Grounding can help to create a sense of personal calm, making it easier to stay present during stressful times. Here are three ways to practice grounding in your daily life.
Use olive oil, avocado oil, ghee, small amounts of grass-fed butter and/or coconut oil in cooking. Avoid and eliminate as much as possible seed oils in cooking and packaged foods. Seed oils include: canola oil, corn oil, peanut oil, vegetable oil, sesame oil, soybean oil, safflower oil and sunflower oil. These oils are industrially processed and highly inflammatory to our bodies.
Common legumes include lentils, peas, and beans, such as pinto beans, red beans, white beans and soybeans. They’re full of nutritional riches and are a very healthy, protein-packed alternative to meat.
Legumes help lower LDL cholesterol, non-HDL cholesterol, blood sugar and insulin levels, and may even lower cancer risk.
Nuts and seeds have been proven to modestly lower LDL cholesterol levels. To avoid blood- pressure raising salt, choose raw or dry- roasted, unsalted varieties. To avoid gaining weight, don’t eat more than one ounce daily since nuts and seeds are dense with calories (averaging about 175 calories per ounce).
Foods naturally rich in soluble fiber have proven particularly good at lowering cholesterol. Excellent sources include oats, oat bran, barley, peas, yams, sweet potatoes and other potatoes, as well as legumes or beans, such as pinto beans, black beans, garbanzo beans, and peas.
Vegetables rich in soluble fiber include carrots, Brussels sprouts, beets, okra, and eggplant. Good fruit sources are berries, passion fruit, oranges, pears, apricots, nectarines, and apples.
Losing excess weight is beneficial for all sorts of reasons, from improving your cholesterol profile to preventing diseases epidemic in industrialized societies, including type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, heart attacks, strokes, gout and many types of cancer.
Do keep in mind that it’s important to limit fat intake, even so-called “good” fats like olive oil, because any fat is dense with calories, which means heavy consumption can easily lead to weight gain.
Processed and refined sugars cause blood sugar balance issues due to insulin resistance. This can in turn affect different components of the cholesterol panel.
This also includes reducing or eliminating artificial sweeteners (sucralose, aspartame. sucralose, acesulfame K, saccharin, xylitol). Artificial and processed sugars have been linked to chronic health issues.
Aim for less than 25 grams of added sugar daily.
“If your LDL levels are still too high after trying these 6 nutrition-based approaches, talk to your doctor about cholesterol-lowering medications like statins, but give these 6 tips your best shot,” encourages Dr. Seth Marquit, MD, Medical Director at the Pritikin Longevity Center. “The right eating plan can be powerfully beneficial – and there are no adverse side effects."
If you need help taking control of your cholesterol levels to improve your health, First Stop Health dietitians are ready! Visit the app or go to app.fshealth.com to request a visit.