Nutrition and Calorie Tips, Tuesday Tip, Uncategorized

Tuesday tip: All or nothing?

Tuesday tip: All or nothing? 🤔

The all or nothing mindset is one of the biggest issues which keeps people from making meaningful progress towards their weight loss and fitness goals. I’m sure we’ve all struggled with this; I know I have and I know many of my clients do too. You start introducing some changes to your diet or exercise regime, you’re diligent and follow it to the letter, and maybe start to see some results but then life happens and you miss a few workouts, or overeat or eat something you don’t deem as ‘healthy’ and suddenly

everything seems to go to pot. Your motivation disappears and you feel defeated, frustrated and discouraged. Somehow one meal or day overrides weeks of progress. You’re hard on yourself and start to fall back to old habits and progress stalls. You think ‘f*ck it’ and don’t even bother trying to be ‘good’. Then after a while, you are unhappy with your weight and the whole process starts again.

This type mentality is very black and white, or off and on – like a light switch. You’re either committed to your goals and the switch is on, or you’re not and the switch is firmly off. It doesn’t have to be this way. It’s not a very healthy mindset to have for long-term, sustainable progress. Think about why you want to improve your fitness or lose weight. Ultimately it’s to live a healthier and happier future, so you can enjoy life. That means you’ll have to learn to manage life and all it entails, and incorporate some of that enjoyment into your new habits and weight loss journey. This means you’ll need to accept that sometimes you’ll do things that don’t fit perfectly into your fitness/weight loss goals, and that’s ok! It’s not about perfection, it’s about consistency.

Rather than being either ‘on’ or ‘off’ instead think about more of a dimmer switch. You can dial the intensity of your effort up or down depending on what’s going on in your life. Recognise that sometimes it’s ok to indulge or to not exercise, and dial down your expectations during that time. Practice a little self compassion and understand that progress isn’t linear and that being able to incorporate these times is actually progress itself. If you are making things too restrictive then it won’t be a long-term sustainable plan for you. Focus on consistency not perfection and with a little patience you will reach those goals. So remember if life gets in the way- dim the lights, don’t turn them off completely, so you can still see your goals!

Happy Tuesday 🤗

Xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

Just a Coffee on the way to work …

Just a Coffee on the way to work … ☕️

Perception is everything! Grabbing a coffee on the way to work, or in a break, is something many of us do without giving it a huge amount of thought. Yet if you’d grabbed a doughnut as a ‘naughty’ breakfast you might be feeling guilty, like you’d over done it and blown your ‘diet’.

Well to be honest neither is an ideal breakfast; the coffee is a mocha and is 300 calories, whilst the jam doughnut is 245 cals. Neither is a huge amount of calories for breakfast but neither will keep you full for long. The coffee, however, is more likely to be ‘forgotten’ about when it comes keeping track of your calories. You’ll probably feel like it’s just a coffee so not worth tracking. The doughnut however is often perceived as an awful thing to have eaten and more likely to derail you from your fitness goals. We often forget liquid calories – and if you were having one every day on the way to work that’s 1500 extra calories you might forget about.

It’s all about perception – the coffee is viewed as an acceptable thing to have in the morning on the way to work, whereas the other doughnut is universally recognised as “junk” food and labelled as “naughty”, despite it being fewer calories and you being less likely to have it every day.

Knowledge is power so being aware of the calorie content of things, and also of our own perceptions of the things we consume is always a good thing.

If you want the coffee then have it and enjoy it. If you want to have a doughnut for breakfast then go for it. Just be aware of the calories in both so you’re making an educated choice and remember to be mindful of those liquid calories

🤗

Xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

What happens when we restrict foods…

What happens when we restrict foods… 🍕

We all have cravings for certain foods or drinks at certain times. It may be for chocolate, biscuits, cheese, fries, Pizza – etc, whatever it is it’s usually perceived as a “bad” food. If you’re trying to lose fat/weight and on a diet then you may cut out or avoid foods like this, so if a craving hits you may avoid it at all costs. Why? because it’s “bad”. This can come from fear that it will

make you gain weight or “ruin” your performance.

This mindset that you have to eat “perfectly” all the time or that certain food are off limits can lead to serious issues, including; disordered behaviors around food, constant thoughts about food, uncontrollable cravings, restriction, bingeing, missing out on fun experiences, negatively impacting your social life, feelings of shame, guilt and anxiety, fear of food, under eating.

What tends to happen when we demonise foods and restrict them is that we can’t stop thinking about them, and that obsession leads to uncontrollable cravings. This often man’s that when you eventually do have that food you over-consume them because you feel like you can ‘never’ have them e.g. I can’t have pizza again so I better eat as much as possible right now! This then leads to feelings of guilt and shame, and impacts weight loss progress. A better approach is to accept that all foods can fit into our diets. It just means we need to have some in moderation. This is easier said than done i know, but it starts from reframing how we think about food. So if you have certain foods or drinks you feel you can’t have when trying to lose weight, instead remind yourself that you can always have any food if you really want it. It’s always available to

you and always will be. When you want it, have it as part of a balanced meal. So if you want pizza – have a few slices, have some

salad or veg with it, enjoy it and factor it into your calories.

Enjoy!

🤗

Xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

Protein snack…

Protein snack… 🤔

I’ve talked before about the marketing power of “protein” and how snacks (and other products) are often promoted as “healthy” or better because they contain X amount of protein. The reasoning behind this is the fact that increased protein can help with improved satiety (feelings of fullness) so CAN help to prevent overeating. Also those working out may want to focus on protein to help with muscle building. Unless you’re a bodybuilder or athlete you probably don’t need to go out of your way to take in extra protein as most balanced diets contain far more protein than the average person needs. However you may still wish to focus on higher protein foods and snacks to help keep you feeling full.

So you may well see this protein snickers bar and think it would be a good snack option – it’s something that feels like a treat (a chocolate bar) and it’s high in protein – win win! It’s 192 cals which is actually not bad for a snack at all and contains 10.8g protein – also not bad.

Oh but this is awkward… you could instead have a 150g pot of Skyr stracciatella yoghurt (yoghurt with chocolate pieces in it), a fun size snickers and 50g raspberries, for a similar 188 cals and it will actually provide you with even more protein – 17.3g in fact! And aside from the fact it’s a marginally lower calorie combo, and has more protein, it’s also far greater volume – which also helps to keep you full. It will

take longer to eat, and has a higher amount of fibre too which will aid with the feelings of fullness. You also get the bonus of added micronutrients from the raspberries and yoghurt for overall health. And it will probably help keep you on track as it allows you to have a snickers and extra protein without detailing you from your goals.

Enjoy!

🤗

Xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

A well deserved treat….

A well deserved treat…. 🚶🏼‍♀️☕️

How often do you reward your physical activity with some sort of food or drink? Or how often do you justify eating or drinking something because you’ve worked out or done a long walk or because you’re going to? I hear it all the time from clients – ‘I did end up having fish and chips, but I did 3 classes’ or ‘I did go over my calories at the bbq but I did do 25000 steps’.

Now whilst the physical activity is great and is absolutely something to be proud of – it’s not something to use to justify overeating. For starters you don’t need to justify eating food. Trying to ‘earn’ food isn’t a good thing and it also sets up a really unhealthy relationship with food whereby you almost have to ‘punish’ yourself to be allowed to eat. Also the chances are that in most cases you’ve grossly overestimated the number of calories burnt in that activity. If you’re trying to lose weight and aiming for a calorie deficit and using those ‘exercise caloires’ to justify eating more then you’re probably affecting your progress. Even if your activity tracker tells you you’ve burnt xxx cals – it will be an overestimate. Most of our activity trackers (particularly wrist based ones) are inaccurate. So if it tells you you’re burning 600 cals, you’re probably burning far less. A recent study compared calories from activity trackers for various workouts (cross trainer, spin, treadmill etc) and found they over estimated calories burned by an average of 40% with some overestimating by 90%!

This is a great example – you’ve just gone for a two hour walk, and you get to the coffee shop and reward yourself with a large cappuccino and a flapjack! That’s ok right? Because you’ve walked miles! Obviously the calories burnt vary with age, gender, height, walking speed, fitness etc but an average calorie burn for that distance for a 50yr old, 5ft 5 female walking at average pace is 324 cals. The coffee and flapjack are a minimum of 594 cals!

So does this mean we shouldn’t bother working out? No of course not! Workouts and general activity (energy burned from daily life activities) all help to increase the calories we use, build lean muscle, keep our hearts and lungs healthy etc so it’s vital! What you shouldn’t be doing is eating these back or using them to justify eating more than you need. They’re a bonus; an additional help towards that calorie deficit. Track them, log them, but don’t treat them as a green light to eat what you want.

Equally you don’t need to ‘earn’ food – if you’re aware of the calories in things you can make informed choices about what you eat. It’s your body – you can eat what you want, when you want – you don’t have to exercise to earn it. Just be aware of the impact it may have on your progress if weight loss is a goal, then make the choice! Knowledge is power!