Sentences with phrase «radical body changes»

I will never understand how these actors can go through such radical body changes in such a short period of time.

Not exact matches

The nation as a body, he holds, lies under God's judgement, and must certainly perish, in default of some radical change.
He believes that Jesus taught a humble, radical lifestyle that changes hearts and minds on the ground — not in law courts or legislative bodies.
Meditation Being pregnant can be an overwhelming experience as your body and mind adjust to this radical change.
«This period of radical change produced characteristic body shapes that remained recognisable for tens of millions of years.»
Gregory and Eldredge's critique provides several good ideas, such as incurring a developmental cost for making radical body - plan changes.
Researchers have proposed a radical change in the way Alzheimer's disease is defined, focusing on biological changes in the body, rather than clinical symptoms such as memory loss and cognitive decline.
Our formulas are BIOAVAILABLE — meaning, your body knows exactly what to do with them to bring radical change to the skin.
During the last half - century, our human DNA has not experienced major changes commensurate with this radical transformation of wheat, and many people's bodies simply may not be capable of processing modern wheat effectively.
These changes occur as a result of increased oxidative stress, which is an imbalance between free radicals (unstable molecules that damage cells) and the body's ability to defend against them.
And the hundreds of books and research papers I studied, gave me clarity that has helped me steer clear of confusing my body, disrupting normal metabolic processes, yo - yo dieting and radical changes of diet, year after year.
If you're ready to make radical changes in your body composition, start here.
The body produces some antioxidant protection on its own in the form of certain enzymes (superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase, and catalase), which change the structure of free radicals and breaks them down.
Oddly enough, there seems to be significant support for, and I haven't heard any argument against the idea that stress in many forms including worrying about diet can be very bad for your health with possible connections to cancer via free radicals and chemistry changes in the body.
Aging, tissue degeneration, and skin changes may be brought about by the damage that free radicals cause to cells unprotected by antioxidant nutrients in the body.
And what better population of student to study and nurture than, as education journalist Linda Perlstein puts it, youngsters whose «bodies and psyches morph through the most radical changes since infancy, leaving them torn between anxiety and ardor, dependence and autonomy, conformity and rebellion.»
A radical change in city demographics was taking place — in the early 1970s, Minneapolis was just 14 percent nonwhite, but by 1995 the Minneapolis Public Schools student body was majority minority.
Antioxidants are believed to prevent and fight disease by neutralizing dangerous, highly - changed waste products, called free radicals, in the body.
Normally, our bodies use natural anti-oxidants to inactivate free radicals; by supplementing with additional anti-oxidants, age - related change can be retarded.
The trumpeting of white, fit, and cis bodies as more «desirable,» or «interesting» becomes antithetical to the radical change we need in our artistic practice.
Our Summer 2016 exhibition traced how artists have addressed radical changes to the very thing we humans know best: our bodies.
The Body Extended: Sculpture and Prosthetics traces how artists have addressed radical changes to the very thing we humans know best: our bodies.
Spanning the First World War to the present day, this exhibition of objects, drawings, films, photographs, paintings and archives from medical museum collections, focuses on analogue augmentation to the body, tracing how artists have addressed radical changes to the very thing humans know best: our bodies.
Apple's next flagship iPhone will have a bigger display - to - body ratio than any other iPhone before it, rumors indicate, as Apple is preparing for a radical design change.
Radical Aliveness strives to represent the world and all of its complexities within the student body, in order to be able to make greater change globally.
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