RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘diet’

20 Crazy Celebrity Fad Diets

The promise of a svelte figure is alluring to the masses, but remember that regular exercise plus a well-balanced diet are key. Here are 20 outrageous fad diets, and the celebrities that follow them.

Katie Holmes ‘puts hubby Tom Cruise on sex diet!’

Tom Cruise is so much paranoid about gaining weight that wife Katie Holmes has put him on a sex diet, say sources.
A source said: “Tom had been complaining about how hard it is to keep off the pounds, so Katie vowed to help him out.
“Katie read somewhere that you burn up 600 calories just by [...]

Boy George turns to raw diet to shed ‘jail weight’

Fallen pop star Boy George has reportedly turned to a strict diet of uncooked food to shed weight he gained as he served his sentence in jail.
The former Culture Club frontman, real name George O”Dowd, was also said to have resorted to a gruelling exercise routine to get back in shape.
“He’’s on a raw food [...]

Robbie Williams goes on crash diet to shape up for comeback

British singer Robbie Williams, who is set to make his comeback, has been working hard on his diet.
The 35-year-old singer is slated to release his first studio album in three years this October. The album titled Reality Killed the Video Star will be his first studio album since 2006”””’’s Rudebox, which was widely panned by [...]

Italian PM receives ‘stress relief’ at start of holidays

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has begun his summer holidays with medical treatment to relieve stress, Italian media say.

Reports say three doctors from a private clinic will advise Mr Berlusconi, 72, on physiotherapy and diet to help him rest.

It is thought his impending divorce and scandals about his private life in recent months have taken their toll.

He has been the focus of reports about prostitutes visiting his homes.

Three doctors from a private clinic in the German-speaking province of Bolzano were flown by helicopter at the weekend to advise Mr Berlusconi on specialist physiotherapy and diet to help him rest and relieve stress, Corriere dell’Alto Adige newspaper reported.

International publicity

He is starting his holidays at his villa near Milan, which has a fitness centre in one wing.

Later this month he will spend some time at his villa in Sardinia, which was the setting for a series of compromising photos of topless women and a nude man.

He has also promised to spend some days at the quake stricken town of L’Aquila in central Italy.

The BBC’s David Willey in Rome says it was clear that the prime minister’s impending divorce and the international publicity given to his private life have taken their toll on the leader’s health.

His wife, Veronica Lario, filed for divorce in May.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Michael Jackson’s Chef Recalls His Doctor’s Role, His Diet, His Children And The Day He Died

LOS ANGELES — On the day Michael Jackson died, his personal chef says her first hint of something amiss was when his doctor didn’t come downstairs to get the juices and granola he routinely brought the King of Pop for breakfast each morn…

Dr. Nicholas Perricone: The Dieter’s Dilemma

Maintaining a healthy weight is not about your daily intake of fat — and it is not about cutting out the carbs!

Pals ask Sarkozy to give up rigorous fitness regime introduced by wife

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has been asked by his friends to give up severe diet and exercise regime introduced to him by wife Carla Bruni.
The 54-year-old politician was rushed to hospital last weekend after he collapsed while jogging.
He was released from Val-de-Grace military hospital in Paris after being kept in overnight under cardiological observation.
While [...]

Tyra Banks’ dieting plan bans others from eating too

American media personality Tyra Banks is said to have taken up a very strict dieting plan, so strict that she has even banned others around her from eating.
Banks, 35, looked about thirty pounds lighter at the BET Awards show a few weeks ago, all thanks to her new diet.
“She has become so strict with her [...]

Jessica Biel reveals her ‘slim’ mantra

Jessica Biel has revealed the secret behind her slender frame – besides healthy diet and regular workout sessions, she sends half of her meal back while in a restaurant.
The stunner makes sure she doesn”t overdo her portion size when she eats out, reports Contactmusic.
She says, “You have to find a balance, especially with what you [...]

Daily potassium citrate may prevent seizure patients on high-fat diet from kidney stones

Researchers at Johns Hopkins Children’’s Center say that children on the high-fat ketogenic diet to control epileptic seizures can be prevented from the excruciatingly painful kidney stones, which the diet may sometimes cause, by giving them a daily supplement of potassium citrate the day they start the diet.
“We can confidently say this is a safe [...]

”Heart healthy” diet, exercise ‘protects against cognitive decline’

A ”heart healthy” diet and taking moderate exercise can protect against cognitive decline, according to two new studies.
Researchers at Utah State University in the US found that over-65s on a diet full of green leafy vegetables, oily fish and the odd glass of red wine scored higher in mental tests.
A separate study at the University [...]

How I lost three stone for my children

After years of too much food and too little exercise, Viv Groskop’s determination not to pass bad eating habits on to her children finally helped her shed the excess weight in just a year

In May last year, when I decided to attend my first local branch meeting of the Rosemary Conley diet and fitness class, I was slightly desperate. The scales put me at more than 14st (89kg), which, at 5ft 5in, gave me an “obese” body mass index (BMI) of 31 (the norm is between 20 and 25). This had happened to me in increments: too much weight put on during two pregnancies, too many bad habits (chiefly, continuing to eat as if I were still pregnant), too little exercise.

The weight itself did not bother me that much. It’s just a number and I was probably even heavier than that while pregnant. But I hated that BMI figure because I knew what it meant: I was a medical liability. I had a problem and it was one that I needed to sort out sooner rather than later.

My weight has fluctuated all my life. My mother was permanently on a diet while I was a child and always telling me I had to be careful not to become “fat”. (She herself has always been a size 12 but would rather be a size 10.) I don’t blame her for my weight: virtually everyone I know who grew up in the 1970s had a mother like this. As a child, though, I was never large. I was a voluptuous student perhaps, but it wasn’t a big deal.

It was only after university that my weight began to creep up because of an over-consumption of biscuits, alcohol and takeaways (there is no attractive way to portray it). At the age of 25, I dieted, lost 2st and was almost slim. But by last year, aged 35, the weight had gone back on – plus extra.

As anyone who weighs more than they should knows, there is no great mystery to piling it on. You eat a bit more here and a bit more there. Certain foods start off as treats and, before you know it, they are everyday indulgences. I was not a miserable porker by any means: I love eating and fully enjoyed not denying myself anything. It was only when I realised that I was becoming increasingly unhealthy – and setting a terrible example to my children – that I realised I needed to change my ways.

I was feeling increasingly uncomfortable with the idea of my daughter Vera, then two, growing up hearing me talk about being on a diet, denying myself food or stressing about looking large. I lived through all this with my own mum and the outcome was not healthy. For some reason, I wasn’t as worried for my son, Will, aged five: he doesn’t seem to have any hang-ups with food. Vera, however, copies everything I do, so I need to be doing the right thing. I wanted Vera to see me eating whatever I wanted in sensible amounts, enjoying healthy food and exercising regularly. It dawned on me that if I didn’t do it before she turned three this summer, it would be too late: she would already be absorbing all the wrong messages.

So for the past year, I have attended the Rosemary Conley classes in my local area (Teddington and Twickenham in south-west London). It costs £30 a month for unlimited classes: a weigh-in, motivational talk and 45 minutes of aerobics. Sometimes I’m a bit slack and go only once a week. Other weeks, I’ll go four times. In the early weeks I lost up to three or four pounds a week. In the first six months I lost two and a half stone.

The next half stone has taken another six months and is still not really off completely – it goes up and down. To my great annoyance, my BMI is still not quite down to 25 (I need to lose another 4lb) but I’m becoming less bothered. If anything, I’m now a bit bored of the tyranny of the scales.

The diet itself is very easy. You just have to be disciplined. They give you a booklet that contains hundreds of meal choices. Breakfast is typically cereal; lunch is a salad or a ham sandwich; dinner is pasta with a tomato-based sauce, or lean meat or fish with vegetables. And they figure in treats too: three Cadbury’s fingers a day or a Jaffa cake here or there. I must admit, though, that I struggle to follow the maintenance diet now that I’ve lost the bulk of the weight (it is quite punitive if you love eating). So, instead, I eat more or less what I want – but in far smaller quantities than before – and try to compensate by doing extra exercise.

The best thing has been how I feel around the children. They notice how much I enjoy the exercise classes. In general I’m more active: if I have to miss classes, I’ll go running instead. I’ve also started Pilates – which I hadn’t done in more than five years. My biggest enemy, though, is complacency. I recently missed two weeks of classes, and Jaffa cakes started “disappearing” from the kitchen cupboard. But I do have a safety net now. I feel a certain comfort knowing that the classes are always there, and I can always up the dosage if things get out of hand.

I’m quietly vigilant around my daughter and I notice already that her attitude to food is different from mine. She will happily leave half a piece of chocolate cake if she doesn’t want it all, something I find both inspirational and puzzling. (I always found it impossible as a child to leave anything sweet on my plate, and I still struggle with this as an adult.) I say very little about food to my children because I know my own attitudes are a bit warped. Nothing is forbidden to them and I try desperately hard not to refer to biscuits, sweets or chocolates as “treats”.

I try to keep it all as neutral as possible. As a result, so far they eat everything and don’t fixate on anything. If only I could say the same for myself. And so the battle goes on

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


How I lost three stone for my children

After years of too much food and too little exercise, Viv Groskop’s determination not to pass bad eating habits on to her children finally helped her shed the excess weight in just a year

In May last year, when I decided to attend my first local branch meeting of the Rosemary Conley diet and fitness class, I was slightly desperate. The scales put me at more than 14st (89kg), which, at 5ft 5in, gave me an “obese” body mass index (BMI) of 31 (the norm is between 20 and 25). This had happened to me in increments: too much weight put on during two pregnancies, too many bad habits (chiefly, continuing to eat as if I were still pregnant), too little exercise.

The weight itself did not bother me that much. It’s just a number and I was probably even heavier than that while pregnant. But I hated that BMI figure because I knew what it meant: I was a medical liability. I had a problem and it was one that I needed to sort out sooner rather than later.

My weight has fluctuated all my life. My mother was permanently on a diet while I was a child and always telling me I had to be careful not to become “fat”. (She herself has always been a size 12 but would rather be a size 10.) I don’t blame her for my weight: virtually everyone I know who grew up in the 1970s had a mother like this. As a child, though, I was never large. I was a voluptuous student perhaps, but it wasn’t a big deal.

It was only after university that my weight began to creep up because of an over-consumption of biscuits, alcohol and takeaways (there is no attractive way to portray it). At the age of 25, I dieted, lost 2st and was almost slim. But by last year, aged 35, the weight had gone back on – plus extra.

As anyone who weighs more than they should knows, there is no great mystery to piling it on. You eat a bit more here and a bit more there. Certain foods start off as treats and, before you know it, they are everyday indulgences. I was not a miserable porker by any means: I love eating and fully enjoyed not denying myself anything. It was only when I realised that I was becoming increasingly unhealthy – and setting a terrible example to my children – that I realised I needed to change my ways.

I was feeling increasingly uncomfortable with the idea of my daughter Vera, then two, growing up hearing me talk about being on a diet, denying myself food or stressing about looking large. I lived through all this with my own mum and the outcome was not healthy. For some reason, I wasn’t as worried for my son, Will, aged five: he doesn’t seem to have any hang-ups with food. Vera, however, copies everything I do, so I need to be doing the right thing. I wanted Vera to see me eating whatever I wanted in sensible amounts, enjoying healthy food and exercising regularly. It dawned on me that if I didn’t do it before she turned three this summer, it would be too late: she would already be absorbing all the wrong messages.

So for the past year, I have attended the Rosemary Conley classes in my local area (Teddington and Twickenham in south-west London). It costs £30 a month for unlimited classes: a weigh-in, motivational talk and 45 minutes of aerobics. Sometimes I’m a bit slack and go only once a week. Other weeks, I’ll go four times. In the early weeks I lost up to three or four pounds a week. In the first six months I lost two and a half stone.

The next half stone has taken another six months and is still not really off completely – it goes up and down. To my great annoyance, my BMI is still not quite down to 25 (I need to lose another 4lb) but I’m becoming less bothered. If anything, I’m now a bit bored of the tyranny of the scales.

The diet itself is very easy. You just have to be disciplined. They give you a booklet that contains hundreds of meal choices. Breakfast is typically cereal; lunch is a salad or a ham sandwich; dinner is pasta with a tomato-based sauce, or lean meat or fish with vegetables. And they figure in treats too: three Cadbury’s fingers a day or a Jaffa cake here or there. I must admit, though, that I struggle to follow the maintenance diet now that I’ve lost the bulk of the weight (it is quite punitive if you love eating). So, instead, I eat more or less what I want – but in far smaller quantities than before – and try to compensate by doing extra exercise.

The best thing has been how I feel around the children. They notice how much I enjoy the exercise classes. In general I’m more active: if I have to miss classes, I’ll go running instead. I’ve also started Pilates – which I hadn’t done in more than five years. My biggest enemy, though, is complacency. I recently missed two weeks of classes, and Jaffa cakes started “disappearing” from the kitchen cupboard. But I do have a safety net now. I feel a certain comfort knowing that the classes are always there, and I can always up the dosage if things get out of hand.

I’m quietly vigilant around my daughter and I notice already that her attitude to food is different from mine. She will happily leave half a piece of chocolate cake if she doesn’t want it all, something I find both inspirational and puzzling. (I always found it impossible as a child to leave anything sweet on my plate, and I still struggle with this as an adult.) I say very little about food to my children because I know my own attitudes are a bit warped. Nothing is forbidden to them and I try desperately hard not to refer to biscuits, sweets or chocolates as “treats”.

I try to keep it all as neutral as possible. As a result, so far they eat everything and don’t fixate on anything. If only I could say the same for myself. And so the battle goes on •

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


How I lost three stone for my children

After years of too much food and too little exercise, Viv Groskop’s determination not to pass bad eating habits on to her children finally helped her shed the excess weight in just a year

In May last year, when I decided to attend my first local branch meeting of the Rosemary Conley diet and fitness class, I was slightly desperate. The scales put me at more than 14st (89kg), which, at 5ft 5in, gave me an “obese” body mass index (BMI) of 31 (the norm is between 20 and 25). This had happened to me in increments: too much weight put on during two pregnancies, too many bad habits (chiefly, continuing to eat as if I were still pregnant), too little exercise.

The weight itself did not bother me that much. It’s just a number and I was probably even heavier than that while pregnant. But I hated that BMI figure because I knew what it meant: I was a medical liability. I had a problem and it was one that I needed to sort out sooner rather than later.

My weight has fluctuated all my life. My mother was permanently on a diet while I was a child and always telling me I had to be careful not to become “fat”. (She herself has always been a size 12 but would rather be a size 10.) I don’t blame her for my weight: virtually everyone I know who grew up in the 1970s had a mother like this. As a child, though, I was never large. I was a voluptuous student perhaps, but it wasn’t a big deal.

It was only after university that my weight began to creep up because of an over-consumption of biscuits, alcohol and takeaways (there is no attractive way to portray it). At the age of 25, I dieted, lost 2st and was almost slim. But by last year, aged 35, the weight had gone back on – plus extra.

As anyone who weighs more than they should knows, there is no great mystery to piling it on. You eat a bit more here and a bit more there. Certain foods start off as treats and, before you know it, they are everyday indulgences. I was not a miserable porker by any means: I love eating and fully enjoyed not denying myself anything. It was only when I realised that I was becoming increasingly unhealthy – and setting a terrible example to my children – that I realised I needed to change my ways.

I was feeling increasingly uncomfortable with the idea of my daughter Vera, then two, growing up hearing me talk about being on a diet, denying myself food or stressing about looking large. I lived through all this with my own mum and the outcome was not healthy. For some reason, I wasn’t as worried for my son, Will, aged five: he doesn’t seem to have any hang-ups with food. Vera, however, copies everything I do, so I need to be doing the right thing. I wanted Vera to see me eating whatever I wanted in sensible amounts, enjoying healthy food and exercising regularly. It dawned on me that if I didn’t do it before she turned three this summer, it would be too late: she would already be absorbing all the wrong messages.

So for the past year, I have attended the Rosemary Conley classes in my local area (Teddington and Twickenham in south-west London). It costs £30 a month for unlimited classes: a weigh-in, motivational talk and 45 minutes of aerobics. Sometimes I’m a bit slack and go only once a week. Other weeks, I’ll go four times. In the early weeks I lost up to three or four pounds a week. In the first six months I lost two and a half stone.

The next half stone has taken another six months and is still not really off completely – it goes up and down. To my great annoyance, my BMI is still not quite down to 25 (I need to lose another 4lb) but I’m becoming less bothered. If anything, I’m now a bit bored of the tyranny of the scales.

The diet itself is very easy. You just have to be disciplined. They give you a booklet that contains hundreds of meal choices. Breakfast is typically cereal; lunch is a salad or a ham sandwich; dinner is pasta with a tomato-based sauce, or lean meat or fish with vegetables. And they figure in treats too: three Cadbury’s fingers a day or a Jaffa cake here or there. I must admit, though, that I struggle to follow the maintenance diet now that I’ve lost the bulk of the weight (it is quite punitive if you love eating). So, instead, I eat more or less what I want – but in far smaller quantities than before – and try to compensate by doing extra exercise.

The best thing has been how I feel around the children. They notice how much I enjoy the exercise classes. In general I’m more active: if I have to miss classes, I’ll go running instead. I’ve also started Pilates – which I hadn’t done in more than five years. My biggest enemy, though, is complacency. I recently missed two weeks of classes, and Jaffa cakes started “disappearing” from the kitchen cupboard. But I do have a safety net now. I feel a certain comfort knowing that the classes are always there, and I can always up the dosage if things get out of hand.

I’m quietly vigilant around my daughter and I notice already that her attitude to food is different from mine. She will happily leave half a piece of chocolate cake if she doesn’t want it all, something I find both inspirational and puzzling. (I always found it impossible as a child to leave anything sweet on my plate, and I still struggle with this as an adult.) I say very little about food to my children because I know my own attitudes are a bit warped. Nothing is forbidden to them and I try desperately hard not to refer to biscuits, sweets or chocolates as “treats”.

I try to keep it all as neutral as possible. As a result, so far they eat everything and don’t fixate on anything. If only I could say the same for myself. And so the battle goes on •

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


How I lost three stone for my children

After years of too much food and too little exercise, Viv Groskop’s determination not to pass bad eating habits on to her children finally helped her shed the excess weight in just a year

In May last year, when I decided to attend my first local branch meeting of the Rosemary Conley diet and fitness class, I was slightly desperate. The scales put me at more than 14st (89kg), which, at 5ft 5in, gave me an “obese” body mass index (BMI) of 31 (the norm is between 20 and 25). This had happened to me in increments: too much weight put on during two pregnancies, too many bad habits (chiefly, continuing to eat as if I were still pregnant), too little exercise.

The weight itself did not bother me that much. It’s just a number and I was probably even heavier than that while pregnant. But I hated that BMI figure because I knew what it meant: I was a medical liability. I had a problem and it was one that I needed to sort out sooner rather than later.

My weight has fluctuated all my life. My mother was permanently on a diet while I was a child and always telling me I had to be careful not to become “fat”. (She herself has always been a size 12 but would rather be a size 10.) I don’t blame her for my weight: virtually everyone I know who grew up in the 1970s had a mother like this. As a child, though, I was never large. I was a voluptuous student perhaps, but it wasn’t a big deal.

It was only after university that my weight began to creep up because of an over-consumption of biscuits, alcohol and takeaways (there is no attractive way to portray it). At the age of 25, I dieted, lost 2st and was almost slim. But by last year, aged 35, the weight had gone back on – plus extra.

As anyone who weighs more than they should knows, there is no great mystery to piling it on. You eat a bit more here and a bit more there. Certain foods start off as treats and, before you know it, they are everyday indulgences. I was not a miserable porker by any means: I love eating and fully enjoyed not denying myself anything. It was only when I realised that I was becoming increasingly unhealthy – and setting a terrible example to my children – that I realised I needed to change my ways.

I was feeling increasingly uncomfortable with the idea of my daughter Vera, then two, growing up hearing me talk about being on a diet, denying myself food or stressing about looking large. I lived through all this with my own mum and the outcome was not healthy. For some reason, I wasn’t as worried for my son, Will, aged five: he doesn’t seem to have any hang-ups with food. Vera, however, copies everything I do, so I need to be doing the right thing. I wanted Vera to see me eating whatever I wanted in sensible amounts, enjoying healthy food and exercising regularly. It dawned on me that if I didn’t do it before she turned three this summer, it would be too late: she would already be absorbing all the wrong messages.

So for the past year, I have attended the Rosemary Conley classes in my local area (Teddington and Twickenham in south-west London). It costs £30 a month for unlimited classes: a weigh-in, motivational talk and 45 minutes of aerobics. Sometimes I’m a bit slack and go only once a week. Other weeks, I’ll go four times. In the early weeks I lost up to three or four pounds a week. In the first six months I lost two and a half stone.

The next half stone has taken another six months and is still not really off completely – it goes up and down. To my great annoyance, my BMI is still not quite down to 25 (I need to lose another 4lb) but I’m becoming less bothered. If anything, I’m now a bit bored of the tyranny of the scales.

The diet itself is very easy. You just have to be disciplined. They give you a booklet that contains hundreds of meal choices. Breakfast is typically cereal; lunch is a salad or a ham sandwich; dinner is pasta with a tomato-based sauce, or lean meat or fish with vegetables. And they figure in treats too: three Cadbury’s fingers a day or a Jaffa cake here or there. I must admit, though, that I struggle to follow the maintenance diet now that I’ve lost the bulk of the weight (it is quite punitive if you love eating). So, instead, I eat more or less what I want – but in far smaller quantities than before – and try to compensate by doing extra exercise.

The best thing has been how I feel around the children. They notice how much I enjoy the exercise classes. In general I’m more active: if I have to miss classes, I’ll go running instead. I’ve also started Pilates – which I hadn’t done in more than five years. My biggest enemy, though, is complacency. I recently missed two weeks of classes, and Jaffa cakes started “disappearing” from the kitchen cupboard. But I do have a safety net now. I feel a certain comfort knowing that the classes are always there, and I can always up the dosage if things get out of hand.

I’m quietly vigilant around my daughter and I notice already that her attitude to food is different from mine. She will happily leave half a piece of chocolate cake if she doesn’t want it all, something I find both inspirational and puzzling. (I always found it impossible as a child to leave anything sweet on my plate, and I still struggle with this as an adult.) I say very little about food to my children because I know my own attitudes are a bit warped. Nothing is forbidden to them and I try desperately hard not to refer to biscuits, sweets or chocolates as “treats”.

I try to keep it all as neutral as possible. As a result, so far they eat everything and don’t fixate on anything. If only I could say the same for myself. And so the battle goes on •

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


The 12 Healthiest Foods On Earth

What is the best diet for human beings?

Vegetarian? Vegan? High-protein? Low-fat? Dairy-Free?

More on Food