Are You Addicted To Sugar?
Who doesn’t love sugar? We get pleasure from eating it. We may even get the “sugar high” only to crash shortly afterward. If you love sugar and can’t seem to stop eating it, you are not alone. Sugar is one of the most addictive substances in our food today. Approximately 75% of Americans consume an excessive amount of sugar.
Are you addicted to sugar? Here are a few common signs that typically point to sugar addiction.
Juicing vs. Blending
Do you juice or blend? Both or none? Here’s an infographic on the difference between the two.
Could Your Everyday Activities be Causing You Stress?
We all know that stress is a part of life. Things such as work, school, or family problems can cause stress. While most people are aware of the major sources of stress in their lives, additional hidden stressors may wreak havoc. These can include environmental toxins, financial worries, and social isolation. Hidden stressors can significantly impact our health and well-being and may not even feel stressful. Which hidden stressors do you have?
The Effects of Stress on the Body
It’s no secret that stress can take a toll on the body. From causing headaches and muscle tension to increasing the risk for heart disease and other chronic illnesses, stress can be harmful to your health. But what exactly is stress doing to your body?
Natural Ways to Reset Your Health for 2022
As you settle into the new year, it’s not too late to make a few minor changes in your diet and lifestyle to help reset your health. A health reset will help you develop healthy habits, kick out bad habits, sleep better, gain energy, improve digestion, reduce inflammation, and feel your best.
If you answer yes to any of the following questions, it’s time for a health reset.
- Have I gained a few extra pounds that I can’t seem to lose? 
- Do I get bloated after eating? 
- Do I feel sluggish and tired during the day? 
- Am I addicted to unhealthy foods? 
- Do I have cravings for sugary or starchy foods? 
- Do I have difficulty focusing or experience a foggy brain? 
If it’s time for a reset, here are a few tips to help you get started.
Do You Know Your Signs of Stress?
Do You Know Your Signs of Stress?
Stress can manifest in various ways, but most people have a half-dozen symptoms that are unique for them, which they can learn to recognize. Here are just a few ways stress can show up in your life:
Physical Symptoms
A typical stress reaction is the “fight or flight” response; your heart beats faster, your muscles tense, your breathing rate increases, and you may even start to sweat. Chronic stress may show up differently. You may get a headache, grind or clench your jaw, experience sore muscles, chest pains, abdominal symptoms, or a change in appetite. Two of the most common symptoms of stress are fatigue and low-quality sleep.
Mental Symptoms
Do you have trouble concentrating or making decisions? These are common signs of stress. You might also find that your mind is racing or going blank.
Emotional Symptoms
It’s common to feel nervous, anxious, tense, restless, or agitated when you’re stressed. You may also feel irritable, frustrated, impatient, or short-tempered. On the other hand, you may also feel lethargic, depressed, or sad.
Behavioral Symptoms
Do you find yourself constantly fidgeting in your seat? Are you a nail-biter or compulsive eater? These behaviors are signs of stress. Other behavioral symptoms include smoking, drinking, talking loudly, or swearing.
Is Stress a Friend or a Foe?
We all have had experiences when our bodies go into “flight or fight” mode, a quick response our bodies are meant to do to protect us in dangerous situations. This was useful when we were being chased by creatures that wanted to eat us for dinner back in the day. Luckily, we don’t face the same dangers as our ancestors in today’s world, but our bodies don’t know the difference between a prehistoric animal and a work deadline. Our stress reactions are activated far too often and for much more extended periods. The result is not only unpleasant but unhealthy.
Self-Sabotage: The Main Reason You Can't Lose Weight
You've decided to lose weight, you read up on how to do it, you select a plan, and you purchase exercise clothing. The first week goes well, and you see the scale dip down slightly. Woot!
You decide to keep going with the plan, but at some point, during week two, you catch yourself sitting on the sofa watching television in your workout clothing, gobbling down a pint of ice cream.
Sound familiar?
If so, you've fallen into one of the most common weight-loss traps: self-sabotage. It's sneaky and often difficult to pin down. It's also confusing, and it's completely derailing your weight loss efforts.
By definition, behavior is sabotaging when it creates problems and interferes with long-standing goals.
In other words, you know what you need to do, but you don't do it. Or you know what you shouldn't do, but you do it anyway. That's the simplest way to understand how self-sabotage works.
Are You Ready to Stop Self-Sabotage?
You say you want to lose weight, but you're not successfully doing it. Chances are you're feeling discouraged, ashamed or confused. Perhaps you also have diet fatigue or lack confidence because you don't believe in your ability to lose weight.
The harsh reality is that you're sabotaging your weight loss efforts because of those feelings. To overcome sabotaging behaviors, you first have to look at what's causing the behavior in the first place, which can be difficult.
If you're willing to make a change in your life, then I'm willing to offer you one laser-coaching session at no charge.
During the session, I'll help you:
Identify how you sabotage yourself. Self-sabotage might look like procrastination, avoidance, over-eating, not getting enough sleep.
Name your fears about weight loss. Remember, fears are usually irrational, so when you put them down on paper, they might seem silly, and that's okay!
Create a weight loss plan. We'll lay a solid foundation to get you started on your successful weight loss journey.
All you have to do is schedule the session. You'll be amazed at what one coaching session can do to jumpstart your weight loss.
Year Challenge Sheet
Are you an artistic person? Are you looking to introduce new habits for 2022? Then this challenge calendar is for you! It’s super cool because you can use one of these for each habit you are looking to introduce. For every day you perform the habit, colour in the corresponding section of the calendar. How cool is that?! If you’d like to download a PDF version, click below.
I can’t take credit for this and I’m not sure who the original designer is but I had to share. I hope you enjoy using it!
How Sleeping Too Little May Keep You From Losing Weight
Stress and the demands of everyday living have us all struggling to stay on track. We skip our workouts, sleep less, grab food on the run, all to keep up with the hectic pace of living.
With so much going on, cutting back from seven or eight hours of sleep might seem like the answer. You may say if you only sleep six hours, that gives you two more hours to be productive, right?
Well, not really.
First off, your brain is TIRED when you don’t sleep. You‘re operating in a fog, and making the best decisions is pretty much impossible. When you stop by the break room, nine times out of ten, you will grab the donut to go with your coffee because you’re so beat you THINK you need the one-two punch of sugar and caffeine to get you going. Your brain’s reward centers are revved up from lack of sleep, and your food cravings are in overdrive.
Studies consistently show us that when our bodies don’t get enough sleep, we opt for quick-fix, high-carb snacks to keep going. One study even showed that participants who slept less than eight hours chose snacks with twice the fat content of their well-rested counterparts.
Second, crappy choices, bigger portions, and no impulse control in the kitchen are bound to produce weight gain. In addition to changing how your brain functions, sleep deprivation has a powerful effect on hormone production. Hormones plus dieting generally equal disaster. Cortisol, leptin, and ghrelin are the three hormones most commonly connected to weight control.
Cortisol
Cortisol is your stress hormone, and it suppresses your metabolism. Your adrenal glands produce it, and if you aren’t well-rested, your stress will skyrocket. Cortisol tells your body to save its energy, which means it’s going to hang on to fat. There is a debate on whether cortisol directly affects weight loss, but for anyone with emotional eating habits, higher cortisol levels are a recipe for disaster. Stress makes us seek comfort, and for many of us, food is a go-to for feeling better.
Leptin
Leptin is a hormone produced in your fat cells. It tells your body when to stop eating and to burn more calories. When you are tired, your body produces less leptin, so your appetite is out of control, and your metabolism tanks. Not recognizing our body’s hunger signals is difficult enough without the added magic of hormones confusing our wants and needs.
Grehlin
Grehlin is a hormone released by your stomach that makes you hungrier, slows down your metabolism, and decreases your body’s ability to burn fat. When you are sleep-deprived, your body produces more ghrelin. That means you are tired, want to eat a whole lot of garbage, and aren’t programmed to burn it off.
Insulin
Insulin is the hormone your body uses to convert food, particularly sugar and starch, into energy. Four days of poor sleeping can be enough to hamper your body’s ability to process insulin. This means your body can’t process the fats in your bloodstream, so it just stores them as fat.
Research proves that dieters who cut back on sleep over two weeks dramatically reduced the amount of weight they lost from fat even when their eating patterns and intake didn’t change. Lack of sleep killed their metabolism, and that equaled weight gain. If you aren’t sleeping enough, you are disrupting your metabolism, which will make you gain weight or have trouble losing weight.
Set yourself up for success with proper sleep hygiene. That’s how you’re going to win at weight loss. If you need help with your sleep hygiene, I can help. Check out one of my upcoming sleep workshops or schedule a call with me so that we can discuss your concerns and set a plan in place to get you sleeping better.
Do You Count Calories?
Do You Count Calories?
If you do, here are some things you should know:
You can’t account for every single calorie
Even if you weigh your food, it’s challenging to count the unused milk in your cereal bowl or the extra teaspoon of oil you used when cooking. You should also consider how the spices you cook with can alter caloric absorption and how your body utilizes calories. Also, the type of food determines how your body absorbs calories. The more processed the food, the easier it is for your body to digest and absorb the calories. Eating whole (less processed) foods requires your body to expend more energy to digest, therefore absorbing fewer calories. It’s safe to say… it’s a very complex process!
Food and exercise can affect caloric value
100 calories from spinach is very different than 100 calories from a donut. Each food can affect satiety, digestion, metabolism, and hormones differently. It’s the same with exercise. Different workouts can result in the same caloric burn but may not have the same effect on health. When choosing foods and exercise, consider the long-term impact.
Labels can be misleading
The FDA allows food labels to be accurate within 80%. That’s a lot if you are counting calories!
Bottom Line
Calorie counting is a small part of the larger health equation. I believe most people don’t need to count calories as there are many other ways to track overall health if you are trying to lose weight.
Is Carbonated Water as Healthy as Still Water?
Water is essential for the functioning of our bodies. Today, we have many choices of tastes and types of water, including carbonated water. But is carbonated water just as hydrating as still water?
Plain carbonated water is simply water pressurized with carbon dioxide. As long as the water is free of additives, it's just as hydrating and healthy as still water.
However, there are many different types of carbonated water on the market:
- Club soda contains ingredients like salt, sodium bicarbonate, or potassium bicarbonate. 
- Flavored Sparkling Water may contain added natural sugars, citric acid, sodium, or caffeine. 
- Mineral water comes from mineral springs and contains minerals, including salts and sulfur compounds. 
- Seltzer water is just regular water that has been carbonated. Some bottled seltzer water may contain added flavors and ingredients. 
- Tonic water contains added sugar, sweeteners, and flavors. 
What about other benefits/risks?
Research has shown that carbonated water may help aid digestion, help improve swallowing ability, and increase feelings of fullness.
Side effects may include gas and bloating, and carbonated water high in sugar can cause tooth decay.
The bottom line is to read the label. If you're worried about sodium intake or tooth decay, stick to plain carbonated water with no additives.
Sleep Your Way to the Top
How often do you hear people bragging about pulling all-nighters or saying things like, “I only need 5 hours of sleep a night,” or “I’ll sleep when I’m dead”?
Here’s a fact, your body needs sleep. Did you know that driving while sleep-deprived can be just as bad as driving while intoxicated?
There are so many benefits to sleep, but I’m just going to give you five of them.
Tips for Holiday Sips
Tips for Holiday Sips
The holiday season brings family gatherings and festive events. It also brings extra calories in the form of food and drink. Adding alcohol to the equation makes it difficult if you’re trying to maintain your weight over the holiday season.
One gram of alcohol is approximately seven calories. It’s more than carbs and fat (4 calories) but less than fat (9 calories). The issue with alcohol is that our bodies don’t burn calories while metabolizing it as we do with carbs, fat, and protein.
Alcohol is easy to absorb, so it enters our bloodstream without burning any extra calories. It’s seen as a toxin, so our liver metabolizes before anything else. Our liver can only metabolize about one ounce of alcohol per hour, which is why we get tipsy if we drink too fast.
If you’re looking to indulge over the holiday season, here are a few tips that may help:
Pour half as much
If you’re drinking wine, pour 3 to 4 ounces at a time instead of 6 to 9 ounces. With liquor, opt for a smaller shot in a tall glass with a lot of ice.
Avoid higher-calorie mixed drinks
Eggnog is usually the go-to for many holiday parties, but one 8-ounce pour can be over 350 calories! Opt for lower-calorie options like:
• Red or white wine: 5 ounces | Calories; 125, Carbohydrate: 4g
• Light beer: 12 ounces | Calories: 100; Carbohydrate: 5g
• Champagne: 5 ounces | Calories: 100; Carbohydrate: 1g
• Vodka, whiskey, rum, or gin: 1.5 ounces | Calories: 96; Carbohydrate: 0g
Alternate between alcohol and water
Drinking water in-between each glass of alcohol will help you stay hydrated, and you’ll drink less.
Sip Slowly
Enjoy that beverage! Drinking slowly will allow you to savor the taste, and you will also drink less.
7 Ways to Stay Healthy This Holiday Season
Have you ever woken up on January 1st a bit disappointed in how you treated your body during the holiday season?
Without a plan in hand, it’s tough to stick to your healthy living goals with all the eggnog and sugar cookies floating around, not to mention the food pushers and saboteurs lurking in the shadows.
Here are seven ways to stay healthy over the holidays.
Free Workshop: A Few Kind Words
Join me as I welcome guest speaker Tracey Gates as she shares the energizing, uplifting, and connecting power of writing unexpected letters of appreciation.
Tracey believes that our relationships are the most important things in our lives. When we connect with one another we become the best version of ourselves. Are you ready to experience the contagious positive energy of kindness through the written word?
Tracey's vision is to let people everywhere know that they matter through writing unexpected letters of appreciation. When we share our kind thoughts, we feel happier, calmer, and more joyful. The lucky letter recipient experiences the same empowering sensations. So....why don't we share our kind thoughts more often? Tracey will share stories from her incredible year-long journey where she wrote an unexpected letter of appreciation to a different person every day for one year and how it changed her life in the most beautiful ways and can change yours too! She will empower you to open up to this simple and overlooked way of life that asks you to simply let people know what you appreciate, admire or love about them. No special degree is needed. What her journey taught her is that every person in this world wants to feel noticed, and when we help people feel noticed, the world shines more brightly. Let's make kindness intentional together and feel exuberant along the way.
Tracey is a certified Life and Wellness Coach through the Health Coach Institute. Her passion for nurturing relationships has been a lifelong study. Through her compassionate listening and deep sense of empathy, Tracey helps people become aware of their possibilities. She creates a warm and safe environment for people to show up and open up on a journey of transformation. In addition to personal coaching, Tracey is dedicated to spreading her message of kindness through her workshop called A Few Kind Words, creating contagious positive energy through writing unexpected, handwritten letters of appreciation.
She has been an active community leader and volunteer for decades in the Princeton, NJ area. She served for many years on the Boards of Trinity Counseling Service, Save - A Friend to Homeless Animals and Pretty Brook Tennis Club. Her work as a CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocate for foster children) and her role as the Director of Alumni Relations at Princeton Day School have fostered her deep commitment to helping people feel empowered and appreciated.
Tracey believes that our relationships are the most important things in our lives. She is nourished and sustained everyday by her husband, children, grandsons, friends and pets.
Why am I hungry all the time?
Do you find there are some days where you can’t get enough food into your belly? Hunger is the way your body tells you it needs food. However, there may be other reasons why you are constantly hungry.
You are not eating enough protein
Protein plays a vital role in appetite control by regulating hunger hormones. Eating protein with each meal or snack, rather than all at once, may help keep appetite steady throughout the day.
You are not getting enough sleep
As you’ve heard me say many times, sleep is essential for our overall health. Sleep regulates ghrelin, our appetite-stimulating hormone. Lack of sleep leads to higher ghrelin levels, which explains why you may feel constantly hungry when tired.
You are eating too many refined carbohydrates
Refined carbs lack fiber and cause blood sugar fluctuations, which are the primary reasons why eating too many of them may leave you feeling hungry.
Your diet is low in fat
Fat plays a role in slowing digestion and increasing the production of fullness-promoting hormones.
You’re not drinking enough water
When you are dehydrated, you will feel hungry. Often we mistake dehydration for hunger and reach for food instead of water.
Your diet lacks fiber
Fiber plays a role in reducing your appetite and keeping you full. High-fiber foods will take longer to digest than low-fiber foods.
You eat while distracted
Eating while distracted makes it difficult for you to recognize feelings of fullness.
You exercise a lot
Individuals who regularly exercise at a high intensity or for extended durations tend to have larger appetites and faster metabolisms. Thus, they may experience frequent hunger.
You drink too much alcohol
Alcohol is well known for its appetite-stimulating effects. Alcohol may inhibit hormones that reduce appetite, such as leptin, especially when consumed before or with meals.
You drink your calories
If you consume many liquid foods, such as smoothies, meal replacement shakes, and soups, you may be hungrier more often than you would be if you ate more solid foods.
One reason for this is that liquids pass through your stomach more quickly than solid foods do. Also, liquid foods do not have the same effects on keeping you full and satisfied as solid foods do. For this reason, you may feel hungry frequently if liquids are a significant part of your diet.
You are over-stressed
Stress increases cortisol levels, a hormone that is known to promote hunger and food cravings. During fight or flight mode, cortisol floods your body, which convinces it to eat, even if you don’t need the calories.
You’re taking medications
Certain medications cause increased appetite as a side effect. In turn, they may cause you to experience frequent hunger.
The most common appetite-inducing medications include antipsychotics, antidepressants, mood stabilizers, corticosteroids, and antiseizure drugs.
You eat too fast
Eating too quickly doesn’t allow your body enough time to recognize fullness, which may promote excessive hunger. It can take upwards of 20 to 30 minutes for your brain to realize you are full.
You have a medical condition
Medical conditions like diabetes, hyperthyroidism, hypoglycemia, depression, anxiety and premenstrual syndrome may cause excessive hunger.
If you suspect that you may have one of these conditions, talk with your doctor to receive a proper diagnosis and discuss treatment options.
You are on a calorie-restricted diet
Consuming fewer calories than the body burns can cause the body to produce a hormone called ghrelin, our “hunger hormone.” A low-calorie diet can increase ghrelin production and cause hunger, even if you have just eaten.
You consume a lot of sugar
A high-sugar diet may cause the body to produce more ghrelin and affect activity in specific brain regions to make a person feel less full.
You are bored
Some people may confuse boredom with hunger, causing them to eat more.
You are going through menopause
A decline in estrogen during menopause may lead to an increased appetite.
You are obese
Leptin is a hormone that tells the brain when the stomach is full. Leptin levels usually rise after a person eats a meal. Overweight or obese individuals may develop leptin resistance, which can make them feel hungry more often.
You Drink Diet Soda
Soda is one of the sugariest foods you can consume. And while you may know sugar makes you crave sugar, artificially sweetened products, and sugar alternatives can ramp up your appetite even more than natural sugar, causing increased calorie consumption over time.
You skip meals
Skipping meals can make you feel hungrier when it’s time to eat. When you don’t eat, your body can deplete its blood glucose stores, promoting an uptick in the hunger hormone ghrelin, ramping up your appetite.
Your Gut Health Is Off
Unhealthy eating or meals centered on saturated fats and sugars can disrupt your digestive system. As a result, an increase in harmful bacteria in your gut may inhibit the good bacteria from regulating your hunger hormones.
Benefits of Broth
Now that it’s getting cooler out, I’m starting to crave soups and stews. A base for many soups and stews is a good bone broth. It’s easy to make from scratch using the bones of a cow, chicken, turkey, and even fish.
There are so many health benefits to bone broth:
It’s nutritious
Bones are rich in vitamins, including calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus. Bone marrow contains iron, vitamin A, vitamin K, selenium, and zinc.
It helps your joints
Bone broth is a source of collagen, which is so essential for our joints. Our cartilage tends to wear down over time through continuous use, which adds stress to our joints. Adding collagen to your diet will help protect the joints from constant wear and tear.
It may help fight osteoarthritis
A 2016 study in the Nutrition Journal found that type 2 collagen (from the connective tissue of chickens) helped improve pain and stiffness in people with osteoarthritis.
It may help reduce inflammation and heal the gut
Not only is bone broth easy to digest, but an amino acid also called glutamine found in the gelatin of bone broth can help maintain the function of the intestinal wall and is known to prevent and heal leaky gut. Gelatine can also bind with water to support the healthy transit of food through the intestines.
It may help you sleep better
The amino acid glycine found in bone broth may help you relax, and multiple studies have also shown that this amino acid helps promote sleep. You may fall asleep faster, maintain a deeper sleep, and wake fewer times during the night!
It may support weight loss
Bone broth is high in protein, which helps the body feel full longer. It’s low in calories but can still satisfy hunger.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
