ဂ်ပန္ႏိုင္ငံက ျဖစ္ရပ္မွန္ " ငွက္ေပ်ာသီးနဲ႔ေရ" ပဲလိုတဲ့ ၀ိတ္ေလွ်ာ့ခ်နည္း
ခုဆို ဂ်ပန္မွာ ငွက္ေပ်ာသီးဝယ္ယူ ရရွိနိုင္ဘို႕ မနက္ေစာေစာေစ်းေျပးေနရျပီ ဆိုပဲ...
အရင္က
လံုးဝ မထင္ရွားသာမာန္ ငွက္ေျပာသီးဟာ ခုခ်ိန္မွာ ပိန္ေရးအတြက္ အရမ္းကို
အသံုးဝင္ေနတယ္ဆိုတာ သိလာၾကျပီးေနာက္ပိုင္း...
ငွက္ေျပာသီးတင္သြင္းတဲ့ကုန္သည္ေတြကလဲ... တင္သြင္းလို႔
မေလာက္နိုင္ေလာက္ေအာင္ ေစ်းကြက္က အရမ္းေတာင္းဆိုလာၾကတယ္တဲ့...
Hitoshi Watanabe ဆိုသူ
အသက္ ၃၁ ႏွစ္ရွိျပီ ျဖစ္တဲ့ ဘြ႕ဲရအလုပ္လက္မဲ့လူငယ္ တေယာက္ဟာ ဒီနည္းဟာ
အေကာင္းဆံုးဆိုတာ ကို ၂၀၀၆ ခုႏွစ္မွာ ေတြ႕ရွိခဲ့ တယ္တဲ့... သူ႔ေကာင္မေလး
Sumiko ဆိုတဲ့မိန္းကေလးက ေဆးဆိုင္မွာ ေဆးေရာင္းတဲ့ အလုပ္လုပ္ရင္း... တရုတ္
တိုင္းရင္ေဆး ပညာ သင္ၾကားခဲ့ရတာကေတာ့... ဘာဖိအားမွ ေပးစရာမလိုတဲ့
အရိုးရွင္းဆံုးပိန္နည္းကေတာ့ မနက္ေစာေစာမွာ ငွက္ေျပာသီးစားျပီး
ရိုးရိုးေရတခြက္ေသာက္လို႕ရွိရင္ ဇီဝေခ်ဖ်က္နဳန္း အလြန္ျမင့္မားျပီး...
ေန႕လည္စာနဲ႕ ညစာ ဘယ္ေလာက္စားစား..... ပိန္နိုင္ပါတယ္လို႕ဆိုပါတယ္....
သူ႕ေကာင္မေလးေျပာတဲ့အတိုင္း
စားလိုက္တာ ၆လအတြင္းမွာ ၁၃ ကီလိုဂရမ္ေတာင္က်တယ္ လို႕ဆိုပါတယ္...အဲတာ နဲ႔
သူေကာင္မေလးSumiko ကိုလက္ထပ္ျပီး ဒီျဖစ္ရပ္ကို MY SPACE ဂ်ပန္ဗားရွင္း MIXI
မွာ ပို႕စ္တင္ထားတယ္ လို႕ဆိုပါတယ္...
ဒီဇာတ္လမ္းေလးဟာ ပထမဆံုး Banana
Diet Story အျဖစ္နဲ႕ ထင္ရွားေက်ာ္ၾကား ခဲ့ျပီး စာအုပ္ေတာင္ ထုပ္ခဲ့ရတယ္...
အုပ္ေရ ၆ သိန္းေတာင္ေရာင္းခဲ့ရပါတယ္..
ဒီအေၾကာင္းပိုမို
လူသိမ်ားလာရျခင္းအေၾကာင္းကေတာ့... တိုက်ိဳ အသံလႊင့္ဌာနက ထုပ္လႊင့္တဲ့
ေအာ္ပရာ အဆိုေတာ္ေဟာင္းၾကီးKumiko Mori ကလည္း ငွက္ေျပာသီး တန္ခိုးနဲ႔ ၇
ကီလိုေတာင္က်တယ္ ဆိုတဲ့အေၾကာင္း ထုတ္လႊင့္ျပသခဲ့တာလဲပါပါတယ္....
တျခားနညး္ေတြနဲ႕
ပိန္ေအာင္ ျပဳလုပ္ေပးသူေတြ မ်က္ခံုးေတာင္ပင့္သြားေစေလာက္ေအာင္ လြယ္ကူ
ျမန္ဆန္ ပါတယ္တဲ့..... အစားလဲေရွာင္စရာမလိုဘူး... အခ်ိန္မွန္လဲ
စားစရာမလိုဘူး.... ညဆို မစားပဲလဲေနစရာမလုိဘူး.... ဘာေလ့က်င့္ခန္းမွလဲ
လုပ္စရာမလိုပဲ မပင္ပန္းပဲ လြယ္လြန္းလို႕ပါတဲ့....
ကဲကဲ... တို႔ဆီမွာ
အေပါမ်ားဆံုးကလဲ ငွက္ေျပာသီး...
ဘယ္နားသြားသြားရွိတယ္...ငွက္ေျပာသီးစားျပီးရင္
ေရရိုးရိုးေလးလဲေသာက္ဘို႕မေမ့နဲ႕ေနာ္....
Japan Goes Bananas for a New Diet
Keiko
Akai is very annoyed. The attractive 21-year-old university student has
been planning to do a banana diet for some time now, but she can't get
started — and not for lack of trying. "I keep going to OK Store, my
local supermarket every single day," she says. "In fact, I've just been
there. There are no bananas on the shelves, and it's been like that for a
month."
Akai has never weighed more than 100 pounds, and is so
slim that her waist is swimming in Zara's smallest size XS skirt. She
doesn't need to lose any weight. But Japanese girls obsessed with diets
tend to jump at any trendy new ones, so, when Akai heard about a popular
actress who'd lost 26 pounds through the Morning Banana Diet, she had
to try it. And the dearth of bananas as her local supermarket, and many
others, is testimony to the popularity of the new dieting fad.
"Large
stores don't have any bananas from noon, and even Ito Yokado (a major
supermarket chain) runs out of them after 3 p.m.," says Tomoyuki
Horiuchi, sales representative of Tokyo Seika Boeki Co., Ltd., fruit and
vegetables wholesale company. Hiromi Ohtaki of Dole Japan, a leading
banana importer, sees the boom in sales as largely due to Morning Banana
Diet — bananas don't normally sell well during summer, and this year's
summer has been especially hot. Still, over the past 4 months, demand
has driven Dole Japan to increase its banana imports by upward of 25%,
and even then supplies could not keep pace with demand. "In a way this
is an emergency," explains Ohtaki. "We've been importing bananas from
the Philippines for the past 40 years, but this is the first time
something like this happened to us, and we find it very difficult to
cope."
The Morning Banana Diet regime is simple: A banana (or as
many as you want) and room temperature water for breakfast; eat anything
you like for lunch and dinner (by 8 p.m.). A three o'clock snack is
okay, but no desserts after meals, and you have to go to bed before
midnight. Sumiko Watanabe, a pharmacist in Osaka designed this
stress-free diet to help increase the metabolism of her husband Hitoshi
Watanabe, who had been rather overweight. In due course, Mr. Watanabe
lost 37 pounds and introduced the diet on mixi, one of Japan's largest
social networking services. Morning Banana Diet books published since
March have sold over 730,000 copies, and some have been translated and
published in South Korea and Taiwan. The diet became even more popular
after a TV program featured a singer who had lost 15 pounds in just six
weeks. It was literally the day after that program aired that the
shortage of bananas first became evident. "Bananas suddenly flew off the
shelves, there was a 70%-80% increase in weekly sales compared to the
same period last year," says Takeshi Ozaki, a spokesperson of Life
Corporation that runs 201 supermarkets throughout Japan.
Professor
Masahiko Okada of Niigata University School of Medicine questions the
hype around the banana diet. The human body has three essential
nutrients — carbohydrates, fat and protein —, he says, and "the golden
rule is to balance these three nutrients and a daily calorie intake.
Once you understand that, you don't have to be swayed by the fad diet
any more, whether it is a konnyaku (alimentary yam paste) or a banana
diet." But a nation prone to dieting fads often ignores such sober
advice.
According to Ministry of Finance, Japan's banana imports
were 970,000 tons in 2007, mostly from Taiwan and the Philippines. "It
takes from 10 to 15 months to harvest bananas, so it is not at all easy
to meet a sudden increase in demand," says Dole's Ohtaki. Dole Japan is
trying to make up the shortfall by negotiating distribution deals with
Dole corporations in other countries. Supplying the spike in demand will
be lucrative, because banana prices in Japan have risen about 20% as a
result of supply shortages that have coincided with the diet fad.
Bananas
are hardly the first fad diet to create shortages in Japan's consumer
markets. During the 1970s, there were similar runs on black tea fungus,
oolong tea and konnyaku; during the 1980s it was baby formula, banana
and boiled egg; then, in the '90s, came apple, nata de coco, cocoa and
chili pepper; and during this decade black vinegar, carrot juice, soy
milk, beer yeast and toasted soybean flour (kinako). Last year's
fermented soybean (natto) diet emptied supermarket shelves. Based on
experience, Horiuchi predicts that the banana boom will last only
another month or so. "In the past, there were all kinds of hit diets.
But they never last, do they? So, we don't really want to end up with an
uncontrollable banana surplus."
Ref:::http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1850454,00.html
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