ibecobiz.com Book Consultation

How to make the best use of this library

Use these articles as learning resources, not personalised medical advice.

The external articles linked on this page have been carefully selected and curated by Nirog Bhumi to help readers understand how lifestyle, nutrition, movement, sleep, stress reduction, weight management, and other health changes may support better metabolic health and, in turn, lead to Type 2 diabetes remission.

These articles are shared for educational and reference purposes only. Nirog Bhumi does not claim ownership over any third-party articles, images, videos, graphics, or media content. All rights belong to the respective publishers, authors, and media organisations. Nirog Bhumi is not responsible for their content, accuracy, policies, advertisements, future changes, or availability. Some articles may be behind a paywall.

While Nirog Bhumi generally agrees with the broad viewpoint expressed in these curated articles, especially where they support lifestyle-based improvement in Type 2 diabetes, we may not agree with every recommendation, statement, interpretation, or dietary suggestion made in them. For example, an article may mention eggs or other animal-based foods as part of a healthy diet, whereas Nirog Bhumi promotes a whole-food, plant-based dietary approach for diabetes remission.

Readers are encouraged to use these articles as learning resources, not as personalised medical advice. Please consult your physician, diabetologist, or qualified healthcare practitioner before acting upon anything mentioned in these articles, especially before making changes to your diet, medicines, supplements, herbs, fasting routine, exercise, or diabetes management plan.

Nirog Bhumi shall not be held responsible for any action taken by readers based on the content contained in these articles. Any reliance on such content is entirely at the reader discretion and risk.

01Foundations of HealthGeneral health02MovementSoleus push-ups03How to EatChewing, order, timing04What to EatFibre and whole foods05What to AvoidUltra-processed food06Recovery, Stress & TrackingSleep, stress, digestion
01

Foundations of Health

This section explains the building blocks of good health: metabolism, energy, strength, body composition, and the difference between looking healthy and actually being healthy.

A useful starting point for reframing fitness around functional health and sustainable living.
01Times of India

Bollywood template of big biceps and 6-pack is not fitness

A useful article for reframing fitness around functional health and sustainable living.

Read article
02

Movement

Muscle is one of the body's most powerful glucose sinks. This section covers walking, yoga, simple seated movements, and post-meal activity that can be easily practised in daily life.

Why small, frequent movement, especially after meals, can often matter more than occasional intense exercise.
01Medical Xpress

Researcher discovers a muscle that can promote glucose and fat burning while sitting

Introduces the idea of soleus push-ups and why light muscular activity can be metabolically meaningful.

Read article
02Times of India

Just move your heels: a 3-min trick may reduce post-meal sugar spike

A simple entry point for readers who need a low-friction post-meal movement habit.

Read article
03

How to Eat

The way food is eaten changes the glucose response. This vertical covers slow chewing, meal sequencing, early eating windows and the rhythm of breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Why how you eat can matter almost as much as what you eat.
01Times of India

How slow chewing can help prevent diabetes and other health issues

Eating slowly helps the body feel full sooner, digest better, and reduce unnecessary glucose spikes.

Read article
02The New York Times

Obesity and the fastness of food

Data on the link between eating speed and weight gain risk.

Read article
03The New York Times

Vegetables before carbs and food sequence

How eating vegetables first can slow glucose spikes and make everyday meals more blood-sugar friendly.

Read article
04American Diabetes Association

Food order has a significant impact on postprandial glucose and insulin levels

Clinical reference for sequencing vegetables/protein before carbohydrate.

Read article
05The New York Times

Is it bad to eat late at night?

Useful for explaining late eating, circadian rhythm and metabolic strain.

Read article
06Medical News Today

Time-restricted eating and early eating windows

Why earlier eating windows may better support metabolism.

Read article
04

What to Eat

What we eat shapes inflammation, satiety, gut rhythm and glucose stability. This vertical focuses on consuming foods high in fibre, and incorporating a whole foods plant-based diet.

Use this when building grocery lists and meal plans.
01The New York Times

The foods that fight inflammation

A list of anti-inflammatory foods.

Read article
02Medical News Today

Low-carb diet may reduce need for drugs in type 2 diabetes

Enhance beta-cell function by adopting a low-carb diet.

Read article
05

What to Avoid

Reversal becomes harder when daily food is dominated by ultra-processed foods, preservatives, sweet drinks, refined snacks and confusing sugar substitutes.

Use this to identify the foods and drinks that quietly make diabetes reversal harder.
01Medical News Today

Food preservatives linked to type 2 diabetes and cancer, studies warn

A cautionary overview of additives and packaged-foods.

Read article
02Global Food Research Program

Ultra-processed foods: a global threat to public health

A detailed study for understanding multiple aspects related to ultra-processed foods.

Read article
03The Economist

Are sugar substitutes healthier than the real thing?

The bitter truth of sugar substitutes.

Read article
06

Recovery, Stress & Tracking

Blood sugar is also shaped by sleep, stress, digestion, emotional eating and whether progress is being tracked. This vertical connects meditation, sleep rhythm and tracking.

Learn how sleep rhythm, stress management, digestion, and calm tracking can improve metabolic progress.
01Medical News Today

Sleep is more important for longevity than diet, exercise, social ties, study says

A readable reference for why sleep rhythm deserves serious attention in metabolic recovery.

Read article
02Medical News Today

Mindfulness may be as effective as antidepressant for anxiety symptoms

A useful article for understanding mindfulness as a serious stress-regulation practice.

Read article