Philosophy of The Revolutionary Diet

Nearly everyone is looking for the best diet plan to help them with weight loss or weight management. They're constantly buying books and magazines that tout the latest weight loss diet and teach them how to diet. They spend hundreds of dollars on healthy eating guides and meal plans that don't work (or work for a few weeks).

Meanwhile, the answer is right there in history - just live the way Americans did at the time of the American Revolution.

Paul Revere, Thomas Jefferson, Ben Franklin, and the rest didn't sit in front of the television stuffing their mouths with Doritos and swilling Diet Coke from 64 oz. buckets. They ate real food, worked outside in the fresh air and sunshine, and got plenty of sleep.

Regardless of your diet goals, you can enjoy the benefits of healthy living without starving yourself and without suffering. Oh yeah, it's not that hard. Just eat real food and get some exercise. You'll be amazed at how quickly you get great results, how good you feel, and how good you look. And all without the pain and sacrifice that you experienced with diets in the past.

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The Revolutionary Exercise Plan

Our forefathers worked much harder than we do. Their jobs were more physical than ours, but so were their home lives.

Whereas we just sit on the couch pushing buttons on one of the many remote controls that litter the coffee table, home life at the time of the American Revolution required much labor.

You just turn the dial on your thermostat to make your house warmer. In 1776, they had to chop wood to stoke the fire. They pumped water from the well or carried many buckets in from the stream instead of turning on the faucet. While you might press a couple of buttons on your microwave, they had to hang a heavy cast iron pot over the fire and fill it with meat they hunted.

Is it any wonder they were in much better shape than you are?

Now don't think you need to abaondon the creature comforts of home to get back in shape. But because your job might keep you behind a desk all day, you need to make a consious effort to get some exercise.

If you don't want to don brightly colored spandex or "sweat to the oldies" in an aerobics class, worry not. It's not necessary. Just get outside and walk. Maybe shovel some snow (in winter) or work in the garden, cut the grass with a push reel mower, or trim the hedges (in summer). Raking leaves, cleaning the gutters, or walking to and from the store for errands all counts as exercise. So does much housework.

Park far from the store when you visit the mall or grocery store. You'll get more exercise walking in and carrying your bags out - and your car will get dinged up less too!

Clean up that old bicycle and fill the tires with air. Go for a bike ride. Any speed you ride is fine. Just ride.

At work, take the stairs instead of the elevator. At the mall or airport, bypass the escalator in favor the stairs too.

It doesn't matter what you do, just do something. Because modern life is so sedentary, you have to make a conscious effort to get some exercise in. You don't need much. Thirty minutes a day is fine if that's all the spare time you have. If you can do more, that's great. The more you do, the more you'll like it, and the more you'll want to do.