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Anonymous asked: What is your diet and exercise routine like? You seem to have a good thing going since you're so in shape!
I don’t really have a routine. I’m not sure if I have a good thing going, but my goal is to adhere to these:
Ten Steps To Health At Every Size
Think of these steps as a dance rather than a linear progression. Move from one to another and back again as fits your own personal style and journey.
- Stop weighing yourself. Shift your focus from weight & body fat to healthy behaviors and fitness.
- Live now, not in the past or future. Live your life as if you were at your desired weight—including wearing beautiful, comfortable clothing in your present size.
- Eat well & mindfully. Enjoy your food. Let nothing be off-limits—there are no forbidden foods.
- Listen to your body and give yourself and your body what you need to thrive: balanced nutrition, adequate sleep, regular exercise.
- Love & accept yourself as you are, & others as they are. Refuse to engage in fat prejudice toward yourself or others.
- Feed your soul with meaningful and enjoyable recreation, relationships, work, & spirituality. Clear out toxic environments/relationships/behavior patterns. Build a nourishing community: surrounding yourself with size-friendly people (friends, therapists, doctors) & images of happy, successful people of all sizes.
- Connect mind & body. Increase body awareness through yoga, walking meditation, tai chi, qi gong, massage, & bodywork, movement therapy (such as Feldenkrais). Focus on what your body can do and how good it can feel.
- Decrease self-criticism & body judgment, increase positive, supportive self-talk. Talk to yourself & your body the way you would a cherished friend or loved one.
- Address any emotional eating or body image issues independent of weight change. Attitudes & opinions are easier (& healthier) to change than body size.
- Invest time & money in yourself rather than the diet industry.
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U.S. Launches Pre-Existing Condition Health Insurance Plan
exciting stuff! :)
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today in my women’s health seminar I learned that most “soaps” that you buy at the grocery store are actually not soap at all, but detergent. detergents apparently have lots of bad chemicals in them that dry your skin out more and probably give you cancer once all of the toxins have built up in your body from years of daily use. I’ve been spending quite a bit of time since class browsing cosmeticsdatabase.com in order to learn which of the products that I’m currently using will eventually kill me, which turns out to be all of them.
some other carcinogens:
- lysol disinfectant
- crest toothpaste
- birth control pills
- oscar mayer hot dogs
- whole milk
- sleeping
- eating
- breathing
- blinking
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Birth Control Affects Muscle Mass Gain
I’m pretty pissed about this.