Difference between revisions of "Lesson:How to eat: like predator or prey?/ExerciseD1"

From The Grove - Academia de Idiomas
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "==Listening Exercise== {{#ev:youtube|ID}} {| class="prettytable" width=800 | <quiz display=simple> {Watch the video and complete the text according to what you can understan...")
 
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
<br>
 +
 
==Listening Exercise==
 
==Listening Exercise==
  
{{#ev:youtube|ID}}
+
<html5media>http://thegrove.com.br/metodo/images/a/a5/How_To_Eat_Like_Predator_or_Prey_-Epipheo.TV-.mp3</html5media>
  
{| class="prettytable" width=800
 
|
 
 
<quiz display=simple>
 
<quiz display=simple>
 
{Watch the video and complete the text according to what you can understand.
 
{Watch the video and complete the text according to what you can understand.
 
|type="{}"}
 
|type="{}"}
 
+
Narrator: We { recently _8 } spoke with J. Stanton about what we eat. Now we wanna talk to him about how we eat and how that { affects _7 } us. So J., we've all heard you should eat a bunch of small meals { throughout _10 } the day to lose { weight _6 }, but is there any truth to that?
 +
J.S.: Absolutely not, you don't lose weight by { eating _6 }, you lose weight by not eating. By analogy, you can look at how { animals _7 } eat, predators which are uniformly lean and muscular, they'll gorge on their kill and then fast for { extended _8 } periods of time, sometimes only eating once every day or every few days. The other { extreme _7 }, prey animals like cattle, graze { constantly _10 } and they get very, very fat doing that. So by analogy to humans, not that we { should _6 } eat once every three days but it is better to eat like a { predator _8 } than like prey.
 +
Narrator: So is it more about how often we eat or how much?
 +
J.S.: in my { experience _10 } and I think in most people's experience it's much easier to { limit _5 } the number of times you eat than to try and limit the { quantity _8 } you eat when you do eat.
 +
Narrator: Huh, well I know for me if I don't eat { something _9 } every couple of hours I tend to get pretty "hangry".
 +
J.S.: I used to be the guy you had to { feed _4 } every three hours or he turned into an ogre. Oh, got to feed J. again, he is getting grumpy. Narrator: So you're saying your body { eventually _10 } gets used to eating less often and if that's the case, what is the biggest difference we'll { notice _6 } going from grazing like prey to eating like predator?
 +
J.S.: The most important change is that food doesn't { run _3 } your life, once you don't have to keep { stuffing _8 } yourself with little snacks every couple of hours, you'll { realize _7 } how much more time you have to { devote _6 } to fixing yourself real food.
 +
Narrator: Really interesting stuff here. Again, thanks to J. Stanton for his "inside into how and what we eat" and be sure to check out this website...
 
</quiz>
 
</quiz>
|}
 

Latest revision as of 15:08, 10 March 2014


Listening Exercise

Watch the video and complete the text according to what you can understand.

Narrator: We

spoke with J. Stanton about what we eat. Now we wanna talk to him about how we eat and how that

us. So J., we've all heard you should eat a bunch of small meals

the day to lose

, but is there any truth to that?
J.S.: Absolutely not, you don't lose weight by

, you lose weight by not eating. By analogy, you can look at how

eat, predators which are uniformly lean and muscular, they'll gorge on their kill and then fast for

periods of time, sometimes only eating once every day or every few days. The other

, prey animals like cattle, graze

and they get very, very fat doing that. So by analogy to humans, not that we

eat once every three days but it is better to eat like a

than like prey.
Narrator: So is it more about how often we eat or how much?
J.S.: in my

and I think in most people's experience it's much easier to

the number of times you eat than to try and limit the

you eat when you do eat.
Narrator: Huh, well I know for me if I don't eat

every couple of hours I tend to get pretty "hangry".
J.S.: I used to be the guy you had to

every three hours or he turned into an ogre. Oh, got to feed J. again, he is getting grumpy. Narrator: So you're saying your body

gets used to eating less often and if that's the case, what is the biggest difference we'll

going from grazing like prey to eating like predator?
J.S.: The most important change is that food doesn't

your life, once you don't have to keep

yourself with little snacks every couple of hours, you'll

how much more time you have to

to fixing yourself real food.
Narrator: Really interesting stuff here. Again, thanks to J. Stanton for his "inside into how and what we eat" and be sure to check out this website...