National Nutrition Month

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This month I’m hoping you to encourage you to step back and re-evaluate the relationship you and your loved ones have with food and mealtime.

What is Sustenance?

For many people, the word Sustenance simply means food. But, the definition of Sustenance is MUCH more broad:

1 a : means of support, maintenance, or subsistence : living b : food, provisions; also : nourishment
2 a : the act of sustaining : the state of being sustained b : a supplying or being supplied with the necessaries of life
3 : something that gives support, endurance, or strength

March is National Nutrition Month, and I frequently write about food, nutrition, and it’s overall impact on our lives and well-being, so I pulled some of my favorite posts to review. I know I was reminded of a lot of what I already knew about SUSTENANCE by going back through my posts, and I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I enjoyed putting this together for you.

Children and Nutrition

Food Allergies & Sensitivities

Grocery Shopping

Diet vs Exercise

Productivity & Creativity

Eating Habits for Weight Loss

I have a lot more on this topic that I didn’t list out, and I’ll be writing a lot more about nutrition yet this month. Be sure to check my blog regularly for more!

Move It Monday – American Diabetes Month

Healthy MondayNovember is American Diabetes Month.

With 24 million Americans living with this disease, and another 57 million at risk, chances are you or someone you know lives with this disease. Every 20 seconds someone is diagnosed with this disease — that’s 4,320 in 24 hours. It was both of my grandmothers.

Because diabetes and its symptoms are significantly impacted by diet and lifestyle, there is a lot YOU can do to keep from developing the disease and helping diabetic loved ones.

  • Physical Activity. Get out and walk, ride a bike, dance in your basement — I really don’t care. But, physical activity is a great antidote. And, as you can see, it doesn’t have to be much.
  • Diet. As always, it comes down to what Mom told you — eat your fruits and veggies, and limit the desserts. Because everyone is different, you need to find the right diet for you — I define the right diet as one that is easy to follow, you feel good when adhering to, and is anti-inflammatory for your body. If you want help with at-home food testing, let me know, and I can point you in the right direction.

This week, I want you to call or email someone you know is diabetic or pre-diabetic and make plans to get out and MOVE with them. If they are too far away, get a commitment from them to find a buddy there.

You can learn more or share your diabetes story at stopdiabetes.com.

‘Keep slim friends’ to stay trim

I really need to stop using the article headlines as my post subjects, because it ends up being a spoiler for what I’m going to talk about. But, I digress…

We model the behaviors of those around us.

This subject line comes from an article posted Friday on the BBC. I really like this article for a lot of different reasons, not the least of which being that I’m still mentally processing the latest Z-Health 9S Course: Sustenance & Spirit. The article is really common sense – we hang out with our friends because we like them and we are like them. Or, we want to be like them.

Growing up, my Mom always wanted me to have as friends the “good kids”, so was not happy when my first boyfriend was on probation for stealing a car at the time we met. She intuitively understood that my behavior was going to match that as of who I was spending time with in order to be accepted by them. Ironically, I later found out that the reason my then-boyfriend started dating me (a straight-A student) was that he wanted to be more like me.

Behavior extends well beyond hanging out at the mall and doing your homework (or not) and in to eating and exercise behaviors. If you spend you time with friends who get their lunch out of the vending machine, you are going to get your lunch out of the vending machine. As an adult, if you work some place where the culture is to eat lunch out every day, do you start forgoing that turkey sandwich that you brought to grab something with your co-workers? If happy hour is the ritual, do you eventually find yourself giving in instead of hitting the gym after work?

Are the people you surround yourself with emulating the behaviors you wish to have? If not, how are you going to change that to be the person you want to be?

Behavior: Money Not a Motivator in Weight Loss

There was an article in the New York Times about two weeks ago titled the same as the subject as my post. I’d sum up the article for you, but the title does fairly well.

Why, in a society where 75% of Americans are considered overweight (and the economy is terrible), can people not lose weight even when being paid???

Because unless you have changed your eating behaviors to make eating well automatic, it simply takes too much energy. Making change requires a higher energy level than giving in to your habits (good and bad). So, as soon as life changes course (vacation, overtime, other stressors), you revert back to what is “easy”.

The Z-Health newsletter that came out earlier this week talked about the 5 eating instincts that people have, and provided some easy-to-implement suggestions for changing your eating behaviors to make good behaviors automatic. Because only when these behaviors are automatic, can you succeed long-term.

Evidence for a restricted diet

Last day of the 9S Sustenance & Spirit course is today, and while I’ll be talking A LOT more about that soon, this came in to my reader a day or two ago, and I just have to share now.

Most of us know that the key to weight loss is to burn more calories than we take in. It’s a bummer, but it’s true. Just like we can modify how much gas we burn in a car as a result of our driving behaviors, we can also modify how much we burn through lifestyle and diet choices.

There is a growing body of evidence that talks about diet restriction as a key component of longevity.  This study has some dramatic PICTURES of the differences. It’s definitely worth a look.

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