Wednesday, June 20, 2012

DAY 23- WE ARE ALMOST THERE!

I feel like everyone needs A KICK IN THE A** with a friendly reminder of what we all signed up for with this Nutrition Challenge!  We are on the homestretch and we can nearly see the finish line at the end of this race.  It's time get in high gear and really focus on what your goals are, why you decided to do this challenge and reflect on all that you have worked on so far!  You guys have really been positive through out all of this and I know some of you have really been super excited about the results so far.  So keep it up!  At the end of the day, we hope that you have a better understanding on how to better fuel your body, have been able to experience new found energy and increased performance in the gym....AND experience looking better naked!

So my thought today is to remember to keep things balanced and I hope that you all can continue to focus on the "big rocks" after this challenge is over with.  Don't get all wound up on all the "little rocks" when it comes to your nutrition.  You will drive yourself nuts!  Here is a great article from one of my favorite blogs:  Whole9 that solidfies this thought process and will give you more insight on what the "big rocks" are.  -Coach Dee

Analyze This

We’re calling this graphical representation of an individual’s overall health “The Whole9 Health Equation” (at least until we have a stroke of genius and come up with something clever-er). Yes, it is simplified – Dallas doesn’t like complex math equations. Yes, there are important factors (such as age and quality social interaction) that are not factored in here. No, we cannot quantify this for you personally, as (again), context matters. Nonetheless, let’s tackle this thing.

We think of each individual’s health status like a “bank account”, to and from which you make deposits and withdrawals.  Like a bank account, your Health Balance is a product of Credits minus Debits. If you make more frequent (or larger) deposits than withdrawals, you accumulate “Health Wealth”.  And, hopefully not to take this analogy too far, that Wealth pays dividends down the road.  Conversely, if you overextend your resources (withdrawing more than you’re depositing), you’ll find yourself in the red – “Health Debt”.  Think about overdrafting your bank account – you can continue spending for a while, but at some point, you simply can’t spend any more, because there’s nothing left in the bank. (Needless to say, that scenario stinks.)   Are you with us so far?  Good.  Now here’s where we start talking about specific factors.

Recovery = Nutrition + Sleep + Specific Recovery Practices

Your diet, sleep and general recovery habits are all a part of “General Recovery” (health deposits or credits).
Nutrition is the biggest potential credit. That’s why we call it “foundational”. Eating adequate calories from nutrient-dense, anti-inflammatory foods on a daily basis will deposit huge credits into your health balance.  But your Nutrition factor can also be a negative integer, a debit. In other words, eating unhealthy foodstuffs can actually cost you – big. (Think obesity and chronic disease.)
Sleep matters. We make ours a priority – above exercise, reading, socialization, or even housekeeping. Dallas has written about this in Performance Menu, and we continue to emphasize this issue in our workshops and with consulting clients.  Nine hours of sleep per night equals big deposits.  Chronically under-slept?  Equally large withdrawals.  Sometimes, prioritizing sleep requires some radical revisions to one’s life. Pay now, or pay later.
Specific Recovery Practices include ice baths, contrast showers, specific mobility work (including foam rolling, lacrosse ball work or self-myofascial release), stretching, yoga, massage and other manual therapies, meditation, recovery (i.e. easy) training sessions, acupuncture, sex, napping, etc.  Your commitment to Specific Recovery Practices, to a large degree, dictates how quickly and thoroughly you recover from training, and ultimately can determine whether your training is productive or simply destructive.
In summary, sub-par Nutrition, Sleep, and Specific Recovery Practices have the potential to massively impact your Health.  (Duh.)  How rapidly this occurs partly depends on how fast you’re “spending” those resources with Physical Stress (PhysStress) and Psychological Stress (PsychStress).

Total Stress = Physical Stress + Psychological Stress

Physical Stress (PhysStress), for most of us, is structured exercise or participation in an actual sport. For some, working a manual labor or highly physical job (construction, firefighting, etc.) would also qualify as physical stress.  But for folks whose primary physical effort is deliberate exercise, there are several factors that determine the amount of PhyStress: intensity, frequency, and volume.  
Intensity refers to how hard the activity feels to you, and how hard your heart is working.  Frequency is how often you are experiencing this physical stress – twice a day, three times a week, etc.  Volume means the amount of work you complete in each training session – whether you lift a particular weight ten times during your session, or one hundred times.
Each of these factors work together to determine physical stress – notice they are all multiplied in the equation. That means in increase in one has the potential to dramatically affect the total of your PhysStress.  You can do short-ish high intensity stuff sometimes, or long and hard stuff occasionally, or long, low intensity activity daily – but not daily high intensity training, or large volumes of moderate intensity training, or (god forbid) both.  Unless you’re a professional athlete, of course, in which case you value performance over health. Most of us don’t fall into this category.
Psychological Stress (PsychStress) can come from a variety of sources, and can be pretty insidious. It could be job-related stress, family/marital stress, anxiety and phobias, unresolved childhood trauma, low self-esteem, guilt, etc. This stuff runs deep. But if you carry things (i.e. “baggage”), it costs – daily, monthly, and annually. The kicker here is that a complete lack of PsychStress doesn’t make a very big deposit into your Health Balance – but its mere existence can make gigantic withdrawals.  Do your best to deal with this stuff head-on, even if it sucks. Some things are actually out of your control, and that has to be okay, too.
In summary, how much of your Health Balance you can afford to “spend” (i.e. the total of your PhysStress and PsychStress) depends mostly on the size and frequency of your deposits (i.e., how much effort you’re putting into Recovery – nutrition, sleep, and specific recovery practices). 
Note:  Before you even ask, no, we cannot quantify this for you.  We can’t say an ice bath is worth 10 health dollars, and a two-a-day training session costs you 20.  You know why?  Because context matters.  Your specific lifestyle and health status play a crucial role in how much you deposit or withdraw from your Health Balance with any given factor.  For example, an evening of dietary off-roading may cost a lean, insulin-sensitive person 10 health dollars, but it may cost an overweight, autoimmune-suffering person 100.  This equation requires you to self-analyze, and determine which factors have the biggest effects on your own individual Health Balance.

Some Health Balance Examples

Some factors detract enormously from your balance. For example, the short-term sleep deprivation that normally accompanies a new baby takes a pretty serious toll on a person.  In this example, you are not able to make large deposits to your balance, even if you’ve backed off of hard training, and are still eating well.  It’s like taking a big pay cut for a few months – your spending habits have to change.  However, what you’ve done up until this point makes a big difference.  If you have a large Health Balance “savings”, you can make it through this situation relatively unscathed.  However, if you’ve been living paycheck to paycheck, barely covering your withdrawals, an unexpected life situation like a new baby will absolutely break you.  Still with us?
A nutritional strategy like intermittent fasting (our favorite example) might be just the right amount of “stress” to drive a positive adaptation in one person’s body, causing the overall effect to be positive. But in someone else, that additional stress only further taxes an already-overstressed system, and may actually detract from their Health Balance. Of course, every person’s scenario is unique, which is why no one can state definitively that IF (as an example) is universally good or bad.
Figuring out your individual context can be tricky, especially when you are both the least qualified person to accurately assess your “stuff”, given how close you are to the subject matter – but also the only person who has all the information about your own context.  But with our big-picture approach, some practice (and perhaps some guidance from a professional), you’ll be able to better evaluate your own overall health balance, and create a solid plan to keep you in the black.

Is Your Health Balance Off Balance?

All too often, we see people struggling to figure this stuff out – really struggling, working hard. They’re committed to making changes, to progressing, to improving… but they’re either overvaluing/undervaluing some factors, or completely overlooking one or more pieces of the puzzle. Admittedly, it’s not easy, but we’re hoping that this post will prompt some more honest introspection. Here are some examples of genuine-but-misguided efforts to improve health:
  • Looking for a nutritional solution to a lifestyle problem, such as attempting to offset the effects of chronic stress by cutting out fruit or nuts, or trying a new PWO whey protein.
  • Being frustrated with your “plateau” (performance, weight loss, whatever) and doing more of what got you this far.  “If high-intensity training helped me lose 20 pounds, then more of it will probably help me lose those last 10.”   All of those factors (Intensity, Frequency and Volume) multiply to create a potentially astronomical PhysStress product before you even realize it.
  • Being so wound up about sticking to the Whole30 guidelines that you actually create more stress for yourself. Folks, the Whole30 is a self-awareness tool, not a hazing.
  • Over-exercising to manage your stress.  Sometimes you need to suck it up, buttercup, because being an “exercise addict” is not a flag you should proudly fly – and will put you into Health Debt faster than you can say, “I’ll rest when I’m dead.”
  • Being over-stressed and under-sleeping, but still cutting calories to try to lose that stubborn belly fat. (One word: cortisol.) Don’t underestimate the power of sleeping more and stressing less on body composition.
  • Grappling with “that shoulder thing” and looking to your physical therapist/chiropractor/acupuncturist to magically fix it instead of taking a week (or two!) off from the gym to focus on nutrition, sleep and bumping up your Recovery.
Any of these sound familiar?  Don’t beat yourself up if you’ve been working hard in all the wrong areas – the thing that counts is that you’re willing to work hard.  Looking at the big picture is difficult, and takes practice – and sometimes, a template (like our equation) to help you figure it all out for yourself.

Taking Care of YOUR Health Balance

We hope our Health Equation has cued some critical and honest self-analysis, and helped you think about factors outside of nutrition as they apply to your health and fitness. Given that each person’s context is different, we’re not able to make blanket statements about how much or how little is appropriate for you, but we bet that if you stop and think about it, you will probably be able to intuit a reasonable direction to head.
In the coming months, we’ll be talking a lot more about context, non-nutrition factors, and (hopefully) a sane way to combine these things into a life that is deeply enriching. If you leave with just one concept, please remember: context matters.  Drop feedback, questions or thoughts about your own Health Balance to comments.

11 comments:

  1. Great, now I realize I fail at my monetary and my health bank accounts.

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  2. It seems that today and yesterday all I can focus on is how much I want chocolate. It is so damn hard to not cheat and it it.. Hell I think I have only gone a week without it or something like that. Perhaps if I could actually go for 3 weeks without eating on it my cravings would cease, but I don't know if I will ever make it that long. Going without a drink is cake when you stack it next to chocolate....mmm chocolate cake... damn it!

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    1. Stay strong girl....YOU ARE DOING GREAT!!! NO CHOC... lol

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  3. It sucks but I've managed so far. I love looking at the finish line, though I'm sad it got pushed to the first so I have to delayy birthday ganache cake from brusters another day. I doubt there's any real change weight wise like I was hoping for considering I'm eating a ton more though overall I'm feeling pretty great have made an changes iny workouts that I've noticed but I'm sure in time my body will adjust. I plan to keep it 80/20 but I will need a snippet of chocolate here and there just to keep my sanity. Yay for almost being done :D

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  4. Just curious whether it is my crashing computer or are there a lot of blacked out words and phrases in this article?? I have done very well and not craving but can not be as anal as my son who eats only to fuel and not for pleasure anymore and can be so obsessive at times that it can ruin a family function. Having a health food store across the street and living blocks from work makes routine and schedule a lot easier than when I spend hours in a car traveling and working 70 hour weeks. I think the lifestyle is easy, the planning ahead is what I suck at but have been getting better. Type A personalities probably do much better at this than those of us who are a little scatterbrained at times and can't live by a schedule. I do know I will NOT eat pizza on day 31 like I did last time I did the 30 day challenge. I was cramped up and miserable in a car for 3 hours!!! Not worth it!

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  5. Back in Atlanta right now, day 2 with rest days. Can’t stand it!!!! to much going on right now i hate that im so close to the finish and i can feel it slipping away!!! Wen’ to Trader Joe’s and spent 150. Hopping it will last me the hole time. Doing major maintaince to the car i bought down here and is hard as hell to be turning wrenches without a 6pack by my side!, taking a trip down to savanna tomorrow to see a old friend, got a cooler that i am going to pack to the Brim. Dame i better Get a WOD Inn tomorrow.

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  6. Almost there...we can do this! Regardless if I see any difference and/or improvements, I'm glad I did it to teach my body to eat a little better We've always have, but we did eat lots of whole grain.
    patti, I have a son like yours...
    Faby

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  7. Great article Dee you are absolutely right. I regret eating the dark chocolate strawberry but just like Kristen I gave in and didn't have the willpower. My mind is back in the game and staying strict until finish. Even though my bday is this Saturday, the drinks will have to come after this challenge. Whats funny is I'm not craving alcohol, soda water and lime hits the spot but chocolate, I dont know if I could give that up especially being a woman! Lol :)

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    1. Way to call me out Cheryl. What is sad is I don't think I regret eating the dark chocolate. I struggle with enjoying certain foods vs being skinny. Which do I want more? Apparently to eat, which is sad.

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    2. I thought it was awesome kristen. And I thought I was a great bus driver ;p. And eating is more important than being skinny. I think as long as I'm healthy I cam come to terms with not being a size zero...I'd still like to be huggable :D

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  8. Feeling as good as ever and seeing GREAT results at the gym as well. I'm actually really enjoying this challenge!!!

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