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More on Moderation, tips to take back your control with food

I was speaking to a client last night who is in the middle of my 30-Day Detox Feast.  She said – as does every person on the 3rd week of eliminating sugar and wheat – “I’m just not hungry anymore.  Where did my constant desire to nosh go?”

I explained that she is not experiencing that constant need to eat because she has eliminated her trigger foods and without them, there isn’t anything really very tempting.

What that means, dear people, is that we are not addicted to the act of eating itself, as many of us think!  We are merely addicted to certain foods.  Take them out of the equation, or develop some strategies for how to control them, and ta da, you are now one of those people who just eats when hungry and stops when full!  In other words, peace with food.  yay!

Back in early March, I wrote a post about Moderation versus Elimination, where I argued that if you cannot control yourself with a certain food or food group, it is better to just eliminate it completely from your diet.  But as mentioned above, there are some shades of gray and ways to work AROUND your trigger foods without total elimination in some cases.

One commentor to the last post said she has trouble controlling all breads and pastas but because those are “healthy” foods and mainstays of many diets, wondered how  she could possibly eliminate “an entire food group.”  That’s a common question, so let’s tackle that first:

1.  Bread and Pasta

While bread and pasta are in fact food items, unlike say sugar and potato chips, if you cannot eat them in moderation – and you have honestly given it a good try! – and your weight or your health are suffering, then eliminate them from your diet.  There are PLENTY of other starches to eat, such as:

Sweet Potatoes, Corn, Quinoa, Amaranth, Millet, Rice, Barley, Buckwheat, Couscous, Kamut (wheat kernels), White Potatoes…

Participants in the 30-Day Detox spend 3 weeks not eating breads and pastas and it forces them to use other grains and starches.  Only when they do, do they realize that they were WAY over-relying on bread and pasta!  Variety is the spice of life and health, so don’t get stuck in the bread/pasta rut.

Your next question may be:  Well, what about bread and noodles made out of the things you listed above?  Ie, quinoa flour bread or crackers, rice pasta, Soba noodles, etc.  My answer is that you will need to check those out for yourself.  If you can eat rice pasta and not over-eat it, then by all means, enjoy.  But if you binge on any sort of pasta, noodle, bread or cracker, regardless of what it is made out of, then pull up out of that nose dive and eliminate!

2.   Know your triggers and box them in

Sometimes we are triggered not by food, but by situations, or even food packaging!  For example, I will overeat pretty much anything in an open package.  Pretzels in an open bag?  I’ll plow through them all.  Ditto nuts, chips, crackers, cookies.  And I know I am not alone in this.  Food manufacturers know as well!  So my solution for this one has been a “No Food in Open Packages in the House” policy.  Or if it arrives in an open package, I will quickly re-package into smaller, portioned packages.

I also discovered that I could share a dessert in a public place with friends or family and NOT binge afterwards.  As long as the dessert stayed out of my house!  We do our best then to avoid having desserts brought back home and just enjoy the occasional sweet outside at restaurants or cafes.

Both of my strategies with portion sizes and eating out, are called “Boxing it In”, a term coined by Dr Stephen Gullo in his excellent book Thin Tastes Better.

Can you think of any situation or packaging triggers you might have that you could learn to “Box In” safely?

You may have habit triggers as well.  A lot of my clients overeat at restaurants because they were raised with an anything-goes-when-we-eat-out kind of attitude.  Others report binging at movie theaters, weddings and bar mitzvahs, book clubs, or while sitting in front of the TV at night.  Still others have certain eating buddies that they are always “naughty” with.  In order to get control of this issue, we first need to get clear and then develop a strategy to change things or see if there is a way to Box anything In.

The point of these two posts on Moderation and Elimination has been to give the power back to YOU.  Many of us feel so powerless in the face of food and eating.  Once you understand WHY and HOW you are using certain foods, you can take responsibility and make changes.  It really is not ALL food you are having problems with.  But the few you are struggling with are pretty much ruining your peace, your health, and often your entire life.

If you need help sorting all of this out for yourself, book a session and let me help!

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Get Over Yourself

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OK, so I have a little writer’s block.  Writing is like any other discipline, when you get into a shvoong and do it everyday, it just pours out with ease and flow. When you get distracted and neglect the practice, you find that starting it up again has become like rolling that dadgum rock uphill.

So, what to do to get things flowing again?  Write something shockingly personal and from the heart of course!

I want to write about something today that really is one of my deepest and darkest shames.  And the reason I risk exposing myself like this, is because many of you share this particular shame and really, I am freaking sick of it already!  We need to shine some light on this thing and sweep it the heck out.

Here’s the heart of it:  I am often fearful of doing things because of how I look.

Backstory:  The other day I was speaking to a friend about something that was holding her back from taking her next steps.  She knows what she wants and needs to do next in life, but is held back, in part, because she has gained a couple of kilos and that makes her lack the confidence to get out there in front of people.

Gee, I have never heard that one before!  And NONE of my clients ever say that.  And I certainly have never felt like that myself!

You see, the truth is, that although I am proud of the weight I have lost and maintained, I am still not a thin woman.  Every single time I meet a new client or teach a class, or show up to run a race, or introduce myself to new people and say what I do for a living, I imagine people are thinking:

“If she eats so healthy, why isn’t she skinnier?”

“Why should I take her advice?  She weighs more than me!”

“She’s awfully large to be running this marathon!”

“I thought vegans are always thin?”

More often than I would like to admit, the fear of those thoughts makes me want to cancel the class, lie about what I do for a living, drop out of the race.  Heck, sometimes I even think “I should just go work in a shoe store or something where I won’t be expected to have a certain body.”  (No offense to shoe store workers!)

The underlying thread of this ridiculous internal monologue is the familiar old fear by the name of, “Who do I think I am?”  Boy, do I hate that guy!

I know that many people have this same fear and it is not always related to weight and appearance.  And I know that it DOES stop many of you from doing the things you know you want or need to be doing in life!

So how to get past it?

Well, I convene a Mind Monkey Summit where I invite these fears to the table and let them say their piece.  The truth is, these thoughts and fears are trying to protect us from making fools of ourselves.  I thank them for that, but then I tell them why it is important for me to proceed despite the danger.

As it happens to turn out, I have information to deliver that literally saves lives.  It saves the lives of the people who learn from me as well as saving the lives of their kids and even grandkids!  If I let my Ego get in the way of my delivering this information to the people who need it,well  that is just a stupid, pitiful shame!

OK, worst case scenario – people really WILL say those things to me out loud, in public, in front of others – then what will happen?  Well, I can tell you that they have said some of those things to me, and although painful and embarrassing, I didn’t die.  I answered honestly, “You are right that I am not skinny, but I have lost a huge amount of weight and kept it off, reversed a deadly disease, healed an eating disorder, cured emotional eating and sugar addiction.  I am still working on my weight and sometimes I still struggle with overeating.  But if you think that my current weight is more important than my vast experience, I’d have to guess that you are looking for excuses not to have to make your own changes.”

OK, I don’t say that last sentence out loud but… yeah, pretty much.

While we should all work towards making ourselves the best we can be, we should not wait until we are PERFECT to get out there and deliver our gifts!  If we hold back from living our purpose because we don’t think our bodies are the right size or shape, or we are not smart enough, or “Who-do-we-think-we-are” is running the show, we are depriving the world of receiving the work/words/message/gift we are here to share.

And because I know some of you are going to be thinking this, remember: Not knowing what your gift is, is not the same thing as not having one!  Subject for a different post.

Now, get over yourself and go leave your mark.

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Redefine Hard

On a typical morning, I wake up, walk the dog,  feed everyone breakfast, pack  lunches, and get the kids off to school.  Then I put on my running clothes…

…and spend the next 30 – 60 minutes whining to my husband about why I do not want to go running!

My husband, observing this phenomenon in me for years, and now experiencing it for himself while training for his first Half Marathon, has sagely noted:

The training is not the hard part.  Getting out the door to DO the training is what is really hard!

Often when a client first comes to see me for weight loss or diet change, he or she holds the belief that “Weight Loss is Hard”. This belief has probably formed during past attempts where it either felt hard to diet or to maintain the weight lost.

Now imagine for a minute how much motivation and excitement to get started you feel when you think “Weight Loss is Hard.”

Ugh, not very much, right?

So we re-frame the belief that “weight loss is hard” by listing all the things about being overweight and food addicted that are hard:

  • Finding clothes to wear that you feel good in each day
  • Clothes shopping (nothing you want looks good on you)
  • Being without food for several hours (start to get crave-y and hypoglyecmic)
  • Having heartburn
  • Having a stomach ache
  • Taking medications for diet-caused illnesses
  • Being out of breath
  • Feeling insecure or even ashamed
  • Walking in to a room and assessing if you are the biggest person there
  • Being tired
  • Feeling depressed
  • Worrying about your own health
  • Worrying about passing these food problems on to your kids

I know that not every overweight person feels these things.  These are things my clients say or things I experienced myself when I was overweight.

When we re-frame the question “What is Hard?” we can now see that being overweight and food addicted is really pretty hard!  Look at that list!  Is it just possible that, in comparison, sticking to a healthy food plan might not be so hard after all?

As for we exercisers, what is the re-frame we do to get us out that door?  Personally, I think about the things that would be hard in my life if I did NOT workout:

  • feeling depressed
  • achy muscles
  • low energy
  • muddy thinking
  • flabby legs
  • being out of breath
  • setting a poor example for my kids
  • and the one that gets me most right now, 8 weeks from my race day: failing and/or suffering in front of thousands of people.

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It’s all in the re-frame!

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T-minus 10: How to Run a Different Race

Remember how last year while training for my first marathon, I latched on to Kelli Clarkson’s song, What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Stronger?

Well, this year there’s a new sheriff in town and she says:

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So, I am in my 12th week of training with 10 weeks to go until race day.   As you know, I also made the conscious decision to have a different experience with running and racing this year.  To accomplish that, I changed my training plan and I changed my training fuel.  I don’t even feel like the same person right now, so I think it is working!

This year I am training with a personalized version of Hal Higdon’s Intermediate runner program.  The biggest change in this plan has been the kind of speed-work the plan entails. Instead of just running intervals on speed days (short sprints or “fartleks”), this plan uses Tempo Runs.  Tempo Training is a gradual process of training your body to be able to sustain a faster speed for longer periods of time, rather than explosive sprints which never helped me get any faster.  You can read more about Tempo Training HERE.

(Incidentally, for those who didn’t see when I posted it on Facebook, the link above led me to this fascinating video on how to blow the perfect Snot Rocket while running.  For that bit of edification, click HERE.  Good stuff.)

Since incorporating Tempo Training I have actually seen my pace slowly improve.  It took awhile for me to see any differences but I was persistent and this week I really turned a corner and cut off some serious time at the 5K distance.

Not only has my performance improved, but the shape of my body is changing as well.  In the past, I tended to grow some pretty big quadriceps muscles when training for these distances events.  This year has literally been a pain in the @ss with most of my new muscle growth in my hamstrings and butt.  Why the difference?  I have been ATTACKING hills this year.  I used to kind of avoid them and we all say how Tel Aviv is a flat course.  But it’s not really flat – ask anyone who has run it!  There are some looooooong slow inclines that are killer and what about those two crazy hills on HaYarkon at the end?!  (If you are thinking “what hills” imagine turning south on HaYarkon from Nordau.  Oh yeah, that hill.  Oh and what is this on the other side of the tunnel coming up to the Sheraton?  It’s a nasty friggin hill at the very end of the race, baby).

Another thing I have changed this year is my nutrition.  Back in November I committed to an Eat to Live challenge over on Dr Furhman’s website.  I had a kind of wobbly start with being totally compliant, but once I got going, weight started coming down and energy started coming up.  Becoming a Nutritarian is changing not only my physical shape, but my mental approach to how and why I feed myself, and undoubtedly it will change the way I coach others as well.  I’m sure I will be writing much more about this.

It is crystal clear to me that on the days I eat to meet my nutritional needs and no more, I have great workouts, and days when I eat (or drink) for entertainment, distraction, or mere habit, my body gives me sub-par performance.  I didn’t even realize I was getting sub-par performance before upgrading my nutrition!  I thought I was doing pretty well.  But yo-ho, there is a whole other level up here!!!  And I don’t want sub-par anymore and not just in terms of running and working out.

So that expression about doing what you’ve always done and getting what you’ve always got?  Completely true.

Luckily, the opposite is true as well.

Training song of the week, Vertigo by U2. This song is like a brick on my gas pedal!

Winner of the 30-Day Vegan Challenge

Thank you all for participating in the give-away.  I wish I had a free membership to give out to everyone of you!  However, the winner of the 30-Day Vegan Challenge Membership is:

Hannah Lee!

 Hannah Lee, please send your email address to me at Emily@TriumphWellness.com in the next 7 days so Colleen’s crew can get you all set-up with your membership.  And take notes because we’d love to read a guest post from you on how the program changed your life, hint, hint.

For those of you who had such great reasons for wanting to take part in Colleen’s program, consider purchasing a membership.  It’s only $20 and well worth the price.  You can sign up HERE.

Next up:  Running Announcement!

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Yeah, so did I…

I made a decision about the Tel Aviv Marathon and signed up for the Half Marathon (21.1km).  If you’ll recall, when I ran the Full Marathon last year I said there were a few things that would have to be different for me to run it again.  I would need to:  a.) run with a group, which would require me to,  b.) run faster, and in order to do that, I would need to,  c.) drop some serious weight.

I did lose weight, but not enough to make a difference yet.  I did try my best to put a group together but they are not ready to commit to the Full Marathon this year (I aint getting any younger people!).  Lastly, despite several weeks of training, so far I have not increased my speed by a second. Why?  Because I keep increasing my distance.  Heck, I’m up to 17kms already, so basically, I could run the Half today!  But if I can stop working to increase my distance to 42kms, then I believe I can work more on speed.

I do not want to run another nearly 6 hour marathon all by myself.  It would be the exact same race as last year, blech.

Therefore, the plan is to work my butt off for the next 14 weeks until the race and try to get as close as I can to a 2 hour Half Marathon.  Then, next year I can think of training for a 4 hour Full.

Fourteen weeks people in Israel.  Even if you are a couch potato, you can be ready to run a 5k or 10k in 14 weeks.  If you are a casual runner, 14 weeks is more than enough to get ready for a Half Marathon.  Hal Higdon’s free plans are HERE.  Come run with me!!!!

Training Song of the Week:  Linkin Park, Burn it Down. This song comes on and my legs are suddenly pistons.

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Guest Post: Confessions of a Newbie Vegan

Our guest writer today, Fred Schlomka, is the husband of a dear friend of mine.  I asked Fred to share his story with my readers and he generously does so very honestly below.

Now, I know that for some of you, the fact that Fred identifies as a vegan but is willing to eat a few non-vegan items or push pieces of meat off the top of a dish and still eat it, is problematic.  If that troubles you, don’t read this post.  If on the other hand, you can focus on the changes this man has made, the impact those changes have had, and allow that we each walk our own path, then I think you will really be inspired by Fred’s story.

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It’s really not that hard to be vegan. People are always asking me “How did you do it?” or gasping “What?  No milk or meat products?! What on earth do you eat?”

Well, here’s my secret: There isn’t one!

Most people know whether they are living a healthy lifestyle or not. Some of us have metabolisms and psychologies that enable a life of moderation and balance. I believe that most foods in moderation do not harm us, and that includes milk and meat products. However most of us in the ‘Developed World’ learn various types of addictions at an early age,  sugar, milk and meat tend to be the worst culprits. From our earliest years these products are shovelled into our bodies in quantities far exceeding our nutritional requirements. Our bodies then become dependent on them, and subsequently prone to all kinds of cardiovascular problems and exotic cancers. Our parents, schools, communities, corporations and governments all work together to reinforce the idea that these foods are needed in huge quantities.

Thus we become addicted, except the people I mentioned earlier who seem to float through life unaffected by all the food indoctrination. They remain gloriously healthy.

There was no real decision point for me to alter my eating habits. It was more like a continuum of knowledge easing me towards a healthier lifestyle. My daughter Maya was an inspiration. She has been vegetarian since she was twelve years old, and during the summer of 2011 stopped eating milk products as well. She never proselytized to my wife or myself, but our kitchen was always a reflection of our daughter’s culinary needs.

Meat was never a big factor in our diet. At home we used to have meat once or twice a week and I would eat the occasional shwarma or steak at restaurants. However I did like slabs of bread and butter, and snack foods such as chips, chocolate, ice cream etc., which, as I passed through my 50′s, started adding to my girth. It was becoming a problem. After a blood test last year, my doctor wanted to put me on drugs to reduce my cholesterol, and giving me red flag warnings about heart disease and cancer. I have also been an on-again/off-again smoker for most of my life.

So in early 2012 I started mulling over what to do. I think my wife’s comments on my emerging breasts had something to do with it. Then my daughter suggested I take a look at a video, Forks over Knives. If anything tipped my decision it was that movie, plus some research it prompted me to do. My reasons are for health alone. I have no ethical problem with the eating of animals or their products, although I am pleased to now be on the side of more ecologically sane eating.

Like most people I have a mild addictive personality so I knew that ‘going on a diet’ would not solve my health issues. Diets are by definition short-lived, so I have chosen a lifestyle change which includes new and permanent eating patterns. Most people have addictive personalities to a greater or lesser degree. This is possibly why most diets do not last. If you bristle at the idea that you are some kind of addict, then I challenge you to give up sugar for the next 60 days – zero sugar – none. This means no sugar in hot drinks, no fizzy soft drinks, no ice cream, cakes, etc etc.

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I made a decision to remove from my eating plan any meat, dairy, sugar, bread, and processed foods. I am not fanatical about it. Just last night I had a little slice of birthday cake at a dinner party. So sugar and the like become occasional treats, not daily fare. Sometimes I visit my Bedouin friends who might serve Makluba for lunch, a delicious dish of chicken and goat meat cooked together with rice and vegetables. It arrives at the table on a huge platter. I just move aside the meat and help myself to the rice and veggies. A little meat flavour does not bother me.

During the first six week after beginning my modified eating plan, I dropped from 76 kilos to 69 kilos. That was ten months ago. Since then I have fluctuated between 67 and 70 kilos. I believe my healthiest weigh should be around 64-65 kilos so am working on reducing my “healthy” snacks which tend to include a lot of nuts.  Now when I am on the road I take fruit or nuts with me, or snack on falafel. Just about any falafel shop will provide a bag of falafel or a platter of falafel and salads without the pita. But I need to still cut down on the nuts.

Of course real health comes from a combination of proper eating and exercise. I practice karate 2-3 times a week and visit my personal trainer at the gym once a week, plus more sporadic working out at home, a little biking (which I want to increase), and lots of walking. I recently had a full blood workup and my doctor informed me that everything was 100%. No one was more surprised than he was!   “I wish all my patients were like you.” he admitted.

Oh, did I mention I stopped smoking several months ago? Now, as I approach the end of my first year as a vegan, I believe I am doing everything possible to improve my health and extend my life as much as possible. It really hasn’t been that hard. The American Philosopher John C. Lilly once wrote ”What one believes to be true either is true or becomes true within the limits of the mind. Those limits are beliefs to be transcended.”  Once upon a time I believed I was a meat-eating smoker, and I was.  Over a period of time I came to believe I was a non-smoking vegan – so I became one. No trauma. No cravings. We all have within ourselves the capacity to change, but for change to come successfully, we have to first imagine a new status, a new way of being and relating to the world. This creates a window of opportunity for change. I stepped through the window and haven’t looked back.

 

Fred & Cindy_croppedWhen he is not eating well or practicing karate, Fred manages Green Olive Tours, an “alternative” tour company. He spends a great deal of time driving around the country, introducing foreign visitors to the culture, social mores, religions, and politics of the region.

 

 

 

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The Frightening New Normal

We live in a world where the following things are considered “normal”:

  • Eating everything, and I mean, EVERYTHING … but in “moderation”, of course
  • Allowing our kids to eat sugar and junk food every day because they are doing so “in moderation” and because not doing so is not “normal”
  • Spending day after day completely sedentary, moving from house to car to office then back to house
  • Hiring people to do all manual labor around our homes from cooking to cleaning to gardening to childcare
  • “Relaxing” at the end of our long day by watching mindless television or chatting with our equally exhausted and equally “normal” mindset cyber-friends
  • Believing that despite our hired help, our cars to take us everywhere, households full of time saving equipment like dish washers and washing machines, and the hours spent on passive screen-based entertainment, that we don’t have time to cook healthy meals or get any exercise
  • Taking all kinds of pills to alleviate illnesses and symptoms brought on entirely from doing all of the above
  • Having to take more pills to alleviate the side effects caused by the first pills
  • Undergoing surgeries where a doctor cuts our bodies open with knives and saws (um hello, SAWS, yes they do!) to fix the problem the pills didn’t fix
  • Feeling this physical and mental decline is all an inevitable part of the aging process
  • Feeling hopeless to change anything

The other day on Facebook, someone posted one of those quote boxes that said “Adulthood:  If you’re not tired, you’re not doing it right.” and a whole string of people said “Amen to that!”  People, I would like to add, who are at least 20 years younger than my remarkably UN-tired self.  

WHA????

I feel so bad for these people.  I feel so sad that people just stumble through life exhausted and drained, not ever imagining the kind of energy and health they could have if they just chose it.  I sometimes feel like I am living in a world that is the exact enactment of the films Wall-E and Idiocracy!  The future has arrived indeed.

Folks, please, please, PLEASE wake up!  Please make the connection between HOW you live your life and the way you FEEL living your life!  Stop waving your white flag of defeat before even stepping onto the battlefield!  

My thoughts:

  • I don’t think that most of us can live in this modern food obsessed, food-abundant world and NOT worry about what we eat and how much.  Very few people have the ability to stop when they are full and only eat when truly hungry. Some can, but judging by the “obesity crisis” most can’t.  I can’t.  I have tried it and it got me obese, sick and miserable.  I pledge everyday to not ever go back to that dark place.  Read the fascinating  Myth of Moderation HERE.
  • Kill yourself in the gym?  Give me a break!  I don’t “kill” myself in the gym.  I kill myself when I am NOT in the gym.  Our bodies need to move, lift heavy things, stretch, jump and climb.  If those actions are not part of your natural life (ie you sit at a computer all day) then you need to work them in somehow.  Working out is what keeps us alive, strong, supple, and mentally well-balanced.  Being sedentary is what is a death sentence.  How have we gotten that so backwards?
  • F*&k Normal!   “Normal” these days is synonymous with diseases like cancer, being overweight and or under-strong, and complaining of how tiring life is.  People hobble along like sheep following the crowd, accepting that cancer is normal, stiff bodies are normal, being tired and overwhelmed by life is normal. They believe that making time to cook healthy food is some weirdo fringe behavior and that rolling up to the drive-through window is “normal eating”.  
  • People say to me “I let my kids eat junk food because I want them to “feel normal about food.”  When did junk food become normal food?  When did cooking healthy food become bizarre and extreme??
  • Every day I wake up and say “I can be better.  I can do better.  I can feel better.  I can be happier.”  Eating healthy, exercising, having a purpose, a dream, and the energy to pursue it – those are the rungs on the ladder I will keep climbing.

 ”Normal” is going to kill you – escape while you can!

 

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Training Time!

 

The other day a friend asked me “So, have you started training for the next race yet?”  And I was like “No man!  That’s like WAY off in the future!”

And then I realized it’s not and crapped in my pants.

But seriously, rather than panic, we need to PLAN.  I am not going to be offering Team Triumph this year.  It was a great program last year and got a lot of people running who weren’t already running.  But now I feel like we need to move forward from that.

I am going to list here the major races I know about in Israel.  Obviously there are more – every city runs a race of some sort – but these are the biggies.  I urge you to pick one and join in! Remember, that every single race can be walked if running isn’t your thing.  You still get a medal for walking!!

  • The Tel Aviv Night Run 10K October 30, 2012.  People say this one is all about fun.  It is very crowded and lots of people walk.  Not for me personally, but go for it if you like the scene.  Website HERE.  It looks like they are offering free coaching in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa.  Cool beans.
  • The Tiberias Marathon is January 10, 2013.  A great way to start off the new year!  This is a very pretty course along the southern end of the Kinneret (Sea of Galilee) and back.  The weather is cool and often rainy.  It looks like this is just the full marathon distance.  Website HERE.
  • The Jerusalem Marathon is March 1st, 2013.  They offer Full, Half, 10K and 4.2km races.  Jerusalem is a hilly town.  I imagine the course reflects that.  It is also a stunningly beautiful and historic place to run through!  Weather cool and possibly rainy.  Website is HERE.
  • My Mac Daddy, the Tel Aviv Marathon, will be held on March 15, 2013.  This is 2 weeks earlier than last year and 26 weeks from today!!!  They offer Full, Half, 10K, 4.2km, Hand Cycle, Inline Skating and a Kids Mini Marathon.  Something for everyone.  Tel Aviv is relatively flat, beautiful, balmy, the courses go along the Mediterranean…  it’s wonderful, run it.  Website is HERE.
  • The Herzliya Women’s Triathalon is on June 1, 2013 and offers several different distances and relay options as well.  Website is HERE.
All other races and sporting events in Israel can be found at Shvoong.co.il.

 Race calendar for the US can be found HERE.  Pick something!!!

As for me, I will be running in Tel Aviv on March 15th, but I can’t say at the moment if I will be doing a Half Marathon or a Full.  I will be training for the Full (following Hal Higdon’s free online plans again – worked last year!) but will make my final decision before December 15th when the early registration prices go up.  

Why am I not sure I want to run the Full when I said here that I would? Well, you remember that plan to drop some weight and heal my adrenals before I started training again?  Best laid plans and all that.  Around the time of the apartment move I had a medical issue arise and went on a very large and protracted course of steroids.  Prior to starting the meds I had been doing well and had lost about 5 lbs.  But on the meds I gained almost 10!  Ouch!  Let me just say once again, that if I did not have my own health coach, I cannot imagine how I would handle something like that?  My coach helped me turn things around before it became a real disaster and over the past 6 weeks – even while on the tail end of the steroid tapering – I have dropped back down 6 lbs.  Basically, back where I started!  

I don’t want to run another 42km race at this weight.  I don’t see the point of dragging my body through that again.  So the revised plan is to keep working on my weight while in the early months of training.  And for those of you who are thinking “But surely training for a marathon makes you lose weight!”  Not really.  Not in my experience anyway.  You have to refuel when you are doing that much exercise so you build muscles and heal injuries.  I think being in caloric deficit while training for an endurance event is a very bad idea.  Not only that, it’s just super duper difficult!

But the good part is that I continued to work out through all of that, so I’m in good starting shape, my muscles are strong, and despite steroids which should have affected my adrenals, I actually feel much BETTER than I did before.  I’ve been doing some of my short runs in my Vibrams which just makes it that much funner.  I’ve been swimming, Spinning and weight training too.  The Hal Higdon plan is an 18 week plan but I remember after the last race feeling that 18 weeks hadn’t been long enough.  If I start now I have an additional 7 weeks minus what I will miss during the upcoming Jewish holidays.

Battle Cry Time!

 WHO THE HELL IS WITH ME???!!!

Do Something!  Do Anything!  Just set a goal for something a little crazy and make it happen!!  Here’s an oldie but goodie to get your blood pumping.  Don’t you want to be a part of something like this??  In 6 months or so, this could be YOU:

The Next Goal

So I left you off as we were in the home stretch of preparing for Passover.  Truly it was a little intense to have one week between completing my marathon and getting Passover-ready.  But once we were into the holiday itself, I had plenty of time to relax.  Like much of the Israeli population, we spent the week traveling from place to place, visiting museums, hiking the land, and picnicking.

Here’s a little photo recap:

 

Holon Design Museum

The Negev

Yafo / Jaffa

Alas, vacations must come to an end.  We packed up the Pesach plates for another year, we re-stocked our pantries, and attempted to return to a somewhat normal life.  For me, this period of time was yet another one of adjustment.  All of a sudden, I was goal-less, after being so focused on completing one major goal for so long.  Luckily my friend Andrea had cleverly reminded me, before I even ran the race, that last year I got depressed when the race and bar-mitzvah were over and I had nothing to work towards.  So after taking a few weeks of break, I now I am ready for my next goal, which is….  

Start preparing for next year’s race!  I know that sounds crazy, but here’s the very honest deal:  I want to be better physically.  I want to be lighter and I want to be in better shape.  It’s not just for the race, but I do like how the race gives me an anchor event to work for.  As time marches on and age accumulates, my body is becoming less forgiving of dietary sloppiness and incomplete physical training.  My hormones have been ridden roughshod by race training and my blood sugar is becoming increasingly difficult to control.  I need to tighten the screws a bit on my plan.

There are 11 months until the next Tel Aviv Marathon.  The next 5 months will be devoted to slimming down and strengthening up, and the following 6 months will be devoted to race training hopefully in a way that enables me to keep the muscle.  I know it seems strange, but long-distance run training cannibalized a lot of my muscle.  I know what mistakes I made, but I don’t think I can implement the changes I need to make without professional help.  

Therefore, I’ve signed a 3-month contract with a new health coach here in Israel to help me achieve my first-half  goals.  Then I plan on hiring a personal trainer who specializes in long-distance running to take me the rest of the way.  I am looking for such a person in the Sharon area if you have any recommendations.

Want to come along for the ride?  I’ll be logging my food over on sparkpeople and will open my tracker to public so those of you who have accounts there can follow along with what I’m eating.  My plan is  a super high-nutrient plant-based vegan diet combined with cross-training and strength training.  No sugar.  Not sure about gluten yet.  I will limit it for sure, but I’m not ready to completely nix it unless I see that I really can’t get my hormones back in balance by eating the occasional wrap or pita.   

I’m going to drop my running distance way back – no more than 10k on long-run days – usually much shorter.  I’m keeping Spinning at least 2 times a week because I must get the endorphins to stay happy.  But aside from that I am going to do something different every single day, keeping it functional and well-rounded without further damaging my adrenals.

My coach and I will be working specifically on the mental aspect.  She’s a graduate of the Ford Institute (as well as IIN), so we’ll be getting all Jungian and Shadowy.  I will share here as I can.

You know, I didn’t know if I was going to share all this here.  It’s hard to be so transparent when you’re the coach and to admit that you too need coaching.  But I feel good after writing this.  Having the marathon process so public really pushed me to accomplish it.  At times I REALLY regretted how public it was!  But it felt so supportive to know how many people out there were pulling for me.  So, as much as my sharing hopefully helps you, know too how this accountability also helps me.  Thank you!

Now, who’s coming with me this time?

Don’t Rush Weight Loss

OK, I know I trot this statistic out a lot, but apparently I have not said it enough for some of my readers:

Of people who have lost weight via dieting, only 3% will maintain that new weight for longer than one year.  97 out of 100 people gain back what they lose, often with extra.

So, as a coach who helps many people with weight loss, I spend a lot of time reading studies on the 3% who ARE successful.  It helps that I myself am one of the 3% and understand just what it takes from my own personal experience.  In this post I will share with you some of the “secrets” of the 3% who succeed:

obstacles to weight loss, weight loss motivation

One of the reasons I believe people gain the weight back is that they lose it too quickly.  Just as nature abhors a vacuum, your body is designed to see rapid weight loss as a survival emergency.  Your thyroid will dial your metabolism  WAY back to conserve energy.  You often become tired, lethargic, you exercise less, you MOVE less.  All the while, your brain is in overdrive encouraging and pushing you to eat more, to crave more, to give in to your rumbly tummy, and faced with the buffet of calories we face each day, to eat, eat, eat.

When I lost 70lbs for the very last time, I did it fairly slowly.  It took me a year to lose the first 50, at a rate of less than 1 lb per week, and the next full year to lose the final 20!  The third year was the most intense of all, as I struggled the most with the factors I mention above.  I had to focus harder than ever before to learn to keep my balance.

But when most people start a diet, they want it off FAST!  They have lived with their creeping overweight by denying it for years, but when the curtain of reality is ripped back, they cannot WAIT to jettison their fat asap.  Thus begin the calculations:  ”OK, I have a wedding in 5 weeks and I need to lose 20 lbs, so if I can just lose 4 lbs each week, I will be fine”.  Of course to lose 4 lbs per week you need to generate a 2000 calorie deficit per day and if that doesn’t start ringing your body’s alarm bells, I don’t know what will!

That’s an extreme, but true example.  Most people come to me wanting to lose 1-2 lbs per week (.5-1kg roughly).  STILL, in order to do that, you need to generate either a 500 calorie deficit each day to lose the .5kg, or a 1000 calorie deficit per day to lose the 1kg per week.  I still hear alarm bells clanging my body’s homeostasis.  That’s a lot of calories to cut and requires you to be in caloric deficit EVERY day – no days off, no special occasions.

In the last month I have received 2 letters from former clients, thanking me for teaching them to live healthier lives, and in both cases, the women reported having lost 10 lbs over the course of the past year “without even really trying.”

Did you realize that if one were to just cut 100 calories from their maintenance level, each day, either by eating one less snack, one less slice of bread, a few less spoonfuls of ice cream, soda or alcohol, OR by burning just 100 calories through a daily walk or a restful yoga class, one would lose 10 lbs in one year!  That’s all it would take!

When I work with a client, we make tiny changes each week.  So tiny that we are both certain they can be accomplished. Things like, take a 20 minute walk every day.  Or swap one apple for one candy bar.  The clients who succeed in this approach stick with their small changes and have the big picture vision to understand that, over time, it is these small changes that will create major shifts.

But every once in awhile I get a client who says “No, that’s not enough.  That will never work for me.  My body is so messed up that I have to make DRASTIC steps like going from zero exercise to 2 hours in the gym everyday.  And 1500 calories??  I can’t lose unless I keep my intake at 1000.”

Yet, 97% of the time, these changes are so big and so hard that the client will abandon them within a few weeks, (or never even get them started in the first place!)

And most often, without even realizing it, they eat a surplus of just those same 100 calories per day, and in reverse, instead of losing 10 lbs that year, they GAIN it.  Then I hear  ”I gained 10 lbs last year and I barely eat anything!  I swear, I don’t eat half of what my friends eat and I just keep gaining!”

That’s right.  You ate only 100 calories more than your friend did each day.  That’s one candy bar instead of an apple, that’s one soda instead of a glass of water, that’s one daily walk you didn’t take…

Small changes, done every day, lead to big differences over time.

But remember that this theory works in both directions!

Don’t be in such a pants-on-fire hurry to lose weight that you set yourself up for failure right from the start.  We don’t say Slow and Steady wins the Race, for nothing!

Oh, and the TOP habit the 3% of successful maintainers usually credit their success to?  Daily food logging.  You can’t know how many calories you are eating – deficit or surplus – if you don’t record what you are eating.

what are calories

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