Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Look Who's Back


So, I know. It's been a few months.

Okay, maybe more than a few, but I promise, life has been busy and it's been interesting.
For starters, I'm now officially a college graduate, and am currently navigating the real world like a drunk person; stumbling and slurring through multiple part time jobs and volunteer/interning ventures.
I've also relocated to the bright, sunny, always active Southern California, so if you're native to the area, SEND ME SOME PLACES/THINGS TO DO. Or if you wanna go for a run. That works too.

I've also decided to become PT certified in the next few weeks, and making this blog more of a priority. Being able to help people find happiness, confidence, and their sea legs while on this journey is always on my mind, and just like fitness, it's not about finding time, it's about making time.
I'm prepared to make time for you guys.

So, what's new?
                                   
I ran a mud run, for one.

And I got to take awkward selfies inside Muscle Beach with Arnold. I shouldn't have to explain "which Arnold."
                                          

But to schmooze my way back into your hearts, I compiled a little list of a few songs I enjoy while on my runs/to get through cardio. Give it a listen; might find some new music to push you through those last few sprints or hills!

STOP TALKING; START RUNNING Playlist

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Eating Disorders & The Media

I will start this post off by saying that I am in no way, shape, or form an expert on any particular subject.
I am a woman, living in a society that many of us are aware values our appearances above everything else. And with that, let us begin.

How much time do we spend on the internet, surfing the web, ignoring the advertisements that pop up on the side of the page or interrupt our YouTube videos? How close do you pay attention to the commercials that play background noise to your homework or snacking? Do those billboards really do anything to convince you to pay for whatever business is slathered across it?
Most of you will defend yourselves; "I just zone out the commercials, I don't really pay much attention, I can think for myself."
Sure, a McDonald's ad isn't going to prop you right then and there to get up and drive to the nearest Micky D's to get a Big Mac. We pride ourselves on our ability to think for ourselves and filter through the information fed to us to determine what is valuable, what's bullshit, and anything other category.

But how many times do you see a Victoria's Secret ad and catch yourself staring at their bodies, their impossibly long legs, flat stomachs, perfectly puckered lips? They sell clothing, lingerie, bathing suits, yet we are more focused on the bodies and the models showing them off. Because what these ads are really showing us is what's important, what really matters.
And 99% of the time, what matters is how we look, how skinny we are.
This is supposed to determine our worth in our society.


So how can we be surprised when we hear that 1 out of every 4 girls has an eating disorder, when all we see are young, thin, impossibly "beautiful" women, and we're told in order to be happy, in order to be accepted by others (or to be available for a relationship) we must look like them. We are told that it is OUR FAULTS if we don't look like them.
Oh, anyone can do it, you just have to work hard enough, pay enough money for breast implants and brand name clothes, eat only this amount.
When is it enough? When does it stop?


Be aware; only 5% of the population have the body type required to be professional models; long legged, wide-shoulders, narrow waist and hips, and that is GENETIC. And you know what, they are perfectly beautiful the way they are as well, but you cannot change these parts about yourself anymore than you can make yourself shorter or taller. All of those teeny, tiny waisted women with large breasts? Implants. Impossible curves? Photoshop.

If you still think media is an appropriate representation of the world around us, pay attention to commercials and the ads in your magazines.
How many older women do you see portrayed?
How many real-life situations do you see women in, ones that you could relate to in an every-day way?
How many black women, asian women, latina women, do you see represented there, and then how many do you see IN THE WORLD AROUND US?
The fact is, the media world is dominantly white, heterosexual, upper class, and young. The more you know that their representation is false, the more you can distance yourself from it, and the more you can begin to focus on your OWN identity, and less of the identity our society would like to mold for you.


Also, please keep in mind, not only is it the KIND of women that the media is presenting us with, but it is HOW they are presenting them to us. Female athletes; do you see them covered in sweat, huddled with their team or clutching their trophy still in uniform? Or do you find them half-naked, posed in sexually exploitative ways, off the court (could you even tell they are an athlete, had they not been labeled, or just as another model?), with children or husbands (because women are really just caregivers, being an athlete is just a side hobby)? Be especially careful of looking at these pictures for inspiration; are you admiring her athletic achievements, her athletic ability and strength? Or are you admiring her body and the way that men would react to seeing a body like that? Sexual exploitation and portraying women in these ways, as sexual objects, or super thin, frail models, are all ways to keep women in their place and from gaining power. You should be vulnerable, weak, silent, passive, and attractive to men.


Whatever happened to being strong, ambitious, authoritative, and doing this for yourself?

In a world that relies heavily now on digital remaking of pictures and touch-ups, be skeptical of every picture you see. Remind yourself; chances are, she is not real. No one is flawless; if they were, how would they be different from anyone else who achieved this idea of "perfection?"

If you still think this doesn't apply to you, think about what you do every day. Instagram? Why do we need filters of ourselves to show to the world? Why do so many girls feel the need to alter their own pictures before publicizing them? Because we are so programmed that we are not good enough, pretty enough, thin enough, that there is always something better, and this can be so incredibly destructive that happiness just seems another pound away, another dress size lower.

If you believe that weight loss or slimming down your jean size is going to bring happiness with your body, it won't. You must learn to love your body before starting a journey with it; would you go on a roadtrip with someone you didn't like expecting to love them by the end? No. Everyone has flaws, everyone has little quirks. Maybe your thighs touch, but your legs are the strongest part of your body. Maybe your arms jiggle; if you shake something, it's going to move, that's just natural. You are different from that girl beside you and from the one behind her, and you know what? That's okay. That's beautiful. You are in every way exceptional and different from someone else. Rejoice in the fact that you are you, and no one else can possibly take that from you.


This is by no means a "cure-all" for our society, or the sexist problems within it. However, awareness, critical analysis, and constant questioning of what is being presented to us can help detach us from the stereotypes reinforced on the television screen and in magazines and elsewhere. Talk to your friends about it, talk to your parents, your professors and teachers. The more discussion, the better.

If you or a friend is suffering from an eating disorder, please do not take it lightly. It is not a trivial disorder, and it is not fashionable or trendy. Millions of people suffer from eating disorders, and 20% of those people who do not receive help will die because of their disorder. Please, helping someone (or even yourself) can save a life.

Eating Disorder Help

ED Recovery


Wednesday, March 6, 2013

TV Workout!

Can't leave your house due to freak snow storms?
This episode of SVU is just too good to break away from?
No worries! Here are some at-home exercises you can mix and organize into your own little TV workout!

During the show (So you can at least watch it)
- Plank
- Side Plank
- Plank w/ hip thrust
- Wall Sit
- Tricep Dips (Use the edge of a chair or coffee table!)
- Squats (w/ or w/o weight)
- Tricep Extensions w/ dumbbell (or a water bottle!)
- Lunges (side lunges too!)
-Russian Twists
-Side Leg Lifts
- Bridges (make it harder- lift one leg while you do your bridge!)

During Commercials (Challenge yourself to see how many you can do before your show comes back on!)
- Burpees
- Mountain Climbers
- Crunches (All variations; side, crossed leg, flat leg, etc.)
- Squat Hops
- Push-ups (All different hand placements)

- Spiderman push-ups
-  Step ups (just use your stairs or a chair!)
- Jumping Jacks

You don't always have to be on a couch to watch TV. Get that body up!

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Got Music?

Need a few new tracks to add to your workout/running playlist?

You're welcome.


My Journey And Stats

So I've always been active. I've never really been "fat" I guess, but I've never been in that athletic shape that I had always wanted to be in.
Last summer I realized that this year would be my last season to play lacrosse before I graduated, so I started then and there. I made the decision to improve myself.

I weighed 145 lbs, at my highest, which for 5'5 is technically "healthy."
I was not satisfied.



I started running. Every day (mostly). When I first tried to start counting calories, I couldn't keep up with it. I'd forget and feel like it was too much of a hassle, so I just pushed it off. I'd run at night, after work, and then do an ab or full body circuit I'd cut out of Fitness magazine. I started implementing light weights, but I wasn't really knowledgable about weight training enough to really push myself. I was just dipping my toes in.

School started, and I continued running, pushing farther into unexplored areas of my college's nearby neighborhoods. I picked up calorie counting again, and found it more helpful this time. I could see what portions were healthy for me and when I was eating out of sheer boredom, instead of hunger.
Our Fall Ball season started, and that's where it all changed. Our assistant coach introduced us to weight training, and I was hooked. One of my teammates was already into it, so I started lifting more often with her, letting her teach me while we encouraged each other, two girls in the weight section surrounded by guys high on preworkout.

It was uncomfortable at first, I'll admit it. I felt like I was crossing dangerous territory, like the 10-15 lbs I was curling was mediocre in comparison. I stared at the ground instead of the mirrors so I wouldn't make eye contact with the guys next to me. This was supposed to be their territory, not mine. Women were confined to the cardio machines, men groaned and threw weights around on their side of the gym.
But by the end of the semester, I was beginning to feel confident. I had enough workouts in my head that I felt like I could continue on my own as winter break began. I kept running (thankfully early winter was appropriately warm for me to do so) and I started on a gym hunt. I looked at a few local gyms, Planet Fitness, LA Fitness, and Gold's Gym. Ultimately I was won over at Gold's, with their women's section and their cardio theater. The trainers were friendly and talkative enough, and I wasn't too awkward to make them shy away (My trainer wrote down all of the aspects of my body that I wanted to work on; I told him to write down "dat ass." There was a brief moment of awkward silence, but he bravely stuck it out with me.)
Once again, it was like the weights section was forbidden, with hulking body-builderesque creatures in their cutoff tank tops and shaker bottles sitting at their feet. Thankfully, there were dumbbells and kettlebells up in the women's section; I staked out a corner of my own, snagged a bench and bosu ball, and got to work every day. I started moving out of the womens section into the training area when it was open and found that more and more people were watching me with weights in hand. It was empowering.
We CAN move out of the cardio section, women won't break a nail picking up a dumbbell over 8 lbs.

By the time I got back to school, I was beaming. I had dropped 15 lbs, at my lowest being around 130. I was getting comments on it, text messages saying I looked great/skinnier, my boyfriend telling me about people telling HIM about me. Even my coach commented on how skinny my legs were.

And now I'm at 133
and content. Currently in my season, I'm lifting in the mornings with cardio, then giving it all in practice later. I've put on muscle, shed fat, but my concern is less on weight and skinniness and more on fitness and performance. I eat to fuel my body, to maintain it's strength so I can perform on the field, so I have enough energy to push through those last 5 minutes in a game. I lift to be able to hold my own, to know if I go in, I will beat her.
That's what my journey is about. Health, fitness, performance.
Strength.
A strong tree survives the storm; a thin twig easily breaks in the wind.



Saturday, March 2, 2013

Get CHEAP

Believe me, I'm in college, I know each dollar is a precious thing sent down from the heavens, and by some luck it landed in your pocket.
So when you spend your money, you want to make sure it's worth it, both for your wallet and for your body.
I've made a nice list of cheap, healthy foods that if you're post-grad, undergrad, living on your own and on a budget, or just trying to slim down your receipt, it should let you breathe -- and live -- a little easier.

Cheapest:
Tuna fish
Oatmeal
Canned Collared Greens or Spinach
Bananas
Green Tea
Cottage Cheese
Low Fat Yogurt
Frozen Fruit (For shakes!)
Carrots
Celery 

Cheaper:
Peanut Butter
Clif/Lara Bars
Whole Wheat Bread
Raspberries
Blueberries
Granola
Frozen Vegetables (no extra sauces!)
Skim Milk
Quinoa
Green/Red Apples
Mustard
Relish
Tomatoes

Worth a Little Extra:
Nuts (Almonds, peanuts, cashews, etc.)
Greek Yogurt
Grapes
Chicken Breast
Fresh Spinach & Iceburg Lettuce
Soy/Almond Milk
Sliced Turkey
Hummus
Eggs

This list is not a "solution" to any weight loss or health problems, but an organization of my own opinion of healthy foods (
you can expand your palate of fruits; I only included a few, but you get the idea). Obviously if you're a vegetarian, a vegan, lactose intolerant or have a gluten allergy some of these foods will not apply to you, and I apologize for the limitation.
If you're like me and could spend HOURS grocery shopping because you're comparing different brands, make sure you're paying attention not only to calories but to:

Sugar
Trans fat
Fiber
Protein


As well as taking a look at the ingredients list and making sure you're tolerant of what your food is comprised of.


When in doubt, whole, organic, fresh foods are always your best bet!

- C_F

Thursday, February 28, 2013

March Assignment

With the beginning of a new month comes new opportunities; a fresh start, a new slate. Spring break.

With March comes the daunting deadline
MAY IS 2 MONTHS AWAY.

Here's an assignment for your Body Project:
Take a moment to write down your goals for the next two months.
What do you want to achieve between now and May 1st?

Make sure your goals are REALISTIC (no, 30lbs probably isn't realistic, but 10 might be better!)

Now, how are you going to reach them? What are you going to do different from this moment on, what are you going to improve on, what are you going to change in your life in order to change your body?

Write it all down. Post it on the back of your front door, on your mirror in the bathroom, somewhere you'll see it every day. Break them into post it's and put them all around to keep your focus and your goal in mind.

Remember, without challenge there is no change.



Stay strong, my friends. And get
fit.

-C_F