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Divine Health Keto Zone Dr Colbert M.D. MCT Oil Hazelnut -- 11.11 oz


Divine Health Keto Zone Dr Colbert M.D. MCT Oil Hazelnut
  • Our price: $30.09

    $1.01 per serving


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Divine Health Keto Zone Dr Colbert M.D. MCT Oil Hazelnut -- 11.11 oz

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  • Note: You must be at least 18 years of age to purchase this product.

Divine Health Keto Zone Dr Colbert M.D. MCT Oil Hazelnut Description

  • Zero Net Carbs
  • Sugar Free
  • Includes Prebiotics
  • 70% C8 | 30% C10
  • Vegan
  • Gluten Free
  • Lactose Free
  • Non-GMO

Keto Zone MCT Oil Powder contains a smooth, creamy consistency. The healthy fats in Divine Health's MCT Oil Powder are quickly converted to ketones to provide increased focus, effortless energy, and enhanced fat metabolism. This low glycemic fuel can suppress your appetite and keep you feeling full for hours.

 

For the past decade, experts have referred to MCT oil as "rocket fuel" for your brain. MCTs are unique among fats since they don't require bile salts for digestion or extra energy for absorption, use, or storage. Your brain cannot store energy and needs a constant stream of that energy which is usually supplied by blood glucose. Ketones is a great source of "brain fuel" because it readily crosses the blood-brain barrier to provide instant energy to the brain.

 

Clean Energy Source:

 

  • MCTs are medium-chain triglycerides, a form of saturated fatty acid that has numerous health benefits, ranging from boosting metabolism to providing a dose of energy throughout the day.
  • MCTs are typically found in coconuts at a smaller percentage, however, Divine Health has extracted the
  • MCTs for a pure oil supplement for maximum benefit.
  • MCTs have been attributed to assisting in fat burning, aside from providing energy. MCT Oil Powder can help increase satiety and even raise the metabolic rate by suppressing fat deposition through enhanced thermogenesis and fat oxidation. It does this by helping the liver produce ketones, an alternative fuel source compared to glucose.
  • Fat Burner - The natural C8 found in MCT oil enables your body to begin burning fat as fuel rather than carbs.
  • Brain Fuel - Your brain is made up of almost 60% fat and this MCT oil provides you the best form of this fat.
  • Appetite Suppressor - Each scoop contains healthy fats and 3 grams of plant-based fiber, which helps you stay full for hours.
  • Boost Energy - Your body burns up fats much slower than carbohydrates, this slow burn will naturally increase your energy.
  • Enhances Mood - MCT oil enables your body to naturally produce ketones, which will then elevate your energy and mood.
  • Supports Heart Health - A diet high in healthy fats has been proven to support a healthy heart.


Directions

Suggested Use: Take 1 scoop daily with a 6-8 oz beverage of your choice, or as directed by your healthcare practitioner.
Free Of
Gluten, GMOs, lactose, sugar, artificial sweeteners, artificial preservatives.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Supplement Facts
Serving Size: 1 Scoop (10.5 g)
Servings per Container: 30
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value
Calories70
Total Fat7 g11%
   Saturated Fat7 g35%
   Trans Fat0 g
Cholesterol0 mg0%
Sodium0 mg0%
Total Carbohydrate3 g1%
   Dietary Fiber3 g12%
   Total Sugar0 g
Protein0 g
MCT Oil Powder10 g*
*Daily value not established.
Other Ingredients: MCT C8 (70%) & C10 (30%), powder blend (medium chain triglycerides, inulin, natural hazelnut flavor & stevia extract).
Warnings

If you are pregnant, may become pregnant, or breastfeeding, consult with your health care practitioner before using this product.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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How to Start Doing Yoga Again After Taking a Break

If there's one thing I'm good at, it's procrastinating. It can take me forever to start something, even if it's an undertaking I love or that's generally easy. To my credit (bear with me here instead of gagging), I get really invested in endeavors, and the very idea of all the energy I'll have to muster once I start is enough to demote me into to-do-listing whatever I could actually do — again, including fun or simple stuff. “Create mantle artwork” and “curate photos for new Mac” have been on my list for, um, a year. Woman in Red Top in Yoga Pose on Living Room Floor as She Learns How to Start Doing Yoga | Vitacost.com.blog Maybe you feel this way too — and you've been moody or impatient and your physical self is coiled up and tense. In other words: You could use a yoga class, which you haven't taken in ages because of pandemic studio closures or a number of other reasons, ranging from scheduling conflicts to injury. Reconnecting with your sticky mat is lovely in an abstract sense, but you're not sure your limbs or mental self can handle it. Also, you’d rather continue clicking through your apps until something interesting pops up in one of them. Move slowly, my friend. But move. Otherwise you'll be relegated to hollow lollygagging instead of reaping the soul-satisfying reward of action. Take it from someone who knows.

How to start doing yoga after time away

1. Prepare.

When you haven't been to an in-person class in ages, it's tough to predict how the space you're headed to will look or feel — or smell, for that matter (maybe the studio uses incense now, or stopped using it). Maybe it'll be crowded. Or empty. Maybe too cold or warm for your liking (so wear layers). Also leave plenty of time to commute so that you don't feel rushed, which is safer, obviously, but also infinitely more pleasant. What's more, an early arrival allows you to stake out a spot. I suggest a corner, which lets you go covert more easily, offers a wall for support and shields you from the creeping relocation that inevitably occurs when you're in the middle of the room and latecomers jostle for floor space. Grab props, even if they aren't required or you don't think you'll use them. They also come in handy for personal-space demarcation.

2. Underachieve.

Have no expectations for your practice other than showing up. Maybe you lie in place for most of class. Acceptable; after an extended break, it's impossible to know exactly what you'll need or be capable of. To that end, even if you're typically a power yogi, consider launching your return with a basic class (not drastically heated, not geared toward advanced practitioners, not incorporating more than 5-10 minutes of closing meditation). That way you'll feel less self-imposed pressure to be or do anything extraordinary. And, yes, underachievement spans both mental and physical aspects of practice.

3. Be receptive.

Unless your health is at risk, commit to the entire session instead of bailing if things aren't precisely how you want them to be. Use the class as an opportunity to explore how you react to the whole experience, and then let that inform you, perhaps even long after class ends.

4. Back off as needed.

Being receptive doesn't oblige you to do everything offered in class. To help, at the outset, request that the instructor not physically adjust you. Given you've not practiced in some time, injury is more likely because you're not tuned in to the interplay between yoga's movements and your body. If something feels like it could hurt, stop doing it. Likewise, if entering a suggested mental space feels overwhelming, relinquish that challenge and let yourself be. Mitra Malek is a former Yoga Journal editor and has taught yoga regularly since 2006.

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Nature Made Calm Mind & Body | Vitacost.com/blog
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