Coming Clean

One woman’s honest quest to clean up her unhealthy life for herself and her family.

Recently in Weight Loss Category

Experience Life Magazine

How Is Your Program Going?

This is a question that I get a lot, especially more recently since my weight loss has become more apparent, and no doubt because I’ve been very public about the process all along. “How’s the training?” “How’s the diet going?” or “How’s the weight loss going?”

Once I hit the 50-pounds-lost point, I was feeling really optimistic. “Things are great! I’ve lost 50 pounds!” Then a friendly exchange of “Wow! Awesome! How?” and a fun discussion of the way I’ve been eating, how I’ve been exercising, and how I’ve changed up my lifestyle to promote healthy living. I hear myself repeating all the great messages I’ve picked up through the magazine, my life coach and my trainer.

It’s also become much easier to quickly identify the misguided approach: At the gym on Saturday, I overheard a woman tell her friend, “It’s not that complicated. You eat less, you exercise more, and you lose weight. If you’re not losing weight by doing that, you’re obviously lying.”

I had to hold myself back from correcting her.

As some of you know from reading Experience Life and the Life Time Weight Loss blog, it’s not that simple. The body’s hormones play a huge part: the sex hormones (estrogen, progesterone and testosterone), stress hormones (cortisol is most often cited as it affects the metabolic system), the thyroid (undiagnosed or subclinical hypothyroidism are common challenges to weight loss); and both too little sleep too often and years of yo-yo dieting and weight changes can mess with your metabolism and hormones. Or there could be an underlying illness that’s putting a demand on your body (and distracting it from losing weight), as my doctor and I found with my parasite. Today, scientists are continuing to learn more and more about how our bodies lose and gain weight.

It’s a fascinating and complicated study, but it’s become very clear: It’s not as simple as calories in and calories out. The continued belief and preaching of this dated theorem comes off as ignorance.

For those of us who’ve struggled to lose weight, this message can be very empowering. When I believed it was all about calories in/out, I was obsessed with numbers and food. I would dream about chocolate cake. I’d struggle with binges if I was left alone with a box of Cheez-Its. I felt shame over food, and over the fact that I couldn’t get a handle on my willpower. I’d work out in long, steady cardio sessions to rack up more calories burned, not knowing anything about weight lifting and muscle, HIIT training, or EPOC (excess post-exercise oxygen consumption, or commonly called the “afterburn,” in which your body continues to burn calories after you’ve finished your workout).

This is supposed to be easy! Just eat less and move more, Courtney! But…why isn’t this working?!?

The more I learned about weight gain and loss, the more I gave myself a break. (Self-acceptance and kindness goes a long way — and it lowers your stress hormones!)

But I do see how people can get overwhelmed by this information, or feel like it’s so complicated that they don’t have control. I would encourage you to see these findings as new avenues to weight loss, so that, when you feel like you’re doing everything right but still not seeing results, you’ll be able to talk to your healthcare provider about, say, testing your thyroid or cortisol levels, and getting recommendations on improving sleep and adding in more activity.

Now, back to that question, “How’s your program going?”Recently, when I’ve been asked this, I’ve felt some hesitation when I answer.

I’ve hit a weight-loss plateau, hovering around 163 pounds. During my first big weight gain in the summer and fall of 2000, I went from 135 pounds to 165 pounds, and I think reaching this number again has been messing with my state of mind. I remember how it felt to gain that weight and enter my freshman year of college: my self-esteem was low, I was fighting with my then-boyfriend frequently, I had a falling out with a high-school friend, and I was worried about my last-minute decision to attend the University of Minnesota instead of the University of Michigan. A lot was changing, physically and emotionally in my world (I bet a cortisol test would’ve revealed sky-high numbers!).

FortunecookiequoteI know I’m a different woman now, but the number threw me. Compounded with our weird spring snowstorm, selling our house, and changes at work, I haven’t felt as focused on my program. And I haven’t felt as energetic, which usually means that I ease off the intensity of my workouts and eat more comfort foods (on my program, that means whole gluten-free grains such as brown rice and quinoa, and while those are healthy options, I’ve been losing weight easier when I cut all grains). This all becomes clear during my workouts, and last night’s Boot Camp class, in particular, was a doozy: one minute of four weight- and body-weight exercises, sprinting between each exercise for 30 seconds, two minutes to rest between the four rounds of the circuit. It felt haaaaard — but in a good way.

Instead of harping on what’s not working, I started looking at what does work for me: group training and classes, spending time outside, and simplifying my diet. It’s a good time for me to set new goals, too, so I’m signing up for two 5Ks with Esprit de She, one in July and one in September. Prompted by the 90-Day Challenge‘s Try-It Tuesday classes, I’ve participated in Barbell Strength, and returned to Cycling and Zumba. I’ve also shared some of my challenges with my supportive coworkers, and discovered a few of them are going to follow a detox/elimination diet from Dr. Mark Hyman’s UltraMetabolism program, so I’ve decided to join in starting May 1. It’ll help me simplify my diet, and the group support for the detox and the 5Ks also helps me feel even more accountable. AND it should help me break through this weight-loss plateau.

So here’s to seeing challenges and changes as opportunities for growth. And when someone asks me how my program is going, I can return to answering confidently “great!” knowing that adding creativity to my program will help me reach my goal.

*The fortune-cookie quote pictured above is one I’ve kept since the start of my healthy-living journey. It inspires me to keep working toward my goals — even when there are setbacks — and, ironically, to stop eating fortune cookies (the messages are delightful, but the flour, sugar and vegetable oil, not so much).

Experience Life Magazine

Inspirational Stories: Katie’s Weight Loss

When I mentioned Katie Torpey‘s weight-loss story in my last blog post, it made me want to share more with you. I said you should check out her blog on the Handel Group‘s website, and you should (after you read and watch this!), but then I thought, why not share part of her story here?

The more I thought about it, I decided it’s these kinds of stories — along with those published in our “How I Did It” column and Life Time’s myStory blog — that keep me motivated to eat right, exercise and take care of my body. So, every week or so, I’ve decided to share videos, blogs, photos and stories I come across online that inspire me on my path to better health. Sometimes they’ll be weight-loss stories, but generally, I’m on the lookout for all-around awesomeness in overcoming obstacles, creating sustainable change or simply being great.

So let’s kick off this week with Katie Torpey, who’s been maintaining a 130-pound weight loss:

If you like these kinds of best-of-the-Web blog posts, be sure to check out Experience Life’s newest site feature, “Link Love,” appearing every Friday. Read more here.

Experience Life Magazine

90-Day Challenge: Faster Fitness

Like any American, I can be a bit impatient and find myself regularly short of “free time,” whatever that means. So the idea of going to the gym and spending an hour or more on the treadmill or puttering around without a plan completely turns me off. In fact, it usually convinces me to skip my workout altogether.

When I’ve worked with a trainer these past few years, I’ve loved having the guidance — especially because I’ve been resistant to working out most of my life. It also why I love group classes at Life Time Fitness: I just have to show up and follow along.

As I got stronger, I decided to try T.E.A.M. Boot Camp, which was awesome in the most challenging way. It’s circuit-style training, with some workouts similar to HIIT or metabolic resistance training: work hard and fast and/or lift heavy, rest, and repeat. (Of course, each instructor is different, but you can find examples of exercises on the Boot Camp by Life Time Facebook page or their website here.)

In honor of this week’s Try-It Tuesday events, either a T.E.A.M. Fitness or Ultimate Workout class, I challenged myself in Boot Camp on the clean and press and managed to hit a new PR (personal record): 55 pounds! Up until this week, my muscles could only handle 35 pounds — that’s a 20-pound difference in a matter of 3 to 4 weeks! Go Courtney’s muscles!

I’ve written about my love of group fitness before, and if you are short on time like me and want a specific plan with super-effect results, I think you’ll be happy with one of the T.E.A.M. classes, either Weight Loss, Fitness, Boot Camp, or the Ultimate Workout. And there’s always group-fitness classes to try as part of your membership.

If you enjoy working out alone, keep it up! Whatever works best for you. But if you’re curious about working with a partner or group, give it a shot. (Read more about the benefits of exercising with friends in “Group Effort,” from the May 2011 issue of Experience Life.) Like me, you might find yourself more motivated to work out.

Have you tried one of the T.E.A.M. classes or group workouts?

For those of you looking for more info on metabolic resistance-training programs, check out our video below. And read more about how lifting weights can boost your weight-loss progress in our September 2012 article, “Lift to Lose Weight.”

Experience Life Magazine

90-Day Challenge: Eat Fit

On February 9, I decided to sign up for Life Time’s 90-Day Challenge to further motivate me in reaching my weight-loss goals. This year, Life Time has two categories for the challenge: transformation (for body composition) or weight loss (strictly scale-only weight changes).

While I’m hoping for better body composition after the 90 days, I selected the weight loss category to focus on the last 35 to 45 pounds I’d like to lose this year. (Check out the leaderboard to follow my progress; my nickname is my Twitter handle, clewisopdahl.)

I fell a bit off track a week after sign-up due to another cold (more to come on that), but started feeling better on Friday and been tuned-in ever since. And I’ve lost 4 pounds since my first weigh-in!

Last night I checked out the Eat Fit seminar for Try-It Tuesdays. My favorite message was debunking calories in/calories out: It’s so much more complicated than that! The model through Life Time Weight Loss is one of balance and examination into metabolism, nutrition, exercise, movement (outside of dedicated workouts), mindset, and stress and sleep.

The class, lead by Highland Park’s personal-training head Arica Johnson, also included in its literature a quote by Switch authors Chip and Dan Heath:

Big problems are rarely solved with commensurately big solutions. Instead, they are most often solved by a sequence of small solutions.

The advice, based on the Heaths’ research, was to take one step toward healthier living this week. Then build on that. Since I often feel like I have to everything all at once — and perfectly, no less — it was a nice reminder to make these changes feel attainable.

Are you participating in the 90-Day Challenge? How’s it going for you?

90day_eatfit_edit

 

Experience Life Magazine

Row and Weep

You know those workouts that are so challenging you feel like crying? And maybe you do start weeping, either because you are relieved or proud or exhausted? That was my workout last night.

I’ve been working with trainer Shane for two years now, one-on-one since the fall of 2010 and in a group setting with Boot Camp since October 2011. Throughout all those fun/difficult/sometimes grueling workouts, I’ve kept a smile on my face. I would visualize myself in top form, completing each circuit with ease and super strength. And, over time, my visions have come closer to reality. But last night, I just couldn’t keep the happy, fit Courtney in my mind’s eye.

And it was all because of the rowing machine.

For an office worker like myself, the rowing machine is a great tool, and one of the few Shane incorporates into our workouts (he focuses on multijoint/compound exercises that recruit several muscles, usually in the form of body-weight exercises, kettlebell swings, and free weights).

Rowing in proper form requires one to pull their shoulders back, but it also utilizes the legs: rowers use more than 20 different muscles with each stroke, including the hamstrings, pecs, lats, traps and glutes. It burns tons of calories, more than any other cardio-style workout, according to rowing expert Frederick Hagerman, PhD, emeritus professor of physiology at Ohio University. For those wanting sprinting-style interval training that’ll be nice on your joints, rowing fits the bill.

Occasionally, Shane will forget his watch so he’s without a timer (on purpose?), so he’ll keep track with one exercise. In the past, this responsibility has fallen on one station where a person has to run five flights of stairs or around the block away from their teammates, while the other group members complete the exercise at their station of the circuit, be it burpees or renegade rows. But with the row machine, I must face my poor group members as I struggle to make it to 500 meters.

The pressure was so intense last night that I had to step outside both to cool off and hold back the tears. Why is this so terribly difficult? I could breathe just fine, but the longer strokes I took (thereby increasing how quickly I’d get to 500 meters), the more I felt the swelling of emotions build up in my chest. When I ruled out vomit, I knew the tears were coming.

By the third and last circuit, I was spent: on the other stations, my vertical jumps were tiny hops, my burpees sad and slow. We had switched places with another group member each round, and this last go had me at the rowing machine for my final exercise. I pushed and pulled, but as soon as Shane yelled “halfway!” panic set in.

Everyone is counting on you, Courtney. You have to finish this, and do it quickly! People are waiting! Hear them struggling with their station? The longer it takes you, the more they struggle! Hurry!

And then the negative self-talk started:

If you were stronger or taller or more athletic, this would be easier. You should be fitter and thinner by now. You should be at your goal weight. If you didn’t have this extra fat on you, you’d be a champion rower! You need to work harder and lose more weight. This group is fit, they shouldn’t have to wait for you anymore. Pull as hard as you might, you’re just not fast enough.

The nasty voice, the one that tries to defeat me. She bullies me into complacency, into indifference. She attempts to prevent change. She’s quite wretched.

But she comes from a place of fear, because the voice in my head that sees me improving and watches me step outside my comfort zone knows my expectations will also change. The fitter I get, the more I’ll want to work out. The healthier I am, the more energy I’ll have to do the activities I’ve been wanting to try all these years. I’ll feel more confident and may start socializing more. What if I attention and admiration I don’t know how to respond to, like from the guy who called me a supermodel this weekend? Will I accept the compliment graciously and move on, or will I get stuck in my head? What if I make new friends only to be hurt later?

I do my best to quiet the voice, but she still lurks in the dark corner of my mind, waiting for moments of weakness to speak up, like last night on the rowing machine.

But then, something better happens: my teammates cheer me on. Trainer Shane says “Nice work!” And cooler still, he tells me my time improved each round, with my personal best at 2:11. The fastest group member, Joe, rowed 500 meters at 1:40, and gee whiz, that doesn’t feel too far off. As the tears trickle down and my face starts contorting, the cheerleader voice in my head says, “Hooray! Look around you. Your teammates are proud! This was a challenging workout for everyone, but we made it through together.”

And the nasty voice? She sulks off as her powers grow faint.

For more on the scientific research behind emotionally charged workouts, see “Laugh, Cry, Lift” here.

Experience Life Magazine

Airport Food

In celebration of my 31st birthday on the 12th and our six-year anniversary on the 9th, Kyle planned a trip for us to Colorado. We haven’t flown anywhere together since our Florida trip in March 2011, so I was excited for this vacation — and to visit someplace new.

I was prepared to challenge my “vacation-food mindset” that had set in during our week at the cabin in August. You know the voice: the one that says it’s OK to eat the cookie or ice-cream sundae because you’re on vacation. Right now, one planned treat a week has been fine for me while I’ve been working to lose weight. The trick, I’ve found, is eating that treat mindfully, really enjoying it and being satisfied with just a few bites or one small dessert. When I find myself desiring (or eating) more than one, I remove dessert altogether the following week, or longer, until I again feel comfortable putting the fork down.

To avoid vacation-food mindset, I wanted to start off strong, which meant choosing wisely at the airport. Most of our family vacations during my childhood were by car, although I flew quite a bit during my senior of high school to visit friends at the University of Michigan. I don’t recall, however, having so many options for wholesome, fresh food at the airport.

All airports aren’t created equal, but the Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport has several restaurants and stands featuring salads and healthy snacks. We made it through security quickly, so we had enough time to stop for lunch at French Meadow Bakery & Café. I chose this yummy salad with organic mixed greens, grilled chicken breast, carrots, tomato, toasted sunflower seeds, shredded beets, and white balsamic vinaigrette. Notice my look of surprise and delight at finding such deliciousness.

With any unpredictable event, I try to eat beforehand, but have been happy to find healthy options on-the-go. What are your favorite places to get healthy food when traveling?

Experience Life Magazine

Core Work

Right around the time I hit my heaviest weight, I started having horrible back issues. If I stood too long, if I wasn’t sitting up straight at my desk, I’d feel this deep ache in my lower back. I’d rotate my hips forward and the pressure in my lower back would grow intense, as if someone was slowly adding iron plates one at a time until I’d break down crying from the pain.

There were a few different interpretations by my care team: I had, after all, gained weight, so perhaps my body was still adjusting to carrying the lbs. According to my acupuncturist, Chinese medicine would say that my back issues were related to my reproductive issues and my kidney energy. One of my chiropractors, who is also a functional-medicine specialist, was considering the implications of adrenal fatigue and weakness in my lower back. And my other chiropractor used a MyoVision scan of my back to show me further proof of said weakness. (More on my experiences with chiropractic care later.)

The workouts I have been doing haven’t specifically focused on the core. I don’t go into the gym thinking I’m going to work my abs. But my plan is fat loss. I’m not targeting areas — I’m working on the big picture. If you’ve been following Survival of the Fittest by my coworker, Jen Sinkler, you’d know she doesn’t put much stock in working one muscle, but rather, encourages people to include multijoint exercises into their workouts. (Multijoint exercises, sometimes called compound exercises, require more than one muscle and more than one joint to do the work. It’s faster, and gets your heart pumping. For examples, see “The Best Exercises You’re Not Doing” in the May 2010 issue.) As in many weight-lifting movements, engaging the core is important for proper form.

Yet, I was thinking my back could use more concentrated attention, if only a few times a week. Back issues run in the family, too, so if genes were going to play a part, I felt like I needed to do everything I could to lessen the pain now and start reversing it. My aunt has successfully used yoga to help her back pain, so I added a class when I could. Our gym also has a Pilates studio, and chiropractor #2 said both yoga and Pilates could provide a lot of relief.

A few years ago, I took a gyrotonic class for a story I was writing. The instructor had me try strengthening exercises on the studio’s expansion system, and the added guidance and resistance from the machine really challenged my body. Afterward, I felt taller, and immediately had less tension in my neck and shoulders. With Life Time’s Pilates classes on reformers, I was hoping for similar results, as well as a good workout.

Kneeling on the reformer during my spring 2012 Pilates classes.

 

If you’re new to Pilates at Life Time Fitness, you start with one-on-one classes with a certified instructor (generally, from the schools of Peak Pilates or Stott Pilates). Once your sessions are complete, you can move on to group classes, with five or six other students. Classes run about 50 minutes.

When I started my sessions in March, I didn’t quite know what to expect. I had been doing T.E.A.M. Boot Camp three times a week since October, so I figured Pilates would be a slow, relaxing workout. I assumed I had plenty of strength built up from Boot Camp, and the Pilates classes would be a cakewalk. Of course, that was before I was introduced to the Power Circle. Or the hundred. Or anything with the short or long box (the lead image on the Life Power Pilates site is how the long box is used).

Like any new action, my muscles were a bit confused. Some of the exercises were familiar, like planks, only now I was extending the carriage (the black platform that glides in the frame of the reformer) with my feet and taxing new muscles. Pictured below, my instructor, Kimberly, corrects my form to keep my back flat.

Some of the same sentiments I have for yoga translate to Pilates: the fluidity of movements, the connection to breath, the focus on coordination. When I’m pushing myself in Boot Camp, I’m often so worried about making it through the workout that I forget to check in with my body and be deliberate with my movements, to tighten my core, and to time my breathing. (Inevitably, I feel fatigued much quicker when I’m inattentive.) I’m reminded of those important factors each week in Pilates, and that consciousness transfers to my other workouts.

One of the best parts of all this consideration for my core: my back issues are fewer and farther between. Combined with losing weight, chiropractic care, yoga and Pilates, I’m feeling my stronger and have had fewer incidences of back pain. And feeling better has encouraged me to keep with it, so in another six months, that aching pain will be a distant memory.

 

Experience Life Magazine

Dress-Size Challenge

This year, I’m in two wedding parties: for my friend, Jessie, who married Kyle’s cousin in July, and in October, I’ll be a bridesmaid in Kyle’s youngest sister’s wedding. It’s an honor to be asked, but, as someone working on weight loss, one of the first thoughts that crossed my mind was the challenge of being fitted in the bridesmaid dress.

On February 26, I was fitted for Jessie’s wedding in a flattering, structured blue dress. After all my hard work, I was really happy with how it looked on me, but I was worried about how it would look if I needed significant alterations in the summer. Since my weight loss started picking up steam in October 2011, I’ve been managing to lose anywhere from 6 to 10 pounds per month. I discussed it with the bridal shop’s consultant, estimated where I’d be in July, then crossed my fingers and signed up for a dress two sizes smaller than my February fit.

It was a risk, but it was also hugely motivating.

Of course, it wasn’t crossed fingers that helped me meet this goal. Through mindful eating of whole, real foods, check-ins with my life coach, and consistent interval-style workouts (including sprinting and weight training), I easily slipped on the two-sizes-smaller dress on July 28. And I hit a new goal: I had lost 41 pounds to date!

Left: At the February 2012 fitting in a size 16 dress. Right: Five months later, wedding day, in a size 12 dress.

Experience Life Magazine

The Signs to Slow Down

I haven’t been a very good blogger. I’m admitting it, and apologizing, both to you and myself. I’m re-committing to regular blogging this fall, and I have a lot to share. Over the two years I’ve been blogging, I’ve learned a lot about myself, some of which I’ve shared and some that I’ve withheld. But I’m promising to be more open and share more often, starting with the most important lesson I’ve struggled to grasp in adulthood.

That lesson being: I can’t do it all. Those men and women who seem to master everything? Good for them! I don’t know how, or even if that’s real. But I’m pretty sure that, at some point, our bodies and/or our world finds a way to tell us to slow down, pace ourselves, and limit our responsibilities. It’s about quality, not quantity, right?

Maybe you’ve felt the warning signs of overscheduling before: you feel a wave of hesitation when the boss asks you take on another project. Or you lose the keys or forget to return a library book or pay a bill — all signs, I take, as my lost sanity because my mind is swimming with projects and deadlines and chores and tasks to complete. I’m rushing and I’m running late, not even close to the role I wish to play of superwoman. I know I’m not alone in this feeling — we feel influenced by American society or the past or next generations or the media’s role in suggesting successful people sleep little and accomplish it all.

Our female cat, Biz.

Over the years, I have become more sensitive to the warning flags. The times when people say they’ve “hit a wall” are (slightly) more obvious to me now. Sometimes I’ve ignored them, usually with steep consequences: In September 2008, I was feeling frazzled. I was working long hours, my house was a mess, and I had a sneaking suspicion that my kitty, Biz, was very sick. She had lost a lot of weight, and was drinking excess amounts of water — the latter leading me to think she had developed diabetes at age 5, which was confirmed after a visit to the vet. As I was driving Biz home from her appointment, we got into an accident and I totaled my car and broke my wrist. Now, I know it’s called “accident” for a reason, but I couldn’t help but think that this was a clear sign that I need to slow down. So I did. For awhile.

Me on our wedding day, September 2006, at 140 lbs.

During my senior year of college, I lost the 36 pounds I had put on during my freshman year, but after I got married in 2006, I had already started to put the weight back on — and then some. After the 2008 accident, I gained the most weight, and by the time a challenged publishing industry forced a round of layoffs at my company in February 2009, I was out of work and exhausted and weighed 208 pounds.

Losing that job was hard because I loved my coworkers so, but the timing was right for me. I needed to take care of myself, but instead I simply kept my focus on work. I started up a copyediting and proofreading LLC, naming it Mixed Bag Media for my skills set (and partially as a play on my mixed race), and got to work. I acquired clients, and in total, contributed to eight different magazines, sometimes working for four publications at one time.

Minnehaha Falls, November 2009, at 208 lbs.

Then, in September 2009, Kyle and I decided the timing was right to have a baby. I stopped the birth control pill, having been a regular user for 12 years, and assumed I would be pregnant within a few months. When I missed my period in November, I took a pregnancy test, which came out negative. And when I didn’t get my period again in December and January, I figured something was wrong.

I went to see my nurse practitioner, who suggested I take a progesterone-only pill to force a period. It worked, but then another 90 days went by without menstruation. When she offered to prescribe the pill again and refer me to an Ob/GYN, I considered it. At the time, I had just started working at Experience Life, and I pondered the bigger picture. Had my weight gain caused this amenorrhea? I was just finishing a three-year term of antidepressants my then-doctor prescribed after an anxiety attack — did the drugs mess with my natural balance? What about all those years of eating processed foods and takeout and trans fats — was my toxic burden too high? My intuitive side was speaking loudly, telling me that my body wasn’t healthy enough for a baby. There were bigger health issues that I had long ignored. I know I could’ve continued with pills and hormones to force my body to correct itself, but I feared that if I missed the chance to remedy my poor health, I could have also put any pregnancy that may have occurred in jeopardy.

So I started researching local doctors and holistic practitioners. I met with an acupuncturist twice a week, visited with a clinical nutritionist and a functional-medicine specialist, a naturopathic doctor, an integrative MD, and a chiropractor.

At my heaviest weight, 221 lbs., February 2011.

I underwent a bevy of tests, and the results were troubling: among the concerns were adrenal fatigue, a pattern of Metabolic Syndrome, or pre-diabetes, and extremely low levels of vitamin D (my number was 16.3; optimal ranges of nanograms per milliliter are 50 to 70, and inadequate levels have been linked to cancer, heart disease, osteoporosis, asthma, Alzheimer’s disease, and even the common cold and influenza — no surprise, then, that I suffered a bad cold nearly every month). I also had high CRP levels, at 9.13, indicating chronic inflammation, which makes it difficult to lose weight and puts my cardiovascular system at risk. I was low on iron and magnesium, dehydrated, and had high white-blood-cell counts, indicating an infection, which was later found to be caused by both a bacterial infection and a parasite called Entamoeba. I wasn’t just overweight and missing my periods, I was on a treacherous path to severe health complications. My stress levels were still elevated, I had put on more weight, hitting a high of 221, and I felt overwhelmed by all the work I needed to do to get better. When the team at Experience Lifeasked me to come aboard full-time, I shut down my LLC and shifted my focus to the world of health, learning all I could for the magazine as well as for myself.

Me on a Florida beach, March 2011.

As scary as my findings were, they also served as an important push to help me readjust my priorities. I changed my diet dramatically, started working out with a personal trainer, joined a workout group, and have been actively managing my stress — ever aware of my struggles with work-life balance.

In AA, they say that recovery happens when someone hits rock bottom. Perhaps this culmination of health problems was my rock bottom. But gosh, there are so many moments, say, when I’m at Boot Camp in round six of the eighth bout of the circuit, pushing through a (semi) atomic push-up, that I wished I would’ve listen to those signs earlier and made a change. That I wouldn’t have let myself get so out of shape. That I would’ve eaten more salads instead of French fries. I didn’t listen to those signs, and I didn’t correct my path, but I’m on the right road now. And I’ll always do my best to heed those warnings in the future.

 

Experience Life Magazine

Mid-Year Update

By the time the 4th of July nears, I’m usually in a state of denial. Has half the year already passed?! Yikes.

It’s a good time to review the goals I set for myself in January (after all, there’s still six months left in this year to get more done!), and to pat myself on the back for how much I’ve accomplished thus far. The latter point is key: If you find yourself looking at your to-dos and getting light-headed, as I frequently do, or you feel yourself shutting down on your progress because you don’t think you’ve done enough, noting your successes can help you stay positive. Take my list from earlier this year, and my ideas for modifications:

  • Goal #1 Workouts: Three Boot Camp classes, one yoga and one dance class per week. I’ve been pretty consistent with Boot Camp — sometimes even going four times per week! — but have neglected my yoga and dance commitments. Instead, I started going to Pilates once a week beginning in March, and yoga only sporadically. Am I going to be hard on myself? Heck, no! Have you seen Boot Camp classes?!? They are intense, to say the least. And it wasn’t long ago that I spent my days in a desk chair only to go straight home to a reclining chair — every single day. The fact that I’m doing three classes a week of this strength-and-cardio circuit gives me a huge sense of pride.
  1. Instead of viewing my lack of attendance at yoga or dance as a point of disappointment, I started reevaluating the purpose of this goal. When I wrote out this resolution, I was still fairly fresh off my visit to Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health in Massachusetts, where I attended a five-day weight-loss retreat. There, I was going to yoga and YogaDance every day. I felt amazing after these classes, both equally relaxed and joyful, so I wanted to keep the commitment in my hometown. Yoga helped slow my racing mind, and seemed to translate to the kitchen, where I was more thoughtful in my food choices. Dancing allowed me to move my body freely and reclaim a sensuality I had lost while gaining weight over the years. Both of these goals serve a greater purpose than simply putting in the time at a class. Worthwhile indeed.
  2. On retreat, I wasn’t in the office or on deadline, keeping up with household chores, and balancing the family budget. So perhaps I need to scale back on this: How about two yoga and two dance classes per month instead of four each? Or one monthly class? Or what if I use a yoga DVD at home and dance in my living room? There’s room for adjustment here. And if I need to put this goal on hold for now in favor of keeping my Boot Camp commitment, I can. Do what works.
  3. Keeping track of my attendance or lack thereof would be helpful in understanding my barriers. After class, I’ve decided to write down how I feel in a journal so when I review my week on Sunday and plan for the next, I can remember what worked the best for me. Along with weekly self check-ins, I’m adding in monthly check-ins on the last day of each month to review what worked and what didn’t.
  • Goal #2 Food: eat “clean” and avoid gluten, dairy, soda and processed foods. I’ve been very happy with how I eat now, and the subsequent energy I’ve been enjoying. Although I’m not 100 percent perfect, and that’s OK, I’ve generally kept focused. In April, for example, I attended a birthday party and stood next to the bar for nearly an hour, eschewing alcohol in favor of only drinking club soda; nearby, a large tray of cupcakes sat on a table and I didn’t even think twice about eating one. But then sometimes I’ll pass the bakery section at my co-op and spy the flourless chocolate cake, a treat often too tempting to resist.
  1. Create allowances. If I can do 80/20 or 85/15, I won’t feel deprived and compelled to splurge. See #20 of 101 Revolutionary Ways to Be Healthy: “It’s what you do most of the time — day in, day out — that counts. The healthier you get, the easier and more automatic healthy choices will become.” Being 100 percent on point isn’t very realistic, especially if you’re breaking a pattern of past poor food choices. Do your best, and make rules that you feel you can follow. Instead of a slice of cake, I avoid that section of the grocery store and have a few squares of dark chocolate as my treat. And be picky! If I really want the flourless cake, but only fluffy marble is offered at the party, I don’t reach for it.
  2.  Plan and Prep. This is a perennial goal for me, but one that has worked so well in the past. When I follow a meal plan, I lose weight. When I pack my lunches and chop my dinner ingredients the night before, I’m much more likely to eat healthy. It also helps me avoid those days when I open the refrigerator and think, There’s nothing to eat!, even though there are options (just my creativity is lacking). It a step I need to incorporate every night while making dinner.
  3. Shop more often. I’ve been in the habit of stopping at the Seward Co-op in Minneapolis after my weekly acupuncture sessions to grab free-range, hormone-free meats, fresh kale and other veggies, or any missing staples for my pantry. They also feature to-order juice and smoothies, a salad bar, and yummy, comforting hot foods to-go or dine in. (Each item at the hot-food counter includes a list of ingredients and allergens.) With my old way of eating, I used to hate going to the grocery store: filling a cart with packaged foods, digging through sub-par veggies, and — oh no! — the harsh lighting. Nothing really looked good to me. It was about checking off items on my list and stocking the cupboards. I’d go shopping every two to three weeks because most of my food was boxed or frozen. But I love the co-op. The people are friendly and helpful, the food super fresh and often local, and I get a general sense of goodness as soon as I enter. Maybe it’s the patchouli. (If I’m not scouting the hot-food bar, you may also find me in the beauty section smelling essential oils.) When I can’t make it to the farmers’ market, I’ll shop here or at Mississippi Market in St. Paul — and sometimes I’ll go to all three!
  • Goal #3 Accountability. Communicate my goals with my life coach/trainer/friends. Earlier this year at a team dinner, I shared a big overarching goal with my co-workers: To be a success story in the magazine. Whether that’s in print or online through the blog, I want to continue sharing my story and reach my weight-loss and fitness goals. Through my regular check-ins with life coach Lauren and Boot Camp classes with trainer Shane, I feel an obligation not only to myself but to them. And that sense of responsibility has led me toward measurable changes.
  1. I really can’t say enough good things about working out with a group or partner. It’s made a world of difference for me. Try a few different classes if you aren’t finding one that sticks, or if you’d rather work out with someone you know, ask them to go on a walk or play basketball in the park. Prefer to stay solo? If you are keeping your commitments, great! But if you are struggling to stay on track, considering finding a group or meeting with a trainer.
  2. Even the solo workout warriors would agree that having an encouraging friend or colleague keeps them motivated. Those compliments go a long way! Sometimes simply sharing a salad recipe with a friend reminds me of my healthy goals. On the days I’m not working out with the Boot Campers, I might go to yoga with a co-worker or take a walk with my friend Jenny. I’ve created a group list in my phone of workout buddies and back-up buddies that I can call on when I need encouragement or a spotter when lift weights.
  3. Recently, I’ve been seeing more and more friends post their workouts on Facebook. Sometimes it’s an inspirational quote or the miles they’ve logged on a run. Other times it’s a Foursquare check-in at a gym. Maybe they’ve just completed a 5K. Personally, I love this! And not just because I’m one of those people. It’s social media, after all, and if you view it as a place to connect with other like-minded individuals and share a sense of your identity, then health and fitness updates fit the bill. When I was in an unhealthier place, I admit, I didn’t care to see these posts. I started hiding them in my news feed. It made me feel bad about my lifestyle, mostly because I wasn’t proud of my lifestyle. I wanted to be running 5Ks, too, but it felt easier to just hate on those that participated and shared it with the world. Now I see them as inspirational. If you aren’t ready for change yet, don’t be a hater: Let us be proud of success. And join in when you are ready. A simple “like” on my check-in somehow feels supportive.

Not all New Year’s resolutions stick. In fact, most don’t, as the media will report sometime in February or March. What’s more important is to review and adjust, and keep working toward your dream. Last month, editor in chief Pilar Gerasimo wrote a great editorial about a class she led on a retreat and recently online for en*theos Academy for Optimal Living. It’s called “Refine Your Life” (look for highlights from the class in our upcoming December issue). In her editorial, she shares how she came to discover the best tools, techniques and insights that help her reach for her best life. For me, I read it as a great reminder that we are all a work in progress and will make many adjustments to our goals along the way.

If you are in goal-setting mode or refining mode, here’s a list of Experience Life articles I’ve found particularly helpful:

 

 

Page 1 of 212