Thursday, May 31, 2018

Water Workouts: 2 Kayaks to Try

Love working out in the great outdoors? Yeah, me too. And one of my favorite ways to have a fun, fit, outdoorsy day is to grab a kayak and get out on the water for a few hours. Recently, I had a chance to borrow a couple of cool kayaks that are quite different than the kayaks I bet you’re picturing right now. One can be carried like a backpack (yes, really!), and the other is pedal-powered rather than powered by paddles. Pretty cool, huh? Ocean Kayak Malibu Pedal From a fitness perspective, the Ocean Kayak Malibu Pedal ($2,199.99) kayak…

The post Water Workouts: 2 Kayaks to Try appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/water-workouts-2-kayaks-to-try/

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Tart Cherry Gin Cooler Recipe

Remember when we shared this Old Fashioned Cherry Pie Cocktail recipe a few weeks back? Well, now that it’s warmer, we’re looking for a lighter, brighter cocktail to sip on our patios. A little something like this Tart Cherry Gin Cooler, which we tweaked from a recipe in Esquire. What’s doubly awesome is that it’s quick and easy to make, so it’s great for entertaining. Tart Cherry Gin Cooler INGREDIENTS 5 tart cherries 1/2 fresh lime, squeezed 2 oz gin 4 oz ginger ale 1 lime wedge sprig of mint for garnish DIRECTIONS Add the sugar cube and sour cherries to your…

The post Tart Cherry Gin Cooler Recipe appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/tart-cherry-gin-cooler-recipe/

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Easy Ways to Give Back That Work With Any Budget

Sometimes I catch myself daydreaming about what I would do if I had an extra million or if I won the lottery. I dream up such elaborate plans that sometimes I actually get down about not being able to see my dreams materialize. It can be frustrating. But recently, I came downstairs to tell my husband that I had an epiphany. I realized that I needed to start focusing less on what I wish I could do and more on what I can do. I may never be able to write a million-dollar check or build a new wing in…

The post Easy Ways to Give Back That Work With Any Budget appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/easy-ways-to-give-back-that-work-with-any-budget/

Podcast Ep 84: Registered Dietitian Heidi Schauster on Eating Disorders and Nutrition

It’s one thing to know the importance of self-love — and it’s another to truly feel that love for yourself, no matter what condition your body is currently in. In this episode, we talk with Heidi Schauster, MS, RDN, CEDRD-S of the Boston-based Nourish Words Nutrition Therapy. A certified eating disorders nutrition registered dietitian with more than 20 years of experience, Heidi has some incredible ideas on weight-inclusive wellness and diet culture liberation, and she wants y’all to know that you are already worthy of self-acceptance right now, at this moment — and you’re absolutely capable of overcoming just about…

The post Podcast Ep 84: Registered Dietitian Heidi Schauster on Eating Disorders and Nutrition appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/podcast-ep-84-registered-dietitian-heidi-schauster-on-eating-disorders-and-nutrition/

Friday, May 25, 2018

Self Massager Products We’re Digging

I didn’t get my first professional massage until I was well into my 20s. There were a few reasons — I’ve always been a bit weird about personal space and people touching me, for one, plus it took me a while to really understand the true value (financial and otherwise) of self-care. If my muscles were hurting, I figured I could just ice ’em, heat ’em, stretch ’em out, and I’d be fine. That approach worked okay when I was a teenager, but became less and less effective as I got older. These days, in order to keep things from…

The post Self Massager Products We’re Digging appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/self-massager-round-up/

Thursday, May 24, 2018

3 Easy Ways to Live Green and Make a Difference

Environmentalism and clean living go together like peanut butter and jelly, mimosas and brunch, yin and yang. Here are three small ways you can make a positive environmental impact. Cut the Meat According to research by Oxford Martin School, the widespread adoption of a plant-based diet would cut food-related emissions by 63 percent and potentially improve our health. While expecting the world to go full veggie may not be realistic, we can certainly be more aware of our meat consumption. Further, food scientists are developing “lab-grown meat.” While the concept of eating meat produced by a lab may sound gross,…

The post 3 Easy Ways to Live Green and Make a Difference appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/3-easy-ways-to-live-green-and-make-a-difference/

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Tiny House Cooking: Swiss Chard Rolls With Root Vegetables

Living in a small space, like a tiny house, apartment, or a dorm, doesn’t mean you can’t dream big when it comes to creating delicious meals, and today’s guest post and recipe is excerpted from a cookbook by Adams Media that’s designed to help you do just that!  No need to curb your big appetite in a tiny home — the recipes in Tiny House Cooking: 175+ Recipes Designed to Create Big Flavor in a Small Space are uniquely designed to be made in the micro-kitchens of tiny homes and apartments, since many tiny homes have only two burner stove…

The post Tiny House Cooking: Swiss Chard Rolls With Root Vegetables appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/tiny-house-cooking-swiss-chard-rolls-with-root-vegetables/

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

Disordered Eating No Longer Controls Me, But That Doesn’t Mean I Never Struggle

disordered eating doesn't control me, but I still struggleWould you rather listen to this article? Use the player below, download the MP3, or listen on iTunes.

I’m no longer captive to disordered eating. But that doesn’t mean I never struggle or feel the tug of old, destructive habits. Like a scar from a sutured wound leaves a permanent reminder of the event, so too did my stint with obsessive eating habits create a lasting mark on me. It fades with time, but it’ll never completely vanish.

Individuals battling their own disordered eating habits may think, as I did years ago, that they can “get over it” eventually and be completely free from its grip, never to fight mental battles about food again. Breaking away from disordered eating (and the ugly side of health and fitness all together) and adopting nutrition habits that are flexible, sane, and mentally healthy is possible. However, it’s naïve to think returning to or becoming “normal” is a likely outcome.

That may sound grim, but it shouldn’t. It’s simply a reality that a lengthy experience with disordered eating habits will leave its mark, just like an operation or serious puncture wound leaves a scar.

I’ve been free from the jaws of the monster that is disordered, obsessive eating and binge eating for almost a decade, but I still have occasional struggles, and many who have a similar history report experiencing these too. It’s time to bring them to light, and what has helped me stay free from previous obsessive eating habits.

No More Disordered Eating. But There are Occasional Struggles.

I no longer binge, but that doesn’t mean I never overeat. Binge eating means consuming a massive quantity of food in a short period of time and, for me, well beyond the point of feeling full. I no longer experience massive binges that easily accrued over a thousand calories and left my stomach throbbing in pain. However, I do overeat on occasion.

I’ve devoured four slices of pizza when I was satisfied after eating two. I’ve eaten too much candy because I gobbled it down too quickly and grabbed more before I’d even finished chewing what was in my mouth. I eat dessert even when I’m full from a delicious dinner. I’ve gone back for a second helping when I was no longer hungry but wanted to keep eating because it was so dang delicious.

And I will do all those things again.

A major difference now is that I accept these occasional events as a normal part of life and don’t get upset about them — or if I do start feeling bad, I quickly remind myself that it wasn’t a big deal. I make myself move forward and refuse to feel guilt or shame.

Recommended Article: The Huge Problem With Guilty-Pleasure Foods

Years ago, when I was breaking free from disordered eating, I accepted that striving for perfection with food — never overeating or making successive less-than-ideal food choices or eating too much candy — wasn’t going to happen. I don’t demand perfection, nor do I berate myself when I overeat or make a string of not-so-great food choices.

I don’t obsess about food multiple times a day, every day, but I do overthink on occasion. When will I eat again? What will I eat? What should I eat? When can I eat after that? Should I try a new diet? How can I avoid the next binge? Those thoughts plagued my mind when disordered eating habits consumed me. Thankfully, that’s no longer the case.

Overthinking still happens, however: I really want the French toast, but the veggie omelet is a better choice. Maybe I should get that because it has more protein and I should eat more veggies. But, man, the French toast sounds amazing. That, and similar conversations, run through my mind occasionally. They’re shorter than they used to be and occur less frequently; I catch myself overthinking a situation, like the French toast versus omelet example, that doesn’t require that much brain power and cut off the mental conversation immediately. Then I choose the food option I really want and enjoy every bite, then move on with the well-established nutrition habits I’ve created.

Just like getting sick or dealing with unexpected real-life events, the occasional overthinking episode happens. I face it immediately, cut it short, and move on. It doesn’t define me, it doesn’t control me, and I choose not to respond emotionally. The better I get at handling those events, immediately, the less frequently they occur.

I’m no longer on a never-ending fat loss journey because I dislike my body, but I don’t love my body unconditionally at every moment. Over a decade ago, all I wanted to do was lose the fat that accumulated from binge eating. Every action in the gym and choice in the kitchen was done in the name of fat loss, and that mindset had me in its grip for years. Now, I don’t fear having fat on my body and set goals that have absolutely nothing to do with fat loss, and I’m not relentlessly pursuing a better-looking body.

Recommended Article: Screw Fat Loss

I love my body and the amazing things it can do — but that doesn’t mean I love how it looks every day. When I see my bloated PMS belly in the mirror I don’t respond with joy exclaiming, “Hot damn I have never looked sexier than I do right now. Thanks, water retention!” I don’t always feel my best; I don’t always think I look my best. But that’s part of life. I refuse to feel bad for not thinking I look amazing all the time. Loving my body without fail every moment is pressure I don’t put on myself.

How exactly do I face those occasional struggles and successfully defeat them?

Not Going Back to Disordered Eating

Though some struggles are inevitable, I won’t return to obsessive, disordered eating habits. Below are some of the main things I do, and don’t do, and important lessons to quickly recall when old habits try to pry into my mind.

Avoidance is Useful

Restrictive diets, venomous snakes, someone spraying their surrounding area like a sprinkler because they don’t cover their mouth when coughing, any dish that includes beets — my response to these things is the same and immediate: I make haste in the opposite direction.

I do the same with anything that led to, or exacerbated, disordered eating habits.

Avoiding what got me there in the first place is helpful: obsessing over making the “best” choices with every meal; being too restrictive; dichotomous thinking (only eating “clean” foods and, by default, labeling everything else as “dirty” and “bad”); putting too much emphasis on my physical appearance and not on how I feel; berating myself for less-than-ideal food choices; feeling guilty for eating my favorite foods; thinking my way to failure. Those have no place in my life.

There is an exception to this rule. The past few months I’ve been running a muscle-building program and weigh myself occasionally. I knew tracking my weight could easily cause negative thoughts to bubble up like they did in the past when I stepped on the scale, but I remind myself that it’s just a number; a data point. I can choose to remove any emotional element related to that innocent number. Just because something used to disturb you doesn’t mean it must always have that power — you can defeat it.

Lesson: Know what works best for you and avoid what doesn’t. Old habits can be defeated with patience and persistence.

Talk About the Struggles

A few weeks ago, I found myself stumbling and felt the old familiar tug of bad mental conversations, and I told my wife about it. Immediately once I aired the frustrations verbally I felt better, lighter. Just getting it out of my head put everything into perspective so I could focus on what was important and let go of what wasn’t.

Lesson: Have someone to confide in when your brain is giving you a hard time.

Don’t Dig the Hole Deeper and Deeper … and Deeper

When my life was ruled by obsessive eating habits, my brain would rationalize I screwed up by eating this “bad food,” so I’ll just keep eating it until it’s all gone, if I ate a small piece of dessert. That small piece would turn into two more larger pieces, and then a string of less-than-ideal choices because, hey, I already screwed up so what difference did it make if I kept going?

That irrational response was akin to falling in a hole, deciding not just to spend time in it but to grab a shovel and make it deeper … and deeper.

If that old mental habit creeps up I catch it and quickly change direction: That cake was incredible. I enjoyed it, there’s nothing “bad” about it, and there’s no need to eat more. I also remind myself that if I eat more even though I’m satisfied I’ll end up uncomfortably full, and that never feels good.

Recommended Article: The One Simple Hack to Stop Screwing Yourself Over

I still stumble into a hole on occasion (by eating a few too many tasty Halloween or Easter candies) but once I realize I’m there, I choose not to keep digging (I don’t keep eating more) and proceed to climb out of the hole and walk forward.

Lesson: Just stop digging.

Get Out of the All-or-Nothing Cycle of Destruction

Eating “good” for every meal, all the time, or giving up completely at the slightest set back or less-than-ideal decision. Sound familiar? I’ve seen too many people swing aggressively from obsessively “watching what they eat” to not caring about what they put in their mouth, because the former mentally exhausted them.

Nutrition is not an all-or-nothing lifestyle. Moderation and flexibility are the solutions, and not demanding the impossible — relentless perfection — from yourself.

Recommended Article: Eating in Moderation: How to Do It Right

Lesson: Screw perfection. Do the most important things most of the time.

Make Success as Easy as Possible

I keep myself set up for success by not needlessly testing my willpower. I know what foods are easy for me to overeat and don’t keep them in the house. They’re not forbidden by any means, but if I really want that food, I go buy a serving and enjoy it. Our home is stocked with nutrient-dense foods we love so cooking great meals and having healthy snacks isn’t a chore; they’re always right there within reach.

Furthermore, I identified situations that were likely to trigger old habits and created a simple, specific plan to handle them. For instance, eating food directly from a bag or container easily turns into me eating half of it. My plan for packaged foods: put a serving in a bowl or on a plate, and put away the rest.

Recommended Article: The Simple Guide That Shows You How to Eat Healthy

Lesson: Make the things you want to do the easy things to do. Don’t “wing it” with situations that previously led to disordered eating habits (i.e., don’t rely on willpower). Identify situations that create problems and have a plan for how to face them.

The goal, for me, isn’t to attain some elusive state of “normal” when it comes to food, whatever that means. Knowing I may always have to be vigilant to keep old habits at bay is fine with me. I aim to build upon productive habits, to replace those that don’t serve me with ones that do, to continue getting better at identifying struggles and handling them promptly and remembering that the main purpose of nutrition and fitness is to help me live my best possible life. Obsessive, disordered eating habits or anything resembling them clashes with that objective.

(Note: If you’re battling disordered eating, find a qualified professional who specializes in your specific issue and get on the fast track to recovery.)

Be one of the first to know when new content is released and get exclusive insider-only information not shared elsewhere. Join the newsletter below.

The post Disordered Eating No Longer Controls Me, But That Doesn’t Mean I Never Struggle appeared first on Nia Shanks.



source http://www.niashanks.com/disordered-eating-no-longer-controls-me/

The 411 on Strength-Based Parenting

So much in parenting advice has changed over the years. And one of the current trends we love (besides YDY — AKA: you do you!) is strength-based parenting, which is based on the principles of positive psychology. Unsure what, exactly, that is? We’re about to break it down in this interview with Lea Waters, author of The Strength Switch: How The New Science of Strength-Based Parenting Can Help Your Child and Your Teen to Flourish and the star of this popular TedX talk. 7 Questions with Lea Waters About Strength-Based Learning Fit Bottomed Mamas: Why was this book so important for you to write? Lea Waters: I run strength-based workshops…

The post The 411 on Strength-Based Parenting appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/the-411-on-strength-based-parenting/

Podcast Ep 83: “Chasing Slow” With Erin Loechner

Slow gets a bad rap — but in today’s interview, we learn that sometimes the best path to happiness isn’t found in the fast lane. In this episode, we talk with Erin Loechner, founder of Design for Mankind and author of Chasing Slow: Courage to Journey Off the Beaten Path. You might also recognize her name from her writing and design work featured in The New York Times, Dwell, Marie Claire, Elle Decor, and Huffington Post, or from her two-season HGTV.com web special in which she and her husband chronicled the full renovation of their Midwest home. That choice to create a home in the…

The post Podcast Ep 83: “Chasing Slow” With Erin Loechner appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/podcast-ep-83-chasing-slow-with-erin-loechner/

Monday, May 21, 2018

All Together Now: The Story Behind the FBG Redesign

As you guys know, it’s been a decade of FBG, and there have been a lot of changes up in here over the years. But the one we are MOST excited to share with you today (and, if you’re reading this, you should be seeing it RIGHT NOW) is a newly designed site that puts all of our sister sites and FBG in one central location! via GIPHY Yes, that means that now, no matter where else you are in the Fit Bottomed World (Fit Bottomed Mamas, Fit Bottomed Eats or Fit Bottomed Zen), you’ll now be on Fit Bottomed Girls. So, instead of…

The post All Together Now: The Story Behind the FBG Redesign appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/we-redesigned-our-sites-to-all-be-in-one-place-heres-why/

2018 Fitties: The Best Fitness- and Health-Related Products We’ve Tried

It’s our birfday week so you know what that means … via GIPHY Well, yes, obviously. But it also means … it’s Fitties time! via GIPHY In case you’re new to the Fitties game or need a refresher, the Fitties are basically our version of the Oscars. And we give them out to only the best-of-the-best fitness- and health-related products that we have tried in the last year and love like whoa. This is the stuff we couldn’t imagine our fit lives without — and recommend to EVERYONE WE KNOW. Like last year, we’ve divided each category up on individual pages so that…

The post 2018 Fitties: The Best Fitness- and Health-Related Products We’ve Tried appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/2018-fitties-the-best-fitness-and-health-related-products-weve-tried/

Giveaway: ZOOMA Florida Race Registration and One-Night Stay

 Don’t these ladies look like they’re having the times of their lives? Well, you could be just like them in October because we are giving what might just be our coolest and amazing giveaway ever … registration to the ZOOMA Summer Challenge and ZOOMA Florida (half marathon, 12K or 5K) — and a one-night stay at one of the race resorts in Amelia Island, located on the northeastern coast of Florida! WE KNOW. It’s an incredible giveaway. You can get all the deets on the race here — but first, know this: Zooma Florida was voted one of the top 20 half…

The post Giveaway: ZOOMA Florida Race Registration and One-Night Stay appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/giveaway-zooma-florida-race-registration-and-one-night-stay/

2018 Noshies: The Best Food, Beverage and Kitchen Products

It’s party time in the Fit Bottomed World! We’re celebrating our birthday week over at Fit Bottomed Girls with fantastic giveaways, great content, and some pretty exciting news. And because all the best parties are full of deliciousness, we’re getting in on the action by announcing the winners of the 2018 Noshies! So, if you’re ready to see what we’re loving SO HARD out of all the great food-related goodies we’ve checked out over the past year, read on! Or if you’d like to start out with a trip down memory lane, you can catch up with who’s been awarded a Noshie…

The post 2018 Noshies: The Best Food, Beverage and Kitchen Products appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/noshies-2018/

2018 Mommies: The Best Products for Moms, Kids and Families

In case you haven’t heard, it’s an exciting week here in the Fit Bottomed World … it’s birthday week over at Fit Bottomed Girls! And while we’re going to be unveiling a pretty big and exciting new change soon (squeal!), today we’re gonna help FBG party by announcing the 2018 Mommies. You guys know that the best stuff in mom life is shared, and that’s exactly what the Mommies are all about. (You can see last year’s list here.) We’ve tried A LOT of stuff over the course of the past 365 days, and these are the mama finds that…

The post 2018 Mommies: The Best Products for Moms, Kids and Families appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/2018-mommies-the-best-products-for-moms-kids-and-families/

2018 Zennies: The Best Mindful Living Products

Can you guys believe that we’re already hosting the THIRD-annual Zennies this year? True story. And if that’s not special enough, we’re doing it at the same time as the Fitties, Noshies and Mommies, because — ladies and gents — it is a HUGE week for the Fit Bottomed World and this is just part of the big ol’ celebration. (Get the scoop here, enter to win some giveaways here, and then stay tuned next week for a new and exciting announcement!) For those of you here on FBZ for the first time, what are the Zennies you ask? Good…

The post 2018 Zennies: The Best Mindful Living Products appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/2018-zennies-the-best-mindful-living-products/

The 10-10-10 Workout

We all have our birthday traditions, right? via GIPHY Some folks start their big day with a special breakfast, while others take the day off work to do something exciting (or relaxing — which can actually be pretty exciting if your everyday life doesn’t really allow for that, right?). via GIPHY Us? Well, we think a birthday is a fantastic opportunity to celebrate!  And by “celebrate,” we mean “celebrate how amazing we are by doing a solid workout!” Obviously. It’s a simple concept: 10 moves. 10 reps. 10 rounds. (Plus a five to 10 minute easy warm up to get your…

The post The 10-10-10 Workout appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/the-10-10-10-workout/

Giveaway: 10 Essential Items for Your Home Gym

Wouldn’t it be cool to have a home gym stocked with the essentials? One that just, like, arrived at your doorstep? via GIPHY Well, guess, what? In honor of our 10-year birthday (get all the deets and special posts here) and because you guys are awesome, we’ve taken our affiliate relationship with ProSource to the next level: the GIVEAWAY LEVEL! via GIPHY Yes, they’re giving away their top 10 home gym essentials to one lucky U.S. reader. via GIPHY Here’s what you can win! 1. Foam Roller 2. Resistance Bands 3. Pull-Up Bar 4. Dip Station   5. Yoga Mat…

The post Giveaway: 10 Essential Items for Your Home Gym appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/giveaway-10-essential-items-for-your-home-gym/

Podcast Ep 82: 60 Questions With the Fit Bottomed Girls

It’s party time! Grab a glass of something bubbly (kombucha works!), put on your most comfy athleisure and get ready to celebrate (FBG-style) our 10th birthday! That’s right, it was 10 years ago that Fit Bottomed Girls — which is now home to a whole slew of verticals including Fit Bottomed Eats, Fit Bottomed Mamas and Fit Bottomed Zen, and the Fit Bottomed Girls Podcast — was launched. So, yeah, we think this is a really, really good reason to celebrate! (Be sure to go here now for special posts, giveaways, and more.) In this special ep, we decided to shake things…

The post Podcast Ep 82: 60 Questions With the Fit Bottomed Girls appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/podcast-ep-82-questions-with-fbgs/

Our Top 10 Most Popular Posts of ALL TIME

Compiling our most popular posts is a tradition we do each and every year for our birthday  … but this year has a twist. A decade-long twist. via GIPHY Instead of sharing your most read and shared posts from the last year, this time, we’re doing it for ALL TIME! via GIPHY It’s kind of like going back in time. via GIPHY Except, it’s also right now, because even posts that we just wrote are in the running. via GIPHY Now let’s get to it! 10. An Easy Way to Keep Those Workout Headbands On 9. We Can So Relate to…

The post Our Top 10 Most Popular Posts of ALL TIME appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/our-top-10-most-popular-posts-of-all-time/

Looking Back on a Freakin’ Decade of Fit Bottomed Girls — And Sharing What’s to Come

Can you believe that — this week — Fit Bottomed Girls is celebrating its 10th anniversary? via GIPHY Yes, that’s a decade. via GIPHY WE KNOW. via GIPHY And over that decade, A LOT of things have happened. And changed. And grown. And evolved. via GIPHY In that time, we’ve started three verticals in addition to Fit Bottomed Girls — Fit Bottomed Mamas (which got a new tagline and logo last year), Fit Bottomed Eats and Fit Bottomed Zen — plus we started our podcast, hosted a retreat, wrote a book, designed a pair of leggings, and launched our ongoing weight-loss…

The post Looking Back on a Freakin’ Decade of Fit Bottomed Girls — And Sharing What’s to Come appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source https://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/looking-back-on-a-freakin-decade-of-fit-bottomed-girls-and-seeing-whats-next/

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

2018 Fitties: The Best Fitness- and Health-Related Products We’ve Tried

It’s our birfday week so you know what that means … via GIPHY Well, yes, obviously. But it also means … it’s Fitties time! via GIPHY In case you’re new to the Fitties game or need a refresher, the Fitties are basically our version of the Oscars. And we give them out to only the best-of-the-best fitness- and health-related products that we have tried in the last year and love like whoa. This is the stuff we couldn’t imagine our fit lives without — and recommend to EVERYONE WE KNOW. Like last year, we’ve divided each category up on individual pages so that …

The post 2018 Fitties: The Best Fitness- and Health-Related Products We’ve Tried appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/2018-fitties-the-best-fitness-and-health-related-products-weve-tried/

Giveaway: ZOOMA Florida Race Registration and One-Night Stay

 Don’t these ladies look like they’re having the times of their lives? Well, you could be just like them in October because we are giving what might just be our coolest and amazing giveaway ever … registration to the ZOOMA Summer Challenge and ZOOMA Florida (half marathon, 12K or 5K) — and a one-night stay at one of the race resorts in Amelia Island, located on the northeastern coast of Florida! WE KNOW. It’s an incredible giveaway. You can get all the deets on the race here — but first, know this: Zooma Florida was voted one of the top 20 half …

The post Giveaway: ZOOMA Florida Race Registration and One-Night Stay appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/giveaway-zooma-florida-race-registration-and-one-night-stay/

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

The 10-10-10 Workout

We all have our birthday traditions, right? via GIPHY Some folks start their big day with a special breakfast, while others take the day off work to do something exciting (or relaxing — which can actually be pretty exciting if your everyday life doesn’t really allow for that, right?). via GIPHY Us? Well, we think a birthday is a fantastic opportunity to celebrate!  And by “celebrate,” we mean “celebrate how amazing we are by doing a solid workout!” Obviously. It’s a simple concept: 10 moves. 10 reps. 10 rounds. (Plus a five to 10 minute easy warm up to get your …

The post The 10-10-10 Workout appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/the-10-10-10-workout/

Giveaway: 10 Essential Items for Your Home Gym

Wouldn’t it be cool to have a home gym stocked with the essentials? One that just, like, arrived at your doorstep? via GIPHY Well, guess, what? In honor of our 10-year birthday (get all the deets and special posts here) and because you guys are awesome, we’ve taken our affiliate relationship with ProSource to the next level: the GIVEAWAY LEVEL! via GIPHY Yes, they’re giving away their top 10 home gym essentials to one lucky U.S. reader. via GIPHY Here’s what you can win! 1. Foam Roller 2. Resistance Bands 3. Pull-Up Bar 4. Dip Station   5. Yoga Mat …

The post Giveaway: 10 Essential Items for Your Home Gym appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/giveaway-10-essential-items-for-your-home-gym/

Podcast Ep 82: 60 Questions With the Fit Bottomed Girls

It’s party time! Grab a glass of something bubbly (kombucha works!), put on your most comfy athleisure and get ready to celebrate (FBG-style) our 10th birthday! That’s right, it was 10 years ago that Fit Bottomed Girls — which is now home to a whole slew of verticals including Fit Bottomed Eats, Fit Bottomed Mamas and Fit Bottomed Zen, and the Fit Bottomed Girls Podcast — was launched. So, yeah, we think this is a really, really good reason to celebrate! (Be sure to go here now for special posts, giveaways, and more.) In this special ep, we decided to shake things …

The post Podcast Ep 82: 60 Questions With the Fit Bottomed Girls appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/podcast-ep-82-questions-with-fbgs/

Monday, May 14, 2018

Our Top 10 Most Popular Posts of ALL TIME

Compiling our most popular posts is a tradition we do each and every year for our birthday  … but this year has a twist. A decade-long twist. via GIPHY Instead of sharing your most read and shared posts from the last year, this time, we’re doing it for ALL TIME! via GIPHY It’s kind of like going back in time. via GIPHY Except, it’s also right now, because even posts that we just wrote are in the running. via GIPHY Now let’s get to it! 10. An Easy Way to Keep Those Workout Headbands On 9. We Can So Relate to …

The post Our Top 10 Most Popular Posts of ALL TIME appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/our-top-10-most-popular-posts-of-all-time/

Looking Back on a Freakin’ Decade of Fit Bottomed Girls — And Sharing What’s to Come

Can you believe that — this week — Fit Bottomed Girls is celebrating its 10th anniversary? via GIPHY Yes, that’s a decade. via GIPHY WE KNOW. via GIPHY And over that decade, A LOT of things have happened. And changed. And grown. And evolved. via GIPHY In that time, we’ve started three verticals in addition to Fit Bottomed Girls — Fit Bottomed Mamas (which got a new tagline and logo last year), Fit Bottomed Eats and Fit Bottomed Zen — plus we started our podcast, hosted a retreat, wrote a book, designed a pair of leggings, and launched our ongoing weight-loss …

The post Looking Back on a Freakin’ Decade of Fit Bottomed Girls — And Sharing What’s to Come appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/looking-back-on-a-freakin-decade-of-fit-bottomed-girls-and-seeing-whats-next/

Giveaway: Brooks Running Apparel From Head to Toe

We’re kicking off our 10th birthday with an amazing giveaway (and so much more — catch it all right here!), thanks to our friends at Brooks Running. Our love of all things Brooks Running is no secret. We dig the brand so much that we’ve been Brooks ambassadors and an affiliate for years. I mean, even if you didn’t know before, this is a dead giveaway. Oh, and speaking of giveaways … via GIPHY Do we ever have one for you! In honor of our tenth (yes, tenth!) birthday, Brooks Running is hooking us UP with a full outfit to give …

The post Giveaway: Brooks Running Apparel From Head to Toe appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/brooks-running-birthday-giveaway/

Friday, May 11, 2018

15 Workout Songs We’re Celebrating Our Birthday With

Next week, we’re turning 10. Ten! A whole decade of Fit Bottomedness up in here. And because this is, ahem, a big deal (with — teaser — a pretty big announcement!), we are getting this party started off right … and early. via GIPHY And we’re doing it the best way we know how: with the ultimate 15-song, celebration-themed workout playlist. via GIPHY With a lot of old party faves (plus two Queen songs), it’ll basically turn your next workout into a serious fiesta. via GIPHY So, come, join us! Get the celebration workout playlist here or below. And be …

The post 15 Workout Songs We’re Celebrating Our Birthday With appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/15-workout-songs-were-celebrating-our-birthday-with/

Thursday, May 10, 2018

The Women Empowerment Event You Don’t Want to Miss

What do you want out of summer? Some time outdoors? A bit of excitement and adventure? Maybe the opportunity to connect with other fitness-minded women in an empowering (and gorgeous) setting? Yep, us, too — and we’re beyond thrilled to announce that we’re leading a workshop at a retreat this summer that’ll provide you with all of that and so, so, so much more. We would love for you to join us June 21-24 at The Assemblage Sanctuary in Bethel, NY — just a couple of hours from New York City for the 109 Women Empowerment retreat. Over the course of …

The post The Women Empowerment Event You Don’t Want to Miss appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/109-world-women-empowerment/

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

The Best Dumbbell Exercises for Your Core

Gone are the days that core work meant just a bunch of crunches. And although bodyweight core work is awesome (I do love me some plank variations), you don’t have to get stuck in that rut either. The important thing to remember about our bodies is that they adapt to what we repeatedly ask them to do, and then they click into cruise control. In order to elicit more strength gains, we have to up the challenge periodically so that our bodies will continue to adapt. When it comes to core work, there simply is no better or more accessible …

The post The Best Dumbbell Exercises for Your Core appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/the-best-dumbbell-exercises-for-your-core/

Fit Outfit of the Day

Welcome to our FOOTD. via GIPHY Also known as our Fit Outfit of the Day. via GIPHY Today it features a few of our latest finds from Brooks Running (which, remember, we’re affiliates and ambassadors — and they send us goodies on the reg!) that we are obsessed with. OBSESSED. via GIPHY Read on for what we’re running in and loving right now! Stealth Tank & Chaser 3″ Short Ladies, the Stealth Tank ($40) is simply everything you want a workout tank to be. It’s lightweight, it’s flattering, it’s high performance so it keeps you dry, and it feels so, …

The post Fit Outfit of the Day appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/fit-outfit-of-the-day/

How to Do a Speed Workout Like Desi Linden

We can’t tell you how PSYCHED we were to see Desi Linden win the Boston Marathon this year — and to do it by showing such heart-touching sportsmanship at that. It was truly one of our fave moments in sports history, ever. (No, you’re crying.) And while we encourage you (and ourselves!) to go out and show character like Desi today (and every day), here’s one of her speed workouts from Hansons Marathon Method so that you can run like her, too. Because, damn, she’s fast. Speed Workouts the Hansons Way Only one elite running team has revealed its marathon …

The post How to Do a Speed Workout Like Desi Linden appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/how-to-do-a-speed-workout-like-desi-linden/

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Podcast Ep 81: Veterinarian Dr. Sarah Boston

Dr. Sarah Boston is a veterinary surgical oncologist (aka a specialist in cancer surgery for dogs and cats) who one day discovered a lump in her thyroid and suspected it was cancer. How did she and her veterinarian husband confirm this? By utilizing the very same ultrasound equipment they used on their furry patients. Sarah wrote about her experience of being both a cancer expert and patient in her book Lucky Dog. And today she joins us for an inspiring chat about she dealt with the stresses of being sick and how her experience continues to affect her work today. …

The post Podcast Ep 81: Veterinarian Dr. Sarah Boston appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/podcast-episode-81-veterinarian-dr-sarah-boston/

Monday, May 7, 2018

The Best Dumbbell Exercises for Your Core

Gone are the days that core work meant just a bunch of crunches. And although bodyweight core work is awesome (I do love me some plank variations), you don’t have to get stuck in that rut either. The important thing to remember about our bodies is that they adapt to what we repeatedly ask them to do, and then they click into cruise control. In order to elicit more strength gains, we have to up the challenge periodically so that our bodies will continue to adapt. When it comes to core work, there simply is no better or more accessible …

The post The Best Dumbbell Exercises for Your Core appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/the-best-dumbbell-exercises-for-your-core/

Friday, May 4, 2018

Fit Outfit of the Day

Welcome to our FOOTD. via GIPHY Also known as our Fit Outfit of the Day. via GIPHY Today it features a few of our latest finds from Brooks Running (which, remember, we’re affiliates and ambassadors — and they send us goodies on the reg!) that we are obsessed with. OBSESSED. via GIPHY Read on for what we’re running in and loving right now! Stealth Tank & Chaser 3″ Short Ladies, the Stealth Tank ($40) is simply everything you want a workout tank to be. It’s lightweight, it’s flattering, it’s high performance so it keeps you dry, and it feels so, …

The post Fit Outfit of the Day appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/fit-outfit-of-the-day/

Thursday, May 3, 2018

How to Do a Speed Workout Like Desi Linden

We can’t tell you how PSYCHED we were to see Desi Linden win the Boston Marathon this year — and to do it by showing such heart-touching sportsmanship at that. It was truly one of our fave moments in sports history, ever. (No, you’re crying.) And while we encourage you (and ourselves!) to go out and show character like Desi today (and every day), here’s one of her speed workouts from Hansons Marathon Method so that you can run like her, too. Because, damn, she’s fast. Speed Workouts the Hansons Way Only one elite running team has revealed its marathon …

The post How to Do a Speed Workout Like Desi Linden appeared first on Fit Bottomed Girls.



source http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2018/05/how-to-do-a-speed-workout-like-desi-linden/

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Here’s the Simple Guide That Shows You How to Eat Healthy

confused about how to eat healthy? This guide makes it simpleWould you rather listen to this article? Use the player below or download on iTunes.

Does it ever feel like you spend way more time than you should have to thinking about food? What you should eat and shouldn’t eat; how many meals you should eat; are any foods best for fat loss; what’s best for improving overall health; is there such a thing as an all-you-can-eat peanut butter diet; are total calories or food quality more important.

Eating healthy is complicated.

Not really. Eating healthy seems complicated because of the abundance of information on food, weight loss, disease prevention and what you should and shouldn’t eat to look better naked. It’s no wonder people are frustrated and discouraged because they’ve tried popular diets that promised to be the diet for effortless fat loss: low fat, low carb, vegetarian, intermittent fasting, ketogenic, and all the rest.

The Basics are Not Replaceable

It’s not uncommon for someone to read the information below and scoff that it’s “too simple.” They want more than the basics. They think a diet that emulates their favorite Instagram fit-pro’s habits will yield better results. They think they’re above the basics.

The problem, however, is that most people have not even mastered the basics. Complex, restrictive diets that eliminate foods or food groups don’t produce better, lasting results – they just reduce calorie intake. People falsely think they’re more effective because of their complexity. These unnecessarily obsessive, restrictive diets can lead to things you don’t want like binge eating, negative body image, or incessant yo-yo dieting.

Complex or complicated does not mean better. Don’t delude yourself into thinking you need something more advanced if you don’t apply the information shared here for months at a time.

Do You Want a Diet or a Lifestyle?

Most diets have a timeframe. You follow it for 12-16 weeks (or until your willpower bleeds dry) and then you’re done and go back to eating whatever was normal pre-diet, or worse because you can’t stop eating all the stuff that was banned from the diet. Sound familiar?

Someone who will stand on stage in a bikini to be judged will follow a diet that meticulously tracks calories to reach ultra-low levels of body fat that’s meant to be sustained for a short period of time (people often forget this part and think it’s easy, or healthy, to have very low body fat levels long term). Problems arise when the average person who just wants to feel great and look better naked attempts to mimic those diets.

Most people need to create a sustainable lifestyle built upon simple habits that can be maintained long term. Not for 12-16 weeks, but for 12-16 months and beyond. A major distinction between a diet and lifestyle: quick-fix diets instill a perfection mindset (never missing a meal, hitting the exact calorie target every day, never “cheating,” you go all in); a healthy-eating lifestyle is about consistency, not perfection, so there’s no burden or stress of thinking you need to be perfect day in, day out – it is not an “all or nothing” game.

Rigid diets that create a perfection-obsessed mindset around food can drown you in their monstrous wake of negative body image and disordered eating habits.

You Must Find Pleasure in the Process

You can only force yourself to follow a style of eating you hate, or that dominates your life, for so long. Eventually you’ll say Screw it! and throw your hands in the air as a declaration of frustration and signaling the end of the diet’s lifespan.

Many people mistakenly look at eating healthy as being torturous, bland, boring, difficult. Establishing better eating habits may be difficult in the beginning, depending on your current food habits, but you must focus on the pleasure that accompanies the process. The pleasure of nourishing your body; properly fueling and recovering from workouts; forging new habits that serve you; actively investing in your health; proving to yourself you can establish rewarding, positive habits.

If you get frustrated from trying to find vegetables or lean-protein sources you enjoy, or have trouble hitting the 80% whole-food target discussed below, refocus on the pleasures you should be reaping from this lifestyle change.

Does It Have to be about Fat Loss?

Tips for weight loss are laced throughout this article, because many people want to lose fat. If you’re burned out on constantly thinking about fat loss, watching what you eat, or otherwise being on a never-ending journey of trying to whittle down to a smaller size, don’t think about fat loss.

If your brain is begging for a break from basing every food choice on losing body fat, choose other reasons for changing your eating habits. Choose to adjust your eating choices to:

  • Improve overall health (physical and mental)
  • Increase energy levels
  • Improve sleep quality
  • Fuel and recover from workouts
  • Slow down the aging process
  • Contribute to self-care
  • Increase physical strength and build muscle

There are, as you can see, lots of reasons to eat well that have nothing to do with fat loss. Depending on your history it may behoove you to say Screw fat loss! and focus on other healthy eating benefits.

How to Eat Healthy

Whatever your why may be for wanting to eat healthy, here are the foods that should make up most of your eating choices.

Eat These Foods Most of The Time

The common thread connecting these foods – they’re minimally processed whole foods. Why have these foods been chosen? Because eating mostly nutrient-dense whole foods, including lots of plant-based foods, has been shown to be most important for improving health and warding off disease.

The following images and examples are not exhaustive, and many could fall in other categories. Eggs, for example, could be listed in the fat and protein groups but appear under fats; corn is a grain when eaten as popcorn but considered a starchy vegetable when consumed as corn on the cob. Don’t get obsessed with minor details but use this as a guide for building meals and snacks.

Fats

whole food fat sourcesThese whole-food sources are packed with healthy fats. Other examples not shown include fatty fish like salmon and mackerel; plant sources include flax seeds, olives, chia seeds.

Protein

whole food proteinNotice that lean sources of protein are shown. Fattier cuts of meat and dairy are fine but shouldn’t make up the bulk of your protein choices.

Starchy Vegetables

whole food starchy veggies

Non-Starchy Vegetables

whole food non-starchy veggiesWhy two vegetable categories? Because some people rely too much on the starchy vegetables and eat nothing but potatoes. Potatoes are healthy and satiating, but don’t neglect non-starchy veggies. A good rule of thumb is to “eat the rainbow” as often as possible so you get tons of nutrients in a fiber-packed package. Non-starchy veggies are a great way to increase satiety because they take up a lot of space in the stomach without packing a lot of calories (i.e., they’re high-volume, low-calorie foods).

Bake them, sauté them, grill them, steam them, eat them raw, turn them into noodles and use in place of traditional pasta, blend them in smoothies. Doesn’t matter how you get them in your belly, just eat them.

Beans and Legumes

beans and legumesTasty protein and fiber combined in a cheap package, especially if you buy dried beans and prepare them yourself. If you don’t eat meat, or much of it, this will be one of your main sources of protein. Even if you do eat meat, include these tasty foods.

Whole Grains

whole grainsThis category also includes foods like whole wheat pasta and breads.

Why is white rice shown instead of brown rice — I thought brown rice was “less processed” and therefore healthier, you may be wondering. There’s not much nutritional difference between white and brown rice beyond fiber (which favors brown rice), so let your taste decide. Some people find white rice easier to digest than brown rice. In the end, choosing between them is a minute detail not worth obsessing over.

Herbs and Spices

herbs and spicesIf you don’t use herbs and spices with your cooking, start. I’ve cooked countless meals that were bland and boring, but the right blend of spices made these meals delightfully craveable. Find recipes that use herbs and spices if you’re not a creative cook. They can make the difference between a meal you feel like you have to choke down and one that creates a symphony of flavors on your tastebuds.

Fruits

whole food fruitsChoose from fresh or frozen. Canned fruits are okay if they’re packed in water and don’t have added sugar. Buy what’s in season or on sale to save money. Keep apples and other easy-to-grab fruits nearby if you tend to snack frequently.

Recommended Article: The Chocolate Protein Shake That Actually Tastes Like a Milkshake

Calorie-Free Beverages

calorie-free beveragesSparkling water is another option and the carbonation can help curb appetite. Calorie-free soft drinks are okay in moderation and can help satisfy your sweet tooth. One of the simplest changes worth making is swapping calorie-laden beverages for their calorie-free or low-calorie equivalent.

If you can only drink coffee with cream and sugar, that’s fine. You don’t have to force yourself to drink black coffee. This can only become something that might need to be kept in check if you use a lot of cream and sugar, or drink multiple cups of coffee throughout the day (then those spoonfuls of sugar and cream add up).

Want a low-calorie way to flavor your coffee? Mix a sugar-free hot cocoa packet (they’re only 25 calories) in your coffee. Makes a tasty low-calorie mocha.

What is “Most of The Time”?

The above food categories fall under the umbrella of foods to eat most of the time, meaning they should make up at least 80% of your food choices; this can be a daily or weekly average. The following image shows the percentage of whole and “fun” foods (covered next) consumed each day over the course of a week — the whole-foods average is 81%.

whole foods weekly averageThe tremendous benefit of aiming for at least an 80% average of whole foods is the flexibility it provides. Remember, this is a flexible lifestyle, not a perfection-obsessed diet. You can socialize and enjoy your favorite foods without feeling deprived or like you’re “on a diet.”

Eat These Foods Less Often

You know what to eat at least 80% of the time, so let’s go over the foods that can make up the remaining 0-20% depending on your needs and preferences.

But first, notice what is not being said. These foods are not bad, evil, forbidden, dirty, off limits, or guilty pleasures. Eating them does not make you bad, ugly, shameful, disgusting, a failure or anything else someone who wrote a diet book that bans these foods may have said you’d be if you enjoy them. Nor will eating these foods occasionally in reasonable amounts miraculously cause you to gain body fat. Only eating more than your body uses for a prolonged period causes the accumulation of body fat, and this can come from eating an excess of anything.

foods to eat less oftenThe eat less of these foods are typically calorie dense, not nutrient dense like the whole foods above. They’re hyperpalatable by design typically using a combination of sugar, fat, and salt. For a fascinating look at how foods are intentionally and painstakingly designed to keep us eating more and wanting to eat more, read The End of Overeating.

The best guideline for the eat less of these foods: be consciously selective of what you will enjoy. Actively choose. Don’t just eat something because it’s there or someone offers it to you.

Recommended ArticleEating in Moderation: How to Do It Right

Are Processed Foods Evil?

Unless you grow it or hunt it yourself, your food is technically processed.

Plain oats are processed, but they’re considered a whole food.

Pop Tarts are processed, and they are not a whole food.

Food-of-the-gods peanut butter is processed; it’s a good source of fat that delivers some protein and is considered a whole food.

Protein powder is processed, yet it’s a staple in many people’s eating choices because it’s a food source packaged in a convenient form, like a stick of string cheese.

Aim to eat mostly minimally processed foods. There’s a difference between oats and peanut butter and Pop Tarts and fried mozzarella sticks. And, remember, if Pop Tarts and mozzarella sticks happen to be two of your favorite foods, you can, and should, eat them in moderation.

Why is it important to eat your favorite foods, even if they’re heavily processed or deep fried and not so healthy?

How (and Why) to Make Room for Foods You Love

Want to throw yourself into a relentless battle with disordered and obsessive eating habits?

Heck no you don’t.

The best way to avoid that miserable struggle (i.e., the ugly side of health and fitness) is to not have “forbidden” or “off limit” foods, or to attempt to abstain from your favorite foods or food groups because you think they’re “bad” or solely responsible for fat gain. Do not fall into the disordered-eating trap of labeling foods “good” and “bad” or becoming obsessively neurotic with what you eat.

Optimizing physical health is important and is achieved by eating mostly whole foods. Mental health is also important yet is often omitted from a diet discussion, and that’s a mistake. A way to help ensure you don’t develop obsessive, unhealthy habits with food is to have flexibility built into your food choices.

Make room for your favorite foods. If a variety of whole foods make up at least 80% of your daily/weekly food choices, you can enjoy other favorite foods in moderate amounts. You don’t need to have an “all or nothing” mentality that rigid diets create. You needn’t “eat perfectly” all the time.

Do the right things most of the time.

It’s time to stop looking at food subjectively. A cupcake is not a “bad” food that will instantly put fat on your body. A spinach salad with low-calorie dressing is not a “good” food that will instantly remove fat from your body.

Analyzing food like that exacerbates, or leads to, disordered eating habits. If you find yourself looking at food through a good/bad lens, make it a priority to catch yourself and start reversing that mindset. If you typically look at a tasty cupcake and think I shouldn’t eat this, it’s bad, and it’ll cause me to gain fat, become aware of that response and change the conversation. Recall that it’s a piece of food; it’s not bad or evil. You can have it, enjoy it, and then move on.

This is a lifestyle, and your favorite foods belong in your lifestyle.

To get stronger and change the shape of your body you must show up to the gym week after week and put in consistent effort. You can’t go sporadically and expect noticeable results. Building a healthier mindset with food requires the same commitment and consistent practice.

Tailor to Your Needs and Preferences

You know which foods should make up the bulk of your eating choices, and how to work in your other favorite foods. Great! Why do you need to “tailor” those guidelines to your needs and preferences?

Because doing something you enjoy and that fits into your life matters. A lot. An eating style is only as effective as your adherence to it. Take the time, if needed, to see how many meals per day you prefer to eat and any other practices you need to adopt (or avoid, more on this below) to reach your goals.

Maybe you prefer to eat two big meals per day because you love feeling full and eating smaller meals causes you to overeat. Maybe you prefer carb-rich foods, so a low-carb diet would be worse than getting a root canal from a drunk dentist with a shaky hand. Maybe you need to measure your protein intake and loosely track calories to reach your goals.

Recommended Article: Why That Diet Didn’t Work for You

Maybe you don’t know what you prefer because you never took the time to ask yourself, so you have to try a few things to see what works best. That’s fine too. Becoming your own guru and approaching your eating preferences like a scientist can be a good thing. Take a pragmatic, objective approach to your eating choices. Keep emotion out of it. Take note of what works and keep doing it; if something doesn’t work or you absolutely hate it, scratch it off the at-least-I-tried list and move on to the next thing.

Does Every Meal Have to Look Like This?

boring food exampleNope. Mine certainly don’t.

There’s nothing wrong with having a vegetable, protein, and starch on your plate, but it doesn’t mean every meal has to be made of single ingredient foods, each having its designated spot.

Some people love using that template to design their meals because of its simplicity and the ease it provides for prepping lots of meals at once, but not me. Some of my meals look that way, but it’s certainly not mandatory.

I enjoy cooking and trying new recipes so I routinely make stir-frys, casseroles, slow cooker meals, stews, chilis, curries. My criteria for most recipes is that they use mostly whole-food ingredients. (For a few recipes you can check out my Instagram: chicken salad, banana-oat cookies, sweet potato pumpkin curry.)

Let your preferences determine how your meals look. Make what you enjoy eating.

Total Calories and Food Quality

Do Calories Matter?

Yes. Using an extreme example, you can go on a Snickers diet and lose weight if you stayed in a caloric deficit. Sure, you’d get to eat nothing but Snickers every day and lose weight, but you’d likely be ravenous most of the time since an all-Snickers diet isn’t very satiating. And, not to mention, you wouldn’t consume enough fiber, vitamins, and other nutrients to optimize health.

The point here isn’t to eat nothing but junk – it’s to emphasize the point that no single food or food group causes fat gain on its own.

Does That Mean Food Quality is Less Important?

Not at all. Just because you can lose fat eating nothing but Snickers or McDonald’s doesn’t mean food quality is less important. As stated above, maximizing overall health is the primary objective, and eating mostly whole foods does that. Food quality is also important for energy levels and satiety.

Let’s say your body needs 1,900 calories per day to stay the same (i.e., if you burn 1,900 calories and eat 1,900 calories, your body composition won’t change). You could eat 1,600 calories worth of Snickers bars each day for a month and you’d lose weight from being in a caloric deficit, though you probably wouldn’t feel too great and would likely experience ravenous hunger.

snickers dietSome people claim you’d instantly pack on fat eating nothing but Snickers bars because of the insulin response, but that’s incorrect. An insulin response won’t lead to fat storage in the absence of a caloric surplus.

Contrast this candy-bar diet with eating 1,600 calories of nutritious whole foods from the eat more of these foods discussed above for a month and weight loss would occur, but unlike the all-Snickers diet you’d experience greater satiety from the higher intake of protein and fiber and higher volume whole foods provide.

whole food diet exampleWhole foods provide greater satiety than heavily processed calorie-dense foods.

And, bonus, as you can see, Snickers can still be a part of a mostly whole-foods lifestyle. Deprivation has no place in eating healthy. Moderation is a habit worth developing.

This isn’t to suggest the results from both diets, if all else was equal, would be identical. If strength training was part of the regimen you may lose more fat and build more muscle with the whole-food diet from consuming more nutrients and protein than the theoretical all-Snickers diet; no doubt your health would benefit from the former.

Do You Need to Count Calories?

I would rather saw off the little toe on my right foot with a rusty pocket knife than count calories. That exercise would send me plunging headfirst back into obsessive, disordered eating habits. That is why I don’t count calories, and why many of my clients with a similar history don’t either. It creates more problems than it solves.

There are plenty of people who like tracking calories. It’s a lifestyle practice they enjoy, or one they find necessary to achieve and maintain their goals, otherwise they get off track quickly.

The option of tracking calories varies from person to person and depends on their goals and needs. Do what works best for you and avoid anything that exacerbates issues with food.

If you’re not sure what you need to do, start by applying the above information for at least six weeks and see what happens. You very well may not need to do anything else. Why make things more complicated than necessary? Try the simplest things first, and tweak only if necessary.

Some people don’t need to count calories (or disdain the mere thought of doing so) yet could benefit from tracking certain foods or macronutrients.

What Should be Tracked?

Maybe something. Maybe nothing.

Let’s say you want to lose weight. You aptly apply the above information for six weeks but don’t feel like you’ve made progress, and you don’t want to resort to counting calories. In other words, what should you do if you’re eating healthy but still can’t lose weight?

Most people don’t overeat lean protein, non-starchy vegetables, or fruits. You can track the two most likely culprits preventing fat loss: fat sources and “fun” foods.

Fat sources are calorically dense, and the calories can add up quickly. For example, one-quarter cup of mixed nuts contains 160 calories. If you eat out of the container instead of putting one serving into a bowl, you may end up eating one cup (I’ve been there and done that). Instead of eating 160 calories, it was 640. If you frequently eat high-fat foods like nuts and nut butters, avocados, cheese, olive oil drizzled on salads, track or measure those fat sources for a week. It may be helpful to measure a serving size of those foods to become aware of what a serving size truly is.

I love carbs. If I had my way a bucket of mashed potatoes would be considered one serving. If you eat more carb sources than fat, track your starchy-vegetable and grain intake. You could try replacing some of the starchy vegetables with non-starchy vegetables (since they’re lower in calories for an equal volume) or simply decrease the serving portions a bit: instead of eating two heaping serving spoons of mashed potatoes, eat one.

“Fun” foods can also be easy to overeat. It’s not hard to eat a few too many tasty cookies or French fries or doughnuts. You may be eating more of those than you realize. Track everything you eat and drink for a week to see what’s going on. You may discover you snacked on a doughnut a few times throughout the week and drank a few sugar-loaded lattes you weren’t accounting for previously. Choose which “fun” foods to enjoy more diligently. Either eat a smaller amount and/or swap them out for lower-calorie whole foods.

If fat loss is the goal and you’re not losing weight, this means, very simply, that you’re consuming too many calories. Find simple ways to consume fewer calories: eat more veggies instead of whole grains, swap out sugar-laden beverages for calorie-free drinks, eat a good source of lean protein with all meals, track fat sources, eat more high-volume, low-calorie foods like non-starchy vegetables and fruits. It really can be that simple.

You could summarize the information above into:

  • Eat whole foods at least 80% of the time
  • Make room for your favorite foods
  • Think flexible, sustainable lifestyle – not a soul-sucking diet
  • Master the basics – no seriously, do them consistently for months
  • Consistency matters most – forget about perfection; this is not an “all or nothing” game

Want to Really Change How Your Body Looks?

Healthy eating and strength training go together like peanut butter and jelly. While proper nutrition can improve your health and is instrumental in losing body fat, an intelligent progressive strength training program is the tool that changes the shape of your body. Eating well can help you lose body fat, but only strength training can help you maintain, and build, muscle.

For maximum results, combine the nutrition guidelines here with a progressive strength training program. Check out the women’s beginner strength training guide or Lift Like a Girl workout template to get started.

Want to know when a new article is released? Want insider-only information not shared here? Enter your email below to join the newsletter. 

The post Here’s the Simple Guide That Shows You How to Eat Healthy appeared first on Nia Shanks.



source http://www.niashanks.com/simple-guide-how-to-eat-healthy/