Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Diet Mistakes

Tuesday Tip: Diet Mistakes 🫣

Whatever dietary approach you choose MUST be sustained in order for you to get and maintain the results. If the approach is unsustainable then so are the results.

Here are some common mistakes:

# Choosing a diet that doesn’t align to your lifestyle.

No diet is inherently ‘better’ than any other as long as it creates a calorie deficit and fits in with your lifestyle. Choose a diet that is sustainable for you.

# Expecting fast results

You didn’t put the weight on in a few weeks, you won’t lose it on a few weeks. It takes time. Stick with it and you will see results.

Consistency is key.

# Food restriction

Excluding certain foods or food groups instead of incorporating them into your calorie targets is a recipe for unsustainability. Instead focus on healthy moderation to reduce the risk of cravings and binge-eating episodes and help you maintain long term.

# Adding back calories burned from exercise

Never ever eat back the calories burned from exercise. Aside from the fact that our bodies adapt rapidly to activity levels devices that measure calorie expenditure have been shown to overestimate calories burned by 28-93%! That means if you burned 500 calories, your device might tell you that you burned anywhere between 630-1000. That would take you out of your calorie deficit if you eat that back. Separate the exercise – view it as something for mental and physical well being, not weight loss.

# Setting unrealistic goals

Make your goals realistic and achievable – e.g. losing a stone in 3 weeks isn’t realistic.

Remember, you are working to build a new lifestyle and not a quick fix!

Try to avoid these mistakes and focus on making your dietary approach a lifestyle that you can sustain for the long term if you truly want life changing results.

Happy Tuesday 🤗xx

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Mindless Snacking

Tuesday Tip: Mindless Snacking 🍪

Many of us suffer from mindless snacking which can slow your weight loss progress and stop you reaching your goals. Here are some tips to help.

# Control your environment

Don’t buy the snack in the first place. Easier said than done sometimes but if they aren’t in your cupboard you’re far less likely to eat them.

# Be intentional with meals

Take time to sit down and enjoy yours meals. Try to stay off your phone, don’t watch TV or try to do other things while yon eat. Focus on the food and flavours to enjoy it more.

# Make it harder to snack

If you are going to have snacks in the house, make it harder to eat them. So for example keep things like fruit out and easily accessible but keep the biscuits and chips in a cupboard in a different room/ at the back of the cupboard/inside a tin etc.

# Know your trigger foods

Everyone has food that triggers them to overeat. Be aware of them and try to avoid them, keep them out of the house or pre-portion them.

# Find other stress relievers

This could be working out, going for walks, doing yoga, mediation, journaling, time with family or friends, other hobbies etc.

# Stay busy

This keeps your mind off food and snacks. Use the extra time to do something productive if you can – be it towards yours fitness, a hobby or even some productive self care like a bath etc.

# Stay hydrated

This can help reduce hunger and cravings throughout the day.

# Try to get more sleep

This will help you feel like you have more energy and therefore be less likely to use food as a pick me up, and it will reduce the production of the hormones that cause hunger too.

Happy Tuesday 🤗xx

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Two weeks off won’t matter

Tuesday Tip: Two weeks off won’t matter 👌🏼

Will a few weeks lost to holiday, sickness or injury spoil all your hard-earned progress?

Only if you let it!

A couple weeks off is only a small fraction of your life and your fitness journey. It’s highly unlikely you’ll gain much fat or lose muscle over a few weeks.

Try to stop the “all-or-nothing” mentality and shift your perspective – you didn’t achieve all your progress in a week or two, and you certainly won’t lose it that quickly.

With the right mindset and approach, a brief break is simply a blip that need not hamper your progress and goals.

So if you’re injured, modify workouts to avoid aggravating your injury. For example, if you can’t train your upper body, focus on your lower body instead. If your injury is more severe, consider walks and lighter movement to stay active. And when you eventually get back to training, ease yourself in to prevent re-injury. Obviously also consult a physio for specific advice.

If you’re sick then just try to adhere to your current lifestyle and diet as much as possible. So keep tracking your food to maintain the habit. Eat a balanced diet if your appetite allows. Stay hydrated and prioritise recovery and sleep.

Reduce training intensity or stop altogether, depending on the severity of the illness.

If you’re on holiday then again try to do as much as you can – keep tracking to keep the habit going (if you don’t like going ‘over’ your cals then up your goal for the time you’re away), stay as active as you can – walk, swim etc and just try not to eat and drink for the sake of it. Focus on the other experiences of the holiday – not just what goes in your mouth.

Even if you stray from your diet, it’s unlikely that you’ll gain much fat over two weeks unless you really go off the rails. And research shows that 2 weeks off training results in little-to-no muscle loss. If you take an extended period off due to surgery etc then you may lose a little muscle but it still isn’t the end of the world. “Muscle memory” is a real phenomenon that enables you to rebuild lost muscle mass more quickly the second time around.

Happy Tuesday 🤗xx

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Menopause Marketing

Tuesday Tip: Menopause Marketing 🤔

Joe wicks recently caused a bit of a stir (again) for posting two ‘menopause’

Workouts. Before I start let me just say that whatever your views on Joe wicks there’s no denying a lot of his content has got adults and children exercising and losing weight and that’s great! But… this latest workout highlights a really common issue at the moment. ‘Menopause’/ ‘peri menopause’

is the new buzz word in health and fitness and every Tom, Dick and Harry (*Joe) is jumping on the bandwagon and marketing their products for menopausal Women.

No one is denying that there are a variety of menopausal symptoms that can make losing weight or exercising harder. No one is denying that these symptoms have historically been overlooked. But… the truth is (and multiple studies confirm) that there are no fundamental differences when it comes to what you need to lose weight in peri menopause/menopause. You need a calorie deficit and you need to be strength training alongside other cardiovascular exercise. Just as you do throughout your entire life – as a woman or man.

The symptoms that make it harder are a completely separate issue and need addressing – by medical experts and endocrinologists- not social media fitness professionals. There’s too much to include in one caption but NONE of the processes of menopause actually affect the basic biological principles and laws of thermodynamics. Yes you store fat in different locations, yes you’ll lose some muscle mass, yes your protein requirement goes up (a little) , yes tiredness and brain fog will make it harder to stick to a calorie deficit and exercise but it doesn’t change the basics.

You do not need a specific workout and certainly not a specifically low impact’ one. Midlife women aren’t ill or in need of low impact workouts anymore then any other person. They definitely don’t need ‘special’ workouts or diets. I work with countless menopausal women, many of whom have never been stronger or fitter in their lives. And the reality is I would give the same workout to a woman in her 20s or 30s as I would do a woman in her 40s or 50s! The exercises are all the same. Of course we may have to modify workouts but this is the case for ALL women of any age. It’s not menopause specific. Yes we may want to prioritise strength workouts but again that applies to all women (and men!).

I’m so sick of people trying to make money out of menopause just because it’s trendy. So instead of spending your money on menopause diets/workouts/plans/ supplements if you really want to spend money on it then use that money to see a private consultant endocrinologist/medical expert in menopause who is actually qualified to help you. Not someone who isn’t qualified making money out of it.

Happy Tuesday 🤗 xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

Stop eliminating and start modifying …

Stop eliminating and start modifying … 🍝

When we are trying to lose weight it’s common to feel like we need to cut out certain foods / meals. You may choose to cut some foods of course but you’re eliminating foods you actually really enjoy then your chances of long term success are far lower. So rather than thinking about never having a certain dish again, instead think of ways you can modify it to fit your goals.

In this example the spaghetti bolognese on the left is made using 20% fat beef mince and comes in at around 661 calories. The one on the right is made using the identical recipe but using 3% mince. The result is a significant reduction in calorie content –

487 cals.

The reality is the taste and satisfaction of that meal will be broadly similar for both dishes. You’d probably barely notice the difference. If you’d chosen to use a meat-substitute mince then you would have saved a further 30 /40 calories. You could of course leave the meat/meat substitute out all together and just use vegetables – that would reduce it even further by another 100 or so calories (using lentils instead would come out somewhere in between). However you’d probably find it wasn’t as satiating due to the lower protein and fat content and it certainly wouldn’t be as indistinguishable from the 20% beef mince option.

Of course there’s also the option to swap the spaghetti itself out for a lower calorie pasta or even courgetti etc if you like that, reducing the calories even further.

So it’s up to you – there are multiple ways to modify meals but still tick the box on taste and satisfaction. Start thinking about how you can modify things you enjoy and still accommodate them in your diet to achieve your goals.

🤗

Xx