Posts Tagged ‘health’

Regain Mobility Around Your House with a Used Wheelchair Lift


2009
07.10

Need to get up and down stairs but age or a handicap is holding you back, or making the task more difficult? Don’t have the money to purchase a new wheelchair lift? Perhaps used wheelchair lifts are the ideal solution for you.

An elderly or handicapped person approaches stairs differently than an able bodied person. The task of climbing or descending stairs can be more intimidating. Fortunately technology has come up with various products that make life easier, and when it comes to climbing stairs, a stair lift can be a godsend.

Not every one may be in a position to afford buying an expensive new stair lift. There is no need to despair over this. Used wheelchair lifts in good condition, and at affordable costs, are available in the market. These may well suit your wallet or purse and meet your stair climbing needs.

New wheelchair lifts and used wheelchair lifts function in an identical manner. Tracks are installed along your stairway and a platform is provided for you to stand or sit or roll onto while you climb the stairs. Buttons are provided that allow you to control the direction you travel in.

Stair lifts may be operated through electrical power or by batteries. Usually, battery-powered lifts employ rechargeable batteries. Electric models need to be plugged into an electrical outlet with a power cord.

If you are looking for used wheelchair lifts, the best way for you to locate one, surprisingly, may be through the assistance of a manufacturer who markets new stair lifts!

A number of stair lift providers will also lease a stair lift to parties just needing one for a temporary time period. When the leased units are returned they can no longer be sold as new so the manufacturer is likely to work out a good deal on a used unit.

Before you buy a wheelchair lift that has been previously used, you need to learn more about the seller to ensure that you’re purchasing the lift from someone who is reliable.

You should also review the terms and conditions of the lease or purchase very carefully and make sure you are aware of the terms that are being proposed. If you don”t agree with something see if you can negotiate better terms for yourself.

You should call several different companies, if possible, to find out which models you can afford and which suit your physical needs.

The best model for you is out there, whether it is used, leased, or brand new. You’ll soon be climbing the stairs with ease.

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The Atkins Diet and Me (part 1).


2009
05.13

I read my first Atkins Diet book when I was working in an office in Barry, south Wales. I had been working there for about five years and had put on a lot of excess weight. I had never enjoyed taking part in sport, but my previously, I had worked on building sites, which meant a fair bit of physical activity ” enough anyway to keep me in decent shape. After five years on the office computer, I weighed 18 stone 12 pounds (264 lbs or 120 kg), three stone more than I had before and neither I nor my GP were happy about it.

One day a representative of some legal or accounting firm came in for an appointment, and, while we were awaiting the other directors, we got to talking about office life and its tendency to make one put on weight. He said that he had had the same problem before his new, more mobile, job, but that now he made sure he got out of the office regularly and walked everywhere he could if he had the time. He also said that he’d read a good book on dieting while on holiday in the USA and that he would send me a copy. I didn’t think anything more of it and never saw the man again. I think his name was Mr. Blackwell.

The book arrived as promised, but I left it lying on my desk unread for months and months, until one day, I had a dentist’s appointment and had forgotten to take a book to work to read while I was waiting ” something I always did/do because the magazines are always so old and boring. Anyway, I read 50-60 pages that day and I was mesmerised. I had never been on a proper diet before and I thought I should give it a a go. I had stopped eating pastry, cakes and chocolate months ago, but it hadn’t had much effect and my weight was still on the increase, albeit more slowly.

It occurred to me that the Atkins diet was a ‘thinking person’s’ diet There is a vast amount of scope for individual tastes and lifestyles and the usual problem of self-discipline did not seem to be much of a problem because for that reason. The book warned of addictions and fads and how best to overcome or prevent them. These did not seem to be an issue for me either – I liked coffee, but could take it or leave it and I had already given up chocolate. I knew that maybe beer and bread would be my biggest problem.

The only ‘must do’ in the seven-day induction phase is to eat not more than 20 gram of carbohydrate per day. The book had a clear list of almost all foods and their carbohydrate content. I found it really easy. In fact, I started eating in a more healthy manner in the induction stage than I had been eating before it! I bought a tub of Ketone sticks from the local chemist to check whether the Atkins Diet was working and found that I was in ketosis on the third day. It was very satisfying to know that now I would be losing weight whatever I did and wherever I was every minute of the day!

I gave up bread (and beer!) for a fortnight and felt great. I actually felt ‘bouncy’ or ‘springy’ as you see a boxer in the ring before a fight. I had no trouble whatsoever staying within the 20 gram limit, although I missed fruit more than I’d expected. But I found ways to compensate for everything. The book has loads of recipes and suggestions so I won’t go into them here, but I started eating breakfast before I went to work and in the evenings, took great care and attention over preparing a lunch box for work the next day, usually consisting of a salad, some cheese and various nuts to snack on. You can eat a few strawberries too. In the evening, I would cook up something like a curry (no flour) eating it with green beans instead of rice; or a traditional British meal without potatoes followed by cheese and strawberries and cream. I lost 18 pounds in two weeks and felt wonderful.

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