Posts Tagged ‘food journals’

My new favorite online food journal

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

I have used many online food journals on my quest to become to hottest, most fit grandmother ever.

Studies show that people who keep food journals are more successful at weigh loss than those who don’t. I don’t know about you, but I want to be successful.

I love, www.loseit.com. I can track my exercise and food and add friends to keep me honest.

Most recently I’ve been using www.myfitnesspal and believe me, this site rocks! If you have a smart phone, esp an iphone, you can actually scan barcodes and automatically add that food to your journal. I’ve have added items with the Publix name brand and it found and added that food even though Publix is not a national grocery store. It also synchs with your computer.

I have to keep things simple and this site and app are a must have.

Your Health is In Your Own Hands, what are you going to do about it?

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

I’ve heard so many people complain about the shape they are in. Lots of excuses and futile attempts at dieting and exercise.

Most of the ones who complain have been jumping from fad diet to fad diet for years thinking that this time, this diet is going to work. These are the ones who have been overweight most of their lives and yet are holding on to old behaviors and excuses.

It is mind boggling to me the amount of people who have treatable diseases like Diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, heart disease, knee and back pain due to lack of exercise and poor diet.

Yet they ignore the recommendations of their doctors and instead go on medications.

I’ve heard sad stories of obese patients being admitted to hospitals for obesity related diseases that can’t be treated because of extreme weight. Some lifesaving medications or measures will not work on the extreme obese patients.

This can change! We have control over our destiny. We make the choices to continue to live or to continue to die or worse, continue to live a life of quiet desperation.

I’ve had thousand of clients, many who have seen dramatic changes in their lives and many who leave exactly the way they came in.

Here is the difference

Successful client makes gradual changes to their current diet by eliminating the foods that are are unhealthy and have no nutritional value. They exchange soft drinks and sweet tea for water.

Unsuccessful client tries to eliminate everything from their diet, cutting calories too low and skipping meals and then going on extreme binges.

Successful client understands and accepts the fact that healthy weight loss will be anywhere from 1-2 pounds a week and that losing weight and getting in shape is a process that can take weeks to a year depending on the amount of weight they need to lose.

Unsuccessful client is looking for a quick fix hoping to drop 20 pounds in a couple of weeks, hence the jumping from diet to diet, program to program.

Successful client keeps a food journal so that they learn about their eating habits and see where they might need to make changes and more importantly see how many calories they are eating.

Unsuccessful client does not keep a food journal and makes excuses why jotting down the food they eat is too hard. They guess at the calories and are convinced that they are not eating that much.

Successful client eliminates processed food from their diet and instead begins to eat fresh fruit and vegetables and lean sources of protein.

Unsuccessful client continues to eat fast food, processed foods and non nutritious food because they don’t have time to eat healthy.

Successful client make time to exercise at least 5 times a week. Even though they are busy and have kids. They will carve out at least 15-20 minutes out of their day to exercise. They make themselves, their health and fitness a priority.

Unsuccessful client makes excuses and does not make their health and fitness a priority.

Successful client make healthy choices when eating out, eats smaller portions and brings home leftovers or shares large entrees.

Unsuccessful client eats out frequently, makes poor choices, chooses high fat food and alcohol.

Successful client accepts setbacks and yet continues to live a healthier lifestyle, getting back on track immediately.

Unsuccessful client will tell themselves that the program or diet is not working and will move on to the next fad and diet.

Successful client will challenge themselves in their workouts, making goals and striving to improve.

Unsuccessful client will do just enough to get by, skip workouts and make excuses.

Successful client will do effective full body workouts, lift weights that are challenging and push themselves out of their comfort zone.

Unsuccessful client will have a house full of exercise gadgets including ab rockers, ab circles, ab-o-sizer, shake weights, and a treadmill being used as a clothes hanger.

Successful client will be consistent over time knowing that losing weight and getting fit is a lifestyle change. They will choose an eating plan and exercise that can be done for life.

Unsuccessful client will get frustrated and give up after a week or two of not seeing changes. They will “diet” and eat healthy maybe a few times a week and then eat poorly the rest of the week. They convince themselves that they are in fact eating healthy and that this diet, this exercise, this program is not working. Again, they move on to the next quick fix, not realizing that wherever they go, there they are.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. I’ve trained thousands of clients, I’ve seen success and I’ve listened to tons of excuses but more importantly, I’ve been there myself.

Losing weight and getting in shape is a lifestyle change, not a quick fix. If you can do the right things even 80% of the time, you will be well on your way to a fitter, healthier life. You will lose the weight in the safest possible time, you will be stronger, have more energy. You will be a better spouse a better parent a better employee.

Spending time doing the right thing will actually free up more quality time so that you can enjoy the life you’ve been given.

It’s up to you. Take inventory of where you are and where you want to be. Make goals that are doable and write them down. Put them somewhere you can see them through out the day.

Start keeping an exercise and food journal. Write down your excuses and then write the steps you ARE going to take when you start making excuses.

Accept the fact that this is not a quick fix but a lifestyle change.

Laurel

Read This Before Making New Year’s Resolutions

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

Personal transformations can begin any time of the year, but most people like to start the New Year off with fresh clean slate.

The problem with resolutions are that most people make them without a plan of action. I don’t remember who said it, but goals without plans are just dreams. If you are serious about making and sticking to your New Year’s resolutions this year, then you need to have a plan of action.

Since most people choose the New Year to get in shape and lose weight, I will use that as an example of how to make your resolutions work for you.

Get a piece of paper and write down your goal. Just writing, “I want to lose weight” is not enough. Your first step to success is being specific. How much weight do you want to lose? Personally, I hate using the scale as a way to measure success, but that is for another blog.

Give yourself a deadline. Deadlines work! If you have a lot of weight to lose, it might take you 6 months or longer. Losing 1-2 lbs a week is doable with a good plan of action that you are willing to follow. There is no point making huge goals if you are not willing to do the things that are proven to help.

If you are not willing to give up junk food, excessive drinking, your daily Cokes or Mountain Dews then losing 2 pounds a week is never going to happen.

Once you have decided on your goal, you need a proven method of behaviors that you will do each day and each week to reach your goals. Now get a notebook. This will be your survival guide.

Big goals need to be broken down into smaller, measurable, attainable goals or behaviors.

Write down a goal for the week. It may be to exercise 5 times, or maybe just 3 times. It may be to abstain from alcohol or soft drinks. Maybe your weekly goal is to walk a total of 5 miles.

It doesn’t matter, it’s YOUR goals.

Now write down the steps you will take each day to reach your bigger goal. I know what works so I am going to get you started.

Keep a food journal! People that keep a food journal are more successful at losing weight than people who don’t. If you don’t know what and how much you are eating, how are you going to change?

There are plenty of great and free online food journals. www.caloriecount.com, www.fitday.com are just 2 that come to mind.

Write down what exercise you plan to do that day. If it’s not scheduled, it probably will not happen. If your goal is to get 5 miles of walking done for that week, then you probably need a daily goal of walking a mile or two.

Write down a water goal for the day. If you foresee any obstacles in your day, like a party, work meeting etc, write down exactly how you are going to handle it.

Trust me, the more specific daily goals you have WRITTEN down, the better you are going to do.

In the evening, go back to your notebook and your daily goals. Check off those you completed. Ask yourself if your behavior brought you closer to, or further away from reaching your bigger goal. Write down what you could have done differently.

I know this sounds like a lot of work. It will be well worth it as your clothes start to fall off and you start to look and feel better.

We just completed a 6 week Transformation Contest at Boot Camp Fitness and Training. Many people lost 10 or more pounds…in just 6 weeks and during the Holidays!! There were no magic pills or starvation diets. The people that lost a lot of weight were the ones who kept a daily food journal, wrote down their goals and met their weekly challenges. They were the ones who did the things I’ve shared with you.

It’s a proven method and it works!

Your goals do not have to be about weight loss, they can be anything; the goal setting is the same. One of my yearly goals is to get rid of the clutter in my house. The process is the same. It’s not enough just to say, “I want to get rid of the clutter”, I have to break it down into weekly and daily goals in order to reach my bigger goal of getting rid of all my junk.

Your goal can be Spiritual. The process is the same. What is your big goal and what steps can you take on a weekly and daily basis to reach that goal. Get it all on paper. Putting pen to paper and seeing your goal and putting visions to goals and having deadlines is going to be the difference between success and failure.

If I can be of any help, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Good luck and Happy New Year!

Laurel Blackburn

[email protected]

What are your goals?

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

I’ve been trying to figure out how to help everyone be accountable to reaching their goals whether it be fat loss, performance improvement, exercise or personal.

I wanted to develop a web site specifically for our clients to track and share their goals; that is until I found out how much it would cost.

I know from years of doing personal training as well as personal experience that people who write down their goals and track them are around 80% more successful than those who don’t.

I also know that people who keep food journals are also more successful than those who don’t. I know that when I posted my food journals at the gym for all to see, I finally started losing weight. There is nothing quite like peer pressure to keep you on track.

So, I am going to experiment. I think that I might be able to help you guys stay on track and become successful in reaching your goals through our blog.

Here you can post your goals, your food journals, your exercise, ask questions and most of all support each other.

We will use the comments section like we would a forum. You can copy and paste your food journals right into the comment section. Post your goals both long term and short term and then keep coming back to post the daily steps you are taking to reach those goals.

If your goals are performance based or personal; share what you are doing on a daily basis to reach your goals. An example might be, running your first 5K. You might post any runs you did for the day, or personal records on time and distance.

Share your successes as well as your failures. I promise, you won’t be alone.

I think by doing this, we are all going to make changes in our lives and probably see results that we have failed to achieve in the past.

I am going to start. You will find my goals in the comment section below.

I challenge you all to join me and I promise that when you are accountable and have concrete goals that are put to paper (computer) you will achieve success.

Our Biggest Losers

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Eleven weeks ago 41 of our boot campers stepped on the scale for our Biggest Loser weigh in. We did a 10 weeks contest, ending right before spring break. We divided into 3 teams with Mike, Bean and I being team leaders. We had prizes for the winning team as well as the overall male and female winners. Everyone paid $5.00 which was split between the winning team.

We encouraged food journals and had special workouts on the weekends to help with everyone’s success. I can’t speak for the other teams, but I only had a few that turned in food journals. Not surprising, these were the people that lost the most weight.

During our weigh in last week, I asked each and everyone who had lost a significant amount of weight in the 10 weeks, what their “secret” was. Well, here it is.

They wrote down what they ate and added more exercise to their week!

Even people that eat “healthy” found that they were overeating once they started writing down what they ate. People who were undereating also found that writing down their food intake helped get them on track.

Those who come to boot camp two or three times a week found that adding another day or two of some type of cardio was just what they needed to get the scale moving again.

Normally I would tell you to stay off of the scale, but since we were doing a contest with a lot of people, we needed a simple measuring tool.

I too found that when I was writing down what I ate, which is pretty simple, I started dropping fat. I started slacking off during the last two weeks of the contest, only keeping a food journal once every few days, and my weight loss stopped.

Once you can get into the habit of writing down your food intake, seeing what normal servings are, finding out which foods should be eaten in moderation and which foods are not worth eating because of the high amount of calories, then you may find you can stop keeping a journal.

There are several great food journals out there. I like www.calorieking.com. Some of my clients prefer www.sparkpeople.com. There is also www.fitday.com.

So, our little contest proved again what I have preached all along. In order to lose weight (fat) you need to eat right and exercise. You won’t know if you are eating right until you write it down and keep track of what it is you are eating.

Exercise should be done at least 5 days a week.

Before you fork out money on another diet program or weight loss supplements, try my free and simple solution to fat loss; a food journal and hard exercise at least 5 days a week.

Congratulations to MY team for winning our Biggest Loser contest. Congratulations to John T and Lisa C for having the most weight loss. Congratulations to everyone who stuck out the 10 weeks and saw some great results.

We will do this again.