Nutrition and Calorie Tips

Just some Xmas shopping fuel…

‘Just some Xmas shopping fuel…’ 🥤

At this time of year all the coffee shops bring out their range of festive coffees and hot chocolates. You’re out Christmas shopping, or meeting up with friends and family, so you just grab a quick festive drink and a snack to enjoy and get you in the festive spirit and help fuel that shopping. You’ll drink it in minutes, and the snack will disappear without really thinking or noticing. But that’s ok, because it’s just a festive hot choc, and it’s Christmas….

These drinks do vary but are all pretty high calorie. This particular example is a Costa Black Forest Hot chocolate (medium, semi-skimmed milk) and comes in at 390 cals cals, 35g sugar and 20g fat. The little Christmas sausage roll (a couple of bites) is around 419 cals (4.3g sugar and 25g fat).

On the other hand that whole chocolate orange comes in at almost the same calories – 822. Now whilst I’m sure you could eat a chocolate orange in one sitting (I certainly could) most people probably wouldn’t . You’d probably spread it over a few hours or possibly days, rather than eating it all in one go and certainly wouldn’t have any extra snacks with it (unlike the hot choc).

Christmas is definitely a time to relax a bit on calories and certainly a time to focus more on sharing memories and happy times with people you care about. But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be aware of the calories in some of the treats you are having.

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 festive drink – have it and enjoy it. If you want to eat your way through a chocolate orange in one go then go for it. Just be aware of the calories so you’re making an educated choice!

Merry Christmas 🎄

Xx

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Coping with Xmas Stress

Tuesday Tip: Coping with Xmas Stress 🎄

Stress levels can soar at Xmas, with the pressure of expectations, exchange and excess. Here are some tips to help!

#1 Limit spending

Gift buying and entertainment costs can spiral quickly, so make a budget and limit spending by only taking cash on shopping trips. Make 1 financial decision at a time to avoid losing willpower and overspending. Remember your relationships with friends and family are more important than material objects!

#2 Manage expectations

Wanting things to be perfect can lead to more stress. Dinner being late or a less than perfect xmas tree won’t ruin your day – it may even give you fond memories to laugh about in future! Be realistic with children: they don’t need everything on their list! Xmas is about being together, so plan lots of fun family activities to do.

#3 Take time out

Factor in some time out for yourself – a bath, watching a movie, reading or a walk. You will feel better and be less likely to take your stress out on the rest of the family too.

#4 Don’t fall totally off the wagon

Plan, eat well outside events, stay active – check out my article (link below) for more tips. If you do find yourself overindulging just remember 1 day of indulgence won’t make you fat, just get back on track the next day and don’t make it a month!

#5 Go for a walk

Studies show physical activity reduces the brain’s response to stress, even more so with other people (by 26%). So try to fit a walk in to your day even if it means walking to work, or school pick up, or just around the block.

#6 Have fun

Laughter is a fab stress reliever. It releases endorphins, boosts circulation, helps muscles relax and reduces physical symptoms of stress. Make sure you have some fun; whether it’s your favourite movie, jokes with relatives, or a fun activity with friends or family.

At the end of the day remember, its just one day, it doesn’t define you or your life. Your friends and family are there all year round and if things don’t go as planned you can always get together in January or Feb instead 🙂

Happy Tuesday 🤗

xx

More tips here :

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Your goal weight isn’t your goal

Tuesday Tip: Your goal weight isn’t your goal.. 🥅

This is probably not what most of us think or want to hear but it’s probably the most important aspect of long term success when it comes to weight loss. The weight loss industry has conditioned you to think about your weight/ fat loss like it’s a sprint. It’s a race – get to the finish line as fast as you can, any way you can and don’t worry about what happens after. Now the thing with a sprint is that if you want to win you need to go flat out, forget everything else, doesn’t matter if you exhaust yourself etc because you don’t need anything left after the finish – you’ve just got to make it there.

If you’re sprinting in a race and you stumble on the way then you’ll lose, you can’t afford to relax or trip or make a mistake.

So if you’re thinking of weight loss in these terms you’re conditioning yourself to believe you have to be perfect, you can’t stumble, you can’t have a blip, and you’re conditioning yourself to believe it has to be fast, and every mistake is then going to feel catastrophic. You’re also going to feel like reaching your goal weight/dress size etc is the end – doesn’t matter how you get there, just get there right?

But that’s not how it works for long term success. Start to think about your weight loss long term. How long do you want to keep the weight off for? Your answer should be forever right? So getting to your goal weight isn’t the finish line – it’s actually the starting line. You want to live at that weight / size for the rest of your life. So try to reframe your goals and your timescale – it’s not a race and it’s certainly not a sprint.. unless you want to keep sprinting forever.

So start your weight loss/ fat loss journey with that long term goal from the beginning, recognise it’s going to be a marathon not a sprint and you’re going to get much better results!

🤗

Xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

You don’t have to do it all .. all the time

You don’t have to do it all .. all the time 🙏🏻

As we approach what is traditionally a busy and hectic time of year I think this is an important reminder. 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. Your health and your approach to nutrition and fitness don’t need to be all or nothing. It’s about learning when to do what, how to do things, when to accelerate, and when to put on the brakes and not beating yourself up about it.

When life is going to plan maybe you will workout 5 times a week, track all your meals, eat ‘healthy’ and stick to your calories, hit your steps, prioritise 8hrs of sleep etc. But then life happens, you get busy, or ill or work takes over 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.

It doesn’t need to be like this – it’s not black and white. 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.

Recognise that sometimes it’s ok to indulge or to not exercise, and dial down your expectations during busy/stressful times. 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.

🤗

Xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

Shift your focus away from the gym …

Shift your focus away from the gym …👀 🏋🏼‍♂️

Whilst it’s obviously important to be active and to exercise for lots of reasons – not least of which is health and well being, too many people are too focused on the gym and what workout’s they’re doing when it comes to weight loss. So often I hear people frustrated that they’re ‘been to the gym every day’ but haven’t lost any weight.

The fact is you it’s very hard to create a meaningful calorie deficit via exercise and activity alone. You have to work extremely hard to burn more than a few hundred calories in a workout. Studies show we usually over estimate cals burnt and how active we are.

If you workout 5 days a week, for an hour a time (which is a substantial amount of exercise) you may feel you should be seeing some weight or fat loss. But that’s 5 hrs out of an entire week… for the average person working a 5 day week they’ll spend 40hrs working, assuming 8hrs sleep a night that’s 56hrs asleep, leaving another 67 hours or so of time when you’re doing everything else. So when you look at it like that those 5 hrs aren’t nearly as important as the other 107 hours (excluding sleep ).

So where do you think the focus should be? On those other hours! Yes the workouts are important for health and well being but they’re not the priority when it comes to fat loss. What you do for the rest of the day and what you eat is. You can’t out-exercise what you eat and diet is king when it comes to fat loss but general activity does help.

We always perceive a workout as burning more calories than it actually does (many studies have proved this). There’s also a tendency after a tough workout to eat more- either because we reward ourselves for the perceived effort or because we’re hungry. There’s also a tendency to be generally less active too if you’re exhausting yourself in workouts. If you spend your working day sat down, and then your evenings watching TV and your weekends fairly sedentary too then that’s what you need to focus on.

The end result is that by being focused on workouts as the only source of calorie expenditure we can end up moving less generally and eating more.

So shift your focus and as think beyond the gym. The calories you burn in a 1 hr workout will be considerably fewer than what you burn being generally active for the rest of the day. So think about how you spend the rest of your day. Do you find yourself sitting more than perhaps you need to? Do you amble instead of walking with purpose? Do you take the lift instead of the stairs? Think beyond the gym and focus instead on making yourself more active – get up, stand instead of sit, walk faster, walk more!

Also don’t be tempted to eat exercise calories back – just treat them as bonus cals rather than something to eat back.

🤗

Xx