Mo Abraham

Personal Development With Success Ingredients


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to make ourselves feel better. Sometimes this is a conscious decision; many times it is not. Also, feeling angry, unhappy or depressed saps energy, making it more difficult to exercise or pursue some other physical activity; we just don’t feel like it.

      There are many ways to combat this cycle. Physical activities like yoga, pilates, tai chi and many others expressly cultivate a healthy mind-body connection for practitioners. Each of these activities use movement tied to breath awareness to focus and calm the mind and the nervous system.

      Yoga includes breathing exercises and meditation as well. These activities build fitness and relieve stress. Some mind-body activities, breathing exercises, visualization and meditation, do not involve whole body movement; they focus on channeling mental activity and relieving stress.

      It is important to keep the body healthy and the mind in a state of equilibrium to experience a sense of well-being. Equilibrium in this context means you do not experience unrealistic highs or debilitating lows (depression). Being even tempered makes it easier to deal with stress, adapt to change and maintain a healthy lifestyle.

      Keys to Success

      •Choose a mind-body activity to include in your schedule which suits your lifestyle and temperament.

      •Practice it consistently for the best results.

      Make it a Habit

      It takes 21 to 30 days of consistent application to make a simple action a habit. More complex accomplishments like establishing an exercise routine, daily meditation and dietary changes can take significantly longer.

      The rate of accomplishment for more complex changes can be highly variable; do not end your quest for ultimate health and wellness if you are not seeing immediate results. The key to changing established habits and acquiring new ones is consistency and persistence. You can reach your goal!

      Men & Women are NOT Created Equal when it Comes to Weight Loss

      Men and women have to deal with different issues when it comes to many aspects of their body and weight loss is no exception.

      This is because the hormonal environment is different from man to woman. For starters testosterone and estrogen are dramatically different from man to woman and even more specific to weight loss leptin levels are also different.

      Leptin (from Greek leptos or ‘thin’) – the ‘satiety hormone’ – is a hormone made by adipose cells that helps to regulate energy balance by inhibiting hunger.

      Leptin plays a vital role in the control of appetite, metabolism and the signals involved in weight gain and weight loss. Leptin levels rise when you eat and fall when you’re not eating. This helps control your sense of hunger and your metabolic rate to keep you from gaining or losing weight. As long as they don’t rise too high or fall too low you’ll remain weight stable and feel fine.

      When attempting to diet ‘hard’ leptin levels can fall too far too fast and you will find it very difficult to lose weight. In fact you can eventually crash and experience big rebound weight gain.

      This effect seems to be worse in women than in men and it’s because women have higher leptin levels. In other words, women have higher ‘highs’ and lower ‘lows’. It’s these dramatic swings in leptin that can lead to the crash and rebound weight gain that so many women experience on standard restrictive diets.

      In contrast a man’s leptin levels rise and fall very predictably and within a relative small range. The high’s aren’t too high and the low’s aren’t too low, and as a result men can follow a pretty mundane, straight forward calorie restrictive diet and make it through to the end without a major crash or rebound and essentially lose all the weight they want.

      This explains why men seem to have an easier time losing weight than women. Or to say it another way, weight loss for men is pretty straight forward and doesn’t require much creativity when it comes to the diet.

      Women on the other hand experience dramatic swings in leptin that require a more intelligently designed diet to minimize these big swings in leptin levels. One of the techniques that has become popular is the idea of adding in a ‘cheat day.’ This is a day during your diet program where you’re instructed to eat more food and more carbs specifically to attempt to bring your leptin levels back up after days and days of dieting and lowering your leptin levels. Knowing that leptin drops further and faster in women it stands to reasons that the ‘cheat day’ is a more useful tool for women as well. But the concept of ‘cheating’ may seem a bit problematic and needs some adjustments.

      I don’t like the word ‘cheat’ as it implies you’re doing something wrong :) and it implies that you should be going ‘all out’ on junk food and whatever else you can get your hands on. This leaves the door open to really overdoing that day.

      I would rather call it a strategic ‘eat-up’ day.

      Women need these strategic ‘eat-up’ days throughout their weight loss program to prevent their leptin levels from crashing and rebound weight gain from happening. And they need these days more often than men.

      For example a man could probably make it two or even three weeks eating very low calories and minimal carbs without having a serious crash in leptin levels and thus no major consequences to their weight loss progress.

      Women, on the other hand, need a to add in these ‘eat up’ days weekly to keep leptin levels consistent and keep the fat burning going.

      To say it another way, what we’re really talking about is hitting the sweet spot between just enough ‘diet days’ combined with just enough ‘eat up’ days.

      As a woman, once you hit this sweet spot, the fat will come off faster than you think and the process itself will be much more enjoyable because you get to take periodic breaks from the diet.

      There are two tailor-made programs, one for Ladies and another for Gents.

      Yoga

      You have little energy left for anything else after a day of work, responsibilities, and a very long to-do list. Basically, you’re in terrible need of a timeout.

      This is where yoga comes in. As it strengthens weak muscles and stretches tight ones to keep you free from injury and pain, yoga strikes a balance in your body. Also, the different poses in yoga help dissolve physical tension and the deep breathing calms your nervous system.

      Your body stresses out from all it has to endure throughout the day or week. Under such a situation, it becomes important for you to not only practice yoga but also to understand why it’s beneficial for you.

      The word ‘yoga’ comes from the Sanskrit root yuj, which means ‘to join or ‘to yoke.’

      Yoga is a Hindu spiritual and ascetic discipline, a part of which, including breath control, simple meditation, and the adoption of specific bodily postures, is widely practiced for health and relaxation.

      Since ancient times, yoga has been practiced for its many physical and mental benefits. The advantages of utilizing yoga in your life have been studied and perfected for many years and it can work for you, whether young or old – ill or in good health.

      If you’re thinking of practicing yoga, it might help to understand its roots. The practice is said to be as old as civilizations itself, but written history classifies it into four periods of time – the Vedic, Pre-Classical, Classical and Post Classical.

      Yoga’s rich tradition of healing can be traced back to stone seals dated around 3000 B.C., but scholars believe that yoga was around even during the Stone Age period when