
One Egg for Breakfast: Great Nutritional Benefits in a Simple Meal - Jordan News
One Egg for Breakfast: Great Nutritional Benefits in a Simple Meal Eggs are among the foods highly recommended by nutrition experts as a key part of a healthy breakfast. They are rich in nutrients and easy to prepare, making them an ideal choice to start the day with energy and focus. اضافة اعلان According to Health Shots, committing to eating one egg daily at breakfast can offer numerous health benefits, including: Eggs contain all the essential amino acids the body needs, making them effective for muscle building and increasing the feeling of fullness. Eating eggs in the morning helps curb appetite and reduces hunger throughout the day, which in turn lowers the desire for snacking and supports weight control. Thanks to their choline content, eggs help enhance brain functions such as concentration and memory, making them an ideal food for students and those in mentally demanding jobs. Eggs are rich in antioxidants like lutein and zeaxanthin, which help protect against age-related eye diseases such as macular degeneration. They also contain vitamin D, which is essential for calcium absorption and building strong bones—especially important for people who don't get much sun exposure. Whether you follow a low-carb or high-protein diet, eggs are a versatile option that can easily be incorporated into any healthy eating plan. Eggs are also one of the most affordable sources of protein, available in every household, and can be prepared in delicious and varied ways to suit all tastes. Having one egg a day for breakfast is more than just a habit—it's a simple step toward a more balanced and healthy life. It fuels the body, sharpens focus, supports bones and eyes, all without straining your budget or taking too much time to prepare.
Source: Sada El Balad
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The Guardian
5 minutes ago
- The Guardian
One in a 13 trillion chance: why six sixes in a Test over may never happen
Six, six, six, six, six, six. The perfect over for a batter but for a bowler a double dose of the devil's number and the ultimate humiliation. 'My brain had turned to fuzz,' says Stuart Broad of 19 September 2007 when Yuvraj Singh took him for 36 runs at Kingsmead in Durban. England had already crashed out of the inaugural T20 World Cup and a 21-year-old Broad suffered a colossal prang to his pride, the events of that night for ever changing him as a bowler. England's match against India was the second in a double-header. The game before ran over and cut into the preparation time for the second. 'I marked my run-up at the end I was starting from, but either forgot or didn't have time to mark it at the other end. I'd also never really done any death bowling. I think maybe Colly [Paul Collingwood, the England T20 captain] had messed up the overs and he was like: 'You are back on to bowl now.'' Yuvraj was on strike and had just had a heated altercation with Andrew Flintoff after hitting his fellow all-rounder for a couple of boundaries in the previous over. With tempers significantly flared the umpires had to intervene. Yuvraj took out his temper on Broad and, more specifically, the white ball in his hand. Broad had to mark out his run-up in a hurry. 'Immediately, I felt a sense of panic. I wasn't looking at my field, who I was bowling to or what I was going to bowl. I was out of kilter. I decided to try to bowl yorkers. I got the first one wrong. The second one wrong. I didn't try to change it up at all.' After the first three balls went the distance, Collingwood suggested his bowler go around the wicket, but Broad was so wet behind the ears he had not really done it before, a grim irony considering his success around the wicket to left-handers subsequently. A full toss came out and was duly dispatched. A few moments later Yuvraj and Broad would be for ever minted on the double-edged coin of cricketing history. 'It definitely changed me,' Broad says. 'I knew what the worst day felt like and I had a wake-up call very early. I became more gritty, more steely after that night. I implemented a routine I then did for every single over I bowled since.' Is he almost glad it happened? 'No,' he says with a firm shake of his head. 'I'd rather it had never happened, but I'm glad I used it and learned from it.' A handful of players know what it feels like to be clattered over the ropes six times in a row in professional cricket. Unlike Broad, some seemingly have not been able to fully exorcise their experience. I tracked a number of bowlers/victims down and most politely declined to discuss their experiences. Broad was able to shake his off and go on to greater things. For most, though, their names are linked to an event when their abasement enables an astonishing feat. 'I sensed that it was on after a couple. I then flat-batted the third ball for six. After the fourth it was clear he'd lost it.' Herschelle Gibbs gives a throaty chuckle down the phone from Cape Town. He was the first man to hit six sixes in international cricket. The Netherlands' Daan Van Bunge was the obliterated bowler in a 2007 World Cup match in Basseterre. Gibbs agrees there is an egotistical element to hitting six sixes. 'It's cat and mouse between batter and bowler and it ends in an absolute mauling.' After the fifth six his batting partner, Jacques Kallis, came down the wicket and suggested Gibbs 'could take it easy now'. Gibbs still sounds incredulous at the memory. 'Maybe that shows the difference between me and Jacques. I was always going to go for the final one.' 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We shouldn't put a flutter on Harry Brook, Ben Stokes or Rishabh Pant doing it this summer then? 'Since June 2022, sixes have been hit, on average, once per 155 balls in Tests. Obviously, it doesn't quite work like this, but that suggests the likelihood of hitting three sixes in a row is one in approximately 3.7m and hitting six in a row one in 13.7 trillion.' You always hear it, Test cricket – it's a bowler's game. For the time being, one of cricket's remaining Everests remains unclimbed, but you suspect a few might be capable of a tilt at the six-hitting summit. This is an extract from the Guardian's weekly cricket email, The Spin. To subscribe, just visit this page and follow the instructions.


India Gazette
5 minutes ago
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Over 400 athletes register for inaugural edition of Shooting League of India
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Reuters
5 minutes ago
- Reuters
South Korean game company Krafton to acquire Japan's ADK for $516 mln
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