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What is a diet?

8/1/2018

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What is a diet?

Somewhere along the line, we lost complete control over what the meaning of a diet is.

We’ve bastardized it even.

Google it, just the word diet. Unlike most singular words you may search for, you won’t even get a definition of the word--believe me I tried. Instead, you have to actually search “Diet definition.”

Then you’ll get to the heart of the word: “the kinds of foods that a person, animal or community habitually eats.”

Hmm, that’s a little weird?

Isn’t it supposed to say things like ketogenic, high-carb, low-carb, caloric restriction, caloric surplus, starvation, cleansing etc? Where are those words?

The unfortunate reality is that none of the above terms actually encapsulates what a diet is. Sure, they are types of diets, but that’s of little actual relevance.

The issue I bring forth here is when someone watches what you happen to be putting into your mouth and make the statement, “oh you’re on a diet are you?”

Well, yeah, I am. So are you. Educate yourself.

We’re all on diet and we have been since the day we entered this world and that’s a good thing. The guy who’s sitting on his couch watching Sportscentre all day drinking Mountain Dew and eating Doritos is also on a diet.

The reason this is important is that it’s crucial we develop an understanding and empathy for the way people eat throughout society. As you are probably aware, some people are able to eat certain foods and others are not. A ketogenic diet works for some but may be the worst possible strategy for others. That’s not a bad thing, it’s just a different reality.

We need to start looking at diets for the benefits they provide to the person who’s using them. Are some dieting strategies better than others?

Sure, only insofar as a certain diet works better for that individual person. Where someone might work better through a high-fat diet, a competitive CrossFitter likely wouldn’t perform and feel as good on said diet. That doesn’t make it a bad thing though.

With all food decisions, it’s crucial we start removing judgement whether that be internal on yourself or external on those around you. If you eat a donut, eat the donut and no that doesn’t mean you’re, “going off your diet.” It’s in your diet. The problem becomes when we look at dieting and eating in these binary terms where it’s all or nothing and you end up falling off the wagon because the “diet” got ruined from one decision.

What you eat, NO MATTER WHAT IT IS, is the diet. The goal is always making the best decisions for your lifestyle and activities. What’s best doesn’t always mean eating broccoli and kale.

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Check in 1: man, I'm hungry

7/9/2018

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Dieting is really hard.

It’s been just over two weeks and I would have to say that’s my biggest takeaway from 14 days of prep work for my first show. I thought for sure that I had things covered but man was I wrong.

Thing is, I knew what to expect going in. I chronicled it already but still, writing it down and experiencing it are two completely different things.

For the past year or so, I’ve been reverse dieting and eating to perform which is completely different than the road I’m on currently. Eating to perform is all about eating enough to make sure you’re fueling your workouts and recovering after them. It’s super important, especially when you’re competing in a sport like CrossFit (yes that means calorie deficits during your CrossFit competition season is a bad idea).

Now however, I’m eating totally for aethetics and although I knew I would be hungry, a little more irritable and tired, this hunger is...well...for lack of a better word, a mind-fuck.

I guess it’s just different though. Whereas before I didn’t really want to feel hungry, now feeling hungry is a good thing for my progress. A hunger response means that my metabolism still thinks we need more calories to maintain my current weight (side note, your body hates change more than you can possibly imagine) which is what I’m intentionally trying not to do.

This means that I have to be able to fight off my hunger though. And I’ll be damned if it’s not hard. See, my girlfriend just moved back to the area for the summer and I want to enjoy a lot of things with her. If she wants ice cream, I want to go for ice cream. If she wants to have a big dinner, guess what I want to have?

Add onto this, I’m currently house sitting for two of my friends who have kids and they have food all over the house. Seriously, M and Ms like they’re going out of stock. It takes everything I have not to grab a handful everytime I walk by them in the house.

What stops me though is my goal. After one week on a calorie deficit, I dropped from 185 to 183 which is right where I want to be but on week two, due to the above circumstances, I often went over my macros and didn’t see any weight loss. Blah.

All I can do is get back on the wagon and get going again on my goals. I know I have probably 13 pounds left to lose at least before I step on stage and that’s not an insignificant number. It’s going to take a lot of hard work in the gym to get it off and more importantly, it’s going to take some self-discipline in the kitchen to endure as well.

But it was a great point I got when listening to Angela Hauck’s podcast, who’s also my nutrition coach, when she was interviewing pro bodybuilder Adam Wilks. They talked about how if you were forced to do it, you wouldn’t think about it or try to rationalize it, you’d just do it.

If someone had a gun to your mom’s head (sorry to the moms out there) and they said don’t overeat or else, I’m sure you’d be able to put the fork down.

Sometimes that’s the mindset you need to get into to be successful when dieting or really anything in life. Get to the gym or else. Pick up the broccoli or else. Cut out the sugar or else. Sure, there's times and places for this mentality and that time ISN'T all the time, but you get what I mean and I’m sure I’ll have to implement it many times along the road over the next three months.

Now, being a nutrition coach with active clients looking for weight loss, know this--unless you have a defined goal with a defined timeline, you do not NEED to think this way. Sure, there’s a little bit of motivation that you need to stick to but don’t feel like your mom will die if you go off the rails for a day or two. The long-game is what we are after here, not a temporary goal.

When you have a short-term goal directly on the calendar, that’s when things need to be more dialled in and you need to care more about the minutia of what it is that’s going into your mouth and how much.

For now, it's one of the ways I'm getting through my prep. Onto the next couple of days though. 




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What is Intermittent fasting?

7/7/2018

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What is Intermittent Fasting?

Ever heard Intermittent Fasting (IF) is the cure to all evils? It will cure cancer. It will take inches off your waist. It will break cravings.

Well, not really. Certainly IF has some benefits for people’s nutritional practices but it’s not the cure of all evil and it still has to apply to some very important physiological laws.

First, let’s go over what IF actually is. The concept really isn’t that difficult. Fasting, simply means just not eating. The first thing that we should get out of the way is that it’s not a diet, it’s a pattern of eating--which depending on your definition of diet is exactly what a diet is anyways but we’ll let that slide.

Essentially, it’s a way of scheduling your eating into a smaller window of the day. It’s not fasting completely where we just don’t eat but fasting for a intermittent period of time to achieve certain benefits. The standard way of doing this is through a 16-fast followed by an eight hour eating window.

These benefits can be exhaustive. It can help you reduce caloric intake (lose weight), increase insulin sensitivity, reduce oxidative stress and inflammation in the body and can help with blood sugar regulation.

The key with all of these benefits is putting the word ‘can’ before them. Yes, there can be some great benefits for sure but they aren’t always exclusive to IF. Let’s start with the most sexy of them--the idea that it can increase weight loss.

With IF, assuming you’re still going to be eating the same amount of food as you would be if you weren’t on IF, you would not be seeing any additional benefits for weight loss. Now if you did a quick Google search of this topic, I’m sure you might be questioning the validity of this article but hear me out. If weight loss occurs through being in a caloric deficit, (that is eating less calories than you are using through energy) where would the caloric deficit occur while eating on IF?

Sure, you might be losing or burning fat on the back end of your fast, but you would be gaining or storing fat during your eating window so how would that change.

The way that IF can help with fat loss however is by controlling the eating window so that when you are eating it feels more satiating than if you were to eat smaller meals throughout the day. Take myself for example. Dieting for a physique show, I’m in a caloric deficit. Eating 2,750 calories per day through a standard day, five square meals, I would likely not get as filling of meals I would typically be used to. I’d feel hungry...a lot. But what about if I fasted until say noon and stopped eating at 8 p.m. Then I would be able to eat the same amount of food in larger meals and potentially feel more full, right?

That’s how IF can work for dieting. Your eating window shrinks so feel more full and can diet easier. That’s why you might see articles on the internet claiming IF is the new cure for weight loss. If that person isn’t controlling calories, it’s likely they’re eating less calories through that eating window than they typically would and boom, weight loss!

This truthfully isn’t rocket science.

That being said, there are benefits such as increasing insulin sensitivity that can be extremely helpful. By being more insulin sensitive, we are able to better use what is the most powerful anabolic hormone in the human body. Sure, insulin can store some unwanted cells such as body fat in the form of excess glucose but if used properly, it can be great. When you lose that sensitivity though, it requires more and more carbohydrate to create an insulin response and then boom, you can become prediabetic or even diabetic.

Through IF though, you are able to reset or lower that insulin resistance through stretching long periods where your body is relying on glucose for energy. Through fasting for 16 hours or more, your body runs through its stored glucose as energy and then converts to using fat as energy which makes your body’s cells incredibly receptive to insulin once again, if presented the opportunity. It’s similar to not having ice cream for months on end before having a spoon full of vanilla ice cream and thinking it’s the greatest thing ever. Your body lost the taste for ice cream and then became incredibly receptive to the taste once again.

Similarly, IF can reduce inflammation within the body through once again the elimination of glucose within the body’s cells.

So is IF the best dietary practice for everyone and one everyone should follow?

No. Again, I’ll alway say that the best dietary practice is the one that works for you and that you can follow. If that means that you stop eating at 8 p.m and don’t eat again at noon because you’re working in the morning, then great IF works for you. But if you wake up in the morning and enjoy breakfast more than anything to get your day started and are busier throughout the day, it may not make sense to put off eating just for the sake of it.

There are plenty of different ideas you can implement for dieting and IF is just one. If it works for you, implement it. If not, just know it’s another tool in the tool box for the time you may want to use it.

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What we believe: Our founding nutritional principles

6/28/2018

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I realize that there are some things I should get out in the open right away from a nutritional perspective.

Within the industry, there exists a plethora of different perspectives on how one should be approaching nutrition. It’s almost as if you find the way you believe and then go find someone that believes in the same things as you and then poof, you have a match (I think they call this confirmation bias or something).

That’s why I feel it’s important my readers or future readers/followers know what I believe so it’s clear. My principles on nutrition are quite simple:

Eat real food, not too much, mostly vegetables. Practice everything in moderation INCLUDING moderation.

It’s literally that simple. 14 words simple. But I’ll break it down.

Eat Real Food

This one can seem overly simplistic but it’s actually not that hard. As a rule, use the idea of shopping the perimeter of the grocery store. Very little of what you find in the aisles of a grocery store has any nutritional value and should be treated as such. That means hitting up the produce section for fruits and vegetables, the meat section for your protein sources, then maybe grabbing a few items from the fridges when it comes to dairy products to top things off.

Quite simply if it comes in a can or a package, we don’t want to be making these things a staple of our diets with a few exceptions. Things like bacon, cheese, yogurt, butter all have a place in your diet depending on how you’re eating but items such as pop tarts, granola or cereal simply don’t unless they are an occasional treat for you that isn’t a mainstay in the cupboard.

Not too much

This is much harder than our first principle. It’s the practice of knowing how much you should be eating for your particular day and not going over it.

We operate through a macronutrient based prescription. With each client, we go over how many calories on average you should be taking in per day and break it down when it comes to the amount of fat, carbohydrates and proteins.

This can vary completely on the individual. An online calculator may tell you you’re able to eat 3,000 calories or MyFitnessPal might tell you dieting on 1,400 is where it’s at but honestly, they can be sometimes as much as 50% off your actual caloric intake. It can take some time and coaching to find out how much fuel you need to put into your tank to see the results you want and know that we are putting enough gas in to get where we want to go but not so much that it’s spilling over the sides either.

Mostly plants

This one is rather simple. If it grew out of the ground, let’s eat as much of it as we can. No I’m not recommending you go vegan or vegetarian and swear off protein (unless that’s a personal choice you want to make for you) but I am recommending when it comes to preparing your meals that you put as many plants, particularly green ones, on that plate as humanly possible.

I saw green vegetables because these are the foods that are highest in micronutrients that we are looking to eat on a daily basis. One of the practices I’ll often tell my clients to work through is to try and get a variety of different vegetables each time you go the grocery store. This means that if it’s asparagus and green beans one week, try to mix it up and get say broccoli and brussel sprouts next week. And yes, there are ways to make brussel sprouts taste appealing.

Everything in moderation, INCLUDING moderation

While I definitely believe in the power of eating meats and vegetables and filling your plate with as many real foods as possible, I’m not naive enough to think that’s all people should be eating. Let’s be honest, at those anniversaries, parties and birthdays, they aren’t serving up kale sandwiches. It’s cakes, baked goods, sweets and alcohol.

So why are we trying to pretend it’s any different by restricting our choices?

The answer is that we shouldn’t be. At Refocus Nutrition, we’re focused on an 80/20 ratio where 80 per cent of the time we’re aiming to make strong nutritional decisions with real foods and 20 per cent of the time, we’re allowed to eat more of the things we often consider bad foods or junk foods.

Let’s face it, a restricted diet hasn’t worked for anyone long term in probably the history of the world. It may work temporarily but after restricting yourself from sweets, I’m sure you fell of the wagon at some point and binged on what you thought would make you fat and kill your progress and further damaged your relationship with food.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Find a way to put those “bad foods” into your diet consistently but in moderation. It might not mean having an entire pint of ice cream, but why not a small bowl? No it WILL NOT prevent you from losing weight, gaining a six-pack of abs or hitting a new PR in the gym, no matter what anyone else has told you.

And lastly, know that even moderation, at times needs moderation. There will be days within the year that you want to go completely off the deep end and eat way beyond what you should in one day. The fact of the matter is if you were to do that four days a month for the entire year, it would only account to just over 10 per cent of the year. That’s nothing. You can create a lot of success in the other 90 per cent that means a lot more than a couple days a month.


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why you crave food?

6/25/2018

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It’s 8 o’clock at night, you’re sitting there binge watching your latest Netflix series and your stomach growls at you.

Damn, you’re hungry but you know you ate everything in your day already. All you can think about is sweet foods though. Oreos, cheesecake, pop-tarts, ice cream—-"ALL THE CARBS," as one of my clients would say.

Quite simply, these are the crazy cravings coming on. We’ve all had them but few of us are actually able to understand why we have them, if they’re normal and more or less, what to do about them when we get them.

First of all, let’s get the initial question out of the way—are they normal? The answer is a resounding yes. Cravings are just one of many ways that are bodies are trying to speak to us. One of the things about the human body that we should always keep in mind is that it is constantly trying to maintain a set-point or homeostasis. Our bodies hate change so when able to, they’re always trying to make sure that things more or less stay the same.

Thus, our bodies could be telling us to eat for a variety of reasons. If dieting and on a caloric deficit, the cravings are telling us the body needs additional calories to get back to maintenance or homeostasis. If we’re tired, it wants to maintain energy levels (more on that later) and if we’re nutrient deficient, our body is craving additional calories in hopes of meeting that need. It’s a pretty simplistic explanation but it’s also the truth.

Hormonally, when it comes to cravings or hunger, we are typically referring to both ghrelin and leptin that is secreted by our guts to regulate hunger. These two chemicals act through a yin-yang approach to balance our satiety and hunger responses. Ghrelin, is the signal sent from our gut that tells us we are hungry. Desperately hungry and we need energy yesterday. Leptin on the other hand is a hormone predominantly made by adipose tissue (fat) to regulate energy balance by inhibiting hunger.

It’s important to know how these two hormones interact when trying to understand why you’re experiencing the cravings you are on any given day.

Now, the first thing you should be thinking about when it comes to cravings is whether it’s hunger or just a craving. Hunger can obviously come from the stomach, growling at you (sometimes viciously) whereas cravings are that inner dialogue within your brain of going for the bag of chips or not going for it.

Once you have determined it’s a craving, ask your body why it might have a particular craving.

Working with clients, I would say two of the top reasons are stress and sleep deprivation. Starting with stress and the accompanying hormone cortisol, ask yourself if you’ve ever experienced stress eating?

For me I know the answer is definitely yes. I know there are times when I’m stressed out and simply just want to eat everything. Typically when we are in that state, we’re craving foods that are high carbohydrate and or high sugar. The reason for this, at least hormonally, is because of it’s insulin response which can act to shut off our cortisol receptors and temporarily relax our nervous system. In English, if cortisol is the fire, insulin or carbohydrates can act as a fire hose to help shut it down and eliminate the stress. Do it over time and we can develop a chemical pathway within our brains that, when our body sees stress, immediately craves carbohydrates.

Seriously it’s that simple.

Onto the second portion, sleep and you can see once again how a simple explanation will help you unearth a wealth of information about your eating habits. Back to our hormones, a 2004 study revealed that simply decreasing your sleep from 8 hours per night to 5 hours can increase the amount of ghrelin your gut secretes and decrease the amount of leptin in your body. What this means is that your body will be emitting more signals of hunger throughout the day and less signals of fullness or satiety.
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Make sense why you’re crushing your second bag of potato chips and still don’t feel a thing on your hunger?

So what can we do about these cravings?

The first step is awareness—simply knowing that these are cravings. Second, it’s having a mindful discussion with yourself about why you’re feeling what you’re feeling. Are you hungry? Are you stressed? Are you upset? Are you just tired? Have you maybe not had enough vitamins and minerals today? What is your body trying to tell you?

From a coaching perspective, it’s one of the things I would work with you to try and figure out.

One of the hacks around this however could be….get ready for it….eating dark chocolate. That’s right. Researchers have found in a study that eating small amounts of dark chocolate 75% cocoa and above actually have an ability to suppress circulating ghrelin levels because of its bitterness and can slow the rate of your stomach emptying. Not only that, it is higher in fiber and is an excellent source of magnesium which is one of the largest nutrient deficiencies in North America that your body may be calling out for anyways.

Sure, this is a simplistic approach to what you should do about your cravings. There’s more you can go into, but this will help you with a general understanding of why you feel the way you do and hopefully provide some insight on where to go with it to create better eating habits to achieve your goals.









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Why I decided to do a physique show

6/23/2018

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So I decided to do a show.

That’s a sentence I never thought I would be writing down, but I guess here we are. Getting into my health and fitness journey, it’s been clear that my life has been dominated by CrossFit as both a workout modality and a lifestyle. I still coach CrossFit at an affiliate and I love it.

So why on earth would I do a physique show?

Good question.

Attending the Nutritional Coaching Institute certification in Washington D.C this past April, I got a far different perspective on health and fitness than I had ever expected. Going into it, I knew Jason Phillips and his team at iN3 worked mostly, although not exclusively, in the CrossFit realm but I came across tons of people that worked in all areas of the fitness industry. Olympic Weightlifting, powerlifting, boot camps—the whole nine yards were represented at the certification. Although I had been in those other camps before, it was an eye opener for what I would do if I ever had the chance to work with a client as a nutrition coach who was a weightlifter, bodybuilder or whatever athlete.

How would I handle their needs because ultimately that’s why I decided to become a nutrition coach to begin with—finding a way to help others achieve their aesthetics, performance and health goals for life.

That’s when it struck me that I needed to undergo this journey myself. That I would actually have to try something out in order to learn about it so that someday I could help someone in my position because if I wasn’t willing to cut calories to the extreme and lose as much fat as humanly possible, why should someone listen to me about that?

Here I go then. October 20, I will be in Edmonton for the INBF Natural Physique competition.

I can hardly believe I’m actually going to do it, but here it is. Along the way, I’m going to document anything and everything that I deem to be relevant when it comes to my preparation phase.

When I told some of my close friends around me that I would be doing a physique show, I definitely got some mixed reactions. One being, “don’t you think those people are kind of unhealthy?” And, “aren’t you worried about the relationship you’re going to have with your body?”

Both of these questions certainly have some validity. For the first, yes, when doing a prep phase to get ready for a show, there are no shortage of ways that you could go about doing it in an unhealthy way. Starting manipulating water intake, sodium levels, starving to poverty calories and screwing with your hormones are just some of the possible outcomes of getting ready for a physique show. But that’s why I decided to hire a nutrition coach myself in Ange Hauck who recently earned her Fitness Pro card so that I can not only do this in a healthy way but learn from her to help others do it healthy in the future.

Really, if I tried to avoid the fact that people are going to do physique shows and then not learn about it, I would be doing a disservice to all the people who need help. Let’s face it, there are plenty of people who are willing to try doing this alone and if done improperly, you really can do some damage to your metabolism, your self-esteem and maybe most importantly, your hormones.

When it comes to my expectations going forward, I know the prep phase is going to be incredibly difficult. Going from CrossFit workouts where I intentionally leave the gym dripping in sweat, it’s going to feel weird and different to leave with a ‘pump’ rather than a bucket of water.

Also, when it comes to my hormones, I can only expect those are going to take a hit because to get to that lean of a body, (sub eight per cent body fat), you’re going to have to leverage things such as cortisol, testosterone (yes that means a sex drive decline) along with energy and sleep quality (I’m already a pretty poor sleeper).

One of the things I’m going to analyze along the way is my relationship with the mirror and my body. For years I’ve been self-conscious of taking off my shirt in front of other people, particularly women. Even if you think I’m a “fit guy,” the memories of being 12 years old and hiding neck deep in water at the pool so as to not show my chest is still fresh in my mind. Is it going to be hard to stand on stage with just boardshorts on? Can I do that? Will I still have those memories? Will I be willing to return to a normal level of body fat post show?

This doesn’t even go into mentioning posing, which, after practicing to try and get a few photos done, seems like the most ludicrous practice in the world. I have zero concept on how to spread my lats in order to look big. My problem was usually trying to find a way to look small so that no one would notice me.

These are all things I’m looking to experience along the way. Will it be easy? No. But nothing worth doing ever was easy right.

Going into the first week, my maintenance calories (the amount of calories required to maintain my body weight each day) stood at 3,350 per day prior to my prep. If you’ve ever consistently ate that much food, it’s a lot.

When it came to my macronutrients for the start of my prep though, those calories were cut down to 2,762 with 174g of protein, 123g of fat and 242g of carbs. It certainly is a healthy amount of food but I honestly can’t remember the last time I ate so little. Along with this, I need to eat 40g of fiber per day.

This also fails to mention that I am going to be drinking 30g of BCAAs per day so to avoid distressing my gut with more protein (I may have overdone this in the past), meaning that I’m likely going to be less satiated than I would be if I was able to use those extra 30g of protein in chicken or lean beef. When it comes to my other two macronutrients, I know I won’t have any issues hitting those numbers as I’ve done both high carb and high fat in the past with ease.

So…..here we go. Let the science experiment begin.


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What are macros?

6/10/2018

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So you’ve heard about these things called macros? People say they’re going to go on the “macros” diet even, but what in the actual hell are macros and how can they help me achieve my health and fitness goals?

When it comes to macros, or macronutrients as they are actually called, there are three that make up most of our food. Each macro has unique functions  and should comprise a different percentage of the total caloric intake depending on an individuals goals.

These three macros are protein, fats and carbohydrates and I will break them down for you here.

Protein

Protein is an essential macronutrient that is used by the body primarily to create muscle growth and muscle retention but can also be used as energy through gluconeogenesis. At the smallest level, they are called amino acids that when joined together form peptides that will make up the primary structure of the protein we ingest on a daily basis.

Without going too in depth into the structure of each protein molecule, it’s important to know that we use each of these amino acids to build new things within the body, therefore we judge a protein source based on its amino acid composition, which is why it's important to eat things like steak and other red meat in order to get the best bang for your buck (sorry vegans).

Due to the diversity of amino acids within each protein source, it’s important that we consume an array of protein sources in the diet to maximize our individual amino acid profile. This is why, although protein supplements such as whey protein powder will help, it’s always recommended to get your protein through whole food sources such as meats, poultry, seafood and dairy before relying on your daily Cliff Builder Bar to get you through the day.

When it comes to intake for individuals, it can vary depending on several factors such as overall caloric intake, body weight and composition, age and someone’s training modality. For example, the needs of an elite level bodybuilder or CrossFitter would be far different than a 300 pound overweight middle-aged male looking to lose body fat.

Most studies indicate that 0.7-1.2g/lb of body weight is preferential, however using the lean body mass of an individual for someone who is overweight can often be the more accurate measure.

For those of you looking to build muscle, know that more is not always better with protein. Through this thing called gluconeogenesis, if you go overboard on your protein, your body will actually be able to transfer this excess protein into glycogen to be used as energy. This essentially means that you will be paying far more for an energy source like chicken compared to say oatmeal when your body treats it the same way as energy. Not only that, excess amounts of protein can be hard on the gut for digestion so when you’re going over-and-above there just for THE GAINS, it does come at a cost.

FAT

Also known as tryglicerides, fats are the essential macronutrient that has several functions in the diet including a long-term energy source, hormonal production, formation of cell membranes along with nervous system support and essential fatty acids.

When it comes to the different types, it’s important to get a balance of saturated fats (beef, lamb, pork, full fat dairy etc) along with monounsaturated (nuts, avocado, egg yolks) and polyunsaturated (walnuts, mayonnaise, chia seeds) within your daily diet.

When it comes to fatty acids, this is where there is a larger emphasis on what you should be eating. Omega 3 fatty acids seem to be getting the brunt of attention these days for the sole purpose that these fatty acids are important for normal human metabolism and have anti-inflammatory effects. They help dilate blood vessels, decrease pain and reduce inflammation throughout the body. This is one of the areas where people with achy joints can definitely go to work.

When it comes to Omega-3-fatty-acids though, it’s important that you spent the time balancing them with your Omega-6-fatty-acids. Within our bodies, we lack the ability to break down Omega 6 (inflammatory fatty acids) into Omega 3’s and for this reason it is recommended we consume a diet that is balanced or closer to 1:1. Now, the way we currently eat with the way food has been produced creates us closer to a ratio of 20:1. The only way to move closer towards the 1:1 ratio is through strong food quality choices with supplementation that can help.

When it comes to intake, it’s important to know that fat carries with it more calories per gram than any other macronutrient. While carbohydrates and protein each carry 4 calories per gram, fats pack more than twice the punch at 9 calories per gram. This means that although it’s harder to overeat fat, people say, it is much more calorically dense.

Typically it’s recommended to keep fat intake between 20 and 50% to maintain your hormone profile and also energize your body. As a rule of thumb, the more you have to rely on high intensity work in your workouts, the likelihood of you needing more carbs and less fats there is in your diet. That being said, it’s entirely up to you where you want to put that in your diet.

CARBOHYDRATES

Ahh, the fun part, carbohydrates. We all love ‘em but claim we don’t.

Without going too in depth on the different types of carbs (monosaccharides, oligosaccharides and polysaccharides) and giving you a science lesson, carbs are typically the source of energy for most diets in North America and arguably the world at large.

Imagine basically any tasty food you’ve had that isn’t meat and there’s a good chance that it had a good deal of carbs in it. Throughout the years carbs have vilified as either good one day and bad the next while our entire society has been told to eat more complex carbs and less simple ones to avoid, “getting fat.”

While I could go down the rabbit hole on that for thousands of words on end, I’ll save you the time by simply saying that neither of those terms helps quantify the micronutrient content of these carbs nor the blood sugar response from ingesting them. Like the glycemic index, it matters far more what you’re eating these carbs with than the actual carbs themselves.

This is when it comes to things like fibre which we have been told for years to consume. Have a hard time going to the washroom? Good chance you’re cutting it too low on fiber. Fiber, unlike most carbs, is indigestible meaning that it cannot be digested by the body. It comes in two forms being solvable (attracts water and dissolves in water) and insolvable (doesn’t dissolve). Soluable fiber is found in foods like oats, nuts, seeds and some fruits and vegetables while insoluable fiber is found in things like wheat bran, root vegetables and vegetable skins and help us feel more full and boost our overall gut health.

When it comes to carbohydrate intake prescription, this is where things can get kind of foggy because . . . . it depends. For an elite level athlete like Michael Phelps, he needs carbohydrates and lots of them--probably in excess of 500g per day when he’s getting ready to break world records at the Olympic Games. When designing your own prescription however, it should be noted that once you fill your intake for your two primary macronutrients, carbohydrate intake will take care of itself. Carbs are NOT an essential macronutrient and while I do think you should enjoy them in your diet, they do have to be earned and consumed in moderation as well. 

Basically fill the rest of your macronutrients with your carbohydrates and don’t get lost in the minutia.

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Retiring with dignity

5/31/2018

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How many of you have given retirement a serious thought?

Depending on the age of the person reading this, I’m sure it varies from, “I worry about this everyday,” to “Yeah, it’s the thing they take money off my pay check for every week like criminals.”

A 2018 CIBC poll shows that only about one in five Canadians are actually giving retirement some serious thought and considering it, saving money so that they eventually won’t have to work.

The poll demonstrated that the magic number people may need to retire is close to $756,000 in order to be able to live comfortably for your remaining years.

Finding this article on a nutrition website, you probably ask why we’re talking about retirement or money in general. The fact of the matter is, people are comfortable talking about saving money for retirement but very few are considering the state of their health when they eventually are able to walk away from their lifetime jobs.

When it comes to getting older, although you may no longer have financial obligations such as a mortgage and car payments etc, your healthcare costs will dramatically increase. After 65, they will nearly double, 75 even worse.

This is largely because the likelihood of having other health problems increases. It can be anything from more conditions, more medications, a surgery here and there or having to actually move out of your home and into a retirement facility. From 2011 to 2016, the number of people having to live in a retirement home in Canada increased over 100,000, according to our most recent census.

When it comes to health and fitness, that’s what we are after—longevity. Put more simply, the average cost for retirement may be $756,000, but what if you were one of the outliers on the lower end of the scale that only needed a fraction of that number plus your Canadian Pension Plan in order to live out your remaining years with a smile on your face?

What if you put off the need for increased medications, visits to the doctor and ultimately relying on an assisted-living facility for another decade or eliminated it all together?

Your financial needs for retirement would plummet. And all of that is possible but you have to take action in your youth to make it happen because the reality is that all of these conditions, many diseases and atrophy is preventable. Sure, there is a chance anyone will get a disease like cancer in today’s world, but the most common preventative measure is a healthy lifestyle and that starts in your 20s with the same importance that putting aside part of your pay check for your pension does.

It starts with assessing the things you’re eating and the way your body is moving. It starts with having a full picture of not only the money you’re saving for your nest egg, but the body you’re going to have once you get there.

After all, if you retire with $2 million dollars but need to rely on medications, weekly doctor visits or worse, are you really retiring from anything at all?

Retirement is supposed to be about being freed from work so you can enjoy the fruits of your labour for your remaining years, not being imprisoned by your health (or lack thereof).

So, when it comes to investing in your health now remember that those dollars are as important if not more than those going into your investment portfolio. Treat the cost of your gym membership or payment for coaching (be it nutrition or personal training) with the same importance as your RRSP because it is.

An investment into your health is as important as one in your pocket book.

Invest today.
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Playing the long game

5/28/2018

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6 weeks to your best body yet. Summer fit in one month.

Ever seen these marketing ploys?

Don’t worry, you’re not alone. Within the fitness industry, they’re rampant these days and to be quite honest, they’re probably not going anywhere anytime soon.

Without going too in depth as to why they exist, it’s pretty easy to see why they’re successful. Think about it— for years you’ve been trying to get that dream body, those six-pack abs, tighter butt, stomach etc, and then you hear that someone can do it in just six weeks not to mention the so-called transformations they have on their website that says it’s attainable?

WHERE DO I SIGN OVER MY BANKING INFO!

Don’t worry, I’ve fallen prey to these marketing tactics as well. It’s why I bought magazine after magazine of Men’s Health looking for that quick summer body with a tagline similar to “lean abs yesterday.”

The hard reality though is that these transformations need to happen in a lot longer terms than just six weeks. It probably takes more than 12 weeks. If you want it to last, for the rest of your life, this is just the reality!

My mentor Jason Phillips puts it eloquently by saying that, “you didn’t get yourself into this mess overnight so you can’t expect to get out of it overnight either.”

For me, it’s taken the better part of two years. These photos aren’t months apart, they’re two years of hard work, counting macronutrients with hills and valley, successes and yes, failures.

This isn’t to say that your desired transformation is going to require two years, a year or more to actualize but it is a suggestion that you play with the long-game in mind rather than the short game. The United States has one of the best track records when it comes to losing weight. It’s not hard. People understand this, so why do they have one of the highest obesity rates if not the highest in the world?

Because they are constantly jumping on and off the “dieting” merry-go-round. People looking for quick changes go on a short-term diet, create success for themselves and then instantly return to their previous lifestyles and they are back at square one only months later or worse.

It’s why I don’t recommend diets like the ketogenic diet unless you’re willing to eat that way as a lifestyle approach.

At the end of the day, if I told you I could drop 20 pounds off of you in six weeks but that you would have gained it all back and maybe more in 12 weeks, would you hire me as your nutrition coach?

I hope not.

What about if I told you we could drop 20 pounds off of you in three months but worked together after to ensure you were able to increase your food without gaining unwanted body fat?

Now we’re talking.

Dieting and nutrition, whatever you want to call it, is a long game not a short game. We’re after a lifestyle transformation, that just might happen to give us a physical transformation. It won’t be fast, it won’t happen overnight, but it will be sustainable.

It will give you a true version of yourself.
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Why we track our food

5/24/2018

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One of the first things we will begin to talk about with our nutrition when sitting down is tracking our macronutrients and calories so that we can create sustainable weight loss.

For many people who’ve never tracked before, this is often met with a frown and the notion that this ‘tracking’ is considered unhealthy. By tracking, what I mean is weighing and measuring your food based on a certain macronutrient profile of carbohydrates, fats and proteins throughout your day.

Before we get to the relationship with food aspect of it all and discuss the social aspect behind tracking, let’s first discuss scientifically why we track what’s going into our mouths.

For most people who are seeking nutrition help, it’s likely because you are looking to create some sort of fat loss in the future, and or become more toned and muscular. From a scientific perspective, to lose body fat, we need to be burning more calories than we are eating in order for our body to burn adipose tissue (fat) and put that carbon dioxide back into the environment. If we are eating as much as we are burning, or eating more than we are burning (through exercise, breathing, walking around, playing with your kids or pets, etc.,) the number on the scale isn’t going to move and you won’t be burning body fat—plain and simple.

This is true no matter what diet you choose to follow. Be it a high carbohydrate and low fat diet, a paleo diet or even a ketogenic diet. If your calories burned are higher than those ingested, weight loss will almost inevitably occur.

Within my intake form for new clients to fill out so that we can learn more about you, I include a request for as much food information as you have had over the last three to seven days. What that does is shows me how much you’ve been eating so we can figure out where you are at and help design a road-map for where we are going to go.

From there we can set out with a prescription that is based on your current dietary history so to eliminate the guess work so we can help achieve your goals.

Now the reason we track is because our eyes can be incredibly subjective when it comes to our favourite foods on our plates. Take for example a tablespoon of peanut butter—I love this example. I used to enjoy having a peanut butter sandwich in which I had a tablespoon on each piece of bread—or what I thought was a tablespoon. Each time I did it, I just stuck to the spoon in the jar and put it on my bread and enjoyed.

That was until one day when I decided to weigh it. I found out that there was 120 grams of peanut butter on my sandwich. One serving or one tablespoon is 15 grams. That’s six extra servings I was accounting for that I didn’t even know. Each serving is 90 calories, so every time I had that sandwich—which was probably everyday sometimes even twice that day—I was eating 540 extra calories never mind anything else that was inaccurate in my day.

Take just that peanut butter and put it over seven days, that’s 3,780 calories. Over say a three-month dieting period, it’s 45,360 calories. In one pound of fat there is approximately 3,500 calories so when it all works out I would be eating at a caloric surplus and gaining approximately 12 pounds over a three-month period (without accounting for metabolic adaptation). Talk about self-sabotage.

This is why I have clients initially start with weighing their food so they can get a better understanding of what certain portions look like. Will we always weigh and measure? That depends on your goals, but we don’t have to. To be as accurate as possible during a fat loss phase, ideally this is what we want to strive for, but if you’re just looking to pursue a healthy lifestyle and aren’t trying to get on stage for a physique competition, eying your portions is perfectly reasonable.

When it comes to the social aspect of weighing your food, I understand that it’s not always going to be possible to weigh your food. Events come up where you just can’t enter it or you go out for dinner and the meals aren’t on MyFitnessPal. That’s perfectly okay, we do our best here.

Will weighing and measuring your food create a poor relationship with food? In some cases, yes it can if you allow yourself to obsess over the little things like how much kale is on the scale even though it might amount to a total of 25 calories. That’s what coaching is for though—allowing you to work through those experiences so that ten years from now you don’t need a scale or a coach and you can live a healthy life eating the things you absolutely love and enjoy in quantities that are sustainable.

For many like myself though, the scale may be a necessity in order to keep an eating disorder at bay. I know there are people out there who don’t really feel hungry and get that same hormonal response from leptin and ghrelin which help us regulate our hunger because of Eating disorders in our past dietary history (as talked about by Dr. Layne Norton on the Ange Hauck’s TransformYour Life Podcast). Now, the food scale helps me make sure that I’m eating enough food while also ensuring that I stop when I should feel full.

Even for myself, I know this isn’t the long-term solution I need to be working on, but for now it’s been a serious help. As Dr. Norton put in that podcast, if people were able to regulate their hunger response on their own, would we possibly be in the obesity crisis that we are in North America today?

It’s an interesting thought.

TRACKING IS SIMILAR TO THE WAY WE RUN OUR BANK ACCOUNT. WE CREATE A BUDGET SO THAT WE KNOW MORE MONEY IS COMING INTO THE ACCOUNT THAN IS LEAVING IT AND THUS, WE ARE MAINTAINING OUR MONEY OR GROWING OUR WEALTH. IT’S THE EXACT SAME WITH OUR INTAKE WHEN MONITORING OUR DIET. LIKE OUR BANK ACCOUNT, IT WOULDN’T BE HEALTHY TO OBSESS OVER EVERY LITTLE PURCHASE OF TWO DOLLARS BUT WE SHOULD HAVE A GENERAL IDEA OF WHAT’S GOING IN AND OUT OF THE ACCOUNT SO THAT WE ARE BETTER ABLE TO MEET OUR FINANCIAL, AND THUS NUTRITIONAL, GOALS IN THE FUTURE. ​

When it comes to tracking, know that it’s a tool at your disposal to help you achieve your goals, but it’s not the end point. There are other discussions such as meal timing, food quality and hydration that we need to consider outside of the parameters of food quantity.

It’s a whole FOOD picture approach.

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    A former journalist and sports blogger, I've turned my writing prowess and love of fitness and nutrition into a personal blog where you can find anything you are looking for on the world of health, nutrition and fitness. 

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