June-Marie Raw Food and Fitness Health misc videos 023 – Video
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The Social View with Christina D Wagner Results Health and Fitness 8 11 – Video
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June-Marie Raw Food and Fitness Health misc videos 011 – Video
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Health Hound Announces New Allergy Report After Study Reveals Seasonal Allergies Prevents Sufferers From Fitness Goals
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Houston, TX. (PRWEB) August 12, 2012
After a new study from AllergEase, LLC showed that many people with seasonal allergies allow their symptoms to get in the way of their health and fitness regimen, Henry the Health Hound announced a new allergy report. The company, which aims to help people stay healthy, lose weight and avoid scam healthcare offers announced the new seasonal allergy report to help those who suffer from allergies overcome their symptoms so they can maintain a healthy lifestyle. The new offer was announced after the reveal of the study, and the health investigation company hopes that many who see the results of this study and the impact that allergies can have on their weight loss and exercise goals, will get help in dealing with allergy symptoms.
The new report aims to educate consumers on healthy, proven ways to deal with seasonal allergies so these individuals can overcome their symptoms and lead the symptom free lifestyle they want. The promotion, which will provide subscribers with real, proven information on effective seasonal allergy treatments will also help consumers avoid scam offers that can do more harm than good when it comes to treating allergies.
The health investigation site, which focuses oh helping consumers get proven information on weight loss and healthy living has announced the new free offer on their website, along with a free newsletter on weight loss for those who have found their allergies have gotten in the way of their fitness regimen. The new healthhound.org offer is available to any individual looking for proven facts on handling allergy symptoms and on proven ways to lose weight and get healthier even when things like allergies make fitness routines difficult.
To find out more about the company and their new weight loss product reviews, visit: http://www.healthhound.org/.
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Health Hound Announces New Allergy Report After Study Reveals Seasonal Allergies Prevents Sufferers From Fitness Goals
Twenty golden moments of the 2012 Games
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LONDON (Reuters) - The London Olympics were packed with sporting highlights, personal dramas and emotional highs and lows. Here are 20 golden moments from the Games.
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Michael Phelps bows out with a record medal haul
With a lop-sided smile of satisfaction, the greatest of swimmers and possibly the greatest Olympian of all time, said farewell with one last immense performance for the U.S. relay team in the men's 4x100m medley. Final tally: 18 career golds, 22 medals. He had done everything he set out to achieve. The world of swimming has lost a titan of the pool.
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Usain Bolt wins (and wins and wins)
The world's fastest man and his Jamaica relay team mates provided three of the enduring moments of the Games. The showman opened his campaign with a Games record in the 100 metres, followed up by becoming the first man to retain his titles in the 100 and 200m - where Jamaica finished 1-2-3 - and then anchored the 4x100 relay to a world record time.
The moment where Bolt and Yohan Blake caught each others' eyes as they crossed the finish line in the 200, with the winner putting his finger to his lips to silence the young pretender, was a classic moment of theatre.
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Andy Murray winning tennis gold at Wimbledon
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Twenty golden moments of the 2012 Games
U.S. coach inspired Jamaican sprint success
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LONDON (Reuters) - Bud Winter, the American sprint coach who mentored a generation of world record-holders including Tommie Smith and John Carlos, held a series of seminars in Jamaica in 1966.
Among the attendees listening to the man who revolutionised sprint training were Glen Mills and Steven Francis. Forty-six years later Mills coaches Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake while Francis guides Asafa Powell and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce.
Between them that quartet collected three individual gold medals and three silvers at the London Olympics concluding on Sunday where a Caribbean island of 2.7 million people reaffirmed it is the cradle of world sprinting. Bolt and Blake also took gold in the men's 4x100 relay and Fraser-Pryce was in the Jamaican quartet who claimed relay silver.
Two years after Winter's visit Smith and Carlos shocked the world and infuriated the establishment when they bowed their heads and held black-gloved fists aloft during the victory ceremony for the Mexico Olympics 200 metres final.
Their silent protest on behalf of their oppressed fellow-blacks in the United States still resonates. A similar determination and pride swept through the Caribbean with the music of Bob Marley in Jamaica and the success of the West Indies cricket side.
"There is a tremendous sense of pride, if two Jamaicans run in to each other in the street they say 'Respect'," said Jason Hall, deputy director of tourism at the Jamaica Tourist Board who helped run the hugely successful Jamaica House at the London Olympics. "Respect is very important. National pride is an extension of that."
Winter's visit to Jamaica came at the invitation of Dennis Johnson, who equalled the world 100 yards records four times in the space of six weeks in 1961. Johnson was coached at San Jose State University by Winter.
On his return to Jamaica, Johnson resolved to help mentor coaches who would help produce world-class athletes. They in turn would not then feel they needed to accept university scholarships in the United States in order to progress.
BURN OUT
As a promising young athlete Hall, now 41, clocked 10.2 over the 100 metres and studied in the United States.
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U.S. coach inspired Jamaican sprint success
For Canada's Olympians at London 2010, success shouldn't only be measured by medals
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LONDON -- Eight years ago in Athens, Tonya Verbeek felt she had lost gold. She was younger then, a "little bit of a brat," in her words. "Oh, I wanted it all," she said, and when she lost the 55-kilogram women's wrestling final, she was bummed, devastated, upset.
Here in London, Verbeek had a different perspective. She was wiser now, 34 years old, almost certainly ending her Olympic career. Oh, she still wanted it all -- a gold to go with that silver and the bronze she got four years ago in Beijing. But this time, when she ran into the same brick wall in the final, three-time Olympic champion Saori Yoshida of Japan, she didn't feel like a failure.
"I stepped off that mat," she said, "feeling like I won silver.''
Experience the Olympics for long enough, and you understand everything is relative. Success is not defined strictly by medals -- for nations as well as individuals. You come. You compete. You see where you stack up. But what it means depends on the circumstances.
By one measure, these Games were a disappointment for Canada. One gold? That's the lowest total since 1976, when Canada was shut out on home soil in Montreal, and that's a poor return on millions of dollars of real money that was spent to develop these athletes -- some of it government money. The Own the Podium program is missing something -- the "w." Canadians were on the podium, but they didn't own it. With five silvers and 12 bronzes, you might call this the Bronze Age.
[ Related: Vote for Canada's most memorable Summer Olympics moments ]
But by another measure, these Games about met expectations. Canada won 18 medals, finishing 13th in the overall count. The Canadian Olympic Committee's goal was "Top 12 in 2012," but that was considered ambitious before the Games began. The totals are in line with history. Canada won 18 medals and finished 14th four years ago in Beijing. It won exactly three golds in five of the previous six Summer Games, so one isn't a big drop-off. It averaged 16.8 medals over the previous five Summer Games, so 18 ain't bad.
So much of this comes down to population and priorities and resources, and Canada is a relatively small nation of 35-million people who live in a cold climate and value winter sports most. Canada won 14 gold medals at the 2010 Winter Games, more than any other nation. Canada won 26 medals overall, third-most. Would you rather have had Sidney Crosby score the winner in ice hockey in Vancouver or the winner in field hockey in London?
"I'm not looking at medal tables," said triathlete Simon Whitfield, the Canadian flag-bearer at the Opening Ceremony. "I'm not trying to compare Canada to the Chinese. That's a fool's game. They're not going to beat us at hockey. I don't think they sit around and look at the hockey going, 'Man, those Canadians, I can't believe they beat us.' "
[ Video: Did the right hurdlers represent Canada? ]
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For Canada's Olympians at London 2010, success shouldn't only be measured by medals