There is nothing linking tea with weight lose, fat storage, fat absorption or an increase in burning fat. There is no evidence to suggest that this tea would help weight loss!
Free radical DO NOT attach to health cells, they DO NOT "grow and grow" and the free radicals CAN NOT repair the damage.
Oxygen free radical DO damage health cells by an oxidation reaction. Antioxidants react with the free radical so the cells dose not.
Your science is flawed and you are scaremongering.
I don't think there is a right or wrong answer to this question, as it all depends on which tea you enjoy drinking. Personally I am not a massive lover of green tea, although I do drink it on occasion. I much prefer Oolong as my general all-round beverage, and often drink black tea and pu-erh also.
In my opinion, tea only becomes "bad" (if that's the right expression) when you start adding sweetners, milk, sugar, etc.
Try a wide variety of teas with and without additives and see what fits :)
Oolong tea is my favourite too. It's served with meals for a reason. I have a highly sensitive stomach and oolong tea soothes it after I eat so I don't feel nauseous.
I wanted to reach out to anyone that loves Hair as much as me!
simplyext 7 months ago
Just drink tea o.k. =^_^=
SOUTHPARKFOREVER240 1 year ago 2
A non protein based amino acid? ALL AMINO ACIDS ARE NON PROTEIN BASED!
Protein however is made up of strings of amino acids.
Also caffeine is a diuretic in all forms, so tea does de-hydrate but less so than coffee.
This is all basic 14 year old science here in the UK what is wrong with you, this is a sales pitch based upon false advertisement.
However I applaud you on making the videos on tea, because it is indeed a tasty beverage.
PS im not 14 im now 20.
hatstalker 1 year ago
There is nothing linking tea with weight lose, fat storage, fat absorption or an increase in burning fat. There is no evidence to suggest that this tea would help weight loss!
Free radical DO NOT attach to health cells, they DO NOT "grow and grow" and the free radicals CAN NOT repair the damage.
Oxygen free radical DO damage health cells by an oxidation reaction. Antioxidants react with the free radical so the cells dose not.
Your science is flawed and you are scaremongering.
sxewas 1 year ago
@sxewas I think I'll trust him
You are a nobody and he will PWN you any day
maclenn91 1 year ago
is any type of tea good for you? or what specific types should i focus on drinking?
kimchicupnoodles 2 years ago
I don't think there is a right or wrong answer to this question, as it all depends on which tea you enjoy drinking. Personally I am not a massive lover of green tea, although I do drink it on occasion. I much prefer Oolong as my general all-round beverage, and often drink black tea and pu-erh also.
In my opinion, tea only becomes "bad" (if that's the right expression) when you start adding sweetners, milk, sugar, etc.
Try a wide variety of teas with and without additives and see what fits :)
UnixAnt 1 year ago
Oolong tea is my favourite too. It's served with meals for a reason. I have a highly sensitive stomach and oolong tea soothes it after I eat so I don't feel nauseous.
AshillaBeige 1 year ago