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Keep a Healthy Mind and Stay Fit During Holidays
If you are wondering how to keep a healthy heart and stay fit during the
holidays, avoid gaining weight and nine hundred other traps during this
busy, but loaded down with obligations and food season, join the crowd.
Millions of people will either crash on their current healthy eating habits
or worse – chalk weight gain up to the season or totally give up.
Keep Honest Records
If you are counting calories and carbs, good luck. The easiest way to go is
to keep a daily record, an actual journal, of what you eat. This is not the
time to try and starve and then binge. In fact, yo-yo dieting is not only
bad for your heart but also for your entire chemical and emotional make-up.
Keep honest records and when you do allow yourself a day to nibble on
holiday treats, do so without too much guilt.
Eat A Little of What You Want
Try to eat as healthily as possible and munch on holiday treats in small
quantities. Did you notice I did not say to avoid holiday meals or treats?
If you try to avoid them, you will regret it. This is always a good rule of
thumb. Eat healthily for six days, and then eat one or two items, holiday
snacks or deserts on the seventh. Alternatively, consume a small piece of
chocolate, Carmel or whatever is your most loved flavor of candy every other
day during the six days. Of course, you do know that chocolate has been
proven to be good for your heart -- right?
Keep Your Stress Level Low
The new saying, "Stress Can Make You Fat," is not new at all. (Where
do people come up with these things?). Just like over half of the
population, anytime I am stressed, I eat and/or drink. It’s a well-known
fact that the more calories you consume, the more weight you will gain --
unless you double your exercise level.
Try to organize things early: food, recipes, gift buying and wrapping,
party, inside and outside decorations, cards, travel arrangements for guests
or for your own family, etc. Don’t forget not to schedule school plays and
other social events too close together and try to buy any formal wear ahead
of time.
Keeping your stress level as low as possible is a must during the holiday
season and although it is sometimes hard, try to keep your regular work out
schedule as normal as you can to stay fit.
Don’t Over Schedule
If something should happen and the best well-laid plans fall
through, think positively about the situation. Some people will spend hours
trying to figure out what it was that they did to upset someone. Schedules
get crazy during the holidays and things will get mixed up or forgotten. Go
with the flow and do the best you can with schedules, kids, climate and
relatives. Don’t over schedule and sometimes that means having to say no and
feeling OK about it. Do it and don't feel guilty!
Stay Organized
Having a daily checklist is probably the easiest way to stay organized.
There are plenty of great planners out there that will include a side panel
or space on the same page of each day. Write down your appointments and
lists in pencil, in case it needs to be rescheduled and refer to it often.
Share events that affect the whole family with everyone at a family meeting.
Before the holidays get too close, try to begin to make healthy meals and
deserts. Try them out on family members, neighbors and/or the local homeless
shelters. This way, you can get feedback as to whether or not the new recipe
is actually good or something you might want to pass on for now. For those
that make the cut, cook or bake them early, and freeze baby – freeze!
Jodie Lynn is an internationally syndicated parenting/family columnist who
writes the Parent to Parent column and is a regular contributor to
eDiets.com for Healthy Kids. Her latest paperback book is Mommy-CEO: 5
Golden Rules, 2001 revised edition, which covers parenting/family and
life/health issues. To learn more about the author, or to buy Mommy-CEO
items (and new Mom, CEO - Chief Everywhere Officer) merchandise, see
http://www.parenttoparent.com/ for details.
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