terça-feira, 19 de agosto de 2008

PHELPS DIET




For a common person, Phelps´diet is guaranteed record - of obesity


The breakfast of the biggest Olympic champion of all time starts with two cups of coffee and three fried egg sandwiches filled with cheese, tomatoes, fried onions, lettuce and mayonnaise.

Do you think it's only these?? No..., it still has an omelet with five eggs, cereals, three pieces of toast with sugar and three chocolate pancakes .

Lunch is enriched macaroni and two sandwiches of ham and cheese with mayonnaise on white bread, accompanied by energy drinks. The energy drink comes back around the dinner, when Phelps closed the day with a pizza (an entire one!) and a half pound of macaroni.

If you wake up today, had lunch with Michael Phelps and tried to catch him up on the table (as in the pool is difficult…), you'd probably end your day in a hospital gurney, with indigestion.

If you decide to continue to follow "Phelps' diet", the only record you'd achieve would be the"arrival at the rate of obesity in less time."

The prodigy child of the Olympic Games in Beijing said in an interview released this Wednesday (13) to the American network NBC that consumes no less than 12 thousand calories a day. Every time he sits for a meal, he eats 4 thousand calories - twice what the doctors recommend for a common person for a full day; overall, the feeding of Phelps leads six times more calories than a mortal like me reles and you.

Mount Rushmore Hystory

Mount Rushmore National Memorial, near Keystone, South Dakota, is a monumental granite sculpture by Gutzon Borglum (1867–1941), located within the United States Presidential Memorial that represents the first 150 years of the history of the United States of America.
With 60-foot (18 m) sculptures of the heads of former United States presidents (left to right): George Washington (1732–1799),
Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826),
Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919),
and Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865).
The entire memorial covers 1,278.45 acres (5.17 km2) and is 5,725 feet (1,745 m) above sea level.
It is managed by the National Park Service, a bureau of the United States Department of the Interior. The memorial attracts approximately two million people annually.

The other side of Mount Rushmore