"There are natural things that will help you get rid of heavy metals. One great one is cilantro (which I personally hate the taste of :P) So add a little more cilantro to your diet, but be careful when you do to also stay well hydrated, as we want the freed up metals to exit your body, not redeposit themselves somewhere in your body less safe (read the brain)."<p>Maybe this is true, but for now I'm going to give it a <i>citation needed</i>.
I was 293lbs last December, 196 this morning.(6'3" male)<p>Overall this was a good read; for me it really was accepting that my lifestyle was unhealthy and making permanent changes.<p>That said I really dislike weightloss articles that speak in absolutes.<p>Cardio helping weightloss isn't a 'myth'; if you can't impose enough self control on yourself to not eat more after cardio, then sure, it might not be beneficial. I know for certain that I wouldn't have lost weight as fast without doing cardio regularly. In fact a healthy choice oftentimes begets another and I would find myself eating less on cardio days.<p>Same with protein after workouts. Sure it can be an excuse to eat more if you let it be, but if you're counting calories properly it is also a good time to intake protein.
> <i>Myth 3: If You Are Fat, Go On a Diet! – Wrong. If you are an overweight wrestler facing a weigh in, diet (here is a great one). Other wise you need to change forever. Diets are temporary. If you are overweight, you need to change some of your habits around food and exercise forever.</i><p>Speaking as a high school wrestler...my last year I had to cut from 130 to 112...most of it was water weight though I tried to keep under 1,000 calories a day. After the season, I gained that weight back in about 3 days, and then an extra 10 pounds that I have never been able to lose (not that I'd want to be less than 130 pounds). Not contradicting the OP...just pointing out, even if you are a wrestler, season-long dieting sucks :)<p>Also, one mistake that I hear of from casual dieters/exercisers...getting excited about losing 1-2 pounds after their first day of a decent workout and light meal...and then getting depressed a couple of days later when that weight ticks back up. Over that short period of time, that weight is almost definitely just water weight...for wrestling, we obsessively weighed ourselves...and the number of pounds (of water) you could lose in a 2 hour workout was always impressive. Taking a short piss was almost a sure way of losing at least half a pound. And even if you stopped eating the day before weigh-ins, did a normal workout, and restricted your water usage...you could expect to be at least a pound lighter by weigh-ins early morning due to water loss through respiration during sleeping.
I originally wrote this up for friends and family, but thought the crowd here might find valuable to hear from someone who thinks similarity.<p>As Bruce Lee said so well: Absorb what is useful, Discard what is not, Add what is uniquely your own.<p>Hope it helps someone and Happy New Year!
The formatting on that page makes it very difficult to read. The text is overflowing its column and the 'share with twitter' bar on the left covers left had side text and I can't get rid of it. I'm on chrome, mac.<p>The content sounds interesting, but the page has been formatted poorly.
I wrote this up for friends and family, but thought this crowd might find it valuable to hear from someone who maybe thinks similarly.<p>As Bruce Lee put it: Absorb what is useful, Discard what is not, Add what is uniquely your own.<p>Hope it helps someone and Happy New Year!