I apologize to everyone for my long absence from the blog. The holiday season seems to always keep me at a rush. Nonetheless, I ask everyone to remain patient with me as I am working on some new ideas for the blog, which will include recipes, exercise tips, and video. Thank you all for your patience.
Laura
Monday, December 3, 2007
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Halloween Candy
Hello to anyone who may be checking in. I have not forgotten you. It has been a busy weekend getting ready for Halloween. I am working on a submission on exercise that I think you will all find informative and interesting.
In the meantime, I would like to answer the question about Halloween candy and your quest to get healthy. Enjoy yourself!! It comes around only once a year so enjoy a little treat. I must stress little treat, of course. It's unlikely You will be able to enjoy it if you eat the whole bag. Guilt will take over and you will be kicking yourself for the next several weeks to come. That's not enjoyable.
If you are someone who fears you may eat the designated candy before the big day, then put off buying it until the last minute. Why tempt temptation? Just remember to get the candy out of the house as quickly as you can after the day, and do not forget to keep up your exercises. Feel free to slack off a little bit, but do not stop.
Until next time, keep moving.
Laura Wise
In the meantime, I would like to answer the question about Halloween candy and your quest to get healthy. Enjoy yourself!! It comes around only once a year so enjoy a little treat. I must stress little treat, of course. It's unlikely You will be able to enjoy it if you eat the whole bag. Guilt will take over and you will be kicking yourself for the next several weeks to come. That's not enjoyable.
If you are someone who fears you may eat the designated candy before the big day, then put off buying it until the last minute. Why tempt temptation? Just remember to get the candy out of the house as quickly as you can after the day, and do not forget to keep up your exercises. Feel free to slack off a little bit, but do not stop.
Until next time, keep moving.
Laura Wise
Exercise
It may be nice to believe that you can lose weight without exercise, but alas, that is not the way things are. The key to weight loss is to burn more calories than you consume. The only way to do that is to get your body moving. The good news is that you do not have to kill yourself to do it.
The best way to incorporate exercise into your daily lifestyle is find a method that best coincides with your lifestyle. For instance, if you are like most Americans you are getting up in the morning with just enough time to get yourself ready for a long day at work, if you have children you have to get everyone ready. My suggestion, try to wake up 5-minutes earlier and do some simple yoga stretches for your, back, legs, arms, and sides. If all you get is a half hour for lunch, pack a light one, and use the first 10-minutes to walk, I don't care if its around the block, around the building,it doesn't matter, just walk. There are some employers who are starting to give their employee's extra breaks during the day just so they can get out and move. If your employer does not do this, see if you can't suggest it.
When you get home take time to continue your walk up to a 1/2 hour. Make sure that you walk with a relative fast pace with your arms moving. Now, end your day with another 5-minute stretch, and take at least 10-minutes of just plain silence to wind down.
There that is a good 50-minute workout a day to start with, and you don't have to do it all at once.
If you can purchase a membership to a gym, or perhaps get an exercise DVD that is suitable to your method of working out, I would highly recommend it.
A gym is good because it helps to give you an extra push. If you can afford a personal trainer that would be even better.
Peace out all...
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
What's the best diet?
The constant barrage of media madness on what's the best diet for the moment can make the whole process of diet and weight loss even more frustrating. As if our chaotic and busy lifestyles didn't give us enough to think about. Now we have to try and familiarize ourselves with the latest diet craze. Which one do I choose? High Carb? Low Carb? High protein? No fat?
Let's face it, anyone who has ever tried to lose weight is going to be very familiar with the popular diets of the time. They all tend to have one common thread: they are restrictive! Not to mention, they cannot agree on what is best for you. The truth be known no one is going to know what is best for you except you. Go ahead and read the popular diets, but do it for the sake of gathering information. Let's face it if we tried to follow all of the most popular approaches to dieting we would not be allowed to eat anything.
I have a special needs child, and I struggle with autoimmune problems. The popular diet going for autistic children is a glutten free/casein free diet or the GF/CF diet. For fibromyalgia we're told not to drink coffee, stay away from sugar, etc, etc. While there is evidence that both approaches work, I still have to cook for two different people who present with two different issues. In my quest to find what will work for both of us I have decided to follow certain guidelines that are consistent with the anti-inflammatory diet. I do not follow it completely, but I follow it enough to get the benefit that I am after, which is better health.
The best part of the anti-inflammatory diet is that it is not a diet for losing weight; although weight loss may end up being a side-effect for those of us who need to lose. It is simply a healthy way of eating that includes foods that most of us already eat. The only obstacle that I personally am faced with is that it does not allow for coffee, but it does make allowances for caffeinated teas because of the bioflavonoids associated with both black tea and green tea; a key cancer fighting agent. Even so, I will still enjoy a nice hot cup of Joe in the morning.
This diet does allow for dairy products like yogurt, which is not allowed on the popular autistic GF/CF diet. Nonetheless, it does allow for foods that are of great importance to any growing child's health, such as nuts, cantaloupe, blueberries, tomatoes, leafy greens, and so on. My decision to use basic guidelines from the anti-inflammatory diet is because it is healthy, and it was the easiest one that I could find to work with what I currently have available in my kitchen right now. Now, I am sure that you all want to know how I am able to get my son to eat his leafy greens. Fortunately, he is at an age where he is beginning to appreciate his vegetables. Even so, I have found it helpful to sneak it into his food by mixing it in a soup or something similar. For those of you with younger children I would recommend two cookbooks, Deceptively Delicious by Jessica Seinfeld, and The Sneaky Chef by Missy Chase Lapine.
Keep in mind that there may be certain ingredients in those two cookbooks that may veer away from the anti-inflammatory approach. Your children may not need to lose weight, and they may be perfectly healthy right now. I hope that they are. However, you want to be able to simplify your life as much as possible. As I stated above, when you are trying to get your own health in order and you are cooking for the entire family as well, you may want to keep everyone as close to the same regimen as possible. Also, for the sake of simplicity, I do not suggest trying to follow any diet too stringently, it is far too easy to become discouraged and give up.
I do not believe in attempting to adhere completely to a particular dietary regimen. It's always best to gather your information first to help find the right approach for you. I stress the word approach because trying to strictly follow a new regimen, is not very practical, especially if you have failed time and again.
Do your research first, and then find your starting point. I recommend two books to start with by Steven Pratt, M.D., and Kathy Mathews. They are SuperFoods Rx and SuperFoods Healthy Lifestyle. Dr. Pratt does not follow the anti-inflammatory diet wholly, but he does use elements from it. I found his method to be a practical starting point for my lifestyle choices, not to mention, my sons.
If you would like to know more about the anti-inflammatory diet, there are several books available on the subject. Dr. Andrew Weil is the most prominent speaker on the subject. He has written several books on it including Healthy Aging, Eight Weeks to Optimum Health, Natural Health, Natural Medicine, Eating Well for Optimum Health, and Spontaneous Healing. I recommend his cookbook, The Healthy Ktichen, which he wrote with co-author Rosie Daly.
Let's face it, anyone who has ever tried to lose weight is going to be very familiar with the popular diets of the time. They all tend to have one common thread: they are restrictive! Not to mention, they cannot agree on what is best for you. The truth be known no one is going to know what is best for you except you. Go ahead and read the popular diets, but do it for the sake of gathering information. Let's face it if we tried to follow all of the most popular approaches to dieting we would not be allowed to eat anything.
I have a special needs child, and I struggle with autoimmune problems. The popular diet going for autistic children is a glutten free/casein free diet or the GF/CF diet. For fibromyalgia we're told not to drink coffee, stay away from sugar, etc, etc. While there is evidence that both approaches work, I still have to cook for two different people who present with two different issues. In my quest to find what will work for both of us I have decided to follow certain guidelines that are consistent with the anti-inflammatory diet. I do not follow it completely, but I follow it enough to get the benefit that I am after, which is better health.
The best part of the anti-inflammatory diet is that it is not a diet for losing weight; although weight loss may end up being a side-effect for those of us who need to lose. It is simply a healthy way of eating that includes foods that most of us already eat. The only obstacle that I personally am faced with is that it does not allow for coffee, but it does make allowances for caffeinated teas because of the bioflavonoids associated with both black tea and green tea; a key cancer fighting agent. Even so, I will still enjoy a nice hot cup of Joe in the morning.
This diet does allow for dairy products like yogurt, which is not allowed on the popular autistic GF/CF diet. Nonetheless, it does allow for foods that are of great importance to any growing child's health, such as nuts, cantaloupe, blueberries, tomatoes, leafy greens, and so on. My decision to use basic guidelines from the anti-inflammatory diet is because it is healthy, and it was the easiest one that I could find to work with what I currently have available in my kitchen right now. Now, I am sure that you all want to know how I am able to get my son to eat his leafy greens. Fortunately, he is at an age where he is beginning to appreciate his vegetables. Even so, I have found it helpful to sneak it into his food by mixing it in a soup or something similar. For those of you with younger children I would recommend two cookbooks, Deceptively Delicious by Jessica Seinfeld, and The Sneaky Chef by Missy Chase Lapine.
Keep in mind that there may be certain ingredients in those two cookbooks that may veer away from the anti-inflammatory approach. Your children may not need to lose weight, and they may be perfectly healthy right now. I hope that they are. However, you want to be able to simplify your life as much as possible. As I stated above, when you are trying to get your own health in order and you are cooking for the entire family as well, you may want to keep everyone as close to the same regimen as possible. Also, for the sake of simplicity, I do not suggest trying to follow any diet too stringently, it is far too easy to become discouraged and give up.
I do not believe in attempting to adhere completely to a particular dietary regimen. It's always best to gather your information first to help find the right approach for you. I stress the word approach because trying to strictly follow a new regimen, is not very practical, especially if you have failed time and again.
Do your research first, and then find your starting point. I recommend two books to start with by Steven Pratt, M.D., and Kathy Mathews. They are SuperFoods Rx and SuperFoods Healthy Lifestyle. Dr. Pratt does not follow the anti-inflammatory diet wholly, but he does use elements from it. I found his method to be a practical starting point for my lifestyle choices, not to mention, my sons.
If you would like to know more about the anti-inflammatory diet, there are several books available on the subject. Dr. Andrew Weil is the most prominent speaker on the subject. He has written several books on it including Healthy Aging, Eight Weeks to Optimum Health, Natural Health, Natural Medicine, Eating Well for Optimum Health, and Spontaneous Healing. I recommend his cookbook, The Healthy Ktichen, which he wrote with co-author Rosie Daly.
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Yo-Yo's Unite and take up the fight
I have created this blog to help anyone who has ever struggled with taking off weight and keeping it off. This a club with many reluctant members. Although it is easy to find someone in the same boat, it is still difficult to talk about it.
Cheryl Richardson once said, "Life is draining without a support system." Isn't that the truth? Nonetheless, our busy lifestyles tend to make a support system a luxury similar to that of caviar. Additionally, since most people with weight problems tend to be jeered and gocked at by the media and the rest of the onlooking public, talking about it is considered almost taboo, which is a ridiculous notion given the fact that most of us, regardless of size, are yo-yo's.
That's right we all yo-yo. On the average most people will yo-yo between 3 and 5 pounds. It's when you get into the 10, 15, 20 and upwards that it becomes a health threat.
I am a personal fitness trainer and I am a classic yo-yo dieter. I have created this blog for anybody who is looking for a support system that will enable them to take control of their life by taking control of their health.
I love to exercise and I love to cook. Here we can all share our stories of loss and gain as we work toward making permanent changes for a healthier happier future.
I have to go and pickup my son now. I will return later with more information on what has worked and failed for me, and where I am at now.
I look forward to hearing from all of you.
Namaste'
Laura Wise
Cheryl Richardson once said, "Life is draining without a support system." Isn't that the truth? Nonetheless, our busy lifestyles tend to make a support system a luxury similar to that of caviar. Additionally, since most people with weight problems tend to be jeered and gocked at by the media and the rest of the onlooking public, talking about it is considered almost taboo, which is a ridiculous notion given the fact that most of us, regardless of size, are yo-yo's.
That's right we all yo-yo. On the average most people will yo-yo between 3 and 5 pounds. It's when you get into the 10, 15, 20 and upwards that it becomes a health threat.
I am a personal fitness trainer and I am a classic yo-yo dieter. I have created this blog for anybody who is looking for a support system that will enable them to take control of their life by taking control of their health.
I love to exercise and I love to cook. Here we can all share our stories of loss and gain as we work toward making permanent changes for a healthier happier future.
I have to go and pickup my son now. I will return later with more information on what has worked and failed for me, and where I am at now.
I look forward to hearing from all of you.
Namaste'
Laura Wise
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