DIS Ladies Only Trip 2007 WISH!

Hi ladies! Sounds like everyone is doing good, every little step is progress for us!

I find if I am craving something sweet, a small glass of lowfat chocolate milk will help me.

The hospital was having free ice cream sundaes tonight, and even though it hasn't ended yet I have avoided the temptation so far, my victory for the day!
I am craving pizza so bad, I think I will treat myself to that this weekend.

I feel good about this so far, I feel like I have my mind made up this time to get healthy, I hope this feeling continues.

Continued good luck! :wizard:


That is great Kendra, WOO HOO on your victory today! :yay: :yay: :yay:

I feel good about this too, and I think with each other's support, we can continue the feeling!



I know I am replying to almost everyone right now, hope it is not driving ya'll crazy, I just want to offer everyone my support!
 
That is great Kendra, WOO HOO on your victory today! :yay: :yay: :yay:

I feel good about this too, and I think with each other's support, we can continue the feeling!



I know I am replying to almost everyone right now, hope it is not driving ya'll crazy, I just want to offer everyone my support!
:grouphug: Jenna you're a good supporter! I'm glad to hear that everyone has such good ideas about how they are going to go about changing their habits. Since we started the WISH I have been tempted to snack after I get in bed to watch tv. So far I have resisted that temptation. I guess that is my victory. Also I am refusing to snack when I am not hungry. That is another bad habit I have. :sad2: It sounds like everyone is off to a good start. Keep it up!!!! :woohoo:
 
I saw your recipe earlier for the breakfast smoothie, and it sounded delicious, I am going to have to try that!:thumbsup2

It is very good. I am sipping one now. The original recipe calls for 6 oz of lowfat yogurt and 8 oz of fruit juice. I modified those two items to cut calories. The 4 oz of pomegranate/blueberry juice with a bit of Splenda makes it plenty sweet for me.

Kat, are you doing WW now? Anyone else following an organized diet plan?
 
Another Article for the day. Hope ya'll arent sick of me posting them. :rolleyes:


The Truth About Carbohydrates
Not all Carbs are Created Equal

-- By Becky Hand, Licensed & Registered Dietitian

It’s true. A carbohydrate-rich diet can inflate appetite and girth. Low-carb diets do promote short-term weight loss, but are accompanied by some severe dangers. So what should you do? The truth is, you can have your carbs and eat them too—you just have to know how to choose them.

The Truth about Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates are the body's ideal fuel for most functions. They supply the body with the energy needed for the muscles, brain and central nervous system. In fact, the human brain depends exclusively on carbohydrates for its energy.
Carbohydrates are found in fruits, vegetables, beans, dairy products, foods made from grain products, and sweeteners such as sugar, honey, molasses, and corn syrup.
The body converts digestible (non-fiber) carbohydrates into glucose, which our cells use as fuel. Some carbs (simple) break down quickly into glucose while others (complex) are slowly broken down and enter the bloodstream more gradually.
During digestion, all carbohydrates are broken down into glucose before they can enter the bloodstream where insulin helps the glucose enter the body’s cells. Some glucose is stored as glycogen in the liver and muscles for future use, like fueling a workout. If there is extra glucose, the body will store it as fat.

All carbohydrates are not created equal.
There are basically three types of carbohydrates:

Simple carbohydrates are composed of 1 or 2 sugar units that are broken down and digested quickly.

Recent research has shown that certain simple carbohydrate foods can cause extreme surges in blood sugar levels, which also increases insulin release. This can elevate appetite and the risk of excess fat storage.

Complex carbohydrates (also referred to as starch) are made up of many sugar units and are found in both natural (brown rice) and refined (white bread) form. They are structurally more complex and take longer to be broken down and digested.

Complex carbohydrate foods have been shown to enter the blood stream gradually and trigger only a moderate rise in insulin levels, which stabilizes appetite and results in fewer carbohydrates that are stored as fat. Unrefined or ‘whole grain’ carbohydrates found in products like brown rice, whole wheat pasta and bran cereals are digested slowly. They contain vitamins, minerals and fiber which promote health. Fiber and nutrient-rich vegetables, fruits and beans which are carbohydrates also have many important functions for the body and are important for good health.

Indigestible carbohydrates are also called fiber. The body is unable to breakdown fiber into small enough units for absorption. It is therefore not an energy source for the body but does promote health in many other ways.
Simple carbs, complex carbs, and fiber are found in many foods. Some provide important nutrients that promote health while others simply provide calories that promote girth.


Sugar, syrup, candy, honey, jams, jelly, molasses, and soft drinks contain simple carbohydrates and little if any nutrients.
Fruits contain primarily simple carbohydrate but also valuable vitamins, minerals, fiber, and water.

Vegetables contain varying amounts of simple and complex carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals, fiber, and water.

Legumes such as beans, peas, lentils and soybeans contain complex carbohydrates, fiber, vitamins, minerals, and protein.
Milk products contain simple carbohydrates along with protein, calcium and other nutrients.

Grain products contain complex carbohydrates, fiber, vitamins, minerals, and protein. The amounts vary depending on the type of grain used and the amount of processing. Selecting whole grain options whenever possible is recommended.

What You Should Know About Low-Carbohydrate Diets
Following an extremely low-carbohydrate diet is disastrous, dangerous, and above all—boring! Carbohydrates are NOT the enemy. Including the appropriate amounts and types of carbohydrate-rich foods in your diet is essential for long-term health and weight loss/maintenance.

The Body’s Immediate Reaction to Very Low Carbohydrate Diets
When there is a severe deficit of carbohydrates, the body has several immediate reactions:

With no glucose available for energy, the body starts using protein from food for energy. Therefore this protein is no longer available for more important functions, such as making new cells, tissues, enzymes, hormones, and antibodies and the regulation of fluid balance.

When carbohydrates are lacking, the body cannot burn fat in the correct way. Normally carbs combine with fat fragments to be used as energy. When carbs are not available, there is an incomplete breakdown of fat that produces a by-product called ketones. These ketones accumulate in the blood and in the urine causing ketosis, which is an abnormal state. Ketosis does cause a decrease in appetite because it's one of the body's protection mechanisms. It's an advantage to someone in a famine (which the body thinks it's experiencing) to lack an appetite because the search for food would be a waste of time and additional energy.

Due to the lack of energy and the accumulation of ketones, low-carb diets are often accompanied by nausea, headaches, dizziness, fatigue, bad breath, and dehydration.

Because of dehydration and a lack of fiber, constipation can result.
Exercise and fitness performance is reduced on a low-carb diet. Do not be surprised if your energy level is so low that you cannot make it through your normal workout routine.

The Long-Term Effects of Low Carbohydrate Diets

~When you severely restrict carbohydrates, your consumption of protein and fat increases, which has several long-term effects:

~The risk of many cancers increases when fruits, vegetables, whole grain products, and beans are eliminated from the diet.

~Protein foods are also high in purines, which are broken down into uric acid. Elevated levels of uric acid in the blood may lead to needle-like uric acid crystals in joints, causing gout.

~Kidney stones are more likely to form on high protein, ketosis-producing diets.
Over time, high protein diets can cause a loss of calcium and lead to osteoporosis.

~The risk of heart disease is greatly increased on a low-carb diet that is high in protein, cholesterol, fat, and saturated fat. A temporary reduction in cholesterol levels may be experienced, but this is common with any weight loss.

The Million Dollar Question
How do you include carbohydrates in you diet in a safe, effective, and controlled way? The “Please KISS Me” (Please Keep It So Simple for Me) plan for carbohydrate control is a wonderful tool that only contains 3 simple rules:

RULE 1: Include the following in your diet:

Fruits: 2-4 servings daily
Vegetables: 3-5 servings daily
Whole grain breads, muffins, bagels, rolls, pasta, noodles, crackers, cereal, and brown rice: 6-11 servings daily
Legumes, beans and peas: 1-2 servings daily
Low-fat and non-fat dairy products: 3 servings daily

RULE 2: Limit the following to less than 2 servings daily:

Fruit Juice
Refined and processed white flour products (bread, muffins, bagels, rolls, pasta, noodles, crackers, cereal)
White rice
French fries
Fried vegetables

RULE 3: Eliminate the following from your diet or eat only on occasion:

Sugary desserts, cookies, cakes, pies, candies
Doughnuts and pastries
Chips, cola and carbonated beverages
Sugar, honey, syrup, jam, jelly, molasses

That’s it! A simple, effective carbohydrate-controlling plan that, when combined with your SparkDiet, allows you to reap the countless benefits of complex carbohydrates and fiber while enhancing your health and maintaining a healthy weight. The long term result will be a healthy you!
 

Thank you for those articles, Wendy. They are quite helpful.

Good luck to everyone today! I just finished my smoothie. It makes me feel very healthy!
 
Since we started the WISH I have been tempted to snack after I get in bed to watch tv. So far I have resisted that temptation. I guess that is my victory. Also I am refusing to snack when I am not hungry. That is another bad habit I have. :sad2:

I am with you on those two habits Wendy, I am the same way! Now when I go to bed to read, I grab a Minute Maid Light to drink, that way I have something, but it is not food, and only 10 calories!
 
I'm not on an official WW plan at this point. I am trying to get myself back into the groove first and then I plan to do it. I follow the old points program they had.

Kendra, good for you resisting that ice cream. That would have been torture for me. I'm such an ice cream junkie.
 
Some inspiration for all of us late night snackers.


I was watching Oprah a couple of years ago, and she had on her trainer. He was talking about not eating at least 4 hours before bed. He said that when you are getting a little hungry at night, and if you don't eat, then that is your body starting to process the fat off your ****!:rotfl: :rotfl:
 
That is a great movivator Jenna... we can all just listen to our stomachs grumble and imagine it is just the noise of a machine that scrapes the fat off our ****. Like a zamboni clearing the slush off the skating rink leaving a perfectly smooth surface :rotfl:

ok, I have no idea where that came from :confused3 :teeth: but maybe it will work :thumbsup2
 
Thanks for that visual, Kelly! :rotfl: I will never hear my stomach grumble again without smiling.

How's everybody doing today? I am a bit hungry--but I think I need to reconnect with that feeling. I rarely experience hunger since I am always eating when I am not hungry. This gives me time to listen to what my body wants. Though, for some odd reason yesterday I had a craving to drink Log Cabin syrup. :confused3
 
Kelly, ROTFL!!! :lmao: That was pretty good.

Also, Jenna that's a great piece of advice!! Thanks for sharing it. Now I wont feel so desperate when I ignore those grumbles at night. ::yes::
 
Thanks for that visual, Kelly! :rotfl: I will never hear my stomach grumble again without smiling.

How's everybody doing today? I am a bit hungry--but I think I need to reconnect with that feeling. I rarely experience hunger since I am always eating when I am not hungry. This gives me time to listen to what my body wants. Though, for some odd reason yesterday I had a craving to drink Log Cabin syrup. :confused3
Having sugar withdrawls??
 
The only times I have ever been successful with losing weight, was with not cutting everything out. I always give myself one meal a week when we go out to dinner where I eat what I want. Usually it is cheese enchiladas, lol.

It is my treat for doing good all week.

So enjoy your pasta this weekend Kat!:goodvibes
I agree. Mine was today. We went to eat at Red Mesa!! :thumbsup2 Free margarita day! I got a fajita twister and a margarita which I took about 5 sips of this time. I'm getting better. :lmao:


Kelly, that was too funny!

Wendy great articles.

Kendra way to go on the ice cream!!

Everyone else you are doing so great! I can't wait to hear how everyone's first week went next Tuesday!! :banana:
 
I agree. Mine was today. We went to eat at Red Mesa!! :thumbsup2 Free margarita day! I got a fajita twister and a margarita which I took about 5 sips of this time. I'm getting better. :lmao:

A fajita twister sounds yummy!

I really feel like pigging out today. :guilty:

I am worried because I am loosely following Weight Watchers Flex Points. I am already at 19 points and we haven't had supper yet. I think I might skip that tonight and just have some smartpop popcorn.

I have St.Elmo's Fire here - might watch that tonight to take my mind off of the pigging out. :thumbsup2
 
Some inspiration for all of us late night snackers.


I was watching Oprah a couple of years ago, and she had on her trainer. He was talking about not eating at least 4 hours before bed. He said that when you are getting a little hungry at night, and if you don't eat, then that is your body starting to process the fat off your ****!:rotfl: :rotfl:

Four hours before bed, huh? Maybe I should start having dinner a bit later and then I won't be hungry later on. Of course right now I'm starving and want to eat NOW!



That is a great movivator Jenna... we can all just listen to our stomachs grumble and imagine it is just the noise of a machine that scrapes the fat off our ****. Like a zamboni clearing the slush off the skating rink leaving a perfectly smooth surface :rotfl:

ok, I have no idea where that came from :confused3 :teeth: but maybe it will work :thumbsup2


:lmao: What a visual Kelly!


Thanks for that visual, Kelly! :rotfl: I will never hear my stomach grumble again without smiling.

How's everybody doing today? I am a bit hungry--but I think I need to reconnect with that feeling. I rarely experience hunger since I am always eating when I am not hungry. This gives me time to listen to what my body wants. Though, for some odd reason yesterday I had a craving to drink Log Cabin syrup. :confused3

:scared:

I agree. Mine was today. We went to eat at Red Mesa!! :thumbsup2 Free margarita day! I got a fajita twister and a margarita which I took about 5 sips of this time. I'm getting better. :lmao:


Kelly, that was too funny!

Wendy great articles.

Kendra way to go on the ice cream!!

Everyone else you are doing so great! I can't wait to hear how everyone's first week went next Tuesday!! :banana:

Five sips, huh? You're turning into a lush like the rest of us Beth. ;)

I expect between the pasta and the birthday festivities on Saturday mine may not start out so well but I know that so I'm o.k. with whatever the scale has in store for me Tuesday.

A fajita twister sounds yummy!

I really feel like pigging out today. :guilty:

I am worried because I am loosely following Weight Watchers Flex Points. I am already at 19 points and we haven't had supper yet. I think I might skip that tonight and just have some smartpop popcorn.

I have St.Elmo's Fire here - might watch that tonight to take my mind off of the pigging out. :thumbsup2

That's what the flex points are for, Kelly. You can add them in where you need them. Also, be sure to get some of the exercise points in there. You know what I like when I am doing WW? Skinny Cow ice creams sandwiches. Two points and pretty good.

Dang...now I am thinking of ice cream.

I forgot to say when you send your weight in, send your actual weight, not "I lost two pounds" You can say that too but it makes it easier on me if I can just look at the weight and not have to do the math on it before entering it on the spreadsheet. :thumbsup2
 
That's what the flex points are for, Kelly. You can add them in where you need them. Also, be sure to get some of the exercise points in there. You know what I like when I am doing WW? Skinny Cow ice creams sandwiches. Two points and pretty good.

Dang...now I am thinking of ice cream.

I forgot to say when you send your weight in, send your actual weight, not "I lost two pounds" You can say that too but it makes it easier on me if I can just look at the weight and not have to do the math on it before entering it on the spreadsheet. :thumbsup2


I have some of the Skinny Cow fudgicles :thumbsup2 The kids want to eat them on me even though they have their own ice cream in the freezer.

I also REALLY love the Chapmans Frozen Yogurt - Cappuchino flavor :thumbsup2
 
oh yeah, about that 4 hour thing... that would be really hard for me. We don't eat dinner until 6:00pm and with the shift I'm on, I usually go to bed around 9ish. That's less than 3 hours between dinner and bed. Maybe I should make lunch my big meal. That would be weird with the kids though - wondering why I am not eating the same dinner as them and all...
 
That is a great movivator Jenna... we can all just listen to our stomachs grumble and imagine it is just the noise of a machine that scrapes the fat off our ****. Like a zamboni clearing the slush off the skating rink leaving a perfectly smooth surface :rotfl:

ok, I have no idea where that came from :confused3 :teeth: but maybe it will work :thumbsup2


Oh my gosh, I love that visual Kelly, too funny! :lmao: :lmao:

How's everybody doing today? I am a bit hungry--but I think I need to reconnect with that feeling. I rarely experience hunger since I am always eating when I am not hungry. This gives me time to listen to what my body wants. Though, for some odd reason yesterday I had a craving to drink Log Cabin syrup. :confused3


I agree, I used to never get to the point where I was hungry. Not sure what to say about drinking syrup though?:confused3 :rotfl:


Well, I did not do good for dinner tonight, yes we have already eaten. Jonathan has soccer at 5:00 and Jessica has open house at her school from 6:00 to 8:30. I thought DH was going to be home to help out, but one of our friends is in the hospital, his kidneys have stopped working (just like what happened to DH's dad), so he is there with him. So we got fast food, which I said I was not going to do, but it could not be helped today.
 
I forgot to say when you send your weight in, send your actual weight, not "I lost two pounds" You can say that too but it makes it easier on me if I can just look at the weight and not have to do the math on it before entering it on the spreadsheet. :thumbsup2

Well, I did not do good for dinner tonight, yes we have already eaten. Jonathan has soccer at 5:00 and Jessica has open house at her school from 6:00 to 8:30. I thought DH was going to be home to help out, but one of our friends is in the hospital, his kidneys have stopped working (just like what happened to DH's dad), so he is there with him. So we got fast food, which I said I was not going to do, but it could not be helped today.

So sorry to hear about your friend. I know that is stressful.

Given the way our society is, I think that we will all likely end up at a fast food place every now and then. The trick is to go in with a plan and not look at the menu. Maybe we could each post healthy or light eating options at some of the majors, then when we "unexpectedly" end up in one of these places, it is not a big deal to order something that is not too damaging to our goals.

At one point I know that McDonalds included nutritional information on the back of the tray liner. I don't remember #'s, but I do remember that a hamburger did not seem to be too bad on fat and calories, and the grilled chicken is a good option as long as you hold the mayo and other hi fat sauces. If you just get a burger with a big diet soda to and grab some of your kids' fries, that is not too bad.

Anyone else with ideas on making fast food work with our goals?
 
Oh my gosh, I love that visual Kelly, too funny! :lmao: :lmao:




I agree, I used to never get to the point where I was hungry. Not sure what to say about drinking syrup though?:confused3 :rotfl:


Well, I did not do good for dinner tonight, yes we have already eaten. Jonathan has soccer at 5:00 and Jessica has open house at her school from 6:00 to 8:30. I thought DH was going to be home to help out, but one of our friends is in the hospital, his kidneys have stopped working (just like what happened to DH's dad), so he is there with him. So we got fast food, which I said I was not going to do, but it could not be helped today.
:grouphug:
 


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