Posts Tagged ‘healthy lifestyle’

What does it take to be a change agent in your community?

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

food for thought thursday

changing camp food

“Motivation” isn’t always about losing weight or “dieting.”  It can be about simply setting goals and working to achieve them. Sure, that could be about your own weight loss (in which case your motivation may be to “feel better”), but it could be about a whole range of other things.

One of my personal goals, as cheesy as it may sound, is to make the world a better place. I have an innate desire to do this (thanks, mom), and it makes me feel good when I’ve accomplished something to that end. So even if I don’t know the root of the motivation, the fact is that I am motivated to do this.

Obviously it’s not possible for one person to fix all the problems in the world, but collectively small actions make a huge difference.  And those actions can snowball into others, often in wonderful ways we never could have imagined.

It just so happens that I’ve always been interested in food and nutrition, and how it can relate to better health — for both myself and others. It also happens that when I was growing up, I was in the Boy Scouts (again: thanks, mom) and spent a lot of time at Camp Emerald Bay on Santa Catalina Island, first as a camper and later on, as staff (I was the sole vegetarian on staff in 1991!) Nowadays, I’m on the board of directors for the camp’s Alumni Association, and I try to get out to the island for a week every summer to volunteer.

For as long as I can remember, the food at the camp has been typical “camp fare,” and while I hear it’s better than most, there’s always room for improvement.  Through the years, as the number of campers has grown, they’ve also come to rely more on prepared “heat and serve” options — just as most school cafeterias now do.

A couple of years ago, I asked some of the camp management if they’d be interested in improving the nutritional quality of the food we offer at the camp. They enthusiastically came on board. Of course, everyone already had a full plate (pardon the pun), so it really just took a volunteer to step up and spend just a little bit of time to pull all the pieces together and keep pushing the ball down the court.

Last summer we started small, implementing just a few changes — including offering Uncle Sam cereal at the breakfast bar! (The Honey Almond was easily the favorite.)  During my week on the island, I drafted an official policy statement and worked with the camp’s leadership to fine-tune it — and I even had time leftover to goof off with my friends (yes, grown-ups can still have fun at camp!).

Progress takes time, but we’re definitely moving forward.  There’s a new food service director and head chef this year, and he’s excited to find new, healthier options — including preparing more fresh food from scratch and serving more whole grains.  There’s also a new business director, and he and I have started a dialogue about finding healthier snacks to sell in the trading post. Although it may be a long road ahead, I’m thrilled at the foundation we’ve already laid and the improvements that are already happening.

Bit by bit, we’re making world a better place.  And that, in and of itself, is motivating.

 

 

 

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Andrew

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A Life Changing Journey

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

weight loss wednesday

Weight Loss Wednesdays focus on hearing from people currently on their weight loss journey or who are maintaining weight loss as they share their  stories and write about topics related to keeping it off. We met Tara last year at FitBloggin’ and she inspired us with her story which she’s sharing with you.

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If you walk by me today you would have no idea of the journey I’ve been on for the last two years.  You might see me running early in the morning or walking around a farmer’s market looking for a seasonal vegetable to go with a new recipe I want to try. You might see me in the organic section of some grocery store or just standing on the corner watching traffic go by. You’d probably look at me and think to yourself “Man she looks good” (or at least I would like to think that’s what you’re thinking).

But that’s not who I used to be.

I used to be morbidly obese. I used to weigh 270 pounds and I was in a desperate state of living.

Tara Martin

Don’t get me wrong I was living. I had a good job. I was married. I had a house. Two dogs. But I was not alive. There was no life inside of me. While I had external pleasures to make everything appear okay, there was something missing. I was depressed. I was eating my way through life. I was playing video games for hours upon hours day in and day out. I couldn’t stand the sight of my own face in the mirror.

Want to know what was missing?

I was.

I wasn’t present in my own life. I was dead inside and in December of 2009, I made a decision that has lead me to where I am today. That decision? To stand up and take control of my life. It wasn’t easy. Boy oh boy let me tell you it wasn’t easy. At 270 pounds I could barely walk up a flight of stairs. I had to start small. I decided to cut out elevators and to park as far away from any building I had to enter. I began to count calories and slowly weaned myself off of diet soda. Parking farther led to walking during my lunch break. Counting calories led to ending the multiple drive-through meals at any fast food restaurant in my path. Weaning off of diet soda led to drinking water. Walking on my lunch break led to running a half a block (and throwing up). Ending multiple drive-through meals led to eating consciously. Drinking water led to…well drinking more water. These small steps of change led to something amazing…

LIFE.

Today I am a marathoner. Today I am a triathlete. Today I am present and I am alive inside.

People ask me all the time what was my secret? How did I do it? They want the magic pill. The easy way out. There isn’t any. It was hard. Let me repeat that: It was hard. There were a lot of tears. A lot of frustrations. A lot of confusion as I adjusted to the changes in my life and more importantly the changes in my body and in my heart. I lost 120 pounds physically but I lost quadruple that in emotional weight.

A few small changes led to more small changes. More small changes led to bigger changes. Bigger changes led to life style changes and in the end (but really just the beginning) led to a life changing journey…

What’s your Life Changing Journey look like?

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Tara Martin

At A Life Changing Journey Tara shares her story of being lost and uncovering herself. The way she tells it, she “began her life changing journey in a 270 pound body dying a slow and very sad death.” She writes a lot about her journey not being just about weight, but also about saving her life on a mental, emotional and spiritual level. She writes candidly about the absolute truth of the process of uncovering your true self and how making her journey public has helped her ways she is unable to explain.

 

Reality Food

Monday, February 27th, 2012

from our team monday

 

 

reality tv

I began to think about reality TV the other day and how pervasive it has become in the menu of TV show offerings. The idea here is that these shows feature everyday people and documents their lives or puts them in specific situations and captures their reactions. A few years ago, I lived with a roommate who reveled in reality TV and would make plans accordingly, aligning her schedule with those of the shows that were her “can’t miss.” Certain channels bask in filling up their time slots with reality TV shows. They know what we do, drama makes a story better.

Real food has become a buzzword and up until recently, one that I would say felt redundant. Isn’t all food real? Once you start perusing an ingredient panel or consider what fillers are used to give the item in question the right look or the right taste, it gets more complicated. Just like the aforementioned TV shows that try to get a slice of life in the day of an American not so similar to us, not so disimilar from us, we look for our food to be what it says it is. If it’s a hamburger, then you expect a grilled patty and bun. To break down each item and look at its sum parts can be eye opening.  I think that this is in great part a reason for the Food DIY movement that has emerged. We want to know what is in our food so making it from scratch gives that ease of mind (and feels good).

Not everyone can cook everything from scratch and this is where minimally processed foods come into the picture. I carried out an experiment late last fall to see if I could make Uncle Sam from scratch in my kitchen, knowing it has a few ingredients and is made with a simple process. I warmed myself that winter day in my kitchen and in the end was successful.

If we took the same approach to food that we do to television and created a category called reality food, I think we would be surprised to see how the average American plate at meal time stacks up to the recommended USDA my plate. Food in reality might look different from the real food suggestions. And like so much else in life, implementing real food into a menu unused to reserving its allotted space on the plate, starts with baby steps. As an example you can become a vegetable lover with some experimentation of technique. Take cabbage, you can steam it, braise it, roast it or even ferment it. As a cruciferous vegetable, it’s chock full of good nutrients. A little oil and kosher salt draw out its natural sweetness. We could go through a long laundry list of veggies, legumes and fruits. As we age, let us see that real food really is our advocate and ally.

 

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Annelies

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