Hello Wellness Nuts -
I recently came accross an article that powerfully endorses what we’re doing here at Body For the Ages Nonprofit to fight Heart Disease with our Online Wellness Program.
This article featured on Worldhealth.net, discusses the beneficial factors in total body physiology that one can achieve through exercise / fitness.
Although the article grasps the general notion around our program, it still only scratches the surface of our specific regiment. Our Nonprofit’s founder, Pax Beale, defeated Heart Disease through a combined commitment to Delectable Nutrition, the Benefits of our patented Pyruvate, and Weight Resistance Training.
Weight Resistence training differs from other forms of aerobic or cardio exercise due to its impact on blood-pressure; in conjunction with the supplementation of Pyruvate (believed by researchers to have strong benefits for the Heart), aids the creation of a sysnergistic rehabilitation for the cardio-vascular system and better positions one to live to their Maximum Genetic Lifespan!
To learn more about Pax’s story view the video below and visit us at Body For the Ages Nonprofit!
YOUTUBE VIDEO - Pax Beale: Heart Expert
Team Body For the Ages
So I was surfing the internet, like one does, when I came across this article:
Being skinny is no guarantee of a healthy heart
Serious health risks are found equally in fat and thin folks, study shows
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26143255/
Certainly, got my attention. The article references a recent study that demonstrates that ones weight does not indicate heart risks. Better indicators of heart risks are age, smoking, and especially inactivity.
“The results underscore how important exercise is for staying healthy, even for people of healthy weight” said Judith Wylie-Rosett, an author of the study.
This is something that Pax has been advocating for years. As he puts it, a healthy body is not imancipated. It’s fit. You don’t want to be merely skin and bones. You want to have muscle as well as little fat. You don’t want to look like a skeleton with skin stretched over it.
Hopefully, this study will help move the thinking in the health and wellness fields away from weight loss to exercise.
There has been much concern expressed about the consumption of soy protein by men. Supposedly, eating soy protein can reduce testosterone levels in men.
This claim doesn’t live up to scrutiny. Here’s the basis of the concern: One man, in one study, saw a significant reduction in testosterone. And he had a testosterone level 200% above normal. Here’s a link to that study. No need to run around like Chicken Little.
A more recent study found NO decrease in testosterone. Click here to read it.
So, one can make there own mind up. Personally, I think that the issue deserves more study before one avoids soy protein, and we should see if soy may have testosterone regulation benefits.
Also, there is no dispute about the heart benefits. The FDA has granted this health claim for soy: “25 grams of soy protein a day, as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, may reduce the risk of heart disease.”
So, check out Pax’s protein, formulated to attack heart risks!