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<channel><title><![CDATA[Pink and Green Style - health and beauty blog]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.pinkandgreenstyle.com/health-and-beauty-blog]]></link><description><![CDATA[health and beauty blog]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 10 Oct 2025 09:00:32 -0400</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Why Choose Heath?]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.pinkandgreenstyle.com/health-and-beauty-blog/why-choose-heath]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.pinkandgreenstyle.com/health-and-beauty-blog/why-choose-heath#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 26 May 2025 03:43:10 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.pinkandgreenstyle.com/health-and-beauty-blog/why-choose-heath</guid><description><![CDATA[Why would someone want to be unhealthy?&nbsp; That&rsquo;s a great question.&nbsp; Some might say that it&rsquo;s ridiculous to think that someone would want poor health.&nbsp; You would think so, right?&nbsp; Your health is something that you have major control over, yet so many people refuse to believe that.&nbsp; Growing up with a hypochondriac&nbsp; mother, I developed the mindset at a young age that I would not be a perpetual whining attention seeker who conjures up ailments and begs for a  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span><font color="#f706f2">Why would someone want to be unhealthy?&nbsp; That&rsquo;s a great question.&nbsp; Some might say that it&rsquo;s ridiculous to think that someone would want poor health.&nbsp; You would think so, right?&nbsp; Your health is something that you have major control over, yet so many people refuse to believe that.&nbsp; Growing up with a hypochondriac&nbsp; mother, I developed the mindset at a young age that I would not be a perpetual whining attention seeker who conjures up ailments and begs for a miracle drug to occur her;&nbsp; thriving only off of the pity of anyone who would listen.&nbsp; In the back of my mind, I&rsquo;ll admit I did fear disease or early death.&nbsp; After my second child was born I even took out a huge life insurance policy on myself, then years later dropped it because I couldn&rsquo;t afford it.&nbsp; It wasn&rsquo;t until the past five years maybe that I really stepped back and looked at what a difference my diet, exercise, and sleep were making and what a noticeable difference they made on the way I looked and felt.</font></span><br /><br /><span><font color="#f706f2">I have said it before and you will hear it again:&nbsp; I didn&rsquo;t actually absorb how unhealthy most Americans are until I started selling life insurance,&nbsp; I realized just how many of those unhealthy Americans are simply doing it to themselves when I became a personal shopper back in 2020.&nbsp; It certainly isn&rsquo;t easy to change a bad habit, but the first step is acknowledging that you have a bad habit!&nbsp; I have customers that I have shopped for, for four or five years now and have become close to.&nbsp; For ages I have wanted to take some of them aside and say &ldquo;Honestly, is this crap all you ever eat?&nbsp; Would you like me to teach you how to cook?&rdquo;&nbsp; As awesome as that sounds, it probably would have done nothing but lose a good customer for me.&nbsp; Some people already know they have a bad diet but for many reasons, chose to ignore it.&nbsp; Others would get offended just because.&nbsp; Finally though, I am at the personal turn in the road where I have earned the right to call someone out and give advice.&nbsp; A lot of them might not want to hear it, but for those who do my help could be life-changing.&nbsp; Some people have the courage and discipline to make big changes and other&rsquo;s need to take small steps with big encouragement.&nbsp; What I have come to know is that what you eat is possibly the biggest factor in your current and long term health.&nbsp; The services I offer now are&nbsp; shopping, cooking, and lifestyle coaching oriented.&nbsp; I am also working on some cookbooks and a mobile kitchen to use for giving classes and possibly selling food out of.&nbsp; I am planning on living another forty years so hey, the possibilities are endless!<br />&#8203;My advice for today:&nbsp; Always <a href="https://www.horizonhealthcare.org/eating-from-the-rainbow/" target="_blank">eat the rainbow</a>!&nbsp;</font><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></span><br /><br /><br /></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[WHERE IT BEGAN]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.pinkandgreenstyle.com/health-and-beauty-blog/where-it-began]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.pinkandgreenstyle.com/health-and-beauty-blog/where-it-began#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2025 03:54:20 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.pinkandgreenstyle.com/health-and-beauty-blog/where-it-began</guid><description><![CDATA[Growing up in the 1960&rsquo;s and 70&rsquo;s was the best!&nbsp; Like most families around me, our house and our belongings were simple.&nbsp; I grew up on a farm in Upstate New York and found out later in life that our house (which my mother still lives in) was built in 1780.&nbsp; As a kid and all through my younger life, I never viewed people as rich or poor.&nbsp; Like most of the farm kids around, I had acres and acres of fields to play in.&nbsp; We all had clothes, homes, food on the tabl [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span>Growing up in the 1960&rsquo;s and 70&rsquo;s was the best!&nbsp; Like most families around me, our house and our belongings were simple.&nbsp; I grew up on a farm in <font color="#81c94c"><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCk9BVt6M6Q" target="_blank">Upstate New York</a></font> and found out later in life that our house (which my mother still lives in) was built in 1780.&nbsp; As a kid and all through my younger life, I never viewed people as rich or poor.&nbsp; Like most of the farm kids around, I had acres and acres of fields to play in.&nbsp; We all had clothes, homes, food on the table and most of us went to the same school.&nbsp; Life was simple and fabulous!&nbsp; One phone hung on the kitchen wall and a console TV sat in the living room.&nbsp; No cell phone and no Internet meant that things like rides from sports practice or trips to the mall had to be planned out. &nbsp; Things you learned and knew were acquired by talking to your parents, your teachers, or listening to your elders.&nbsp; The basic things in life, I took for granted.&nbsp; It wasn&rsquo;t until many years and many cities away from the farm, I learned that not everyone had the same foundation. &nbsp; My childhood was far from traditional at the time as my parents divorced when I was young but fortunately I was able to live with my father in my teen years.&nbsp; It was my time with my father and stepmother that helped me look back at the parts of myself that I had inherited from those before me.&nbsp; My mother&rsquo;s mother had been a hard-working telephone operator who also was a fabulous cook, a spotless housekeeper, and an exceptional seamstress.&nbsp; My father&rsquo;s father had been the son of a Polish blacksmith and was an exceptional carpenter.&nbsp; Dad&rsquo;s mother was a hard-working farmer, gardener and the stern but loving voice of reason in his family. &nbsp; My father was a thinker and a politician.&nbsp; He was smart and kind.&nbsp; He never treated anyone he met as less than his equal and for that reason he was loved by many.&nbsp; On top of the list of others who crafted me was my neighbor and my father&rsquo;s childhood friend, Rosemary, who taught me the beauty of being a homemaker long after my grandmother was gone. &nbsp; I will most likely look back to what I have learned from all of my early influences in future posts here.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><br />&#8203;<br /><span>Though my life could have gone in many different directions, and well, it did take many twists and turns, I was fortunate to have learned the basics.&nbsp; You know, cooking, cleaning, earning a living.&nbsp; I would probably be better off financially, had I finished college the first time around and married well. &nbsp; While neither of those two things happened,&nbsp; I was able to spend about the first 20 years after college working in restaurants where I fell completely in love with food.&nbsp; None of the fine cooking, serving, tasting and sipping I did back then was at all focused around nutrition.&nbsp; It was universally known that Meat potatoes, vegetables, and milk (or alcohol) go together.&nbsp; Into my thirties and even my forties, I never once stopped to think about how much sugar I had consumed over the course of my lifetime just in breakfast cereals or how many&nbsp; McDonald&rsquo;s meals I would have been better off without.&nbsp; The mother in me thankfully always chose healthy food that was within budget for my kids, but I felt healthy and resilient.&nbsp; It wasn&rsquo;t until my daughter, who was born when I was forty became an aerial dancer and later a gym fanatic that I started to really evaluate my own health and nutrition.&nbsp; It was then that I became more and more aware of not only what I am eating but equally important what I am not eating. &nbsp; For a short time I explored supplements as the answer to good health.&nbsp; Then I realized that it is much more than just taking supplements. &nbsp; Avoiding toxins in food and the environment is huge!&nbsp; I never realized how huge avoiding poison was to achieving good health.&nbsp; As I studied things like <font color="#81c94c"><a href="https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness-and-prevention/detoxing-your-liver-fact-versus-fiction" target="_blank">detoxing my liver</a></font> and the difference between nutrient rich foods and just &ldquo;food&rdquo;&nbsp; the light came on in my head brighter than ever!&nbsp; Sixty years ago my grandparents didn&rsquo;t need to worry so much about this toxic dilemma because they raised a great deal of what they ate.&nbsp; Holy Cow have things changed since the days of dairy farm life!</span><br /><br /><span><span style="color:rgb(183, 72, 174)">For me, eating and just living healthier is pretty easy.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s mostly been a matter of rationing portions, and including even more of the things I already love in my cooking.&nbsp; Well, then there are things like ditching the alcohol and limiting butter piles of cheese on everything!&nbsp; The latter are my problem areas.&nbsp; It occurred to me along the way that especially for younger people eating healthy may be more of a challenge.&nbsp; My own daughter only recently has shown any interest at all in cooking her own meals (surely my fault for being too available) &nbsp; . The reality today sadly is that for whatever the reason, many parents do not cook meals for their families and don&rsquo;t even teach their kids the basics of cooking or preparing meals for themselves.&nbsp; I took to the Internet for some insight into this.&nbsp; Though I am not a big supporter of letting apps guide me, I did find this read by </span><span style="color:rgb(106, 168, 79)"><a href="https://www.lark.com/resources/five-reasons-why-you-can-beat-the-excuses-and-cook" target="_blank">Lark</a> </span><span style="color:rgb(183, 72, 174)">whose mission is to encourage diabetics and others to cook for themselves in an effort to improve their health.&nbsp; Similar to Lark, my mission here will be to encourage and promote food and lifestyle for healthier living by way of cooking, exercise, fresh air and sunshine, and eco-friendly practices.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></span><br /><br /><span><span style="color:rgb(183, 72, 174)">Finally, check our one of my favorite classic YouTube videos that confirms one of my greatest fears of young Americans today!&nbsp; Cooking ain&rsquo;t that bad kids!&nbsp; Stick around and I&rsquo;ll show you how.</span></span><br /><br /></div>  <div class="wsite-youtube" style="margin-bottom:10px;margin-top:10px;"><div class="wsite-youtube-wrapper wsite-youtube-size-auto wsite-youtube-align-center"> <div class="wsite-youtube-container">  <iframe src="//www.youtube.com/embed/RB9-OSBLJz0?wmode=opaque" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> </div> </div></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>