4/27/2006

Running Photos From Flickr

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

As of 04-10-2006, there are 20,590 photos tagged with the word running. A lot of them are of race participants and children, but some of them are surpisingly inspiring.

Here is a slideshow of my favorites:

4/26/2006

Animals Love Exercise… Why Don’t We?

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

I’ve been thinking a lot about keeping my mind fresh and active and I’ve found that exercise is one of those things that keep me “bubbly.” It looks like Kathy Sierra has noticed the same:

Her weblog concentrates on teaching me how to write a weblog that people will love. What it has to do with exercise, I don’t know, but this article was very helpful to me.

Want to be a little smarter? Have a better memory? Stay mentally sharp? Improve higher brain function? Run. Those who exercise have a mental advantage over those who don’t.

Every day when I take my dog for a walk or play with the horses, I watch them tear around and think, “Why do I have to force myself to do what they do because they love it?”

Sometimes we think too hard about exercise. Next time you go outside for a run, try running like a crazy maniac. It’s what my dog does everytime I remove his leash at the dog park. There is something about just letting loose and running full speed that is so fun and invigorating. Somehow, it gets lost when we grow up.

Clandestine Clementines

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

Clandestine Clementines by Laura Moncur 04-15-06I piled the green apples and clementines into the grocery basket. We were going to Disneyland and I planned on stocking the cooler with lots of healthy food. The carrots bagged into individual servings along with the apples and clementines, they were going to accompany me into the park, offering me healthy snacks when I felt hungry between meals. I had planned it all.

Mike and I were bringing up the suitcases up from the basement.

“By the way, how are you planning on taking those huge bags of produce into California?”

I suddenly had a vision of the border of California. The border patrol doesn’t care if I’m an immigrant or not, but they don’t want me to bring any fruit or veggies into the state. I’ve surrendered bananas in the past, their brown and yellow skins passed from my car to the kiosk sheepishly.

“Crap…” I responded to Mike.

“Yeah, I wish I had thought of that at the grocery store.”

We crossed the border with an empty cooler, but my lack of produce wasn’t an excuse to eat unhealthy. I just stopped at a grocery store in California. The fruit tastes better there anyway.

I’ll eat my clementines when I get home…

4/25/2006

Biggest Webcomic Loser for Unicef

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

I read a comic called Mousewax. The artist, Brandon Lewis, is participating in the Biggest Webcomic Loser. It’s a contest in which webcomic artists are taking pledges on their weight loss for Unicef.

I just finished reading all the comics on the site and some of them are weight related and pretty funny. Here are some of my favorites:

I enjoyed skimming all of these comics and laughing to myself. Sometimes we need just a little levity to make it through the day.

Skinny People Sweat Too

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

Kell, one of the authors at A Blog For Fat Athletes (wish they’d get a catchier name), wrote about her discovery about heavy breathing and sweating during exercise.

She used to think that only fat people sweat or get out of breath and television was partly to blame:

“Once upon a time in the late 1960s, when I was 8, 9 years old, I truly believed that thin people did not sweat or get out of breath. After all, whenever you saw a fat person doing anything athletic on television, they always showed us huffing and puffing.”

The truth is, if you’re exercising at the correct intensity level, you will sweat and breathe heavily, whether you’re skinny or fat. Conversely, if you are “working out” and not even breaking a sweat, you’re not working out hard enough, whether you’re skinny or fat.

The day I realized that skinny people sweat too was the day I was able to feel good about how hard I was working.

4/24/2006

Question of the Week

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

We are coming up on the time when people are planning their summer vacation trips. There have been so many times when I have used vacation as an excuse to overeat.

How do you eat healthy when you’re on vacation?

What tips and tricks do you have to keep on track when you’re out of town?

This week, I’m not writing my own response to this question. I really need your tips and inspiration right now because I’m out of town trying to stay on program.


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.

4/23/2006

Celebrating Over 100 Years of Advertising Fraud

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

Dr. Rose\'s Obesity Powder from 1902 Sears Roebuck CatalogA new weblog is posting items from a Sears Roebuck Catalog from 1902. Even back then, they were ripping people off with obesity cures.

The advertisement proclaims all the ills of being fat from sluggish circulation and labored action of the heart. Then it proclaims that Dr. Rose’s Obesity Powder will “reduce corpulency in a safe and agreeable manner.”

It didn’t work then and they don’t work now. The modern day shucksters say the same things and are selling you the same junk. Don’t buy it.

Via: Boing Boing: Funny highlights of the 1902 Sears and Roebuck catalog

4/22/2006

A Whole Website About Treadputers!

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

Thanks to a watchful reader, Shawn Lea at Everything and Nothing. She left a comment on my entry about Brad Felt’s Treadputer which pointed me to this website about turning your treadmill into a treadputer.

I’m particularly interested in this modification:

Rob Couture - Treadmill Desk

It’s Rob Couture’s Treadputer. It looks so tasteful and simple that I wonder how I would modify my treadmill this way. It looks a little low to really work for typing, though. What keeps the laptop from sliding off?

I think I haven’t modified my treadmill is because I’m scared of damaging my laptop, treadmill or both. I just need to move past the fear and try it for myself.

4/21/2006

Deprivation

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

Colleen WainwrightOne of the wonderful people that I passed in the halls at SXSW, Colleen Wainwright, writes about feeling deprived on her weblog.

She is painfully skinny at times because Crohn’s Disease has attacked her body, but she intimately knows what it’s like to feel deprived.

“So now I find myself feeling deprived in a way I never have before, having to figure out how to fill up the hole with something other than what I know would fill it. I realize that somewhere down deep, I always felt deprived; I just got to hide it longer. The fat girl, she knows all about this, I think. We’re more alike than I knew, although having walked through the fire, she is probably kinder and less judgmental than I.”

She avoids breads, starches and sugars in order to starve the bacteria in her intestinal track and keep them from causing her harm, but this results in the familiar feeling of deprivation that we all feel when we are on a “diet.”

When we feed ourselves food that will hurt us, what are we feeding?

Pressured to Eat?

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

Cheryl Koch, R.D. has some great tips on how to eat healthy when you are in social situations where you might feel pressured to eat.

Here is a quick list of her recommendations:

  • Plan ahead
  • Drink plenty of water at any social occasion featuring food.
  • Add some bulk.
  • Take a good look before you make a decision.
  • Take it slow

The most important of these items is to plan ahead. Asking what will be served so you can save your calories for it or eat at home instead is the key to success. Go over the event in your head before you arrive and visualize yourself eating healthy.

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