Digital Art Director (Johannesburg)
Advertising, Marketing,
PR, Media and Digital
Jhb: 011 883 5404
CT: 021 422 3590 www.adtalent.co.za
Recruiters & Career Coaches in Advertising, Marketing and Media Industries
Lynn: 082 802 4441 (Advertising/Digital/Media)
az.oc.dauqskroweht@nnyl
Jo-Anne: 084 200 1703 (Marketing/Sales/PR)
az.oc.dauqskroweht@ennaoj
Recruitment Specialists since 1989
Rob Jones:
az.oc.llywel@jbor
Michelle Jones:
az.oc.llywel@jhcim
Tel: 011 465 9368
www.lewyll.co.za
Branch Manager/Sales Representative (Durban)
Advertising, Marketing,
PR, Media and Digital
Jhb: 011 883 5404
CT: 021 422 3590 www.adtalent.co.za
Recruiters & Career Coaches in Advertising, Marketing and Media Industries
Lynn: 082 802 4441 (Advertising/Digital/Media)
az.oc.dauqskroweht@nnyl
Jo-Anne: 084 200 1703 (Marketing/Sales/PR)
az.oc.dauqskroweht@ennaoj
Recruitment Specialists since 1989
Rob Jones:
az.oc.llywel@jbor
Michelle Jones:
az.oc.llywel@jhcim
Tel: 011 465 9368
www.lewyll.co.za
App Developer – C# (Umhlanga)
Advertising, Marketing,
PR, Media and Digital
Jhb: 011 883 5404
CT: 021 422 3590 www.adtalent.co.za
Recruiters & Career Coaches in Advertising, Marketing and Media Industries
Lynn: 082 802 4441 (Advertising/Digital/Media)
az.oc.dauqskroweht@nnyl
Jo-Anne: 084 200 1703 (Marketing/Sales/PR)
az.oc.dauqskroweht@ennaoj
Recruitment Specialists since 1989
Rob Jones:
az.oc.llywel@jbor
Michelle Jones:
az.oc.llywel@jhcim
Tel: 011 465 9368
www.lewyll.co.za
for Sale. R 4 200 000 : A MOUNTAINSIDE BEAUTY IN PAARL… South Africa Property Portal
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4 Reasons It’s Harder to Lose Weight in Winter—and What You Need to Do Differently
There’s no question it’s easier to make healthy choices in spring and summer: There’s an abundance of produce in season. The sun is shining, the days are long—and you feel naturally motivated to head outdoors and get active! But come the cold, harsh months of winter, eating clean and slimming down can seem a whole lot more challenging. Read on for a few common weight-loss hurdles that pop up when the temperature drops, plus experts tips on how to dodge them.
Temptation is everywhere
Hot chocolate, creamy soups, mashed potatoes, macaroni and cheese—’tis the season for comfort foods, which can seem so unfair given you’re doing your best to stay hyper-focused on what you “should” be eating. These circumstances can put you in a tough spot, says health and lifestyle coach Sheila Viers. If you’re not careful, you may slip into the mindset that all indulgences are “bad,” she explains—and once you start labeling your food choices as “good” and “bad,” every decision becomes a loaded one.
Any time you stray from your rigid eating plan, you might experience guilt or shame, emotions that can trigger the body’s stress response, says Viers. And stress only sets you up for more trouble: When you’re not feeling your best, it’s even harder to stay on track with your goals, she points out.
Instead of sweating over all the dietary “shoulds,” try making food choices that are right for you. “Maybe you plan ahead,” Viers suggests, so you are deciding in advance when you want to indulge (like at the Friday night potluck, for example). Or maybe you choose one small indulgence per day (say, a few squares of high-quality dark chocolate) to satisfy your sweet tooth. “The important thing is that the decision feels good to you.”
RELATED: 57 Ways to Lose Weight Forever, According to Science
You’re fighting the urge to hibernate
Between the snow and ice, and shorter, darker days, winter is enough to tank your motivation to exercise. Who wants to venture out into the freezing weather to go for a run, or to the gym when it’s so cozy at home? Luckily, you don’t have to leave your living room to get in a killer sweat sesh (promise). There are tons of great workout videos online. “You can put a couple together,” says Viers, “or split them up, with 10 minutes before work and 10 minutes in the evening.” Keeping up a fitness routine will help with more than weight loss, she adds. “The benefit of working out is that it gets oxygen to the cells,” says Viers. “This keeps your body working optimally, and keeps you energized.”
Need some fitspo? We’ve rounded up our favorite online workouts for yoga, dance cardio, and HIIT. Only got a few minutes? Check out these super-efficient routines you can do anywhere.
Sign up for our 30-Day Love Your Strength Challenge With Emily Skye!
You’re loading up on salt
If you’re eating less fresh food in the winter months, you’re probably eating more packaged and processed foods, which can be sneaky sources of sodium. Think canned veggies and soups, pasta, bread, chips and crackers—they can all cause you to retain water.
Even if you’re keeping your calorie intake in check, water weight can make you feel bloated and sluggish. Viers’ advice: Hydrate as much as you can. “It really is the best way to get rid of that water weight,” she says. Adding potassium-rich foods to your diet may help, too, because they regulate sodium levels in your body. Great sources include avocados, bananas, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, and coconut water.
To get more weight-loss tips delivered to your inbox, sign up for the Healthy Living newsletter
Raw veggies seem so unappealing
Let’s face it: When you’re feeling cold, your belly isn’t exactly rumbling for kale. You’re probably more inclined to opt for a savory lunch over a salad, right? Soups and stews are a great way to get vegetables too, you just have to choose wisely, says Viers. “A soup with a cream base is more likely to contain more calories, for example, so you can opt for broth-based soups.” And if you’re turned off by salad, try eating your veggies warm: Roasted sweet potatoes, peppers, parsnips, carrots, asparagus and Brussels sprouts are great as a side, thrown into soup, or even tossed over greens for a hunger-crushing meal.
Don’t forget about warm fruits either. They can be a delicious and healthy winter treat. You can bake or roast peaches, pears, plums, or even cherries, and eat with a little drizzle of honey or cinnamon, or a dollop of whipped cream.
5 Signs You’re Getting Fitter—Even If the Scale Hasn’t Budged
You’ve been doing everything right: loading up on greens, lifting weights, and going easy on the wine and late-night snacks. But whenever you step on the scale, the same digits stare back at you—or worse, the number is higher than it was last time. WTF?
Before you get too worked up, the scale doesn’t tell the whole story—and you know this! Fortunately there are other ways to gauge your progress: As you get healthier, a few subtle mind-body clues begin to surface. Read on to learn what to look for. If you can check any of the boxes below, it’s a safe bet you’re on the right track (even if the scale claims otherwise).
Your junk food cravings have mellowed out
Once you’ve adapted to a cleaner diet, your hankerings for sugar and processed foods should get less intense (and may even go away completely), says Mark Hyman, MD, director of the Center for Functional Medicine at the Cleveland Clinic. “You can absolutely train your body to crave healthy foods instead,” he says. In other words, jonesing for edamame is an excellent sign you’ve made headway.
Test your taste buds: Make a list of five foods you once craved; then after two weeks, note whether you crave them anymore. The shift can happen very quickly, says Dr. Hyman, who wrote The Blood Sugar Solution: 10-Day Detox Diet. “If you load up on plant foods, healthy fats, and protein with every meal, you will find that eventually you won’t want the junk.”
RELATED: 9 Before-and-After Photos That Show Weight Is Just a Number
You’re reaching for heftier dumbbells
So you finally started lifting—or doing body-weight workouts—to build fat-burning muscle. Here’s some encouraging news: You may notice progress stat. For some people, it takes just a few weeks to see improvements in strength. “This is often referred to as beginner’s gains,” says Kourtney Thomas, a certified strength and conditioning specialist based in St. Louis. (After that, progress may slow, but it should still happen over time.)
Track your gains: As a general rule, if your regimen includes progressive overload (meaning you gradually make your muscles work harder over time, by adding weight or tension) you should be able to lift weight that is 7 to 10 percent heavier—or do endurance strength moves (such as planks) for longer—after every 14 days or so. Try using specific exercises (think bicep curls and a squat hold) as "benchmarks," and testing yourself every two weeks or so. But keep in mind that fitness progress isn’t always linear, Thomas notes. “Other general clues like having more energy for workouts, and better balance and coordination are valuable indicators too,” she says.
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You’ve never felt more rested
“Exercise has been proven to not only boost your daytime energy, but your sleep quality, too,” says Marci Goolsby, MD, a physician in the Women’s Sports Medicine Center at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City. Researchers have found that when people with insomnia get on a long-term exercise program, they tend to doze off quicker, snooze longer, and sleep more deeply than before they started working out. (Just don’t bang out a HITT routine right before bed, Dr. Goolsby warns, because that might actually keep you up.)
Collect some data: Use a sleep tracker device for a few weeks. “It can give you some general feedback,” says Dr. Goolsby, such as how long it takes you to drift off, and how long (roughly) you spend in REM sleep (the deepest stage). Once you start noticing positive changes, you may be motivated to hit the hay earlier, she adds.
RELATED: 6 Weird Things That May Help You Sleep Better
Your appetite has changed
If your get-fit plan has you turned you into a gym rat, you may not be as hungry as usual—or, you may be famished. Exercise can actually have both effects: Some people experience a drop in appetite, while others crave more food.
If your end goal is a slimmer waist, feeling ravenous can be frustrating. But you may actually need more food to keep burning calories, says Thomas: “You might have to increase what you are eating to fuel your body through your exercise routine.”
Assess your eating habits: In a notebook or with voice recordings in your smartphone, keep tabs on your hunger levels and rough calorie intake. If you do notice you’re eating more since you’ve started crushing your workouts in full-on beast mode, that okay, says Dr. Hyman. “Just make sure you’re adding real, whole foods,” he says. “Eight hundred calories from an avocado is going to do dramatically different things to your body than 800 calories coming from gummy bears.”
RELATED: How to Control Your Hunger Hormones to Lose Weight and Keep It Off
Your jeans fit differently
“Focusing on how your clothing feels is a good gauge for most people,” says Thomas, "as long as you recognize that sizing is a messed up mind game and are able to not worry about that." But don’t expect your pants to get looser necessarily; you may actually fill them out a bit better. This is what happens to Dr. Goolsby (who describes herself as not naturally muscular) when she starts a new workout. “If I start doing Spin, for example, all of a sudden I’m starting to notice my pants feel a bit tighter as I’m building my quads. It’s not because I’m gaining weight, I’m putting on muscle.”
Do a mirror check: If you want visual evidence of how your body is changing, consider snapping pics of yourself wearing the same outfit (and at the same time of day) every so often. (Note: If this habit becomes obsessive or makes you feel discouraged, it’s not worth doing.) Even just taking a mental note of how you feel physically in your clothes when you get dressed in the morning is fine.
Should you toss your scale?
The number on the scale is not worth fixating on—but that doesn’t mean weighing yourself is a complete waste, says May Tom, RD, an in-house dietitian at Cal-a-Vie Health Spa in Vista, California. “Having objective data to look at can help move people toward change,” she says. Research backs her up: Two recent studies have reaffirmed that people who step on the scale regularly tend to lose more weight than those who weigh themselves less frequently or not at all.
So how often should you weigh in? Once a week at most, says Tom. “That’s my usual recommendation if people feel like [the scale] keeps them on track and accountable,” she explains. “Any more than that and you can become frustrated if you don’t see progress.”
News24.com | Alcohol, poverty, fuelling domestic violence in Bredasdorp – court hears
Cape Town – Violent assault by a partner is considered “the norm” in families blighted by alcohol abuse and poverty in Bredasdorp, the Western Cape High Court heard on Wednesday as sentencing proceedings began for the man who raped, kidnapped and murdered teenager Elda Jaftha.
“Many of the violent crimes are committed between girlfriend and boyfriend, and husband and wife,” investigating officer Nataniel Kruger told Acting Judge Feziwe Renqe.
Zimbabwean Gift Sibondo, who was found guilty on Monday, listened as proceedings continued.
READ: Sentencing of Bredasdorp teen’s killer postponed
The public gallery was empty, in contrast to the massive outpouring of dismay after Jaftha’s body was found under Sibondo’s bed on May 31 2015.
The two had been in an on-off relationship since she was 12-years-old and she was last seen by several people while she was slung over his shoulder on May 29 2015.
He told them she was feeling “faint” from drinking too much and he took her home and dabbed a damp hot towel on her in the hope that she would recover.
On Sunday, May 31, that year, he hid her under his bed when somebody arrived to fetch a borrowed DVD.
He never took her to a hospital. A suspicious neighbour tipped off the police and his door was broken down. Jaftha’s feet were found sticking out from under his bed.
Teeth knocked out
When handing down judgment, Renqe said the girl had been severely beaten and possibly even kicked before she died.
The attack was so severe, that a piece of what could have been a screwdriver and twig points, were pulled out of her wounds. Two of her teeth had been knocked out.
He had pleaded not guilty, but said she had consented to sex and that they lived together and were in a “love relationship”.
READ: Man guilty of brutal murder of teen
He was in his late 20s when he raped and killed her.
Kruger testified that most people remembered 17-year-old Anene Booysen who had been gang-raped and disembowelled in the town in February 2013.
She did not survive and these “very cruel” murders and attacks still occurred.
He told Renqe that, in his 27 years as a police officer and 17 years as a detective, the common denominators in the cases were alcohol abuse and poverty.
Financial dependence on an attacker made it worse because the women would lay a charge, an attacker would be arrested, but the case would later be withdrawn when they realise they would lose their financial support if their attacker went to jail.
Financial support
In one recent case he investigated, a woman’s partner used a wooden pole to beat her so badly that he fractured her skull, said Kruger.
When he interviewed her in Tygerberg Hospital, she told him that was just “the norm” in her relationship.
When she realised that her spouse could go to jail, she started to worry about how she would support herself and her family because he had given them money.
This was a typical response to victims from poor families where alcohol abuse was prevalent, he said.
This fear of losing support meant that many attackers go unpunished.
Never see her again
Before Kruger testified, an affidavit was read on behalf of Sibondo’s ex-girlfriend, who may not be named to protect the identity of their child.
The statement was short, and focused on her loss of financial support when Sibondo was arrested.
Elda’s mother Eva held back tears as she said that Sibondo should get life for the murder of her daughter.
“It broke my heart that I will never see her again,” she said.
Sibondo will be sentenced on Friday.
Sales Executive-new Business Kwazulu Natal
Sales Executive – New Business Development (Durban – KwaZulu Natal) R Market related Leading Staffing Services Company based in Durban is seeking an energetic, sales and target driven Consultant to build and maintain new business in the allocated area.
Minimum requirements:
Grade 12
Computer literate (MS Office – Word, Outlook & Excel)
Minimum 5 years working experience
Minimum 2 years experience within the staffing industry
Experience in cold calling
Aware of target market
Confidence to interact and communicate to clients on all levels including senior management and executives
Sound knowledge of sales techniques in order to sell a service
Attributes:
Attention to detail
Meticulous in work execution
Zero tolerance for errors
Methodical
Target driven
Energetic
Competencies:
Accuracy and attention to detail
The ability to work well within a team
Continuous improvement abilities
Ability to work under pressure
Reliable and self-managing
Job responsibilities (duties include but not limited to):
To prospect for, gain new business in line with the company’s ideal client criteria, and ensure annual sales budgets are met
Achieve the sales targets allocated
To ensure that once the client has accepted company’s proposal the necessary
documented procedures are followed and communicated to all relevant parties in order to provide a smooth running, efficient service to the clients
Provide statistical information on all proposals and prospects in the form of weekly, monthly and quarterly reports
Ensure tenders are completed and deadlines are met
Determine clients to target and set up marketing and investigative meetings with same
To ensure client communication, meetings and presentations are carried out professionally in order to project the company profile with a high degree of efficiency
Provide accurate information to management on prospective clients for accurate costing’s and solutions
Oversee and approve the preparation of a formal proposal for approval by senior management
Ensure all new account procedures are followed
Manage all direct reports efficiently and professionally
Assisting with implementation of new accounts
Carry out any reasonable task as instructed by management
Should you meet the minimum requirements, please email your CV to:
mariusp@transman.co.za with reference: Sales Durban
Engineering Chargehand (uitenhage)
Engineering Chargehand (Uitenhage) Specialist organisation in the rubber and plastics technology industry based in Uitenhage is seeking the skills and experience of an Engineering Chargehand who has a qualified Electrical Trade / Millwright Trade Test Certificate.
Minimum requirements:
- Qualified Electrical Trade / Millwright Trade Test Certificate
- Minimum 5 years’ electrical maintenance experience
- Minimum 3 years’ electrical project management experience
- Proven Knowledge of PLC’s / Drives
- Sound understanding of applicable Health and Safety Regulations
- Proven negotiations with contractors and third-party personnel
- Problem solving and decision making
Job responsibilities:
The position includes, amongst others, the following key performance areas:
- To control and allocate the flow of electrical/electronic work through the workshop to make the best use of staff, equipment and other resources.
- To ensure that electrical/electronic engineering downtime is kept to a minimum and take appropriate, hands-on corrective action where required including carrying out electrical/electronic repairs when required.
- To ensure that all electrical/electronic equipment are serviced in accordance with departmental service standards.
- To ensure that all electrical/electronic equipment are serviced in accordance with departmental service standards.
- To ensure that pro-active planned maintenance is carried out on all electrical/electronic equipment to prevent problems occurring.
- To ensure that each electrical/electronic equipment has a full documented history of work carried out to satisfy DVSA and company requirements.
- To act as a technical expert in the workshop, advising electricians on tasks and sharing knowledge, for example through regular toolbox talks.
- To act as a technical expert in the workshop, advising electricians on tasks and sharing knowledge, for example through regular toolbox talks.
- To carry out any staff appraisals allocated by the Engineering Specialist.
- To maintain a high performing engineering team and in particular take responsibility for supporting and advising, coaching and mentoring of apprentices.
- To instil and maintain a strong health and safety culture amongst the Engineering team with a good understanding of risk assessments.
Should you meet the minimum requirements, please email your CV to: gerhardv@transman.co.za with Email subject: Engineering Chargehand