Top 10 Health Benefits of Drinking Tea
By: Lynn Grieger
There are
lots of reasons why I enjoy a hot cup of tea: I love the aroma of various
flavors of tea; holding onto a hot tea mug warms my hands on a cold winter
morning; sipping tea in front of the fireplace is a great way to relax. And
those are just the feel-good reasons. If you're not drinking tea yet, read up on
these 10 ways tea does your body good and then see if you're ready to change
your Starbucks order! 1.
Tea contains antioxidants. Like the Rust-Oleum paint that keeps
your outdoor furniture from rusting, tea's antioxidants protect your body from
the ravages of aging and the effects of pollution. 2.
Tea has less caffeine than coffee. Coffee usually has two to
three times the caffeine of tea (unless you're a fan of Morning Thunder, which
combines caffeine with mate, an herb that acts like caffeine in our body). An
eight-ounce cup of coffee contains around 135 mg caffeine; tea contains only 30
to 40 mg per cup. If drinking coffee gives you the jitters, causes indigestion
or headaches or interferes with sleep -- switch to tea. 3.
Tea may reduce your risk of heart attack and stroke. Unwanted blood clots
formed from cholesterol and blood platelets cause
heart attack
4.
Tea protects your bones. It's not just the milk added to tea that
builds strong bones. One study that compared tea drinkers with
non-drinkers, found that people who drank tea for 10 or more years had the
strongest bones, even after adjusting for age,
body weight
6.
Tea bolsters your immune defenses. Drinking tea may help your body's
immune system
7.
Tea protects against cancer. Thank the polyphenols, the
antioxidants found in tea, once again for their cancer-fighting effects. While
the overall research is inconclusive, there are enough studies that show the
potential protective effects of drinking tea to make adding tea to your list of
daily beverages. 8.
Tea helps keep you hydrated. Caffeinated beverages, including
tea, used to be on the list of beverages that didn't contribute to our daily fluid needs.
Since caffeine is a diuretic and makes us pee more, the thought was that
caffeinated beverages couldn't contribute to our overall fluid
requirement. However, recent research has shown that the caffeine really
doesn't matter -- tea and other caffeinated beverages definitely
contribute to our fluid needs. The only time the caffeine becomes a
problem as far as fluid is concerned is when you drink more than five or
six cups of a
caffeinated beverage
9.
Tea is calorie-free. Tea doesn't have any calories, unless you
add sweetener or milk. Consuming even 250 fewer calories per day can result in
losing one pound per week. If you're looking for a satisfying, calorie-free
beverage, tea is a top choice. 10.
Tea increases your metabolism. Lots of people complain about a slow
metabolic rate
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