They stole her childhood: This little girl won one beauty pageant after another. You won't believe how she looks today.

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Jan , 23. 12. 2025

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All kinds of beauty pageants are held around the world. For the most beautiful mother, fitness instructor and last but not least, for the most beautiful little girl. But what do these competitions entail for the youngest?

Eden Wood

The beauty of women has been the most valued since the dawn of humanity. Women were portrayed in paintings, sculptures; in the Middle Ages men fought to the death for the favor of a beautiful woman.

Today men may not fight in tournaments over a beautiful woman, but beauty pageants are very popular and are held all over the world. Eden Wood also took part in such contests. She began at the age of 6.

Beauty pageant

She won more than 300 contests across America. Instead of running around the playground with her friends, playing with dolls, riding a bike, rollerblading, going to school and doing all the ordinary mischief that little girls usually do, she went to tanning salons, learned to use make-up, wear hair extensions and high heels.

By the age of 12 she was already so well-known that magazines wrote about her as the most beautiful American.

She later wrote a book titled “From Stroller to Crown”. There she describes her difficult path to fame and her lost childhood. And what does she look like now?

She’s trying to forget the pageants

She no longer competes and is not interested in beauty pageants. She sees her future more in modeling, acting and dancing.

She will hopefully make use of the years of hard preparation and finally live her own life. She tries to forget the years of children’s contests and hides her beauty pageant trophies.

See what a beautiful young woman she has grown into. On her website she tries to help current little girls who are going through what she herself went through.

What does she look like today?

Cholesterol and sugar: what really raises LDL and how to protect the liver

Eggs, liver and bacon are often labeled as the main culprits of high cholesterol. The reality is more complex. For most people, dietary cholesterol has only a limited effect on blood cholesterol levels. Much more important is the overall diet, the proportion of saturated and trans fatty acids, intake of added sugars, body weight, genetics and lifestyle. Below you will find a balanced overview of what the facts say – without myths and shortcuts.

What cholesterol is and why the body needs it

Cholesterol is a fatty substance essential for building cell membranes, producing hormones and vitamin D. In the blood it is carried in the form of lipoproteins. LDL ("bad") carries cholesterol to tissues, HDL ("good") takes it back to the liver. The goal is to keep LDL low and HDL in an appropriate range.

Dietary cholesterol vs. saturated fats and trans fats

In most healthy people, dietary cholesterol (e.g., from eggs) has only a small effect on LDL. A much stronger factor is saturated fats (fatty processed meats, high-fat cheeses, large amounts of butter) and trans fats (industrially hydrogenated fats), which raise LDL and can lower HDL. Eggs are also a source of nutrients (e.g., choline), so for most people they can be part of a balanced diet.

How added sugars and refined carbohydrates worsen the blood lipid profile

High intake of added sugars and refined carbohydrates (sweetened drinks, sweets, white bread) raises triglycerides and promotes the development of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). The liver then more often releases VLDL/LDL particles and the overall lipid profile worsens. The liver is particularly harmed by excess fructose from sweetened drinks and syrups.

The role of choline and "healthy" fats

Choline (eggs, lean meat, legumes) helps form and export fat particles from the liver, thereby supporting its normal function. Monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats (olive oil, nuts, seeds, fish) can lower LDL and some fractions of inflammatory lipids, if you also limit saturated fats and added sugars.

When eggs can be a problem

For a portion of the population with a genetic burden (e.g., familial hypercholesterolemia) or for people with very high LDL, even dietary cholesterol can play a larger role. In such cases, individual recommendations from a physician and a nutrition therapist are decisive.

Practical meal plan for healthy lipids and liver

  • Limit added sugars: sweetened drinks, confectionery, excess white-flour baked goods.
  • Prefer unsaturated fats: olive oil, rapeseed oil, nuts, seeds, avocado, fatty sea fish twice a week.
  • Reduce saturated fats and avoid trans fats: processed meats, fast food, toppings made from partially hydrogenated fats.
  • Eat enough protein: fish, poultry, eggs, legumes, fermented dairy products – they support satiety and muscle maintenance.
  • Fiber: vegetables, fruit, whole grains, legumes – soluble fiber helps lower LDL.
  • Alcohol in moderation: excess increases triglycerides and burdens the liver.
  • Hydration and exercise: 150–300 minutes of moderate activity per week (brisk walking, cycling), strength training twice weekly.
  • Body weight: even a 5–10% weight reduction can noticeably improve triglycerides and LDL.

Key takeaway: it's not "forbidden eggs", but the overall dietary pattern

For most people, eggs or liver alone do not "cause" high cholesterol. The key is the combination of fewer saturated fats, less added sugar and more unsaturated fats, fiber and exercise. If you have high LDL, a family history or liver disease, discuss a specific eating plan with your doctor – sometimes pharmacotherapy (e.g., statins) is also necessary.

18. 12. 2025 Jan
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