Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Gonna Fly Now!

"Gonna Fly Now"

By Terri S.


I feel awesome! After weeks of sluggishness and a bad case of the “lazies,” I just hit the gym and had a great workout! I went over 8 miles on the stationary bike and almost 2 miles on the treadmill. Then, I finished up with some light arm weights, and I am bursting with energy and feel so great. Why have I been slacking off when I can feel this good? I kind of feel like Rocky Balboa running those stairs right now with “Gonna Fly Now” blasting the background.

One thing I noticed at the gym is the sense of community that one develops. Community is so important when one is undertaking anything new. Like the community you can develop at Lean, Fit, and Healthy! You need encouragement and you need to know that there’s someone behind you cheering you on. You need someone you can complain to when your muscles ache or when you don’t have the energy. But you need someone to sing you an anthem when you feel like me right now, high with exercise endorphins.

I’d love to hear how your experience with Lean, Fit, and Healthy is going as well. How are your goals being met with this innovative program? Do you feel stronger and healthier? Has community made a difference in your journey?

And since you are part of my community for fitness, I must tell you how excited I am about buying clothes in a smaller size this week! I go back to work in a few weeks and I got rid of a lot of my clothes that got too big at a garage sale. So now I’m getting the joy of buying smaller sizes. It feels great! I can’t wait to be one of those chicks at the gym working out in only a sports bra. J But that time will come.

Ok, guys. Thanks for all of the support. I’ve gotten lots of notes on Facebook from you so keep that up. I love hearing from you. And when you hear someone in the background humming “Gonna Fly Now” when you’re hitting it extra hard at the gym, that’ll be me.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Terri's Action Plan

Terri's Action Plan
July 27, 2010

Summertime is the time when I want to start to slip into old habits. It’s depressingly hot, so sleeping until noon just feels better than being up, out, and hot. I’m a schoolteacher, so I have about two more weeks of vacation left, and I want to make the most of it, too. Yet what I end up doing when I lie in bed late is eating bad the rest of the day.

Sleeping until noon means not eating breakfast. No breakfast means that I’ve missed one meal, and if you’re keeping your Food Journal like you should be on Lean, Fit, and Healthy, you will know that not entering breakfast makes it look as if you have extra calories floating around. That does not fit in with an environment for real change, you know. Making changes to be healthier when you are otherwise not, or at least somewhat kind of doing so, requires preparation. Summer, to me, means not having to be prepared for anything, so again…an excuse to be sloppy! Then I look for excuses all day to eat sloppy. There are dirty dishes, so I don't want to cook, the dishes are clean, I don’t want to mess them up, the kitchen is too hot and therefore I want a "quick fix.” I also find that there are times when I just don't want to cook and reach for the quickest thing to eat.

I'm here to be the first person to say...this mentality does not work when you are trying to progress and move forward. The thing is, is that I know how to be a healthy person. I know what to do, what not to eat, and certainly looking at what I’m eating in my Food Journal online is just this ugly reminder! This is why I need Lean, Fit, and Healthy in my life.

Lean, Fit, and Healthy helps me to see the balance, and even when I’ve had an “off” day or “off” week (yes, two weeks ago, I went over 631 calories for the week!) I SEE what I need to do to regulate, monitor, and adjust.

Starting a diet program is supposed to make you feel uncomfortable. I know that I start feeling sad and sorry for myself because I'm not eating comforting foods in excess these days. But by keeping this journal, I also know comfort foods ultimately make me sick. They decrease my energy rather than increase. That’s what I start to see using my Food Journal. Make notes when you cave and say, “I ate 4 slices of pepperoni pizza today, and felt like I’d swallowed a bowling ball for the next three hours.” I overate last night at dinner, and missed a movie with my husband because it made me feel so terrible. In hindsight, I would have much rather been out with him than back at home lying in bed with my laptop while he watched tv in the den!

My action plan is this... #1 Set the alarm. I don’t have to crawl out of bed at 5 a.m. like I will in two weeks, but get up in time to eat a healthy breakfast. #2 Plan out those small meals I need to be eating every three hours. #3 Go to the gym even though it’s oppressively hot. The gym has AC. Swim after doing cardio and I’ll be cool when I head to the parking lot (plus burning more calories)! #4 Encourage more friends to join Lean, Fit, and Healthy!

Friday, July 16, 2010

Portland Press Herald Interview with Mike Foley

Mike Foley, resident industry expert for Lean, Fit and Healthy was featured in the Portland Press Herald on Thursday, July 15. Mike will provide tips of the day, fresh articles for LFH users as well as access to his e-book, "Eat to Be Fit."

Link to the interview: http://www.pressherald.com/business/go-by-the-book_-he-wrote-it_2010-07-15.html

Below is the text from the article:

Shoptalk:
Go by the book? He wrote it
By Melanie Creamer mcreamer@mainetoday.com
Staff Writer

Mike Foley, 42, personal trainer, nutritionist, and author of "Eat to be Fit."




DO YOU know someone who would make an interesting candidate for Shoptalk? Send your suggestions to business@pressherald.com.
He operates Foley's Fitness at World Gym on Marginal Way in Portland. He lives in Scarborough with his wife and three children.

Q: How long have you been in the nutrition and fitness industry?

A: I've been a personal trainer since 1987 and a nutrition consultant since 1990.

Q: What is Foley's Fitness?

A: It's a company I established in 1994. It's basically my nutrition program.

Q: What does your program entail?

A: The sessions are 15 minutes, unless it's the start of the program (first meeting), which takes between 45 to 60 minutes. In the initial session, we sit down and talk about your goals. We design a nutrition regiment to go along with your exercise routine. I have some clients that are not gym people. They might be just walkers. I have a couple people that are very large. I might have them do a five-minute walk three or four times a day. It's more than what they are doing. I'm working with a lot of people getting ready for the Iron Man. On the weekends, they exercise for 10 hours a day. It's amazing to me how much they exercise.

Q: How many clients do you see a week?

A: Right now, I see about 200 clients a week. It's a long day.

Q: How much exercise do recommend for the average person?

A: I try to make sure they do at least 30 minutes of cardio a day at least four times a week, depending on what their goals are. If you want to get in better shape you might need more commitment."

Q: Is part of that eating healthy?

A: I have people eating consistently. If your body isn't sure when you're going to feed it, it becomes every efficient at storing fat. The whole key to changing your body is to get your body burning fat when you're not working out."

Q: Why did you decide to pursue this field?

A: I was going into college. I had back surgery and lost a lot of weight. I wasn't able to work out. When I got back into working out, my body never came back.

I never really ate healthy in high school. I played sports, but was I just an average athlete at best. I found that as I started making a commitment to nutrition, I felt much better personally and liked the changes it made physically and mentally.

Q: What was your purpose for writing "Eat to be Fit?"

A: It was something I always wanted to accomplish. With the help of Pat Walsh, I was able to write the book.

Q: How many copies have you sold?

A: I don't know. I have given away so many.

Q: What do you see as the biggest challenge for people trying to live a healthy lifestyle?

A: I think the biggest challenge is mentally giving in to eating healthy. So many times when people go about doing nutrition plans, they are so used to taking short cuts where they try to lose weight quick with very little effort or no effort.
There are so many different ways you can design a diet that work. If you put structure in someone's eating and give them enough of the right nutrients at the right time, they can change their body. That does you no good to lose weight if you can't maintain it.

Q: So what's the trick? If someone is on a good streak and they are exercising every day and eating healthy, but they hit a plateau -- how can they get past that plateau to keep the momentum going forward?

A: For those people, I would first start by changing the exercise a little bit. Let's say they are a walker and they are not a gym person. Maybe adding five or 10 more minutes of exercise for a short time will help. Sometimes when you hit a plateau, it doesn't mean that every pound is going to be fighting you. A lot of times, the easiest thing to do when you hit a plateau is increase your calories gradually for two or three weeks, and then take those calories away, you will drop (weight) again.

Q: How many kids do you see?

A: Not that many. Right now I have four kids I'm working with under the age of 13. I always work with quite a few high school kids. What's great about these four kids is that they are doing the program with their parents.

Q: What's your take on childhood obesity?

A: I'm not sure if kids have ever really eaten well. Each generation gets less and less active. I think when I was growing up, a lot my friends didn't play sports. They were as good as I was. Now, there is such a separation of the athletes. I think because it's competitive, a lot of kids fall through the cracks of being physically active."

Q: Are you taking on new clients?

A: I'm always taking on new clients.



MIKE FOLEY
WHAT: Owner of Foley's Fitness
WHERE: World Gym, 265 Marginal Way in Portland
PHONE: 828-9900
WEB: www.mikefoleysfitness.com

Terri's Third Blog: Staying Motivated

Stumble. Two syllables, and something I can do on a flat surface. After breaking my right ankle and my left foot less than 11 months apart, I think I may in fact be a professional. But stumbling just isn’t that less-than-graceful move that results in a face plant, it also describes my weight loss journey. And this summer has been a stumble-palooza! As hot and humid as it has been in my neck o’the woods, I’m lucky I'm not face down in a puddle of literal melting belly fat. Yet, is that my excuse?

I'm trying hard not to get discouraged when the weight doesn't come off like I think it should. I have a lot of support and a lot of people looking to me to get this right. Giving in to the negative thinking is a habit I’m trying to break, but I’m not working so hard at giving in to that extra large helping of strawberry shortcake. See what I mean about a stumble?

Since beginning Lean, Fit, and Healthy, I feel better and look better. I’m down 42 pounds, I know food and exercise a lot better than I did a few months ago, and I’m learning so much about myself. Even that stumbling isn’t just about my inability to keep on both feet. I’m working out, I’m building muscle. I’m losing fat. I’m succeeding. Slow and steady wins the race, even if it means that you end up, legs in the air, falling on your butt every now and again (holding that second helping of strawberry shortcake, even!)

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Week 2 WIth LFH

Week 2: The Food Journal
By Terri Smith

There has not been a tool more useful to me in my effort to lose weight than the food journal. Lean, Fit, and Healthy has an amazing food journal, and it will be imperative for you to use on your weight loss journey. When you can see how much what you’re putting in your mouth adds up throughout the day, you will begin to think about every bite that goes toward your lips. I love to see how a sub from my favorite sandwich joint stacks up against that salad I had at the fast food place (you would be very surprised)!

I also noticed when I tend to eat well and when I tend to eat poorly. Weekends kill me, while Monday-Wednesday are my “healthier” days. I can track why through the food journal, and plan to make changes for the next week.

The other thing I like to track is my intake of fat, carbs, and protein. I know that I need to have a 40-30-30 split. At the end of the week, I can look back and see if I stayed within that range (I’ve noticed I never get the 30% of protein!).

I also use the Fitness Journal to assist with how much I’m burning through the day, as well. Did you know that leisurely swimming—not laps—can burn lots of calories? I didn’t until using the Fitness Journal.

I’m not an organized person, but I’ve gotten so disciplined about using these two tools, that I have learned so much about the way I eat, what I eat, and what burns the most calories. Lean, Fit, and Healthy has been amazing for me and these tools have taught me more than anything else. Start using these TODAY and keep it up.

Friday, June 25, 2010

What We Think About When We Think About Weight Loss

I wanted to share my thoughts with everyone on how successful I've been with Lean, Fit and Healthy. I've got a ways to go, but LFH is giving me the tools and motivation to succeed!


Blog From Fat-Bottomed Queen….(Terri)


Losing weight can be very confusing for one who undertakes the process using the “instant gratification” mentality that eclipses our culture. I have 190 pounds to lose, and if I could drop the weight in six months, trust me, I would be sliding in to some size 3 jeans right now. After six months of true diet and exercise changes, I am down just 37.6 pounds- but I’m ok with that.


I have a lot of people who have not only been supportive of me in the last six months, but even a lot of people who say they are inspired by me. That is a lot to take in after being incredibly overweight (morbidly obese by physicians’ standards). Why would I inspire anyone?


I think it comes down to trying to lose weight differently. Firstly, I don’t mince words much. When asked why I’m trying to lose weight now, the answer is easy for me: I want to be hot. Sure, getting healthier is an added bonus but what I want most of all is to get attention again. I want to be the one boyfriends and husbands get in trouble for turning around to look at. I want to once again, recognize myself, and not what I think looks like a winter parka of skin. So what’s my advice? You have to be honest with yourself about why you want this. It has to be for you, for real, and for forever.


Secondly, my advice would be that if you’re going to lose weight, you must ignore the television. That doesn’t mean turning off your favorite shows. This means that you cannot believe the unimaginable propaganda that’s out there about losing weight. You’re not going to lose 15-30 pounds per week like that famous television show’s contestants. That can mess with your head! It’s not realism, it’s reality TV and there is a BIG difference. Also, there’s not a product out there that is going to single-handedly result in dramatic weight loss. If it was as easy as popping a pill, no one would be fat. Forget the hype. Dietary changes and exercise are what results in weight loss. While there are products that help, there is nothing more than internal motivation that will get results.


I get frustrated. After losing 37.6 pounds since Jan., all I think about is when I’m going to lose more. But I also know that losing weight is all up to me, and no one else is going to do it for me. I also know that I need people motivating me and I need to constantly be reminded that I’m not in this alone. I know that through the use of Lean, Fit and Healthy I’ll continue my march towards achieving the body I want and know that I have people out there cheering me on! When you know there are lots of skinny people walking around in fat parkas, you will begin to find the peace inside yourself that is needed to commit to this journey. With the help of Lean, Fit and Healthy I know I have the help I need.