakens the intestines and assimilation of important nutrients such as calcium.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

DIET, UNHEALTHY FOODS AND OBESITY

DIET, UNHEALTHY FOODS AND OBESITY

'Obesity in the U.S. becomes a worldwide epidemic spreading to the developing world'
New York Times

Obesity in the developing world is following right behind the outrageous rate of obesity in the U.S. and other developed countries.  As obesity continues to spread, it starts affecting younger populations every year and begins to spread an epidemic of youth diabetes too. In adulthood, this greatly increases the risk of developing heart disease.  While this news is extremely alarming, the good news is that we are not powerless to fight this epidemic.  By implementing intelligent nutrition and a balanced regimen of daily physical exercise and rest, we can hope to reverse this trend swiftly.  Aside from the lack of physical activity, the main culprits for obesity have been identified as sugar, fried food, foods that are loaded with saturated animal fat and cooked proteins.  By cutting down on such foods and beginning to replace them with fresh, healthy food, you can turn this around.  Without any action taken, the negative consequences of large scale obesity on the health care budget will continue to affect our society for generations to come.  For more, read below.

The NY Times reports that 'the rest of the world is following our sad example.'  'Developing countries should act now to head off their own "obesity epidemic"', says a global policy group. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) observes that 'obesity levels are rising fast'.  A recent report from the Lancet Medical Journal reports that 'low-income countries cannot cope with the health consequences of wide scale obesity.  Rates in Brazil and South Africa already outstrip the OECD average.  Increasing obesity in industrialized countries such as the U.K. and the U.S. has brought with it rises in heart disease, cancer and diabetes.  However, increasing prosperity in some developing countries has led to a rise in "Western" lifestyles.'  The OECD warns that they too are catching up fast in terms of obesity rates, 50% of adults are overweight or obese across all countries represented in the OECD.  Childhood obesity rates in the Russian Federation are only just below this, and while fewer than 20% of Indians and fewer than 30% of Chinese people are considered 'obese', the OECD says things are worsening fast and that obesity could become a huge weight to all affected countries.

'Proposed name change for High Fructose Corn Syrup is set to deceit consumers'
New York Times - Wednesday, September 15, 2010 by Tara Parker-Pope

It seems to have become common practice amongst the food industry to simply change the name of a product that has acquired a bad reputation as if that would miraculously resolve the potential health hazard it poses to consumers...  This is exactly what the corn industry is attempting to ask the FDA to do with high-fructose corn syrup, which if successful will become 'corn sugar'.  When you know that refined sugars like high fructose corn syrup is unhealthy and is directly linked to obesity and diabetes, it puts the maneuver as rather deceitful and misleading and one would hope that the FDA will deny this request.  For more, read below.

Would high-fructose corn syrup, by any other name, have sweeter appeal?  The Corn Refiners Association, which represents firms that make the syrup, has been trying to improve the image of the much maligned sweetener with ad campaigns promoting it as a natural ingredient made from corn. Now, the group has petitioned the United States Food and Drug Administration to start calling the ingredient “corn sugar,” arguing that a name change is the only way to clear up consumer confusion about the product. “Clearly the name is confusing consumers,” said Audrae Erickson, president of the Washington-based group, in an interview. “Research shows that ‘corn sugar’ better communicates the amount of calories, the level of fructose and the sweetness in this ingredient.”  According to the market research firm NPD Group, about 58 percent of Americans say they are concerned that high-fructose corn syrup poses a health risk. Some scientists over the years have speculated that high-fructose corn syrup may contribute to obesity by somehow disrupting normal metabolic function, but the research has been inconclusive. As a result, most leading scientists and nutrition experts agree that in terms of health, the effect of high-fructose corn syrup is the same as regular sugar, and that too much of either ingredient is bad for your health. Marion Nestle, a professor in New York University’s department of nutrition and a longtime food industry critic, says that Americans consume too much of all types of sugar, but that there is no meaningful biochemical difference between table sugar and high-fructose corn syrup. “I’m not eager to help the corn refiners sell more of their stuff,” Dr. Nestle wrote in an e-mail. “But you have to feel sorry for them. High-fructose corn syrup is the new trans fat. Everyone thinks it’s poison, and food companies are getting rid of it as fast as they can.” Dr. Nestle says she thinks the plural “corn sugars” is a better description of high-fructose corn syrup, which is actually a mixture of glucose and fructose. But she agrees that the corn refiners “have lots of reasons to want the change.”  “Even I have to admit that it’s not an unreasonable one,” Dr. Nestle said.  Michael Jacobson, executive director of the health advocacy group Center for Science in thePublic Interest, said he thought the term “high-fructose corn syrup” had misled many into thinking the sweetener was composed mainly of fructose, a simple sugar found in honey and fruit.  “Sugar and high-fructose corn syrup are nutritionally the same,’’ said Dr. Jacobson, who has a doctorate in microbiology. “I don’t know if ‘corn sugar’ is the best term, but it’s better than ‘high-fructose corn syrup.’ ”  High-fructose corn syrup, which came into widespread use in the 1970s, isn’t particularly high in fructose, but was so named to distinguish it from ordinary, glucose-containing corn syrup, according to a report in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. High-fructose corn syrup and sucrose (also known as table sugar) contain about the same amount of glucose and fructose. In fact, one commonly used version of the ingredient known as HFCS-42 actually contains less fructose (42 percent) than table sugar, which has 50 percent fructose, according to the report. “The name is confusing, and consumers don’t understand that it has the same calories as sugar,” said Ms. Erickson, of the Corn Refiners’ Association. “They also think it’s sweeter tasting. That’s why the alternate name provides clarity for consumers when it comes to the ingredient composition and helps them better understand what’s in their foods.” Table sugar comes primarily from sugar cane or sugar beets. High-fructose corn syrup is made
essentially by soaking corn kernels to extract corn starch, and using enzymes to turn the glucose in the starch into fructose. The ingredient is a favorite of food makers for practical reasons. Compared with sucrose, high-fructose corn syrup doesn’t mask flavors, has a lower freezing point and retains moisture better, which is useful in making foods like chewy granola bars. And because the corn crop in the United States is heavily subsidized, high-fructose corn
syrup is also cheap. As a result, it’s now used in so many foods, from crackers to soft drinks, that it has become one of the biggest sources of calories in the American diet. But the public perception of high-fructose corn syrup as unhealthful has prompted many food companies to stop using it in their products, including Hunt’s Ketchup, Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice and Wheat Thins crackers. The F.D.A. has six months to respond to the name-change petition. If the agency accepts it, the decision on whether to allow the name “corn sugar” on food labels may take another 12 to 18 months.  Although food label changes aren’t common, the F.D.A. has allowed name changes in the past.
The ingredient first called “low erucic acid rapeseed oil” was changed to “canola oil” in the 1980s. More recently, the F.D.A. allowed prunes to be called “dried plums.” “It’s rare that food ingredient labels are changed, and when they are it’s always been to provide clarity to consumers,” Ms. Erickson said. “This is a classic case for consumers to better understand an ingredient.”
'Nutrition: Risky Additions to a Low-Carb Diet'
New York Times - September 14, 2010

The NY Times reports that Low Carb diets such as Atkins Diet are not safe. This article explains how people who replace their consumption of carbohydrates with that of animal foods (as prescribed in the Atkins Diet) are seriously compromising their health.  This should serve as an example to start regulating the market of diets before a large number of people are negatively affected by a "bad" diet.  In the end, losing weight should only be done with the objective of getting healthier and never at the expense of one's overall health and well-being.  Read below for more.

Atkins-style low-carbohydrate diets help people lose weight, but people who simply replace the bread and pasta with calories from animal protein and animal fat may face an increased risk of early death from cancer and heart disease, a new study reports.  The study found that the death rate among people who adhered most closely to a low-carb regimen was 12 percent higher over about two decades than with those who consumed diets higher in carbohydrates. But death rates varied, depending on the sources of protein and fat used to displace carbohydrates. Low-carb eaters who drew more protein and fat from vegetable sources like beans and nuts were 20 percent less likely to die over the period than people who ate a high carbohydrate diet. But low-carb dieters who got most of their protein and fat from animal sources like red and processed meats were 14 percent more likely to die of heart disease and 28 percent more likely to die of cancer, the analysis found. The study, published Sept. 7 in Annals of Internal Medicine, analyzed data from more than 85,000 healthy women aged 34 to 59 who participated in the Nurses’ Health Study, and almost 45,000 men aged 40 to 75 who took part in the Health Professionals’ Follow-Up Study. Participants filled out questionnaires every four years. “If people want to follow a low-carb diet, this provides some guidance,” said the paper’s lead author, Teresa T. Fung, an associate professor of nutrition at Simmons College in Boston. “They should probably eat less meats.”

"'Who Moved My Cheese?': The US Government's Mixed Messages about Cheese'
New York Times, November 6, 2010

Bombarded with marketing campaigns and commercials that claim the health benefits of dairy products, it's often hard for the misinformed consumers to decipher the truth.   And the U.S. government is not making it easier for consumers to tell right from wrong with the mixed messages they send about cheese.  On the one hand, they are engaged in an anti-obesity drive which suggests that cheese consumption should be drastically reduced, yet on the other they generously support an industry responsible for a myriad of degenerative diseases that plague our society.    Read below for more.

Domino’s Pizza was hurting early last year. Domestic sales had fallen, and a survey of big pizza chain customers left the company tied for the worst tasting pies. Then help arrived from an organization called Dairy Management. It teamed up with Domino’s to develop a new line of pizzas with 40 percent more cheese, and proceeded to devise and pay for a $12 million marketing campaign. Consumers devoured the cheesier pizza, and sales soared by double digits. “This partnership is clearly working,” Brandon Solano, the Domino’s vice president for brand innovation, said in a statement to The New York Times. But as healthy as this pizza has been for Domino’s, one slice contains as much as two-thirds of a day’s maximum recommended amount of saturated fat, which has been linked to heart disease and is high in calories. And Dairy Management, which has made cheese its cause, is not a private business consultant. It is a marketing creation of the United States Department of Agriculture — the same agency at the center of a federal anti-obesity drive that discourages over-consumption of some of the very foods Dairy Management is vigorously promoting. Urged on by government warnings about saturated fat, Americans have been moving toward low-fat milk for decades, leaving a surplus of whole milk and milk fat. Yet the government, through Dairy Management, is engaged in an effort to find ways to get dairy back into Americans’ diets, primarily through cheese. Americans now eat an average of 33 pounds of cheese a year, nearly triple the 1970 rate. Cheese has become the largest source of saturated fat; an ounce of many cheeses contains as much saturated fat as a glass of whole milk. When Michelle Obama implored restaurateurs in September to help fight obesity, she cited the proliferation of cheeseburgers and macaroni and cheese. “I want to challenge every restaurant to offer healthy menu options,” she told the National Restaurant Association’s annual meeting. But in a series of confidential agreements approved by agriculture secretaries in both the Bush and Obama administrations, Dairy Management has worked with restaurants to expand their menus with cheese-laden products. Consider the Taco Bell steak quesadilla, with cheddar, pepper jack, mozzarella and a creamy sauce. “The item used an average of eight times more cheese than other items on their menu,” the Agriculture Department said in a report, extolling Dairy Management’s work — without mentioning that the quesadilla has more than three-quarters of the daily recommended level of saturated fat and sodium. Dairy Management, whose annual budget approaches $140 million, is largely financed by a government-mandated fee on the dairy industry. But it also receives several million dollars a year from the Agriculture Department, which appoints some of its board members, approves its marketing campaigns and major contracts and periodically reports to Congress on its work. The organization’s activities, revealed through interviews and records, provide a stark example of inherent conflicts in the Agriculture Department’s historical roles as both marketer of agriculture products and America’s nutrition police. In one instance, Dairy Management spent millions of dollars on research to support a national advertising campaign promoting the notion that people could lose weight by consuming more dairy products, records and interviews show. The campaign went on for four years, ending in 2007, even though other researchers — one paid by Dairy Management itself — found no such weight-loss benefits. When the campaign was challenged as false, government lawyers defended it, saying the Agriculture Department “reviewed, approved and continually oversaw” the effort. Dr. Walter C. Willett, chairman of the nutrition department at the Harvard School of Public
Health and a former member of the federal government’s nutrition advisory committee, said: “The U.S.D.A. should not be involved in these programs that are promoting foods that we are consuming too much of already. A small amount of good-flavored cheese can be compatible with a healthy diet, but consumption in the U.S. is enormous and way beyond what is optimally healthy.” The Agriculture Department declined to make top officials available for interviews for this article, and Dairy Management would not comment. In answering written questions, the department said that dairy promotion was intended to bolster farmers and rural economies, and that its oversight left Dairy Management’s board with “significant independence” in deciding how best to support those interests. The department acknowledged that cheese is high in saturated fat, but said that lower milk consumption had made cheese an important source of calcium. “When eaten in moderation and with attention to portion size, cheese can fit into a low-fat, healthy diet,” the department said. In its reports to Congress, however, the Agriculture Department tallies Dairy Management’s successes in millions of pounds of cheese served. 
'With Obesity on the rise, U.S. Public Health priorities shift 
from Anti-Tobacco to Anti-Obesity Campaigns'
New York Times - July 27, 2010

With 1 in 3 Americans considered obese, it is no surprise that the focus of health campaigns are starting to shift towards Anti-Obesity. The New York Times foresees the focus of big class actions also shifting from Tobacco to Obesity in the very near future.  Michelle Obama has started campaigning against childhood obesity, delivering a consistent message of healthy living through rightful eating and exercise.  This is a very simple formula, one that only requires a little will power and discipline and can be implemented through a manageable nutrition and fitness program that will lead to a long, healthy and harmonious life.  For more, read below.

 "As public health priorities shift, anti-tobacco programs are losing out to the campaign against obesity."  The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation took on Joe Camel in the 1990s. It is now spending $500 million to battle childhood obesity. But a few years ago, the Johnson foundation, based in Princeton, N.J., added another target to its mission, pledging to spend $500 million in five years to battle childhood obesity. As the anti-obesity financing rose to $58 million last year, a new compilation from the foundation shows, the organization’s antismoking grants fell to $4 million. The steep drop-off in private funds illustrates the competition under way for money as public health priorities shift. In the race for preventive health care dollars, from charities and from federal and state government sources, the tobacco warriors have become a big loser. And the nation’s battle to shed pounds has in its corner the White House, with Michelle Obama leading a new campaign against childhood obesity. Shortly after the first lady kicked off the “Let’s Move” program, the administration awarded more funds to fight obesity than tobacco through two big new money sources for preventive health. The funds, totaling $1.15 billion, came from economic stimulus and health care reform legislation. They still provided more than $200 million for tobacco-use prevention, but much more to grapple with obesity. The changes in financing are also evident across the country. State governments have used tobacco’s billions to balance their budgets while cutting $150 million from anti-tobacco programs over the last two years. On the airways, obesity public service announcements are lining up while a “Truth” campaign about tobacco languishes for lack of money. “Don’t forget tobacco,” pleaded a commentary this month in The New England Journal of
Medicine. One in five Americans still smokes. But one in three is obese!
'Letter to the Editor: Can a Soda Tax save us from ourselves?'
Economic View - June 6, 2010

'If the rational for taxing alcohol and cigarettes follows the economic logic of the huge financial burden it represents on the government's health care budget then wouldn't you think that the next logical step would be to start imposing a tax on sugar?', asks Ron Cronovich Kenosha, an Associate Professor of Economics at Carthage College.  For more, read below.

If soda is taxed, N. Gregory Mankiw asks in the column, will products like ice cream and fried foods be next? And his final question — Do you trust government enough to make it your guardian? — seems to suggest that government shouldn’t be in the business of micromanaging what we eat or how we behave. Fine. But there are plenty of other arguments for the soda tax: Soda is often consumed all day long, and is more readily available than fast food. Farm subsidies make high-fructose corn syrup, and therefore most sweetened beverages, artificially cheap, which encourages overconsumption. Soda is more easily defined than fast foods, which vary greatly in nutritional value. It would be hard to determine which fast foods should be taxed. Soda and fast foods are not good substitutes for one another, so taxing soda wouldn’t, for example, make people eat more fried chicken. Finally, it’s better to do something than nothing. The soda tax would be a huge step in the right direction. 



THE SOUTH BEACH DETOX: A CURE TO EATING DISORDERS?

THE SOUTH BEACH DETOX AND EATING DISORDERS

“The South Beach Detox”: “A cure for Anorexia?”
PRESS RELEASE - MIAMI YOGA, October 2010
“A South Beach Yoga Studio develops a detox program that could hold the key to cure millions of young sufferers, mostly females, of Anorexia.”

While The South Beach Detox was not originally developed with curing Anorexia in mind, it most definitely has the potential to do so. The South Beach Detox is essentially a cleansing program which main objective is to bring both body and mind to a state of perfect balance, ultimately promoting health, mental stability and vitality.  Through the combination of a flawless nutritional approach, a highly effective yoga sequence, and a supportive awareness meditation program, the recipients of The South Beach Detox experience a powerful personal transformation that melts away all conditioned responses and unhealthy habits embedded in their old personality, leaving space to create the New.
“The synergetic effects of the components of The South Beach Detox literally propel you to the next level of performance on the physical, mental, and spiritual levels!”, says Yoga Master, Fred Busch, creator of The South Beach Detox,  who enthusiastically adds, “It’s not just that you’re feeding your body with the most perfect food on Earth, creating the perfect balance between exercise and rest according to your body’s needs, or that you are aware of the state of perfect bliss you access when you really listen and heed your body’s inner intelligence, it’s that you’re doing it all together!  And, that doing it all together is what transforms you into this powerhouse of endless energy and equanimity.  Anybody who has experienced the magical metamorphosis of The South Detox bears witness that it partakes of the principles of Alchemy!”
Because The South Beach Detox integrates all the elements necessary to “re-create” a person from scratch – i.e. at the cellular level, it is most suited for people suffering from conditions resulting from deeply-rooted complexes and mental impressions that may already have crystallized themselves, not just on the mental but also the physical level of their being, such as in the case of Anorexia. 
Ranked #1 Superfood by renowned health authorities, the E3Live supplements, which form the foundation of The South Beach Detox, represent the highest quality food we can bring to our body.  This, of course, constitutes one of the fundamental benefits of The South Beach Detox when it comes to Anorexia. Because in such extreme cases the body is so severely undernourished, or even often starved, bringing it a perfect food like E3Live immediately restores its vital balance.  Appeased, the body is now able to relax and allow the remainder of the miracle to start unfolding.  The combination of a healthy exercise plan and a perfectly orchestrated “spiritual awakening” program dissolves any trace of resistance, leading to a full surrender where the recipients start to truly respond to their nutritional needs at the cellular level.  Soon, the appetite increases, but because the food intake is intelligent and healthy, the weight gain takes place at a very slow pace, which proves much more manageable psychologically in the case of Anorexia.  Finally, the obsessive preoccupation with body weight, food intake, and excessive exercising disappears and, free of fear, the sufferers of Anorexia are able to start moving towards their natural body weight without a second thought.
Alessandrina Lerner, a recovering Anorexic, who participated in The South Beach Detox and was so enthralled by the results that she is now working with Fred Busch to disseminate the program says, “I struggled with Anorexia for over 20 years, bouncing from Therapists to Recovery Programs, AA Meetings to various Support Groups without success, then I attended the Yoga Teacher’s training with Fred Busch.  Through an intelligent and balanced approach to nutrition, exercise/ rest, and a deep awareness of the processes involved in my unhealthy eating habits, I soon found myself empowered to change all my habits and put an end to the vicious cycle I had fallen victim to.  As I watched in awe the personal transformation occurring within my body and mind, soon emerged the butterfly that had been trapped in its cocoon for so long.  Thanks to The South Beach Detox®, I am finally free of Anorexia, I am moving towards a healthy body weight and I’ve never felt so good inside both my body and my mind.”
How ironic that what could possibly be the cure for Anorexia would be conceived in the heart of South Beach, renowned headquarters for the Modeling industry, a sector long plagued by the disease, and where it may most likely continue to develop if industry standards don’t change. 
Regardless of whether or not it is the miracle cure so many sufferers of Anorexia have been waiting for, it is without a doubt the most wholesome and effective detox program anyone could ever hope for!
For more information on The South Beach Detox (in relation to Anorexia, or not), please contact aleslerner@hotmail.com or fbusch911@gmail.com


“Could The South Beach Detox be Key in Ending the Eating Disorders 
and Unhealthy Eating Habits that Plague the Fashion Industry?” 
PRESS RELEASE - MIAMI YOGA, November 2010
Miami Beach, FL - There is no question that competition in the Modeling Industry is extremely fierce.  The pressure which often ensues from what are, essentially, unrealistic expectations relating to physical appearance and standards of beauty can push models into a daily battle with their body and weight, ultimately leading to unhealthy relationships with food, constant dieting and, in some cases, Anorexia.   Recent headlines have denounced tragic stories of models who lost their battle to Anorexia; prompting designers and fashion industry leaders to rethink acceptable weight standards on the runway.

With the danger of eating disorders in the spotlight, now seems the perfect time to educate and empower aspiring and professional models to form long-lasting healthy relationships with their body and mind.  The South Beach Detox®, a full-fledge cleansing program designed by Yoga Master, Fred Busch, owner of Miami Yogashala, and which aims at restoring balance on the physical, mental, and spiritual levels, could be instrumental in achieving such results.  While The South Beach Detox is a generic program intended for anybody who wishes to attain perfect health, mental equanimity and vitality, it could be key for models seeking to stay runway ready while keeping in perfect balance.  Because The South Beach Detox is highly effective and personal, it can be completed in just 4 days, with total flexibility to fit in a busy schedule.  Simple, non-invasive, and extremely successful in re-establishing healthy eating habits it is particularly well suited for the busy professional working in the fast-paced fashion industry.
“When I first came up with The South Beach Detox concept, I didn’t have any specific target audience in mind.  I still don’t!”, says Fred Busch.  He goes on to explain, “What makes The South Beach Detox so successful and powerful is that it is non-specific.  The primary objective of the program is not to cure a particular ailment but rather to restore balance on all levels of one’s being.  Once that’s been achieved, what room is there for any mental or physical manifestations of any kind?  Dis-ease and illnesses are all rooted in imbalance.  You take out the imbalance, i.e. the root cause of the problem, and the symptoms inevitably disappear!  It’s that simple and clean-cut!  And that’s what makes the program so effective!”
Simple and clean-cut, indeed, yet extremely comprehensive!  Consisting of three key elements, The South Beach Detox® addresses all levels of one’s being.  A highly effective line of nutritional and potent Detox products coupled with healthy food choices caters to the physical aspect, a well established and successful yoga sequence supports the first dimension while also addressing the mental and spiritual elements, and an awareness meditation program specifically tailored to act on all levels, and ultimately break down all emotional attachment to food, reinforces all the benefits gained through The South Beach Detox.  This complete integration, together with one-on-one pre- and pos-detox support provided to clients in an effort to help them implement long-lasting changes in their daily life, is the reason why The South Beach Detox® is so successful in restoring balance and continues to have positive effects well after the four-day program has ended!  That’s what makes The South Beach Detox® so different to any other program; because it truly benefits all dimensions of one’s being and its benefits are there to stay!
For more information on The South Beach Detox®, visit www.miamiyoga.com, or email us @ aleslerner@hotmail.com or fbusch911@gmail.com

Princess Diana struggled with anorexia-bulimia for years.