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47. How Not to Die

Rating:  ☆☆☆☆1/2

Recommended by:

Author:   Michael Greger

Genre:  Health, Nutrition

576 pages, published December 8, 2015

Reading Format:  Book


Summary 

How Not to Die is written by Dr. Michael Greger, the physician behind the extremely popular website NutritionFacts.org, and makes the case that the vast majority of premature deaths can be prevented through simple changes in diet and lifestyle.   Dr. Greger examines the fifteen top causes of premature death in America (heart disease, various cancers, diabetes, Parkinson’s, high blood pressure, etc.) and explains how nutritional and lifestyle interventions can are often superior to pharmaceutical and surgical approaches, allowing us to live healthier lives.  In addition to showing what to eat to help treat the top fifteen causes of death, How Not to Die includes Dr. Greger’s Daily Dozen, a checklist of the eleven foods (and one habit) we should consume or do every day:  1) Cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli, brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, kale, spring greens, radishes, turnip tops, watercress; 2)

Greens including spring greens, kale, young salad greens, sorrel, spinach, swiss chard; 3) Other vegetables, including asparagus, beetroot, peppers, carrots, corn, courgettes, garlic, mushrooms, okra, onions, pumpkin, sugar snap peas, squash, sweet potatoes, tomatoes;

4) Beans, such as black beans, cannellini beans, black-eyed peas, butter beans, soyabeans, baked beans, chickpeas, edamame, peas, kidney beans, lentils, miso, pinto beans, split peas, tofu, hummus; 5) Berries or any small edible fruit, including grapes, raisins, blackberries, cherries, raspberries and strawberries; 6) Other fruit, such as apples, apricots, avocados, bananas, cantaloupe melon, clementines, dates, figs, grapefruit, honeydew melon, kiwi, lemons, limes, lychees, mangos, nectarines, oranges, papaya, passion fruit, peaches, pears, pineapple, plums, pomegranates, prunes, tangerines, and watermelon; 7) Flaxseeds; 8) Nuts or nut butter; 9) Spices, especially turmeric; 10) Whole grains such as buckwheat, rice, and quinoa; 11) Exercise (ideally 90 minutes a day of moderate activity, such as walking); and 12) Water

(five large glasses a day).

 

Quotes

“For disease prevention, berries of all colors have “emerged as champions,” according to the head of the Bioactive Botanical Research Laboratory.  The purported anticancer properties of berry compounds have been attributed to their apparent ability to counteract, reduce, and repair damage resulting from oxidative stress and inflammation.  But it wasn’t known until recently that berries may also boost your levels of natural killer cells.”

 

“The best way to minimize your exposure to industrial toxins may be to eat as low as possible on the food chain, a plant-based diet.”

 

“While the pathology of stroke and Alzheimer’s are different, one key factor unites them: Mounting evidence suggests that a healthy diet may help prevent them both.”

 

“Here’s a statistic you probably haven’t heard:  Higher consumption of vegetables may cut the odds of developing depression by as much as 62 percent.   A review in the journal Nutritional Neuroscience concluded that, in general, eating lots of fruits and veggies may present “a non-invasive, natural, and inexpensive therapeutic means to support a healthy brain.”

 

“Back in 1903, Thomas Edison predicted that the “doctor of the future will give no medicine, but will instruct his patient in the care of [the] human frame in diet and in the cause and prevention of diseases.”

 

“The flaxseeds managed to drop subjects’ systolic and diastolic blood pressure by up to fifteen and seven points, respectively. Compare that result to the effect of powerful antihypertensive drugs, such as calcium-channel blockers (for example, Norvasc, Cardizem, Procardia), which have been found to reduce blood pressure by only eight and three points, respectively, or to ACE inhibitors (such as Vasotec, Lotensin, Zestril, Altace), which drop patients’ blood pressure by only five and two points, respectively.  Ground flaxseeds may work two to three times better than these medicines, and they have only good side effects.  In addition to their anticancer properties, flaxseeds have been demonstrated in clinical studies to help control cholesterol, triglyceride, and blood sugar levels; reduce inflammation, and successfully treat constipation.”

 

“Though the majority of lung cancer is attributed to smoking, approximately a quarter of all cases occur in people who’ve never smoked.  Although some of these cases are due to secondhand smoke, another contributing cause may be another potentially carcinogenic plume: fumes from frying.”

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2. Better than Before: Mastering the Habits of Our Everyday Lives

Rating:  ☆☆☆☆1/2

Recommended by:  Lisa Goldberg

Author:   Gretchen Rubin

Genre:   Non-Fiction, Self-Improvement, Happiness

Info:  320 pages, published March 17, 2015

Format:  Book

 

Summary 

Creating positive habits is a key to leading a happy life.   Habits “are the invisible architecture of daily life,” and “if we change our habits, we change our lives.”  In Better than Before, Gretchen Rubin help you identify your habits personality type (I’m an Upholder) and then shows you how you to create positive habits that will work for your type.

 

Quotes

“The desire to start something at the “right” time is usually just a justification for delay. In almost every case, the best time to start is now.”

“The biggest waste of time is to do well something that we need not do at all.”

“In the chaos of everyday life, it’s easy to lose sight of what really matters, and I can use my habits to make sure that my life reflects my values.”

“I should make one healthy choice, and then stop choosing.”

“With habits, we don’t make decisions, we don’t use self-control, we just do the thing we want ourselves to do—or that we don’t want to do.”

“Habits make change possible by freeing us from decision making and from using self-control.”

“The most important step is the first step. All those old sayings are really true. Well begun is half done. Don’t get it perfect, get it going. A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Nothing is more exhausting than the task that’s never started, and strangely, starting is often far harder than continuing.”

“What I do most days matters more than what I do once in a while.” That kind of self-encouragement is a greater safeguard than self-blame.”

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