How do you survive Christmas? Without gaining 10 pounds!
Posted on 2009-December-22 by Helle Nielsen
December, the Christmas month! Yay! Goodies, Duck, family festivities, home baked cookies and presents! It’s the month of the year where we spend more time with family and friends often gathered around good food, wine and Christmas goodies. It’s also the month of the year where the food temptations are at their highest point.
The key is to find a balance!
Keeping a diet seems like it’s impossible, and somewhere in the back of your head you’re already dreading January (like most bills arrive in January so does the “I’ve gained 10 pounds that I have to sweat off” bill!).
At the Christmas dinner you eat a little extra, because it tastes good and you’ve already decided that you’re not going to eat in January anyway… Right? …and exercise like a mad-woman! That’s in fact your New years resolution: To exercise more… and to eat healthy… and to fit some of the clothes that are a bit too tight…
…You know what? You should enjoy the Christmas season and everything that comes with it. Life is to be lived and enjoyed!
You’re probably wondering: “So how do I avoid gaining weight when I should enjoy and just eat whatever I want?”
The answer is easy and the results effective.
A dear friend and fitness expert once said; “Please your brain, but keep your backbone”.
The meaning of his words can be boiled down to one word: Balance.
Like so many other things in life, you have to find a (food) balance. Don’t over eat to starve later or yourself out on the treadmill for endless hours to punish yourself for your uncontrolled chocolate consumption.
Instead gain control!
Who has more control of their bodies than athletes? That’s why I’ve asked several of the Evolution Hotel athletes how they keep those pounds off in December without spoiling the Christmas fun.
Here are Figure athlete Heidi Rosenfeldt’s Christmas tips:
- Make Christmas something more than just food. Put your focus on things other than food such as spending quality time with family and friends. Play games, talk and do fun things!
- Let Christmas Eve be the day you “dig in”. Then you have something to look forward to.
- Avoid the candy/cake department at the grocery store. Don’t allow yourself to fall into traps, you know them yourself. It is better to prevent rather than cure.
- You can bake delicious cakes yourself. Replace some of the flour with protein powder. Replace the sugar with liquid sweetener and reduce the margarine or completely skip it. Add bananas or low-fat cream cheese for moisture and a richer texture.
- In the Christmas holidays you have the extra free time to work out or take a nice fresh walk in the outdoors. It will take your mind off of the sweet temptations.
- When you do eat “bad” food think quality over quantity.
Figure athlete Line Wilkens thinks it’s important to replace the “bad” goodies with healthy alternatives:
- Replace the sweets on the table with Oranges and nuts.
- I don’t like to draw attention when I’m invited out by saying “No” to everything. I pick the healthy choices and eat slowly. As long as I eat no one will notice that I don’t have my mouth full of cookies!
- During December I’m often invited to some Christmas festivities. I take one off day a week from eating healthy and that will be that particular day where I’m invited out.
- If I’m invited over to a friend’s house for dinner, I volunteer to bring the desert. I’ll bring some low-fat yogurt smoothie or another low-fat/low sugar dessert.
Line Kolbe, a female bodybuilder from Sweden, says that she eats healthy those days she isn’t invited out for some festivities:
- I always have a food plan and make an effort to stick to it 100%!
- On the days where I’m invited out I pick the healthiest things to eat. I eat extra vegetables and protein and less carbohydrates and fat.
- I eat a lot of vegetables and make sure that I eat every 3 hours and feel satisfied throughout the day. It’s easier to say no to bad things when you’re stomach is full (with good things).
It all comes down to finding the balance. Your balance. How about starting your New Years resolutions this year and starting 2010 with more balance, more control, more energy, more self-confidence and less pounds.
If you think this sounds good but need a little help then please contact me and together we will find your balance.
Thank you to the Evolution Hotel athletes Line Kolbe, Line Wilkens and Heidi Rosenfeldt, who contributed to this article.
Your friend, Helle
- Illustration by da-kuk, DomenicoGelermo & artpipi / iStockphoto