4/5/2006

Yourself! Fitness and Xbox 360

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm — Filed under:

Yourself! Fitness for Xbox

After a hiatus, I popped in Yourself! Fitness into my old Xbox and did an intense 60 minute workout. I thought it would be easy on me because I’ve been weight training on my own for the last two months, but Maya was able to give me a challenging workout and I felt it in muscle soreness the next day.

I was wondering what is going on with Yourself! Fitness and responDESIGN because it has been well over a year since they have produced anything new. Are they going to release a new version for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3? Are they working on a more realistic Maya with changeable outfits? How about a sensor that can read the signal from your heart rate monitor and adjust the program accordingly? Even a version where we stretch more than just our quads and hamstrings would be nice.

Maya My Personal TrainerAfter looking at their website, I was shocked to see that not much had changed. They still have a rabid fan base in the forums asking questions just like mine, but no one is there in an official capacity answering them. In fact, it took a lot of digging for me to even find any answers of any sort. Here’s what I found:

According to a press release buried deep in responDESIGN’s website, the original Yourself! Fitness will work on Xbox 360: Press Release: Yourself! Fitness compatible with Xbox 360: Only fitness game for all audiences among 200 titles

That’s it. No announcements about anything new in the works. Not even an easy way to link to their press release because of their broken Flash-based website. So, they are abandoning their fanbase in the forums AND not even bothering to advance their product. That’s a shame because the original Yourself! Fitness was a great starting point and I was excited to see what the future held. Too bad it looks like the future brought a sad sizzle instead of a burning fire of innovation.

See other entries about Yourself! Fitness:

Food Extremism

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

It seems that no matter who you are, there are people who take things to an extreme. WaiterRant talked about his experience at the health food store the other day.

Waiter works at an upscale Italian restaurant, serving high calorie food all day long. There, he meets with food extremists on the other side of the spectrum from the people he encountered at the health food store.

“You know, this may be a health food store but many of the customers look pasty, thin, and weak – the very opposite of healthy. Some of them look like they’re five minutes from fertilizing one of those local organic farms.”

Remember, eating is about enjoyment AND health.

4/4/2006

Loving Your Body

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm — Filed under:

Braidwood has an excellent entry about loving her new-found body. She has been eating intuitively, which has given her a voluptuousness that she didn’t notice before:

She is enjoying her body right now. This is exactly the sort of Inner Workout that I am advocating. Assessing yourself and loving yourself just as you are.

“I think my current pride in my girth is the closest I’ve come to understanding some men’s pride in their package. It’s like a female version of machismo.”

Bookmark Braidwood’s entry and next time you’re feeling down on yourself, read it.


On another note, today is Braidwood’s birthday, so go there and wish her a happy one!

Flow and Exercise

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Flow: The Psychology of Optimal ExperienceFor the last couple of days, I’ve been talking about a book I found called Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience. How does flow relate to exercise? You’re in luck, it’s one of the best things about exercise.

Physical activity is one of the easiest ways to get into flow. Sports have so many of the requirements of flow. Exercise is a task that we have a chance of completing. It requires concentration and most sports have clear goals. Physical activity also provide immediate feedback (whether you’re falling down, performing the move correctly or concentrating on your form).

What if you’ve never experienced flow while exercising?

Guess what, it can still happen to you. The most important thing is to have clear goals. For example, if you choose to run, your goals could be to complete a certain mileage in a set amount of time. You can keep increasing the mileage to keep the activity challenging.

If you chose inline skating for your physical activity, it’s pretty clear if your goals have been met. Are you still on your feet? Good job! If you’re not, your goal should be to fall down less next time you exercise. The same goes with roller skating, riding a bike, riding a skateboard, skiing or snowboarding. Once you’re able to stay on your feet (or board), then you can work on speed and agility. There are so many goals to achieve with these sports.

Weight training is another activity that is VERY measureable. Every workout in which you are able to raise the weight you’re lifting, even if it’s by only 2.5 pounds, that’s an achievement. I have to admit that I have really enjoyed watching the plates stack up on the bench press bar.

No matter which activity you choose, if you set clear goals for yourself, you’ll be that much more likely to get into flow. Keep upping the difficulty and you will have an exercise that you can enjoy. Instead of going to the gym thinking of drudgery, you will be excited to see if you can beat your previous best.

4/3/2006

Question of the Week: Laura’s Writeup

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm — Filed under:

My most pleasureable experience with flow is when I’m writing. It feels like the words come out of my fingers instead of out of my head. It almost feels like writing is a physical activity like roller skating or riding a bike. Sometimes I feel like I am not even part of the writing process and it all has to do with my body. I usually lose track of time when I’m writing and Mike will come into the room asking if I’m ever going to go to bed. I look at the clock on my screen and hours have gone by.

Writing can be difficult sometimes, so I like to read a lot to get better skills. I also do a lot of writing that never sees the light of day just to practice. Just when I think I’ve got this writing thing down, I learn something new that tells me that I have just begun on this writing journey.

Writing feels so good that I wish I could do it all day long. Some days, I’m actually able to write all day long, but others, I’m barely able to write a sentence. I tend to go in spurts, but when I get going, it feels so good that I don’t want to stop. I’m happiest when I’m writing.

The last time I ate food for just pleasure instead of hunger was about a week or so ago. I had a hard time when I came back from SXSW. I had met so many amazing people there that SLC felt lonely. I felt so isolated here and I longed to talk to all those interesting people I met a week earlier. I had a hard time keeping my eating under control the first week back from SXSW.

Eating for pleasure feels good. I’m not going to lie about that. It DOES make me feel better to binge on high calorie food. If it didn’t, I wouldn’t have trouble with eating. Comparing bingeing to being in flow, however, is something completely different. I would trade a thousand binges in order to get into flow every day. It wouldn’t have to be with writing, either. I could be in flow with crocheting or taking pictures or even with exercise.

Bingeing just doesn’t compare to those times when the words are flowing out of my fingers at such a fast pace that I don’t even realize that I am typing them.

Question of the Week

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Flow: The Psychology of Optimal ExperienceFlow is an emotional state of “optimal experience”, a state of concentration so focused that it amounts to absolute absortion in an activity.

When are the times when you have experienced “flow”?

What were you doing and what did it feel like?

When was the last time you ate food for pleasure instead of hunger?

How did that feel compared to being in “flow”?


The Question of the Week is meant to be an Inner Workout for you. Find some time during the week and allow yourself to write the answers to the questions posted. You can write them on paper, on a word processor or here in the comments section. Whatever works for you as long as you do it.

Keep writing until you find out something about yourself that you didn’t know before. I’ve also heard that it works to keep writing until you cry, but that doesn’t really work for me. Whatever works for you. Just keep writing until it feels right.

4/2/2006

Flow and Healthy Eating: Part 2

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Flow: The Psychology of Optimal ExperienceWhat does flow have to do with healthy eating? What does flow have to do with exercise?

While reading Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience, I realized that the more food I eat, the more time I need to spend exercising to burn off the calories and the LESS time I have to get into flow with writing, crochet or any other activity that I enjoy. I remembered so many saints who became ascetics. They were so concerned with God, nature, art or beauty that they neglected to eat. Some of them became painfully thin because they became so involved with their fields of study.

I’m not advocating “painfully thin,” but I realized with crystal clarity that I would much rather be in flow writing or crocheting than spending two hours a day exercising. If I could just eat less food, I would be able to stay at a healthy weight without having to spend so much time exercising.

I had been “starving” when I picked up the book to read. I was reading in an effort not to overeat that evening, but when I realized that I could have more time in my life for the things that I REALLY wanted if I just ate less, my hunger evaporated. I literally felt it leave me when I made that realization.

But how can flow deal with exercise? Tune in on Tuesday to find out.

4/1/2006

Flow and Healthy Eating: Part 1

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Flow: The Psychology of Optimal ExperienceI’ve been reading an excellent book called Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience. It’s not a diet book. It’s a book about those times in your life when you are really in the groove. It might be when you’re reading a book and you look up and find out that it has been two hours since you last looked at the clock, but it feels like it was only fifteen minutes. Or maybe those times when you are doing something really complicated and you lose yourself completely in the experience. Those times are called flow.

There are two ways to feel good in life: pleasure and flow. Pleasure is usually short-lived and entirely external, such as watching television, having sex or eating. Flow can happen with almost any activity, but requires some skill and difficulty.

I’ve experienced flow when reading, while writing, while taking pictures (and manipulating them on Photoshop), when I crochet, while playing Dance Dance Revolution and even when running. If you sat down right now and made a list, I’m sure you have had several instances of flow with various activities.

I even remember being in flow when I worked at K-Mart. There were busy times, such as during the Christmas season or right before Mother’s Day, when working at K-Mart required all my concentration. Getting those customers out the door happy was something that I was able to excel at and during those times when the lines were long, I actually enjoyed working at K-Mart.

The author of the book says that flow is the main element of true happiness and the more time we can spend in that state of mind, the happier we will be.

What does this have to do with eating healthy? Tune in tomorrow to find out.

3/31/2006

Dying to be Thin by NOVA

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm — Filed under:

I just finished watching the online episode of Dying to be Thin from PBS. You can view it here:

The show is packed with interesting quotes:

“Everyone wants to know the secret to being thin because that… that’s success… that’s love, that’s glory, that’s power – that’s a crock.”

“Sometimes they make it look so glamorous to have an eating disorder.”

“In some ways we all have distorted views of what is beautiful. And the repeated exposure to a particular image teaches you to like that particular image. And we have become so used to seeing extremely thin women that we have learned to think that this is what is beautiful.”

“The whole society is involved in the perfection game; that we can all fix our bodies, make our bodies over. “

“I see the common theme in all of this is that women are using the appetite as a voice and they’re using the appetite to express different things depending on their situation.”

“When I was heavy, I was ignored instead of nurtured. And when I was really thin all of a sudden I was nurtured and taken care of and the teachers loved me and they cared about me. Gaining weight was the worst thing. I was just so ashamed of my body. I felt like I was the biggest failure.”

“The scale becomes your altar. It becomes the site where you pray every morning. You pray that it will be down another pound or another ounce or anything to show that the work that you’re doing – and the work is starving – is working, because other things in your life aren’t working.”

“I believe that very few women escape a battle with their bodies.”

“During a binge people will typically report something changes. At least they feel numb – they’re not thinking about whatever it is that they were worrying about. So there is a reward there. They don’t feel good, but they feel different and they feel some relief.”

“Plus size is no different than being skinny. It’s just another way of being beautiful.”

It was a little glurgy at the end with the “cured” girl writing a letter to the hospital that treated her. but it had a lot of good things to say also.

The most interesting portion of the show for me was the section about bulimia. I don’t have purging problems, but I have dealt with bingeing ever since childhood. I was surprised to learn that it takes about three months of staying away from bingeing before the body recovers and starts acting like a normal digestive system. The signal of fullness isn’t as strong with someone who has regularly binged as with a normal person, and it takes three months of not bingeing to start getting back to normal.

I’ve never gone three months without bingeing my entire life.

That’s probably why weight loss is still a struggle for me, so my new goal is to refrain from bingeing for over three months. That is what I’m striving for to get my body back to normalcy. This was a very helpful documentary for me, even though it focused on anorexia nervosa instead of binge eating.

Via: Online Documentary Illustrates Devastation of Anorexia

Strawberry Basil Bruschetta

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

Food Porn: Strawberry Basil Bruschetta

The original recipe for this treat is relatively low in calories except for one ingredient: marscarpone, which is a creamy cheese that is usually a little sweet.

A Blithe PALATE: Strawberry Basil “Bruschetta”

A simple substitution can create a beautiful and healthy treat that will make you feel like you’re eating decadently for less calories than a Twinkie.

2 slices cinnamon raisin bread
1/4 cup sugar free and fat free yogurt (instead of the marscapone)
1 T honey (because the yogurt is sweetened, use less honey)
4 large strawberries, rinsed and hulled, cut in half
1 T fresh basil leaves, chopped into a fine chiffonade

Follow their directions:

“Toast the slices of bread, then cut diagonally for four toast “points.” (Alternatively, you can use a round cookie cutter and cut out toast rounds; cutting diagonally simply prevents waste).”

“Mix together mascarpone and honey. Pipe or spread honey mascarpone mixture onto bread. Sprinkle with basil chiffonade. Top with strawberries and remaining basil.”

Depending on the brand of cinnamon raisin bread, the calorie count will range between 150-300 calories. If you are careful when you buy your bread, you can have a low-calorie treat that makes you feel like a pampered aristocrat.

Via: Food Porn: Strawberry Basil Bruschetta – Slashfood

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