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Author Archive for: jentwistle

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Food For Thought: Recipe of The Week

We know breakfast is the most important meal of the day, however, it is also the most rushed. Smoothies have become the new fad in trying to get some quick but necessary nutrients in the morning. The following information from eatingwell.com provides numerous delicious, simple and fast smoothie recipes that are great for people on the run!

Eatingwell.com: Quick and Healthy Smoothie Recipes

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New Year… New You? How to Promote Success with New Year Resolutions

Happy New Year!  For many of us, this is when we take time to reflect on the previous year, and set Resolutions or Goals for the year ahead. However, significant research highlights that many people who set resolutions or goals for the year end up abandoning these before the end of January. Why does this happen and how can you ensure the positive changes you wish to make come to fruition?  This article from the Huffington Post discusses why many often fail at achieving their New Years’  Resolutions and provides helpful tips on how to set reasonable and attainable goals.

 

The Huffington Post: This Is Why You Can Never Keep Your New Year’s Resolutions

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Daily Dose of Inspiration

“The mind is everything. What you think you become.”

Buddha

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10 Tips to “Just Do It” in 2014!

I just received my Costco Online catalogue.  I was not surprised to see that the first 10 pages were dedicated to fitness equipment, health products, and weight loss supplements.  Why?  Because it is January – the time when many people make new commitments for the year.  According to Web Pro News, weight loss is the most common resolution people make, but ironically this is also the one goal most will fail to achieve.

Weight loss as a goal makes sense – excessive weight is unhealthy and can make even regular tasks like walking, using stairs, and completing home tasks challenging.  I remember when I was pregnant with my twins.  I gained 50 pounds – all out front much like older men that seem to carry their excessive weight in their bellies.  Towards the end of my pregnancy I remember feeling the extra weight when I tried to hike, carry my kids, or just get out of a chair or car.  After I had my twins and essentially lost 40 pounds of baby and “stuff” in 8 minutes, I got up from the delivery table and said to my husband “I feel so svelte!  Look, I can bend, twist, turn, I can breathe!” He laughed because I am sure my flabby baby belly still made me look like I was carrying something.  Anyway, the point was – over 9 months of accumulating weight my body had adapted and I had forgotten what it was like to be thin again, including how much harder things are when you are carrying weight in places where weight does not belong.

Fortunately for me, I have always been athletic and have good genes (my goal is to always weigh less than my dad – I gave up on weighing less than my mom in Grade 7).  But I also have a strong work ethic and even stronger willpower.  Many years ago I committed to karate with the goal of getting my black belt by 35.  Then, I picked up an Oxygen Magazine and committed to getting my body fat percentage to a level of elite athleticism.  This required me to start “eating clean” and as such I no longer consume (99% of the time) refined sugar, white grains or carbs, or red meat.  I only drink tea and water.  Boring, I know.  But the point is, I took 8 years to get to the point I am at and the small adjustments I made along the way have resulted in my success.  Weight loss, or any resolution, is not going to happen overnight.  Here are 10 tips to remember:

  1. First, keep track of what you are eating and how you spend your time.  Do this for a week. Then, analyze.  Where are the problems?  You know what they are, you just need them on paper to really impact you into “seeing” them.
  2. Pick ONE thing (the easiest one) to change.  And don’t get rid of it, just focus on reducing it.  Maybe try to stop eating sooner before bed, or change from heavy carbs at night to some fruit, from regular pop to diet, white to whole wheat, 2% to skim, from Wendy’s to Subway.  The goal is not abstinence, but improvement.
  3. Once you have reduced that ONE thing, pick another and proceed that way until you have addressed many of your identified problem areas.  If you can tackle ONE thing per month, by the end of the year you will have made 12 healthy improvements – excellent!
  4. Remember that less is still good, even if less does not mean NONE.  You can get to NONE, but cold turkey is not usually successful (but in the place of ham – much better J).
  5. Don’t think that the problem is lack of exercise.  That is part of it, but weight management is 70% diet.  If you commit to a new fitness program, without adjusting your poor diet habits, your success will be limited.
  6. If exercise is not your thing, fake it until you make it.  Try those activities that are exercise hidden as fun.  Go for walk with a friend, grab a Wii Fit, try Zumba, join a dance class.  Make small goals such as “I want to walk around the block without stopping” then when you can do that, make it two blocks.  I did this in University as a project for my Behavior Modification class.  I started walking my dog for 20 minutes a day, and gradually, over four months, was up to 2 hours.  This became my new “normal” and I did this with my dogs until they became too old to manage that amount of exercise.
  7. Remember it takes 3 weeks to 4 months to create a new habit.  Give yourself a month to “try it” and if at the end of the month you are still struggling, pivot your change to something less difficult.  Throw a calendar on the fridge, X out the days, circle your target (21 days, 30 days etc).
  8. Tell people your plans.  Facebook, Twitter, your journal, your best friend.  Write it down.
  9. Don’t get caught up in gimmicks.  They are just that.  If there was a fast and easy way to lose weight we would all be thin.  There isn’t – it requires dedication and persistence.
  10. Just Do It!  Nike is right – nothing beats just gettin’ er done!  Your mind will play tricks on you the entire time.  I laugh at my mind now.  When it is a Cross Fit day for me, my mind will invariably tell me I should do something else instead.  I smile, say “haha mind, good try” and get on my fitness clothes.  The real trick to going from “I want to” to “I am” is attaching a physical component.  You have FIVE seconds to turn a thought into action.  Think it, move towards it, and DO IT!

All the best in 2014 and may all your resolutions, goals, wishes (or whatever you call them) become your reality this year.

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The 12 Days of Inspiration: Day Twelve

On the twelfth day of inspiration my OT gave to me:

Clara Hughes, a Canadian Olympic athlete in both the summer and winter games for cycling and speed skating.  She set world records by becoming the first Olympic athlete to win medals at both the summer and winter games.  Clara is an inspiration to the world not only for her athletic accomplishments, but as a spokesperson about depression issues from which she suffers. Hughes uses her struggles with depression to help others and to help combat fight the stigma involved with mental health. This year Clara began annual bike rides across the country in order to raise awareness about mental health.

 

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The 12 Days of Inspiration: Day Ten

On the tenth day of inspiration my OT gave to me:

An amazing story of brotherly love; Conner and Cayden Long.  Conner, age 9 wanted to bond with his seven year old brother Cayden who suffers from  hypertonic cerebral palsy, a condition rendering him unable to speak or walk.  Their brotherly bond was strengthened by competing in triathlons together as a team.  Though they often finish last they share an amazing bond and were named Sports Illustrated “SportsKids of the Year” for 2012.

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The 12 Days of Inspiration: Day Eight

On the eighth day of inspiration my OT gave to me:

The Tutu project.  The story of a loving husband supporting his wife through breast cancer treatment.  Bob Carey started taking photos of himself in a pink tutu as a way to bring a smile to the face of his wife Linda while she was undergoing chemotherapy.  What started small has grown into “The Tutu Project”  and Bobs photos have helped thousands of women suffering from breast cancer find something to smile and laugh about.  Bob Carey and his pink tutu are truly an inspiration across the world.