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The First Annual Education Foundation of Lower Merion “Run For Our Schools” 5K May 31, 2009
Join the first annual Run for Our Schools, sponsored by The Education Foundation of Lower Merion. A timing system for all runners will be implemented by Run the Day with results posted at www.runtheday.com. To make this a success we are currently seeking sponsorships. The event features
- A 5K Run
- A 1.5 Mile Walk
- A "Track Trot" for our younger runners (7 and under).
- A Fitness Fair, featuring area vendors
Free event Dri-Fit T-shirt for the first 250 runners registered.
Free event cotton T-shirt for the first 250 walkers and Track Trotters registered.
The Perfect Day of Eating—Part 1 May 29, 2009
One of these days I’m going
to go to a nutritionist and have them outline an eating plan for me. A very
specific eating plan where they tell me what I should cut out and what I should
be adding into my diet. Since I haven’t gotten around to making this happen, I
was happy to see this article in Prevention magazine: The Perfect Day of Eating. The writer interviewed three
nutritionists who counsel real women on the simple secrets of smarter meal
planning.
Here’s
what they found out: 1) Have a meal or small snack every 3 to 4 hours. This
fuels your metabolism and helps prevent binges and blood sugar crashes. 2)
Combine protein (meat, fish, beans, nuts, eggs, dairy) and fiber (whole grains,
fruits, vegetables) at every meal. When eaten together, these foods take longer
to digest than simpler carbohydrates, so you stay fuller, longer. 3) Get up,
move around, and drink water often. This daily meal plan has a wide range of
calories (from about 1,550 to 2,100); if you’re active you can go toward the
higher end of the range.
Finally, remember that even
the “perfect day” isn’t perfect if you eat the same thing over and over again.
Use creativity to mix and match your own delicious, healthy meals.
***My next blog will
continue with an hourly breakdown of what you should eat throughout the day
from the Prevention article.
Parting thought: “Finish
each day and be done with it. You have done what you could; some blunders and
absurdities have crept in; forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new
day; you shall begin it serenely and with too high a spirit to be encumbered
with your old nonsense.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ditchin’ the Cola May 22, 2009
I once thought I had an addiction. It was an addiction that
I couldn’t even fathom kicking: drinking soda. Drinking a 20-ounce Coke (I’m
definitely not a Pepsi gal, it has to be Coke) at least twice a day was part of
my routine for the past couple of years. Sometimes I would substitute a regular
lunch for a 20-ouncer and a soft pretzel. . . .ahhh, carbs and caffeine can’t
get healthier than that, right? Wrong.
I knew with each bottle of Coke I consumed that I was
pumping more than 300 calories into my body. Empty calories that weren’t doing
anything remotely near healthy for my diet. One soda contains 10 teaspoons of
sugar (that’s 100% of our recommended daily intake) and plenty of high fructose
corn syrup. What I loved about Coke though was that it made almost everything I
ate taste better whether it was popcorn at the movies or a sandwich at lunch. I
also loved how full it made me feel. I stupidly convinced myself that drinking
a Coke was curbing my appetite.
When I would tell people how much soda I drank they would
cringe. I got lectured on how it ruins your teeth, leads to the breaking down
of your bones and especially how it packs on the pounds. One friend went so far
as to emailing a list of websites devoted to how bad soda is for your health.
One fact in particular from these websites made me pause: soda can clean your
toilet, eliminate rust from a car bumper and remove grease from clothing. Yuck!
The bottom line was if I wanted to lose weight, I’d have to
cut my ties with Coke. It wasn’t easy at first. I got headaches that I’m
assuming was from not having the caffeine. I felt lost without saying “I’ll
have a Coke with that” when I went out to lunch. Day by day it got easier and
after almost three months of breaking my daily routine of guzzling Coke, I’m
happy to admit I don’t miss it. The cravings are long gone. I’m certain a
percentage of the weight I’ve lost so far is due to changing my beverage
choices. Now my beverage of choice is water —something I never believed I would
crave, but I do now.
So if you’re reading this and you’re thinking I’d never be
able to give up soda, think again. Try it and you just may surprise yourself.
Parting thought: Be not afraid of going slowly; be afraid
only of standing still. — Chinese Proverb
New York State of Mind May 15, 2009
When you eat out in the Big Apple the menu clearly states
how many calories are in each dish. So if you’re at Burger King and you’re
craving a Triple Whopper with Cheese you’ll know that you’re consuming 1250
calories. Or if you are a fan of the fried macaroni and cheese at The
Cheesecake Factory, you’ll know that if you clear the plate you’ll have eaten
1570 calories (and even though it doesn’t say it on the menu this dish has a
colossal 69 grams of saturated fat which is more than you should eat in 3 1/2
days).
Public-health advocates and the Senate are trying to pass
nationwide laws that all chain restaurants put the calorie counts on the menu.
Currently only New York City, West Chester County, NY and King County, WA, have
mandatory calorie counts on menus. A recent study confirmed that 82% of New
Yorkers said the new in-your-face nutrition data have affected their ordering.
When can mandatory calorie counts on menus be implemented on
the Main Line? I know that I would definitely think twice about ordering some
of the (ahem) not-so-healthy stuff I order if I knew how many calories came
along with it. Would chomping down the Quesadilla Burger at Applebee’s at 1440
calories really be worth being on the treadmill for hours working it off? I
don’t think so. Sometimes I have to be shamed into making the right decision
and staring back at calorie counts definitely would make me think twice before
placing my order.
Parting Thought: “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence,
then, is not an act but a habit.”— Aristotle
Wise man, wise words May 08, 2009
Although I’ve been doing well so far I know from past
experience of trying to lose weight and exercise that it usually goes well for
a few weeks then things start slipping.
It starts with a missed workout here, then a chocolate donut
there and then it’s one big slippery slope of being off the track of healthy
living.
So I started to research advice on how to stay motivated and
I came across this quote from Czech Olympian Emil Zatopek which I think sums it
up quite succinctly:
"If one can stick to the
training throughout the many long years, then willpower is no longer a problem. It's raining? That
doesn't matter. I am tired? That's besides the point. It's simply that I
just have to."
I’d add just one thing to this great Zatopek thought for
myself: Just stop whining and get moving.
****Eight weeks into my training
and eating modification (I think this term sounds better than diet) I’ve lost
11 pounds. I think they say the average is two pounds a week, which means I
should be at 16 pounds, but I’m down more than10 and I’m going to be happy with
that. Plus, muscle weighs more than fat and I know I’ve had to gain muscle
after almost two months at training at Vertex. I can’t wait to see what the
next few months bring.
Working the Whole Body May 01, 2009
I love working out at Vertex Fitness. Dwayne, Chris and
Corinne and the whole staff are phenomenal personal trainers. They’re
encouraging, patient, knowledgeable, and somehow know what my body is capable
of (even when I’m not even sure myself). There’s been days I’ve walked through
the door at Vertex and have totally not been in the mood or felt like I’ve had
the strength to get through five minutes let alone 30 minutes of a workout, but
one of these guys have gotten me through it and I’ve left every time feeling
re-energized.
I do have one complaint: I wish spot training problem areas
really worked.
At Vertex they train the whole body: you work both your
upper and lower body during the same session. The entire body responds to the
weight training and since every body is unique, every body reflects the effects
of the weight training differently. Exercising the entire body is the proper,
and only, way to achieve an overall stronger and fitter body.
So I’m glad I’m not wasting my time doing 100 crunches for
those flatter abs I’m dying for or spending precious time performing countless
lounges for the perfect butt. I’m lucky to be working with professionals that
understand the body and know how to properly train it. I can, however, continue
to hope that my “problem” areas start responding faster to all my hard work.
There’s nothing wrong with wishful hoping, right?
Parting Thought: A man who wants
something will find a way; a man who doesn’t will find an excuse. —Stephan
Dolley Jr.
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