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Four Ways to Stay on Track with your Health & Fitness Resolutions

January 23, 2017 By John Lamberson 2 Comments

 

It’s almost the end of January which means it’s a good time to check and make sure you’re staying on track with the health and fitness resolutions that you had in mind on December 31st.  How is your progress going?  If you have not yet been successful, you are not alone!

According to www.statisticbrain.com, 42% of those who make resolutions do not keep their resolutions.  But, there is some good news…if you are a regular resolutions maker, you are 10 times more likely to reach your goals that those who never make resolutions.  And, the most common resolutions are health and fitness-related:  to lose weight, exercise more and eat healthy.  So, what are four ways that you can be successful at keeping your health and fitness related resolutions? Read on:

  1. Resolve to make a plan!  No matter how well intentioned we are, if we don’t develop an outline or guideline, our goals may seem too elusive.  So, write down what you want to accomplish!
  2. Resolve to patient.  Many resolutions involve a long term commitment.  However, we get eager for the results before we put in the work to gain those results.  Give yourself time, but be accountable to your plan.  A great way to do this is to break down your goals into smaller, more manageable steps.  For example, if you want to exercise more, How are you going to exercise?  Where are you going to exercise?  How often or what days?  Are you ready to exercise?  Have clothes, shoes, facility available?  Are you comfortable exercising in group sessions or by yourself?  Asking and answering those questions can help you get more specific with your plan.
  3. Resolve to celebrate all successes, no matter how small or how big they may seem!  Recognizing successful change can sometimes be difficult.  That’s another reason why being specific with your goals and plan of action is so important. If you wanted to change the way you eat by adding one piece of fruit to one meal a day, celebrate the week of eating 7 pieces of fruit!  Change starts in small increments and carries on as you become more aware of that change.  So celebrate all success!  If you want to celebrate more, share your goals with a friend or work with a coach.  They can help hold you accountable to the process and help you truly recognize successes.
  4. Resolve to seek out high quality advice!  Don’t rely on methods that promise huge results without putting in work. Fad diets, supplements, and other “health” products are usually not the best way to progress.  Use the trained and licensed professionals you have access to: Registered Dietitians, Certified Integrative Health Coaches, and Exercise Physiologists. Always remember the saying, “If it sounds too good to be true, it usually is!”
  5. Bonus Resolution: Resolve to be forgiving!  While we may always need to be forgiving of others, we must also be able to forgive ourselves. Hold yourself accountable to making changes but don’t allow yourself to be held hostage by them. You’re going to have difficult times and setbacks as you work toward change.  It’s ok to hit a barrier but don’t let that stop you. Forgive yourself for not sticking to your plan but get right back to it.  Barriers are meant to strengthen you.  Find a way over, under or around that barrier. Then, celebrate your new found path for accomplishing your goals!

Remember:  It’s Your Health. It’s Your Life. Make That Change! 

Filed Under: General Nutrition & Wellness, health coaching, Nutrition, Wellness Tagged With: coaching, Fitness, goals, health, health coaching, Healthy Lifestyle Change, wellness

Developing a Game Plan to Reach Your Health Goals!

December 30, 2016 By John Lamberson Leave a Comment

a-goal-without-a-plan-is-just-a-wishgame-planning-12-30-2016

Team up with a health coach for a winning game plan to reach your health goals!

The New Year is here! What does that mean for you and your health?  Are you one of the many planning to make resolutions and health goals for the New Year?  Let’s talk about that.  Change can be difficult to accomplish.  To set the stage, we need a game plan!  Like sports teams that have a goal to win championships, making health changes can be similar.  We have an “opponent” – the behavior we want to change. We have “practice” – the other times we’ve made changes. We may even have a “scouting report” on our opponent – what has worked or not worked when making changes in the past. If we have that information, we can make a game plan!

Our plan doesn’t have to be as in-depth as a game plan for a football team playing in the Super Bowl but we still need to have a plan.  The plan will help to provide guidelines of how to make changes.  The plan needs to include action steps that follow the SMART system…Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, and Timely action steps.  Write your plan  down and have it available to refer back to.  When we attempt change, we are bound to run into barriers and setbacks.  Having a plan helps you be prepared to face barriers and find ways over, under, around or through them.  Your health game plan needs to include contingency plans to help you use barriers as a springboard to greater things.  We can’t plan for all barriers but we can be prepared.  Hold yourself accountable to making changes but don’t allow yourself to be held hostage by them. If you run into a barrier, adjust your plan to get you back on track.  Don’t let that barrier be an excuse to stop! What may also help you drive through a barrier is working with a coach.  A health coach can provide you with accountability, guidance, motivation, celebration and cheer leading. A coach can also refer you to the professional services you may need to keep you moving forward.  They can help you identify different action steps or take a new perspective on a problem that may help you find a new approach.  Remember, you hold the keys to better health!

Warm wishes for a Happy, Healthy and Safe New Year!

It’s Your Health. It’s Your Life. Make That Change!

~John

Filed Under: General Nutrition & Wellness, health coaching, Wellness Tagged With: health change, Healthy Lifestyle Change, New Year's Resolutions, positive approach, SMART goals

Get on Track for Successful Health Change in the New Year!

January 8, 2016 By John Lamberson Leave a Comment

Hopefully, Achieve Your Goals- St Francisyou’ve been able to keep those resolutions!  Many times we start to falter as we move deeper into January and February.  We often have a tough time making and maintaining change.  Why? It doesn’t have to be that way!  Things change every day.  We are just not always aware of the changes going on around us.  The sun rises in the East and sets in the West day after day.  What’s different about the rising and setting of the sun?  The time is different. It never rises and sets at exactly the same each day!  We just don’t perceive the difference until it hits us how dark it is at 4:30 pm on the Winter Solstice. The gradual change makes it more difficult to distinguish the changes.  (Take heart, the sun shines a little longer each day now!)

Think about the changes you’ve been wanting to make in your life.  Do you expect the change to happen immediately or are you prepared to slowly evolve into a newer version of yourself?  We tend to start our change process with a New Years Resolution.  But why do we wait until the New Year to make changes?  It was Buddha that said, “Every morning we are born again.  What we do today is what matters most.” Every day we are given a opportunity to make a change in our lives.  The change can be big or small but every change we make will impact us some how.  To get the most out of the changes you want to make, be sure to have a plan to help you make and maintain those changes fro the long term.  Resolutions don’t have to be all or nothing. It’s not a pass-fail game.  If you start with the end in mind, this can help figure out what actions steps you’ll need to complete to reach your goal. It’s important to have a goal BUT, it’s more important to to break that goal down into manageable steps.  We like to use the SMART Step System to help clients find change success.  You may have heard about the SMART System:

S: Specific ~ Be specific about what you are going to do.  It’s not enough to say you are going to eat healthier or exIf you always do what you always did 1.2016ercise more. Specify what that means to you.  How do you define eating healthier or exercising more?

M: Measurable ~ You want to see how often you are doing or not doing something.  If part of your healthier eating plan was to include more fruit, how many pieces a day did you want to eat?

A: Achievable or Action-Oriented ~ This is getting you to take the steps necessary to meet your overall goal.  Break the bigger goal down into smaller components that you can work on each day.  You can also use the “A” to represent Accountability.  Being accountable to someone can help drive you when you feel like giving up. Find  a person that will have a positive impact on your drive towards your goal and, if you’re comfortable, share your goal and your action step you plan to use to reach them.If you always do what you always did 1.2016

R: Realistic ~ Important area here!  We are not saying choose an easy task that won’t cause you much stress.    What we are saying is that we need to be able to meet and exceed our action step and keep moving forward. You want to stretch yourself outside of your comfort zone.  We often work with clients that want to lose weight.  They would like to lose 20 pounds in a month.  While that is possible, it is typically not probable, nor is it healthy! You can lose that 20 pounds but it may take a little longer than 30 days!

T: Time Driven or Target Date: Set a date to accomplish your action step.  If your
goal is to workout more often, say 4 times a week, choose an exercise, choose the time of day and the days of the week.  Doing so will help you better visualize how and when you will accomplish your step.  This can also help you overcome potential barriers that may keep you from finishing that action step.

So take control of each and every day! Use it to help you move forward with your plan.  It may be of help to write down what it is you want to change and why that change will be helpful to you. Think about what it is that motivates you to make that change. Make that motivation a personal priority for you. And if you have a hard time staying on track, remember, there is no failure but opportunities to find out what doesn’t work for us.  So try something new or different!  Each new day gives us a new beginning! Here’s to a Happy & Healthy New Year!

“It’s Your Health. It’s Your Life. Make That Change!”

~John

Filed Under: General Nutrition & Wellness, health coaching, Wellness Tagged With: Achieve Your Goals, Change, Diabetes, diet and health, Don't Quit, Healthy Lifestyle Change, lifestyle changes, positive approach, Success, weight loss, wellness

Diabetes Month Reflections…

December 2, 2015 By John Lamberson Leave a Comment

Old Point Tidewater Triathlon June 9, 2012 Diabetes Does Not Slow Me Down (480x640)Monday, November 30th, brought a close to Diabetes Awareness Month. But for the millions of us with Diabetes, there is no close on Diabetes. It is a condition that requires constant awareness, heightened vigilance, and a focused approach.  We get no break or vacation from Diabetes.

I don’t say that to sound as though I am lamenting over the fact that I have Diabetes or have a feeling of dread or depression associated with Diabetes.  I say it to remind every body that we should all remain alert and and focused on our health, regardless of whether or not we have Diabetes.

I have never used my diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes as an excuse to allow myself to get down or depressed about it. Diabetes is a frustrating, aggravating, difficult and complex chronic disease to manage.  The good news is that Diabetes is manageable.  For me though, I see Diabetes as a blessing.  I will not tell you that I love having it, because I don’t!  But it’s all about the perspective YOU choose to have.  I can say that without Diabetes, my life would definitely be different.  I don’t mean less frustrating, less aggravating, less difficult or less complex.  Would life be better without Diabetes?  I can’t answer that question.  Life is life.  We will all have problems, frustrations, good times, bad times, happy and sad times.  Diabetes doesn’t add or subtract those things.  While I don’t love Diabetes, I do love my life, which includes Diabetes.

I am thankful when I look back and see how Diabetes impacted my life in a positive way.  Because of Diabetes, I became a Registered Dietitian, Certified Diabetes Educator and an Integrative Health Coach. With Diabetes, I met and married my best friend.  With Diabetes, I have been blessed with two wonderful children.  Diabetes has also allowed me to meet people, both personally and professionally,  that I would never have had the opportunity to meet.

I don’t just try to live with Diabetes, it is my goal to thrive with Diabetes!   I’ve had the diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes for just over 24 years now.  In that time, I have performed more than 44,250 Blood Glucose Checks, more than 35,400 insulin injections and lived 212,400 hours (or 12,744,000 minutes) of LIFE with Diabetes. It does not define me.  But it is a part of me and it help to make me a better person.

Again, it’s all about your perspective!

It’s Your Health. It’s Your Life. Make That Change!

~John

Filed Under: Diabetes, Diabetes Education, health coaching Tagged With: #DiabetesAwarenessMonth, Coping with Diabetes, Diabetes, Diabetes Awareness, Diabetes Treatment, Dietitian who specializes in Diabetes, Healthy Lifestyle Change, positive approach, Type 1 Diabetes

Success is Failure Turned Inside Out…

August 12, 2014 By John Lamberson 2 Comments

I was cleaning our sons room the other day when I came across the poem, “Don’t Quit”.  This poem holds special meaning to my family.  This poem was given to me upon graduating high school and again after my college graduation.  This poem was passed to my sister during her battle with brain cancer and to my Mom as she battled non-Hodgkin Lymphoma.  We have also provided it to extended family and friends as they struggle with the storminess of life. While cleaning the room, the framed version on the wall caught my eye.  I had not read this poem in a long time.  But sitting down and re-reading it, many memories came back to me.  It serves as a reminder to me that we must stay positive and keep focused on our goals.  Life is hard.  There is no question about it.  Many people are stunned and saddened by the recent death of Robin Williams.  That event confirms that the struggles we face in life are not cured by fame and fortune.  Many of us are looking for something more and trying to reach the potential we have within us to become a better person, better husband or wife, better friend, or just better.  Nobody knows what life has in store for us, all we can do is cherish each moment, whether good or bad, and learn from those experiences.  We must continue to move forward and discover the good that exists in the world. If we have trouble finding the good,  then we must provide it for others!  Achieving the goals we set for ourselves requires dedication, commitment and hard work.  I encourage you to take some time and read the poem.  Let it sink in and see how it speaks to you…..

 

Don’t Quit

When things go wrong, as they sometimes will,

When the road you’re trudging seem all uphill,

When the funds are low and debts are high,

And you want to smile, but you have to sigh,

When care is pressing you down a bit,

Rest if you must , but don’t you quit.

 

Life is queer with its twists and turns,

As every one of us sometimes learns,

And many a failure turns about,

When he might have won had he stuck it out;

Don’t give up though the pace seems slow,

You may succeed with another blow.

 

Success is failure turned inside out,

The silver tint of the clouds of doubt,

And you never can tell how close you are,

It may be near when it seems so far;

So stick to the fight when you’re hardest hit,

It’s when things seem worst, that

YOU MUST NOT QUIT.

~Author Unknown

 

Keep moving forward and always remember that you hold the keys to the changes you want to achieve.  Believe in yourself and trust your instincts.  There are no failures, only opportunities to learn more about ourselves and about life.  We are always searching for the next right answer to the questions life throws at us!  Enjoy the journey!

 

It’s Your Life. It’s Your Health. Make That Change!

~John

Filed Under: health coaching, Wellness Tagged With: Don't Quit, Success

Change Doesn’t Come in a Pill!

April 25, 2014 By John Lamberson Leave a Comment

Statin drugs were recently shown to lead to a potential worsening of health behaviors for those that take them to battle high cholesterol levels.  A study released April 24th in JAMA Internal Happy sunsetmedicine and reported in the news today detailed the findings.  Using ten years of data, calorie and fat intake actually increased in those taking the medications.  Remember, fat intake, especially saturated fat intake, can have a dramatic impact on cholesterol levels, as well as heart disease.  What the researchers concluded was that those taking the medications may feel less obligated to follow any type of heart healthy nutrition guidelines because they believe that medications will protect them. 

My question to the researchers would be, “Is this phenomena only seen with the statin drugs or would you expect to see the same thing from those using diabetes and blood pressure medications?”

From my observational studies, I would say, “Yes!”  Many times when taking medications for a specific ailment, lifestyle changes are not adequately stressed or addressed.  I have been told frequently in my practice by clients that they don’t follow any dietary guidelines because they are on a medicine to control their condition.  I am not an anti-medication person.  The drugs we have to control diabetes, blood pressure and cholesterol are very good, especially when taken correctly.   However, I am a big believer in doing more through lifestyle change to help reduce the reliance on medicines.  I teach a class on Food-Drug interactions and how what we eat can impact the effectiveness of the medicines that are prescribed.  Many times, people focus on the major interactions seen with drugs like Coumadin (Warfarin) a medication designed to slow the clotting time of the blood to help defend against blood clots.  There are certain foods that need to be monitored to allow the drug to work as intended.  There are also interactions between many blood pressure medications, as well as statins, and grapefruit products.  During the class, we discuss how any medication we take can be impacted by what we eat.  For instance, if you are on a fluid pill, or diuretic such as Lasix which is designed to keep you from retaining fluid and yet you continue to eat a high sodium diet, then you are going to continue to retain fluid.  As a result, your doctor may choose to increase your dose to achieve the wanted results.  However, by simply reducing the sodium content in your food, you may be able to reduce or eliminate the need for that medicine!  The same is true for cholesterol and diabetes medications.  Remember, it was Hippocrates in 400 BC that said, “Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food”. 

We hold the keys to better health in our own hands.  We cannot rely solely on medications to make us better.  The body has an innate ability to heal itself.  We just have to be mindful of that and find ways to assist our bodies.  This is called the mind-body connection!  If you want a strong example of how the mind-body connection works, look at the so called, “Placebo Effect”.  Many drug studies have to discuss this phenomena when people are given a placebo instead of the real medication and are able to achieve the same positive results that the true medicine provides.  By believing they are receiving an active medication, those patients are often able to see a positive result! 

Exploring the mind-body connection is central in the integrative health process and even more so with Integrative Health Coaches.  Making positive behavioral changes are paramount to finding the healthy lifestyle that you want.  You will not find that in a pill.  You will find it within yourself!  If you are interested in making changes that support a healthier lifestyle with a focus on mind, body and spirit, contact us today and Make That Change! 

It’s Your Health.  It’s Your Life.  Make That Change!

~ John

Filed Under: Diabetes, General Nutrition & Wellness, health coaching, Nutrition, Wellness Tagged With: cholesterol medications, diet change, Healthy Lifestyle Change, integrative health coaching, mind-body connection, placebo effect, statins

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