About Me

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Rockport, Texas, United States
Just a regular gal..nuthin special...loves God, her family, friends, music (classic/southern rock blues,etc), old time radio, pets/animals, cooking....sometimes the government and society we are living in (will let you know how they are doing from my perspective as it goes)...My morals and values come from another time in space according to "kids" of today! I know the white picket fence does not exsist...but come on! Some of it still has to be out there somewhere!? Van Halen and "that little ol' band from Tx" are my music toppers, Uncle Lucius (xoxo Kevin)...(gasp) and can't forget my boys in Nickelback...special to my heart (long story) and last but not least..Retro FX (local group) that my Nephew Bruce is in!...old westerns and 40's movies/tv series...too much to state here...will write a page on what i like and don't like. P.S. There are some pics I do not own and have gotten off the internet or have been sent to me by friends....PINK rocks!

Friday, May 23, 2014

Today's..."lmao pics"

Love to laugh till I cry...lol.

Sorry..

I am having a hard time with my blog due to the fact that I am unable to check the post on my laptop. EVERYTHING is going through my mobile. If you have overlap on PC view, please let me know and view on mobile. Renee'

Recipes....

Send me your favorite recipe...easy enough for anyone to make, and I will share it here.

Carbs...so confusing

I did not write this information,   credit is noted in article. NOW I understand carbs better!

Naturopath Connect
A Learning Resource

The Truth About Carbohydrates
Good Carbs Bad Carbs

Carbohydrates have become a hotly debated topic when it comes to good nutrition. The high-protein, low-carb diet fads have produced desirable results for many people who have been unable to shed unwanted pounds in the past. However, this temporary result has fooled many people into believing that severely restricting carbs is the answer to weight loss. While initially it may work, many people can’t keep up with the severe carb restriction. Once they reintroduce carbs into their diet, they gain the weight back, and add on more pounds than ever before.

Americans are struggling with carbs. The Standard American Diet (SAD) is overloaded with non-nutritive carbohydrates, such as refined sugar, white flour, and heavily processed foods that have been stripped of their nutrition.

As a result, the calorie consumption of many Americans has gone up dramatically, while the nutrient value has gone down. The unused calories that are not burned up by the body are stored as fat. As a result, many people feel hungry, have more cravings, and eat more—while losing ground in maintaining adequate nutrition. This sets the stage for chronic problems with obesity, diabetes, hormone imbalances, and significant nutrient deficiencies that lead to chronic conditions.

A strict, high-protein diet is only a “quick fix.” While it may offset the problems surrounding a non-nutritive, high-carb diet, this solution will not last. Carbs are the primary source of “quickly available fuel” for the body, and the body naturally yearns for these when blood sugar levels are low. When carbs are severely restricted from the diet, the body doesn’t have enough energy to sustain itself, and it starts using its fat stores. That’s how most people initially lose weight, but they gain it back when they reintroduce carbs.

Restricting carbs is not the answer. It’s actually unhealthy in the long run to severely restrict carbohydrates from your diet. Optimal nutrition and an ideal body weight require a healthy balance of good fats, good proteins, and good carbohydrates.

A healthy balance is best. Each person’s protein, fat, and carbohydrate requirements are unique based on his or her individual biochemistry. In general, the Zone Diet provides healthy recommendations by adhering to the 40-30-30 rule:

40% of calories should come from carbohydrates.
30% of calories should come from protein. (Read more about good protein and bad protein.)
30% of calories should come from fats. (Read more about good fats and bad fats.)
Acceptable ranges for children are similar to those for adults, except that infants and younger children need a slightly higher proportion of fat (30% to 40%). During childhood, the brain is the fastest-growing organ and it’s made up of 60% fat. A severe, low-fat diet may have long-term negative health implications.
A word of caution to vegetarians: Many vegetarians unknowingly eat too many carbs and suffer from severe vitamin and mineral deficiencies due to the lack of complete proteins in their diet. Without proper medical guidance, many vegetarians put themselves at risk for osteoporosis (calcium deficiency), anemia (iron deficiency), hair loss (zinc deficiency), fatigue, and poor wound healing. Also, vegetarians can suffer from vitamin B-12 deficiency, because plant sources don’t provide bioavailable B-12. Vegetarians should consider taking a high-quality vitamin B-complex supplement.

Good Carbs

The truth is not all carbs are bad! Just like fat and protein, the human body cannot survive without carbohydrates. The key to good health is choosing high-quality, nutrient-dense, low-glycemic carbs, while avoiding the non-nutritive, empty carbs that are all too commonly found in today’s modern American diet.

Many carbs ARE good for you. “Good” carbs are low-glycemic foods that gradually increase your blood sugar levels over time, posing much less of a burden on the pancreas to produce insulin. Unlike bad carbs, they are whole foods packed with nutrients that the body needs to function. Good carbs are best when eaten in their natural, raw state, and they are considered “living foods.”

Good carbs contain less calories, so you can eat more! Good carbs are less calorie-dense than bad carbs. For example, you can eat a whole apple in exchange for just one bite of a cinnamon roll. Once you start eating good carbs, you can actually eat more food, which surprises many people trying to lose weight.

Bad Carbs

Many carbs are not good for you. “Bad” carbs are defined as non-nutritive, high-glycemic foods that spike your blood sugar too rapidly. These include heavily processed foods that contain refined sugar, refined white flour, additives, chemicals, and preservatives.

Bad carbs lead to blood sugar problems. Glucose (blood sugar) is converted into energy with the help of insulin, a hormone produced by the pancreas. If the body is repeatedly bombarded by high-glycemic foods, the delicate balance between glucose and insulin begins to break down. If this situation is left unchecked for a long period of time, insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes can develop, and the pancreas can shut down altogether. Once the pancreas stops producing insulin or produces too little, oral medications and/or injections are needed to provide the necessary insulin that the body requires to convert glucose into energy.

Bad carbs will cause you to gain weight. When the body receives too much energy (empty calories) all at once from high-glycemic carbs, the energy has to go somewhere. As a result, excess energy is stored as fat, so you’ll start to see the pounds accumulate around your middle, thighs, buttocks, and other areas of the body. These excess fat stores put you at increased risk for heart disease, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, stroke, and many other chronic conditions.

Bad carbs cause nutrient deficiencies. If your diet is mainly composed of non-nutritive, high-glycemic carbs, you become prone to nutrient deficiencies that lead to chronic conditions. Foods that contain refined sugar, processed flour, chemicals, preservatives, and additives are mostly void of nutrients. Even though you’re eating large quantities (2000 calories or more per day is the average), your body still craves more food to try to get the nutrients it requires to function.

Dietary Recommendations

Choose organic low-glycemic carbs:
Raw, green, leafy vegetables
Sweet potatoes
Whole fruits with peel
Sprouted Nuts and seeds
Choose whole grains (never refined):
Barley
Brown rice
Buckwheat
Bulgur (cracked wheat)
Millet
Oatmeal
Sprouted-grain breads
Wild rice6
Choose healthy saturated fats such as virgin coconut oil, known to help control blood sugar levels.
Incorporate healthy fiber like organic flax meal, to help promote digestive regularity, and help control blood sugar levels.
Drink purified water instead of fruit juice, carbonated soda, and/or sugary drinks.
Foods to AVOID include:

High-glycemic carbs like white potatoes, white bread, baked goods, and processed snacks
All foods that contained refined sugar in any form
All foods that contain white flour
Instant grains. Instant rice, wheat, and oatmeal are actually not any better for you than refined sugar. They are processed grains that spike blood sugar levels rapidly.
Fruit juices. They do not contain the fiber that normally slows down the digestive process, which leads to spiked blood sugar levels. Also, drinking is an easy way to add unwanted calories to your diet very quickly, because it’s easy to drink very large quantities in a short amount of time.
Caffeine. Caffeine inhibits healthy blood sugar control.
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Thursday, March 13, 2014

Real food from REAL recipes

Recipes online...

Majority of the time my recipes NEVER turn out like the posters pic nor have the same outcome. Do they actually prepare these recipes or make them up? I try to read the reviews and then decide if I should make it or not. 80% of the reviews had: major changes... must really not been that good in the first place, or said it was a total flop! Okay...how can it be a total flop when others praised it? My eggs...flour...milk...whatever should be no different than yours. Even on the big sites like Betty Crocker and others I've experienced the same thing. Maybe I should start a web page for sharing recipes just among peeps I know. Some peeps post recipes to FB but don't say if they've actually tried it out (yeah..it looks good in the pic you posted). My Daddy made up a cookbook for his daughters that contained our Mama's best recipes. He made notes on each one reflecting how it tasted and sometimes the occasion we had it....also stated if it was a keeper, but just not to his liking. I'm gonna quit experimenting online and stick to the tried an true recipes from family and friends...otherwise its turning out to be a real waste of my money! Let me know your view on this.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Monday, March 10, 2014

Sunday, March 9, 2014

DADDY

OMG...happy belated birthday Daddy! I remembered yesterday but forgot to post...my bad. Miss you...xoxo #4

Obamacrap

ObamaCRAP...yes that's what I said! I'm just soooo boiling mad at this government of ours. Seems it just gets better an better the older, and wiser, I get. All of us Americans are to have MANDATORY health insurance by the end of March.... Dictatorship? I have tried and tried to get all the information I can regarding Obama Care.... got very upsetting. You have to "shop" for a company that will give you the best deal in health insurance. Wellllll....the best I can come up with is a joke! In a nutshell...the government/IRS have a scam going on. Here's why: I qualify for the tax credit thingy (like that word?) where my monthly premium will be reduced by about $400.00.  If it can be reduced that much, why not just charge that much less and who is getting/benefitting from that money? My subsidy taken off the premium still leaves me unable to afford a policy that is any better than me paying cash as I do now. I can pay a premium anywhere between $11.00 to $110.00 (my price range) monthly and get NOTHING in return! To get any benefits paid by insurance company....I have to pay deductible first. Deductible = $5000.00 to $6000.00! Unless I get hit by a Mack truck, I'm never going to meet that deductible in a year. So...back to nutshell...my health care will be as it is now...paying cash for everything, but I also get to give the government/IRS/insurance Co. (whoever) money for nothing! I have decided to wait till August when I qualify for medicare through SSDI. I'll be damned if I'm going to just "give" away,  even $11.00, for nothing! Thought this crap was suppose to help us out....yes the insurance is affordable....but you get NO BENEFITS!!!! I'll throw $ out the window first! I could not even get a copy of all the coverage unless I paid the premium first. Also....none of the companies covered my meds....and meds are included in paying of the deductible. Sooooo.....lol....how much is the penalty for no insurance? I feel better for getting this off my chest...it's a sad shape our country is in...Obamacrap is just one problem that joker has in the works....hell...I didn't vote for him!!!!
p.s. okay.....so it's a big nutshell...a Brazil nutshell.

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Mama and I both loved bluebonnets.

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