Showing posts with label Healthy Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Healthy Food. Show all posts

Friday, 4 August 2017

Create A Schedule


Being consistent is key in living a healthy lifestyle. An easy way to create consistency is by making a schedule for yourself. A lot of times we use the excuse "I don't have time" when it comes to eating healthy and working out. In order to have time for the things that we deem important we must make time. Write down your schedule for the week and find an extra hour or so a day to fit the gym in your schedule. The number of times you decide to go to the gym a week is totally dependent upon what you feel is best for you. Writing this down in your schedule is just the first step.

Try following your schedule for 2 whole weeks without missing a workout. Were the times convenient? Was it easy to follow the schedule? Figure out what works best for you and STICK TO IT. Along with scheduling workouts it is very important to schedule meals. Find a day in your weekly schedule where you have a few hours of free time. Use this time to go to the grocery store and buy healthy, tasty foods that can be prepped for meals that you can take on the go. Cooking and preparing these meals only takes a couple hours, give or take, and can be vital to a successful diet. If you want to be even more organized label your meals! A lot of us live very busy lifestyles and don't always have the time to cook healthy meals. Having your daily meal packed and ready to go for you is a great way to keep your diet consistent. Plan out your week and create time to prepare healthy meals for yourself along with time to hit the gym.

I have learned that from past experiences, I won't be sure to get anything done unless I write it down or come up with some type of daily schedule to get used to something. IT is important that I visually see what I need to be getting done in a day or a week or even in a month. Making time for all of these important things is so much easier to do when I already have it planned out. It's kind of hard to make excuses for not getting things done when you had them written out right in front of you the whole time.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/expert/Maddie_Williams/2414304


"What do you think?" Comment in the box below.

Saturday, 22 July 2017

Keeping Your Healthy Food Lifestyle, And Your Dignity, In Challenging Social Situations

Sharing food is one of the most basic ways that human beings bond with one another.                                                  
We celebrate our religious holidays with food. 

Family get-togethers centre around food.

We get to know potential romantic partners by going to a restaurant to eat food.

When we have an office party: food. 

When we have a block party: food.

Rites of passage are brought to a close by gathering around food.

Our first bond with another human being is developed through food: the mother breastfeeding her infant.

But food can also be a basis of social conflict, especially when you start saying "no" to unhealthy food, partly because of our strong attachments to each other.

There's the family conflict, such as, "Why aren't you eating my chocolate cake, I made it just for you?"

There's the unspoken friendship conflict: "If you don't want to make me uncomfortable, you will keep eating the same food we are used to eating with each other."

And there's the silent vampy conflict. "I don't like her thinking she's better than me with all those healthy food choices she's making."

Because food is so social, it can be hard to make choices that are different from the choices of people around us. Some people might be supportive when you make that important shift from unhealthy to healthy eating habits. Some might even be inspired by your choices and decide to follow suit.


Other people might take your choices as personal to them. They react as if your healthier food choices are a negative reflection on the choices they are making.

The "dark side" to food as a medium for social bonding is that it is loaded with social judgements. People judge themselves and each other for what they eat.

And it's not just "healthy versus unhealthy" kinds of judgements.

If you say "no" to a food that to symbolizes love or friendship to the person offering it, they might not think you are saying no to the effects of the food on your body. They might assume you are saying no to what the food symbolizes to them.

Complicated stuff to deal with, especially given the fact that making the transition to a healthy food lifestyle is already hard enough.

But dealing with the social complications around food doesn't have to do you in. You don't have to cave to social pressure, and you don't have to isolate yourself from people who have unhealthy eating habits.

You just need to remember how loaded the topic of food is to some people, and prepare for it in advance.

Usually all it takes is having a few prepared explanations for your food choices. By having a prepared explanation for your consistent "no" to certain foods, you can safely make your way through a social minefield by presenting your explanation in a way that minimizes some people's tendency to interpret your choices as personal to them.

For instance, let's say you are visiting your parents, who think refined sugar is one of the great inventions of the modern world, and Dad is pushing pie.

Dad: "You don't want a piece of your mother's pie? She spent all afternoon making it!"


You: "I know, it looks so good. I ate so much of her delicious dinner, though. I'm so full!" (Slight lie - it wasn't that delicious, and you're not that full.)

Dad: "Well, here, just a small piece."

You: "Well, I want to eat it when I can appreciate it, so not right now, or it won't taste as good as I know it is. I better take some home with me instead. So anyway, dad, I heard that you got a new... !"

If you're not comfortable with a polite lie, then find your sliver of truth to present. Just frame it in a way so that it makes people feel safe, and they'll be less likely to think your choice is a reflection on them.

Of course, they shouldn't take it personally. But reality isn't what it "should" be. It is what it is. People are the way they are.

To keep their emotions out of your personal eating choices, it's good to have a strategy for every social situation.

If you are sticking to the carrots and hummus at the office party because everything else is loaded with sugar and chemicals, you could briefly explain to anyone who asks you why you aren't trying the amazing hydrogynated-oil-high-fructose-corn-syrup delight, that you've noticed sugar makes you feel tired, and you want to see if you start feeling better if you cut back on it.

This explanation keeps the problem and solution all about you. Not about weight. Not about will power. Not about "good food" and "bad food." Not, "Are you crazy, do you know what's in that stuff?"

Especially nowadays - when junk food abounds, and people everywhere are struggling with their weight - food can be a very emotionally loaded topic.

Unless you want to engage with people about your "strange" healthy food choices, just come prepared with a brief, impersonal explanation for your refusal of certain foods, one that both honors your choices and deflects intrusive reactions.

When you prepare in advance, dealing with the complicated social dynamics around food can be sort of like bringing an umbrella when it looks like it might rain. With just a little forethought, you can have a totally different experience in challenging weather.

Image source of girl with cupcakes courtesy of nenetus at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/expert/Andrea_Sasefran/2428704

"What do you think?" Comment in the box below.