1/4/2008

The USDA’s Food Pyramid

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

The USDA’s Food PyramidWhen the USDA came out with their new food pyramid, they got a lot of flack. I even chimed in with my paranoia.

The USDA’s food recommendations for me.I’ve been looking at their recommendations to see what is a good plan to recommend for all the New Year’s Resolution people and it actually looks like something pretty reasonable. They recommended the following for me:

  • Grains: 6 oz.
  • Vegetables: 2.5 cups
  • Fruits: 2 cups
  • Milk: 3 cups
  • Meat and Beans: 5.5 oz.

They recommend 2000 calories a day, which translates to about 40 Weight Watcher points a day. That seems like way more than WW recommends for me, but when I include my Flex Points and the added exercise points, it’s about the same.

Sure, the USDA Food Pyramid was made by a government agency that monitors food sales, but this food pyramid seems to be right where they need to be.

If you are looking for a reasonable eating plan that will help you lose weight the healthy way, then put in all the information on the MyPyramid Plan on the USDA’s site and see what they recommend for you. It’s free and you will have a plan that’s tailored to your height, weight and sex.

1/1/2008

New Year’s Resolutions: Week One

By Laura Moncur @ 9:04 am — Filed under:

Every week, I’ll be giving you some direction for how to actually KEEP your New Year’s Resolution to lose weight or get more active. If you’re short on time, scroll down to the end and read “The Short Version” to get your weekly tips.


Did you make a New Year’s resolution to lose weight? It’s a very popular resolution. I’m sure there are statistics to tell us how many people all over the U.S. decide to lose weight at the first of the year. The only problem is that for years, I made that resolution, but in the pit of my stomach I worried that it was going to be like last year.

No, this year is going to be different.

I would say that to myself every year as well.

It took me a long time, but I finally realized that those big New Year’s resolutions were actually part of my weight problem.

I would promise myself that I would lose weight this year. I would go on a strict diet. I would exercise until my muscles hurt. I would be diligent about everything and in the end, it would be too much. Something about restricting my diet that much and suddenly increasing my exercise would set off a survival instinct in my mind. I would become obsessed with whatever food the particular diet had restricted.

Then I would binge.

This year, if you have resolved to lose weight, please do me a favor. Don’t go on a restrictive diet. Seriously, just don’t do it. Don’t exercise yourself to exhaustion either. Really, do you think it’s going to work when it didn’t last year?

Let’s try something different.

Don’t change your eating habits just yet. Just write down EVERYTHING you eat. Don’t judge yourself when you do it. This week just write down everything you eat. If you want to do something good for yourself, ADD some veggies into your diet. Don’t take anything away from yourself, just add something healthy.

3-Hole Starling Fitness Yearly Journal from FlickrHere is a Microsoft Excel Form you can download and print up to write down your food:

If you aren’t spreadsheet saavy, you can order a Starling Fitness Journal here:

Exercise?

Yeah, I want you to exercise. I want you to think about what you would have done this week. Did you have a book that you were going to follow? Did you have a plan that you wanted to torture yourself with? That’s great!

Cut it in half.

Honestly, no matter what you were planning on doing, cut that plan in half. I want it to feel hilariously easy. I want you to feel frustrated because you’re going so slow or doing so little. Next week, you can do a little more, but this week keep your workout out short, slow and EASY.

If you want to know what I did to get started, I walked 0.5 miles on the treadmill five days a week. A half mile felt like NOTHING. It was very frustrating and after a couple of days, I wanted to increase my mileage, but I didn’t. My goal was consistency. I wanted to exercise every day at the same time. Learning that consistency was WAY more important than killing myself trying to rack up the miles.

You won’t lose any weight this week.

Sorry. No massive weight losses that make the commercials so appealing. You might even gain weight, but don’t let that stop you. Next week, we’ll be doing a little more and after a week as easy as this, you’ll actually be willing to do a little more.

As always, check with your doctor before starting any diet or exercise regime.


The Short Version:

  • DO NOT change your eating regime at all, but write down EVERYTHING you eat.

  • You are allowed to ADD a serving or two of vegetables every day, but you are not allowed to restrict anything in your diet.

  • Start exercise slowly. SLOW, SHORT and EASY. Whatever you were thinking of doing, cut it in half. Recommended exercise: Walk 0.5 miles five days this week.

  • Check with your doctor.

12/19/2007

Surviving Christmas Shopping

By Laura Moncur @ 1:26 pm — Filed under:

Last year I wrote an entry asking how you eat healthy when you’re Christmas Shopping at the mall:

I didn’t give any helpful tips, but some other people did that are worth clicking over to read.

Ginger Pork at Edo JapanWhat I do when I am shopping at the mall is resort to Edo Japan or Subway. I love the Ginger Pork at Edo Japan and I will eat half and since I’m shopping, throw away the other half. It’s always best if I can share it with someone, but if I can’t I toss it.

If I eat the whole thing, it’s a whopping 521 calories, but if I eat half (or share it), then it’s the perfect meal. I have a choice: I can waste it or waist it. I prefer the former.

What do you eat at the mall when you are trapped shopping for Christmas presents?

12/15/2007

How To Get Rid of Man Boobs

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

I fully expected to hate this video from VideoJug. Life explained? I had a hard time believing that a video entitled, “How To Get Rid of Man Boobs” would be useful or objective.

Guess what? It WAS:


VideoJug: How To Get Rid Of Man Boobs

Their tips were thorough:

  • Causes: Man boobs are caused by excess body fat or hormonal imbalances.
  • Aerobic Exercise: Burn off excess body fat with aerobic exercise.
  • Anaerobic Exercise: Build up muscle with weight training.
  • Diet: You have to eat healthy food to burn off excess body fat.
  • Tips on staying motivated

These tips are the same whether you’re trying to get rid of man boobs, saddlebags, beer bellies or thunder thighs. The only way to tone a part of your body is a three-fold approach of healthy diet, aerobic exercise and weight training. Anyone who tells you any different is selling snake oil.

VideoJug also has a ton of other videos. I’ve included a video showing weight training for the chest area after the break: (more…)

12/6/2007

I’m Addicted To Overeating, NOT Food

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Self Portrait Monday 12-03-07 from FlickrThis article by Rudd Sound Bites was about Thanksgiving, but it gave me a moment of revelation that I have never imagined before.

It was this paragraph gave me such an insight:

Another tenet that has held true despite a minority of dissenters is that abstinence from the overused/misused/abused substance or behavior is highly recommended if not absolutely necessary to ensure long-term recovery. Most recovering addicts are free of their obsessions and cravings as long as they abstain from their substance/behavior. However, once the behavior is engaged in or the substance consumed, there is a high risk of triggering the cycle of craving that leads to loss of control and ultimate self-destruction.

I’m addicted to overeating, NOT food. It’s the BEHAVIOR I’m addicted to, not the substance. My biggest problem with the food addiction philosophy is the fact that I can’t stop eating. I can’t go cold turkey and even if I did, I would eventually have to go back to eating. Food isn’t the problem, though.

That stuffed feeling from overeating is the problem.

That positive mood swing I get only shows up when I overeat. I can eat a small amount of food and I won’t get that mood elevating effect. I kind of LIKE that effect, actually. Just like an alcoholic likes to be drunk, I actually enjoy the positive emotions I get from overeating. I can binge on ANYTHING, even healthy food. When I’ve lost weight in the past, I’ve done it by bingeing on healthy food.

Basta! Enough! No More!

Cold turkey. I CAN go cold turkey. I can eat tiny amounts of food all day long and stay in control. When I was at my healthiest, that’s how I did it. I ate whatever I wanted in SMALL quantities. That’s because I was “on the wagon” and had been for some time.

Detox… That’s where I’m headed for the next 28 days. Detox from that overstuffed feeling that I enjoy so much. If I can go 28 days without overeating, I will be able to conquer this again!

Thanks, Rudd Sound Bites! I needed that change of perspective more than you’ll probably ever know.

12/5/2007

Restaurant of the Future: It’s More Than A Food Lab

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Self Portrait Wednesday 11-28-07 from FlickrThe Wageningen University in the Netherlands has what they call the Restaurant of the Future. They watch your every move while you eat to learn why we overeat and what causes it.

The name is not just bombast, because in addition to a staff of talented chefs, the restaurant is home to some of the world’s leading nutrition and psychology researchers. These researchers watch patrons from a secret control room, measuring portion and bite sizes, eye movements, and anything else that they feel might hold a clue to the often puzzling eating habits of humans. An intricate system of hidden cameras, heat sensors, and scales makes the restaurant an extremely versatile laboratory.

The Restaurant of the Future

Food research has focused on selling in the past. How can we sell more food? How can we get people to eat more? How can we make it taste better to more people? That’s because a lot of research is funded by the companies that sell food. They want to sell more. They don’t care whether we get fat in the process.

I don’t know what the research focus of the Restaurant of the Future is. Their website is VERY generic. It seems like they are just building it and hoping researchers will come. If they are depending on funding from outside sources, then I suspect they won’t find out what makes us obese and merely find out how to make us fatter.

11/30/2007

Pizza Hut’s Double Roll

By Laura Moncur @ 3:53 pm — Filed under:

Japan must think Americans are insane. The Pizza Huts there are serving this monstrocity:

Pizza Hut’s Double Roll

There is just too much in the crust and on the top to really list it all. FitSugar, however, have tried to breakdown the calorie count:

They came up with over six hundred calories a slice. I’m not surprised, but I AM surprised that all my thoughts of food went from one part of Japan (sushi) to another (weird “American” food) so quickly.

Pizza Hut’s Double Roll

Via: holy sweet mother of jesus – this is the best pizza ever on Flickr – Photo Sharing!

11/28/2007

Is Sushi Healthier Than Burgers?

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Self Portrait Monday 11-26-07 from FlickrThere have been many times when I’ve sat in a Weight Watchers meeting and the leader has told the groaning class that sushi is a healthy alternative to other restaurant food, but is it really?

Lately, a lot of the sushi restaurants have been deep-frying their sushi rolls and adding sauces and toppings that are much higher in calories than the traditional rice, raw fish and crisp vegetables.

Take the Viva Las Vegas Roll, for example:

Viva Las Vegas Roll from Flickr

We went out for sushi while we were in Las Vegas. I usually order a simple California Roll, but I was in LAS VEGAS! I HAD to order the Las Vegas roll in Las Vegas! It was a deep fried roll with a spicy crab mixture on the top. It all tasted way too good to be healthy. I counted it as 8 WW Points in my journal, but I was just guessing.

How many points do you think it was?

11/23/2007

Avoid Shopping Today And Avoid Weight Gain

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Self Portrait Wednesday 11-21-07 from FlickrIt’s Black Friday. The United States’ busiest shopping day of the year, or so they say. They have great deals out there if you look at the ads, but what about you? What about eating healthy and staying fit? How do they fit into your post-Thanksgiving shopping plans?

Me? I worked at K-Mart for SEVEN years while in high school and putting myself through college. I worked every Black Friday during my formative years. One year, we put blankets on sale for five dollars apiece (they were normally fifteen or so). There was a huge pile of them right at the doors when we opened them to the crowd. I was working the customer service desk and got a front row seat to the FIGHT that broke out. Women were pushing each other. Screaming and grabbing these pathetic blankets out of each others’ hands.

I vowed never to shop on Black Friday.

The cool thing is that staying home or doing fun things on Black Friday has protected me from weight gain as well. I’m not tempted by the Hickory Farms samples at the mall. I’m not run ragged until I’m desperate for food and willing to eat wherever has the shortest line. I’m not enticed by the cinnamon aroma of roasting almonds. I am protected from all the stressed out decisions I would have made just to get a good deal on a blanket (or TV or whatever…).

Funny thing, the stores are packed, but there are lots of places that are ghost towns this time of the year:

  • Go to an early movie: The Thanksgiving movie tradition is pretty strong with some people, but not nearly as strong as the lure of “good deals.” You’ll be able to get into the theater easily.

  • Go to the gym: There will be a bunch of people there burning off yesterday’s meal. They’re the kind of people that you want to be friends with. Burn it at the treadmill and find a workout buddy while you’re at it.

  • Go to the grocery store: The grocery store will be gutted from yesterday’s last minute shoppers, but all the healthy food will still be available. Now’s the time to stock up on healthy alternatives so you don’t resort to mashed potatoes when you’re hungry.

  • Do something active: Depending on your climate, you have a wide variety of choices for activities: hiking, mountain biking, skiing, snow-shoeing and just walking around your neighborhood.

  • Play games with your family: You have an extra day off. Spend it having fun with your family! Whether it’s a traditional board game or the latest video games, find time to enjoy with the people who are closest to you.

Christmas is about telling the people around you that you love them. You don’t have to fight the person in front of you in line to prove that you love your dearest. TIME is the most valuable asset right now, so give yourself and your loved ones some of that time this weekend.

11/20/2007

Prepare for Thanksgiving

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Self Portrait Sunday 11-18-07 from FlickrThanksgiving is coming for most of you. For me for the last few years, I’ve had two Thanksgiving dinners in one day: one with my family and one with Mike’s family. I am here to tell you that you can lose weight the week of Thanksgiving. A couple of years ago, I wrote an entire series about how to do just that:

I really should have read this series before last weekend, however. This year, my family celebrated Thanksgiving last Sunday instead of this Thursday. My first thought was, “Great! I won’t have to figure out how to fit two meals in one day.” I can do that AND lose weight, but it was great to know that I didn’t have to.

Unfortunately, I didn’t plan how I was going to tackle the one Thanksgiving meal last Sunday. I ended up using far more Flex Points than I have and now I have another meal with Mike’s family on Thursday. This time, I’m planning exactly what I’m going to eat and how I’m going to survive.

As you head into this holiday season, don’t give up. It is possible to eat healthy AND enjoy the fruits of the season. All you have to do is plan for them and stick with your plan. Wishing you the best this holiday, now go give it to yourself!

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