The "All You Can Eat" Diet
Make Smart Choices About What To Eat But Never Go Hungry
von William B. Ashton
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Über das Buch
My doctor reassured me that a 250 count was just fine and I shouldn’t be concerned. But I didn’t believe him. I began running every day. My cholesterol count began to drop a little every year (I have had annual exams since 30) but it never got down to the 200 level until several years later when I decided to drastically change my eating habits.
I stopped eating the greasy hamburgers I loved several times a week and began eating lean white chicken breast instead. Gradually I began to eat more and more fish and less chicken as I grew to love fish even more than the old hamburgers. And I radically increased my consumption of fruits and vegetables . . . literally eating them whenever I got a hunger pang.
An amazing thing happened. My weight dropped back to my high school weight and my cholesterol dropped below 200. So I thought up this catchy title, The “All You Can Eat” Diet, and wrote this book.
I am now in my 70’s, still running, still eating whenever I feel the slightest hunger pang, and still at my high school weight. I feel healthy and strong. I have no aches or pains and have no signs of cardiovascular problems.
My hope is that this book might inspire my family and others to adopt an exercise and eating style that will help them obtain the same health and happiness that I have enjoyed well into my later years.
Eigenschaften und Details
- Hauptkategorie: Kochbücher
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Projektoption: Quadratisch klein, 18×18 cm
Seitenanzahl: 36 - Veröffentlichungsdatum: Aug. 25, 2011
Über den Autor
William B. Ashton (Bill) was born in Southern California in 1939 at the start of the Second World War. At San Marino High School he excelled athletically and academically. Upon graduation he received the mathematics award given to the highest math student in the senior class. He went on to study engineering at Stanford University, graduating in 1964 with a B.S. in mechanical engineering. After graduation from college, Bill immediately began working for North American Aviation on the Saturn 5 rocket for the Apollo Moon Project. He worked on the design of the second stage rocket insulation. Though only one of thousands of engineers who worked on the project, he is still proud to say he was part of that marvelous event of landing a man on the moon in 1969. In 1964, Bill went back to Stanford and obtained an MBA from Stanford’s School of Business. Subsequent to obtaining that degree he worked for Hewlett Packard and several Southern California aerospace companies for 38 years
