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Search Results for: metabolism

January 31, 2026 By Mrinali Dwivedi Leave a Comment

Carrots, Beetroots and Tomatoes For Good Health!

carrots, beetroots and tomatoesStress, oily foods, greasy foods, smoke, smog and air pollution give rise to free radicals in our body. These free radicals cause cell damage and bring about aging in us. Antioxidants capture these free radicals and protect our cells and blood vessels from the damage caused by them. Thus, antioxidants are great for our skin, heart, metabolism and are anti-aging. Carrots, Beetroots and Tomatoes are among the vegetables that have the highest amount of these antioxidants. Carrots are rich in Vitamin A that helps build immunity and eyesight, while beetroots have blood pressure lowering properties and tomatoes are heart healthy and skin brightening!

The combination of carrots, beetroots and tomatoes helps in weight loss and curb constipation as well. The nutrients of these are best absorbed when taken in combination with each other. Though available throughout the year, they’re the best during winter! Here are some easy ways to make very low calories, yet satiating recipes with this wonderful combination. 

3 Healthy Recipes Using Carrots, Beetroots and Tomatoes

1. CBT Juice
Want to get rid of toxins? Employ Carrots, Beetroots and Tomatoes for a cleansing, detox drink that will flush out all those toxins! 

What you will need: 

  • Carrot – 1 medium sized 
  • Beetroot – 1 
  • Tomato – 1 
  • Mint – 5-6 leaves
  • Coriander – 2-3 twigs 
  • Rock salt and lemon juice – to taste 

Method:

  1. Peel and roughly chop the carrot, beetroot and tomato
  2. Blend them along with mint and coriander leaves in a blender/juicer
  3. Add some water if required while blending to bring a juice like consistency.
  4. Add lemon juice, rock salt and mix well

Important: Do not strain, or you’ll lose all the good fiber. Drink the juice within 15 minutes of preparation or else the juice gets oxidised and may lose most of its healthy goodness. The best time to have this is on an empty stomach in the morning – do not eat anything for the next half an hour. 

2. CBT Salad
Confused about what to eat for lunch? Want something that’s filling and low on calories? Let this CBT Salad be your go-to recipe! 

What you will need: 

  • Carrot – ½ cup grated
  • Beetroot – ½ cup 
  • Tomato – ½ cup finely chopped            
  • Onion – ¼ cup 
  • Coriander leaves – 1 tablespoon chopped
  • Mint leaves – 1 tablespoon 
  • Lemon juice – 1 tablespoon 
  • Sesame seeds – 1 teaspoon 
  • Salt to taste 
  • You can also add: Yoghurt, chopped walnuts, feta cheese

Method:

  • Mix and toss all the chopped and grated vegetables
  • Add lemon juice and salt.
  • Garnish with chopped coriander and mint leaves
  • You can pour a temper of curry leaves and mustard seeds over this salad
  • Yoghurt can be mixed with this salad
  • Add some finely chopped walnuts or sesame seeds for a nutty flavour and the good fats.
  • Feta cheese will add some first class protein

Important: Wash all the vegetables properly. Squeeze the lemon just before consuming the salad. Salad should be consumed within 20-25 minutes of preparation to avoid the nutrients getting oxidised. Start lunch with this salad as it will curb post-meal glucose excursion. Aids weight loss, as it is filling and has less calories.

3. Soup
In the mood for soup? Here’s something we’re sure you haven’t tried before! 

  • Tomatoes – 5 
  • Carrots – 2 
  • Beetroot – 1 
  • Ginger garlic paste – 1 tablespoon 
  • Cinnamon stick – 1 inch 
  • Bay leaf – 1 
  • Ghee (Clarified butter) – 1 tablespoon 
  • Salt, cumin powder, chili flakes, fresh pepper, dry herbs (oregano, basil, parsley) to taste.

Method:

  1. Pressure cook the carrots, beetroots and tomatoes with the cinnamon stick, bay leaf and enough water to soak for 2 whistles
  2. Cool down the boiled vegetables. Discard the cinnamon stick, bay leaf and the skin from the tomatoes. Puree the rest in a blender
  3. Heat 1 tablespoon ghee (clarified butter) in a medium pot. Add the ginger garlic paste and be sure to not burn it
  4. Carefully pour the puree in the pot
  5. Add cumin powder, salt, chili flakes and fresh ground pepper as per taste
  6. Bring to a boil on medium high heat, stirring the mixture a few times
  7. Sprinkle some dry herbs and serve hot! 

Important: The best time to have this soup is for a light dinner or a healthy evening snack. 

We hope you enjoy all the amazing benefits offered by this healthy combination of Carrots, Beetroots and Tomatoes! Do try out all the recipes and let us know in the comments below! For more on nutrition, check out Healthy Reads or ask a GOQii Coach by subscribing for Personalised Health Coaching here.

Eat healthy and #BeTheForce  

Disclaimer: The information provided in this blog is for general awareness and educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for personalised medical guidance or concerns related to your health.

January 30, 2026 By Roopa Tandur 2 Comments

Why Do We Gain Weight During Winter?

gain weight during winterHave you noticed that you tend to gain weight during winter? While there are many factors at play here, is it true for everybody? If you’re one of those who gain weight during winter, it is best to know why it happens and take necessary measures to prevent it!

Let’s Analyse Why We Gain Weight During Winter

  1. Less Water Intake: As we aren’t thirsty and neither do we sweat as much as we do during summer, we tend to drink very little water which makes us lethargic and fatigued. The usual signs like dry and flaky skin is an indicator that one is not having enough water. We use moisturisers instead and not increase water intake which gives more room for frequent infection and dehydration leading to headache and dry cough
  2. Not Exercising Enough: With the pleasant winter chills, it is a little difficult to get off the couch or bed. This leads to fewer calories being burned and as a result, weight gain!
  3. Increased Production of Melatonin: Less sunlight and shorter days affect our hormones and some people tend to produce more of the hormone melatonin which controls our sleep-wake cycle. This increased production of melatonin induces sleep when it is not the time to sleep, making one lazy, lacking motivation and energy. It also increases appetite and leads to eating more.
  4. Increase in Metabolism: While this sounds great, it doesn’t really support your weight loss goals during winter. The sudden increase in metabolism will burn more calories to keep you warm but it will also make you hungrier.
  5. Staying Indoors: makes us lazy and bored. When bored, we begin binge-watching followed by binge-eating comfort or fried food which is high in sugar and salt. It doesn’t take a genius to figure that this contributes to weight gain as well.  

How Do We Prevent Gaining Weight This Season?

There is an effective way to break the vicious cycle of more sleep, less healthy food and little to no exercise! Here’s how you can avoid gaining weight during winter.

  1. Choose Foods Wisely: Choose healthy, home-cooked meals such as soups. Opt for green tea. You can even add natural spices to your meals which are warm and benefit your health. Choose foods which can be paired with others or can be eaten any time of the day. Swap options like sauces available in markets to homemade hummus or dips.
  2. Pick a Hobby: Concentrate on other things like hobbies, sports, painting or reading books. You can even clean your house if you’ve been postponing it. Do something that engages you instead of finding comfort in food.
  3. Time Your Sleep: Maintain sleep timings which will set your circadian rhythm and help you stay active through the day or take power naps in the afternoon instead of sleeping for long hours
  4. Exercise: Plan indoor activities and exercises like yoga, skipping, stair activities which will help you be active more regularly. In fact, you can tune in to GOQii Play and browse some indoor workouts by fitness experts or yoga and meditation by yoga specialists. You can even opt for making group plans which have less chances of failure. If you can’t find a group, join our LIVE, interactive, GOQii PRO sessions conducted by experts within the GOQii App. 

That’s all! Mind what you eat, sleep on time and exercise regularly to not gain weight during winter. We hope you found this article useful! Please leave your thoughts in the comments below.

For more on weight loss, fitness and being healthy, check out Healthy Reads or ask a GOQii Coach by subscribing for Personalised Health Coaching here.

#BeTheForce 

Disclaimer: The information provided in this blog is for general awareness and educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for personalised medical guidance or concerns related to your health.

January 28, 2026 By GOQii Leave a Comment

The Hidden Longevity Divide in India: How Urban Health Expectations Are Declining

The life expectancy in India has steadily increased over the years. We live longer lives compared to our past generations, and that is something to be proud of. However, a hidden reality lies beneath these figures.

The years that remain free from illness known as Healthy Life Expectancy haven’t increased at the same rate as our lifespan.

World Health Organisation (WHO) data from 2021 indicates that our healthy life expectancy at birth was approximately 58 years, a slight increase from 54 years in 2000, despite our overall life expectancy rising much faster.

The implication is clear: Urban Indians are living an increasingly larger portion of their lives afflicted by diseases. We aren’t just adding years to life; we are adding years of life with conditions like diabetes, hypertension, and cardiac issues.

To understand the forces creating this hidden divide and how to close it, let’s look at the “Four Horsemen” of urban health.

  1. Pollution: The Invisible Ager

The air pollution problem in India is vast. According to the landmark Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study, an estimated 1.67 million deaths in India were associated with air pollution.

The effects of breathing toxic air in cities like Delhi, Mumbai, and Kolkata are not restricted to the lungs. It leads to systemic inflammation, accelerating ageing from within. It increases the risk of:

  • Heart attacks and strokes
  • Insulin resistance
  • Metabolic disturbances

Toxic air is an everyday stress factor that your body fights 24/7.

  1. The Urban Plate: Stuffed with Calories, Starved of Nutrients

The food environment in our cities has transformed. Traditional, home-cooked meals are being replaced by ultra-processed foods, sugary drinks, and industrial bakery products.

These foods interfere with your metabolism long before you see changes on the weighing scale. They cause spikes in insulin and inflammation—major drivers of Metabolic Syndrome.

In select cities, over 30% of the adult population faces metabolic syndrome (a combination of obesity, hypertension, and high cholesterol). This isn’t just a statistic; it is a warning that the disease burden looms large.

  1. The “Sitting” Epidemic

Physical inactivity is a public health crisis. Worldwide, almost 31% of adults do not fulfil the lowest standards of physical activity. In India, the urban corporate culture of long commutes and desk jobs exacerbates this.

Inactivity accelerates:

  • Glucose metabolism deterioration
  • Muscle wasting
  • Obesity

A 30-minute workout is great, but it cannot fully reverse the consequences of sitting in a chair for 10 hours. We need to move throughout the day, not just at the gym.

  1. The Reactive Trap: Late Diagnosis

The most devious aspect of this health shift is its timing. Issues like fatty liver or insulin resistance can lie latent for years before symptoms appear.

Most urban Indians visit a doctor only after symptoms develop. This “reactive approach” means we miss the golden window for early intervention and reversal.

Flipping the Script: How Digital Health Can Help

Here is where the picture stops being dark. Digital health isn’t just a tech trend; it is the tool we need to close the longevity gap.

  • Wearables & AI: Continuous Glucose Monitors (CGM) and fitness trackers make invisible patterns visible. You can see exactly how that samosa or that stressful meeting affects your body in real-time.
  • Upstream Care: We need to move from episodic care (hospital visits) to daily awareness. Postponing the progression of diabetes by even a few years can drastically improve your quality of life.

Conclusion: From “Living Longer” to “Living Well”

There is a strong urge to celebrate increased life expectancy, but a lifespan without vitality is not a success. A nation that lives longer but stays sick for longer incurs a heavy cost—both financial and physical.

Closing this gap demands broad changes: cleaner cities, better food choices, and intelligent workplaces. But it also requires you.

India’s hidden longevity divide is not inevitable. It is the consequence of choices we can change. The goal is to ensure your Healthspan (years of health) increases at the same rate as your Lifespan.

That is the point when “to live longer” will finally mean “to live well.”

Ready to close the gap and take control of your healthspan? Reach out to our certified experts by subscribing to GOQii’s Personalised Health Coaching here.

#BeTheForce

Disclaimer: The information provided in this blog is for general awareness and educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for personalised medical guidance or concerns related to your health.

January 21, 2026 By GOQii Leave a Comment

Ageing and Habit Stacking: How to Upgrade Your Health without Adding New Activities

The thing with ageing well is that it’s never unwound by one bad habit, nor ever made good on in one glorious resolution. Healthy lifestyles are made every day through good habits.

Everyone already knows what they should be doing. Move more. Eat better. Breathe deeper. Sleep well. The issue isn’t a lack of understanding or knowledge of what needs to change. The problem is bandwidth.

Already by the middle-aged years, life is a juggling act of work, family, caregiving responsibilities, health care visits, and a thousand other open tabs floating around in the brain that rarely get closed. The thought of putting more things on the to-do list is just draining before the day even starts.

That’s where Habit Stacking helps. Habit stacking does not involve accomplishing more; it involves achieving this through smarter methods.

What is Habit Stacking?

Habit Stacking is adding a small health habit to an activity you already do every day, with no negotiating and no need to be motivated. No additional time blocks.

Habit stacking relies on existing routines for consistency. Think of it as upgrading the routines that you already have.

You brush your teeth. You boil water. You wait for lifts, traffic lights, or meetings to begin. All of these things are already part of your routine. Habit stacking is just using them for good, and with increasing age, this is even more relevant for us.

Why Habit Stacking Works Particularly Well As We Age

Ageing isn’t just about lines and a lower metabolic rate. It is about muscle loss, stiffness, insulin resistance, loss of balance, reduced lung function, and recovery time. None of this happens in a day. Everything occurs gradually.

On the bright side, small and steady efforts will definitely decelerate the progression of most such processes. On the other hand, drastic changes in one’s lifestyle are rarely sustainable.

Habit Stacking occupies the golden zone. It honors the real world. It builds strength, range of motion, metabolism, and nervous system vitality without requiring a daily battle of wills.

Consider a couple of examples:

  1. Add Strength to Your Hygiene Practices

After 40 years, most adults lose muscle mass every year unless actions are taken to counter it. Losing muscle mass influences balance, metabolism, posture, and even bone mass.

  • The Stack: Perform Calf Raises while brushing your teeth. Keep an erect posture while standing at the sink. Gradually raise yourself onto your toes. Come down slowly. Continue the exercise for two minutes.
  • What It Does: It strengthens the calf and ankle muscles, which adds to balance and reduces the risk of falling – a concern that escalates with advancing years. You won’t need gym clothes or an exercise program. Just a toothbrush.
  1. Stack Breathing During “Waiting Time”

Chronic stress and shallow breathing are silently ageing your body. They trigger inflammation, poor sleep, a surge in blood sugar, and tiredness.

  • The Stack: Perform slow breathing drills during the waiting period for the kettle to boil, the food to heat up, or during page loading.
  • Try This: Inhale for four counts through your nose. Exhale slowly for six counts. Repeat for one to two minutes.
  • What It Does: This stimulates the parasympathetic nervous system, reduces stress hormones like cortisol, enhances heart rate variability, and helps promote sound digestion and quality sleep. In the long run, it helps the body recover from both physical and psychological stress.

You’re not adding meditation to your to-do list; you’re utilising dead time.

  1. Stack Nutritional Rules Instead of Calorie Counting

The truth is, the more we age, the more calorie obsession tends to be a source of harm to our bodies.

  • The Stack: Use a protein and fibre guideline for your meals instead of focusing on calories. Every time you eat a major meal, ask one simple question: “Where is my protein? Where is my fibre?”
    • Protein sources: Dal, egg, fish, curd, paneer, tofu, and chicken.
    • Fibre sources: Vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains, and seeds.
  • What It Does: This works well to control sugar in the blood, maintain muscle mass, improve gut health, and control portions naturally without completely limiting an individual. This works best for someone in midlife when the goal is both the loss of weight and increased insulin sensitivity.

No apps. No math. Just better defaults.

The Power of Accumulation

None of these will go viral on social media. The habits do not look dramatic. None of these will give you an instant transformation picture. They do something much more valuable, however. They keep you consistent.

Ageing well is not about intensity; it is about accumulation.

  • Two minutes of calf raises a day becomes over 12 hours of strength training per year.
  • Breathing one minute a day conditions your nervous system to shift gears.
  • Making protein and fibre choices on most days can impact your metabolic profile.

These are small deposits into what you might think of as your Longevity Bank Account.

How to Start Without Overwhelm

  1. Begin with one stack. Just one.
  2. Make it hook into something you always do (like brushing teeth).
  3. Make it simple enough that it feels almost too easy.
  4. Be consistent.
  5. Once that one is automatic, you could add another. Not that you should, just that it belongs there.

Ageing does not require that you change your life. It simply requires that you pay attention. Habit stacking honours the fact of a busy life but simultaneously improves the underlying level of health from the inside out.

No additional tasks. No guilt. No requirement to be perfect. Just small, intentional choices layered on top of the life you’re already living.

And over time, these layers accumulate to create strength, resilience, and the capacity to continue to do what matters most to you well into the future.

We hope this article helps you upgrade your routine! For further information or guidance, reach out to our certified experts by subscribing to GOQii’s Personalised Health Coaching here.

#BeTheForce

Disclaimer: The information provided in this blog is for general awareness and educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for personalised medical guidance or concerns related to your health.

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