Sunday, February 26, 2017

Mindful Meals

"Everything you see I owe to spaghetti." -Sophia Loren

30 Days of Workouts was not the success I had hoped for, but it wasn't a complete failure, either. Between a week-long business trip and an awful illness (both at the same time), it was difficult to workout as much as I needed. However, a few fun, three to four minute dancercise videos from the Fitness Marshall kept me moving and motivated until the end! My favorite are the workouts choreographed to Brittney Spears songs because Marshall becomes sassier, if that's even possible.

I am continuing with working out daily and have increased the length and intensity of the exercise sessions as my body heals. I feel more confident on the elliptical (though huffing and puffing at resistance level 2 is still an issue) and realized that the other patrons could not care less about my lack of muscles or endurance. Working out at the gym and at home have become less of a chore and more of a necessity. I mean, not really, but I am getting to the point where exercise feels more of a normal activity than torture.

Have you ever sat down in front of a TV with your dinner plate, and realized two hours later that you've already inhales seconds AND more dessert than you ought to have? This happens to me all of the time. One of the biggest culprits of overeating is being distracted, and I am finished with consuming excessive food without even enjoying it.

At first, I wanted to simply cut out TV during my mealtime hours, but the problem is that I have a habit of snacking while binge watching sitcoms. I am double binging on TV and food. Ugh. I never feel great after a TV and snacking session, anyway, so it is time I cut it out of my life. Instead I will limit my TV time to one hour a day. This is still a lot of TV, but it's a vast improvement from my current, daily, five+ hour relationship with Netflix.

Here are the conditions:
-One hour of TV a day OR one movie a day.
-YouTube, TED, and other short videos do not count, but should be enjoyed in moderation.
-TV time cannot carryover to another day.
-No meals/snacking during TV time and YouTube/TED videos. Not even healthy snacking. (I just polished half a jar of leftover homemade Quickles while watching an episode of Endevour - oops.)

This project may prove difficult because there are other people who can influence my ability to stick to it. My family and friends are avid fans of the moving picture box, so when I have visitors or am staying with family, I need to suggest new activities.

What did people do before TVs? In Pioneer Camp, we churned butter and sawed logs, but those activities are useless thanks to modern day advances, like 24 hour grocery stores and central heating. Knitting scarves seems silly when you live in the American South. It is much faster to read alone than out loud to others. This is tough.

This much needed and long overdue lifestyle change will challenge me to find new ways to pass time.  Who knows, I might even pick up a second 30 Challenge this time around!

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