Monday, August 22, 2011

Loose Belly Fat?

9 Ways to flatten your belly in one week

Another reason to hate Mondays? Tight post-weekend waistbands. Unless you spent the past 2 days living like a monk, the cocktails, movie snacks, and dinners out can all add up to one thing: belly bloat.

“If you wake up bloated on Monday morning, your weekend food choices are likely to blame,” explains Keri Gans, RD, author of The Small Change Diet. “In fact, overindulging for two days straight can easily cause a gain of three pounds. Fortunately, this weight gain is usually temporary and easy to get rid of in less than a week.”

Feel flat again by Friday with these nine easy tips:

Reduce belly fat and lose inches by eating delicious foods!

Season Food Differently

You may be attracted to your saltshaker, but water is too. When you take in higher-than-usual amounts of the salty stuff, you’ll temporarily retain more fluid, contributing to that sluggish feeling, a puffy appearance, and extra water weight. Avoid salt, overprocessed foods, and salt-based seasonings. Gans suggests you also ditch the frozen microwaveable meals while you’re de-bloating—they’re packed with sodium. Instead, she recommends a simple turkey sandwich or a salad with chicken for lunch this week. And eat plenty of fruits and vegetables that are packed with water.

Add zest to your dinner recipes with fresh herbs and salt-free seasoning blends such as the Original and Italian Medley Mrs. Dash.

Trim Down Carbs
Stay away from heavy carbs such as bagels and pasta. When you decrease the carbs in your diet, you temporarily train your body to access stored carbohydrates called glycogen and burn them off, while also eliminating excess stored fluids.

Trim back on your daily carbs by having eggs for breakfast, making your sandwich open-faced with only one slice of bread, and packing protein-rich snacks such as turkey slices, low-fat string cheese, seeds, and nuts.

Switch Your Starch
If your belly bulges after a high-carb meal like pasta, complex carbohydrate-rich foods may be the cause of your bloat, says Jackie Wolf, MD, author of A Woman’s Guide to a Healthy Stomach. Most starches, including potatoes, corn, pasta, and wheat, produce gas as they are broken down in the large intestine. Rice is the only starch that doesn’t cause gas, so have a ½-cup serving of brown rice (which has more fiber) if you want carbs with dinners.

Stop Milking It

If you’ve ever felt gassy, crampy, or bloated after dairy, you may be one of 30 to 50 million Americans with lactose intolerance. This occurs in people whose bodies lacks the ability to break down and digest the sugar in milk, resulting in digestive issues like gas, bloating, cramping, and diarrhea. Try lower-lactose foods (such as hard cheese or yogurt) or lactose-free dairy products (such as rice milk and almond milk), or take a lactase enzyme to help break down lactose. Dr. Wolf recommends soy milk as a dairy alternative but warns that some people experience gas and bloating from soybeans as well.

Your Guide to Healthy, Happy Tummy

Make These Fruit Swaps

Wolf recommends you eat fruits that are kinder on your belly. Berries, grapes, and citrus contain a near-equal ratio of the sugars fructose and glucose, making them easier to digest than fruits with more fructose, such as honeydew, apples, and pears.

You can also eat canned fruits in natural juice or small portions of dried fruit, such as raisins and dried plums.

Hold The Hot Sauce
IF you love four-alarm food, lay off the Tabasco, barbecue sauce, and garlic for a few days while de-bloating. Spicy foods stimulate the release of stomach acid, causing irritation. Give dishes a flavor boost with in-season fresh or dried herbs such as dill, basil, mint, sage, tarragon, and rosemary. You can also use curry powder or lemon or lime juice—all perfect with fish or chicken. Also, steer clear of black pepper, nutmeg, cloves, chili powder, onions, mustard, horseradish, and acidic foods such as catsup, tomato sauce, and vinegar.

Use Prevention’s Recipe Finder Tool to Find Tasty Recipes Seasoned with Fresh Herbs

Ditch Diet Foods

Avoid low-calorie or low-carb products containing sugar alcohols, which go by the names xylitol or maltitol and cause gas, bloating, and worst—diarrhea. And don’t reach for a stick of gum when you’re trying to quell that sugar craving. Instead, satisfy your sweet tooth by using a little maple syrup on your morning oatmeal or yogurt snack.

Get On The Wagon

Steer clear of alcohol for the next few days to maximize your body’s belly-flattening capabilities. Alcohol causes dehydration and may slow your body’s ability to eliminate that excess weekend waste, so if you had a little too much to drink this weekend, start chugging the H20.

It’s best to eliminate that occasional glass of wine, beer, or hard alcohol this week while you’re on a skinny jeans crusade—all are high-acid beverages that can irritate your GI tract and cause swelling.

Do Some Activity Every Day
A study from Spain's Autonomous University of Barcelona suggests that mild physical activity clears gas and alleviates bloating. That's because increasing your heart rate and breathing stimulates the natural contractions of the intestinal muscles, helping to prevent constipation and gas buildup by expediting digestion. Take a short walk after meals or pedal lightly on a bike at the gym to help relieve bloat.

More Remedies For Belly Bloat
If you want extra belly-flattening aids, consider one of these products to soothe your belly problems.

•    Get gas relief with an over-the-counter product such as Gas-X.
•    Try peppermint capsules to kill bacteria that cause bloat and aid digestion.
•    Stay regular by increasing fiber with flaxseed or a fiber supplement such as Benefiber.
•    Take a daily probiotic capsule. Dr. Wolf likes Align, Digestive Advantage Intensive Bowel Support, and Pearls IC Intensive Care Probiotics.

A definite belly-flattening “don’t” is weighing yourself every day, says Gans. “Bloating is about how you feel. A lot of women will start weighing themselves daily—it’ll drive them crazy and could be discouraging. Go by how your clothes feel rather than letting the scale rule your week.”

Monday, August 1, 2011

The P.E.W. Path to Health, Wellness and Fitness-by Andrea Hall-Miller, HC#798

The P.E.W. Path to Health, Wellness and Fitness
submitted by Andrea Hall-Miller, RN, MA, HC # 798

I spent the majority of my adulthood being overweight despite trying one fad diet after another, losing and re-gaining the same 20 pounds for decades. Finally, six years ago, weighing 213 pounds at 5’4” I hit bottom. That was the day I tried on a pair of size 18 jeans and they were too small. Refusing to buy a size 20 I left the store, prayed for help and made an appointment with my doctor for advice. I suffered a new low blow when I looked over his shoulder and saw that he had typed the word “obesity” into my electronic chart as my primary problem. I knew I was overweight but had not thought of myself as being obese.   My feelings were hurt and I was angry but something my doctor said to me really made sense.  He said, “You have to count something.  I don’t care if you count carbohydrate grams, calories, fat grams, portions or points. Just pick something to count and stick with it.” He told me to go to the pharmacy and buy a book called The Calorie King.  He said, “It looks like a cheesy little book, but you need to decide which diet you are going to follow, count whatever you choose to count, stick with it—and exercise!”  he added with an encouraging smile. Armed with my new book and more importantly my new attitude I began my journey toward health, wellness and fitness. 
I believe we all know what to do to lose weight. We’ve heard it all of our lives: make up your mind to do it, then eat right and exercise – and keep on doing it.  It’s not easy but it’s simple.  In order to wrap my head around it, I came up with this simple mnemonic for quick and easy recall to keep me on the right path:  P.E.W. which stands for Prayer, Exercise and Weight management.  I call it the PEW Path.
PRAYER:
I started with prayer, admitting to God that I needed Him to give me strength to successfully lose weight and keep it off.  I meditated and visualized myself at my desired size and thanked God for having already reached that goal in my spirit even though it did not yet show physically.
(Im in the lavender sweater and jeans)
I chanted to myself as I power-walked: “Nine would be fine but eight would be great!” This I chanted because I wanted to reduce my size 20 body to a size 8 or 9.  I began speaking my perfect size out loud and visualizing myself at my goal weight and size almost constantly.
EXERCISE:
When Dr. Ian Smith spoke at the BABUF African American Health Summit he said that if he could recommend one simple magic pill to cure illness and dramatically improve health it would be exercise. It’s that good for us. So I started power-walking.  I strapped on my headset with my favorite music going and started walking as fast as I could.  Eventually I started jogging, then running. When my knees and ankles began to complain I switched to dancing and fitness routines.  I fell in love with Zumba and Beachbody workouts like Insanity, Hip Hop Abs and Turbo Jam.  Wanting more definition and even more health benefits I began strength training with weights. To this day I am hooked on exercise.  The natural high produced from the endorphins released while exercising can’t be beat!  I reach for that natural God-given high through exercise nearly every day!
(Me the African American Health Summit)
WEIGHT MANAGEMENT:
Following my doctor’s advice, I began counting something. I chose carbohydrates (carbs) because I was drawn to the fact I could eat as much meat, cheese and eggs I wanted and to eat the bulk of my carbs through eating fruits and vegetables.  Living the low-carb life actually worked out quite successfully for me over several years, and along with prayer, meditation and exercise this new way of eating resulted in a weight loss of 47 pounds!  However, I became bored of the restrictions of the low-carb life and began straying from the diet by eating way too many processed carbs, including sweets, treats, and other things I had no business eating.  Dr. Atkins wrote in his book that if we started to do that we should switch to another diet for a while and stick to it.  He warned his followers to keep on following a “diet” even if it wasn’t’ his. Admiring the success my daughter was experiencing with weightwatchers, I switched to the weightwatchers plan and began counting points.  I quickly lost the 15 pounds I regained after falling off the Atkins diet path and kept losing all the way to my goal weight and size and even a little lower.  Truly, I believe weightwatchers is the healthiest eating plan to follow. Besides that, it’s quite similar to the food plate ‘Our First Lady Michelle Obama’ recommends: Half of our plate should consist of fruit and vegetables. The other half should be one-fourth whole grains and one-fourth protein.

Around the same time I joined weight watchers, I also enrolled in the Health Conductor program which I learned about at the African American Health Summit.  The support and encouragement of the leaders and participants in the program provided a solid foundation of common goals, aspirations and accountability.  To this day, I remain in close contact with a HC team member I met on the journey and we continue to support and encourage each other. 

By following my P.E.W. Path I lost a total of 75 pounds over 5 years.  I wear a size 8 now, but more often than that I wear a size 6 and on rare occasions I even need to wear a 4. I’ve kept the weight off for over a year. I’m not skinny and I don’t want to be.  I am fit and healthy which was my true goal all along.  My blood sugar, blood pressure, cholesterol, body fat percentage and body mass indicators are all in healthy ranges. 

Through the grace and support of God and the Health Conductor program I have reached my health and fitness goals but that doesn’t mean it’s time to rest on those laurels. Persistence is the key.  The same thing it takes to reach our goals is the same thing it takes to maintain them. 
Me Now July 2011
Be Encouraged!