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Last Minute Survival Guide for Holiday Eating

December 24, 2017 by Kathryn Alexander Leave a Comment

Merry Christmas, my friends!


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The holiday season can be the most fun, celebrated, joyous time of year. It is filled with special indulgences, vacations, and reunions with loved ones. It can also be a time of pressure, tight deadlines, and to-do lists as long as CVS receipts. It is the combination of all of this – excitement, happiness, stress, and fatigue – that makes the holidays so tiring! 

The good news is that smart, healthy food choices can help you feel better and manage stress through the craziness. Oh, and the other good news is that life also returns to normal routine, pretty fast. Savor the fun crazy while you can!

Austin friends, I bleed purple and gold, but you know I love UT too! 

 

Why Food Can Make You Feel Bad

Keep in mind that food can make you feel better or worse, depending on what you eat. The great news is that, unless you are 5, you are fully in control of what you eat. (More about this below.)

It can be tempting to throw willpower out the window and attack the buffet with wild abandon, but remember chances are, you won’t feel great after. Is it worth it? Likewise, if you end up driving through a fast food restaurant and fill up with junk, you won’t feel so hot either. 

Confession: I love fast food fries and chocolate shakes. (Frosty anyone? Delicious. I know that will gross some of you out, but I can’t lie to ya!) However, I have them rarely and in small amounts because I hit a wall about half hour after I eat fast food.

Besides just making you feel stuffed and sluggish, the problem with quick, non-nutritious food is that it often leaves you feeling hungry soon after. If you pick at pretzels, popcorn, or cookies, but neglect to get a sufficient amount of protein and fat, you’ll be hungry again in no time. Those calories will add up without actually adding vitamins and minerals, and they’ll leave you unable to focus because you’re hungry again 15 minutes later. I don’t know about you, but I find that super annoying. 

 

Regular Days Around Holidays

During the days around holidays, when you are gift shopping, grocery shopping, planning parties and celebrations, take a few extra minutes to plan your meals for the day. If you don’t have time to cook ahead, at least take time to plan where you can eat healthily. 

For example, if you know you’ll have a tight turnaround between the post office and heading back to your workplace, think ahead about where you can get a healthy, quick meal. Almost every restaurant, including fast food places, has a grilled chicken and salad option these days. Quick options: 

  • burrito in a bowl at any burrito or taco place
  • chili’s or grilled chicken at Wendy’s
  • ready to go meals from a grocery store. You can often find healthy options. 

 

Snacks

When you don’t have enough time to sit down at a restaurant, look for the nearest grocery store or large convenience store. Convenience stores are starting to have a healthier section, which includes prepared meals, fruit, cheese and meats. Grocery stores also have options galore. Try: 

  • cheese sticks
  • beef jerky 
  • Greek yogurt. Pro tip: keep plastic spoons in your vehicle.
  • sushi pre-made at grocery stores. Pro-tip 2: HEB has the best sushi. Texans, try this. No affiliate link, ha 😉 I just love their sushi. 

 

The Big Meals

After all the work is done done, you’ll find yourself at the big party, the family holiday or meal with friends. This is the fun part, where you should finally be able to relax and enjoy! I don’t want you to have to think about what to restrict or what you can’t eat. Instead focus on filling up with the healthy things first: protein, vegetables, and water. Then add in your indulgences: extra dinner rolls, sides, desserts, and drinks. 

If you begin your meal by eating what your body actually needs, you will find you don’t binge as much with a fuller stomach after. Additionally, you can truly savor the indulgences that you have less often. (You shouldn’t feel guilty about food anyway, but especially not when you’ve preceded it with healthy foods.)

I sat down with Erika Lopez at KVUE to discuss this exact topic: healthy eating through the holidays. You can see this quick Exercise Minute by clicking here. 


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When Others Challenge What You Eat

Food and meals are usually social events, so people often discuss and share their food preferences. This is part of relating and learning from each other, but it becomes trying when people force their preferences on others. 

I haven’t figured out exactly why, but people are extremely dogmatic about their food preferences, like they are about politics and religion. This is unfortunate when people pressure others. 

If someone makes a neutral comment on your food choice, the easiest thing to do is lightly acknowledge it and move on. 

“Oh, another cookie?”
“Yes, they’re delicious! How’s your new job? Are you enjoying it?”

Boom, cookie philosophy crisis averted. 

For that acquaintance that just doesn’t get the hint, bless her little heart, you can be a little more direct. Your boundaries are yours, and you are entitled to your own choices. Let’s say you are going to pass on desserts this time. 

“You won’t want a cookie? They’re my Aunt Betty’s recipe and you really should have one.”
“No, thanks so much!!” You don’t have to explain your reasons. 
“Come on, one won’t kill you.”
“No. I won’t decide what you eat, and you don’t get to decide what I eat.” 

Repeat as necessary, and move on. Don’t feel like you have to give an explanation or bend. 


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Murray the festive cat holds his own against a jambalaya pusher but is powerless to resist a belly rub. Christmas Jam 2016.

Murray the festive cat holds his own against a jambalaya pusher but is powerless to resist a belly rub. Christmas Jam 2016.

 

ENJOY

Remember, life is to be enjoyed! Family and friends coming together is something to be celebrated! You won’t have them forever, and soon enough, you’ll go back to your regular life. 

Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, and Happy New Year! 

Filed Under: Life, Misc., Nutrition & diet Tagged With: diet, food, healthy eating, holidays, New Year, Thanksgiving, travel

The Paris Experiment, A Sleep Study with Unintentional Benefits

November 7, 2017 by Kathryn Alexander Leave a Comment

A couple years ago, I got the chance to go to Paris. It was last minute, and would be a quick trip. I didn’t love Paris the first time I visited, so my growing affection for the city made me appreciate each visit more. I looked forward to again seeing the city that made my pupils dilate with its ornate cathedrals, romantic art, and the big city buzz swirling all around me, yet having no need for me. 


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Amor and Psyche by Antonio Canova, displayed at the Louvre. I can't even pretend to be tough when I see this one. Melts my heart.

Amor and Psyche by Antonio Canova, displayed at the Louvre. I can’t even pretend to be tough when I see this one. Melts my heart.

I couldn’t wait to savor coffee on a French sidewalk cafe. And the baguettes, the French bread that they don’t call French bread because that would be redundant. 

The Louvre, the Eiffel Tower, the stores, the fashion. I was giddy thinking about it!

There was one catch: it would be a weekend trip, and I handle jet lag like a narcoleptic ninety-year old. I’m talking, out-like-a-light at 6 pm, can’t even hang with the toddlers. Then like a resurrection miracle, fully awake and happily functioning (all alone) at 3:30 am.

Le sigh. 

 

I Can Figure It Out

Call me stubborn or bull-headed (though I prefer determined), but I always think there has to be a way. I can figure it out! In the past, I have tried a variety of tactics to decrease jet lag so I could enjoy more travel time, with some but minimal success. This includes:

  • strategically timed melatonin on the flight to reset circadian rhythm (sleep on an international flight? haha)
  • exercise upon landing in new time zone. (Soooo tiring)
  • caffeinating myself at doses that would worry most health professionals
  • the Argonne Anti-Jet-Lag protocol, which was highly effective on National Guard subjects in this Pentagon funded study

The latter was the most effective, but still not good enough for me. I was convinced I could do better. 

  

A Crazy Plan With Unintentional Side Effects

My plan was to bring my body as close as I could to real-time wake-sleep schedules in Paris, while still here in American central time zone. It was simple enough: go to bed 4 hours early, and wake 4 hours early. This way my body would be halfway adjusted to the 7 hour difference by the time I landed. 

Beginning two weeks before my trip, I took the recommended dose of an over-the-counter sleep aid and aimed for lights out at 7 pm. I woke between 3 and 4 am. 

To ensure this would be successful, I warned my friends that I would be seeing less of them for a couple weeks, and I did all my work as early as I could, including anticipating clients needs so my support for them would not suffer. 

Other helpful habits included blacking out my room, being hyper organized so I didn’t worry about a thing, and putting my phone down in early evening. 

What Happened?

The results were amazing! First, I felt 10 years younger. I slept completely through the night, getting 8, even 9, hours of quality sleep. When I woke up, I eased into the day with a cup of coffee. Really, what rush is there at 3:00 am? Nobody else is up. 

I work exponentially better when I am not rushed or stressed, so I got good, quality work in that left me feeling productive and peaceful. 

My workouts felt good since I was truly rested. I was giving my body everything it needed. 

It was actually a great way to live, even without a trip to plan for. And the trip? Went off without a hitch. I don’t remember falling asleep at the dinner table once. The flights were even less stressful since I was more patient and in a better state of mind.

 

The Moral of the Story


...but I got to see my friend Marion, who lives in France. It had been about 15 years. Best reunion ever! 

…but I got to see my friend Marion, who lives in France. It had been about 15 years. Best reunion ever! 

….is obviously to get good sleep. Take care of yourself. Sometimes this requires being a little bit selfish. I did miss my friends, and feel kind of like a weirdo feeling like I was up past my bedtime when I was in the gym with my 6:00 pm client. 

It was worth it, though. It was a great reminder of how we need to be protective of our bodies and our time. No one else is going to do it for you! 

If you need a little pick-me-up in life, try this. It will change your outlook! Try just a 2 hour difference if you don’t have a time zone change in your future. 

Let me know how it goes for you! Email me. I read every email! kathryn@kathrynalexander.com


Sunset in Paris.

Sunset in Paris.

Filed Under: Life, Misc., Recovery Tagged With: self care, sleep, travel

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