|
|
|
| Step1
- The road to financial freedom is to
have great health so that you are in good shape
to learn.
|
| Step
2 - An open mindset to start learning
and practicing what you have learned. |
| Step
3 - Investing your time in your
financial & health education so that you
are in control of your life to create wealth to
enjoy a better life.
|
| Step
4 - Enjoy the wealth that you have
created because you have been taking care of
your health. |
 |
  |
 |

|
|
|
|
 |
| |
|
| |
We call Vitamin C, also known as
ascorbic acid, "the most famous of vitamins"
because it really is the best known. It is the first
one schoolchildren learn. It is the most cited cure
for the common cold. Most people can rhyme off at
least a few foods that contain vitamin C. And vitamin
C is the single most searched nutrient on the
Internet.
HISTORY: Nobel Prize winning biochemist Dr.
Albert Szent-Gyorgyi first isolated vitamin C
in 1928. (As someone of Hungarian descent, I find this
a touch exciting.)
Vitamin C first got its reputation for beating the
common cold in 1970, when fellow Nobel Prize winner
Linus Pauling published his bestselling book
"Vitamin C and the Common Cold". In it, he
suggested that taking vitamin C at levels well above
the USA RDA (now 60 milligrams per day) could
strengthen the immune system and help ward off the
common cold.
BENEFITS: Vitamin C helps form collagen, a glue-like
fibrous protein in bone, cartilage, tendons and other
connective tissue. Vitamin C helps give structure and
maintain such body parts as bones, cartilage, muscle,
veins, capillaries and teeth.
But recent studies have also linked "adequate
dosages" of vitamin C to preventing a number of
common cancers, of helping boost the nervous system,
of prolonging life, of reducing the risk of heart
disease, of softening the symptoms of respiratory
diseases such as asthma and cystic fibrosis, and of
keeping skin and glands healthy.
SOURCES: Most animals manufacture their own vitamin C.
Primates, such as humans, gorillas, and monkeys, have
somehow lost this ability.
Which is why we need to get our vitamin C from our
diets.
It is well known that citrus fruits, such as oranges,
lemons, grapefruits, tangerines, limes, mandarins and
others contain vitamin C.
In fact, vitamin C comes almost exclusively from
fruits and vegetables.
Other good sources are tomatoes, strawberries,
raspberries, broccoli, asparagus, brussels sprouts,
cauliflower, cabbage, peas, rutabagas, cantaloupe,
kiwi, papayas, potatoes and watermelon.
One place that is NOT a good source are vitamin C
pills, which the body just cannot absorb properly.
This is a water soluble vitamin best taken in its
natural juice or in a liquid supplement.
OPTIMUM USAGE: Fortunately, if you consume too much of
a water soluble vitamin, your body will get rid of
excess. It also means that your body does not store it
for long periods of time. You can't "stock
up" on it, and you can reach a saturation point
quickly; you need vitamin C several times a day.
Being a water-soluble vitamin, you lose it when you
boil foods. For instance, if you boil your broccoli,
you will lose the vitamin C. However, if you boil your
broccoli in a soup, you will get the broccoli's
vitamin C in the broth.
Do not soak or store fruits or vegetables in water,
for you can lose the vitamin C that way. In short, the
fresher cut the fruit or vegetable, and the less
cooked, the more vitamin C you will get.
Like all vitamins and minerals, Vitamin C is most
effective when combined with other nutrients. For
example, one of the big benefits of vitamin C is that
it helps the body digest and absorb iron, an essential
mineral for good health.
It has also been found that vitamin C and E work
together to help stave off Alzheimer's disease.
This is one of the reasons it is so important to take
vitamin supplements that contain as many different
nutrients as possible, so the body can absorb them
together and enjoy the maximum benefits from each one.
DOSAGE: Most experts agree that the US RDA is only a
fraction of what it should be, and that daily vitamin
C levels up to 1,000 or even 2,000 milligrams per day
are safe and healthy.
Essential Nectar contains 250% of the US RDA, mixing
it with 233 other natural, plant-based
nutrients...making it a good vitamin C supplement for
your diet.
By David Leonhardt
About The Author:
David Leonhardt runs a liquid vitamins store
online.
Learn more about vitamin C or read up on other
nutrition information.
|
| |

|
|