Healthy Food

Whole Food Is Healthy Food

Anyone who knows me will be quick to tell you I‘m big on healthy eating, and I’ve been that way most all of my life. Welcome to our Healthy Food page! You’ll find there is plenty of basic information on this page relating to whole foods, and the many page links to pages of interest below.

Even if you’re already committed to a healthy diet, you’ll still find useful information here.

Are you getting the basics right? There are many reasons getting the basics right is so important if you wish to succeed with your healthy diet and lifestyle approach. A healthy diet is not that hard to adopt and maintain, but you need to get the foundation right first, just like building a house. Everybody knows a house build on a poor foundation will never last, with the first big strom it’s gone.

A Healthy Diet Contains Many Vital Nutrients

Your body is nourished and protected by your diet, especially when you consume a whole foods diet. Many valuable nutrients found in food support good health and shield your body from illness.

A poor diet and supplements cannot and never will replace the effects of nutritious whole foods.


Let’s look at the most important categories of essential elements that our bodies require through diet and nutrition:

  • Minerals and vitamins. Although vitamins and minerals are only required in negligible amounts by your body, they are essential to your health. However, Western diets, which are low in whole foods like fresh produce and heavy in processed food, are often vitamin and mineral deficient. Your risk of illness can significantly increase because of these inadequacies. Vitamin C, D, and folate deficiencies can weaken your immune system, affect your heart, and increase your cancer risk.
  • Plant compounds. Vegetables, fruits, beans, and grains are all nutritious foods that include a variety of useful substances, including antioxidants and many more. Antioxidants shield cells from harm that may otherwise result in illness.  Diets high in polyphenol antioxidants reduce the risk of heart disease, diabetes, dementia, and depression.
  • Fiber. Fiber is a crucial component of a balanced diet. It supports healthy digestion and excretion while also feeding the good bacteria in your stomach. As a result, high-fiber foods, including fruits, grains, beans, and vegetables, work to strengthen your immune system, reduce inflammation, and guard against disease. Conversely, a low-fiber diet is linked to a higher risk of diseases like colon cancer and stroke.
  • Protein. Protein’s building blocks, amino acids, support immune system health, muscle synthesis, metabolism, and growth, whereas fats offer energy and aid in nutrition absorption.
  • Carbohydrates. Foods that contain healthy carbohydrates are whole grains, vegetables, fruits and beans, and legumes. These foods promote good health by delivering vitamins, minerals, fiber, and a host of other important phytonutrients.
  • Fats. Whole, nutritious foods that contain fat play a variety of vital purposes in your body. Omega-3 fatty acids, which are present in foods like fatty fish, have anti-inflammatory properties that benefit heart and immunological health.

 

Your BEST Diet and Lifestyle Depends on TWO THINGS:

 

1. It Takes Time and Patience To Adopt Healthy Habits

A glass of fresh and pure waterJust like it takes time to achieve anything worthwhile in your life, there are no exceptions. It takes time and patience to integrate healthy ways of eating and living into your daily life, but you’ll find they lay the foundation for good health and wellbeing. For example, learn to drink a glass of water when you get up each morning, make it an “automatic habit”, like brushing your teeth before bedtime. I hope you do.

When you get into your car, for example, you always fasten your seat belt as soon as you get inside. You give little thought to what you’re doing, or even why you’re doing it. It’s automatic, you just DO IT. Your brain loves routines because they save it time and energy. When you automate everyday tasks, you release mental capability that can apply to other tasks. You become both healthy and efficient when you learn to automate healthy ways of eating and living. Like drinking water, or eating more vegetables, or getting up from your desk and going for a walk.

The thing with eating well and staying well takes time, commitment and persistence. Bur it is SO worth it when it all comes together. This FIRST step is about awareness of WHAT you are eating. The second step we’ll get into now is about your body, allowing it time to adjust.

 

2. You Need To Allow Your Body Time To Adjust

Many people want to make healthy changes when they are unwell or sick. The fact is that many people become impatient and want to go from feeling bad to good quickly. In fact, literally days or weeks, even if they have been unwell for many years. When you learn to take your health more seriously and make the changes that enable your body to repair and heal itself, it may produce additional symptoms. Technology is making us impatient, according to research.

A survey suggests says that in our society of immediacy, our patience runs out within seconds. Literally…seconds.

For example, if you are on a weight loss program, your body will need to adjust to the lowered levels of insulin, cholesterol and blood pressure. You should experience some weight reduction as well, and for some this can be dramatic, for others it will be minimal.

With all these changes occurring in your body, there will almost certainly be emotional and psychological changes as well, so allow yourself time to adjust to these changes. Over time, as your healthy eating habits become more regular and your health improves, you’ll find it harder to slip back into old ways.


Click on Healthy Eating and read a comprehensive page that can teach you the best ways to eat and living healthy. There are the several links you can click to direct you to different pages containing plenty of useful information. Links also include pages about your best food choices, shopping on budget, best supplements, the best lifestyle changes to make and more.

Click on Links to Pages of Interest

healthy food searchInteresting Healthy Food SEO Facts

I’ve taken up a new interest, SEO, and been studying health and diet SEO related terms. You may like to know a few SEO facts regarding the online search query for the term “healthy food”. SEO, of course, means Search Engine Optimisation, that boring analytical stuff that many would rather avoid.

The search term “healthy foods and diet” returned a Google result of 178 million results, a sign of many people using the internet to search for healthy food and diet information. Interestingly, you’ll find almost 40 million google results for the query “healthy food and diet SEO”, a sign of many people competing for better online rankings.

Some USA monthly search terms related to healthy food:

  • 5.4K    healthy food McDonalds
  • 8.1K     healthy food ideas
  • 74K     healthy food store near me
  • 14.8K  healthy foods to lose weight
  • 18.1K   healthy foods to eat
  • 90.5K  healthy food recipes
  • 550K   healthy food near me

This makes me think people are looking where to eat healthy food (healthy food near me) rather than to prepare healthy food (healthy food recipes). But the cool thing is there are over five thousand searches per month in America for healthy Mc Donald’s food choices. And that’s nice to know that it’s not all about Coke and fries at the golden arches for some.

Click on Links to Categories of Interest

Here is a list if you want to access any of the Healthy Food (nutrition)categories. You can also scroll down further and access these same categories, and find articles further down below this page.


Natural Medicines and Home Remedies

All Nutrition

Vitamin C

Vitamin C is a water-soluble vitamin that can be found in citrous fruits and vegetables as well as in dietary supplements. Vitamin C is a necessary for tissue repair, collagen formation, and neurotransmitter enzymatic production.

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Copper

Copper is a vital mineral for the human body. It helps the body create red blood cells when combined with iron. It aids in the maintenance of healthy bones, blood vessels, nerves, and immunological function, as well as iron absorption....

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Boron

Boron is a dietary trace element found primarily in plants. Boron supplementation can markedly reduce urinary excretion of calcium and magnesium, and is a particularly important trace element for postmenopausal women. The bigger minerals receive most attention from the researchers,...

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Vanadium

Vanadium is a trace element needed for cellular metabolism and in the formation of bones, cartilage, and teeth and required for normal growth and development. Vanadium is absorbed in the intestines and stored in the liver and bones. Insulin-like effect-...

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Zinc

Zinc is a nutrient that plays many vital roles in your body. Because your body doesn’t naturally produce zinc, you must obtain it through food or supplements. This article explains what you need to know about zinc, including its functions,...

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Selenium

Even if you've never heard of selenium, it's an essential component for your health. Selenium is an important mineral, which means you must get it through your food. It's only required in trace amounts, yet it's critical for vital bodily...

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