Thursday, March 21, 2013

Clean Your Apartment & Workout Too Part 1

This post was supposed to simply be a workout that you can do at home, while you clean your place. Harmless, right? As I started writing, my heart opened up to another issue and that is really sticking with something, even if day by day the results seem small. I've seen so many examples of this with people I know recently, and apparently my heart needed to release it. Part 2, is an actual workout you can put into practice to make cleaning your house/apartment/whatever, fun and workout beneficial!

Often, I hear the excuse, "I don't have time to exercise." I myself often find myself thinking, "I don't have time, energy, etc to clean my space."

The truth is, we all have time. Maybe we don't all have 90-minutes a day, but we all can find 10-20-30 minutes a day to exercise and on somedays longer, if needed to hit your goals.

We can find the time.

But, you have to want it. You see I want to keep my car, purse, apartment, kitchen, bathroom, closet (need I go on?) clean, but the truth is, if I don't set this as a priority or treat it with importance, it happens infrequently. Yesterday, I dumped out my purse on my bedroom floor (in the middle--because ideally this means I'll pick it up faster). For me, this is how I force myself to clean, create an even bigger mess that has to be taken care of. Today I pulled out all the change and put it in a cute box and stacked up the dozens of receipts that had given my purse the resemblance of a trash bag....change needed!

So the above is a funny example, but how often do we treat our bodies and health this way?

"I'll start tomorrow." (no--tomorrow doesn't exist now--today is it)

"I ate a banana today (and kept all my other crappy eating habits). I was healthy today!" (be sure not to kid yourself)

Is your health/weight/food choices/workout decisions/stress management techniques/etc/etc/whatever you need to make yourself better, a priority? Or is it something you only handle when it becomes so severe, like the receipts flying out of my purse, that you only take action at crisis?

No matter what it is: moving your body more, stopping your ice cream binge, halting an addiction, speaking up for yourself more, believing in yourself, training for that half marathon you've always wanted to run, taking that dance class you've been terrified to sign up for....

Whatever it is for you, you CAN do it. You CAN step up and say, I'm all in to hit my goal.

You may need support.

I believe as humans we are designed to be in community and help each other.

Let someone step into your life and encourage you, challenge you and uplift you.

Do you need to dump so trash (old receipts) on your bedroom floor and day by day pick up the pieces? The trash represents past failures, negative people, your situation if you are unhappy with it.

Dump it all out and start fresh today, even if the changes seem insignificant right now. In my opinion, any change that you make for the better, is significant. I don't care how small it is (or how small you think it is). If you are trying to save up money and you put away $5 a day for 30 days, does it look significant? Not really. But if you weren't doing that last month and you continued to do this for 90 days, you'd have $450 (the cost of an iPad mini and some accessories!)

What if you did the same for your health? Just using exercise as an example, let's say you ran for 15-minutes a day (literally just a random example kind of/sort of equivalent to putting away $5 a day!). Let's say in 15-minutes, you expend 125 calories. In 90-days, you would have run 10,800 calories or 3 pounds. Maybe that's not a huge deal and maybe your goal is bigger. But look back 90 days, did you hit your goal of losing weight?

This example can be applied to any goal you have. Let's say you want to be able to do a pullup. If you start from zero and practice several times per week, over time you'll get to your goal--but it may take time.

Stick it out and know that the other side is positive and empowering!

By the way, this is soo not what I was about to post about, but it was on my heart. Part 2 is a workout that you can do, at home, while cleaning up your space!

In health & prosperity,

Monica


Friday, March 8, 2013

Monica's Pre-Race Food Tips

Next Saturday, I'm running the Rock n' Roll Half Marathon with 3 of my friends! I can't wait to do this race, because it will be the first race I've done since the life changing MCM in 2011! I did zero races in 2012 after running a marathon at the end of 2011, although it doesn't feel like it's been that long. Anyway, today I got this question from a friend who's running it too, and I thought it could be helpful for you, if you are looking at running a half or a full marathon in the near future. 

Question: What Should I Eat the Week Before the Race?   

Answer: Eat normally throughout the week, with foods that you know are neutral to your digestion. This week I've actually been eating a rather plant strong diet with lean proteins, like salmon or ground turkey breast. I like this type of diet because it makes me feel lighter, which helps running.  In general next week, I would say to stay away from foods that drag you down, like super cheesy/high saturated fat/fast food type stuff, but eat normally. 

The most important eating day is the day before the race. You'll want to drink extra water throughout the day and eat a dinner that is generous in healthy carbs. Whole grain pasta with veggies and a meat is a great way to go. My go-to the day before race day is actually Chipotle, because it's easy, no thought, and will give me a good sized portion of the right types of food.  I do brown rice, beans (sometimes), peppers, chicken, tomato, corn, and a little bit of sour cream and cheese. This preps me and gives me energy, but I would recommend eating it at least a couple hours before you go to bed, so that it can digest right ;-) On race day morning, I drink an XS (for the B-12 energy), a big glass of water and make myself a 2 egg, whole wheat bread, spinach and tomato breakfast sandwich with an apple. I also usually bring a ~200 cal protein bar to eat 30-min or so before the race starts. I find that because we are eating breakfast so early to get to the race, I am usually hungry by the time the race starts, which is not a great way to start. You may not need that extra bar, but it's good to have it on hand in case! 

This is how I eat, and what I've figured out for myself after a few higher distance races. You may be different. Figuring out what's best is all about trial and error.

The key with the pre-race diet, is to not eat anything new the day before or morning of, and really if you can help it, a couple days before. You don't want to find out on race day that your body doesn't digest "x" like you thought it would. Same thing goes for sports drinks, energy cubes or energy shots. I would recommend not experimenting on race day! Runner's diarrhea is a real thing :) 

You may want to run with water, but experiment with your method, before race day. I don't like to run with anything extraneous on me. I find that the water stations come up enough, but I know some like to have it when they want it. 

This is my non-scientific method for eating before a distance race. Feel free to comment with your experiences! 

In health & prosperity, 
Monica

Friday, March 1, 2013

Advice from the Naturally Unorganized--how to tackle your space!

If you are unorganized by nature, hear me.. so am I! I stopped reading organizational articles and spontaneously buying magazines with articles that promise an organizational solution a long time ago. Usually, in my experience (and please direct me if otherwise!), they are written by organized people! What?

Ok,  although my organizational skills get better and better everyday (this is a positive mindset insert), I still struggle with this issue daily.

For me, the common culprits are (in no particular order) are:

1. The constant everyday need to do dishes...seriously...

2. Laundry that goes from the dryer to being dumped on the bed to the floor and then gets stepped on for a week

3. The random sock that is under your coffee table... or in the kitchen...or sitting on your dining room table

4. A bathroom counter filled with non-daily used products, a toothpaste container that is out of control and a sink that could use some green cleaning spray and a turbo application of the paper towel

5. A desk that has anything piled on top from (and this is just my today view of it): bills, jewelry, products to sample or sell, slippers (this is unusual), gum, and a Christmas stocking (which may possibly definitely house my receipts--for tax purposes--for the month of January 2012)

6. Your car. Oh my. I don't get how the car can turn into a locker room, a kitchen, and a bedroom all at once. This week for me, was the most extreme. I won't go into details (but if you want to know call me!).

7. Your purse (or your backpack, or brobag...whatever you carry). It gets so crazy that you have a tough time finding your wallet, your lip gloss,  your smartphone, or anything and everything else that you pack in there.

Do we relate yet? If you're shaking your head, yes, keep reading. If you're confused or disgusted, stop reading, you're already organized (no offense--those who are going to keep reading might possibly envy you!)

We can't point out all the above craziness, without some solutions to take action on immediately. Let me be clear. I didn't google and find the above examples. I have lived them (and am definitely not giving you the full story!). If you are working on getting more organized as a naturally unorganized person...keep reading (then apply what makes sense to you)

Step 1: List it!
Walk around your living space and in each room write down everything that needs to be picked up, organized or fixed. And I mean Everything. No matter how miniscule it seems, if it pops in your head, write it down.

Next, do the same with your car. Write down things like, clean out the trunk, wash the floor mats, etc.

If you are self-employed or have an office or work space, do the same thing.

Step 2: Start with your living space!
While you may spend a lot of time in the car, if your living space is a mess, bringing things in from the house is only going to make that mess worse.

Look at your list and tackle the surface items first. For example, clear off your desk, do the dishes, sort your mail, dust your end tables and coffee table, etc.

Next, tackle what's on the floor. Just pick it all up and put it where it goes.


Step 3: The Car!

Option 1: Put trash in a plastic bag and throw away. Put everything else in the car in bags, bring it into your house, and leave it there for a month or two. If you don't remember/haven't needed anything from the bags in the last month or two, throw it away. This is the extreme way to deal with clutter and it's my favorite!

Option 2: If you are more conservative, do the same thing listed above, but then sort through the bags either all at once, or one per day for a couple days and put things where they belong.

Next, vacuum out your car, and clean off the dash and the console. If you must store things in the car (like me), buy cloth bins or a gym bag to house what you need and keep it in place. 







Personally, I've become bored with this by now (and I'm guessing if you're like me, you have too!). Start here. This process could take you a day, a week, or a month. Go at your pace. Keep going and master these projects, before moving on the other organizational tasks!

Would love to hear feedback from those who take this and put it into action!