Saturday, August 4, 2007

Success is hard work.

In Dallas at the RWA National, I was with a group of multi published author friends who were moaning about their work loads... yeah like I should be so lucky.... anyway they were envious (to a point) of my unpub status... Enjoy it they said, you can write what and when you feel like it, you have no constraints, no public ready to pounce on something that they feel should not be. If you are unpub and have finished a manuscript and started another, you have success. So many don't get to type - The End. That in itself is success...
It got me thinking about success and here is what a few others think of it.

  • (On being congratulated on a Competition win) It is always encouraging to receive a compliment - Brenda Novak (author)
  • I work really hard - Tiger Woods (golfer)
  • The only place success comes before work is in the dictionary - Vidal Sassoon (hairdresser)
  • Success can be wracking and reproachful, to you and those close to you. It can entangle you with legends that are consuming and all but impossible to live up to. - Gordon Parks (photographer film director)
  • What separates the talented individual from the successful one is a lot of hard work. - Stephen King (author)
  • In all things, success depends upon previous preparation, and without such preparation there is sure to be failure. - Confucius (Chinese philospher and ethics teacher)
  • '-be happy but not satisfied' - Sensei David Kovar (6th degree black belt)
  • Getting there is only part of the challenge, it is how you deal with it that determines whether success continues - Anon
  • (on how to write a successful novel) - There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are. - Somerset Maugham.
  • Success is counted sweetest, by those who ne'er succeed
  • To comprehend a nectar, requires sorest need. - Emily Dickinson (poet)

Guess it is back to the grind... and I'll take a leave out of Rita Mae Brown's book and - "pray for chance magnificence."

Thursday, August 2, 2007

13 Facts and Fallacies about health and diet!

1.Diet soft drinks can help you lose weight!
Only if you are substituting real sugar sodas for diet (save 100 cal approx)
NB: Rats fed artificial sweetners craved more calories than rats fed real sugar.


2. Eating late at night in unhealthy and makes you fat and lead to a poor nights sleep!
  • Fallacy it will only make you feel ill if you aren't used to it and consume more calories than you will burn off in the next 24 hours. Fallacy - There is no evidence to support that going to sleep on a full stomach, or the time of eating, leads to a worse nights sleep, unless of course you are not used to it.
3.Calories consumed after 6pm lead to sleepless nights and make you fat!
  • Fallacy - There is no evidence to support that calories consumed later in the day hang around. It is how often you consume these large amounts of calories not the time they are consumed that lead to fat deposits. Calories consumed late in the evening can have a beneficial affect on sleep - take hot chocolate for instance, or a glass of red wine.
4. Commercially prepared children's food are geared to their needs.
  • only 'beginner' baby foods like simple pureed fruits and vegetables that have no salt or sugar added.
  • Most commercial foods targeted to children are sweetened, contain artificial colors, flavors and bright appealing packaging. None of which are to do with the 'needs' of young children. Many 'regular adult foods containing less sugar and fewer additivies are far healthier.
5. When you go a long time with little food your stomach shrinks.
  • Fallacy. The stomach never shrinks it only enlarges to accommodate large portions of food then returns to its previous size. However the entire digestive tract can be overtaxed and overworked if it is only used to small portions and is suddenly called on to deal with a larger quantity. In stomach stapling for extreme obesity - the original (empty) size of the stomach is stapled so it wont accommodate as much food.
6. Adding salt to cooking vegetables keeps their colors bright.
  • Fallacy. Salt has no effect on the color of vegetables. Waters acidity and mineral content contribute to the molecular changes n vegetables and often affects their color. NB: Plunging vegetable into ice cold water after blanching will help them retain their color.
7. Searing meat seals in the juices.
  • Fallacy. Tests prove that seared meat and unseared meat have about the same amount of juice. Searing does however gives it better flavor due to the protein and sugar reaction to heat.
8. Cooking time for roast meat depends on its weight
  • Although weight is important the shape also affects the amount of time it takes the heat to reach the center of the roast thus affecting cooking time.
9. Alcohol evaporates during cooking.
  • It does evaporate faster than water but not all of it evaporates when cooked. e.g. something cooked in alcohol for 2 1/2 hrs will retain 5% alcohol, a flambe however retains 85%.
10. You can't deep fry in olive oil.
  • You can but it does smoke faster(375F/191C) than other oils. It works fine in a deep fryer and gives food flavor however it is a lot more expensive than other oils.
11. Water is better than milk in an omelet.
  • It might be healthier but tests have proved that an omelet made with milk is softer, fluffier and has more flavor.
12. The highest levels of Vitamin C are found in lemons.
  • Fallacy - per 100gms, the Barbados cherries are the highest with 3,ooomgs, then rosehips with 2,800mgs and sea buckthorn 1,200mgs. Fruits such as blackcurrants 190mgs, kiwi 100mgs; green cabbage 105mgs; and red peppers 100mgs. Oranges and lemons only contain 40-50 mgs.
13. The smell of strawberries is made from --well, strawberries.
  • Fallacy - the so-called fruit aromas are produced by bacteria and fungi.
Another load of useless info for you thanks the the Health and Diet section of: 1,000 Common Delusions and the real facts behind them by Christa Poppelmann, Firefly Books, 2006.