Welcome! I hope something you read on this blog makes you feel awesome. By the way, I think you're pretty cool. No really, I do.

Monday, August 22, 2011

8/22: something nice

Hi Friends:

I hope your Monday is going well. Just a reminder: I still have tickets for the 8/27 Zumbathon, if anyone is interested. 3-6 p.m., St. Francis School, $10. I go on at about 3:45. Personally, I love Zumbathons. The music is great, you can see different instructors and different moves, and it makes you realize just what a cult Zumba is (but in a good way).

Also, I'm starting Tuesday classes on 9/6. Nuuanu Elementary. 530-630. Be there!

Third, I wanted to share with you a project from one of my favorite groups, Improv Everywhere. Technically, what they're doing is not improv, but it is quite lovely and magical:

http://improveverywhere.com/2011/08/22/say-something-nice/#more-3001

And here is the YouTube video, if you don't want to read the whole thing:



Finally: I think you are all wonderful, and I applaud your commitment to your health!

Have a great week,
meredith

Monday, August 15, 2011

8/15: love, me

Hi Friends:
 
First, a couple of announcements:
-Starting in September, I will also have class at Nuuanu Elementary on Tuesdays, 5:30-6:30! The first Thursday of the month is no longer free; the first Tuesday of the month will be the free class. My passes are good at both classes. If you come early, you can get some extra exercise in by helping me move the tables.
 
-I will participating in a Zumbathon, Saturday August 27, 3-6p.m. at St. Francis School. The flyer is attached. Tix are $10, and you can reserve and pick them up from me. Should be a fun time. It's a study-abroad fundraiser.
 
-Here are couple more suggestions from people on electrolytes: coconut water, and Bob Harper's electrolyte drink recipe (thanks for the tip, Maile!). On the Dr. Oz website, it says:
Add a boost to your water bottle with Bob Harper's simple, natural electrolyte recipe. You'll maximize your workout and prevent dehydration.
Ingredients
1 liter of water
1/2 tsp of baking soda
2 tbsp of agave nectar
1/2 tbsp of sea salt

Directions
Combine all ingredients in water bottle and sip during workout as needed.
-Noe also says to have protein after working out.
Now, for today's thought:
 
I was going to post  about writing yourself a love letter (inspiration here: http://www.aspiremag.net/writing-as-a-practice-of-self-love-write-yourself-a-love-letter), but then I tried the exercise and it's really hard. I got really self conscious and felt like I was updating my resume. It felt like I was bragging about myself, to myself. I like the idea of being your own cheerleader and telling yourself nice things, but a whole letter is a little too much of a time and emotional commitment.
 
And then I was going make a post about writing a self-love letter of forgiveness (inspiration here: http://www.theselflovediet.org/pdf/body-forgiveness-template.pdf), but it made me feel actually worse than I had already been feeling, and I felt guilty for all the ways I had mistreated myself in the past. Who really needs to dredge up all that yucky stuff?
 
So I decided the most painless, still positive thing would be to list three things I love about myself that I would give as a compliment to someone else. Then, I could give myself credit for something, but at the same time not get too bogged down emotionally. I came up with:
-I love the way you like to make things from scratch.
-I think you pick really good, really different music for Zumba.
-I love that constantly work to make a better system, and be more organized, and get on schedule.
 
That took only about five minutes, and I feel pretty good about myself. I encourage you to try it, especially about stuff nobody else even notices, such as, "I like the way you wipe the counter after washing your hands in a public bathroom/I love how you've organized your closet/I think it's wonderful that you didn't eat that extra piece of cake, even though you wanted to."
 
And don't forget to thank yourself for the lovely compliment!
 
Ok, have a great week,
meredith

Monday, August 8, 2011

8/8: Drinky, drinky

So, I drink water all the time. I’ve been carrying around a water bottle for years—drinking water before it became trendy. My classmates used to tease me, saying, “Can’t you sit through a 45 minute class without getting thirsty?”
I thought I was so water savvy: Pick water over any other beverage. Drink at least 8 glasses a day. Drink water to replenish fluids after a workout—one glass for every 15-20 minutes of exercise. I mean, it’s water. I’ve been drinking it my whole life, minus the first six months. Should be pretty basic, right?
Well, this summer I taught Zumba 2-3 times a week, and on top of that my husband and I have been taking a cross training class every week, and I’ve been chasing my kids around—and to be honest, I’ve been feeling pretty haggard. One of my friends told me I wasn’t refueling properly, especially my fluids. How is that possible? I thought. I drink enough water to choke a linebacker! According to the internet, it’s completely possible. Here are some things I’ve learned after Googling water, hydration, and related topics:
Going #1
If your pee is dark, you are either taking too many vitamins or you are dehydrated. You need some water, buddy.
If you pee is completely clear all the time, you are drinking too much water and the water is not flushing your system properly. You need some electrolytes.
Dehydration
Dehydration is when you don’t have enough water in your system for proper cell function. If you wait until you feel thirsty to drink something, you are already dehydrated. So, on the light end, dehydration can result in feeling thirsty—on the serious end, dehydration can result in, well, death. There are, of course, steps in between such as constipation and cramping, but don’t wait until you experience those middle steps before you get a drink.
Diuretics
Diuretics are foods and drinks that make you pee. Some diuretics are obvious: asparagus, coffee, and green tea. Others are not as obvious: carrots, tomatoes, lettuce, oats, dandelion (though I don’t know how much dandelion the average person eats). So it is possible to drink all the time and still be dehydrated; also, if you drink water and then have coffee, you’re going to need to drink more water to replenish what the coffee, um, flushes out.
Proper refueling
I super hate sports drinks. Not only is it a lot of wasteful packaging (I’m one of those weirdos who hate bottled beverages because of eco/hippie-dippy sensibilities), but also $3 for slightly salty, watered down juice? That’s ridiculous!
Until I read up about electrolytes, which are ions that help conduct electrical currents. In your body, nerve and muscle functions are actually controlled by electric impulses sent throughout the body, and electrolytes help with the movement of these impulses (ok, it’s a really long, technical explanation that I only understand murkily, so I’m, um, watering it down quite a bit). So what was happening when I would feel grouchy, fuzzy-headed, and crampy after working out is that I had lost electrolytes through sweating and not replaced them.
So, do you need to drink a sports drink?
You need to refuel on electrolytes (some combo of sodium, potassium, calcium, and other minerals) if you’ve been exercising an hour or more, but some people take them every day, depending on how active they are and what’s in their diets. I have started taking an electrolyte supplement (1 teaspoon/day of Trace Minerals 40,000 Volts! Electrolyte Concentrate) that I got at the health food store and I’m feeling a lot better. However, it tastes awful—like Epson salt. They also have electrolyte powders that you can dissolve in water, and pill form. I’m going to pick up some of those, and I’ll let you know how it goes.
Or you can drink V-8. Or you can eat potato chips. Or take potassium pills and mini pretzels, if you can find potassium pills. And apparently, Jelly Belly has “sport beans” with electrolytes (link below). All salts are electrolytes, but a good nutrient replacement formula will also include other nutrients. And all this has to be mediated with having a low-sodium diet, or whatever your doctor says.
I hope all my Googling and summarizing was informative. I guess the long and short of it is to drink up. So, raise your water glasses in a toast: to your health!
Have a great week,
Meredith

P.S. If you want to read up, here are some of the best/most interesting articles I found (I feel it’s important to cite my sources—after all, I’m not a fitness or nutrition expert. Also, I could be dead wrong about all of this stuff but you can read the info and come to your own conclusions):





Monday, August 1, 2011

8/1: It's Elementary

Hi Friends:
 
Happy August!
 
Today was the first day of school for my older daughter. When I was prepping her school supplies, I had my husband scrape off some of the yellow paint on each pencil so I could write my daughter's name on the exposed wood. My husband asked me why I wanted him to do that, when we have a Sharpie pen and can just write on the yellow paint, and I realized I just always associated elementary school with these pencils with the side scraped, along with homemade lunch (my elementary school was too small to have a cafeteria), small cartons of milk, always having a new outfit for picture-taking day, and getting li hing mui for snack (red li hing mui was just invented or something when I was in elementary school--it was such a symbol of coolness to have red-orange fingers).
 
I didn't think about it too much then, but now that I'm a mom, I take not a little pleasure in labeling my daughter's things, and imagining her as she goes through her day, drawing and writing; when I pack her lunch, I think about her sitting with her friends in the cafeteria, laughing and playing; I put my quarters on the side so she can buy milk and snacks.
 
I do these things with love, and I imagine my parents did the same. It's funny to think that, even when I wasn't with them physically or conscience of it, I was surrounded by my parents' love, all day long. I carried it, quite literally, with me (in my backpack). And of course, it doesn't just stop with elementary school, nor does it just stop with your parents.
 
We are surrounded, all day, every day, by small acts of love and intent, that form crisscrossing nets of support. So many people hope for your happiness--myself included.
 
Have a great week,
meredith
 
ps. Zumba is free! This week Thursday. If that's not love, I don't know what is. Bring some friends and lots of energy!