Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Re: Improving Intelligence with Diet

Paul,

:)

I will watch the video later........

thank you for sharing.........

i am not sure it addresses the problem directly moreso than providing
intellectual reasoning, but i will find out i guess.

On May 16, 7:06 pm, Paul <paul.mcglot...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks for your fair and honest answer. Yes tis' true some folks do
> have trouble breaking their high calorie habits.
> When we are consulting with people about it, I never talk with them
> about eating less. Rather we focus on the biochemistry of happiness,
> as demonstrated in this video:
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fWPr58UWmOc&feature=player_embedded
>
> Once that is in place, reducing calories is easy. It does not mean
> eating less food after all.
>
> One more thing. Let's say someone for whatever reason does not want to
> follow a low-calorie lifestyle. Still we suggest to take time to
> understand the biochemistry of CR and how cells adapt to fewer
> calories, less amino acids, etc. They should also study what happens
> when excess ATP is added to a cell. That may be very beneficial for
> judging whether or not to take a particular supplement, for example.
> It is one thing to overeat. It is adding fuel to the fire to
> exacerbate that  biochemistry with a supplement that might provide
> increased energy and perhaps a higher n-back score for a little while,
> and over the years might destroy neurons and a whole lot of other
> things.
>
> I always appreciate your gentility, BTW. It contributes to valuable
> exchanges on this forum.
>
> Paul
>
> On May 16, 12:08 am, whoisbambam <smath...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > not such an easy task for some of us.........a friend of mine just
> > cant seem to control his appetite..........
>
> > nothing he has tried seems to work............
>
> > On May 15, 8:30 pm, Paul <paul.mcglot...@gmail.com> wrote:> Recently, a new group member asked if at 35 years, he could could
> > > improve I.Q.( GQ). I suggest that intelligence improvement may be
> > > facilitated by limiting calories:
>
> > > Cognitive Performances Are Selectively Enhanced during Chronic Caloric
> > > Restriction or Resveratrol Supplementation in a Primate
>
> > > Abstract
>
> > > SNIP

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