June 23, 2008

Tastefully Driven is Looking for Authors!

By TD-Adam | 06.23.2008 | Filed under: Site News

Are you a blogger or site owner?  Do you want to increase your exposure and build more links to your site?  If so, writing for Tastefully Driven might be perfect for you. We’re looking to expand the Lifestyle Blog into a daily blog with contributions from the very best bloggers across the web.  Our target date to launch the revised version of this blog is July 15th.  Our goal will be to bring you one unique post a day from an array of knowledgeable authors.

Requirements:

  • You currently maintain a blog or website in one of the following categories:
    • Health & fitness
    • Technology & Electronics
    • Video games
    • Life hacks
    • Poker or other table games (billiards, darts, etc)
    • Sports
    • Computers
    • Fashion
    • Career advice for professionals
    • Automotives
    • Food & dining
    • Entertainment
  • You must submit at least one post per month, preferably more.
  • Your posts for the Tastefully Driven blog must be completely original and not published anywhere else online.  We will provide you with ideas in case you’re drawing a blank.
  • Your posts must meet our editorial guidelines (adequate length, proper grammar, relevant topics, etc)
  • You must display a 125 x 125 Tastefully Driven Lifestyle Blog Author badge on your site.

Benefits:

  • Exposure to a new audience.
  • Networking opportunities with the other authors.  We plan on opening a closed forum to help facilitate these conversations once the new site is up and running.
  • Permanent listing in our Author Directory.  You can choose the text and links that point back to your site.
  • “About the Author” section at the end of each post where you can advertise your site or business.
  • Wholesale account for discounts on all Tastefully Driven products.  We have various tiers, but discounts in the first tier are generally over 30% off of retail price.  We will increase you to higher tiers based on your contributions.

Contact adam [at] tastefullydriven [dot] com if you’re interested!


June 18, 2008

Fast and Affordable Full Body Workouts From Home

By TD-Adam | 06.18.2008 | Filed under: Fitness, Site News

Over the past few weeks we’ve shot a bunch of videos demonstrating the amazing Altus Athletic products that we carry in the Health and Fitness Store.  Each of the following items are extremely simple and affordable products that you can use anywhere to get a full body workout in minutes.  A majority of the items can be purchased for between $10 - $20!

The Body Ball

Weighted Jump Rope

Push Up Stands

Power Medicine Ball

Back and Chest Expander (Resistance Bands)

Dual Exercise Ab Wheel

Chin Up, Push Up, Sit Up Bar


June 15, 2008

Add High Fiber Foods to your Diet

By TD-Michael | 06.15.2008 | Filed under: Health, Nutrition

High fiber foods

Are you getting enough fiber in your diet? If you’re not getting the recommended the 20g - 35g of fiber a day, you may want to think about increasing your fiber intake. A high fiber diet is part of a healthy lifestyle that offers numerous health benefits. If fiber doesn’t cross your mind day to day, the listed benefits below might make you think twice about the importance of fiber:

  • Lower cholesterol by slowing and preventing cholesterol absorption
  • Maintains healthy blood sugar levels, extremely beneficial to diabetics
  • Prevents constipation and promotes regularity in bowel movements
  • Can help reduce the risk of colon cancer
  • Help maintain or lose weight and control appetite

“It’s hard to believe that something we can’t even digest can be so good for us! A higher-fiber diet has been shown to lower blood cholesterol levels and prevent constipation. High-fiber foods also tend to contain more nutrients and fewer calories, are digested more slowly, and help us feel full sooner.” - WebMD.com - Get the Facts on Fiber, by Elaine Magee, MPH, RD

I’ve made it an effort to maintain a high fiber diet and personally I think you really have make a conscience effort in order to get the daily recommended fiber. Anything short of me having complete control of my diet by eating what I cook and make, it’s really tough to get all the fiber I need. Below I’ve made a list of some of the foods that I eat day to day to meet my daily requirement for Fiber.

High Fiber Foods I Eat

I personally try to eat foods that nutrition packed that has fiber, protein, and low in calorie. For the most part high fiber foods come from natural foods in soluble and insoluble form. Soluble fiber is known to slow cholesterol absorption and regulate blood sugar level while insoluble fiber promotes a healthy colon with regular bowel movements. Look for high fiber foods in nuts, vegetables, fruits, whole grains and beans to add to your diet. There’s a lot to choose from to get your fiber but if you aren’t eating a balanced diet it may be difficult to reach that intake level of 20 - 35 grams of fiber daily.

I’m 100% positive I don’t like being constipated and I’m pretty sure everyone hates colon cancer, Fiber is good, so get your roughage.


June 12, 2008

Polyphasic Sleep: Is it Healthy? Is it Possible?

By TD-Adam | 06.12.2008 | Filed under: Health, Life Hacks, Uncategorized

What if I told you that you could sleep less without feeling more tired? Not only sleep a little less, but a lot less - up to five hours less a day by taking short naps every few hours. Imagine what you could do with that time! Start a new hobby, work an extra job, spend more time with your family, etc. At this point I probably sound like a late-night infomercial, but that is the basic premise behind polyphasic sleep. I would say that it’s a highly controversial subject, but the medical community seems to ignore and dismiss it (you can’t really have controversy if one side doesn’t see an issue). For something so potentially beneficial and so (relatively) simple to test, it’s shocking that there has been no widespread studies and the majority of “data” out there is anecdotal evidence presented by those who have tried it.

What is Polyphasic Sleep

Polyphasic sleep is the practice of breaking up your sleep into more than one session in any 24 hour period. In contrast, the standard “8 hours” is considered “monophasic” sleep because you only sleep once per 24 hours. In general, when people mention polyphasic sleep it usually refers to more than two sleep sessions - sleeping twice in any 24 hour period is usually referred to “biphasic”.

Breaking up your sleep is sometimes considered OK by the medical community, as long as you still achieve the same amount of total sleep. According to the Wikipedia article on Polyphasic Sleep, the military uses polyphasic sleep to help soldiers get enough sleep around their demanding schedule:

An Air Force report states: “Each individual nap should be long enough to provide at least 45 continuous minutes of sleep, although longer naps (2 hours) are better. In general, the shorter each individual nap is, the more frequent the naps should be (the objective remains to acquire a daily total of 8 hours of sleep).”

Now, the controversy comes in when people try to adapt something called Uberman sleep, an extreme form of polyphasic sleeping where you nap approximately 20 minutes every four hours (when you say “polyphasic sleep” most people immediately think of Uberman). The idea behind Uberman is that you “trick” yourself into falling directly into Stage 5 REM sleep, the most beneficial sleep, reducing your sleep cycle from 100 minutes to 20 and therefore reducing the time you sleep in a day from around 500 minutes down to as low as 120 minutes. Adding to the folklore and mystique of Uberman is that it is reported that several famous historical figures like Leonardo da Vinci, Napoleon, Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla, and Winston Churchill have slept on Uberman-like sleep schedules (although proof of this is scant at best).

Potential Benefits

Aside to the obvious benefit of increased free time, the following benefits have been reported:

  • More energy
  • Reduced drowsiness
  • Ability to remember your dreams
  • Ability to wake up automatically
  • More endurance during heavy physical work

Potential Risks

Most sleep experts still look at polyphasic sleep as a sleep disorder:

It used to be thought by scientists that REM is the main reason we sleep and that REM is largely responsible for the mental rejuvenation effects. Scientists no longer believe this. Humans typically (normal pattern) get their daily sleep in one long stetch (go to bed at night; get up in the morning), while other mammals are usually practice polyphasic sleep patterns. This pattern may have evolved in an attempt to remain vigilant against predators.

There is not much scientific evidence to support the polyphasic sleep theory. Sleep researchers do not work in this field, and the medical establishment, including sleep specialists, do not recommend this technique.

However, different people vary widely in their sleep needs, and there are anecdotes of geniuses such as Leonardo Da Vince and Thomas Edison sleeping in a polyphasic pattern. This has led to some people thinking they can increase their productivity by employing polyphasic sleep.

In a recent issue of Men’s Health Magazine, a writer attempted (unsuccessfully) to adapt to the Uberman sleep schedule. Despite trying, he was unable to find any doctors who would really vouch for polyphasic sleep. Christopher Winter, M.D., a board-certified sleep-medicine specialist and the medical director of the Sleep Medicine Center at Martha Jefferson Hospital in Charlottesville, Virginia, had the following to say:

All kinds of things could happen to individuals who are sleep deprived. Changes in blood pressure, heart rate, hormones, glucose metabolism, temperature regulation, and appetite can be seen quite quickly. The sleepless individual is probably cold [due to increased energy expenditure], so hypothermia could be an eventual cause of death. So could catabolism — that is, an increased metabolic rate and protein breakdown — and susceptibility to disease from a weakened immune system.

In sum: you’ll have a very hard time finding anyone in the medical community who will even listen to the argument that an Uberman sleep schedule can be healthy.

Who Has Tried It?

The information available is almost all personal case-studies, the most famous (and most successful) being personal productivity blogger Steve Pavlina’s almost 6 months of practicing an Uberman sleep schedule. He eventually stopped not for health reasons or stress, but because the rest of the world sleeps on a monophasic schedule:

The #1 reason I decided to call it quits is simply that the rest of the world is monophasic. If most of the world was polyphasic, I probably would have stuck with it. Obviously when you go polyphasic, you fall out of sync with the way other people live. You’re awake most of the night while everyone is asleep. If you sleep like most people, then the hours you’ll gain from polyphasic sleep will come in the middle of the night. And as I gradually learned, nighttime hours are not the same as daytime hours when you live in a monophasic world.

Tastefully Driven Forum user “Timmy” posted about his failed attempt to adapt to a Uberman sleep schedule, which ultimately is what gave me the idea for this article. If you Google polyphasic sleep you’ll find hundreds of others who have tried with minimal success to adapt to some form of a polyphasic sleep schedule.

So is there ANYONE in the medical community who supports polyphasic sleep? It’s scarce, but there are a few. Most notably, sleep researcher Sara Mednick, Ph.D., has posted about Uberman on her blog:

This practice rests upon one important hypothesis that our biological rhythms are adaptable. This means that we can train our internal mechanisms not only when to sleep and wake, but also when to get hungry, have energy for exercise, perform mental activities. Inferred in this hypothesis is that we have the power to regulate our mood, metabolism, core body temperature, endocrine and stress response, basically everything inside this container of flesh we call home. Truly an Uberman feat!

There is evidence in favor of this hypothesis from studies of humans and other animals. During the summer season in the northern latitudes, millions of people every year acclimate to long lit days without any sign of deterioration to the aforementioned internal mechanisms. During periods of migration, birds will travel for days apparently without the need for sleep. Our 24/7 culture has hospital staff, plant workers, and drivers of goods toiling into the wee hours. These members of society are in fact not living as long, more often infirm, and getting into more accidents than their 9-to-5 working counterparts. But the fact is that they ARE doing it.

Should You Try It

Should you try polyphasic sleep? If you are a new mother or work odd hours, getting your ~8 hours in several different sessions might be the best way to ensure you don’t deprive yourself of sleep. Should you try an Uberman’s sleep schedule? At this point in time, all I can say is proceed at your own risk. No one really knows or understands the long term detriments that such a sleep schedule can cause, so proceed with caution. Even those who have tried it admit that they are unsure if they are doing serious long term damage or not.

The other factor in all of this is whether or not your lifestyle will allow for polyphasic sleep.  Your life and your job need to be extremely flexible to allow for sleep every four hours.  For most, this factor alone will eliminate them from contention.  IF you do attempt an Uberman schedule, you might want to try easing yourself into it with a slightly reduced biphasic sleep schedule similar to the one Devin Reams reportedly does.

We Need More From the Medical Community

The big question I have is why hasn’t the medical community studied polyphasic sleep more?  Think of all of the wacky drugs and crazy diets that get funding for studies at all of the labs and universities around the world, yet no one can do a large scale study on Uberman?  To truly test Uberman there needs to be a third party monitoring the exact amount of sleep, what stage of sleep (can you really “trick” your brain into REM sleep?), and the impact of Uberman on cognitive functioning, metabolism, stress, blood pressure, happiness, and anything else critical to a long and healthy life.  Until that happens it’s impossible to say whether or not extreme polyphasic sleep schedules like Uberman are healthy.


June 9, 2008

Hybrid Workouts for a More Intense Workout

By Parth | 06.09.2008 | Filed under: Fitness

Guest post by Parth from Shah Training

The problem with me is that I adapt to my workout extremely fast. This is the reason I keep trying to come up with different ways of working my body. The second biggest problem that I have is that I am extremely limited to the equipment available to me. Last week I presented you guys with the video I made featuring four of my favorite one-arm dumbbell exercises.

There was a second part to the video featuring the following workout:

Perform as Circuit:

One-arm Dumbbell Clean and Press 3×20 for each side
One-arm Dumbbell Overhead Squat 3×20 for each side
One-arm Dumbbell Windmill 3×20 for each side
One-arm Dumbbell Swing 3×20

I adapted after a few times of performing this workout. So then I began thinking of ways of taking it to the next level. I remember reading somewhere about hybrid lifts. Hybrid lifts are lifts that combine two to three exercises that flow well together. I realized immediately that all of these exercises can easily be thrown together to form a hybrid.

Hybrid Exercise One: One-arm DB Clean and Press + Overhead Squat

Perform a clean and press with one arm, then while keeping your arm extended over your head, perform a squat.

Hybrid Exercise Two: One-arm Dumbbell Swing + Overhead Squat

Perform a one-arm swing, then while keeping your arm extened over youer head, perform a squat.

Hybrid Exercise Three: One-arm Dumbell Swing + Windmill

Perform a one-arm swing, then while keeping your arm extended over your head, change your foot positioning and perform a windmill.

Hybrid Exercise Four: One-arm DB Clean + Press, Overhead Squat, + Windmill.

Perform a one-arm DB clean and press, go into an overhead squat, come back up, change your foot positioning and perform a windmill.

The Routines

Now this is where things get a little complicated. Because these are hybrid lifts, I think that you should start out with doing only one or two in a workout. Work up to 3×20 on each side, then slowly add in other exercises. If you wanted to construct a schedule using these exercises, I suggest only performing them twice a week. So here is what the schedule would look like:

Workout One:

One-arm DB Clean and Press + Overhead Squat 3×10
One-arm Swing + Overhead Squat 3×5

Workout Two:

One-arm Swing + Windmill 3×10
One-arm DB Clean + Press, Overhead Squat, + Windmill 3×5

Give these workouts a try and get back to me!

About the Author

Parth Shah is a Strength Consultant based in New Hyde Park, New York. He has just started an online personal training service through his website, Shah Training.


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