Maximizing Your Health & Fitness While
Maintaining a Compassionate Lifestyle
Ulysses Press
Text Copyright 2013 Ben Greene and Brett Stewart. Design and concept Copyright 2013 Ulysses Press and its licensors. Photographs Copyright 2013 Rapt Productions except as noted below. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
Published in the United States by
Ulysses Press
P.O. Box 3440
Berkeley, CA 94703
www.ulyssespress.com
ISBN13: 978-1-61243-161-1
Library of Congress Control Number 2012951896
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Acquisitions Editor: Keith Riegert
Managing Editor: Claire Chun
Editor: Lily Chou
Proofreader: Lauren Harrison
Index: Sayre Van Young
Design and layout: what!design @ whatweb.com
Interior photographs: Rapt Productions except pages 65 and 75 Brett Stewart
Cover photographs: quinoa Foodpictures/shutterstock.com; man Kzenon/shutterstock.com; woman
Aleksandr Markin/shutterstock.com; edamame ponsulak kunsub/shutterstock.com; butternut squash
sarsmis/shutterstock.com
Please Note
This book has been written and published strictly for informational and educational purposes only, and in no way should be used as a substitute for consultation with health care professionals. You should not consider educational material herein to be the practice of medicine or to replace consultation with a physician or other medical practitioner. You should always consult with your physician before altering or changing any aspect of your medical treatment and/or undertaking a diet regimen, including the guidelines as described in this book. The author and publisher are providing you with information in this work so that you can have the knowledge and can choose, at your own risk, to act on that knowledge. The author and publisher also urge all readers to be aware of their health status and to consult health care professionals before beginning any health or diet program.
This book is dedicated to my familyMom, Dad, Bryan, Jonathan, Dominic, Sidney and Bailey. I love you guys more than I could ever express with words!
Ben
Dear Mom, you were right about the broccoli.
Brett
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Hi, Im Brett from 7weekstofitness.com, and Ive been lucky enough to publish quite a few fitness books with some amazing professional athletes, trainers, nutritionists and coaches. Being a fitness author, Im surrounded by healthy and passionate individuals of all ages who represent all levels of fitness, and each one has a story to tell and a lesson to teach. At 42 years old, I can confidently say Im the fittest Ive ever been thanks to tips, tricks and sound fitness and nutritional advice Ive learned from my coauthors, training partners, friends and clients. While Ive never officially been a practicing veg*n (vegetarian or vegan), when I met my coauthor Ben Greene for the first time, I knew my life would change forever. Ben is a bright, young, energetic athlete whose love for the sport of triathlon and passion for being a vegan was introduced to me by a mutual friend; along with that chance encounter came a wealth of knowledge about eating more healthily, treating my bodyand not coincidentally the Earthwith more respect and developing a deeper connection with the choices I make when Im fueling my body for training, racing or even daily activities. Ben practices what he (quietly) preaches, and has the physique and success as a trainer and athlete to back it up.
The addition of Corey Irwin, a running coach, athlete and outstanding chef with an unstoppable drive for tinkering with and perfecting recipes to the max, was extremely fortuitous as she was just beginning to write her own series of cookbooks. We were lucky enough to get some of her time (OK, hundreds of hours) to devote to the delicious vegan recipes youll find throughout the book. Coreys popularity online and in print as a contributor to many publications was an added bonus, as her devoted readers could share this journey along with Ben and me as we crafted this book.
Brett Stewart
Phoenix, Arizona
2013
You are what you eat. Apparently, Mom knew what she was talking aboutif only we would listen!
Weve all heard that phrase and dismiss it as simple rhetoric. Even with tons of documentation from research and nutritional information right at our fingertips, most people fail to comprehend that simple statement and make the necessary correlation: The food we consume is such an important factor in our health, energy, well-being and ability to function on a daily basis that it should be chosen carefully based on intelligent, well-informed information.
Theres no question that individuals living in the twenty-first century have in-depth data readily available about the nutritional values of certain foods and dangers of others. The disconnect lies in how few people actually spend the time to do even cursory research before deciding what to ingest. Every minute of every day, millions of people are turning a blind eye to the dangers of the foods they consume, whether it be by eating inherently unhealthy items that they know are bad for them or by unwittingly ingesting unseen pesticides, bacteria or hormones that lurk in their food choices.
From drive-thrus to fad diets, the overwhelming majority of individuals in modernized countries focus on the ease and convenience of food rather than the actual content of their meals. There are now generations of humans who have existed with convenience food in millions of different combinations. This societal shift has all but erased the decision-making process based on food availability or quality and replaced it with choices based on flavor: Do you want Thai or Mexican food?
The numbers behind the trends are staggering. On average, a single American consumes 200 pounds of meat, poultry and fish per year. Comparing that amount of ingested animal protein to what it was just 50 years ago, the increase is nearly 25 percentor 50 pounds more per individual. Protein intake has ballooned to approximately 110 grams per day (nearly double what the USDA recommends for healthy, active adults), with nearly 80 percent of those amino acids coming from animal flesh, eggs and dairy.
Not coincidentally, the average weight of Americans has risen steadily over the last five decades by approximately 25 pounds, and obesity has run rampant throughout our society. Males of nearly 200 pounds and females of 165 pounds (just 35 pounds less) have become the norm, with many nutritionists attributing this weight gain to our penchant for eating animal proteins three times per day, at an average of a half-pound total.