Izzy's story
"I'm
		  a believer!" 
That's the proclamation from Izzy, a 60-year-old
		  clerk from Petaluma, Calif. She's talking about a way of eating that helped her
		  lose weight and brought her blood pressure way down. 
 "If there
		  were a commercial for the DASH diet, I'd volunteer to be a spokesperson,"
		  says Izzy. 
The DASH diet is an eating plan that is low in fat but rich in low-fat dairy foods, fruits, and vegetables. DASH stands for Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension. Hypertension is high blood pressure.
"I didn't have any blood pressure problems until after I'd been quite
		  overweight for about 10 years," Izzy says. But when her
		  blood pressure tests regularly showed her at 130 to 140 over 80 to 90, that got her attention. 
"I work in a medical clinic, so I knew
		  exactly what those numbers meant. I had prehypertension"
Today, 2 years after
		  deciding it was time to take action, Izzy has lost her extra weight. And her
		  blood pressure is regularly 100 to 105 over 50 to 55. 
"Those
		  numbers seem impossibly low to me, even now," she says. "I could never have
		  imagined I could get them down so low by losing weight. I feel sure it was the
		  WAY I lost weight, with DASH."
Izzy happens to love
		  fresh vegetables. So she started using them to fill her plate-and her stomach.
		  "My lunch is usually a heaping plate of raw cauliflower, broccoli, radishes,
		  cucumbers, carrots, and tomatoes," she says. She also
		  makes sure she has 3 servings of dairy every day, usually in the form of
		  low-fat mozzarella cheese sticks and fruit smoothies made with nonfat vanilla
		  yogurt. 
She says she makes a big effort to
		  eat from all the other food groups, but vegetables are her go-to food. "They're
		  always my entree, you might say. When I have meat or rice or something like
		  that, it's like a side dish. 
"Finding a permanent way to eat
		  healthier seemed like an impossible thing to me," Izzy
		  says. "I didn't see how I could ever give up so many
		  things I love. But here's the thing: I didn't give them up. Yep, I still have
		  my beloved nachos once in a while, but my portions are much smaller-just enough
		  to satisfy my craving, you know? 
"A big lesson I learned is that
		  everything we do routinely is a habit. And habits can be changed. I'm living
		  proof." 
This story is based on information gathered from many people facing this health issue.
For
		  more information, see the topic
		  High Blood Pressure.