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Think Yourself Skinny?

OK so here is the latest technique to losing weight. Are you ready? It’s called habituation. The idea is that by visualizing yourself eating a food you really enjoy eating, you stimulate the pleasure centers of the brain enough so that when the time comes to actually eat the food you will eat less of it and be satisfied. Simple, right?

*beating head against keyboard*

The problem I have with habituation isn’t whether it works or not, but rather that weight loss seems to be the goal of this technique rather than building a strong, lean, healthy body by eating healthy, nutrient dense foods. Instead we are trying to play tricks on our heads by visualizing eating junk food so that when we actually eat junk food we don’t eat as much of it and lose weight. How many people do you know who’ve gotten fat from overeating healthy food? I certainly have never heard of such a person. The really great thing about eating healthy, nutrient rich, un-processed foods is that they usually taste just good enough to keep us interested and satisfied but not so much that we binge on them. Perfect.  Why mess with this successful formula?

I’m going to keep saying this in hopes that I may actually reach at least 1 or 2 people. There are no shortcuts. Having a healthy, strong, sexy looking and sexy feeling body requires hard work, proper nutrition and adequate sleep. Weight loss is not the goal. HEALTHY BODY RECOMPOSITION is the goal. This means maximizing muscle activity and allowing fat stores to adjust to proper, healthy levels. Stop looking for shortcuts unless you want to keep failing. Educate yourself! The information is out there if you pay attention and know where to look. LEARN about your body. MOVE your body. The panacea is simple and millions of people are already engaged in it – it’s called EXERCISE! DO IT. LIVE IT. LOVE IT.

Strength Addict

Over the last couple of weeks I have been making some unusually big gains in strength since I got back into weight training. It’s felt so amazing that I can almost liken it to a drug addiction – not that I know what that feels like exactly. I started in November of 2009 by joining a small gym near my house. It had been nearly 15 years since I touched a weight with any degree of seriousness. I started strength training when I was 20 years old right before joining the Navy in 1986. In 1989 I was certified as a personal trainer and went to work training clients privately as well as fitness clubs. In 1998 I changed careers and stopped weight training altogether. From 1998 to 2008 I went from 200 lbs to 290 lbs. I spent a year from November 2008 to November 2009 losing most of the fat I had accumulated by walking, running, and eating healthy food in very small portion sizes. As a reward for going a full year without faltering on my commitment, I joined a gym knowing the money spent would not go to waste. Here are my approximate starting strength levels for the basic movements:

Dead Hang Pullups: 0
Pulldowns: 90 lbs. (8 reps)
Cable Rows: 70 lbs. (8 reps)
BB Bench Press: 115 lbs (8 reps)
DB Incline Bench Press: 35 lb DBs (8 reps)
DB Shoulder Press: 25 lbs DBs (8 reps)
Leg Press: 400 lbs. (8 reps)

These are the weights I am currently lifting:

Dead Hang Pullups: 7
Pulldowns: 170 lbs. (8 reps)
Cable Rows: 150 lbs. (8 reps)
BB Bench Press: 205 lbs (4 reps)
DB Incline Bench Press: 70 lb DBs (6 reps)
DB Shoulder Press: 65 lbs DBs (6 reps)
Leg Press: 800 lbs. (5 reps)

So on average I have about doubled my strength in most movements. It’s amazing how good it feels to be able to lift these kinds of weights. A great deal of this adaptation is neuromuscular rather than actual new muscle tissue development but I estimate I have gained about 10-15 lbs. of new muscle since I started. These kinds of numbers make the act of going to the gym kind of like going to an amusement park. I can’t wait to see how far I can take my strength potential. It’s going to be a great new year.

Breaking Bread

How many times have you heard that if you buy bread, pasta, or any kind of baked goods made from wheat you should buy whole wheat or whole grain varieties? Of course you have and of course you should. But there is something else I bet you haven’t heard. With bread and other baked goods made from flower you are essentially getting the same glycemic index effect that you would get with white bread. This means it has the same effects on spiking your insulin as white bread or other sugar laden foods without much in the way of nutrients. This is because the flower, even whole wheat flower is still pulverized and turned into powder making it pass through the system much faster and hitting the blood stream.

For most people this won’t be a big deal if you have a healthy balanced fiber and nutrient rich diet but if you are insulin sensitive or insulin resistant then this could be a big deal.

There is a silver lining to this cloud. If you look around you can find bread products that aren’t made from flour. Ezekial bread is one such product. Here in the northwest there is a fantastic bread maker named “Dave’s Bread” that sells a product called “Good Seed Bread“. This bread is made from sprouted wheat. No flour. It may be hard to find products in your area, but if you look hard enough you might just be able to find something that doesn’t reduce the whole wheat kernel to flower instead sprouts the wheat retaining it’s low glycemic index properties.

Don’t bet the Ranch

Ya know I’m getting tired of all the misinformation being circulated about food and it’s time to take a look at one such bit of information. Ranch Dressing. I love Ranch dressing. I love it on sandwiches, salads and hamburgers. I love to dip vegetables in it and use it on pizzas. I also hear all the time from so-called nutrition experts and doctors to stay away from the creamy dressings for your salads and use an olive oil/vinagrette dressing instead. So I decided to take a closer look at both of these to see what is really going on nutrition-wise:

Lets compare 1 tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil with 1 tablespoon of regular Lighthouse Ranch dressing.

The olive oil has 120 calories and the Ranch dressing has 60 calories. Interesting. Each of them is made up from primarily fat calories with olive oil being 100% and the Ranch about 90%. The other 10% are sugar sources from dairy and maltodextrin. So lets take a closer look at the fats in these 2 products since we know that olive oil is almost all the ‘good’ fat we always hear so much about. The Ranch dressing must be mostly saturated fat right? WRONG.

1 tablespoon of Ranch has 6 grams of fat, and only 0.5 of that is saturated fat. 1 tablespoon of the olive oil has 14 grams of fat, 2 of which are saturated. That means 14% of the olive oil is saturated fat and 8% of the fat in the Ranch is saturated. Neither has any trans fat by the way.

So in the end I can put double the amount of Ranch dressing on my salad as I can olive oil and still get less saturated fat and about equal the number of calories. If I put 4 tablespoons of Ranch dressing on my salad I’m also getting 4 grams of carbs which equals 16 calories. WOW. I think my heart is going to explode with all this unhealthy stuff going through my system.

Just in case Lighthouse isn’t reflective of standard common Ranch dressings on the market I decided to check the most common brand I could determine which was Hidden Valley Ranch. The numbers are very similar but the Hidden Valley has about 17% of its fat being saturated which is only slightly higher than olive oil but still nowhere near the runaway health hazard that the media and experts would have us believe.

I Want My Reward

In building a consistent exercise program it will be important and immensely helpful to reward ourselves for our hard work. Certainly exercise can seem like a chore much of the time and this can easily take over and cause us to make the decision not to exercise at all. Find something appealing about the activity – maybe you like to think about a particular topic and walking helps you to concentrate on that topic. Maybe there is a particular smell you enjoy on your walks or something very appealing to look at such as a beach or a park. Maybe the quiet peaceful morning fog beckons you to go on that meditative like walk or jog. Maybe you have noticed that when you are out there running or walking you can think more clearly and generate ideas much more readily.

Create a reward for yourself upon completion of the activity – maybe a particular breakfast or food item or some play time with your pet or kids. Use these appealing things to get you motivated to go on that walk and build consistency. Over time it will certainly become automatic and then you can start to increase the intensity and frequency of your work-outs.