See Some Warriors Sweatin’ It Uuupp!

  • Kick It Jamie
This post was originally published on this site

Originally posted at: http://www.nerdfitness.com/

Two weeks ago, I almost puked and it inspired this article.

My friend Noah was in town, and he invited me to join him in a special workout with some other internet dorks (that’s what I call affectionately those of us who make our living online). Noah lives in Austin, and I haven’t seen in him in a while, so although the idea of going out in public (yikes) and working out in a group setting (nope) are things I try to avoid, I figured I’d be a good sport.

Upon arriving at the gym, I walked into a room with 25 other people and an instructor who looked like he had been picked from a “good looking super jacked trainer” casting call.

What transpired was a 25-minute bootcamp style workout where we all did various things like burpees, box jumps, squats, dips, etc. There was no break, and we moved from one exercise to the next as thumping hip hop played, the training yelling louder and louder to encourage us to push ourselves.

I HATED EVERY SECOND OF IT.

I think I would rather get a root canal than go through that style of workout again. Or watch an episode of the Real Housewives of Rivendell.

Let’s be clear: I’m not saying this just wasn’t my cup of tea…This wasn’t mild-displeasure, but pure misery.

As I finished my gazillionth burpee, wheezing and out of breath, I looked at my friend Roman and we both kind of chuckled: “This is not my thing,” Roman said to me. Okay, actually what he said was more profanity-laced, but I like to keep things relatively clean around here.

When the workout was over, I glanced at some of the other people around the room, also drenched in sweat, but with smiles on their faces:“That was great!” and “I loved it, thanks man!” phrases were shouted.

Although I knew I probably wouldn’t enjoy this type of workout, after realizing just how much I hated it – I knew I needed to write about it.

“Just how many people hate these workout and think they hate working out?” I wondered as I pushed myself to the point of puking.

Today, I’m going to give you permission that you didn’t realize you needed.

Don’t like “exercise” ? It’s probably the type

Sunrise Workout

I have been training in gyms, parks, and playgrounds for 15 years.

I own and operate a health and fitness website and thoroughly enjoy exercise. It’s one of my favorite things to do, and if I miss a workout, it feels like something in my life is missing. And yet, I found myself cursing the exercise gods during that workout – wishing I was doing anything else.

You see, I like exercise to be an enjoyable and solitary experience. Pushing myself to the point of almost puking is not fun for me. Training in a group setting is also not generally enjoyable for me, as I prefer my workouts to be contemplative and meditative: Headphones in, playlist on, eyes down, mouth closed, and doing my routine designed with specific goals in mind.

Because of this, other than going for extended walks around New York City, hiking when I can, or doing ring routines that last for a few minutes, I don’t “do cardio.”

So a bootcamp/crossfit style workout is not one I particularly enjoy.

People look at me like I’m crazy when I tell them I don’t “go for a run” ever. It’s like there’s this law that says “in shape = formal cardio,” which I disagree with strongly.

I couldn’t help but think about somebody that might be in their mid 30s, who has been sitting hunched over a desk for the past decade, potentially also severely overweight, and ends up in a boot camp as their first fitness experience.

I think some people will love it. And maybe they’ll build up to CrossFit or SoulCycle or some other similar type of workout atmosphere. And that’s AMAZING. They love that feeling of pushing themselves harder than they thought possible, they get to work out alongside others, and it gives them a hell of a workout. They end these classes really beat up and fired up.

That’s what some people will do.

I think many other people won’t particularly enjoy this workout style – especially if they’re rookies to fitness or very overweight.

Sure, they might find a way to push through their workout enough times that they learn to “love to hate” them, and they’ll make this a thing they do regularly.

HOWEVER, I imagine the far majority of out-of-shape/new people fit into this category: Hate the workout, assume this “fitness” is the only kind of fitness, and get discouraged and embarrassed. “Screw this, I’m going back to my couch.”

Like Billy Madison getting teased when he HAD to write in cursive, he got discouraged and never wanted to come back to school:

There’s nothing wrong with bootcamps and CrossFit. I would LOVE it if I liked that stuff. But It never worked for me. If that’s your thing, keep killin’ it! These are amazing ways to get in shape for the right type of person. (Here are my official thoughts on CrossFit, btw.)

But for those of you who don’t find these workout styles fun, motivating, and easy to get yourself to do, I want to make something abundantly clear: If you strongly despise a certain style of working out and don’t want to do it, it doesn’t make you a bad person, or lazy, or a quitter.

It might just mean that you don’t like this kind of training! So don’t do it. Ever again. Never ever.

You don’t have to prove anything to anybody but yourself

be yourself

When I ran cross country my freshman year of high school, I hated every day of practice.

But I had friends on the team, and I told myself I was a quitter if I stopped. I made it through the fall season…barely. As I trained for the upcoming season during the next summer, I refused to let myself get ‘beat’ by stopping running even though I hated it.

Finally, after a month of increasing misery went by, I accepted my training preferences and decided that putting myself through another four months of torture to prove a point to nobody that I could do something I hated was the dumbest idea I’ve ever had.

Well, second dumbest. I once thought it was a good idea to cast a fishing rod a few weeks after breaking my collarbone. That was the dumbest thing I’ve ever done.

So, when I stopped running, I decided to try something else: I got a gym membership.

And that gym membership changed my life and started me down a path that led me to Nerd Fitness.

Find your fitness

stop sign

Today, I’m giving you permission to make some changes:

  • If you don’t like “exercise,” it doesn’t make you a bad person.
  • If you don’t like to run, it doesn’t mean you are a quitter or doomed to stay overweight.
  • If you have gone to a bootcamp and it kicked your ass and you hated it, it doesn’t mean you’re weak.  
  • If you have gone to a gym and you hated lifting weights, you never have to pick up another weight again in your life.

Instead, I want you to find the type of fitness that brings you to life. If you haven’t done that yet, you haven’t looked enough places. So look more places.

Have you tried parkour?

How about rock climbing?

Swing dancing?

Yoga?

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu?  

Geocaching?

LARPing?

Kung-fu?

Powerlifitng?

Running?

These are all awesome forms of exercise and will get you to a pretty solid baseline of health.

After all, how you eat will determine 80-90% of your physique.

If you are trying to look a certain way or build certain skills, then YES you will need to train and eat a certain way. And next week we’ll show you exactly how to customize your training to your goals.   

For the rest of us muggles just trying to lose some weight, get in better shape, or look a little better, eating healthy and doing a fun form of fitness a few times a week along with some walks will actually get you most of the way there.

Don’t worry about getting your heart rate into the “fat burning zone” which is nonsense.

Don’t worry about “metabolic conditioning” or “WODs” or mile splits.

Don’t feel bad if doing squats and deadlifts aren’t your thing and you’d rather be outside in nature. Or that using an elliptical makes you want to cry out of boredom.  

Instead, do the thing that actually brings you joy and gets you moving. THAT is what “exercise” is: For me, it’s gymnastic rings and power lifting.

The rest of Team Nerd Fitness is quite varied:

  • For Staci, it’s powerlifting and yoga.
  • For Jim, it’s olympic lifting and gymnastics.
  • For Baker, it’s Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
  • For Alek, it’s ultimate Frisbee and CrossFit.
  • For Margaret it’s rowing.
  • For Darryl it’s martial arts.
  • For Taylor, it’s lifting and bodyweight training.
  • For Noel, it’s the NF Academy workouts.

Despite that list being quite “all over the place,” it’s all tied together by one principle: We exercise in a certain way because we enjoy it. This is why you can create a free character on Nerd Fitness with a focus in whatever reaches out to you.

We also all know that some basic strength training, even if it’s not our main focal point, makes us safer and better at the other activities we choose to do, so we all mix in a bit of that with our routines too.

It’s why principle #1 of NF is to train in a way that you enjoy! This will allow you to stay excited and motivated about moving – if you force yourself to do things you hate all the time, you’ll give up the second you reach an obstacle.

This is built into every element of Nerd Fitness, and we can help you find the path towards the life you want to live. It starts with a foundation of fun and the right attitude towards strength.

Stop today. Start today.

start today

I want you to have an honest conversation with yourself right now:

  1. If you are brand new to fitness, remove any preconceived notions you have about how you’re supposed to train. There’s no perfect way to train, but I’ll tell you there IS a wrong way – forcing yourself to do something you despise because you think you have to.
  2. If you’re already on your fitness journey, is there something you force yourself to do because you’ve always done it or because you think you have to keep doing it? If you’re doing it to reach a specific goal, good for you! But if not (and it just so happens to be what you think exercise is), can you STOP that thing?

I want to hear from you:

What’s one thing, with regard to fitness, that you have been forcing yourself to do, or what’s the mental image you have of fitness that has kept you from starting?

And what’s one NEW thing you’re going to try, or what’s an enjoyable form of exercise you’re going to do more of?  

If you are lost and don’t have any money or time to try new things, do this instead. Load up an audiobook or your favorite podcast, put on a pair of shoes, and go for a walk.

We all have to start somewhere, so we might as well enjoy it from the first day too! This will help you actually build the habit of doing the activity rather than doing something because you think you HAVE to.

Once you’re ready to set some elite performance or physique goals, we can talk about sacrifice and doing things for reasons other than pure enjoyment…but until then, have fun.

We’ll be covering specific performance and physique goals next week. Get ready!

-Steve

PS: Are you a fan of ours on Facebook? Staci is going to be doing our first ever Facebook Live tonight at 8pm CT. She’ll be talking about how to find the right gym for you!

###

photo: PROReiterlied: lego, Steven Depolo: start

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

Originally posted at: http://www.nerdfitness.com/

Two weeks ago, I almost puked and it inspired this article.

My friend Noah was in town, and he invited me to join him in a special workout with some other internet dorks (that’s what I call affectionately refer to those of us who make our living online). Noah lives in Austin and I haven’t seen in him in a while, so although the idea of going out in public (yikes), and working out in a group setting (nope) are things I try to avoid, I figured I’d be a good sport.

Upon arriving at the gym, I walked into a room with 25 other people, and an instructor who looked like he had been picked from a “good looking super jacked trainer” casting call.

What transpired was a 25-minute bootcamp style workout where we all did various things like burpees, box jumps, squats, dips, etc. There was no break, and you moved from one exercise to the next as thumping hip hop played, the training yelling louder and louder to encourage us to push ourselves.

I HATED EVERY SECOND OF IT.

I think I would rather get a root canal than go through that style of workout again. Or watch an episode of the Real Housewives of Rivendell.

Let’s be clear: I’m not saying this just wasn’t my cup of tea…This wasn’t mild-displeasure, but pure misery.

As I finished my gazillionth burpee, wheezing and out of breath, I looked at my friend Roman and we both kind of chuckled: “this is not my thing,” Roman said to me. Okay actually what he said was more profanity-laced, but I like to keep things relatively clean around here.

When the workout was over, I glanced at some of the other people around the room, also drenched in sweat, but with smiles on their faces:“That was great!” and “I loved it, thanks man!” phrases were shouted.

Although I knew I probably wouldn’t enjoy this type of workout, after realizing just how much I hated it – I knew I needed to write about it.

“Just how many people hate these workouts, and think they hate working out?” I wondered as I pushed myself to the point of puking during the workout.

Today, I’m going to give you permission that you didn’t realize you needed.

Don’t like “exercise” ? It’s probably the type

Sunrise Workout

I have been training in gyms, parks, and playgrounds for 15 years.

I own and operate a health and fitness website, and thoroughly enjoy exercise. It’s one of my favorite things to do, and if I miss a workout, it feels like something in my life is missing. And yet, I found myself during that workout, cursing the exercise gods, wishing I was doing anything else.

You see, I like exercise to be an enjoyable and solitary experience. Pushing myself to the point of almost puking is not fun for me. Training in a group setting is not also not generally enjoyable for me, as I prefer my workouts to be contemplative and meditative. Headphones in, playlist on, eyes down, mouth closed, doing my routine designed with specific goals in mind.

Because of this, other than going for extended walks around New York City, hiking when I can, or doing ring routines that last for a few minutes, I don’t “do cardio.”

So a bootcamp/crossfit style workout is not one I particularly enjoy.

People look at me like I’m crazy when I tell them I don’t “go for a run” ever. It’s like there’s this law that says “in shape = formal cardio,” which I disagree with strongly.

I couldn’t help but think about somebody that might be in their mid 30s, who has been sitting hunched over a desk for the past decade, potentially also severely overweight, and ends up in a boot camp as their first fitness experience.

I think some people will love it. And maybe they build up to Crossfit or Soul Cycle or some other similar type of workout atmosphere. And that’s AMAZING. They love that feeling of pushing themselves harder than they thought possible, they get to work out alongside others, and it gives them a hell of a workout. They end these classes really beat up, and fired up.

That’s what some people will do.

I think many other people won’t particularly enjoy this workout style, especially if they’re rookies to fitness or very overweight.

Sure, they might find a way to push through enough times that they learn to “love to hate it,” and make this a thing they do regularly.

HOWEVER, I imagine the far majority of out of shape/new people fit into this category: Hate the workout, assume this “fitness” is the only kind of fitness, and get discouraged and embarrassed. “Screw this, I’m going back to my couch.”

Like Billy Madison getting teased when he HAD to write in Cursive, he got discouraged and never wanted to come back to school:

There’s nothing wrong with bootcamps and Crossfit. I would LOVE it if I liked that stuff. But It never worked for me. If that’s your thing, keep killin’ it! These are amazing ways to get in shape for the right type of person. (Here are my official thoughts on Crossfit, btw.)

But for those of you who don’t find these workout styles fun, motivating, and easy to get yourself to do, I want to make something abundantly clear: if you strongly despise a certain style of working out and don’t want to do it, it doesn’t make you a bad person, or lazy, or a quitter.

It might just mean that you don’t like this kind of training! So don’t do it. Ever again. Never ever.

You don’t have to prove anything to anybody but yourself

be yourself

When I ran cross country my freshman year of high school, I hated every day of practice.

But I had friends on the team, and told myself I was a quitter if I stopped. I made it through the fall season, barely. As I trained for the upcoming season during the next summer, I refused to let myself get ‘beat’ by stopping running, even though I hated it.

Finally, after a month went by of increasing misery, I accepted my training preferences and decided that putting myself through another four months of torture to prove a point to nobody that I could do something I hated was the dumbest idea I’ve ever had.

Well, second dumbest. I once thought it was a good idea to cast a fishing rod a few weeks after breaking my collarbone. That was the dumbest thing I’ve ever done.

So, when I stopped running, I decided to try something else: I got a gym membership.

And that gym membership changed my life, and started me down a path that led me to Nerd Fitness.

Find your fitness

stop sign

Today, I’m giving you permission to make some changes:

  • If you don’t like “exercise,” it doesn’t make you a bad person.
  • If you don’t like to run, it doesn’t mean you are a quitter or doomed to stay overweight.
  • If you have gone to a bootcamp and it kicked your ass and you hated it, it doesn’t mean you’re weak.  
  • If you have gone to a gym and you hated lifting weights, you never have to pick up another weight again in your life.

Instead, I want you to find the type of fitness that brings you to life. If you haven’t done that yet, you haven’t looked enough places. So look more places.

Have you tried parkour?

How about rock climbing?

Swing dancing?

Yoga?

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu?  

Geocaching?

LARPing?

Kung-fu?

Powerlifitng?

Running?

These are all awesome forms of exercise and will get you to a pretty solid baseline of health.

After all, how you eat will determine 80-90% of your physique.

If you are trying to look a certain way or build certain skills , then YES you will need to train and eat a certain way. And next week we’ll show you exactly how to customize your training to your goals.   

For the rest of us muggles just trying to lose some weight, get in better shape, or look a little better, eating healthy and doing a fun form of fitness a few times a week along with some walks will actually get you most of the way there.

Don’t worry about getting your heart rate into the “fat burning zone” which is nonsense.

Don’t worry about “metabolic conditioning” or “WODs” or mile splits.

Don’t feel bad if doing squats and deadlifts aren’t your thing and you’d rather be outside in nature. Or that using an elliptical makes you want to cry out of boredom.  

Instead, do the thing that actually brings you joy and gets you moving. THAT is what “exercise” is: For me, it’s gymnastic rings and power lifting.

The rest of Team Nerd Fitness is quite varied:

  • For Staci, it’s powerlifting.
  • For Jim, it’s olympic lifting and gymnastics.
  • For Baker, it’s Brazilian Jiu Jitsu
  • For Alek, it’s ultimate Frisbee and Crossfit.
  • For Margaret and Darryl, it’s martial arts
  • For Taylor, it’s lifting and bodyweight training.
  • For Noel, it’s the NF Academy workouts.

Despite that list being quite “all over the place,” it’s all tied together by one principle: we exercise in a certain way because we enjoy it. This is why you can create a free character [link] on Nerd Fitness with a focus in whatever reaches out to you.

We also all know that some basic strength training, even if it’s not our mail focal point, makes us better and safer at the other activities we choose to do, so we all mix in a bit of that with our routines too.

It’s why principle #1 of NF is to train in a way that you enjoy! This will allow you to stay excited and motivated about moving – if you force yourself to do things you hate all the time, you’ll give up the second you reach an obstacle.

This is built into every element of Nerd Fitness, and we can help you find the path towards the life you want to live. It starts with a foundation of fun and the right attitude towards strength.

Stop today. Start today.

start today

I want you to have an honest conversation with yourself right now:

  1. If you are brand new to fitness, remove any preconceived notions you have about how you’re supposed to train. There’s no perfect way to train, but I’ll tell you there IS a wrong way – forcing yourself to do something you despise because you think you have to.
  2. If you’re already on your fitness journey, is there something you force yourself to do because you’ve always done it, or because you think you have to keep doing it? If you’re doing it to reach a specific goal, good for you! But if not (and it just so happens to be what you think exercise is), can you STOP that thing?

I want to hear from you:

What’s one things with regards to fitness you have been forcing yourself to do, or the mental image you have for fitness that has kept you from starting?

And what’s one NEW thing you’re going to try, or an enjoyable form of exercise you’re going to do more of?  

If you are lost and don’t have any money or time to try new things, do this instead. Load up an audiobook or your favorite podcast, put on a pair of shoes, and go for a walk.

We all have to start somewhere, so we might as well enjoy it from the first day too! This will help you actually build the habit of doing the activity rather than doing something because you think you HAVE to.

Once you’re ready to set some elite performance or physique goals, we can talk about sacrifice and doing things for reasons other than pure enjoyment…but until then, have fun.

We’ll be covering specific performance and physique goals next week. Get ready!

-Steve

PS: Are you a fan of ours on Facebook? Staci is going to be doing our first ever Facebook live tonight at 8pm CT. She’ll be talking about how to find the right gym for you!

###

photo: PROReiterlied: lego, Steven Depolo: start

Be Nice and Share!
This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

(Image credit: Dinner at the Zoo)

If your kids aren’t too excited about the first meal of the day, you might want to try these breakfast sundaes. Made to look like ice cream sundaes, they add a little pizzazz to your standard bowl of yogurt and fruit. I mean, who can say no to sprinkles in the morning?

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/get-your-kids-excited-about-breakfast-with-these-yogurt-sundaes-238452′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

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This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thekitchn.com/feedburnermain

Every host has at least one diner coming to Thanksgiving with a dietary restriction. While the main event isn’t vegan (although, if you need one, try this root vegetable pot pie), most of the other dishes on the table are easily adapted to be enjoyed by both vegans and non-vegans alike.

But what about the pumpkin pie? Pie crust is easily made vegan with a switch of butter to vegetable shortening or even oil. That gloriously spiced pumpkin filling is set with eggs and milk, though, and while it isn’t as simple as the one-to-one swaps for making the crust, you can bake a vegan pumpkin pie with ingredients already in your pantry.

<p><a href=’http://www.thekitchn.com/a-great-vegan-pumpkin-pie-everything-you-need-to-make-one-237644′><strong>READ MORE »</strong></a></p>

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This post was originally published on this site

https://www.girlsgonestrong.com/

There has been a lot of debate in recent years about what stretching actually does, and whether or not it is necessary. Current belief holds that oftentimes muscles feel “tight” because the brain is sending the message through the nervous system to stiffen muscles around a joint due to perceived weakness or lack of stability.

Many times, my patients are surprised to find that as their strength and stability increase, their feeling of “tightness” decreases.

What does stretching actually do?

It has been proposed that what is actually happening when we feel “increased flexibility” from stretching is that we are increasing the nervous system’s tolerance to moving into a new range of motion.

Mobility drills can be considered a form of “stretching” as they increase your available or useable joint range of motion. When performed dynamically, they are a great way to warm up before for your workouts.

As I’ve previously written, a part of the body that often seems to feel sore and tight is the hip. In this article, I want to share three hip mobility drills that can help to address that.

sore-tight-hip-flexor-hip-bones-and-muscles-327x615Before jumping into the drills, however, let’s take a moment to review the anatomy of the hip.

Anatomy of The Hip

The hip is a ball-and-socket joint. The “ball” is formed by the head of the femur, and the “socket” is the acetabulum of the pelvis. The muscles in the front of the hip are collectively referred to as the hip flexors. The hip flexors are listed here in order of greatest contribution to smallest contribution:

  • Psoas major and Iliacus (often referred to as Iliopsoas)
  • Rectus Femoris
  • Sartorius
  • Tensor Fascia Latae (TFL)
  • Pectineus
  • Adductor Longus
  • Adductor Brevis
  • Gracilis

The muscles in the back of the hip are referred to as the hip extensors. They are:

  • Gluteus Maximus
  • Biceps Femoris, Semitendinosis, and Semimembranosis (the hamstrings)

gluteus-maximums-640x430

Other Contributors to “Tightness”

In a previous article, I discussed how weakness or lack of coordination in the pelvic floor and deep central stability system can lead to “tightness” or increased risk of injury to the low back, hips, and legs. We need to incorporate exercises for deep central stability into our training programs.

Additionally, in this article, I explained how a feeling of “tightness” in the hip flexor muscles may actually be weakness of the muscles surrounding the hip.

Hip Mobility Drills

The following drills are a good adjunct to your training program assuming you’re also incorporating deep central stability (core and floor) training into your current strength training program.

These drills can be performed as part of your dynamic warm-up. Spend as much time as you like on each one. Perform these drills within your comfort level, moving slowly and respecting your own body’s current joint mobility.

You should not feel any pain in your hip or knee. If you do feel pain, please see a licensed physical therapist for a consultation.

 

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The post 3 Drills for Better Hip Mobility appeared first on Girls Gone Strong.

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This post was originally published on this site

Originally Posted At: https://breakingmuscle.com/feed/rss

If Google’s promises hold true, Android Wear smartwatches will deliver much improved interactions with smartphones.

Google’s smartwatch operating system, Android Wear, is making its way into the fitness smartwatch market. The Polar M600 is the first enthusiast device that uses Google’s operating system to turn the watch into much more than just a fitness tracker. Is the M600 ready for prime time?      

 

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Originally Posted At: https://breakingmuscle.com/feed/rss

Bodybuilding is all about balance and symmetry, but you can’t have either if your posture is failing.

Muscular balance and symmetry are critical when it comes to bodybuilding. One of the drawbacks to a typical bodybuilding training regimen is that the majority of the exercises are executed in the sagittal plane. In other words, most exercises involve front to back movements such as bicep curls, chest press, leg extension and leg press. 
 

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Originally Posted At: https://breakingmuscle.com/feed/rss

Research says eating pulses can help you lose fat and keep it off.

New research shows that eating beans, lentils, dry peas, and chickpeas – also called “pulses,” can result in modest weight-loss by reducing your appetite. This research also indicated that consuming daily servings of pulses can also significantly lower bad cholesterols like trans-fats in your diet.

 

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This post was originally published on this site

Originally Posted At: https://breakingmuscle.com/feed/rss

You can get all the benefits of a ketogenic diet and still gain strength.

“Fat is bad for you, your cholesterol is going to go up, and so will your risk of chronic disease.” This is what many of us have been told throughout our lives, and this view point has pushed by the media, trainers, and most of the health world for many, many years. Thankfully, things have changed.  

 

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This post was originally published on this site

http://www.thealternativedaily.com/

[…]

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