Showing posts with label eating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eating. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

Livin' the Vegan Life!



Today is my tenth day as a vegan. The transition to a vegan lifestyle has been extremely educational and I can tell my body is quickly adapting to the change in diet. I will write more about this transition later, once I can better grasp the dynamics of the changes that are happening. Until then, I have posted the video below about transitioning to healthy eating habits. The key word, I think, is "transition." Make the change. Start today. You don't have to go vegan, but do something good for your body. Eat well.



Also, if you are interested in veganism, "Becoming Vegan," by Brenda Davis, R.D., and Vesanto Melina, M.S. and R.D., has been a vital part of my education on veganism. It is a wonderful book. Check it out.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Food Journal - A week of eating


I recorded everything I put in my stomach for a week. Here are the results:

Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2010

Lunch

Zola Acai with Pineapple Juice (1.5 servings) - 150 cals total, 27 g carbs, 1 g protein, 1.5 g fat
2 blocks of Almond Good Health Cheese Alternative (16 servings) - 800 cals total, 3 g carbs, 7 g protein, 1 g fat
Guiltless Gourmet All Natural Chili Lime Tortilla Chips (7 servings) - 840 cals total, 22 g carbs, 2 g protein, 3 g fat

Dinner

2 cups of cooked lentils seasoned with Herbamare Herb Seasoning Salt, served over a bed of salad greens (2 servings) - 460 calories total, 40 g carbs, 18 g protein, 1 g fat


Snack

Pretzels -
2 cups of air popped popcorn


Daily Totals (Net Grams)

2250 calories total, 323 g carbs, 164 g protein, 41.25 g fat


Workout

Jogged 1 mile (warm-up)
Hill repeats (30x total) alternating walk/run, walk up 2x and run up 1x, then run up 2x and walk up 1x
Walked 1 mile (cool down)


Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010


Breakfast

Dried apples (6 servings) - 90 cals total, 0 g fat, 4 g carbs, 0 g protein
Dried mangos (2 servings) - 240 cals total ???
1 tablespoon of 100% raw honey - 60 cals total, 0 g fat, 17 g carbs, 0 g protein


Lunch


2 5-ounce bowls of Barbecue Sausage and Beans Soup (2 servings) - 340 cals total, 29 g carbs, 5 g protein, 4 g fat (2 g saturated fat)
Salad greens with 1/4 cup of black olives, 1/4 cup green olives, 1/4 cup green peas, red onions, 1/2 cup of diced turkey - estimate of 500 calories ???
1 plain baked potato (1 serving) - 200 cals total, 46 g carbs, 5 g protein


Snack

Dried apples (6 servings) - 90 cals total, 0 g fat, 4 g carbs, 0 g protein
Dried mangos (2 servings) - 240 cals total ???


Midnight Snack


2 Wasa light rye crispbreads - 60 cals total, 0 g fat, 14 g carbs, 2 g protein
1 banana - 120 cals total, 0 g fat, 31 g carbs, 1 g protein
1 Bartlett pear - 100 cals total, 1 g fat, 25 g carbs, 1 g protein


Daily Totals (Net Grams)

2040 cals total, 5 g fat (not including the olives in the lunch salad and the turkey) (2 g saturated fat), 239 g carbs (not including the salad or the dried mangos), 19 g protein (not including the salad or mangos)


Workout

10 miles, with 33 hill repeats up and down (set of 3) after every mile.


Thursday, Sept. 9, 2010


Lunch

1 Bartlett pear - 100 cals total, 1 g fat, 25 g carbs, 1 g protein
7 Wasa light rye crispbreads (3.5 servings) - 210 cals total, 0 g fat, 14 g carbs, 2 g protein
1 whole avocado - 227 cals, 21 g fat (3 g saturated fat), 12 g carbs, 3 g protein
1 cub sweet butter leaves -
2 tablespoons green roasted salsa


Snack


1 whole avocado - 227 cals, 21 g fat (3 g saturated fat), 12 g carbs, 3 g protein
3 Wasa light rye crispbreads - 90 cals total, 0 g fat, 14 g carbs, 2 g protein
1 banana - 120 cals total, 0 g fat, 31 g carbs, 1 g protein


Dinner

Green salad with diced tomatos and cucumbers - 150 cals total, ???
2 wheat dinner rolls - 400 cals total, ???
1 glass of red wine (Shiraz) - 100 cals total, ???


Midnight Snack

4 avocados seasoned with lite salt and red chili flakes - 908 cals total, 21 g fat (3 g saturated fat), 12 g carbs, 3 g protein
12 Wasa light rye crispbreads - 360 cals total, 0 g fat, 14 g carbs, 2 g protein
2 tablespoons green roasted salsa


Workout


Run/walked 5 miles at noon
Run walked 5 miles at night


Friday, Sept. 10, 2010


Bad Day!

Breakfast

Banana
2 Pears


Lunch

(Clarissa's B-Day Party)
Spaghetti w/ 3 meatballs from Orlando's Restaurant
Chips and Queso
4 glasses of blush wine


Snack

1 bag of Turkey Jerky
4 string cheese sticks
24 oz. 100% Apple Cider


Workout

Run/walk 5 miles


Saturday, Sept. 11, 2010


Breakfast

8 oz. 100% Apple Cider


Workout Food

Vanilla Bean GU Gel


Dinner

2 avocado roll sushi
Edamame appetizer
2 bowls of steamed white rice (3 cups, maybe 4)


Snack

4 turkey slices
1 avocado
16 oz. orange juice


Workout

Ran all day at Buffalo Springs Lake


Sunday, Sept. 12, 2010

Lunch

3 slices of turkey


Dinner

Vegetable Biryani (vegetables and rice, not healthy because cooked with butter)
2 falt wheat breads (not healthy because greasy)
1/4 slice of naan
Cilantro chutney
1/2 of a bowl of Tomato soup
Iced tea


Midnight Snack

Bowl of salad greens
4 slices of turkey
1 avocado
Leftover rice
1/2 flat wheatbread


Workout

Ran 10 miles
Ran 10 miles
20 miles total for the day


Monday, Sept. 13, 2010

Breakfast

2 pears
1 and 1/2 bananas

Lunch

4 slices of turkey
3 cups of cooked lentils
Powerade Zero


Dinner

4 slices of turkey
8 oz of apple juice
5 slices of reduced fat swiss cheese
Dried mangoes
A handful of pecan halves


Snack

2 sandwiches (4 100% whole wheat bread slices, 3 slices of turkey, a handful of salad greens, 3 slices of reduced fat swiss cheese, 1 tablespoon green roasted salsa)


Workout

Ran 6 miles


Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Lunch

Salad (salad greens, red bell peppers, handful of almonds, handful of sunflower seeds, black olives, liquid aminos)
1 plain baked potato
1/2 of an avocado
Dried mangoes


Snack

Handful of pecans
1 slice of turkey
1 slice of reduced fat swiss cheese
8 oz 100% apple cider


Dinner

2 sandwiches (4 slices of wheat bread, 4 slices of reduced fat swiss cheese, 5 slices of turkey)
8 oz 100% apple cider


Snack

1 sandwich (2 slices of wheat bread, 1 slice of turkey, 1 slice of reduced fat swiss cheese)
8 oz 100% apple cider
Handful of pecans


Workout

Ran 20 miles before school


Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Breakfast

1 1/2 bananas
Dried mangoes


Lunch

2 sandwiches (4 slices of bread, 4 slices of reduced fat swiss cheese, 2 slices of turkey)
Handful of almonds
8 oz of Odwalla Protein Monster Chocolate Milk
16 oz 100% apple cider


Dinner

Baked potato (plain)


Workout

Run/walk 3 miles

Sunday, August 29, 2010

A typical meal


I've been asked what a typical meal looks like for me. So on no particularly special occasion, I took a picture of my lunch plate. Here it is: It consists of a nice green salad with red bell peppers, sunflower seeds, olives, and shredded carrots. I dash on lots of Braggs Liquid Aminos. I usually eat one avocado a day. They are delicious. And, I'm a big fan of baked potatoes. To drink, I have water and an Odwalla Superfood. I would say my diet is 60% carbs, 20% protein, and 20% fat. I eat healthy probably 90% of the time and I eat crap 10% of the time. No refined sugars. I sometimes describe myself as a flexitarian. Maybe you've heard the term before. These are people who see the benefits of a vegetarian lifestyle but are also not opposed to eating the occasional piece of meat. So there you have it. It works for me.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Food for Thought: Notes on My Relationship With Food


Losing weight is hard. Not everyone understands this. I've heard some people explain it to me like this: "you just burn up what you put in," referring to calorie intake and expenditure through exercise. "It's pure mathematics." The problem with this logic is that it completely ignores the complicated physical, chemical, and psychological factors that make us overweight to begin with. If ever someone tells you this, you can be sure they haven't had to lose a lot of weight before. People are too complex for such irreducible formulas.

When I was losing weight, I had to evaluate my relationship with food. I had to look at what I ate and why I ate it. I struggled so much to understand my habits and where they came from. I still struggle with food today. For example, I sometimes feel overwhelmingly guilty for eating, even when I know that there is nothing wrong with what I am eating. Where does that guilt come from?

I had been heavy most of my life. Growing up, I was always the chubby kid. Food was such an important part of my life. Mexican-Americans place a great emphasis on culinary traditions. If you ever go to a pachanga, you will find plenty of food available. In my family, eating was very much a social event, a part of the cultural fabric that allowed us to relate to each other on deeper, more personal levels. I came to love food.

There is nothing wrong with loving food. I think food is meant to be enjoyed. I've met people that take a purely utilitarian approach to food. "Food is fuel," they say. "Nothing more." I do not share this view. Food has the potential to awaken us to the most cherished sensory experiences of our lives. It is both tradition and culture, memory and expression. To eat food is to partake in one of the most fundamental experiences of the human condition. Truly.

So where is the problem? The problem for me was when I ate for the wrong reasons. Emotional eating, for example, often leads to problems. I remember eating to soothe my emotional pains. This started at a young age. When I would cry as a child, my parents would give me candy to cheer me up. Is it any wonder that I came to see food as an emotional crutch, something I could lean on for comfort during the rough times?

When I was losing weight, I had to stop my emotional eating. Not completely, though. I still allowed myself to eat for emotional reasons. Food and emotion are so closely intertwined in our modern times that I think it's unreasonable to expect to shut off the habit completely. But, rather than associate food with negative emotions, I tried to associate it with positive ones. So, if I was having a good day or I accomplished something good, like getting a good grade on a school paper, I would allow myself a culinary treat - maybe a big bowl of homemade vegetable soup that evening.

I believe associating food with positive emotions is essential to weight loss. So often, the diet books emphasize the negative. "No" to this. "No" to that. Food becomes something we fear and we try to avoid it. Of course, this ends up in diet-disaster. We abstain from eating because we are afraid to eat, but we can only abstain for so long before we give in and chow down. Then, we overeat. We binge. This leads to guilt, which leads to more eating. We shouldn't fear food.

That's a hard concept to put into practice, especially for someone trying to lose weight. As I mentioned, I still sometimes feel guilty when I eat. I can't help it. All through high school I was called names and teased because of my weight. College, too. I saw myself as fat, and I blamed food for it. When I tried a new diet, it was always with that do-or-die attitude. With each new attempt to shed the pounds, I would set out on a mission to conquer food, the archenemy of my desired waistline.

Eventually, I realized that I couldn't conquer food. I had to embrace it. Most importantly, I had to acquaint myself with new culinary experiences: eating healthy, making smart food choices, opening up my palette to new tastes - fruits instead of candy, vegetables instead of junk food. I eliminated fast food from my life. I cooked 95% of my meals. With this new approach to eating, and with the benefits of exercise and running, I lost 180 pounds.

However, losing weight is just the beginning. A lot of people, after successfully losing weight, put it back on within a year. There are many culprits behind the problem of yo-yo dieting. One culprit, and I think it is the most important, is that some people, while dieting and losing weight, never fully analyzed their eating habits. They never understood their relationship with food, and they never fully embraced food as a part of life, not to be feared but rather to be enjoyed. By that same token, our relationship with food changes as time goes by. It evolves. But, the basic tenant of the relationship should always stay the same: love.

I enjoy food, just as you should enjoy food, just as we all should enjoy food. I also enjoy exercise and running. Whether you are trying to lose weight, or just struggling like me to come to terms with your ever-shifting relationship with food, remember that love conquers all. It is the opposite of fear. And when you learn to love good food, you also learn to love yourself.