National Nutrition Month
In case you didn't know, it's National Nutrition Month. A time to celebrate delicious and nutritious eating all month long! The American Dietetic Association has provided a Good Nutrition Reading List that you may find helpful. I'm currently reading "The Rules of Normal Eating" and am lovin' it!
Tweet
Client Spotlight: 3 Lessons Learned
I have been working with a client who has made tremendous strides with her eating habits and her relationship with food. She is currently 37 years old and describes herself as a long time emotional eater and “on again/off again” dieter. She grew up with a father who equates food with love and has had trouble adjusting her diet now that she is no longer an athlete in training. When we began our work together she felt no forward progress with her diet, despite her recent successes with a new exercise regimen.
I asked her to share with me and with you what she feels are her biggest successes. She title’s her thoughts “3 Lessons Learned.”
3 Lessons Learned
I began meeting with Marci in September of 2009 and feel that I have made tremendous success and progress. Below are the three most important lessons I have learned.
1. Find someone who you click with to discuss your nutrition issues. Finding Marci has been the biggest key to my success. Prior to working with her, I had tried both group counseling and the online program with Weight Watchers. In the group sessions, I didn’t connect with the team leader and I felt very excluded from the group. In fact, it left me feeling resistant and frustrated. I also struggled doing online nutrition programs since they were so sterile and generic. After trying to follow the prescribed program during the week I felt starved and usually overate on the weekend. I ended up gaining weight, which left me feeling like a failure.
2. Be gentle with yourself. Every day brings its unique challenges. A process or regimen that works on Monday, might not work on Friday. So don’t beat yourself up! Keep with it and think of each meal is a new start to your day. I was quite familiar with the start of a Monday morning diet. If I felt I messed up on my nutrition plan I used to say “I’ll start again on Monday.” Well, if I got off to a bad start at the beginning of the week, the following Monday was a long way off. Now, I think of each meal as a fresh start. If I overeat on carbohydrates in the morning, I focus on veggies and protein at lunch to balance it out. I’ve learned that by eating more balanced meals, my cravings for sweets have diminished. But I’m happy to respond to a craving if my body is asking for it.
3. Divorce yourself from “good” and “bad” foods. For years I defined pizza, soda, macaroni and cheese, desserts, and everything that I wanted and craved as “bad” foods that I tried to expel from my diet. I did my best to live off salads and 100 calorie soups because they were “good.” It didn’t work. I vacillated between feeling virtuous (yet miserable) while filling up on “good foods” and like a failure when I caved and binged on the foods I had been depriving myself. This kind of eating led to a constant loss and gain of the same 10 lbs.
I can confidently say that through my work with Marci I have learned to ditch the cycles restriction and overeating. I feel less pre-occupied with food, more trusting of my body, and more confident in my ability to take care of myself. I’m feeling better and grateful that I’m adopting a healthier way of eating that will last a lifetime, rather than a work week.
Tweet
Wise Health Consumer Month
February is "Wise Health Consumer Month" and I believe that becoming more involved in your own health care is essential. My sister-in-law was finally diagnosed with Celiac Disease after doing some research and convincing her Dr. to test her for it.
The American Institute for Preventive Medicine developed a Top 10 list of ways you can become more involved in your own health care.
One way you can become a wise consumer in the grocery store is learning how to decipher your packaged and boxed foods. Here are three simple tips to get you started.
1.) Ignore the words on the front and back of the box. Catch phrases like "antioxidants" "more fiber" "natural" are simply a sales pitch.
2.) Read the ingredient list. You should be able to recognize the words you are reading. Better yet, if it's a grain-based food (as many packaged items are) the 1st ingredient ought to be "whole grain..."
3.) Check out the number of servings in a package. It's often more than one.
I recently met with a client who wanted some nutrition counseling for PCOS (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome). She had already made great strides with her diet and was seeing me for "fine-tuning." At our first session she brought in a food label of a Kashi bar she likes to eat. She thought it seemed like a healthy way to take care of her sweet tooth and wanted my opinion. So, we dissected the food label together (too see the nutrition facts, click on this link then click on the button that says nutrition facts).
Together we learned that the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th ingredients are all sugar! By the looks of the wrapper, you'd think she was making a healthy snack choice. Besides, Kashi has a reputation for selling pretty healthy foods. But in reality, all of those highly processed sugars would actually do more harm to her PCOS than simply having a small serving of dark chocolate after dinner (which what she really wanted!).
So don't be fooled by your packaging. It's the ingredients that count. I have a simple handout called "Decoding the Ingredient List." If you'd like a copy, send me an email to marci@marciRD.com.
Tweet
Michelle Obama: Tackling Childhood Obesity
For those of you who listened to President Obama's State of the Union address on January 27th, you likely heard him introduce his wife's initiative to tackle childhood obesity.
Tweet
Is Sugar Addicting?
Is sugar addicting? I recently received an email from a friend who had this question. She felt that she was completely addicted to sugar and wanted to know my recommendations on how best to detox her system. Little did she know, she was asking a question that researchers and scientists seriously debate. Just google the term "sugar addiction" and you'll see a litany of results and no real consensus.
- The physiological consequences of eating candy, chocolate, and other high sugar foods are a rise in serotonin and endorphins which make you feel good. This sensation doesn't last long and may be part of what encourages you to want to eat more of it.
- Consider the company you keep while eating high sugar foods. An encouraging companion, alcoholic beverage, or social occasion will encourage you to eat more.
- Create a healthy environment. If you find that once you start eating sweets you just can't stop, consider what you keep stored at home. Rather than a jumbo bag of M&Ms, go out and buy a small pack when a craving hits.
- If you find yourself reaching for sweets after every meal try skipping your sugary treat just once. Distract yourself after your meal and check in a few hours later. How do you feel?
- Try to eat chocolate mindfully with this exercise
Tweet
Product Showcase: Kashi 7 Whole Grain Pilaf
Since it's Heart Month, I thought it would be appropriate to highlight a whole grain food product I absolutely love. A few months ago I found Kashi's 7 Whole Grain Pilaf in the hot cereal aisle. It looked interesting so I bought it. And to my delight, it is an absolutely scrumptious grain that cooks a lot like brown rice. Warning, it does take 25 minutes so you may want to make it ahead of time. Because it is plain, I recommend consulting Kashi's website for recipe ideas or get creative and spice it up on your own.
2 packets Kashi® 7 Whole Grain Pilaf
1 cup pine nuts (to reduce fat content, use ½ cup pine nuts)
2 cloves organic garlic, minced
6 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
3 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
½ teaspoon lemon zest
1 teaspoon crushed red chili flakes
1 teaspoon salt
2 bunches fresh basil, coarsely chopped
1 organic red bell pepper, diced
1 organic yellow bell pepper, diced
fresh ground black pepper to taste
1. Cook pilaf according to package instructions.
2. In a small skillet, dry toast the pine nuts over medium high heat, stirring continuously until they are golden brown and aromatic. Remove nuts from heat and set aside.
3. In a small mixing bowl, whisk together the garlic, olive oil, balsamic vinegar, lemon zest, chili flakes, salt, basil, pepper and set aside.
4. In a large mixing bowl, combine cooked Kashi Pilaf, pine nuts, bell peppers and sauce mixture. Mix well and serve.
Tweet
February is American Heart Month
Most of us associate February with Valentine's Day. And we all know what that means- chocolate. But February isn't just for celebrating love and candy. The American Heart Association has deemed the month of February American Heart Month.
Tweet
A Little Spice in Your Life
Did you know that this week is National Salt Awareness week? Weird, but true. If you're interested in learning about the effects of a high salt diet, check out this link. Salt is usually a guilt by association kind of ingredient. It tends to be excessive in highly processed and packaged food items. On the flip side, it tends to be low in minimally processed whole grains, fruits, and veggies.
Makes 4 servings.
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 14 minutes
Refrigerate Time: 30 minutes
1/4 cup orange juice
1/4 cup reduced sodium or regular soy sauce
2 tablespoons honey
1 tablespoon McCormick® Ginger, Ground (I used fresh grated ginger)
1 teaspoon McCormick® Garlic Powder (I used fresh garlic)
1 green onion, chopped
1 pound salmon fillets
1. Mix orange juice, soy sauce, honey, ginger, garlic powder and green onion in small bowl. Reserve 2 tablespoons of the marinade. Place salmon in large resealable plastic bag or glass dish. Add remaining marinade; turn to coat well.
2. Refrigerate 30 minutes. Remove salmon from marinade. Discard any remaining marinade.
3. Grill over medium-high heat 6 to 7 minutes per side or until fish flakes easily with a fork, basting occasionally with reserved marinade.
Tweet
Marci's New Nutrition Class: Nutrition Tools
In February I will be teaching a new nutrition class at the Wellbridge Athletic Club in Harvard Square
Tweet
Healthy Weight Week
_New.jpg)
Traditionally many Americans begin a diet the first week in January and "blow" it the second week. Healthy Weight Week, the third week, is a time to stop dieting for good and help people normalize their lives. It’s a welcome antedote to the dieting and bingeing that typically begin the New Year!
Healthy Weight Week promotes healthy nondiet lifestyles for children and adults of every size. It helps them move ahead to healthy habits they can live with long term – sound, reasonable habits that allow them to live well and get on with their lives. Eat well, live actively, and feel good about yourself and others.
- Partially determined by your genetics
- A range of a few pounds that may vary depending on the time of month
- Where your body goes naturally when you are eating when hungry, stopping when satisfied, and usually a result of physical rather than emotional or social hunger
- Is supported by a moderate exercise program
- Determined by a scale, jeans size, or weight chart
- Attained by calorie counting, low cal diets, and excessive exercise
- Necessarily what you weighed when you graduated high school :)
- Big Fat Lies: The Truth About Your Weight and Your Health by Glenn A. Gaesser
- Health At Any Size by Linda Bacon
- Intuitive Eating by Evelyn Tribole & Elyse Resch
Tweet

