Mindless Eating

Image result for mindless eatingMindless Eating by Brian Wansink is a book that explores “why we eat more than we think.”

Wansink’s book explores the tricks marketers use to get us to buy their products and how our minds play tricks on us as well to justify our eating habits.  He asserts (correctly) that we’ll never be able to lose weight based off of will power alone if we deprive ourselves of our favorite foods.

Habits are the key.  We do eat out of habit (mindless as Wansink calls it) and subconsciously for various reasons.  Some are from our childhoods.  Others are from watching others’ patterns.  But most are not for sustenance.  Wansink’s research shows we eat from habits, some formed since childhood, and without thinking.  This leads to weight gain over time.

His solution:  Cut 100-300 calories a day in 3 simple changes you commit to that will cause a weight lose over a year of 10-20 pounds that are mindless.  You do this by food trade-offs and food policies, both of which give you the chance to eat some of what you want.  Other recommended tricks:  buy smaller plates, which tricks the mind into thinking we are eating more than we actually are, don’t eat out of the package or standing in front of the TV, don’t put food on the table while eating–make it inconvenient to get up to get seconds, don’t eat in front of the TV, and beware of “low-fat” alternatives that trick us into eating more.

We make over 200 food choices a day (from what to eat to walking by the candy dish).  We don’t have the mental will power to resist all the “no’s” caused by these 200 decisions every day.

Thus:  change your environment.  Out of sight, out of mind works.  Get rid of the food on your counters and put the “bad” food or high-calories foods in the back.  Make it harder to get to these.  Make it easy to grab celery and carrots.  No see through containers either.  The more inconvenient good is, the less likely we will consume it.

This is doable for most people.  Most people won’t go exercise more.  But they will not eat that slice of cheesecake if it’s on your “no food” policy list.  Accountability is you checking this off on a calendar at the end of the day if you followed your simple 3 rules.

I love this idea because for me 100-200 calories is easy to do.  And Wansink says your body won’t miss the calories like it would if you were trimming 500 or more calories per day.  Hence, your adherence will be much higher.

My 3 changes are:

  1. Either cut the sugar I put in my coffee by half or use a sugar-free alternative.
  2. Don’t buy icing (my one weakness I can’t resist when it’s in the house).
  3. Don’t eat past 6 pm at night.

Overall great read on how our minds work around food and the tricks marketers use to get us to buy their products over their competitors.  I love the premise of small changes leading to big results.  Highly recommended for those who find diets and exercise challenging.  This is a way to start small and go from there!

Finally! A Podium Finish!

MOB Comp
That’s Me in the Bright Red!

Today I had a CrossFit competition at CrossFit MOB (mind over body) in Thornton, CO called Battle of the Boxes. I entered the female/female competition, and my partner was a girl from their box.

We worked really well together. She’s crazy strong, and I had a bit more skill work than her. The workouts suited us as well.

We got 2nd overall. We won the Floater, which was a partner sled push and pulled out a second place finish for WOD #2. Our prizes were really cool: a case of Kill Cliff drinks, a jump rope, wrist guards, a $100 gift card to Reebok, and a recovery drink.

I had a ton of fun (of course winning helps).  Another team from my box competed in the male/male division and won 2nd place as well!  Way to go, guys!

My partner commented how with partners you try harder because you don’t want to let the other one down.  That’s certainly true.  In WOD #2 one partner had to hold a 95 lb barbell in the front rack position while the other either rowed and did wall balls.  I ended up doing most of the holding, and I held it longer than I normally would have because of her.

It was her first competition, and she had a blast.  That’s what it’s about:  pushing yourself while having fun!

I Don’t Function Well Outside of Routine…

Anyone else like me?

Life happens, your schedule gets messed up, and your whole day is off?

My whole family has been sick at various times for the last two weeks.

This week has been my son who’s been home all week.  He’s got the stomach ache, phlegm build-up, went to the doctor, is constipated, has no appetite, etc.

For me, stress builds at this point.  And I usually don’t get stressed.Image result for stress

I did everything I knew how to do to relieve it:  CrossFit, Olympic Lifting, Running, Coffee…nothing helped much.

It’s all in the mind, I tell myself.  Let it go.

I’m just trying to push through, control the things I can control and let God handle the rest…

That’s all I can do.

What Makes or Breaks Your Diet…

…is weekends.

Most people are awesome at dieting and sticking to their meal plans and macro counting Monday-Thursday.

They do everything right.  They pack their lunches.  They turn down cookies at work.  They weigh and measure their food.  They avoid fast food.  They don’t snack outside of their planned snacks.  They are on the path to success until….

Friday night. Saturday.  Sunday.Image result for cheat meals

Then these same people who wouldn’t touch a piece of chocolate on Tuesday are wolfing down chocolate pie and ice cream, guzzling beers at the local hang out, and eating a meal of 2000 calories after work.  Then, figuring they already broke their diet, they continue to do so all weekend until Monday comes around.  They get back on their diet only to break during the weekend again and wonder why their body composition hasn’t changed or they haven’t lost weight.

In order for your diet/meal/nutrition plan to work, adherence is the key.  It trumps everything else.  You have to stick to it.  Almost always.  95% of the time.  If you want results.

Can you have a cookie?  A piece of pie?  Ice cream?

Yes!

If it fits into your macros for the day.

Otherwise, a small cookie, a small piece of pie, a small bit of ice cream.

AND THAT’S IT!

Many diets out there allow you to cheat.  Regularly.

A lot of nutrition plans use the 80/20 rule: adhere 80% of the time, cheat 20% of the time.

This can potentially work.

The problem is most people abuse the 20%.  And the 20% turns into 25% or 30% or more.  Then they are in trouble.  But they tell themselves “Hey, it’s ok.  It’s a cheat meal.”

When cheat meals become excessive, you’ve lost.  You’ve negated all the work you did during the week and you’re at square one.  You look the same.  You feel the same (maybe even worse because you’ve cheated when you know you shouldn’t have).  And you’re so frustrated you throw in the towel altogether on eating healthy.

I propose a solution:  tell yourself you can’t cheat.  Make this your mentality.  Change how you look and feel once and for all and it’ll be a lot easier to turn down a beer.

Can you have pumpkin pie on Thanksgiving?

Of course!

That’s the 5%.  And no more.

I challenge you to make the change today and let me know the results!

Best of luck!!

Find Your Light…

Image result for sunrise

As I’m flipping around my front room on my mat, practicing handstand hold and walks, realizing how utterly hard this truly is and wondering why I’m doing this, this thought pops in my head.

I hope my kids find something to obsess over as much as I obsess over CrossFit.

Because ultimately I love it.

I truly, deeply love the challenge of CrossFit, the process of learning a new skill, the hard work involved, and the results afterwards once I learn a new move and improving it.  I love how I look.  I love being fit.  I love being healthy.

Of course, you have all the other things that goes along with my lifestyle:  soreness, aches, sprains, etc.

Minor in comparison to what I obtain from CrossFit.

I want each of my kids to find their “something” in this world.  They have to find it or life will suck.  Majorly.

They may not be able to make a living at it (like me and CrossFit).  But they have something which makes their heart sing.  Something they cling to despite the hardships life will throw at them.  Something that propels them forward no matter what. Something that brings them light when life is full of darkness.

This is my prayer for them.  And for you.

Find what makes your heart sing.

THEN DO IT!

Always.  Perpetually.  No matter what.

Don’t let it die.  Don’t surrender it.  Don’t let “life” get in the way.

Find a way.

You will blessed in so many ways if you do…

 

Ah, to be 17 Again…

Image result for picture missing the boat

Watching the 17-year old at my CrossFit box knock out unbroken bar muscle ups gave me this idea:  I want to be 17 again.

Alas, I missed that boat.  The boat where you start CrossFit at a young age when you can move so much better and ingrain all those movement patterns and skills so much easier and faster.

THAT boat…

At least my kids can be on that boat.

I can live with that.

Working Out with the Youngins…

This week we had a partner WOD.

I paired with the two teenagers in my class, ages 17 & 18, both are REALLY good at CrossFit.

I didn’t think much about it until it was pointed out to me that I was over twice their age!  They could have been my kids!

And I kept up!Image result for crossfit teens

It was a fun workout (rowing and power cleans with increasing weights), and we all kept moving.

It’s inspiring to see kids busting their butts and staying healthy, and it kiboshes the myth that this generation of kids just sit in their rooms in front of some type of screen.

My heart was warmed and my spirit soared.

An awesome reminder that CrossFit is for everyone and grants the participant more than just a good workout.

Murph for Easter…

I’ve made a commitment to do Murph once a month.

Pulling Murph

Celebrating our freedom from sin seemed like a good time to start.

For those of you unfamiliar with CrossFit, Murph is a Hero Workout, named after Lieutenant Michael Murphy , a Navy Seal, who died fighting for our freedoms.  This was one of his favorite workouts and it is traditionally done by most CrossFit boxes on Memorial Day in his honor.  The workout is:  1 mile run, 100 pull ups, 200 push ups, 300 air squats, and then finish it off with a 1 mile run.

This is one of my absolute favorite workouts, and I’ve been itching to do it for a while now but with the Open and my wrist, it didn’t happen until now.

I PR’ed by 2 minutes.  Butterfly pull-ups and my run made the difference.

Did get a couple of blood blisters on my hands from the 100 pull ups.

Totally worth it.

I needed this one.  Mentally more than anything.  Plus, I love to go long and it’s rarely programmed due to time constraints at the gym.

Side Note:  I woke up today not sore at all.  When I used to do this workout, it would destroy me for a few days.  It was actually the first workout I ever did in CrossFit.  I know I work hard and am fit, but it doesn’t hit me how fit until I do something like this.

Happy Easter, one and all!

There’s No End to the Sacrifices You’ll Make…

Image result for sacrifices
This is What I Wish Someone Would Do to Me Many of My Days

I’m just now finishing up a Nutrition course I’ve taken through WodPrep.com

It was really good information.

However, what I was looking for I didn’t find.

And I did realize through this course that I’ll never find it.

I was looking for a nutrition/meal plan for life.  Something I could follow every day without thinking about it that would give me the body I want and allow my body to keep doing what I’ve asked it to do.

This does not exist.

Why?

Because the human body is always changing.  Outside factors such as exercise and the intensity causes your needs to change.  Hormones will play a huge factor.  As will your individual metabolism.

It’s depressing.

To me at least.

I’m the person who plans out everything as much as possible without factoring in the curveballs life throws you continuously.

With all the sacrifices I make on a daily basis (my recent blog post HERE on this), I was hoping not to have to make this sacrifice:  the nutrition one.  The one where everything has to be controlled and if you deviate too much, you set yourself back days.  The guilt you have over the cheesecake drenched in hot fudge sauce (what I had yesterday).  Every day starting over and hoping you can avoid your temptations.  Battling the fatigue from this fight every day.

However, all this makes sense.  I was 33 when I realized I couldn’t eat anything I wanted  anymore.  And now I’m realizing I have to constantly adjust as well.

Sigh….

The first step in progress is recognizing the issue.  This does take a huge burden off of my shoulders as I’ve been struggling with nutrition for a while now.

I know I’ll get it.

But the fight continues…

I’m Not Happy Unless I’m on Top…

I finished 28th in my state for the CrossFit Open in my age group.

I finished 67th in my region for the CrossFit Open in my age group.

Endure Comp Me
Game Face

I finished 716th in the United States for my age group.

I finished 1077th worldwide for my age group.

Last year, I finished 56th in my state.

I finished 127th in my region.

I finished 1244th in the United States.

I finished 1845th worldwide.

A substantial improvement in one year’s time.  To be exact, that’s 48% in my state higher.  52% in my region.  And 57% in the US.  58% worldwide.

Am I satisfied with the results?

No, not really.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad I moved up.  But I’m not happy with my scores.

I don’t have ring muscle ups.  I’m not as strong as I need to be yet.  My chest to bar, pull ups, and handstand push-ups all need work.  So does other holes in my wheelhouse.

The fact of the matter is I’m not happy unless I’m on top.

Period.

The fact of the matter is I won’t ever be on top because there’s always someone out there better than you.  I get that.

The other fact of the CrossFit Open is it’ll never cater to my strengths and thus I’ll never be on top as well.

My strengths are the long game (workouts over 20 minutes), running, body weight exercises, light-weight barbell moves with many repetitions, and double unders.  We’ll never see Murph in the Open.  Or running (too hard to measure).  Or probably the long game.

These are the workouts I need in order to be on top.

My lamentations are irksome, I know.  I just had to vent.

One thing’s for sure:  I am determined to make vast improvements over this next year.  To have all the moves mastered.  And quickly.  To perfect them as much as I can.  To get stronger.

Then we’ll see what next year holds…