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Books > Health, Home & Family > Cookery / food & drink etc > Health & wholefood cookery > General
'It's a great place to start if you're set to get fighting fit' -
New! Magazine 'This woman will change how you exercise forever' -
YOU Magazine FEEL-GOOD FOOD AND FITNESS. UNBELIEVABLE RESULTS.
Fitness guru Krissy Cela wants to transform your life with her
360-degree approach to exercise, eating well and mindset, with
results that really work. Happy Healthy Strong is a simple and
achievable plan that you can do at home, focusing on three key
elements for life-long success: - Train Your Brain - to build your
mental strength - Fuel Your Life - more than 80 easy, delicious
recipes to keep your body strong and satisfied - Move Move Move -
over 45 at-home exercises, complete with build-your-own workout
guides for every level Looking after your body and mind is the most
important thing you can do for happiness and wellbeing; it means so
much more than a number on the scales. Through Krissy's
tried-and-tested advice, you will feel great and get results you've
never thought possible, with a programme you can stick to for life.
With Happy Healthy Strong, you can say goodbye to yo-yo dieting,
feel great, and live a life that truly empowers you.
Vegan or carnivore? Vegetarian or gluten-free? Keto or
Mediterranean? Fasting or Paleo? Our relationship to food is filled
with confusion and insecurity. Every day we hear about a new
ingredient that is good or bad, a new diet that promises
everything. But the truth is that none of those labels matter. The
secret to becoming healthier, losing weight, living a pain-free and
energetic life and healing the planet has nothing to do with
counting calories, reducing portion sizes or feeling deprived - the
key is re-learning how to eat like a human. This means finding food
that is as nutrient-dense as possible, and preparing that food
using methods that release those nutrients and make them safe and
bioavailable to our bodies, which is exactly what allowed our
ancestors, millions of years ago, to not only live but thrive.
Archaeologist and primitive technologist Dr Bill Schindler draws on
cutting-edge science and a lifetime of research to show readers how
to live like modern 'hunter-gatherers' by using the same strategies
our ancestors used - as well as techniques still practiced by many
cultures around the world - to make food as safe, nutritious,
bioavailable and delicious as possible. With each chapter dedicated
to a specific food group, in-depth explanations of different foods
and cooking techniques and concrete takeaways, as well as 75+
recipes, Eat Like a Human will permanently change the way you think
about food, and help you live a happier, healthier, and more
connected life.
There was a time when garden designer Cleve West questioned the
importance of his role as a garden designer. Two things changed his
mind: designing a garden for a hospital and adopting a vegan
lifestyle. Cleve's transition to veganism was a profound and varied
learning experience. He learned more about nutrition than when he
studied it as part of a sports science degree. He learned a great
deal about propaganda in the food industry and how, contrary to
what he'd been led to believe, the cows and chickens in the dairy
industry are far from 'happy'. He learned that animal agriculture
is a leading cause of climate change and a whole range of
environmental catastrophes. He found that many illnesses have their
origins in the consumption of animal products. He learned that a
plant-based diet can alleviate some of these illnesses and
sometimes even reverse them. He learned that a drive towards a
plant-based diet could offset many of the environmental aspects of
animal agriculture and make a positive transition to a more
sustainable future. Everything started falling into place. It was
all about plants. Suddenly, his role as a garden designer didn't
seem so trivial after all. The Garden of Vegan charts Cleve's
journey from its tentative beginnings to an understanding of the
restorative power of gardens and a realization that some of the
most destructive aspects of the Anthropocene can be mitigated or
even fixed by plants.
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