Combating Signs of Aging with ZeroTox Wrinkle Defense System

Has some rude soul recently pointed out your crow's feet? Up until this moment you were probably content with the condition of your skin. Nothing wrong with a few wrinkles, right? The fact is, more than anything wrinkles can convert someone with a zest for life into someone who hates social events. You may not have reached a point so serious, but people often become desperate about wrinkles. The popularity...

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Are You Getting Enough Color in Your Diet?

Jean Fisher

Vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals and fiber--the good guys in the food we eat. They make our bodies strong to help us fight disease and slow the natural aging process. So how do you know if you are getting enough of these food superheroes? Think color!

White Bananas are well-known to be an excellent source of potassium. They are also high in vitamin C, vitamin B6, magnesium and manganese. One large banana contains 15% of the recommended daily allowance of fiber. At just over 6 calories one-quarter cup of raw cauliflower provides almost 20% of the daily recommendation of vitamin C and is high in fiber. Cauliflower is also an important source of folate. A member of the cruciferous family of vegetables, it is recognized as possessing cancer-fighting properties. Adding onions and garlic to your meals can boost calcium intake, and provide chromium, a trace mineral important in maintaining blood sugar levels. Regular consumption of onions and garlic has been shown to significantly lower cholesterol levels and blood pressure. America's favorite white vegetable, the potato, is an excellent source of vitamin C, potassium, Vitamin B6, niacin and thiamin. (Don't think that makes it okay to pig-out on fast-food fries, or bury your baked potato under butter and sour cream! You know better.)

Yellow/Orange Yellow fruits such as pineapple and papaya contain large amounts of both vitamin C and vitamin A giving a generous boost to your immune system. One half cup of pineapple delivers almost half the daily recommendation of manganese yet weighs in at only 40 calories. Think yellow bell peppers for vitamin C. A one-half cup serving provides 300% the daily recommendation of vitamin C. That's a lot of antioxidant power. Most of us associate beta-carotene, one of the earliest identified anti-oxidants, with carrots. But you can also find beta-carotene in oranges, apricots, squash and other orange fruits and vegetables. Not just candied yams at Thanksgiving anymore, sweet potatoes are an amazing package of vitamins and minerals as well as being high in fiber. One baked sweet potato with provide significant amounts of phosphorus, vitamin E, thiamin, iron, copper, magnesium, pantothenic acid, potassium, vitamin B6, manganese, vitamin C and vitamin A (over 1,000% RDA).

Green Avocados have gotten a bad reputation as being high in fat. But they are also high in fiber, folate, potassium, pantothenic acid, vitamin C and vitamin B6. Go green, like honeydew melons, green peas, spinach, and collards to supply important carotenoids that reduce the risk of cataracts and macular degeneration. Also included in the green group of vegetables are broccoli, Brussels sprouts, and cabbage, which are, like cauliflower, cruciferous vegetables and contain powerful carcinogen blockers.

Red Add tomatoes to your diet to provide lycopene, an antioxidant associated with a lower risk of prostate cancer and cardiovascular disease. Surprisingly, cooked tomato products are richer in lycopene than uncooked tomatoes. You can also get the benefits of lycopene from watermelon and pink grapefruit, plus vitamins A and C. Don't peel your apples! The skin of a Red Delicious is packed with two very powerful phytochemicals called epicatechin and procyanidin. Apples are also rich in pectin, a fiber that has a high capacity to absorb water and improve regularity.

Purple/Blue Eat purple grapes or drink Concord grape juice to provide quercetin in your diet. Quercetin has been identified as an important phytochemical in the prevention of blood clots. Blueberries, plums, purple cabbage, eggplant and purple onion provide another phytochemical group prevalent in purple food, anthocyanins. These anti-oxidant phytochemicals have been linked with preserved memory and brain function during the aging process.

Add color to your plate. Your eyes will enjoy the sight and your body will be receiving important nutrients vital for optimum health.

Jean Fisher - http://www.whatsfordinner.net

About the author:
Jean Fisher is a former elementary school teacher. Her website

How to Supercharge an Aging Brain

Copyright 2006 Mary Desaulniers My parents were in their early fifties when I turned 22 and the chasm that separated us seemed unbridgeable. My father had his hat and tie on everywhere he went even when he mowed the lawn. My mother kept indoors most of the time and warned us girls that no man would marry a woman made brown by the sun. I used to wonder if their brains had turned to mush. Now I look at my 22 year old son and chuckle at the chasm that yawns between us. With his mp3 looped permanently over his neck, pants baggy and cuffed, he looks like an alien from a distant star. I have no doubt...

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Learn About Microdermabrasion

Being the largest organ of our body, it is hardly surprising that the skin takes much of people's attention, care and money. While women have always been keen in doing painstaking ways to take care of their skin, men are also beginning to pay attention to their skin. It is a known fact that skin consists of numerous cells. Every day, a good number of these cells die to be substituted by new ones. Aging disrupts the normal flow of this process and this results in various skin problems, such as dullness, wrinkles and dark blotches. Fortunately, technology has come a long way in helping people bring...

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