5/10/2006

2987 Miles Walked

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

Photo Credit: amorphity via FlickrFor a great inspirational story about walking, read tingilinde’s entry about walking here:

The tips about walking are excellent and so many that I don’t want to print them all here. Click over to tingilinde to read them all.

I started out walking when I weighed 235 pounds, and even now, a brisk walk is enough to get my heart pumping and me feeling happy and active. There are so many benefits to walking and running that it’s very difficult to put them into words, but tingilinde has done a good job.

Via: Betsy Devine: Luna bars, movie whiplash, and more inspirations

5/9/2006

Try Something Scary

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

Photo Credit: Rafael@Dresden via FlickrFear is such a personal thing. For one person, learning to surf is scary. For another, being able to walk out to the mailbox and get the mail is. I can’t look into a magic computer screen and see each of your fears. All I can do is urge you to do something scary.

I can think of a ton of things that used to scare me:

  • Running a race.
  • Writing down EVERYTHING that I eat, even when I’m bingeing.
  • Exercising every day.
  • Eating healthy in front of my family and friends.
  • Saying no to desserts or other food that wasn’t in my plan.
  • Being a “picky eater.”
  • Hurting myself by exercising.

I could keep on writing, but these are my fears, not yours. Make a list of your biggest diet and exercise fears.

Today…

Seriously, right now, this very second make a quick list of what you’re scared of. Choose something on that list and do it now. I was scared of being thought of as a “picky eater.” Now, I have no fear of that because I was brave enough to say that I didn’t want to eat unhealthy food. It took me a long time to learn how to be POLITE and ask for what I needed, but I finally got past that fear. Today is your day to learn how to cross one of those fears off your list.

Each time you cross off a fear, you get closer to getting to goal weight and living a healthy lifestyle without effort.

Feel the fear and do it anyway.
Susan Jeffers, Ph.D., Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway, 1988

Interesting Ads for The Fitness Company

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

They don’t promise that you’ll be thinner, just a vague threat that the rest of the world will be…

The Fitness Company

You can see all the ads here:

The Fitness Company is based in Germany. They’re clever advertisements, but I don’t appreciate the sentiment that the rest of the world will suddenly change to the Size Zero Mentality.

5/8/2006

Question of the Week: Body Image

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

Tell me about your body.

What do you love about it?

What would you miss if you lost it?

How strong are you? How fast are you? What can you do that no one else can?


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.

5/7/2006

Reflect/Respect

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

Self-image is a personal thing. Dave Werner wanted to share the stories he received about body image with the world. Here is a video describing his work:

Here are the responses to the body image question:

Real Images Project Responses

You can see Dave’s portfolio here:

Dave Werner’s Portfolio 2006

Via: Big Fat Blog: Reflect/Respect

5/6/2006

Fun Exercise Videos From YouTube

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

I did a simple search on YouTube and found a few exercise videos. It made me happy just to see these short films.

Exercising with Claire, Peck & Katy:

These three kids spend their afternoon exercising with an exercise video. They are giggling more than they are sweating, but it looks like such fun. Peck is behind the camera most of the time while Claire and Katy try to keep up with the video.

Exercise Ball:

Scott shows you how to do a simple crunch using an exercise ball and then gets a little silly.

Morning Exercise:

A truly inspiring video showing a floor exercise done by an amazing gymnast.

(more…)

5/5/2006

Steamer: A Pleasant Way to Drink Milk

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

If you go into any coffee shop and order a steamer with fat-free milk, they will understand what you’re talking about. If it’s not a Starbucks, they’ll roll their eyes and sneer at you, but they’ll understand.

A steamer is warm milk heated to a frothy goodness using the steam valve on the expresso machine with a shot or two of flavored syrup. Since there are many sugar-free syrups to choose from, you can enjoy a wide variety of steamers for the same calories as a glass of milk.

Since many diets recommend two servings of milk a day, this is an easy way to get in your milk in one fail swoop. One 16 ounce steamer counts as two servings of milk. If you make sure to order the sugar-free syrup, then it’s no more calories than the milk.

You don’t need to shell out two bucks at the coffee shop to get a steamer either. Sugar-free flavored syrups are usually available in the coffee aisle at grocery stores. The selection of syrups is smaller than a coffeehouse, but you’ll be able to create a steamer by microwaving your milk with a shot of syrup for only one minute and much less money.

Torani has a list of steamer recipes that sound delicious. These recipes aren’t specializing in the sugar-free flavors, so make sure you get sugar-free syrups in order to avoid extra calories.

Role Models

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

Picture via FilmNight.comWhen I was a kid, my two biggest heroes were Nell Carter and Miss Piggy.

Seriously. This isn’t a joke.

My personality is 20% Nell Carter and 30% Miss Piggy. I have a little bit of Jo from the Facts of Life in there, but anything that isn’t me, is probably Nell Carter or Miss Piggy. Both of them were strong and independent women who KNEW they were divas. They knew it with all capital letters. It didn’t matter that Miss Piggy was a pig. She was a diva and she demanded the spotlight every week on the Muppet Show.

Picture via Hamilton/Turner AutographsIt didn’t matter that Nell Carter weighed over 200 pounds. She was the star of Gimme A Break! It should have been called the Nell Carter show, she was such a diva.

Miss Piggy will live as long as Frank Oz can still talk, but Nell Carter died in 2003. She died of heart failure complicated by diabetes and obesity. When the fat acceptance people say that fat doesn’t kill you, I know they’re wrong because we lost Nell Carter far too soon.

For some reason, my childlike mind made the connection between fat and strength. Since Miss Piggy and Nell Carter were such strong women, I assumed that all fat women are strong. When I started losing weight, I felt like I was losing my strength. I’m just as tough today as I was when I weighed 235, but now I can kick your butt and run away fast as lightning if I need too.

I need new role models…

5/4/2006

Kathy Sierra Reviews The Shangri-La Diet

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

The Shangri-La DietI met Kathy Sierra at the South By Southwest convention in March and I’ve been reading her weblog ever since. She usually writes about making websites better, but she diverged from her basic theme the other day and talked about a diet that she has been trying, The Shangri-La Diet.

Here is her description of the diet and how it worked for her:

“You must MUST be able to find at least one two-hour time window each day where you have nothing but water. Nothing with any flavor of any kind is allowed–NO EXCEPTIONS–during that period, including brushing your teeth. For most people, two hours is no problem at all… but you have to be extremely careful or you risk not just eliminating the positive effect, but potentially ruining your chance of using it correctly in the future.”

“In the middle of that two hour window, you must ingest one of two things… either a tablespoon of sugar dissolved in water, or a tablespoon of extra light olive oil. If either of those are not do-able for you, you’re out of luck.”

“For me, in two weeks, it’s been working too well. I don’t have a weight problem, so I wasn’t interested in losing weight. I wanted to try it because it’s fascinating, seems impossible to believe, and MAINLY for the claim that by reducing cravings, it helps you make better eating choices. My goal on this “diet” was that when it was time to eat, I wanted to find carrots and broccoli as viable an option as Ben and Jerry’s. That hasn’t completely happened (although cravings have virtually disappeared), but within three days, I was actually forgetting to eat.”

Forgetting to eat is one thing that can trigger a binge, so this doesn’t sound like a good diet for me, but I’m sure there are people who this would work for. Click over to Kathy’s site and read her full review. It contains links to other reviews about the diet and more information.

McDonald’s and Yourself! Fitness

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

McDonald's and Yourself! Fitness

McDonald’s has a new promotion right now. If you order one of their premium salads and a drink, you can get a Yourself! Fitness DVD. I can’t find anything about it on the McDonald’s website, but Yourself! Fitness is promoting it on theirs.

I got the Cardio DVD and the Yoga DVD the other day and I just finished doing a workout with the Yoga DVD. The workouts are very similar to the Yourself! Fitness game for the PC, PlayStation 2 and Xbox. Here is how a workout is different with Yourself! Fitness vs. the DVD.

  • Maya is a little more talkative. She explains her movements a little more than she does with the Yourself! Fitness game.

  • You cannot stop the workout and have the move explained in further detail. That’s probably why they include more explanation during the workout.

  • The indicator is the same except it doesn’t tell you how much time is left on the workout like it does on the game. Of course, all the workouts are only 15 minutes long, so knowing how much more time is left is less of an issue. With the game, there is a counter on the left hand side that tell you how much longer you have. I find that really helpful and missed it on the DVD.

  • You can’t stop a movement and ask Maya to make the workout easier or more difficult. Once you choose a difficulty level, you’re stuck with it for the entire workout. In the game, you can stop it at any time and ask for a more difficult workout or easier. It’s a great feature of Yourself! Fitness.

  • You can’t choose your workout environment or music like you can with the game. The Cardio DVD uses the Urban workout environment and the techno music every time. I really like being able to change the venues.

  • The DVD is actually a little bit better as far as stretching after the workout is concerned. It still only stretches the hamstrings and the quads, but it allows for more time stretching after a workout. I really recommend doing the Yoga DVD when your finished with the Cardio DVD so that you get a full stretch after your workout.

The ways in which the game and the DVD are similar:

  • Maya is still very cut and dry. This is a great feature. She just explains the moves and stays quiet the rest of the time. There is none of that silly workout patter.

  • There is still an indicator telling you which move you are going to do next and how much longer you have on the current move. That is really helpful on the Cardio workouts when the movements change rather quickly. I tend to really worry about keeping in step and the indicator really helps for that.

  • You get to choose the intensity of your workouts. You can choose “Ease Me Into It” or “I’m Up For A Challenge.” On the Cardio workout, you can tell Maya whether you have a step-bench or not for different workouts.

I’m so glad to see Yourself! Fitness get this opportunity. I want to see them release a second version of Yourself! Fitness that fixes some of the minor problems with the program and add new features. This might be the promotion that they needed to get that done.

You can find out more information about Yourself! Fitness here:

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