I can't seem to find the joy in cooking. I do, however, find great joy in the work someone puts into my Thai iced tea and some peanut-saucy tofu at a cafe table. I love the experience of eating out...no mess, no dishes, no wasted time, maybe a patio and a beautiful view. However, my lack of interest in the kitchen is suddenly bothering me. So, this is my goal for the month. Cook something.
Like most people who want to be something that they aren't, I have a lot of books about cooking. I am a big fan of Tosca Reno's Eat-Clean Diet books. I don't think my skills are lacking...I can read (in two languages) and measure, so a lack of ability isn't the issue. When my significantly-more-involved-in-the-kitchen counterpart makes these meals, I love them and feel awesome. Why don't I do it for myself? Because peanut butter sandwiches are just so easy.
Why the change? Looking ahead at my schedule, I will have 2 nights each week in which I can be at home. 2 out of 7 doesn't bode well for having peaceful, at home dinners. This means, I need to have good food at work or end up having late night dates with Roman Candle and Silvermine. This shit, while it tastes awesome going in, makes me feel fat, icky and slow. I can't feel fat, icky and slow and teach/rock 6 + fitness classes each week.
So, here I go. 30 days. No kitchen laziness. 1 meal out per week. I'll be in touch with my progress.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Friday, March 16, 2012
The Truth About Yoga
Yoga is not my thing. Its a little too breathy, a little too quiet, and a little too much time to think about all the shit I should be doing instead. However, from a professional standpoint, appreciate, understand and enjoy the activity.
There are many, many, many benefits to being bendy and zen, but skinny just may not be one of them. The old adage of "If its seems to good to be true, it probably is" is (today) my number one rule of thumb in fitness. If sitting, breathing and listening to whales sing seems like the easiest freaking way to exercise...that is because it is. E = R. Effort = Results. While poses may be challenging at times and you may have to chase your brain around in circles and force it to remain calm (is that just me?), a hatha-style yoga class (1 hour) burns less than 200 calories. Good for reducing stress? Yes. Better than sitting on the couch? Double Yes. Good for weight loss? Your time could and should be better spent.
Now that is not to say that all yoga is low on the calorie-burn. Vinyasa or Flow style yoga can kick your ass a bit - up to 600 cals per hour!
Check out this great little article from Fit Bottomed Girls for more on yoga and calorie expenditure!
I'm just going to go ahead and get all the yoga out of me right now.
Now, onto how irresponsible the yoga world can be. In January, the New York Times published an article warning readers of the danger of yoga. How Yoga Can Wreck Your Body includes images of oddball Broadway actors contorting themselves while the article tells the most obnoxious, worst-case scenarios of bizarre-o individuals doing really dumb shit and calling it yoga. From the "pop pop pop of ribs giving way" to irresponsible statements like "the vast majority of people should give up yoga altogether. It’s simply too likely to cause harm. the vast majority should just give up yoga." If people are seriously this dumb, we have some problems. The article elicited little more than an eye roll from me...until I started to hear people's reactions.
"See, I told you exercise was bad!"
"And that is why I don't exercise!"
Are you f*&%ing kidding me?
I actually met with my tax man yesterday, an avid yoga practitioner, and he was like "that article scared me...until I read the article in the Wisconsin State Journal."
And back to my girl, Jeanne. She wrote a great article reviewing the book, The Science of Yoga by William J. Broad (and author of aforementioned NY Times article) and I was fortunate enough to get a few words in (by the way, I love to be interviewed). Jeanne, being a yoga instructor, certified group ex pro AND writer, wrapped all of her common sense up into a great piece.
It is all about common sense, people. But, just in case that common sense does not exist...as a professor once told me...Be a good consumer of anything - fitness, food, people. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. If it seams f-ing crazy, it definitely is. If it is a combination of both - why are you still thinking about it? Your body, your brain, your responsibility. If you believe everything you read, you've got problems (present reading material included).
There are many, many, many benefits to being bendy and zen, but skinny just may not be one of them. The old adage of "If its seems to good to be true, it probably is" is (today) my number one rule of thumb in fitness. If sitting, breathing and listening to whales sing seems like the easiest freaking way to exercise...that is because it is. E = R. Effort = Results. While poses may be challenging at times and you may have to chase your brain around in circles and force it to remain calm (is that just me?), a hatha-style yoga class (1 hour) burns less than 200 calories. Good for reducing stress? Yes. Better than sitting on the couch? Double Yes. Good for weight loss? Your time could and should be better spent.
Now that is not to say that all yoga is low on the calorie-burn. Vinyasa or Flow style yoga can kick your ass a bit - up to 600 cals per hour!
Check out this great little article from Fit Bottomed Girls for more on yoga and calorie expenditure!
I'm just going to go ahead and get all the yoga out of me right now.
Now, onto how irresponsible the yoga world can be. In January, the New York Times published an article warning readers of the danger of yoga. How Yoga Can Wreck Your Body includes images of oddball Broadway actors contorting themselves while the article tells the most obnoxious, worst-case scenarios of bizarre-o individuals doing really dumb shit and calling it yoga. From the "pop pop pop of ribs giving way" to irresponsible statements like "the vast majority of people should give up yoga altogether. It’s simply too likely to cause harm. the vast majority should just give up yoga." If people are seriously this dumb, we have some problems. The article elicited little more than an eye roll from me...until I started to hear people's reactions.
"See, I told you exercise was bad!"
"And that is why I don't exercise!"
Are you f*&%ing kidding me?
I actually met with my tax man yesterday, an avid yoga practitioner, and he was like "that article scared me...until I read the article in the Wisconsin State Journal."
And back to my girl, Jeanne. She wrote a great article reviewing the book, The Science of Yoga by William J. Broad (and author of aforementioned NY Times article) and I was fortunate enough to get a few words in (by the way, I love to be interviewed). Jeanne, being a yoga instructor, certified group ex pro AND writer, wrapped all of her common sense up into a great piece.
It is all about common sense, people. But, just in case that common sense does not exist...as a professor once told me...Be a good consumer of anything - fitness, food, people. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. If it seams f-ing crazy, it definitely is. If it is a combination of both - why are you still thinking about it? Your body, your brain, your responsibility. If you believe everything you read, you've got problems (present reading material included).
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Community Service & Fitness
Making the most out of our workouts generally means super-efficient training, but Good Gym in London is combining community-service work with running. Performing tasks ranging from distributing flyers for hospice to tidying up gardens, these runners are defining what it means to be a community member. Read the whole dang article! It's awesome. How can you implement a program like this in your community?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2012/mar/04/good-gym-exercise-community-work
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2012/mar/04/good-gym-exercise-community-work
Tuesday, Tuesday
Monday, March 5, 2012
I am 32 with a Ripstick in My Trunk
For years (and years and years), my summers have revolved around bike races, triathlons, training, not doing fun stuff because I might get hurt and not doing bad stuff because it might hurt my training...well, this summer I am putting my foot down. Bring on the hurt! Kidding. But seriously, bring on the the best summer ever.
So far, I have 1 - The Color Run, 2- The Warrior Dash and 3 - The Dirty Girl (the last two being on the same weekend). I also am setting the goal of paddling 5 days per week. Aside from going to work and paying bills, my goal is to live this summer like summer camp. Perhaps there will be some friendship bracelets involved. Are you in? What are your goals for summer?
Counting down the days til the snow melts.
So far, I have 1 - The Color Run, 2- The Warrior Dash and 3 - The Dirty Girl (the last two being on the same weekend). I also am setting the goal of paddling 5 days per week. Aside from going to work and paying bills, my goal is to live this summer like summer camp. Perhaps there will be some friendship bracelets involved. Are you in? What are your goals for summer?
Counting down the days til the snow melts.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Marching Orders
"Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the grey twilight that knows not victory or defeat." - Theodore Roosevelt
Commit yourself to something amazing today - a race, a goal, a wall to climb over.
Commit yourself to something amazing today - a race, a goal, a wall to climb over.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)