Category Archives: Diet

I CAN’T eat healthy because…

One of the most frequent excuses I hear is that my clients can’t eat well because they don’t have the time to cook (or don’t enjoy doing it).

AND I always laugh at that statement. BECAUSE IT IS FALSE!

No matter how busy you are, you can always find time to eat healthily.

You can pre-cook a ton of meat on Sunday. I find it super easy to bake a full chicken on Sunday and eat that for lunch throughout the week. You can make salads with the pre-cooked meat or throw it in with some vegetables. You can make a ton of different sauces ahead of time even to throw on your dishes!

You can also make big casseroles, which will last you a few days.

AND if you don’t even have the energy to throw a ton of meat in the oven and let it sit, you can use a CROCK POT! Yep…a crock pot is the lazy Primal eater’s best friend!

You can throw meat in it with some liquid and veggies and leave it while you watch TV or head out to do errands. You can cook a huge amount of food for the week ahead of time or make fresh meals every day. To have FRESH meals every day, just load in the meat and such before you leave for work. It will be cooked and ready to eat by the time you get home!

A crock pot is about as easy as it gets!

So no more excuses about how cooking takes up too much time or that you don’t enjoy it! A crock pot makes cooking so quick and easy that no matter how much you hate cooking you can stomach this.

AND don’t try to make up some excuse about how you don’t have any recipes! There are tons of blogs out there with daily recipes AND one of my personal favorites is Ryan’s – The Grok Pot.

Yes the end of this is a shameless push for you to check out Ryan’s new blog. Also, it is a perfect description of what I eat on a daily basis. 🙂

We are both super excited about our new crock pot!!!

 

Vanishing of the Bees

Ok so sometimes I’m really glad that Ryan picks out the TV shows and movies that we watch because I would never have watched this documentary on my own (of course this also has a downside…sometimes I’m forced to watch movies like Step Brothers BLEH).

Anyway, yesterday we watched Vanishing of the Bees. The documentary talks about the fact that honeybees have been literally disappearing from their hives…just sort of dying off.

Which may leave you thinking…who cares all they are used for is honey…BUT THAT IS FALSE!

Honeybees are the reason that we have most of our vegetable and fruit crops.

Commercial honeybee operations pollinate crops that make up one out of every three bites of food on our tables.

So without the honeybees, we would be EXTREMELY dependent on foreign crops.

So of course…scientists began trying to figure out ways to SOLVE the problem…let’s be clear here…not ways to PREVENT the problem…but ways to SOLVE the problem.

They tried dividing up the hives to repopulate the abandoned ones. They tried antibiotics. But nothing was really solving the issue of the disappearance of the bees (or as they call it Colony Collapse Disorder). Hives were still being abandoned and droves of honeybees were still dying off.

The farmers then find out from their European colleagues that the disappearance of their honeybees may have something to do with the pesticides being used on some of the crops that the honeybees are pollinating.

The pesticides may be killing off the bees! But does the government respond by pulling the product off the market? NOPE!

Why? Because we would rather solve a problem with a new product rather than prevent it by not using an old one.

We would rather create drugs for ailments and disease than prevent them by educating people on healthy eating.

We have the attitude of we can SOLVE any problem so we don’t need to worry about PREVENTION.

BUT PREVENTION IS KEY!!!

Prevention will help us keep this planet healthy. Prevention will help you keep yourself healthy!!!

It’s like I tell my clients, you invest in your health now (prevention) so you don’t have to spend more money later dealing with all the medical bills (trying to solve the problems).

The same applies to almost every aspect of our lives, including the fact that it is worth spending more money on grass-fed beef and organic vegetables to save our environment and our health.

I mean…think about it…if pesticides are killing the bees…they’ve got to have some effect on us. Not to mention if the bees die off so do most of our fruits and vegetables!!

So stop believing there will be a solution to any problem and start trying to PREVENT the problems!!! Start eating well and buying organic and taking care of yourself!!!

PREVENTION may be the BEST SOLUTION to any problem!

(DISCLAIMER: I’m really not a hippie…not that there is anything wrong with being one).

“I’ve tried everything and nothing works”

“I’ve tried everything and nothing works.”

This statement always frustrates me. Why? Because it is absolute BULLSHIT (yep the curse is necessary to explain how absurd the statement is!)!

For one…there is ALWAYS something you haven’t tried.

And two…if you utter this statement then you’ve given up on trying.

There isn’t one program that will work for everyone because everyone is so different. BUT I guarantee that there is some diet or workout plan that works for you…not everyone but JUST for you.

How do I know that there IS something that will work for you? Because I’ve tried A LOT of different things. And I’ve found lots of diets and workout plans that DON’T work for me. Like a workout plan without weights..it doesn’t work for me because I just get skinny. I have to lift HEAVY to maintain any muscle and eat LOTS of protein.

And through all this experimentation I have found something that works for me (which of course I’m constantly tweaking to make it work even better).

And my diet and workout plan isn’t the same diet and workout plan that works for the Man Bicep Mom. She prefers portion control and applies the 80/20 rule daily. Her daily diet also doesn’t include red meat and saturated fat like mine does, but does include whole grains, which I don’t eat. She also prefers circuit training with weights to slow powerlifting style workouts.

And my diet isn’t the same as Brian’s even though we are both doing powerlifting style workouts. He does a lower carb diet similar but not the same to Primal. He will NEVER (I repeat NEVER) give up his peanut butter or whole wheat wraps!

BUT while the Man Bicep Mom’s and Brian’s diets are both different from mine, they work for them! AND there is something out there that will work for you!

You can’t get stuck on what works for OTHER PEOPLE! You have to think about yourself – what foods you like, how much time you have, what activities you enjoy doing, how much you enjoy cooking..

I mean just look at that U.S. New Diet Rankings list (which I still don’t agree with). There are 20 diets on there and each of them have people who voted “yes this diet works.” Even the Paleo diet, which was the “worst diet” had 5,791 people say it worked for them!!!!

Don’t get stuck doing a diet or workout plan just because it’s popular or worked for you friend. If you find you can’t stick to it during that first month when you are most committed, it probably won’t work for you. So don’t waste your time. Try something else.

I mean shoot combine diets and workouts that you’ve tried and make up your own!!! Self-experimentation is key!!!! ( I can’t repeat that enough!!!)

But PLEASE don’t tell me, “I’ve tried everything and nothing works” because that is a lie. Don’t give up!!!

Coffee – Good or Bad for You?

Who the heck knows!?! I feel like you hear people both touting the great benefits of coffee or saying that too much will kill you.

So I decided to try to settle the debate, which ended up being an epic failure.

I found this the other day on Leangains Facebook page. This article tells you that more than 1 cup of coffee per day has great health benefits for you. This article definitely made me think that coffee is good for you.

So I had to go in search of articles that didn’t agree. I honestly struggled to find anything recent that stated the negative effects of coffee (so maybe the debate is over?)

I did find that all of the common negative effects of coffee were linked to caffeine, such as the fact that the caffeine in coffee can cause lower bone mineral density.

Also, there is lots of debate as to whether or not coffee is good or bad for your cardiovascular health.

Caffeine blocking adenosine constricts the brain’s blood vessels. The heart beats rate increases, muscles tighten, the blood pressure booms, blood vessels near the surface constrict and more blood flows to the muscles.

I then found this…which made me kind of laugh:

Coffee can kill you! Just as any other drug, in small amounts, caffeine (and coffee) is a stimulant. But the coffee plant synthesizes the alkaloid with the purpose of killing its natural consumers. The grazer eating too much coffee will die. We, too, may be killed. The uncontrolled heart beats are the prelude of a heart attack.

Over 400 mg of caffeine (found in 4-5 cups of brewed coffee) can cause caffeine intoxication. Some even snort caffeine powder, which results in a more rapid and intense reaction. The symptoms are just like those induced by any other drug: restlessness, nervousness, excitement, insomnia, face flushing, increased urination, gastrointestinal disturbance, muscle twitching, a rambling flow of thought and speech, irritability, irregular heart beat, and psychomotor agitation.

So, you have to drink 80 to 100 cups of coffee very quickly to die… This also varies with the coffee variety, and cup size, as this determines how much caffeine enters your body. Actually, cases of death caused by coffee drinking have not been reported yet (at least from rapid drinking; the chronic effects are another story) but caffeine pills (just 2 g) are much more effective and have been proven lethal.

So coffee can either kill you or prevent a lot of bad diseases. Which is it? Anyone know?

My thoughts – Everything in moderation! If you don’t drink 80 cups of coffee a day (or NEED it to function) you are probably going to be fine!

REALLY!?!

Does this list upset anyone besides me? US News’s list of Top-Rated Diets is RIDICULOUS! How can you put the Slimfast diet (a diet full of processed CRAP) above Paleo (a diet consisting only of natural, whole foods)?

Check out the list. Let me know what you think!

Man Bicep Mom – Teaching our children good eating habits

Cori seems to think that I can shed some light on how to teach your kids good eating habits.

I’m laughing because all I can remember are all the “bad” things I did.

I let them get snacks from the vending machine at the tennis club.  I swore I would never do that.  When they were preschoolers I would put them in the nursery at the tennis club while I played.  It was there that they discovered the vending machine.  They were not to be denied.  They were fascinated with picking their snack, putting in the money, punching in the numbers or letters (make sure you make use of a little teaching time here) and watching their snack drop down. I tried to control the damage by steering them to the “healthier” snacks.  They usually had animal cookies or some kind of cracker.  Drew was tough – she loved potato chips – but we didn’t make a regular habit of them.

For their birthdays we would each have an ice cream sandwich for breakfast.  The birthday girl’s ice cream was replete with candle and song.  By the way, that didn’t replace the birthday cake at dinner.  More candles and more singing.

During the summer we would occasionally forgo lunch and hit a famous St. Louis ice cream stand.  Our huge ice cream concoction would be our lunch.

I remember a period where we had popcorn and soda every Friday after school while we watched a certain TV show.

And then we had dessert every night at dinner.  Bad for you dessert – cookies, cakes, brownies, ice cream.

But we rarely overindulged.  We would eat our piece of cake, our 2-3 cookies, our 2 brownies or our bowl of ice cream and we would be finished.  We wouldn’t binge on our dessert and keep eating until it was all gone.  We would have a little each night.  We were in control of our eating.

And maybe this was the most important lesson I gave my kids to help develop good eating habits.  The ability to control themselves; to control what and how much they ate.

I think young children do this naturally.  Most of them do not overeat.

One day we were at a play group where the host mother set out a full package of cookies for the kids.  The children were allowed to help themselves.  All of the children, except for one, ate two maybe three cookies at the most.  Only one little girl kept eating…and eating.  Her mother needed to control her portions.

When Cori and Drew were young, I read an article that advised parents to give their children dessert simultaneously with the rest of their meal. The expert claimed that the kids would not eat the dessert exclusively ignoring the rest of their food.

I tried it and it was true.  Cori and Drew were as interested in the rest of their meal as their dessert.  In fact, sometimes when I would ask them what they wanted for dessert, they would choose crackers over something sweet.

So if children naturally do not overindulge or seem to be overly interested in sweets, I ask, where do we, as parents, go wrong in teaching good eating habits?

Could it be that by denying sweets or other bad foods, we are creating an uncontrollable desire for them?  They become that forbidden fruit?

When the kids were preschoolers, we would go to a lunch bunch.  We would rush from my tennis to this group and, I confess, that when I was lazy I would get us McDonald’s for lunch.  One little boy in the group was not allowed to eat fast food.  His parents forbid it because it was not healthy.  This child would, quite literally, attack my girls, grabbing their McDonald’s and gobbling down the fries.  He was ravenous for that forbidden fruit.

In college I found that my friends who never ate dessert growing up ate more dessert than those of us who had regularly indulged.

I contend that you can teach your children good eating habits by teaching them control and moderation.  To me, obesity is the biggest health issue.  If you can teach your children to control their binges and cravings and to eat in moderation, then you are teaching them good eating habits.  They learn to control what they eat and can choose to eat “healthy” most of the time.

By the way, I did do some “good” things.

Cori and Drew would often help me grocery shop.  We would pick out fruits and vegetables and read labels together.

They would help me cook (and, yes, bake – but they learned control – we didn’t eat all the raw dough and not make any cookies!)

When they were young, we had planned snacks.  The kitchen wasn’t a revolving door.

We regularly had family meals together.  We usually ate breakfast and dinner together and enjoyed hearing stories about each other’s day.

We regularly ate healthy meals.  Fruits and vegetables were always served along with our protein.  I didn’t force them to eat something they didn’t like, but we had an agreement that they would at least taste everything that was being served.

So, was I successful in teaching my daughters good eating habits?  Cori seems to think so.  I can tell you this, both Cori and Drew seem to have a very healthy attitude toward food.

So, good luck and bon appétit!

(I do think the Man Bicep Mom did a great job teaching my sister and I to eat healthily. I credit her with my interest in nutrition (even if it has led me to follow a diet very different from the Man Bicep Mom’s). AND although I do now in fact now binge, I eat clean at minimum 80% of the time! So teach your kids that there is a reason to eat well, but at the same time don’t deny them the experience of eating those disgustingly delicious bad for you foods our society provides! Remember…instilling good eating habits is key because you won’t always be there to control what they stuff in their mouths!)

Absolute Randomness

So today all I can think about is the random discussions and facts that I’ve had this week. So I’ve decided to include them all here. I apologize that you must see this glimpse into what goes on in my brain on a regular basis.

Yesterday I was very amused by Candy and my shoes. So much so that I actually took pictures. Candy was wearing her new school Vibrams and I was repping the old school Converse.

New School

VS.

Old School

Ever since Ryan bought his first pair of Vibrams over a year ago, I’ve told him I would NEVER think of getting a pair…I must admit defeat in this battle though…I really want a pair like Candy’s!

BUT Converses are still the bombdiggity!

On to more randomness…

Some random topics I’ve thought about this week:

  • Is being obsessed with eating healthily a disorder? According to Steve Bratman it is! He called this healthy eating obsession “Orthorexia.” He defined it as “an obsession with healthy or righteous eating.” He says it refers to people who “create severely limited diets in the name of healthy eating.” For more information on Orthorexia, click here. What do you think? Is orthorexia real?
  • Do people really believe they are being healthier when they eat candy with less fat in it?

Maybe I should have gotten twizzlers...they have no fat...

  • Uhm…what…the…heck…Edible Spray?
  • Recently I’ve had numerous discussions about the safety of Crossfit and even extreme heavy lifting. One of the articles I was sent had to do with rhabdomyolysis. I personally don’t think this is a reason to not do Crossfit or any other intense workout program (I’ve known people who’ve gotten this from P90x). It is something to be aware of though. Anytime you go from doing nothing to working out intense 5-7 days a week, you have to understand the risks and potential consequences. I mean…there are risks to starting any intense workout routine and you should be aware of them. What do you think?
  • Why are people so unwilling to question what their doctors tell them?
  • Why do like 90% of the men you see in the gym not perform a full range of motion when they lift? My only guess is that they so concerned with the amount of weight they can lift that they don’t care if their lift is actually good.
  • Will P90x2 be as good as P90x or is BeachBody just trying to sell more products?

AND the last piece of randomness I would like to include is the Burpee workout Candy and I did the other day. It is 210 burpees in 20 minutes. If for any reason you don’t hit the specified number of burpees in the minute, you must finish the remaining burpees in the next minute, but you can’t move on to the next set of burpees once you’ve finished the specified amount. You must wait until the next minute.

We wrote it down because we didn't think we could memorize it.

 

Oh Conventional Wisdom- How I HATE YOU!

So I may have hinted at this before…but I LOVE a good diet and fitness debate. hehe

(And I’m apologizing upfront to any of my readers who are vegetarians…but I mean come on the comic is funny!) 🙂

For the first time this week I slept in (till 7 am!!! YAY!), and when I woke up Ryan had a nice article up on the computer for my post today – “The Paleo-Diet: Not the way to a healthy future.”

THANK YOU NPR!

First off, like many people you talk to, the author of this article Barbara King, got stuck on the fact that the Paleo diet is modeled on a hunter-gatherer diet. Most people get turned off of the diet because of this, which is why you hear people scoff at the idea of a “caveman” diet.

In this case Barbara King tries to prove that the Paleo diet DOESN’T in fact mimic the diet of paleolithic people. She even states that a true “paleo” diet may in fact be vegetarian:

Our ancestors began to eat meat in large quantities around 2 million years ago, when the first Homo forms began regular use of stone tool technology. Before that, the diet of australopithecines and their relatives was overwhelmingly plant-based, judging from clues in teeth and bones. I could argue that the more genuine “paleo” diet was vegetarian.

Ok that may be true…but then again we evolved into Homo form and those are probably the species more similar to our own so wouldn’t it make more sense to follow their diet than the one of a species that eventually EVOLVED into a hunter? Makes sense to me, but hey…

Next point…

Again she tries to prove that the Paleo diet isn’t a true paleolithic diet. She states:

First, ancient hunter-gatherer groups adapted to local environments that were regionally and seasonally variable — for instance, coastal or inland, game-saturated or grain-abundant (eating grains was not necessarily incompatible with hunter-gatherer living). Second, genes were not in control. People learned what worked in local context for survival and reproduction, and surely, just as in other primates, cultural traditions began to play a role in who ate what.

In short, there was no single hunter-gatherer foraging strategy, and genes no more “designed” our eating behavior than they designed our language or our ways of relating between the genders.

I think most Paleo and Primal followers agree that Paleolithic people ate what was regional and seasonal. AND many Paleo and Primal followers TRY to follow that. Of course since we do get produce from other places, we do make exceptions especially if it is organic. I also think people following the Paleo and Primal diets do adjust them to fit the region they are from just like our ancient ancestors did. Plus like any “diet,” the creators and main promoters of these diets have to promote a BASIC set of principles to follow.  It is up to the “dieter” to adjust it to fit where they are from.

Just like vegetarians. Just because someone is a vegetarian doesn’t mean their diet is the exact same as another vegetarian yet both are following the same BASIC set of principles outline by the person (people) who started/promoted vegetarianism. Sooo….what’s your point Barbara?

Oh, and also, our genes may not “design” our eating behavior but they do react better when you eat a certain way. I think all of the testimonials you can find in Paleo and Primal books as well as on blogs do prove this point. I mean just check out marksdailyapple.com and read a few of the testimonials there! (I mean shoot, if you are reading this blog and agree send me your testimonial and I’ll post it here as proof! haha)

OK! Next point! And the one that made me laugh out loud!

Barbara states:

But the paleo-movement seems to doom (even if unintentionally) more animals to life and death in factory farms. A greater percentage of grain crops would also be diverted to rich countries’ animals and away from poor countries’ people.

Uhm has she done any actually reading about Paleo/Primal? Doesn’t sound like it! WE AVOID GRAIN FED ANIMALS!!! So uhm…the poor countries can have all the grains they want! haha

Most true followers of Paleo try to eat only grass-fed animals. We are trying to promote a Paleolithic lifestyle, remember Barbara. SOOOO we want animals that were raised in a way that mimics the way Paleolithic animals lived…aka roaming free and eating what they naturally ate (grass for cows, grubs for pigs and such!).

So actually the Paleo diet is trying to get rid of factory farms. We are actually promoting a diet that is more humane to animals (if you look at the “5” rating at Whole Foods those animals actually got to live out a very nice long life!).

So Barbara didn’t convince me. Anyone out there have something better?  haha

Conventional Wisdom – BS about Breakfast

Oh Conventional Wisdom…I HATE YOU.

People believe that breakfast is the most important meal of the day…my question is why is it so important?

The common answers are:

  • If you skip breakfast you are more likely to become obese because you will overeat later.
  • Breakfast kick starts your energy level after fasting all night which can help prevent you from overeating later in the day.
  • Breakfast is also supposed to kick-start your metabolism and increase your metabolic rate, which will help prevent weight gain.

So what I’ve deduced from all of this is that breakfast is important because it is supposed to prevent obesity and help you control your weight.

But seriously, how is it supposed to do this? Consuming calories at a certain point in your day is really going to help you lose weight and fight obesity?

I DON’T THINK SO!

I mean just look at our breakfast eating society…seems like breakfast is really helping with our obesity problem!

Maybe breakfast isn’t really the key to preventing obesity. Maybe overeating is. Maybe weight gain has more to do with ingesting the wrong foods than it does with eating at certain times of the day!

I believe you should eat when you are hungry. If you want breakfast, eat it. BUT if you aren’t hungry in the morning, don’t eat. What benefit can eating when you aren’t hungry have?

If you only eat when you are hungry, you WON’T overeat later! For more information about how breakfast isn’t the most important meal of the day check out the two links below.

To Eat Breakfast, Or Not – Mark’s Daily Apple

Interview with Mark – Underground Wellness

 

The Tortise and the Hare

When I was little I was never really a fan of the Tortise and the Hare story, but lately I’ve realized just how applicable that story is to fitness and weight loss goals.

Today more than ever, people want instant results. We want the quick fix. We want to lose 30lbs in 30 days. We want speedy results – we want things to move like the Hare not like the Tortise!

So to get speed results we choose a crash diet. We drop weight quickly and it doesn’t take long to see the finish line. But once we start getting the great results, we can’t maintain them…We can’t keep up that pace or we get complacent knowing that we quickly got so close to our goal. Plus, we don’t really have the tools to keep the weight off because the crash diet we did isn’t something realistic that we can keep up for any extended period of time.

BUT if we had chosen a healthy diet that didn’t promise quick results but instead promised life-long health, we would eventually see the results we wanted. With this type of diet, we won’t see quick results, but if we are consistent and patient will we reach our goal. And the best part is…we will be able to maintain our results!!!

So while a crash diet may get you there quickly, you won’t be able to maintain the results for long, which will just lead to a cycle of crash dieting. If you are instead consistent and patient and allow the results to occur slowly, you will reach your goal and be able to maintain it. Slow and steady does in fact win the race!!!!

Being patient and giving yourself time to reach your diet and fitness goals isn’t easy. I’m right there with you in terms of wanting quick results.

I’ve tried crash diets. I’ve done a low-fat, low-carb diet and lost a ton of weight very quickly, BUT the diet wasn’t something I could maintain. It was just about the blandest food you could eat. So eventually I couldn’t control my cravings and ate terrible, horrible no good, very bad food and gained the weight back.

Once I’d gained the weight back, I knew I had to do something different the next time. I didn’t want to keep up the crash diet cycle. That is when Ryan and I started Primal.

Mark Sisson and his Primal diet don’t promise you quick weight loss or six-pack abs. They do promise you that you will quickly feel better and more energetic. And if you follow his guidelines for weight loss, you will slowly but steadily lose weight! His diet also makes it easy to lose fat WHILE gaining muscle, which I found was near impossible on a low-fat, low-carb diet.

I’ve been following some variation of the Primal diet now since January 2010. And I’ve seen results…slowly. BUT I also enjoy eating primally. I don’t dread meals or constantly dream about pizza. And I feel healthier and more energetic than I have on any other diet. I used to ride the carb wave and have energy spikes and dips, but since starting Primal I only suffer those spikes on cheat days.

And the same slow and steady approach that you need to have with your diet plan, you need to apply to your fitness program. Don’t think that you can just go from 0-60 and get great results that you can maintain. I’ve seen people try. And usually they get great results and then get injured. Bye Bye great results.

So be patient. It isn’t easy, I know. But if you really want great results…Slow and steady wins the race!! 🙂