Poor Billy

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I may have just eaten half of a family-sized block of Cadbury chocolate. That’s right, not even the good stuff.

I feel okay sharing this with you because this is the least-terrible thing I’ve eaten in the past week.

This has left me feeling very icky, bloated and poor.

I’m off to Auckland for a couple of nights tomorrow, and when I get back there will be no more takeaways, junk food or bought lunches. It’s all about the homemade, penny-saving goodness, baby!

Roast Vegetable Couscous with Cashews

This week I have a nice, casual dinner plan sorted. We’re headed into winter, so I want warm, filling meals – and it’s dark by the time I get home I’m lazy so they have to be quick and easy.

Solution one: cook a batch of something delicious on Sunday, and eat up well for the fist half of the week (at least). Cue this so-easy-my-dog-could-do-it recipe: roasted vegetable couscous salad with cashews for extra crunch.

Yum!

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I made a bulk-batch of four servings, at approximately 370 calories each, with really simple ingredients. If you’re interested in the recipe, read on! Continue reading

Just Peachy!

Ladies and gentlemen, this is a monumental occasion – for two reasons:

  1. because I have this week’s meals more or less under control for the first time in, well, ever. And…
  2. because this is the first time I’ve ever eaten a real peach.  You know, straight from the fruit bowl.  Not from the syrupy goodness of a can.

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Hey guys, did you know that peaches are fuzzy?  Okay, I kid – I have seen a peach before.  I know what they look like.  Jamie Oliver would be proud-ish satisfied.

Growing up, we stuck with the basics – apples, bananas, oranges.  They were cheap and always available.
Peaches were always saved for fancy desserts Mum made when we had guests.  And they came out of a can.

Now that I’m earning my own money and not trying to feed a family of four on a limited budget, I splurged a little.  (Seriously guys, these things are at least $6/kg, compared to apples at $2-3/kg).

Long story short:  Me like.
And it’s nothing like the mushy slices from a can at all!

You can expect to see a few more outbursts like this one as I work through the master shopping list our boot camp trainer has given us.  There’s plenty on there that I love – but there’s plenty on there that I’ve never tried, either.  Like guava, seitan, hemp seeds and quinoa (my parents were relatively straight-forward “meat and three vege” meal kind of people).

So, watch this space!

The Truth About Food

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This morning I was lucky enough to catch a guest speaker who had come into my work to speak to us about nutrition.  Jeff, director of personal training studio Studio41, shared with us a snippet of what he believed to be ‘The Truth About Food’.

Admitting that I know very little about nutrition, I at least thought I knew the basics: consuming fat makes you fat, opt for fruit, trim milk keeps you trim, etc.

But about 5 minutes into this presentation I was questioning everything I thought I knew.  Even the ‘basics’  consuming fat makes you fat, opt for fruit, trim milk keeps you trim, etc.  I was stunned at how an educated young person such as myself had never stopped and thought about the ‘healthy’ things we are putting into our body.

Turns out my go-to healthy breakfast of museli, yogurt and fruit is a diabetes time-bomb waiting to happen, and a large contributor to my morning caffeine requirements.

Potatoes are like legal crack cocaine.

Okay, they are my words not his… but woah.  They pack a punch on your blood sugar levels.

Jeff shares the science behind his thoughts, too – he didn’t just throw about a bunch of opinions without any backing and expect us to believe them.  What he explained made sense.

The talk itself was only an hour long, so he wasn’t able to cover everything he wanted to talk about – or everything we should know as adult human beings responsible for our own (and young’uns) well being.  This morning he focussed on the impact of sugars and carbohydrates on our blood sugar levels, and what that means for our muscle and fat cells.

So what exactly did he talk about?

Our ability to process sugars and carbohydrates depends on our insulin sensitivity.  The more sensitive we are, the more easily we are able to move glucose (read: energy) from our blood stream to knock on the ‘doors’ of our muscle cells.  If it knocks and the door opens, it’s good – the glucose is used by the muscle cell and the energy is burned.  But when those ‘doors’ don’t open, the glucose (energy) is stored in our fat cells instead – making us fatter.

And the bigger we (and our fat cells) get, the greater our insulin resistance (the opposite of insulin sensitivity).  This makes it harder for the glucose to knock on the ‘doors’ of our muscle cells, and even more glucose ends up getting stored in our fat cells.

So being fat makes us fatter? 

Well, it sure doesn’t help.

The more the fat cells grow with the glucose stores, the bigger they get.  Similarly, the ‘doors’ to the fat cells get bigger as the ‘doors’ on the muscle cells are getting jammed in the hinges – or worse yet, have locked shut (cue type-2 diabetes).

To lose weight, we need to use the glucose (energy) stored in the fat cells.  Using what’s stored inside makes them shrink – like a balloon full of maple syrup:  if you tip half the syrup out of the balloon, it will shrink down in size.

How do you utilise those stores?  Consume less glucose than your body needs.  Exercise more and make your muscles hungry for more energy.  When you burn more energy than you consume, your body taps into its energy stores – the fat cells.  That’s what they’re there for.  They have a genuine (life saving) purpose.  We just abuse them.

And the real kicker?  Once we use up those stores, and lose the weight, the cells will shrink but the ‘doors’ to the fat cells will still be the size they were when we were much bigger.  That’s one reason why it’s easier to gain weight after losing it than to put it on the first time.  Thankfully, anecdotal evidence suggests that these doors do shrink slowly over time, as we maintain our healthy post-weight-loss weight (okay, it’s not science but I’m a sucker for a happy story).

So what CAN I eat?

Anything.  But you need to be aware of how it will affect your body.  The catch is knowing what the food you’re currently eating is doing for you, and making changes where it’s necessary.

For me, my whole mindset and view of food is up in the air – I haven’t had enough time to stop and really process what Jeff was sharing means for me and my body.  Do I even believe everything he said?  I don’t know.  Maybe.  It certainly makes more sense than a lot of what I  learned from Weight Watchers (which, in the end, didn’t help me with my weight loss).

Will I be trying some of his suggestions?  Probably.  He made a few good suggestions for how to loosely structure your meal plans – (red meat) protein for breakfast, salad and white meat protein for lunch and dinner.  I’ll no doubt try his approach to breakfast over the next couple of weeks given the time-bomb I’m currently consuming.  I’ll keep you in the loop as to how I go.

What about you?Have you been to similar talks and have taken something helpful away?
Are you a PT or nutritionist who would like to share your 2cents?

What’s your take on ‘The Truth About Food’?

Thirteen New Experiences for 2013: Update

We’re almost two whole months through 2013 already. The year is flying by, and I’m really enjoying it so far. A lot has happened!

And there’s steady progress being made with the ‘Thirteen New Experiences for 2013‘ I set out for myself last year. Two down, 11 to go.

  1. Run my first race
  2. Try a mixed martial arts class
  3. Try a pole fitness class
  4. Try a spin class
  5. Go skydiving
  6. Try a beginners/intro crossfit course
  7. Try a yoga class
  8. Try a pilates class
  9. Go bungy jumping
  10. Try indoor rock climbing
  11. Buy a bike
  12. Sign up for boot-camp style group training
  13. Try an aqua/pool-based fitness class

“1. Run my first race”

Completed this last Sunday with a 7km run ‘Round the Bays’ with a friend of mine from work. Our official time was 50:32 – not fantastic, but we’re happy with it! And we had fun which is the main thing.

As ‘Nev’ from never2late4 puts it, I’ve caught ‘the bug‘ and I’ll definitely be doing more races.

Another friend and I are signed up for the Round the Vines race next month (the day after the dragonboating competition…so it might be another slow one). Our packs arrived in the post yesterday.

And the Wellington Marathon is coming up in June – I’ll be signing up for the 10km run once our work team entries open.

“8. Try a pilates class”

I did this one a little while ago and thoroughly enjoyed it. Sadly, I haven’t been back since despite raving after the class that I would.

It was a well-paced beginners class held at the gym and I felt that I took a lot away from it.

And I certainly felt it in my core for the next couple of days – Pilates: It’s not for chumps!

So… What next?

Plans are in place to hit up a spin class next week (my legs are already crying), and I’m currently investigating bikes to buy (though I won’t be getting anything too fancy until I learn how to ride one!).

Bungy jumping is currently in the pipelines for May, and I’m waiting to hear back about possible dates for sky-diving.

I’ll make sure to keep y’all updated!

How are your goals progressing?
What have you got lined up for the next month or so? Anything exciting?

Embracing New Experiences

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I’m all set up for my first dragonboating training tomorrow. I’ve got my clothes packed neatly in my gym bag, and I’m starting to mentally prepare myself for what’s to come. Gah! What is to come?

I have new boat shoes – which are hideous, and surprisingly chunky, but at least they were cheap.

I have a bright pink shirt for good weather, and a bright orange long-sleeve shirt if it’s wet, so the coach won’t need to learn my name in order to yell constructive feedback at me when I’m doing it all wrong.

I have never even tried dragonboating before.
And I haven’t participated in team sports since high school (and even then it was a ‘social’ team, so winning was never a realistic goal).

I’m so close to messing myself it’s not funny.
(Did I mention that I’m trying to swear less, too?)

But regardless of the fear – the unknown – I’m excited. The kind of excited you get when you’re about to discover something for the first time.

Will I love it, or will I hate it?
Who knows. But I’m committed to this season and I’m totally in this thing 100%.