diet

Eat FAT, Stay SKINNY

I'm a breakfast girl.  I loooove breakfast.  The picture below was taken maybe a month ago and big deal, right?  A bunch of eggs and bacon -- well, these are not just any eggs and bacon-- these are grass fed, pasture raised organic eggs and bacon that literally fueled me 'til dinner while hiking and running over 10 miles in the High Sierra Nevada Mountains. Now that's a breakfast of champions.

Since then, I've actually been fairly fascinated with the concept of eating fat, because I literally had so much energy that day. Now, I'm talking about high quality fat, mind you, not the trans fats that are in packaged, processed foods or unstable cooking oils.

The fat of the matter is (eh? anyone?), I eat a fairly high fat diet. Fat does not spike your blood sugar, like at all, it's a slow burning source of fuel.  It's the lowest of the low on the glycemic index scale.  So, that's why when we eat cereal or even oatmeal for breakfast, we get hungry just an hour or two later, but when we eat eggs and bacon (hopefully, really cleanly sourced) we can just keep going like the energizer bunny.  Literally, the less you spike your blood sugar, the less your cortisol has to manage your insulin, which means the less your body produces fat. 

Making breakfast before the 10 miler up and down a mountain.  I had no idea what I was in for when I started the day.

Making breakfast before the 10 miler up and down a mountain.  I had no idea what I was in for when I started the day.

So, what about heart disease and all that good stuff, you ask.  Well, recent studies are all proving that fat, even saturated fat, does not cause heart disease or clog your arteries.  It's actually all the sugar and processed foods.  (For more info on these studies go here and here.)  This is one of the reasons why the Mediterranean diet is revered as so healthy.

Plus, eating fat is awesome for your brain.  I remember a cleanse I did a year or so ago, where I juice fasted for about 10 days and man, my body and my brain just craved eggs.  Eggs, eggs, eggs, eggs. That was my brain. On a juice fast. Eggs.

Eating low fat or avoiding fat for a while is actually what convinced me that it is so vitally healthy for our bodies.  

Anyway, here is a list of fatty foods that I enjoy often:

-avocado, nuts and seeds, coconut, coconut oil, olives, olive oil, grass fed butter, fish, meat (yes, usually dark meat and red meats - preferably grass fed or at least organic, although I'm not always great at this.). I even make my pancakes and cakes with almond flour or coconut flour . . . and I cook with butter and coconut oil instead of vegetable oils.

Here are the list of fatty foods that I try to avoid:

-vegetable oil, canola oil, deep fried foods from restaurants, processed foods and packaged foods like crackers, pastries, cereals, chips . . . ehhh, you get the point . . . 

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How the Mind-Body Connection is for Reals

I have always been fascinated with healing.

I’m also a Gemini.  I used to hate being a Gemini - people would always say, “oh, so you have a dark side” or “so, you’re flakey”.  Right.

Until, I met Angela Nelson.  

We are both Gemini’s and I learned from her that we are incredibly smart (true), witty (also true), sociable (sometimes true), adventurous (true!) and love to travel (very true!).  Yes, we can also be indecisive, anxious and stray from our desired path, but that’s beside the point.

I was fascinated with Angie.  First, of all, she’s gorgeous.  She has a modern elegance that is rare in a woman these days.  And second of all, she’s a healer. She’s a massage therapist who specializes Structural Integration which is type of massage that is known for getting the body proper in alignment as well as a Reiki Master.

Plus, she’s a pole dancer. Like a legit, won 2nd place at the most recent National Championships, type pole dancer.  

Like I said: Fascinating and elegant.

Years ago, Angie and I used to stand for hours in the mall selling makeup to people.  We were “Beauty Ambassadors” trying to spread the good word of beauty in the form of mineral makeup.  Really, we were just trying to make a buck supporting our true passions: being artists.

What I never considered before was the artistic, creative process of being a healer.

Angie, explained to me recently that with each client who comes to her with a certain issue, she has the opportunity to be creative in how she navigates her treatment.  

For instance, when she meets a client she knows how each type of massage technique will affect a person’s body but that there is also an intuition in knowing what someone's body will need that she has developed over the years.

She explained to me that “everything is a form of energy” and as a Reiki Master she is able to pull “more universal light energy through [her] body, through [her] hands” and that a “person’s body will respond to that energy and know what to do”.  She further explained that it’s similar to a loving mother comforting her child, but as a trained Reiki Master she has more awareness and more access to that energy.

Angie told me that one of the most profound things she learned while becoming a therapist was that “our bodies, our emotions, our minds are not separate.  They’re 100% integrated with each other”.  

This resonates so deeply with me because as an actor, I use my body to access my emotions and vice versa I also use my emotions to create a physical reality in my body.

This mind-body connection goes even deeper than we think.  She said, “Brain nervous tissue is found throughout your whole body even if it’s microscopic. And it’s very concentrated in a sac around your heart called the pericardeum and also in your solar plexus.  So, when you have very real feelings in your heart, or knowings in your heart, there’s brain tissue talking to you.” Mind. Blown.

Finally, I wanted to know how her work made her happier in everyday life.  She quoted Dr. Ida Rolf who said, “Movement is Life."

She continued, "I grew up dancing. I still dance. It’s how I best express myself, how I honestly express who I am. Anytime I’m not dancing or moving, I get grouchy.  With my work doing massage, people come in and they have pain - [I'm] moving the actual energy through their body, increasing that blood and circulation through their body.  If you’re body is moving you’ll always be processing your emotions and working through things and so that’s what I do--- I want people to be able to move and function so that they can live more life."

So dance, move, get massaged . . . for Movement is Life.

Angela Nelson, LMT can be contacted at:

801-864-2814 or nelson.angie@hotmail.com or at:

https://www.facebook.com/nelsonalignmenttherapy?fref=ts

Fat Burning Mode

There's an interesting concept out there that I've been trying out due to Unicity's Transformation program that I've been doing called 4-4-12.

You only eat 3 times per day.  

Now, as someone who for the past decade has eaten 4-6 small meals and snacks in a day this has been a particular challenge.

For example:

9 am: breakfast

1 pm: lunch

5 or 6 pm: dinner 

No snacks.

The idea is, your body is burning the food you ate for about the first 2 hours and then transitions into 'fat burning mode' for the next 2+ hours before your next meal.

This concept is similar to, although not quite as extreme as the ever popular intermittent fasting concept that has hit the health scene.

Transitioning to this new regimen has been a bit of a challenge because my body is like a clock.  I get hungry about every 2-3 hours.

Which is exactly the point-- according to Abel James, in his book The Wild Diet and on his blog, Fat Burning Man, we have literally trained our bodies to be hungry every 2-3 hours by eating so often.  Which I have found to be true in my own case.  

I'm not convinced this practice is for everyone.  Especially since I have really struggled with it - not just being hungry, but actually experiencing dizziness or a shakiness due to not eating.  So I did some reading and found that while intermittent fasting is extremely popular and effective for men, it might not be the best for women.  Stefani Ruper on her blog www.paleoforwomen.com says that 'women's metabolisms suffer from Intermittent Fasting'. You can read up on her study here.  

Often in a time crunch, I will do a cardio HIIT - where I run at a normal pace for about a minute and then sprint as fast as I can for a minute for 12 minutes. Killer! 

Often in a time crunch, I will do a cardio HIIT - where I run at a normal pace for about a minute and then sprint as fast as I can for a minute for 12 minutes. Killer! 

While 4-4-12 is not technically IF - I've found that when I eat every 4 hours, I often eat dinner around 5 pm and then do not have breakfast until 9 or 10 am the next morning - which,  can be up to 17 hours of without food.  Interestingly, I don't struggle much with not eating after dinner - it's not snacking before dinner.  Some days are definitely easier than others due to exercise and my cycle, etc.  Again, my approach after stressing about it, is to not stress about it . . . If I'm feeling shaky one day due to not eating, I will definitely eat.

More Tips to put your body in Fat Burning Mode:

1. Exercise before you eat

2. Weight lift 

3. Do a cardio HIIT (high intensity interval training)

Let me know what you think of Intermittent Fasting or the concept of 4-4-12 and if you've ever tried it. 

Happy Sunday everyone!

 

 

 

4 Reasons to Track Your Progress

For the first time in my life I am measuring my food, my workouts and tracking my progress.

I have always beens active or worked out. But, I've always done what I feel like when I feel like doing it and have never bothered to measure anything other than step on a scale every now and again.

I wear my Garmin pretty much every day and my heart rate monitor whenever I work out. I also measure my stats once a week.

I wear my Garmin pretty much every day and my heart rate monitor whenever I work out. I also measure my stats once a week.

What have I learned?

1. Progress is motivating!!  

2.5 months ago I could barely get out 10 pushups, I recently hit the 100 pushup mark (no, not all in a row). I recommend shooting for a measurable goal that can be tracked easily so that you're motivated to keep improving.

2. The scale is deceiving.

Pick a day once a week to measure and record your stats.  Seeing a half inch to an inch decrease is actually much more satisfying than seeing the scale drop (and a relief when the scale goes up!). Meeting with my coach once a week and reporting numbers to her forced me to measure my waist, butt, thigh and neck - not just step on a scale.   Both my waist and my thighs tightened and lost inches due to my resistance training. I don't know that I would've noticed that half inch to an inch difference around my thighs if I hadn't actually measured.

3. Accuracy.

If you're going to measure your fat mass percentage, get it done at the most accurate place you can.  At the beginning of my Transformation, I did two different fat percentage tests.  One was a calculation just based off of numbers versus a $20 BodPod test, (more on that here), which is one of the most accurate ways you can test your body fat.  Let's just say there was 6-7% discrepancy between the two tests.  Luckily, the BodPod which is more accurate was the lower of the two!!

4. You probably eat more than you think (and exercise less).

I'm also using my fitness pal -- don't get me wrong, I hate counting calories and I don't live or die by it - especially, because I believe the value of your calories counts way more than just the pure calorie count itself.  But, counting calories does have its place and my fitness pal is super simple, convenient and syncs to my Garmin (which tracks my steps as well as my heart rate).


Transformation

In this pic I had just started the transformation - stay tuned, I'll be posting before/after pics in about 7 weeks . . . 

In this pic I had just started the transformation - stay tuned, I'll be posting before/after pics in about 7 weeks . . . 

I don’t claim to be a bio-hacker. At least not like Tim Ferris or Dave Asprey, but I do love to test things out on my body. Supplements, diets, exercises, cleanses, etc, etc.  

Then came a trip to Costa Rica with Boston’s work - a health and supplement company where I met people who had experienced dramatic health changes in not just weight loss but with conditions such as the Epstein Barr virus and diabetes.  And even more who had  lowered cholesterol, lowered triglycerides and lowered glucose levels . . . So, I decided to test their program out. 

My basic goals have been: 

1. Resistance or weight train 3x/week

2. Cut up. Decrease fat, gain lean muscle.

3. Hydrate, supplement and regulate sleep cycles.

4. Feel awesome.

So far I have maintained basic body weight with fluctuations within a couple pounds, but I've been measuring inches - something I've never bothered to do before.  I've lost a total of 1.5 inches - about a 1/2 inch off my waist, 1/2 inch off my thigh as well as 1/2 inch off my bum.  Which according to my coach's calculation has resulted in about 1% loss of total body fat composition.

I’ve gone from being able to barely muscle out any push-ups, to up to 65 in sets of 10-15.  And for crying out loud, I can do burpees and not want to die.  It's a love hate relationship.

Fun fact?  Total carbs - fiber = net carbs.  If you’re eating a bunch of fiber it cancels out carbs per gram. Didn’t know that!

My energy has not been ideal but I'm attributing that to the fact that my carbs have been pretty darn low . . . we're talking 50-80 grams/day. 

I’m about 8 weeks in with 7 more to go.  Stay tuned . . .