Archive | July, 2011

Why Exercise Sucks

26 Jul

Do you know why exercise sucks? It’s because instead of making it work for you, you work for it. You slog on the treadmill, hating every second of it, because you want to burn off those nasty calories. Or you lift 3-pound weights for 50 reps just so you can say you did it and get on with your day already.

That’s why exercise sucks.

But if you make it work for you, exercise is a glorious thing.

Here’s an example: Today an editor pissed me off. She asked to schedule a call yesterday at 1 pm to discuss a possible assignment. I raced home from the bookstore, where I was working on an article, and dutifully called at 1 on the dot. No answer. I called again at 1:15, and tried the editor’s cell as well. No response. I waited another half hour before moving on to other work.

Today, after I prompted her via e-mail, the editor apologized that yesterday was a “typical Monday,” and am I available today at 1 instead?

No. No, I am not.

Seething, I ditched my planned cardio workout in favor of some yoga, concentrating on heart-opening postures to well, open the heart, plus twists to work out the pissed-offedness, and some easy inversions to help boost my mood. Voila — I went from angry to okay, and I got a good workout in.

Another example: The other day, I was feeling anxious; as you may know, I live with an anxiety disorder. I had been loosely planning to lift weights, but instead I hopped on the treadmill and burned the anxiety off with an interval training session. Again, mood: stabilized. Workout: done.

You don’t have to stick to a regimented workout schedule just because it seems like the normal thing to do. I aim to get in two to three weight training sessions, four to five cardio workouts, and one or two yoga workouts per week. Some days I do two different types of workouts, some days I do one, and every once in awhile I do nothing at all. And instead of scheduling workouts for the same days every week, I do whichever one I think will serve me best that day.

If you go with what inspires you, you’re more likely to actually exercise than if you tell yourself “I have to get in a damn cardio workout today.” Once you get in the groove and start actually enjoying exercise for what it can do for you, you’ll probably get in plenty of workouts during your week. You may even find yourself toning up and slimming down, even though your main purpose for exercising is to increase your energy and lift your mood. (It happened to me!)

Angry? Try yoga with a lovingkindness meditation session at the end. Anxious? Burn it off with cardio. Pumped — and want to stay pumped? Lift some challenging weights, using supersets to keep your heat rate up. Sad? A walk, hike, or run outside in nature can lift your spirits.

Do what you naturally gravitate towards based on your mood — and exercise won’t suck anymore. [lf]

5 Healthy Morning Habits That Will Wake You Up and Rock Your Day

25 Jul

If you’re like me, some days you can’t seem to get going, and you drag all morning — especially if you suffer from depression, anxiety, or other mood disorders. When that happens, I have a whole arsenal of tricks I use to wake myself up so I can get on with the day.

Drink Up

At night, you go at least eight hours without drinking, and dehydration can cause you to feel sluggish. Try quaffing a full glass of water spiked with lemon or lime for a quick pick-me-up.

Brusha Brusha

No, I don’t mean your teeth, though you should definitely do that every morning — I mean dry brushing, or gently brushing your skin in the direction of the heart with a dry, natural-bristle brush. I find this to be incredibly rejuvenating in the morning, and it takes only a couple of minutes. For more info on how to dry brush, check out this video.



Step Out

Getting a little sun will tell your body it’s time to wake up. When you get up, throw open the curtains, and go outside for a minute or two, even if it’s just to get the paper. I like to get up early and spend some time on my front porch with a cup of coffee. If you have Seasonal Affective Disorder, consider investing in a light box; all you have to do is sit in front of it for about half an hour each morning during the cold season. I’ve done this in the past and it seems to work! You can get a good light box online for around $200; mine was from Northern Light Technologies.

Chill Out

In The 7 Day Energy Surge, Jim Karas recommends taking a cold shower to boost your energy all day. I tried it one day and it really did work. I didn’t just jump into a freezing shower (yikes!); I took my usual warm shower and then at the end, I turned the water to as cold as I could stand for a couple of minutes. Wow! Now I do it every day.

Say Ommmm

Doing a few yoga-inspired stretches or even a short yoga routine helps get the blood moving and prepares you to face the day with calm energy. YouTube has tons of yoga sequences you can try, including the one below for beginners. Also, Yoga for Dummies is a great resource to help you build up your own practice.



What do you do to wake up in the morning?

Try This: Boost Your Mood with Tunes

21 Jul

“[...] The brain reacts to [music] by shifting our focus, releasing hormones, and activating emotions and memory. The positive and relaxing effect that music has on our brain cells and hormones brings about an increase in our healing, immunity, and cellular regeneration.”

—From The 7 Day Energy Surge by Jim Karas

Later in the chapter, Karas discusses how soothing music can help us beat anxiety and energizing music, well, energizes us and boosts our mood.

I usually work in silence, but after reading this I decided to play music for one day. Right when I got up, I set my iPod for shuffle, playing a mix of everything from Air and Thievery Corporation to Chemical Brothers and Crystal Method — songs that ranged from slow to fast, but always had a good beat.

Wow! Once I turned on the tunes, I felt uplifted and energetic all day. I actually felt almost giddy with energy and happiness. This will be a new habit of mine.

Can music help improve your mood? Try it one day and see!

 

Free Personal Training Session for 60 Cary-Area Residents!

19 Jul

Okay, I just signed the lease on my own personal training space in Cary, NC and am ready to start training.

Well, almost ready.

You see, I need some beta testers for my services. So I’m giving away 60 one-hour personal training sessions in 60 days starting on Monday, August 8. There’s no obligation and I won’t hit you with a hard sales pitch. All I ask is that you give me feedback that can help me improve my offerings.

Not only am I giving away free training sessions, but the 60 lucky trainees will get information on how to install healthy habits every day.

If you’re interested in a free training session, please e-mail me at lindaformichelli@gmail.com and tell me a little about yourself: Your name, city, age, gender, and why you are interested in becoming fitter (do you want to beat stress? gain energy? tone up?). I’ll let you know if I can offer you a free session, and if so, we can set a date and time.

Please spread the word…I’d be happy to extend this offer to your friends and family members.

Thanks, and I look forward to helping you get HappyFit!

The Joy of Being Intolerant

18 Jul

There’s a spot on the rug.  I hate my hair.  The dog keeps jumping on the bed.  I don’t like the way the phone rings.  According to life coach Kristin Taliaferro, owner of KristinCoach.com, women zap their energy by putting up with the multitude of little things that bother them every day–what life coaches call “tolerations.”

Tolerations do more than drain your energy–they also clutter your life to such an extent that you have no time for anything else.  “Psychically, you have to create space for new things to show up,” says Taliaferro.  “Women’s lives today are so jam-packed that they can’t attract new opportunities.  Getting rid of tolerations opens up space so good things can flow in.”

Are you ready to give the boot to the host of little annoyances that plague you each day?  I was, so I spoke with Taliaferro and two other toleration-free women to find out how they did it–and how you can, too.

Make a List, Check It Twice

“Grab a pen and jot down the things in your life that bug you to no end,” says Taliaferro.  “Aim for 100–and don’t be surprised at how quickly you reach this mark.” When Taliaferro instructed me to compile a lengthy list of my tolerations, I was skeptical–but to my surprise I came up with 65 in under half an hour, and brought the count up to 100 the next day.  To think that there are so many little things that cause my blood to boil!

According to Taliaferro, there are several places where tolerations can hide out, so examine each of these areas as you write your list:

Your health: “The most-often ignored area of tolerations is around self-care,” says Taliaferro.  “It’s the best place to begin.  Once you begin taking great care of yourself, you’ll have the energy to get rid of other tolerations.”

“Every night I’d go to bed and say, ‘I hate this pillow,’” recalls Dawne Knudsen, 41, a mother of two in Moline, Ill., who arranges book signings and other promotional events as an author’s assistant.  “Then I’d get up in the morning, go on with my day, and at night I’d say again, ‘I hate this pillow.’”  I personally discovered annoyances from bad hair to toenails with chipped polish, plus untreated allergies and a dentist appointment I’d been putting off for well over a year.

Your home: Go through each room in your home seeking out tolerations.  “In the kitchen, do you just hate that melted spatula?” says Taliaferro.  “How about the pitcher that dribbles when you pour?  In the bathroom, does your razor always fall out of the shower caddy?”  For me, a collection of empty frames on the sofa table was a longstanding irritation.  These frames still contained the original photos from the store, and had been that way for so long that I was starting to think of the strangers in the pictures as family.  Taliaferro advised me to hop to it and get my own family photos in those frames.

Your career: “Examine your feelings towards your job, your coworkers, your boss,” says Taliaferro.  The cubicle mate who snaps her gum, the coworker who steals your ideas, long hours that cause you to miss your daughter’s soccer games–these are all sapping you of energy every day.  “I was having a tough time at my previous job [as a college professor] because it had a lot of interruptions,” says Tami Seitz, 37, a photographer and mother of two in Bettendorf, Iowa.

Your equipment or appliances: “If the equipment you use on a daily basis–like your refrigerator, car, or phone–isn’t in good condition, it can be a big drain on your time and energy,” says Taliaferro.  At the top of my list was my cute but temperamental iMac, which wouldn’t shut down all the way unless I actually unplugged it.  Next on the list was a car with a gas cap that wouldn’t close properly and iced tea stains on the driver’s seat.  For Knudsen, it was a phone that was on the fritz.  “I had a telephone that I had to reprogram every day for six months,” she grumbles.  “That was a huge toleration.”

Your environment: Can’t tame the paper tiger in your office?  Mailbox filled with junk mail?  “Informational clutter in our environment steals a lot of our mental energy,” says Taliaferro.  My top clutter tolerations were an e-mail inbox overflowing with spam and a magazine subscription I had been forgetting to cancel–for two years.

Your time: Then there are the time-sapping tolerations like traffic jams, train delays, and long lines at the supermarket.  Nixing these tolerations is often a simple matter of adjusting your timing–going to the supermarket on Tuesday instead of on Friday after work (when it’s the most crowded), or leaving for your destination ten minutes earlier.

Your relationships: As much as we love them, friends and relatives often have habits that grate on our nerves.  “As tough as it is, handling your relationship tolerations can provide tremendous personal relief,” says Taliaferro.  Seitz, for example, was tired of people who would call during traditional dinner hours.  She would invariably end up talking on the phone while eating–instead of spending quality time with her two daughters.  “It bugged me to receive these calls during dinnertime,” Seitz says.  “It also bugged me that I was unable to say no or just not pick up the phone.”

Your finances: Debt, confusing bills from the phone company, and the always-irritating lack of money belong in this category.  I always have a few pricey projects, like retiling the kitchen floor or reseeding the lawn, that I’d love to take on but for lack of money.  And I wanted to eliminate lower-paying writing assignments in favor of more lucrative ones.

Take Action

Now comes the hard part–crossing your tolerations off the list one by one.  Scheduling time to abolish tolerations can be a challenge, but there are many ways to handle it.  Some women vow to tackle the tolerations in one room per week.  Others eliminate theirs by category–self-care-related tolerations one week, appliance-related the next.  “There’s a huge satisfaction when one area of your life is almost perfect,” says Taliaferro.

Some women, like Seitz, concentrate on getting the most irritating tolerations out of the way first.  “Another idea is to trade toleration-free days with friends,” Taliaferro says. “One day per week, your group of friends can concentrate on giving the boot to one person’s tolerations.”  I decided to keep it simple by ridding myself of ten tolerations in one week, mixing difficult tolerations with easy ones, ones that cost money with ones that were free.

Taliaferro suggests brainstorming three ways of doing away with each toleration  For example, I could sew up my torn comforter cover myself, hire someone else to fix it, or buy a new one.  I could fix my own messy nails, get a professional manicure, or learn to be happy with ragged cuticles.

Get Motivated

One secret to getting a jump on your tolerations is to create a big dent in your list right away.  “This launch gives you an energy surge that inspires you to keep going,” says Taliaferro.  Or treat yourself to a reward whenever you get rid of a toleration. Not only did I make appointments with the doctor, the dentist, and the hairdresser right away, but I promised myself a dinner in a nice restaurant if I managed to zap ten tolerations in one week.  The fact that I took a big chunk out of my list of tolerations in about ten minutes felt great–and the promise of chicken piccata and a luscious dessert didn’t hurt.

“Another motivational trick is to think about how you’ll feel once your tolerations have bitten the dust,” advises Taliaferro.  How relaxed will you feel when you don’t have to worry about people calling during dinner?  How relieved will you feel when you finally have a new toothbrush and don’t have to look at your old, frayed one twice a day?  I imagined how calming it would feel to snuggle under my comforter at night without having to look at that gaping tear.

And keep in mind that getting rid of tolerations is often a small effort that pays off big.  Knudsen merely took her faulty phone back to the store and got a new one; for less than an hour of effort, she no longer had to endure feelings of anger whenever she picked up the receiver.  Broken window cranks were another toleration Knudsen endured for years until she finally had had enough. “I drove to the hardware store, bought the cranks, drove home, and installed them,” she says. “It took me thirty minutes total, and less than $30.”  Talk about a big payoff for a small output!

Cry for Help

Asking your hubby or kids for their support or making a toleration-free pact with a friend can be a big help. “My husband has a place where he likes to put his stuff, and it drives me crazy,” says Knudsen.  “I asked him to at least put it in piles instead of in a lump, and he did. When I learned to ask for help, my family was more than willing to cooperate.”  And I enlisted my husband’s help in everything from replacing the dead pansies in our window boxes to coming up with a plan to earn more money.

If you can’t get anyone to help–or if you don’t have time to do an at-home manicure or organize your office–it may be time to break open your wallet and delegate to the professionals, advises Taliaferro.  “The yard was a big challenge for me,” says Seitz, who had trouble relaxing in her hot tub when her yard was unkempt.  “So I called and hired someone to do yard maintenance.”  Seitz shelled out for the big jobs–like having the lawn treated for weeds and bugs–and did other yard work on her own.

The Money Question

Sometimes all that stands between us and a toleration-free life is money.  After all, not everyone can afford to hire an organizer or buy the magical doodad that will fix all their problems.

Fortunately, many fixes are free; removing that spot from the carpet, training the dog not to jump on the bed, and asking your husband to stop leaving his socks on the floor don’t cost a dime. I sewed up the rip in the comforter cover for nothing.  My home manicure cost zilch.  And to stop forgetting my friends’ and relatives’ birthdays, I signed up for a free online reminder service. Tami Seitz can use the answering machine to pick up calls and ask people to stop calling her between, say, six and seven p.m.–and eliminate a major toleration at a cost of zero.

For those occasions where tackling tolerations would require an outlay of cash, Taliaferro suggests asking yourself: Will it cost you more to buy a new pitcher or to deal with the daily hassle of a pitcher that drips for the rest of your life?  I determined that splurging on a hip new haircut outweighed feeling frumpy every time I looked in the mirror.  But when I found out that fixing my recalcitrant computer would cost in the range of $700, I decided that I could live with that toleration after all.

Oh, What a Feeling

Once you start putting the kibosh on your tolerations, it might seem like for every one you eliminate, another one pops up.  But soon, you’ll learn how to snag them as soon as they rear their ugly heads, nixing them before they become a drain on your energy.  “It’s come to the point where I recognize problems before they become tolerations,” says Knudsen.

When you get into the groove, you’ll start to feel lighter without even going on a diet. “Getting rid of tolerations has helped me more than anything,” says Seitz. “If you don’t have tolerations, you have more energy, and when you have energy, you feel like doing things.”

It’s true–exterminating the tolerations that were demanding so much of my mental energy has made me feel calmer and more together.  Now you’ll have to excuse me–once I fix this loose button on my shirt, I can cross another toleration off my list.

By Linda Formichelli. This article originally appeared in Family Circle.

Try This: Get Up Earlier Tomorrow

14 Jul

There’s something about having an extra hour in the morning that makes the day go so well, it’s worth the lost sleep (though you could always go to bed earlier to get your full 8 hours).

What could you do with that hour? Go out for a walk. Meditate. Take an early-morning yoga class. Read. Listen to music. Enjoy a cup of coffee. Heck, you could even get a head start on your work.

As I’ve mentioned here before, I get up a couple of hours earlier than my husband and son — which is a couple of hours earlier than I need to get up — because:

  • I dislike being thrown into my day when everyone else wakes up and we need to immediately be in “Go” mode, making breakfast, getting the kiddo ready for the day, and so on. I need time to get acclimated to the new day.
  • The morning is the perfect time to get things done without interruption.
  • If I schedule something for first thing in the morning, I’m more likely to actually do it than if I put it off until later in the day. Hence the early-morning exercise and studying for the personal training certification exam.
  • When I get up early, the energy spills over into the rest of my day and I feel productive all day long.

If you have trouble waking up an hour early, here’s a crazy tip: Get up extra early. There’s something about getting up at, say, 4 am that makes it easier than waking at 6 or 7. Maybe it’s the novelty factor of getting up while it’s still dark. Maybe it’s the excitement you feel at having several hours to yourself. I don’t know what it is, but it works — and when I do it, I always think I’ll hit a wall and crash in the early evening, but I end up powering through and feeling great all day.

Can you get up at least an hour earlier tomorrow? What will you do with the extra time?

You Don’t Need to Be Motivated

11 Jul

A few months ago, I noticed that friend of mine with depression had a photocopied excerpt of the book Get It Done When You’re Depressed, by Julie Fast, on her refrigerator. I was so impressed with that excerpt that I bought and read the book and then interviewed Fast for the Renegade Writer blog.

One of the points that stuck with me most is that you can’t wait to feel motivated or inspired before you do something because if you’re depressed, you’ll never feel motivated. You’ll just wait and wait to feel that spark of inspiration, and it won’t happen.

The trick is to push through and do the task anyway, even if you don’t feel like it. Motivation doesn’t create action — action creates motivation. Once you’re doing the task, you’ll often feel compelled to keep going and do even more. This tip works whether you’re clinically depressed or you’re just feeling lazy and unmotivated.

One way to get yourself started — which is the hardest part, really — is to set a timer for 10 minutes and promise yourself that if you feel like stopping when the timer goes off, you can. Usually, once you get past the stuckness of just trying to get moving, you’ll create a momentum that keeps you going. For example, some days I don’t feel particularly inspired to exercise in the morning, but I tell myself that all I have to do is get out the door — and if I don’t feel like exercising then, I can go back inside. If I can just get myself out the door, that’s the hardest part. Once I’ve hit the road, I always feel a lot better, and I feel great when I’m done.

Remember, when you exercise, prepare a healthy meal, knock a task off  your to-do list, or get your work done, you’ll never say to yourself, “Boy, I wish I hadn’t accomplished that.” But if you don’t do it, you will beat yourself up later.

Try This: Ditch the Sweet Stuff

8 Jul

Just for today, try to avoid consuming sugar. The sweet stuff gives us a burst of energy, but it leads to a sugar crash that can leave us tired, irritable, and anxious.

I have no trouble avoiding desserts, cookies, and so on, but my downfall is sweetened drinks — iced mochas, sweet iced tea, a couple of spoonfuls of sugar in my hot tea or coffee. I now limit myself to a few sweetened drinks per week, and they’re extra delicious because I have more time to plan for and anticipate them, instead of the sweet beverages being just another part of my daily life. I’ve learned to love unsweetened iced tea and coffee, and add lime slices to my water.

Just for today: Craving a cookie? Have a few strawberries. Like your sugar with a little coffee? Try it without, and see if you can stand it. Then ask yourself at the end of the day: How did I feel today? Was my energy more even? Was I in a better mood than usual? Do I feel better about myself for doing something healthy for my mind and body?

Start: Now!

9 Ways to Feel More In Control of Your Life

5 Jul

When our lives feel out of our control, it tends to make us anxious, worried, and depressed, and can decrease motivation. We feel as if life is happening to us, and we’re just reacting to what life throws at us. On the other hand, when we feel in control of our time and our careers, we feel confident, motivated, and happy.

The bad news is that there’s a lot we can’t control in our lives: Traffic, illnesses, the weather, the proverbial death and taxes.

Luckily, even though much of life is uncontrollable, there are ways to gain control over various parts of it so that we get a sense of authority over our lives.

1. Set your morning routine. Instead of sitting down at the computer first thing in the morning and merely reacting to “urgent but not important” tasks all day, such as answering e-mails as they come in, set a definite morning routine.

I was one of those get-up-and-check-email-all-day people until my coach at The Yoga of Writing retreat in New Mexico gave me a morning yoga practice. For a while, I would get up early and do a 20-minute yoga practice that made me feel centered all day. Now, I get up a couple of hours before my husband and son, go out for a walk or a run-walk, take a shower, and read inspirational books before getting started with the day. This routine helps me clear my mind for the day and focus on those tasks that give me the greatest bang for my buck.

2. Time your day. For one week, keep a time log of your days. This helps you weed out unproductive uses of your time (like reading Blogging Project Runway every day) and gives you a sense of control over how you spend your days. In her book 168 Hours: You Have More Time Than You Think, author Laura Vanderkam points out that we all have 168 hours in a week, and tracking our hours helps us figure out how to make the most of what really is a lot of time.

3. Make a list. Get everything you need to do out of your head and onto paper. This past year I posted an extensive Q&A with David Allen, author of Getting Things Done, on the Renegade Writer Blog. He recommends doing a mind dump of everything you can think of that you need to do. All those to-dos are cluttering your mind and keeping you from focusing on the most important task at any given moment. Put the first step for each of these to-dos on separate lists for different areas of your life, such as “To Call” for when you’re near the phone, “Errands” for when you’re in the car, and “Computer” for those tasks that need to be done when you’re at your computer. This will help you feel in control of all those little tasks that were previously clogging your brain.

4. Take a shower already! This is especially relevant for the self-employed or stay-at-home parents: Nothing makes you feel less in control than being unshowered and unbrushed at 3 o’clock in the afternoon. Take a shower in the morning and put on some nice but comfortable clothes. If you’re a woman (or a guy, if you’re into it), you can even put on a bit of makeup and some jewelry. This will help you face your work day feeling put together and ready.

5. Revamp your day. Make a list of every task you do in your day, such as writing reports at work, getting the kids ready for school, and cooking dinner, and then brainstorm ways to revamp and improve those processes. Then experiment with the new way of doing things to see if they work better. We often do the same things over and over again out of habit, even when they aren’t the best methods, and looking at those habits with a fresh eye will help you come up with ways to improve them. For example, my husband and I used to fight with our toddler at dinnertime because he wanted to play instead of eat, and he never wanted to eat what we were having. Now, we let him snack as he plays — we serve up healthy foods like fruit, veggies, yogurt, mini sandwiches, and cheese — while we eat a quiet grown-up dinner.

6. Delegate it. If there’s something you’re not good at, or that you hate, find someone who does it better and delegate to them. This will give you a sense of control because you’re consciously choosing what you will and will not do in your life. For example, if you would rather drive spikes through your forehead than garden, mow, or shovel snow, hire someone to do it for you. When we lived in New Hampshire, most years we hired a snowplow driver to do our driveway. Well worth the cost.

7. Make a schedule. Instead of doing tasks whenever you think of them or whenever you happen to have free time, which perpetuates a sense of being at the whim of others, schedule important tasks into your day. For example, perhaps you can schedule a half hour of exercise at 1 pm. Or maybe you run errands like grocery shopping and mailing packages for Friday afternoons.

8. Set up an admin day. It’s hard to feel in control when you’re spending all day putting out tiny fires as they come up. Designate one day of the week, or certain hours of a day, to clear out administrative tasks like signing the kids’ report cards, going through the mail, scheduling home repairs, shredding documents, and paying bills.

9. Beat the clock. Here’s one from Steve Pavlina’s  book Personal Development for Smart People: “Estimate how long a task will take to complete. Then start a timer, and push yourself to complete it in half that time.” For example, if it normally takes you two hours to clean the house from top to bottom, see if you can do it in one hour instead. You may be pleasantly surprised by how much you can do — and how well — in half your usual time.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 93 other followers