I’m not on a diet, but I made changes.

First, I’m not on a diet. I don’t have any food restrictions, and this time I’m not forcing myself to eat a certain calorie limit (to the point it became unhealthy). This time I wanted to get to a healthy weight by having a healthy relationship ship with food that I could maintain…. AND keep a healthy mindset.

So this time I made small changes to my normal food intake for the better. The goal was to eat more nutritious food, food that is going to keep me full till my next meal, food that is going to fuel my body for workouts and gaining muscle!

Here are some of the substitutions and additions I made:

1. VEGGIES!!!

I mean I’m sure we all know that we should be eatting vegetables, it’s part of the four main food groups. All dieticians and doctors advise to eat them. But that didn’t mean that I did before…yikes.

What I wish I knew was how to make veggies delicious: Saute them in olive oil, boil them and ADD spices!!

I mean chicken on its own is super boring, it’s really how you cook and spice it up that makes it good. The same is true with vegetables. It took me a lot of trial and error to figure out what I liked. But you can get there too. Plus it’s a low calorie addition to a meal. I fill up my huge plates completely now.

2. High Protein Foods

I love meat, like my body craves it as a snack. Often times we will have bologna, hot dogs, or left over chicken in the fridge that I munch on like a snack. The way other people do with sweets haha.

I also knew that if I was going to be VERY active I needed enough protein in my diet to help maintain and repair tissue. What I also read is that protein helps reduce cravings and late night snacking (this is where I really struggled before). I would eat highly processed, fatty foods before bed and a lot of it. Since changing my diet, I don’t do that as often (mainly when I didn’t eat right in the day or my period)! This could also be why I crave meat? Since a high protein food helps satiate me rather than a big bag of chips 🤯

Some high protein foods that I eat on the regular are: bread (specific kinds), Greek yogurt, eggs, fish (salmon), broccoli, and peas!

2. Substitutions

Another thing I did was make substitions of staples in my meals. That doesn’t mean that I replaced one food for another, but that I found more nutritious options to replace my existing.

Bread. I have bread everyday, probably with about half my meals. And the thought of giving up bread made me sad, so I could never sustain the keto diet. So I replaced my brown dempsters bread with stonemill sourdough rye mulitgrain bread. It has slightly less carbs and sugars. This could be the reason I feel full longer with this bread as sugar is linked to increased appetite.

Eggs. I eat eggs every morning, but I wanted to reduce fat and increase protein so I replaced one egg with two-four egg whites. Which is less or equal the amount of calories but more nutrition!

Rice. I used to eat minute rice because I was all about convenience. Now I have switched to basmati golden rice. The amount of calories per portion is alot better and you feel more satiated.

Milk. I’ve come to the conclusion that I’m lactose intolerant like most first nations peoples. I completely cut out cheese, that was hard, because my gut just can’t take it anymore. On occasion I still have fast food with cheese. And my body usually isn’t very happy. But I still want milk for my coffee, so I substituted almond milk. Way less calories for the punch.

The point of this is I made small changes overtime. I don’t do a diet because I know myself, I won’t be able to sustain it and I won’t be happy. I’m making lifestyle changes for the future!

Lastly it’s about balance, previously I was preaching calories in and calories out mythology for losing weight. This method works but it can be a breeding ground for eatting disorders and obsessive behavior.

Now I calculate what my caloric intake should be on this website: https://www.calculator.net/calorie-calculator.html

I instead eat within the range or sometimes over. No big deal! I’m not trying to stay below a specific number, 1200 calories before or even 900 at my worst 🤦‍♀️, and actually slowing my metabolism. I eat anywhere between 1450 calories to 2100 (+). And I make sure that in those calories I’m getting the nutrition I need. I feel like I’m one step close to tracking my macros (haha) I’ll eventually do the research and figure that out 😂

So eatting better and eatting more now…and guess what my body composition has never been better and I’m happier during the process!

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Get off the scale: it’s pure fuckery.

So I’ve been sitting on this blog post for awhile. I have been noticing changes to my body composition, as I was putting on muscle but the scale wasn’t moving. Let’s talk about that!

Since I have been sharing my fitness journey online, mostly instagram stories, people started to mention that they are noticing changes to my body as well. That told me that people may be ready for this post.

This is my second fitness journey, the first was quite awhile ago and my goal was to lose weight. I broke down weight loss to its bare basics that caloric deficit = weight loss… no matter the nutrition or the loss of muscle along the way. I just wanted to see the scale shrink.

I didn’t want to land in that obsessive behavior again this time on my fitness journey, so I did a lot more research on nutrition and started incorporating small healthy changes to my diet [more on this later]. My goal this time was to be toned, and gain muscle mass.

I started this journey midst the pandemic, because like I alot of people I gained a pandemic 15 pounds. The road wasn’t easy, and I fell off a lot of times. I am an emotional eatter and being stuck at home during a tumultuous time just meant that I was a couch potatoe and ate a bunch of junk . So instead of getting upset that I couldn’t get that under control, I decided to make my goal consistent workouts. So the first few months, I just focused on getting my workout in and working on bettering my form and getting stronger. I would celebrate every day I got up and moved even if I ate bad.

My nutrition was maybe like 50/50 for eating healthy and then days of Mcdonalds/pizza/chips etc. But I built myself consistently to become quite active, even working out twice a day. The extra calories actually became effective for building muscle.

Once I started seeing changes in my body and abilities in my workouts, I stepped on the scale. Absolutely no change….nothing. that was very disheartening but I was perplexed and decided to check my measurements. There it was…my body was changing, inches were being lost but the scale wasn’t moving. I was turning my fat to muscle, and muscle weighs more than fat.

Weight comparison: left 162 and right 171

Just take a peak at these two photos. The left is 162 at the beginning of the year pre-pandemic weight gain. The right is 171 after turning fat into muscle. This was absolutely shocking to me, my measurements were close to before my weight gain but I was ten pounds heavier!! If I just focused on the scale, I would have took a deep dive into depression because I wasn’t seeing results.

But my experience with tracking my weight via scale only and tracking without has taught me the scale is pure fuckery… for the following reasons.

1. Muscle Mass – muscle weighs more than fat. And just because the scale isn’t moving, doesn’t mean you are not showing results as per the photo above.

2. Natural fluctuations – your body naturally varies weight during the day and month. This would throw me for a loop when I was obsessively tracking it daily. You weigh more at night. After a salty or bad meal you’ll see weight gain that will be gone in a day or two. And for women, we gain during our time of the month. I gain two pounds and two inches of bloat around my waist. If I didn’t know this, I could see it being very disheartening for someone tracking their weight only by scale.

3. Mental Health- as I have been demonstrating above…the scale can have negative effects on your mental health and it can become an obsession or even throw your whole day off. Don’t step on the scale. Keep moving towards your goals daily. Its much better to track your results once you start to notice change, as a mood booster that your hard work is paying off. If you dont see results on the scale – check some things i mentioned: are your clothes fitting better? Your measurements better? Have you had a bad meal? Are you carrying bloat? This ALL matters and factors into how you should respond to that number.

With all that being said, some of you have come for the result comparison photos. So here they are!!

Weight loss: 178 to 171 [7 pounds]

Arms: from 13 inches to 12

Chest: no change

Waist: 35 inches to 34

Hips: 44.5 inches to 45 [gained some booty muscle]

Thighs: 26 inches to 24

I’m so proud of how far I’ve come..especially since I didn’t take it all on at once. I just focused on being active even if I couldn’t get my eating under control during a stressful time. The workouts helped with my moods as well. Win win!!

Now that I have my workouts down, I have decided to start my “cut.” Meaning that I will be shedding off the fat around the muscle I have built. This means that my next two months will be focusing on my nutrition. Nutritious meals at least 5/7 days of week. And I will be changing up my workouts as well. No more two a days with weights and cardio, instead it will be a single HIT insanity workout.

Check back in a couple months with me. See if I have been able to stick to nutritious meals, which admittedly will be hard for me. See if I am able to stick to the Insanity Workout program, because historically I haven’t been able to. This will be a true test for me…these next few months.

I would really appreciate any support and encouragement!

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Weight Loss Success- Month of August

So as you know…I’ve been trying to take off that extra poundage I’ve found lately.

The month of August has been a success.

I’ve lost 4 pounds.

I know that doesn’t seem like a lot. But for a person with my BMI it is!

I had been unhappy with how little I’ve lost.

Until people started to ask: “have you lost weight?”

I would just brush it off…and say not really.

BUT…

Come on Natasha- 4 pounds is really good!

Be Proud!

A healthy BMI for a female of my height:

18.5-24.9

Even with the extra poundage.. I was at a healthy BMI of 23.9

With four pounds lost I am now at:

23.2

Looking for your BMI:

http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/educational/lose_wt/BMI/bmicalc.htm

They say that healthy weight loss is between 1-2 pounds a week.

I did 1 pound a week.

That’s without exercise- I’ve only been watching what I’ve been eating lately.

You can check out how I eat here!

Check out the difference 4 pounds makes!

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You can really notice the weight loss in my face.

But if I want my toned arms/legs/ and butt back…

I need to get my butt in gear- and exercise!

I need to listen to my own advice and MAKE THE TIME!

So Let’s check in at the end of September and let’s see where I am there!

How is your fitness journey going?!

I would love to hear! 🙂

i pound

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How to eat and lose weight

Disclaimer: by no means am I a dietitian, I also have not consulted with one.

But I can only tell you what worked for me to lose 30 pounds.

Restrictions

Before I started I was a frequent customer to both my local convenient store and fast food joints.

Put an end to that!

That extra weight will shed from your rear-end and transfer to your wallet. win-win!

Do not drink your calories. Do not be fooled by those 0 calorie products. They have hidden calories from all that sugar- that sugar turns to fat in your body.

Water is your new best friend.

These were the only restrictions I put on myself- everything else I ate, I kept.

Don’t Diet – Be Mindful of Calories 

diet

I don’t like vegetables… I love the “meat and potatoes” lifestyle. Meat and grains are my favourite food groups!

So how could I still enjoy eating and lose weight at the same time. I mean, I didn’t want this to be a “fad diet” or something I was going to do for a short time. I wanted this to be a sustainable lifestyle change. And the only way I would be able to sustain it is if I was still enjoying what i was eating. I mean I LOVE TO EAT; I cannot be one of those people who look at food as fuel. Food is comfort, food is a social facilitator , and food is …well DELICIOUS!

So that was when I had my revelation, if I watch my calories I can still have home-made burgers, pasta, and snacks!

So, I researched how many calories with my BMI (age, gender, and weight) I should be eating to lose weight.

and I was successful with 1,200-1,400 calories with workouts.

This means you have to start looking at the nutritional values on the back of the products you buy at the grocery store. If you don’t know how to read them, do some research. The main important values are: Serving size, calories, fat (trans), and sugar.

But as you will soon find out your calories will go much further if you eat better, so i started adding the vegetables i would actually eat to my eating habits such as carrots, peas, corn, lettuce, and cucumber.

You also feel better during a workout when you eat better.

So slowly your tastes begin to change. You actually begin to enjoy different tastes (like me with vegetables i never liked before) and hinder your craving to those meals that make you groggy and slow- and therefore workouts harder.

It’s all about the baby steps of change.

How I Handled Cravings 

cravings

low-calorie snacks!

You know what… they aren’t the best nutritionally, but they are a guilt-free way to satisfy my cravings.

low-calorie is the new advertising ploy, as a result there is basically aisles full of low-calorie snacks. (I can hear the dietitians of the world screaming “Nooooo!”) But my favourites were granola bars and goldfish crackers- I have frequent salt cravings. But for all you sweet-tooths out there, fruit can subdue your urges for sweets with natural sugars!

At the end of the day when I’m watching my recorded television programs, i like to munch.  Two of my favourite new munchies are:

A peanut butter lollipop- that’s a glorified way of saying a spoonful of peanut butter. It is salty-sugary-goodness that has a high protein content that helps you feel full. It is the perfect “fix.”

Another good munch food while watching a movie is popcorn. 3 cups of air-popped popcorn (NOT popcorn in a bag!) with two tablespoons of margarine is 200 calories. Fool Proof!

Tricks and Tips

When I first started watching my caloric intake, I found it quite difficult but let me pass on my tricks to you.

1. Eat every 3-4 hours.

You won’t get hungry and therefore you won’t binge eat on something bad. Also you keep your metabolism working throughout the day. If you don’t eat for long periods of time, your body goes into storing fat mode to anticipate the next lull period between meals. You want your body to be using the fat on your body not storing more.

Also if you don’t eat for a long period of time, your body obviously gets hungry and you have a higher likelihood of binge eating!

2. Don’t Skip Breakfast!

 Not eating is going to put you into fat-storing mode; I mean you haven’t eaten in more than 8 hrs. Get your metabolism moving right in the morning. Even if you don’t eat breakfast usually, add something small to your coffee routine such as an apple, peanut butter toast…just something to wake your metabolism up!

3. When eating high caloric meals …split it!

Whether you are eating out at a restaurant, split the meal. Me and my man would order something together then just split it. I mean restaurant serving sizes are completely out of whack anyway. The average meal (without appetizers or desert) is 1,200 calories. Therefore when you split it, you consume the more reasonable 600 calories.

But high calorie meals are enjoyed at home as well. I know some of my dishes I always make are  roughly 800 calories. So what do i do? I split it, time wise! I eat half now and the other half 3 hrs later. I’m still eating the same amount of calories but because I split it up, I won’t get hungry later.

4. Snack!

Cravings and Hunger can throw you off track. So satisfy them the smart way.

Your eating every 3 -4 hrs that doesn’t mean they all have to be the same size meals all day. You can eat a larger meal, and three hrs later have a little 100-200 calorie snack such as an apple (75 calories- apples have been known to be natural way to help wake yourself up without caffeine), granola bar (100-200 cal), nuts (200 cal- both granola and nuts help make you feel full) …these were some of my favs. Find what works for you!

5. Don’t eat three hours before bed

Three hours before bed, your body has enough time to digest the food you have eaten. If food isn’t digested before hand, it turns to fat. It’s that simple. If you just cannot make it… like I can’t sometimes….I eat a low-calorie,easy to digest snack: Peanut butter. I spoke of this gem already- It helps makes you feel full to make going to bed easy.

6. Eat on Smaller plates

Ok, this one might be my most silliest. But todays plates are huge, and don’t represent what a proper serving size should be. Therefore you fill up your plate, and you essentially over-eat. So instead I use the smaller plates that come with a set and i fill that one to the max.

That way it doesn’t feel like I’m not eating anything compared to what i used to (while gaining weight!)

7. Don’t drink your calories!

Sugary pops or juices just are not worth it. As i said before water is your new best friend. I would SO rather use those calories for a snack then a favoured drink.

8. Alcohol Beverages

Most nutritional information and dietitians will tell you to remove alcohol from your lifestyle. AND…I just said not to drink your calories …But I’m giving information to the average woman like myself, and let’s face it…I’m not giving up my cocktails.

So…

Vodka tonic with lime is the drink with the lowest caloric value.

Your welcome. 😉

9. Lastly, workout!

You will never get the results you want if you don’t workout.

It burns those calories.

It keeps your metabolism working.

When you research how much calories you can eat with your BMI. Whether you workout or not and how often.. will be a factor.

You can eat more if you workout because you burn more calories!

Who doesn’t want to eat more?

 And when you finally hit your goal weight- you can enjoy much more! If you continue to maintain your muscles, that means you burn more calories. Meaning you can eat more compared to someone who doesn’t workout. The good thing is it takes less working out to maintain muscle then to gain it.

Did I lose you?

Look at it this way:

If you workout you lose weight faster. And later to maintain your weight: you can work out less and eat more!

Did you like my post? Show some love: share my post, like it, comment

I want to hear from you!

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Cardio Vs Weights

As women the thought of looking masculine isn’t appealing- but don’t be afraid of lifting weights!

When I started working out; all I thought was I didn’t want big muscles- that’s not sexy.

But guess what?

You know that ideal body type you covet- it’s achieved through lifting weights AND cardio.

The ideal body type i coveted was: lean arms, trim tummy, toned legs, and a nice shaped booty.

I’m guessing your ideal body type sounds pretty damn similar.

Well through much research and constant encouragement from my man/work out partner- I realized that all those things I wanted would never be achieved through cardio alone. To tone…there must be muscle; to have a nice lifted booty…you must lift weights….PERIOD.

But I can talk at you all day, quote research, show you statistics and it doesn’t have the same effect as showing you the proof!

I don’t follow much fitness accounts on instagram but I found @taifitness different from the rest. She was a real transformation story, and completely honest and forthright about her feelings and evolution through her fitness journey.

Say Hello to: @taifitness

www.mytaifitness.com

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This is her at the start and present day of her fitness journey. Jaw dropping results right?!

She has gone through some amazing transformations including changing her workout routines.

She started out mostly with yoga and cardio on the left and then incorporated weights.

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And the results speak for themselves. There is much more lift and shape to her body type on the right photo compared to the left. You can melt away as much fat as you want, but that will never give you the shape you are looking for.

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She is looking absolutely spectacular!

If you are looking for a personal trainer, motivation, and nutrition advice you can contact her at:

tai@mytaifitness.com

Have you been convinced of my point yet?

Well…

There is a reason that Tony Horton from P90X  incorporates weights into his “lean routine” P90x Program:

P90X-Lean-Workout-Routine-628x130

1. shoulders and arm routines: for those lean arms I want

2. Legs and back routine: for those toned legs and that lifted booty i want

3. core synergistics and abs workout: for the trimmed tummy i want

All these routines incorporate weights or use your body as weight- And they are in the LEAN routine..to give you that Lean Body type you want.

Lifting weights to gain mass: is lifting heavy weights for short amount of reps

Lifting weights to gain lean muscle: is lifting lighter weights for more reps. BUT you must go until it is a struggle unless you aren’t working out. If it isn’t a struggle, then up the weight!

Another benefit of lifting weights for the seasoned readers.

It helps our aging population stay healthy and independent for longer.

I hope this convinces even one of my readers to incorporate lift training into your work out routine.

I got to say: STRENGTH IS SEXY!

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