Friday, January 18, 2013

Fabulous Friday!! A guest blog post by Angelique

Are you as excited as I am that today is FRIDAY?!? I am looking forward to the possibility of sleeping in tomorrow and spending time with the fam...what about you?

Today, I am SO excited to have a new friend be my first guest blogger!!! I met Angelique on facebook and knew I liked her spirit right away. I quickly fanned her page Healthy Living for All and appreciate the encouraging posts and helpful hints she posts. I asked Angelique to share some encouragement for those of us who are seeking weight loss and here is what she has to say:


Hello to everyone! My name is Angelique Mirhige Guisto and about 2 years ago I decided to make a lifestyle change for good. After suffering through 3 back surgeries and fusion, I was in a wheelchair for 6 months of my life and overweight. I never had a weight problem but being immobile for so long and on so much medication I packed on the pounds - we didn't know if I would ever walk again. So I decided after my son's High School graduation that was it no more and I changed my life to a healthier one. I have since lost 90 pounds and have kept it off for a year now. I went from a size 16 to a size 4. I first started a support group on Facebook with a few friends and it eventually grew and grew. I created a Page as well to reach the public and help more people and our page has grown to over 19,000 likes now and our members and fans have lost over 1,735 pounds!! I couldn't be more proud of everyone's hard work. I post meals daily, there is a recipe section, before and after pictures, motivation and tons of support. The best advice I can give to all of you is this is not a DIET this is a lifestyle choice.
Here they are – 20 of the best healthy weight loss tips that have helped me and many others lose weight.
Drink Water
One of the biggest common denominators amongst people who lost weight is they all switched over to drinking water. They gave up the sodas and sugary drinks and instead quenched their thirst with water. This tip alone helped hundreds of people lose weight. I drink 12 bottles of water daily and stopped drinking soda 5 years ago.
Keep a Food Journal
Write down everything that goes into your mouth. Most people were surprised to see how much they were actually eating. It wasn’t until they wrote it down that they began to realize the cause and effect of what they were putting into their bodies.
Count Calories
What a boring and tedious job but probably one of the most effective undertakings for losing weight. There is no getting around calorie balance. If you want to lose weight, you have to eat less than you burn. I personally use the Lose It app or My Fitness Pal to track my food calories (calories in), and the BodyMedia FIT Armband to track my daily calorie burn (calories out). I stay under 1,200 calories daily that varies on age, sex, height and weight.
Control Portion Sizes
In our super-sized food culture, portion sizes have gotten out of control. Eating portions the size of your fist is a good start towards controlling your food intake. Getting in the habit of measuring your food with a digital food scale is a great way to learn how to eye portion sizes. Also, don’t feel like you always need to finish off all the food on your plate. Leaving a couple bites will teach you self-control. I no longer eat on dinner size plates I eat on salad plates for all my meals making it easier to eat less.
Don’t Diet
The best “diet” is the one that best fits into your lifestyle. Once you find that, it’s no longer a diet – it’s just a way of life. One of the best healthy weight loss tips people sent in was to approach weight loss as a lifestyle change, and not as a diet. Once you get it out of your head that there’s an end date, you can start focusing on the day-to-day realities of living a healthy lifestyle. Being fit is not a destination – it’s a way of life. I want to live a longer life watch my son grow older and have children don't you?
Be Consistent
No one is perfect. We are all going to make mistakes. However, successful people are consistently living a healthy lifestyle. Over a period of time, they are eating healthy 90% of the time, and they are exercising several times a week. Make exercise and healthy eating part of your everyday routine and soon it will be as second nature as brushing your teeth. I allow myself one cheat day usually Sunday's and I eat something I normally wouldn't eat however I still watch my portion sizes.
Plan
A healthy lifestyle takes planning. Most mistakes occur from a lack of a plan. Plan your meals in advance so you know what to buy every week at the grocery store. Only buy what you plan on eating, and try to cook your meals ahead of time. The simple nature of reheat and eat makes it much more likely that you’ll stay on track. I plan my meals every Sunday for the week and shop Monday mornings for what I will need for the week.
Make Small Changes
Make small changes consistently until they are habit and you no longer have to think about it, and then make another change. There’s no need to completely change your lifestyle all at once. You’ll be much more likely to stick with your new healthy lifestyle if you make small changes. Try changing one thing at a time. Be patient it doesn't happen over night.
Educate Yourself
Learn the whys. Don’t just do something because someone said to. Understand the purpose behind it. Many people just want a meal plan or blueprint to follow for weight loss. However, the successful people that lost weight and kept it off long term started taking an interest in how nutrition and exercise impact their bodies. They learned the “whys” behind what they were doing, and they were more successful because of it. Last summer I got certified in nutritional counseling to better educate myself and others.
Get Active
Nearly everyone who lost weight has added in some form of physical activity. Even if it is just a little bit, the fact that they were more active helped them lose the weight. The trick is to find an activity you enjoy. Not everyone likes the same exercise. Find an activity you love to do, and then push yourself out of your comfort zone. Get comfortable with being uncomfortable. I never had joined a gym before, I didn't think it was possible with a cage in my back that I could lift weights, do Zumba, let alone do a 5K last summer, from a wheelchair a few years ago!
Don’t Beat Yourself Up
You’re going to mess up. We all do. Successful people don’t beat themselves up over it. They get right back on track. They don’t wait until tomorrow to do so either. Their healthy lifestyle and weight loss continues to move forward and make progress because they allow themselves to make mistakes, learn from them, and then end up stronger as a result.
Surround Yourself With Positive People
We are highly influenced by the people close to us. As successful people we have to move forward with our lives and leave old friends and lifestyles behind. It was a hard decision to make, but understood how important it is to surround yourself with people who believed in your dreams. I cut out the negativity in my life years again people who are not supportive are not going to help you succeed. My biggest support comes from my husband and my son. They cheered me on every step of the way.
Start
How do you expect to accomplish your goals if you never start trying to achieve them? Beginning is half the challenge. Don’t be afraid of failure. We all fall down but you have to get back up and try again.
Stop Making Excuses
Successful people make the shift and once you realize the reasons for why you aren't reaching your weight loss goals that they were actually just excuses. It is a hard idea to accept, but once you are honest with yourself you will spend less time making excuses, and more time finding ways to accomplish your goals.
Do It For Yourself
Make ME #1. Lose weight for Me, not because of pressure from other people. We all have our own reasons for losing weight. Don't be pressured into weight loss by friends or family. Do this for yourself! & this has also helped my family as well. My husband eat's much healthier now and has even lost 22 pounds.
Be Patient
You didn’t gain your weight overnight, and you aren’t going to lose it that way either. We all want the weight gone quickly, but once you realize that weight loss is a process, you can stop beating yourself up for not reaching your far-fetched weight loss goals. Stop looking at weight loss as a day to day challenge. If nothing changes, nothing changes. This is a lifetime commitment to changing. It took me 9 months to lose 90 pounds so don't expect to lose the weight overnight.
Stay Positive
Negative thoughts lead to negative results. You are the result of what you think. Keeping a positive outtake on your weight loss journey increases the odds of your success. You will learn a lot about yourself during your lifestyle transition. There will be many challenges and difficulties, but it’s important to understand that even though it might not be easy, it will be worth it. Join support groups this helps tremendously if you can talk to others in the same situation as you.
Discover Your Relationship With Food
Why are you eating bad? Make the connection between your eating habits and your emotions. Get to the root of your negative lifestyle choices. Know when your body needs food and when it wants food, and find new ways to reward yourself. You are not a dog so do not reward yourself with food.
Don’t Try to Be Perfect
If your goal is to be perfect, you’re already setting yourself up for failure. No one is perfect. Even the people who seem to have the most perfect bodies didn’t get there by being perfect. Perfection is something many strive for, but ultimately something they will never achieve. Do your best!
Never Give Up
Weight loss happens the moment you don’t give up. Many people don’t realize how close they were to achieving success. There comes a time when things just click, but that doesn’t happen until you’re ready to throw in the towel and call it quits. The longer you stick with it, the higher your odds of success. Keep moving forward, and don’t ever give up! If you believe it you can achieve it!
Do you see why I love her spirit?!? Wow!! Thank you SO much, Angelique! This makes so much sense but many of these tips are ones I need to apply to my journey stat!
To get more information or be encouraged by Angelique, make sure to like her facebook page or stop by her website
A new page I added is Fav Workout Song - I am always looking for new tunes to download to motivate my workout. I asked Angelique to share her favorite and it is Don Omar featuring Lucenzo and the song is called Danza Kuduro. She also mentioned ANYTHING by Pitbull motivates her.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Today is brought to you by...

Did you watch Sesame Street growing up? I loved that show - the opener where Barkley is running up the hill? Ahhh, the good ol' days!

Today's smoothie is a little different. I usually try to use more veggies than fruits because I usually eat more fruits raw. But I went grocery shopping and the place I went didn't have frozen spinach so I'll have to go elsewhere to grab it...

Today's smoothie:
1/2 can coconut milk
2 carrots
1/3 beet
1 cup frozen mango chunks
1 cup frozen strawberries
Water

I need to cut back on the beets...let's just say, you will know when you need to start cutting back as well... The bonus of making a smoothie versus juice is I retain ALL the fiber. The non-soluble fiber is in the remnants in your can on the juicer. Some people are extra diligent and use the remnants in baking...I never got there.

You can go to my first post to find the benefits of the coconut milk, beets, and carrots. I've included the benefits and links for the rest:
Mango: boosts immune system, lower cholesterol, clears skin, prevents cancer, better sex (hubby will love this one!)
Strawberries: anti-inflammatory, great for bones, antioxidant agent, healthy eyes

Since I started my smoothies for breakfast, I am noticing my appetite is increasing and my water retention is down. What about you? What benefits do you see from juicing or smoothies? What are your favorite ingredients to add?

Added to my short list: buy frozen spinach

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

It's never too late!! {(NY) Resolutions}

I don't want to leave you hanging! So, here is a rundown of where I am at:

Eating: Paleo(ish)
I always love watching people's faces when I add the "ish" to the end of that word! I eat meat, a lot of it. I eat fruits, vegetables, and nuts...I eat rice (basmati) and I eat Ezekiel bread. I tried not eating those carbs and my body does not do well. For me, I found evidence that there must be carbs present for my body to be able to use my thyroid meds. Done deal.

I try to avoid: highly processed food. Additives. Dairy. Soy. Corn. Gluten. I say I try to avoid because I've been known to slap my burger in a bun...I LOVE hamburgers! I also LOVE corn on the cob but realized corn is an inflammatory and my body doesn't love it. I encourage EVERYONE to try a week with the elimination of dairy. I honestly did not think I would feel a difference. Almost overnight, gas was no longer an issue. Bloating was lessening. It was crazy to me! I recently read soy is almost always GMO. GMO is a topic for another time but try to avoid soy in your diet. It is harder than you think - I was eating KIND bars because they are gluten free and *healthy*. A friend challenged a group of us to look at all the labels of our food and guess what was on my KIND bar label?!? SOY! Ugh...

My breakfast lately is a smoothie, my lunch is a salad at work or something I've packed (pb&j or leftovers and fruit or veggies) and my dinner is usually meat, veggies, and sometimes rice or potatoes. Snacks are meat, nuts, or fruit.

My take home message. I am not at the point of having to be a complete drill sergeant about my food. I completely understand if you are. If you aren't at that point either, try to eat as little processed food as possible. Eat more fruits. Eat more veggies. Treat yourself occasionally and NOT at every meal. I try to treat myself twice a week - once mid-week, once on the weekend. Otherwise, I feel deprived. And, by treat, I mean I will eat pizza for a meal...I will eat a hamburger with cheese and a bun. Gone are the days where I eat a whole pie...or 3/4 of a pie because I have to share with my hubby and the littles. If you are still doing this, forgive yourself. And try to do better next time. I was there and it was because of other things going on in my body that I didn't know about. Keep striving for healthy and eventually you will conquer those demons. The biggest lesson I learned that helped me move beyond is not throwing away the whole day or the whole weekend because of one mistake. I would forgive myself for that mistake and the next moment get myself back on track. I have saved myself a lot of calories doing this.

Exercise: Weight lifting, yoga, running/walking
Here is where you might have more fun! I realized after my thyroid crash I have to make priorities with my exercise. At this point, I can't do it all. I have to weight lift. I am 35, I have scoliosis, and I am in menopause. I don't want to end up hunched over at 40!! My gp and I had multiple conversations about the fallacy of calcium protecting women's bone structure. He explained women stop bearing weight, their core breaks down and they start hunching over. I work at a desk 5 days a week and I need to make weights a priority. At this time, weights will be my main focus because it is less taxing on my system than cardio.

I want to run!! In the summer, I was running 3-4 times per week. I didn't feel it but it obviously was too much for me. Inflammation is a problem. So, I am going to work to running 1-2 times per week. Running is a huge stress reliever for me and I just love pounding out my day on the treadmill or road!

Yoga is good for keeping me limber. Since menopause, I have noticed I tighten up if I am not practicing. It also helps my muscles after running.

Walking. I haven't been working out since this past summer. I am starting to get back into it by walking. If you have no desire to run, maybe walking is for you! After the shin fractures, I walked. And I walked. And I walked. I would try to log 15k plus steps on my pedometer. I gained so much muscle tone!! And stamina! Walking is good for you and is low impact.

Mind/Spirit: ???
This is an area I am not good at. I love to read, I don't make time for it. I love to create, I don't make time for it. I love to write, I don't make time for it. I love to take photos, I...see the theme?? So, right now, my goal is to make time for myself every week. Regenerate, restore. What ideas do you have?

So, take a few minutes and make some resolutions. In reality, I am always considering what I want to accomplish. On my other blog, I have a list I call my dreams. Start thinking about what you want to do. Where you want to be. And start making a list of things that you can accomplish that will get you closer. Let's call it our short list.

Short list:

  • Get new battery or new scale (must be able to track progress)
  • Get new battery or new pedometer (FitBit??)
  • Renew membership to gym (need to get back to weights!!)
Let me know what is on your short list - we can do this! 

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Juicing & Smoothies

LOVE this cup - holds
a LOT and easy to 

carry!
I watched the documentary "Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead" a year or so ago. I highly recommend watching if you haven't yet! It made so much sense to me and I immediately bought the Breville juicer. I juiced for breakfast for a few months but the frustrating part, for me, was the amount of time it took to clean the vegetables/fruits, juice, then clean the juicer again. I am a working mom and am perpetually running late...so, I just wasn't able to do it all in the morning. However, I felt the difference! More energy, better digestion - the health benefits were definitely there.

As I have been working to recover from my thyroid crash this past summer, juicing continues coming to mind. The vitamins, the energy, the healthy feeling...I knew I needed to get back to it. So, I actually tried to juice again and quickly became frustrated again. I decided to try something different - smoothies.

I must warn you, if you are used to drinking juice, smoothies are going to be different. I am usually quite tactile sensitive but I have had to get over it with my smoothies. I bought a Ninja and it works fine...but there are still chunks...it is a smoothie after all, right?! It helps if you add additional water but I still have chunks. It can take me all morning to chew through my smoothie. Oh well, I am full and getting vitamins!

So, here is what I am putting into my smoothies lately:

Coconut Milk (half a can)
Frozen Spinach (I use 1/2 of the frozen box)
Banana
Peanut Butter (1-2 tbsp to balance the banana!)
Carrots (I put in two)
Beet (half)
Cacao chips (~1/3 cup - it is still too much so I'm going to lower this)

For water, I usually fill the cup I drink my smoothie out of and put that amount in the blender - it seems to make it a good consistency. It also lets me leave some for the hubby!

I always like to know the benefits to what I'm drinking so I did a little research - I'll list the benefits I'm most interested in but include the links so you can read the additional information:

Coconut milk: helps maintain blood sugar, strengthens bones, relaxes muscles, has selenium which is important for thyroid health
Spinach: maintains low blood sugar, regulates inflammation, combats onset of osteoporosis, boosts immunity, fights wrinkles (YAY!!)
Banana: promotes calcium absorption, boosts the overall ability to absorb nutrients, restock electrolytes, B6, anti-inflammatory
Peanut Butter: protein, healthy fat, potassium, fiber
Carrots: anti-aging (YAY!!), dental health, prevent cancer and heart disease, improve vision
Beet: clean out liver, boosts mental health, boosts energy, high in multiple vitamins including magnesium
Cacao nibs: promotes release of neurotransmitters, rich source of antioxidants, magnesium

Next, I plan to replace my water I put into the smoothie with my homemade broth. I have been out of town though and didn't want to thaw out my broth knowing I wouldn't be able to use it all before leaving. I'll try that yet this week though!!

What about you? Do you juice? Smoothie? What are your favorite ingredients to add?


Sunday, January 13, 2013

About me

It's me!! This photo cracks me up - I had NO idea
my friend V was taking it! (At an exhibit for the 
SCAR Project)
As I look back over the years as an adult, I realize how my thyroid health has changed so many things in my life. Unfortunately, hindsight is 20/20 and back then I didn't have any idea what was going on.

In 1999, I was diagnosed as hypothyroid at my 6 week check-up after the birth of our firstborn. It didn't surprise me because my mom is hypothyroid. It kind of freaked me out when they exclaimed how fortunate I was not to have lost our baby because my numbers were through the roof but because I was used to seeing my mom take a pill everyday, I took the prescription and didn't question it. For years afterward, I had symptom after symptom pop up but was always given a different diagnosis: IBS, PCOS, etc. If only I had known then...

Fast forward, in 2006, I had genetic testing and was told I have a mutated BRCA 2 gene. This means my chances of developing breast, ovarian, and other cancers are high. MUCH higher than an average person without the mutation. In 2007, I had a prophylactic bilateral mastectomy. In 2011, I had an oopherectomy and hysterectomy. While these decisions were not easy, I always made my choices based on what was right for me and what would give me the greatest chance of being around as long as possible for my family.

In the fall of 2010, I was pulled off running because of fractured shins - no, not shin splints, fractures. It was painful - I had lived in pain for a year because of a doctor telling me I was too fat to play soccer and run. I believed her but I wasn't ready to give it up so I continued and just told myself the pain was the cost of wanting to be active. I finally couldn't take it anymore and saw a different doctor who was appalled at how far I had let it go. As I went through daily physical therapy to recover, I learned to take it slow and pulled myself off of running a few more times when I had gone too far too soon. I would let my body rest and heal and start back at it. 

The summer of 2012 I was enjoying life. I felt I had conquered old demons and was moving along. I was working hard at working out but, at the same time, applying lessons I had learned previously and making sure to listen to my body and support it. I was lifting weights because I am in menopause and I am told this is the best way to prevent osteoporosis. I was practicing yoga because I have found this is a great way to center my mind and stretch my muscles. I had recently picked up zumba because I wanted something different and I love to dance. And, yes, I was running. Running is a great source of stress relief and it exhilarates me. On a Saturday, I had gone for a two mile run, went to a friend's baby shower, dropped the littles at my parents' house, and went to a friend's volleyball party. I vividly remember thinking that day how happy I was and how much I loved my life.

The next morning, I could barely think straight. I described it in my blog as tingling all over and trying to move through molasses. I was too tired to do anything but lay horizontal. It was truly unlike anything I had ever experienced and it scared both my husband and I, though I couldn't form a sentence at that point to voice my fear. I am incredibly thankful because, even though I had never experienced this before, I knew my thyroid had crashed. I truly believe it was divine intervention that pressed that upon my mind. I had been working with my gp for at least six months trying to regulate my thyroid levels. Since my ooph/hyst, he had been unable to stabilize me. I would get calls asking if I was taking my medication everyday - of course I was! I had been taking it for 13 years! He would increase my medication one visit and drop it down the next. At the time of my crash, we were trying a new dosage in between.

I am not fully recovered yet. I am trying to find my optimal dose of medication and have hit bumps along the way but I am leaps and bounds better than I was in August, I believe I am on the right path. 

There are times where I truly feel the medical field has failed me. Over the years, I kept presenting myself and my problems to my doctors and they never took the time to find out why. Why was I unable to walk by the end of my day? Why was I unable to sleep? Why am I in so much pain? Why am I gaining so much weight? It was one prescription after another without ever getting to the root of the problem and never truly fixing anything. 

In December, I made a difficult choice. I had my implants from the reconstruction of my mastectomy removed. For the past couple years, they have been giving me discomfort and pain. I had conversations with my doctors but no one could give me a reason why this would be happening. Ironically, I made the definitive choice to have them removed and was telling my husband it was time and, in the next moment, opened lab results I had tricked a nurse into running for me and found I have Hashimoto's hypothyroidism, an autoimmune disease. My best guess was my body began seeing my implants as something to attack. Almost immediately after the implant extraction, I could feel the difference.

I am telling you all of this to encourage you. You live in your body everyday. Your doctor does not. Doctors are highly educated but they do not live in your skin. Become your own expert. Listen to what your body is telling you. Take action on what you feel is the best option for you. 

I am incredibly thankful. I have a gp who does not know much about hypothyroidism, even less about Hashimoto's but is willing to partner with me. I research and learn and formulate what I want to try. He listens and tells me what he knows that would support or discount my plan. He runs labs for me so we can see what my blood is trying to tell us. We are trying to do this together but the responsibility for research falls on me. In a perfect world, I would be able to go to a doctor who specializes in this and that doctor would know exactly what to do. I don't have that luxury. But, at the same time, having to take responsibility for my Hashi's has kicked my butt into gear with the rest of my health too.


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