Food Choices

Posted by kathy - Under: Uncategorized

Healthier You 2009

1. What are your fitness and health goals this year?   :: To get back to my pre-pregnancy weight :D

2. Are you dieting? What is an effective diet plan for you?  :: I’m a serious crash dieter, but I can survive without the carbs and sodas too.

3. If you are intent on losing, what is more important – poundage or inches? :: inches baby! coz it shows!

4. Do you take diet pills?  :: Actually thinking of, heard of fern slim?

5. Choose only one – diet or exercise? Why? :: exercise, it’s proven effective but no time and too lazy for that.. so diet I guess.

Fear Factor:
One effective diet tip you would like me to know. Share please. I’m desperate :) :: Throw up everything you binged on after ever meal! joke :D … but really, I used to do that, it’s my most effective way  — done it when I was in College.. yeah desperate move.

Tell Me:
Would you go under the knife if all else fails?  :: Oh yes!!! Belo or Calayan?! who want’s to sponsor first?! lol as if.

Thanks Aggie!

Random Q’s #9

Posted by kathy - Under: Uncategorized

1. Do you believe in love? Yes of course

2. Do you ever want to know who you’re going to marry? Yeah, and I am now

3. Having a good day? So far, yes

4. What are you thinking about right now? My daugher’s mini-family birthday celebration

5. Would you kiss the last person you kissed again? Oh yes

6. Last restaurant you went to? Mc Donalds

7. Did you have an exciting weekend? Not so

8. Have you ever crawled through a window? Nope

9. What do you spend most of your money on? Shopping for gifts

10. Do you normally sleep with clothes on? Yeah :D

Thanks Chikai!

Bad Dreams?

Posted by kathy - Under: Uncategorized

In connection with my bed talks post, let me just share with what I stumble upon  earlier on the web about reasons why people have bad dreams… this is to help us all to avoid having bad and scary dreams during our slumber.

1. Anxiety and Stress
Anxiety and stress, often as the result of a traumatic life event, are sometimes the cause of nightmares and bad dreams. According to the International Association for the Study of Dreams (IASD), a major surgery or illness, grieving over the loss of a loved one, and suffering or witnessing an assault or major accident can trigger bad dreams and nightmares. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is also a common cause of recurrent nightmares.

Not all nightmare triggers have to be traumatic, however. Everyday stressors, such as job or financial anxiety, or major life transitions such as moving or divorce, can also cause nightmares.

2. Spicy Foods
When and what we eat may affect our nighttime rest, if not our tendency toward bad dreams. A small study published in the International Journal of Psychophysiology had a group of healthy men eat spicy meals before bed on some evenings and compared their quality of sleep on nights where they had non-spiced meals. On the spicy nights, the subjects spent more time awake and had poorer quality sleep. The explanation is that spicy food can elevate body temperatures and thus disrupt sleep. This may also be the reason why some people report bad dreams when they eat too close to bedtime. Though few studies have looked at it, eating close to bedtime increases metabolism and brain activity and may prompt bad dreams or nightmares.

3. Fat Content of Food
Though far from conclusive, some research has indicated that the more high-fat food you consume during the day, the greater the chance that the amount and quality of your sleep may suffer. A small study published in 2007 in Psychological Reports found that the dreams of people who ate a high amount of organic food differed from those who ate “junk foods.” The authors hypothesize that certain foods may negatively influence dreaming.

4. Alcohol
Though alcohol is a depressant that will help you fall asleep in the short term, once its effects wear off, it can cause you to wake up prematurely. Excess consumption can also lead to nightmares and bad sleep; nightmares are also a common occurrence for those going through alcohol withdrawal.

5. Drugs
Some drugs, including antidepressants, barbiturates, and narcotics, can cause nightmares as a side effect. For instance, a 2008 study published in the journal Pyschopharmacology looked at ketamine, a drug used in anesthesia and recreationally, and found that compared with a placebo, ketamine use resulted in more dream unpleasantness and increased the incidence of bad dreams. Similarly, anyone who has traveled to a country where malaria is endemic may have taken Lariam and had some interesting nightmares associated with it. Nightmares usually cease once the drug is cleared from the system.

6. Illness
Illnesses that include fever, such as the flu, can often trigger nightmares. And other sleeping disorders, including apnea and narcolepsy, may also increase the incidence of bad dreams and nightmares.

Found this article here

YQOTW #44

Posted by kathy - Under: Uncategorized

1. What do you hope to have accomplished before the end of 2009?  :: our family goal, and I wanted to get back to my pre-pregnancy weight too

2. How’s the New Year treating you so far? :: It’s really overwhelming, online and offline :D

3. How do you feel about yourself right now?  :: I feel fat :(

4. What are the seven wonders in YOUR world? :: my kid, husband, parents,sister,nieces,friends,online rakets

5. ‘Sometimes I can be ________________’  :: your worst enemy.

6. As a child, what job did you hope to have?  :: to become a flight attendant

7. List 3 things about which you consider yourself very knowledgeable.  :: I still have a lot to learn, but I can do stars out of paper strips, does that count?! :D

8. List 3 things that you do very well. :: cook, nag, worry.

9. Do you think you look your real age? Have others ever made comments that they think you look younger or older than you are? :: I think I look older, but I feel good.

10. Are you an artist? If so, what do you create? :: Nope

Thanks Yen!