Fine Tune Your Diet By Counting Macros

Fine Tune Your Diet By Counting Macros

When looking at losing weight and healthy eating, you may have run across the word “macro” and “tracking macros.” But what are they and why track them? If you have ever gone on a low carb or low-fat diet, increased your protein for muscle building, or carb-loaded before a distance race, you have been playing with macros. Keep reading to learn how to fine-tune your diet by counting macros. What are Macros? Macros are macronutrients. The term macro means large. The body needs these nutrients to function and provide energy. You may be familiar with the term calories or as in counting calories. Macros are what make up the calories in food and can help you understand how all calories are not created equal. By learning more about macros, you will better understand where your calories are coming from and how they affect your body. Counting macros can help you focus more on how to fuel your body for better nutrition and fitness goals. The three areas of nutrients concerning macros are fat, carbohydrates, and protein. Counting macros and not just calories are important. The calorie content in these three areas has a value. Carbohydrates Carbohydrates contain 4 calories per gram. Carbs are important for fueling daily activities, but they are not all created equal. Simple carbohydrates such as white bread, white flour, regular pasta, and sugary cereals will spike insulin levels which dictate how our body will use the food. It can be used immediately for energy or more likely stored as fat. Complex carbs generally digest slowly and keep insulin levels from spiking, allowing the food to convert into energy rather than storing it as fat. These types of carbohydrates include brown rice, whole wheat bread, quinoa, and whole-wheat pasta. Protein Proteins also contain 4 calories per gram. Protein is essential for building muscle, and lean muscle is the best tool to burn fat. According to a Harvard Medical School article, most Americans take in about 15% of their calories from protein. This may sound low, but it is well within daily recommended requirements. But if you are looking to maintain healthy weight and muscle while aging research has shown adding more protein to the diet may help. Common protein sources include chicken, ground turkey, lean red meats, pork, eggs, fish, and protein powder. Fat  Fats contain 9 calories per gram. This is more than double the carbohydrates and proteins. No reason to be afraid because fat helps us absorb vitamins into the bloodstream. It’s also important for managing inflammation. Your body needs fat for energy and critical functions, such as hormone production, nutrient absorption, and body temperature maintenance. Excellent sources for unsaturated fats include avocado, nuts, and extra virgin olive oil. Stay away from trans-fats, found in fried and processed foods. Be watchful when consuming saturated fats from milk, cheese, and other animal products as they can be high in cholesterol. So Where To Begin? Start with finding how many calories you should consume within a day. A calorie calculator can help you determine your needs and can be located online. The next step is to look at what macronutrient ratio works best for you. A macro calculator can help with specific ratios that may work best in your individual case. Calculator.net has a good one for both calories and macros with an option on if you want to maintain, gain, or lose weight. The Right Fit Typical macronutrient recommendations for carbohydrates are 45-56% of total calories, proteins 10-35% of total calories, and fats 20-35% of total calories. Your ratio can be fine-tuned depending on your goals. Finding the right fit of protein, fat, and carbs can help establish your personal goals to build muscle or lose weight. Getting Started Plan and execute. The more you think about your food intake, the less surprised you will be by what you have consumed. Learn what a typical serving size is for portion control. Use an app to make tracking easier and save time on math calculations. Remember, patience helps when learning something new. Before you know it, you will recognize what your body needs and how it will stack up in your macro numbers. Don’t give up! The Benefits Of Tracking Macros The benefits of tracking macros can help eliminate excess calories from your diet and result in weight loss. Tracking gives you a more solid nutrition program and in turn a more powerful impact on choices and calorie intake. Since we start losing muscle in our 30s, tracking macros can help you get enough protein to build and repair the body. What you may like best about counting macros is the “not a one-size-fits-all strategy.” You are eating real food without depriving your body. You will want to keep in mind that quality is still the goal and not focus solely on the numbers. Keep looking at the food your body really needs. Always consult with your healthcare provider before beginning an exercise/meal restriction plan to ensure the health and wellness plan is right for you. Remember, it’s important to get whole grains, healthy fats, vegetables, and lean protein on your plate. Macro counting is just another way to help you find the right fit for your body. About The Author Robin Anne Griffiths is a certified master development coach, personal trainer, behavior change consultant, and yoga instructor. She specializes as a movement instructor for senior populations. Her mission is to help with living a fuller and healthier life as you age. Her Better You Series is three unique programs tailored to help with positive changes in diet, fitness, and life direction. She works with groups and individuals on life transitions to create personal balance – physically and mentally. You can find more information at her website .

Food – The Love/Hate Relationship

Food – The Love/Hate Relationship

Many of us have a complicated relationship with food.  We LOVE to eat, and we HATE how it affects us. Often, we have a distorted view of what and how much we eat, and our choices aren’t always the best for us.  Too many times I hear how great an eating plan is going, then something happens, and it falls apart.  The breakdown can come from many areas, like poor planning, going too long without eating, or just not drinking enough water. Sometimes it can be from depriving our self and then binging on that very food. This love-hate relationship is an old dance that we have been playing over and over for a lifetime.  Frequently it began when young, when we become overly conscious of our bodies and become slave to the scale.  Society puts a picture in our mind of what is ideal, and we then strive to get that perfection.  We then began the roller coaster ride of fad diets, poor nutrition, and poor fitness plans. Before you know it, we have formed a habit.  Here is an example.  We have an upcoming event, (cruise, school reunion, wedding) and we gear up by dieting and exercising, then we celebrate during the event and then go right back to our old habits.   Let’s look at some facts about the diet industry from the U.S. Weight Loss & Diet Control Market. In 2019 the report stated that the US weight loss market was worth a record $72 billion.  The good news is consumers are shunning processed foods and artificial ingredients, and more consumers are using free diet and fitness apps to track their intake.  The bad news according to a study conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics shows both men and women in the US are nearly an inch taller and 25 pounds heavier with an increase in body mass index (BMI) than in 1960.  Which is not surprising since we serve larger quantities, eat fewer whole foods, and move less.  It should also be noted that although the diet industry is still strong, the number of dieters has fallen, due to the growth of the size acceptance and body positivity movement.  So, what does this all mean?  I believe it suggests that although are more knowledgeable about food today than ever and have many options at our fingertips, our relationship with eating is muddy.  Why?  Several reasons, but I want to focus on the relationship aspect and how we are processing our thoughts when it comes to eating. Let’s explore how we feel about food as well as when and why we eat.   Eat when you are hungry and stop when your full.  The body can tell you so many things if you learn to listen.  This amazing machine knows what it requires and can alert you to what it does not need. Learning these cues when your body is hungry or full can help you eat when you need to and stop when you should. Cravings are clues.  For example, if you are burning a lot of carbohydrates from exercise, you will more than likely be craving replacements. Listen for the clues and learn to connect what you are feeling to what your body is telling you.  Don’t categorize food as good and bad.  When you deprive yourself of specific foods because you label them as bad or off limits, you are setting yourself up for failure.  By learning to eat instinctively, you can satisfy a craving and be less likely to overeat or binge when your willpower has been depleted.  Discover how improving nutrition and satisfying craving can create variety, balance, and self-control. Eat, keeping moderation in mind. Don’t keep foods in the house that are problematic and seem to call your name. If you like ice cream go out occasionally to get it as a treat rather than keeping a gallon in the freezer when you know you can’t leave it alone. Also remember to portion out your treats.  Rather than sitting down with a half-gallon of ice cream with a spoon or a bag of chips, serve yourself with a cup or bowl that can control the amount you are having.  Recognize emotional eating habits. You may use food as a coping method when experiencing emotional feelings or triggers.  Boredom, stress, solitude, and other emotional situations can cause overeating. Learning to recognize what initiates these feelings will help you find other outlets to cope.  It’s important to divide natural hunger from emotional hunger.  Don’t be a slave to the scale.  The scale is a good way to keep track of change, but if you are building muscle and losing fat, it can disappoint since muscle weighs more.  Preferably we want to eat to provide energy, to feel good, and not to structure our meals around the number on the scale.   Practice mindful eating.  If you are paying attention to your body’s signals for hunger and fullness, you will understand mindful eating habits. Eat without distractions such as television, email, or other diversions.  Mindful eating is being present at the moment. Practice on each bite and pay attention to the texture and flavor of the food.  Recognize when your body is becoming full.  Asking yourself the following questions will teach you to pay attention and keep you in the moment rather than mindlessly taking in food without really knowing what or how much you ate.  Why do I eat? When do I want to eat? What do I eat? How do I eat? How much do I eat?  Where do I invest my energy?  Enjoy!  Best of all, we can appreciate our experience with food by coming to terms with our old way of thinking and adopting mindful practices.  By practicing mindfulness in our eating habits and dispersing with depriving our self, we become more in touch with our body. “Mindfulness practices are not about learning to enjoy every moment in every day. Let’s be honest: We are humans, and this

Ten Steps To Find Motivation For A Better You

Ten Steps To Find Motivation For A Better You

Have you found yourself in the morning resolved to change habits and by evening it has disappeared?  What are your road blocks?  Going out to eat?  Unexpected guests? Started a project and time got away from you?  Becoming over-whelmed, or you didn’t feel like it later in the day? The secret is to find motivation and have a plan you can stick to for the long term.  So where to start?  What is stopping you? I have a few thoughts to help you become more accountable to what you are trying to accomplish. #1 – Decide What You Want To AccomplishWhat is important enough you will want to stick with it and follow through?  Evaluate your priorities and figure out what is most important and why you want to do it.  For example, if you are looking to lose weight – Is it because you want to look better?  Feel better or something else? If you want to be healthier – Is it because you are trying to prevent future problems, or solve current health issues?  Are you wanting to feel better and stronger? My point is if you don’t buy into the result or big picture, you won’t find motivation to accomplish the wanted result. #2 – Create A Personal Mission StatementAs silly as this may seem a mission statement is vital because you are deciding what’s important to you; why you are doing it and agreeing to move forward.  When thinking about a mission statement try to keep it simple.  Don’t make it complicated so it will be hard to remember or obtain.  Think basic plan and work from there.  For example, a sample mission statement could be as little as “I will walk five days a week and build up to going ten miles a week.” #3 – Set Mini GoalsMini goals are great to keep us excited about what we are doing, and it also helps us change habits.  You can control how many and how often you have mini goals.  For example, you may decide as part of your weight control or healthy eating plan you will delete one item from your menu in the next month.  You may have a mini goal of adding stretching to the end of your workouts.  Or one mini goal may be to drink a certain amount of water daily. When you have these types of mini goals, you see differences in your life plus you feel good about being in control. #4 – Make NotesList can be helpful.  It could be something you hang on your bathroom mirror to see each morning, a phone app or an actual to-do list on your calendar.  Don’t over load your list with items you know you cannot handle.  Some people find it works well to have a list of things to accomplish each week and at the end of the week reflect on what happened.  For example, say you want to read an article once a week on strength training techniques.  Or perhaps you decide each week you will try a new recipe that is healthy for you.  Go back to your mission statement and mini goals to see if they are falling in line with the big picture of what you want to accomplish. #5 – One Task At A TimeHow often do we hear the benefits of multi-tasking?  I am here today to tell you to stop and think single tasking!  Why? I bet you do too much at once and instead of something getting done everything is in process. There is something also called slow multi-tasking.  This is having multiple task going on, but you are working on one thing at a time.  If you want to give up sugar, exercise, or give up caffeine then start with one and get it done before moving to the next.  I often tell my fitness clients I’m excited they showed up.  If they can’t do every movement or need to alternate something, it’s okay.  We can build as we go.  The last thing I want is someone to feel uncomfortable, then stop and quit.  Remember single tasking! #6 – Know Your Strengths And WeaknessesWe all have things we do well and many not so well. For example, you may have the self-discipline to work out regularly but can’t give up the evening dish of ice cream.  Knowing what needs done and owning up to what you do is two very different things.  Make a mental note of where you are strong and where you have weaknesses.  Then work on what you can do to make your strengths even more of an asset and decrease the weaknesses or at least recognize them and chip away on how they are affecting your life.  If getting to the gym is hard to do in the morning but you are better in the afternoons, then plan it.  If you have a weakness for certain foods, then don’t have it in the house or plan how you can indulge and when.  #7 – Create PartnershipsWhen possible work with others who have similar goals.  It will make your journey more fun and by sharing ideas it will motivate you to stay on course. When I began my journey, I met with a group who went to the same gym classes at lunch time and had similar goals.  We all became friends and did outings outside the gym.  Our lunch time workouts were like a recess for us in the middle of our day.  It gave us an incentive to go. #8 – Have Self-ValueSo often we put ourselves last on the list of needs.  We take care of everyone else and if there is time left over, we then give to our self.  Reassess your priorities and learn how important it is to have self-care.  Work on adjustments you can do to make sure you are getting the attention you need to be the best person you can be. # 9 – Getting FeedbackWhen you