Archive | October, 2011

Halloween Special: How to Vanquish Your Energy Vampires

31 Oct

We all know an energy vampire — a friend who buffets us with tales of woe, a coworker who whines more than a lost puppy, an acquaintance who has to top everything we say or do. (You have a cold? She may have contracted a flesh-eating disease. You got a pat on the back from your boss? She got a major promotion.)

“Energy vampires attack our energy through their neediness or negativity,” says Judith Orloff, MD, author of Positive Energy10 Extraordinary Prescriptions for Transforming Fatigue, Stress, and Fear into Vibrance, Strength, and Love (Three Rivers Press, 2005). “Whenever you deal with an energy vampire, you’re left feeling frustrated and depleted.”

You don’t need to wear garlic around your neck to ward off the energy suckers in your life. You can defuse most energy vampires by playing to the five core needs that everyone has: appreciation, autonomy (the freedom to do what we want), status (the need to feel important), affiliation (an emotional connection to people), and role (the need to play a meaningful role), says Dan Shapiro, PhD, director of the Harvard Negotiation Project and author of Beyond Reason: Using Emotions as You Negotiate (Viking/Penguin, 2005),

A person whose core concerns aren’t being met can quickly suck the life out of you. For example, someone who feels unimportant (no status) may feel the need to one-up you, while someone who feels excluded (no affiliation) will suck up all your energy trying to get your attention. “You want to set your boundaries, but in a way that addresses their core concerns,” Shapiro says.

Here, we offer expert suggestions on how to use this and other techniques to help you deal with the most common energy vampires.

The Constant Talker

The Constant Talker is a chronically perky motor-mouth who’s not interested in your feelings and who always demands center stage. “It’s very negative for your health and well-being in the moment because they barrage you with words,” says Orloff. Protect your energy by staying neutral and defining your needs verbally. It can be difficult to do because we’re taught not to interrupt, but giving Constant Talkers nonverbal cues like crossing your arms or stepping backwards doesn’t work. They’re too caught up in their own babble. So if you’re cornered by a Constant Talker at a party, for example, you need to say politely but bluntly, “It was nice meeting you, but I have to go on to the next person.”

Shapiro’s run-in with a Constant Talker shows how attending to people’s core values can defuse an energy vampire. Shapiro was giving a lecture on international conflict, and one man kept raising his hand to interrupt with off-topic comments. “Instead of simply pushing him off, I said, ‘I’ll give you three minutes at the beginning of the next lecture to say whatever you want,’” he recalls. “So he got up there, talked for three minutes — then he had had his pedestal, so he walked out.”

The Sob Sister

The Sob Sister always has something to whine about–her throat hurts, her boss hates her, the convenience store clerk shorted her fifty cents–and she uses every opportunity to tell you about it. “Sob Sisters love an audience and cast themselves as victims,” says Orloff. “When you offer a solution, they say, ‘Yes, but…’” The trick to warding off this vampire is to be kind, but to limit the time you spend discussing the Sob Sister’s gripe, Orloff advises. “You have to say, ‘”I’m interested in your problem, but I can talk for only five minutes unless you want to talk about solutions,’” she says.

The Naysayer

The Naysayer is always the first one to tell you who you are not and what you can’t do instead of supporting who you are and what you can do. Jan Yanehiro, co-author of This Is Not the Life I Ordered: 50 Ways to Keep Your Head Above Water When Life Keeps Dragging You Down (Conari Press, 2007), started out in the radio industry in 1972 as a secretary, and she dreamed of being an on-air reporter. “I remember one of the guys saying within my earshot, ‘We don’t want to hear a woman’s voice on the air,’” she recalls. “I said nothing back. I just kind of shriveled up.”

Yanehiro didn’t let the Naysayers’ negativity affect her; in fact, the cruel comment fired her up. “I had to find it within my core, my determination, my stubborn belief, that I could be on the air,” Yanehiro says. “I doubled my practice efforts, bribed the studio engineer with donuts to let me practice in the sound studio, and found the most liberal, most benevolent male in the station and asked him to critique my practice tapes.” Yanehiro later became the co-host of Evening Magazine, a nightly TV program in San Francisco, and is now the host of Everyday Angels on Comcast Cable TV and the Executive Producer of Pacific Fusion TV.

Naysayers don’t always mean to be negative; sometimes they’re trying to protect you, or they’re afraid of what will happen to them if you reach your dreams. The key is to acknowledge their concern and tell them what you would like from them. “We have to put up our hands and say, ‘Thank you for your concern, but I would really love you to think positive for me,’” says Yanehiro. “Debbie Fields founded a cookie empire by refusing to listen to those who told her she was crazy to start a cookie store.”

The Blamer

The Blamer, of course, blames other people for everything that goes wrong in his life. “The Blamer has a sneaky way of making you feel guilty for not getting things right,” says Orloff. “They sometimes even resort to verbal abuse.” You can enforce boundaries by setting firm but kind limits. Orloff suggests telling the person, “My feelings get hurt when you blame or criticize me. Please don’t do it. We must treat each other with mutual respect.” Repeat this boundary-setting exercise as often as you need to, and if possible keep your distance from the offender until he stops blaming you.

The One-Upper

When something good happens to you, something better happens to her; when something bad happens to you, something worse happens to her. You just can’t win with the One-Upper. “The problem is that everything you say, they one-up to feel higher in status, and that hooks you in,” says Shapiro. His advice is to refuse to compete over status. “Listen, appreciate their perspective, acknowledge their areas of high status, and move on,” Shapiro suggests.

The Fixer Upper

The Fixer Upper requires constant repairs, says Orloff — and he thinks you’re just the person to make those repairs. Unlike the Sob Sister, the Fixer Upper truly does want his problems fixed, but unfortunately those problems are endless. Don’t encourage this energy vampire by playing amateur psychologist: “You have to realize that others must take responsibility for their own lives,” says Orloff. “It’s none of your business to fix anyone. Disengage yourself from the fixer-fixee agreement, but do it with compassion. Orloff suggests saying to the Fixer Upper, “I care about you but I think it’s important that you get help from a qualified person. I can only talk for five minutes about problems but I’m available to share on other levels.”

The Unintentional Sappers

Sometimes energy vampires aren’t coworkers or strangers at parties — they’re our friends, spouses, and children. People we love can often drain us the most. “Life’s demands add up and you’re often barraged by these people when you’re tired,” says Orloff. The solution is to protect your energy by letting others know when you need time to yourself. For example, if your spouse starts complaining about his boss as soon as you walk in the door, tell him that you need ten minutes to decompress when you get home — then head to the bedroom to listen to your favorite soothing music for a few minutes.

So toss the garlic and the holy water: Understanding people’s core needs, setting boundaries, and respecting yourself and others will keep these and other energy vampires at bay.

Have you ever dealt with an energy vampire? Let us know how you dealt with it in the Comments below!

Why the Time of Year Rules Your Mood — And How YOU Can Take Control of It

27 Oct

September, with its start of the school year, always gives me a sense of newness and possibility, even though I haven’t been in school for 20 years. But for people who had less-than-good times in school, the same time of year can bring on feelings of anxiety and depression. I tend to get Seasonal Affective Disorder, while other people may get Reverse Seasonal Affective Disorder and feel down in the summer. And who doesn’t feel pangs of sadness at the times of the year that mark the death of a loved one or the breakup of a relationship?

Strangely, though, although our emotions are often ruled by the time of the year, we’re often oblivious to why we feel down, anxious, or elated during certain seasons or months, and we’re unable to predict that it’s going to happen. “You’re likely to say to a friend, ‘March is the anniversary of your breakup and you’ll probably feel really down,’” says John Sharp, MD, a psychiatrist and neuropsychiatrist at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston and author of The Emotional Calendar: Understanding Seasonal Influences and Milestones to Become Happier, More Fulfilled, and in Control of Your Life (Times Books, January 2011). “But if you’re left to your own devices very often you’ll find yourself in the midst of the same thing happening over and over again before you realize what it is.”

According to Dr. Sharp, there are three conditions that can bring on feelings of sadness or anxiety (or, for that matter, feelings of elation) at certain times of the year: the weather, cultural expectations (which are why we often feel sad during “happy” holidays), and milestones such as a death in the family, a breakup, the start of the school year, tax day, or the anniversary of a happy event like a wedding or promotion.

Here are pointers from Dr. Sharp on how seasons and personal milestones can affect your mood, personal effectiveness, and energy levels — and what you can do about it:

Pinpoint It

Instead of finding yourself (yet again) in the midst of emotional turmoil and wondering why — which is the usual M.O. for most of us — think NOW about what times of the year tend to affect you. Perhaps you’ll realize that you always feel unsettled around the anniversary of a cross-country move, or sad during Christmas, or anxious during your job’s busy season. Some of these issues may seem obvious once you define them, yet when you were in the middle of them you could never figure out why you felt the way you did. Knowing your triggers can help you make plans to alleviate the problem.

Take Advantage

Just as most of us have predictable times when we feel down or anxious, we also have periods of high mood and energy; for example, maybe you blast through the summer feeling great thanks to the warm weather and abundant sunlight, or you feel your happiest and most energetic during the holidays. Dr. Sharp suggests taking advantage of the good periods to plan and tackle big projects that might seem like impossible hurdles during less energetic times of the year. For example, high-energy periods are perfect for doing home repairs, planning events, and taking on extra projects at work.

Make a Plan

Once you’ve pinpointed your low periods, Dr. Sharp recommends making a plan and getting all your resources set up so it will be easy for you to follow the plan even while you’re feeling low. He says, “Ask yourself: How do I typically respond, and what could I do differently? What kind of support do I need so that when the rubber hits the road, I can do what I planned even though I may not feel like it?” For instance, you may ask your spouse to encourage you to exercise outside during the winter when he sees you’re feeling blue; that way, you don’t have to rely solely on your willpower at a time when it’s at its lowest.

Honor the Season

In some cases, you know you’re simply going to feel anxious or down during certain times of the year, and you need to make allowances for that. For example, Dr. Sharp had a patient who became listless during the fall due to back-to-school doldrums. He advised her to make a big pot of coffee in the morning and allow herself extra time to get things done, and to accept that she has low moods in the fall and will feel better when winter rolls around.

Don’t let overwhelming emotions at certain times of the year take you by surprise yet again — anticipate them, make a plan, and make the time work for you.

Is there a certain time of the year when you feel sad, elated, anxious, or especially calm? please share your experiences with my readers in the Comments section below!

Get Unstuck: Mind Shifts to Help You Get Healthy, Improve Your Career, and More

24 Oct

Recently I interviewed the treasurer of a local university for their alumni magazine, and at one point in the conversation he said, “Your processes are geared towards getting you the results you’ve been getting. If you don’t like the results, then your processes are no good.”

I love this. It makes a lot of sense for everyone, not just university administrators: If you’re not getting the work you want, then you need to tweak what you’re doing.

The statement also resonated with me personally. I’ve been writing full-time since 1997, and browsing through my journal, which I’ve been keeping since 2004, I can see that I’ve felt burned out on and off for the last seven years.

I’d always wanted, since co-authoring Becoming a Personal Trainer for Dummies, to become a personal trainer and wellness coach. But it was such a far-fetched idea that when I told friends about it, I would preface it by saying, “I have this pipe dream…” or “You wouldn’t believe the crazy dream I have…”

But one day this past spring, my mind shifted from “You wouldn’t believe this crazy dream I have” to “I’m going to do this!” And instead of just thinking about it, I suddenly decided to sign up for personal training and wellness coaching certification courses, rent a personal training studio in Cary, and hire my life coach and my old personal trainer to mentor me.

I call situations like this, where you suddenly take a leap into a new way of thinking and working, mind shifts. It was a mind shift in the summer of 2009 when I decided to cut my workweek down to two days (while maintaining the same income), and it was a mind a year before that when a coach talked me into offering phone mentoring for writers (when I was previously scared of the idea).

Sometimes mind shifts come on of their own accord, like mine did, but there are ways to help spur a mind shift when you feel stuck. So if you’re having trouble deciding on your career direction, wanting to find new ways to get healthy, or even feeling stuck with your novel, here are some ways to force a mind shift.

Say “Ommmmm”

Sometimes we get stuck because we spend so much time running around putting out fires that we have no time or mental space to tackle the big issues. When this happens, I force myself to take a few minutes to lie on the floor and meditate. I often come up with fresh new ideas as, ironically, I’m trying to not attach to random floating thoughts.

Sometimes, opening yourself up this way brings on benefits without your even trying. The other day I was feeling harried and worried about not having enough work, so I shut my laptop and lay down on the floor. When I got up a little while later and checked my e-mail, there was a message from one of my favorite editors asking if I’d like to write a column for her magazine! That night before bed, I did a guided meditation from The Meditation Podcast. When I woke up in the morning, there was an e-mail from a custom publishing company I had written to weeks before, saying they were looking for freelance writers and would be in touch. I checked the time stamp and realized the e-mail had been sent at 10:30 pm the night before — the exact time I was doing the meditation.

Ask a Coach

Whenever I feel like I’m stuck in low gear and need a mind shift, I set a session with my life coach. She’s the one who talked me into teaching e-courses even though my initial market research was less than positive. And it was a coach at The Yoga of Writing retreat who finally convinced me to start phone mentoring for writers even though the very idea scared me out of my wits. These were two pivotal points in my career. Sometimes you need an outside perspective on how you can get unstuck, and coaches (even wellness coaches like me) are trained to spot sticking points and help you work through them.

Get Crazy

As fast as you can, make a list of every idea you have on how to fix whatever problem is bugging you — for example, say you’re looking for new ways to improve your health. Don’t censor your ideas…just let them flow. Then go through them one by one and seriously consider what would happen if you gave these ideas a try. The ones that sound crazy could be just the game-changing tactics you need to get out of your rut. Maybe you join a roller derby team, spring for a personal trainer, sign up for a 5K (when you have no running experience yet), hire a personal chef to create healthy meals for you, try a detox, or find an accountability buddy at work. Those ideas sound crazy at first, but are they really? (My take: No.)

Like my wise source said, you can’t get radical new results using the same old tactics. Have you ever had a mind shift? Did it come on naturally or did you need to force it?

The Easiest Way to Build Healthy Habits

20 Oct

Many of my coaching clients want to start exercising. One obstacle many of these clients encounter is that they have an “all or nothing” approach: Either they want to exercise an hour every single day or they don’t want to exercise at all. This obstacle comes up with many other goals, too: The goal to write for an hour a day, give up sugar cold turkey, meditate 30 minutes, seven days a week, and so on.

While these ambitious goals are admirable, they can set you up for failure. For example, if your goal is to exercise an hour a day and one day you don’t because it’s raining or you don’t feel well or an emergency comes up at work, the perfectionist in you will say, “I failed. I might as well give up for good.” If you harbor negative feelings about a task, you’re less likely to do it.

The trick to creating habits that last is to start small to set up little “wins” for yourself. For example, commit to exercising for just 10 minutes a day, or cut your sugar consumption by one quarter, journal 10 minutes daily, or meditate for 5 minutes per day.

There are two reasons this tactic is so effective:

  1. The goals are so ridiculously easy that they’re hard not to reach. And once you complete the small task, you feel good about yourself for doing so. And this positive feeling helps kick-start you the next time you go to do the task.
  2. If you promise to, say, meditate for just 5 minutes, and tell yourself that you can stop as soon as the timer goes off, you’ve overcome the main hurdle to completing a task: Getting started. Once you’re actually doing the task, you’ll often get on a roll and not want to stop. So 10 minutes of writing turns into an hour. A short meditation session turns into a long one. A quick walk becomes a couple of miles.

When I suggest that a client create small wins, she often balks because she says that the goal can’t possible benefit her health. Two counter-arguments:

  1. Doing 5 or 10 minutes of something has more of an impact on your health than doing nothing at all.
  2. The point of manufacturing small wins isn’t necessarily to create great gains in health — it’s to get you started with a habit that will grow over time. Then you’ll see the gains in health. Experts say it takes 21 days to create a habit. Even more important than doing a lot of something is doing it consistently.

Your challenge today: Create a small win for yourself for vowing to do something — self care, meditating, exercising, writing — for just 5 to 15 minutes per day. And let me know how it works!

You Can’t Lean on a Broken Stick

17 Oct

Many of my wellness coaching clients have said that they feel guilty taking time for themselves, whether it’s to exercise, prepare healthy foods, meditate, or just plain relax. Like these clients, many of you are going a mile a minute for 18 hours a day taking care of your kids, your spouse, your job, your house, your church — everything but YOU.

If you’re that concerned about the health and welfare of everyone else, consider this: If you’re not taking time to refuel and take care of yourself, you’re cheating all these other people out of your best work and your best self. You can’t write five articles in a month if you’re dragged out. You can’t be patient with your kids and your spouse on no sleep. And if you’re sick, everyone loses.

One of my clients put it best: “You can’t lean on a broken stick.” In other words, if you’re not at your best, then you’re not in a good position to take care of other people. You may have also heard the phrase “You can’t serve other people if your cup is empty.” Same deal.

So if your motivation is taking care of other people, know that it’s important to take care of yourself first. Carve a half hour out of your day to relax, go for a walk, do yoga, or meditate. Go to bed an hour earlier. Prepare healthy foods for yourself instead of grazing on whatever you have around the house.

You’re worth it, and your loved ones are, too.

Set Your Own Agenda, Or Other People Will Do It for You

12 Oct

Recently I coached a freelance writer who had few chunks of time during the day that were big enough to exercise in. After asking some questions, I noticed that she was letting her interview sources choose the times and days for their talks, so she would have interviews scattered throughout the day.

Until recently, I had been doing the same thing: When I gave away 50 free wellness coaching calls, at first I asked prospective coachees to send me a few days and times that worked for them, and I would choose from these. But letting other people control my schedule resulted in, well, a crazy schedule, so I started offering coachees one choice: “Would you be available on Monday at 11 am ET?”

Usually, they said yes…no problem. And if it didn’t work for them, I would throw out another option. The result: I was scheduling coaching sessions from 11 am through about 5 pm, with half-hour breaks in between to let me refresh myself.

I advised this writer client to start taking control of her schedule. She needed to decide what was important (like exercise), schedule it in her calendar, and schedule other things around it.

If you let other people control your schedule and try to fit your goals into the time that’s left over, chances are you’ll never get to work on your goals at all. And you need to set good boundaries and be firm, because one thing I’ve learned from experience is:

If you don’t set your own agenda, other people will be only too glad to set it for you.

In other words, if you let other people set your deadlines and you say Yes to everything that comes your way, you’ll soon find your calendar packed with work you don’t want, obligations you have no time for, and precious little time to take care of yourself, care for your health, or work on your career or personal development goals.

Don’t worry: People won’t be offended if you’re firm about what you can do and when you can do it. They’ll understand, and even admire you, if you say you don’t work on weekends, that your exercise time is sacred, or that you don’t take phone calls during family dinnertime.

Your challenge until the next blog post: Do what you can to set your own agenda that includes time for what you want and need — and stick to it!

You DO Have the Time to Reach For Your Dreams

10 Oct

In coaching my clients, I’m finding something interesting: Almost every one of them says they don’t have the time to exercise/prepare healthy meals/meditate/practice self care.

If I point out that everyone is busy, most of them say, “Yes, but I’m really busy. I work two jobs/have four kids/volunteer for five organizations/take care of my ailing parents. I literally have no time.”

Let me tell you: The people who are getting important things done? Who are running marathons and writing novels and starting businesses? They aren’t some lucky breed of folks who are less busy or have more time than everyone else. They don’t have maids, they usually have kids, they have full-time jobs.

They just make better use of their time.

Instead of sleeping in, they train. Instead of watching TV, they study. They understand the premise of Laura Vanderkam’s wonderful book 168 Hours: You Have More Time Than You Think, which is that, well, we all have 168 hours in a week. Even if you work 8 hours a day and sleep 8 hours a night, that leaves 56 hours every week. According to the book, time use studies tell us that people work less and spend less time on chores and on child care than they think.

So how can you make better use of those 56 hours so you can do all the important things you dream of?

1. Stop Watching TV

I’m not kidding. I watch one show per week (right now that’s Project Runway). We don’t even have cable (I download PR from Amazon.com and stream it to my TV). Many clients say that at the end of a long day they need a break and they deserve to watch an hour or two of TV. My take:

  • TV is not relaxing. Experts even recommend that you don’t watch TV right before bed because it’s too stimulating.
  • What you deserve is to pursue your dreams and live the life you’ve always wanted. You deserve so much more than a couple hours of TV in the evening.

My challenge to you: Turn off the TV for one week and use that time to exercise, plan your next day, write out a weekly plan of healthy meals, market your business…anything that will take you in the direction of your best self.

2. Group Similar Tasks

Many of us do have enough time to go after our dreams, but if that time is scattered in 10-minute chunks throughout the day, it’s pretty useless.

One tip: If you have several tasks that are similar, do them all together instead of scattering them throughout the day. For example, if you’re a freelancer, electronically sign and send all your contracts at once, and send your invoices all at the same time for the whole week. If you need to pick up a prescription and make copies at the office supply store, do it all in one trip. When you’re making dinner, prepare your kid’s school lunch for the next day, too.

3. Say Sayonara to Surfing

Isn’t it funny how the people who complain they have no time to exercise or write a novel do have time to obsessively post on Facebook or read through their feed of 100 blogs several times a day?

It’s about priorities, folks. Sure, you want to keep up with your Facebook friends and your blogs. But why does that take precedence over your very health and wellbeing?

I use a cheap piece of software called Freedom that makes the Internet inaccessible for the amount of time I choose, from half an hour to eight hours. I usually set it for an hour when I’m writing an article so I won’t be tempted to jump online and check e-mail. I’ve also used a site blocker browser extension to block time suck sites like certain writer’s forums and even, at times, Facebook and Twitter.

Also, I turned off social media e-mail notifications (I was getting up to 15 Twitter follow notifications a day), and generally answer e-mail in chunks once or twice a day to cut back on the back-and-forth that can occur when you jump on an e-mail 15 seconds after the sender zaps it off.

The result? I get all my writing work done in under 20 hours per week while still earning a full-time income, and have had the time to pursue my dream of becoming a personal trainer and wellness coach.

So here’s another challenge: Figure out what’s sucking up all your time on the Internet and take steps to cut down on it, whether it’s e-mail, social media, or blog surfing. Use that time to do one thing that will take you closer to your goals.

Is Your Present Self Dumping on Your Future Self?

6 Oct

I’m pretty conscious about taking good care of myself, but I have one major weakness: When faced with one too many projects or a crazy deadline, I say to myself, “I’ll take this…I could use the money, and it won’t be too bad.”

Fast forward to two weeks later, when I’m beating my head against the wall and wondering why it was that once again I thought I would want to have three articles due the week of my vacation or to do five wellness coaching sessions in a row with no break in between. (Don’t get me wrong, I love my work! But everyone needs a break.)

I was contemplating this problem when my good friend Jennifer Lawler wrote a blog post that said exactly what I was thinking: On Giving Your Future Self a Break.

I’d never thought of it in those terms before: The past me, present me, and future me. My problem is, the present me always seems to think that the future me will somehow morph into a person who doesn’t have an anxiety disorder and who would simply love to be overloaded with work. Would I want to be in that situation right now? No! Will I two weeks from now? Of course!

I’ve started to face facts: Even though I’m a very productive person, I need a lot of down time to keep the stress, anxiety, and even depression at bay. As soon as I’m through with this busy period that my past self thought was such a great idea, I vow to, as Jennifer put it, give my future self a break.

The question is: How to break that trend? Overloading myself with obligations is a pretty unconscious process right now, so the trick will be to somehow put the concept of the past me and future me forefront in my mind at the moment when I’m considering taking on another project.

My own life coach told me about the valuable practice of instituting rules for yourself. For example, one of my rules is, “If I slack on exercise one day, I’ll get right back on track within 24 hours.” When you institute the rule, you make it a habit so whenever a certain situation comes up, you don’t have to wonder what to do…you have a rule!

It seems like the perfect rule to keep the present me from trying to kill the future me with overwork will be, “Before committing to any obligation, I will take a few minutes to contemplate how I would feel if I were in that situation right now.” How would I feel if, right now, I were about to go on vacation but had three articles due? Or if I woke up knowing I needed to do five coaching calls all in a row that day? This will certainly keep the present me from dumping all over the future me.

How about you: Does your present self put your future self through hell? What rule can you institute to stop doing it?

Think That Food Is Healthy? Think Again

3 Oct

A few weeks ago, my husband brought home a box of Fiber One cereal. He checked the label and saw that it was jam packed with fiber and protein, and low in sugar, and he thought it would be a good replacement for the Kashi cereal we usually eat, which the supermarket was out of.

The next morning I happily poured myself a bowl, took a bite and — wow! For a cereal that’s low in sugar, it sure was sweet. As sweet as those kiddie cereals we avoid.

I looked at the label, and discovered that the cereal was indeed low in sugar, but that the overwhelming sweetness came from aspartame — otherwise known as NutraSweet and Equal.

According to LiveStrong, “The Center for Science in the Public Interest has requested the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to review a recent study conducted by the Ramazzini Foundation regarding the occurrence of tumors in laboratory animals given aspartame.”

Pretty sneaky, Fiber One.

A week later, I was hungry while shopping. I usually carry a healthy snack for just such emergencies, but had forgotten to pack one in my purse that day. So I grabbed a bag of trail mix to nosh on while I browsed the aisles. Healthy, right?

Well, later, when I looked at the label, I realized that the trail mix contained hydrogenated oil — the source of the dreaded trans fat. And when I looked closer, I saw that one gram of fat was unaccounted for on the label, which usually indicates the presence of trans fat. The recommended daily intake of trans fat is ZERO grams.

These experiences taught me that if we care about what we put into our bodies, we need to carefully inspect food labels, even of brands that tout themselves as heathy. I mean, I thought I was eating healthful foods when I was really ingesting chemicals and trans fat.

When you’re deciding whether to buy a food, don’t just look at the nutrition label and be satisfied that the product seems to be low in sugar, fat, or calories. Look at the ingredients as well. Sugar can hide out in all different forms, such as sugar alcohols that end in -ol (like sorbitol or xylitol). Hydrogenated oils can sneak in trans fats, but food companies are allowed to say a product is trans fat-free if it has half a gram or less per serving.

And of course, be on the lookout for the presence of lots of ingredients you can’t pronounce and that sound more like they came out of a lab than out of grandma’s kitchen — despite the fact that the label depicts a homey kitchen laden with fresh foods.

I learned my lesson with these so-called “healthy” foods. How about you — have you ever been surprised to find out that a food you thought was healthy really wasn’t?

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