Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Trip to Washington, DC and Engine 2 with Rip Esselstyn


Posted: 09 Sep 2013 06:37 AM PDT
Dear Heavenly Bodies, Hello from Washington, DC where we are celebrating my husband's birthday with a destination tour of our capital. The architecture style is in proportional relationship to the human in that the buildings in the central area are no more than 6 or 7 stories high. That makes one feel that the city is made for them unlike New York where I at least feel like an ant.  Also buildings are not chock-a-bloc allowing for space and green areas around as well as parks and of course The Mall. We are being total tourists, taking the Hop-on-hop-off bus to all the major sites one can see in two days. Then it's the Metro, buses and feet.

Food..... So as always then it's about the fuel. How do we get the food and mainly the protein in our tanks to keep going?

I can always get a salad but that can just get boring so a rundown on some of the wonderful choices available to us so far.
Travel Suggestions. Be prepared...... Take care of yourself.  Traveling is stressful but adding to it the uncertainty of "our food" being readily available is a recipe for defeat, putting me at least in a anxious place.....  That food deprivation area....    Nope, not interested.

Airplane food....  No meal selection for vegetarians not to mention no cheese vegans on our flight. The flight attendant didn't offer one thing that was on my eating plan.... My PLAN BEAUTIFUL kicked in and I was satisfied with My Happy Meal of fruit, mint, seeds, cranberries, raisins and baby spinach. Yum.  Lots of seeds and raisins left over for munching.  All packed at home.

First night in DC. After getting up at 3:30am at home and arriving in DC at 5pm, throwing our bags in the room and heading to the Mall to see the sights, I was really hungry. Right next to the hotel was a pizza parlor called Pizza Pi  (the symbol) cute.  Went in expecting a salad. With my card, I discussed my choices... Pay dirt.... I did have a small salad but also a thin-no-oil crusted pizza with tomato sauce, plant based sausage, dry sautéed mushrooms and garlic.  Left full and happy.

Special restaurant recommendations. Before we came to DC, I put out the word that we would love suggestions of special favorites our friends could offer.  A couple who lived in DC told us of a restaurant they enjoyed which turned out to be a block away from our hotel.

The importance of calling ahead.
I called about 3pm to discuss the possibility of dishes I could have relative to my eating plan. With a bit of on-hold and clarifying, we made reservations for 7pm with the suggestion that I make myself known at the desk.  I also gave my what-i-can-&-do not eat card with emphases on the No Oil to my server.  All went so well that we went back another night especially for the special care and treatment at the beautiful hands of Chef Karen who came out at the end of my 4 course meal to see if all was well. Wow  Hope the pictures come out of food and Chef Karen who told us that she doesn't eat any refined sugar. Amazing the stories and lifestyle others are living!  None of this would ever have happened to me pre-stroke and lifestyle change.  The night was delightful and memorable. I have met so many wonderful food angels on this journey.

We have also scored at the many Smithsonian gallery restaurants with well stocked salad bars some even with tofu and all with many choices of protein rich beans and spinach.
Dinner at vegetarian choices from VegDC blog were great and one meal in the room with an edamame, spinach, broccoli, seeds and fruit salad with soy yogurt dressing from the grocery store along with whole grain roll from the bakery.  Nobody's starving here.

It helps to have a hotel room with a frig and microwave.

Breakfast is always oats and fruit. Easy to find most places.

GREAT FIND....
Rip, son of Dr and Anne Esselstyn, is a fire fighter and tri athlete who has an interesting blog called Engine 2 Diet.  I will put this on the resources page. (Note about Rip...he does include some nuts and avocados in his recipes. ) hey, we know how to adjust, right?

This is a current article by Natalae on his blog. http://engine2diet.com/the-daily-beet/emotional-eating/
EMOTIONAL EATING?  THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH YOU.

BY NATALAE2
August 09, 2013
I always had this belief, I was an “emotional eater”. I was told this by various “experts”, TV show doctors, magazines and Oprah. And I believed it. It seemed to make sense, every time I got upset, I would eat, and make some bad choices.

But I looked around, I had thin friends that would go through a breakup, or have some other bad thing happen in their life. They would eat, lets say a pint or 2 of Ben and Jerry’s, or eat an entire box of oreos. They were thin, but I saw them doing the same thing I was doing in response to stress.

And if I was honest, I wasn’t just overeating when I was sad or angry, I was overeating on a pleasant, Tuesday afternoon or a nice dinner out, or, well really anytime.

It occurred to me that weight gain does not take much, if you have the right genes (high fat stores) to make it happen. It takes 120 excess calories per day of oil to gain 100 pounds in 8 years. That’s it. Spread throughout your day – 120 calories excess of empty calories. We’re not talking 3 pints of ice-cream or a bucket of fried chicken. We’re talking about a drizzle of salad dressing, or a few cookies, or a few potato chips.

This is the trouble when you have high fat stores. You store fat, very well. It was a great thing back in the day, it is why you survived. But in todays modern society, food is abundant, we can get it 24/7 without having to chase it, dig it, or catch it. We do not have to put an ounce of effort into getting food, unlike our ancestors who had to do a lot to not starve, not starving was a full time job back then.

When I started to really look into the reasons why we eat,I started to see the problem as one that is much more simple, yet far more complex at the same time. We overeat because we’re supposed to, we’re built that way, we have a unique wiring that says “get as much calorically dense food in me, or I might starve”. And we haven’t had that much food abundance, for that long to see any significant changes to our biology.

Same with working out. Your ancestors did not work out. They were active out of necessity, and the conserved energy, that was how they survived. Unless they were being chased by a lion, they didn’t run. So our modern brains are still catching up, if you aren’t being chased by a lion, why the heck are you running? If you have the opportunity to eat a donut that is deep fried, why wouldn’t you? Do you know how long that would last you if you were starving for the next few weeks?

So I started to examine what happens when we eat, for what seems to be emotional reasons. First, our brains sense there is something wrong. This is a great instinct, it means danger, trouble, and it probably meant that something bad was about to go down in the village, and that you might not be eating for a while. Our brains say “time to ramp up!” and we eat. We eat for a very normal, reasonable solution to a problem that took many centuries to develop.

There is nothing wrong with you.

Let me repeat that, and if you have to say it out loud, print it, put it everywhere. THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH YOU.

You are a normal human being, with a normal desire to survive.

You are not broken. You might feel like it. I felt like I was a big broken mess for years. I tortured myself over thinking there was something fundamentally wrong with me as a person, with my character, with my brain, with who I was. When there was nothing wrong with me at all. The response to eat and overeat can be traced back for as long as their have been humans on this planet. The difference is that now we have food available all the time, and then we did not.

That’s it. A simple yet complex problem.

So what is the answer?

The reason why this way of eating works for people who tend to have higher fat stores, and people who tend to eat more than others, is because of the amount of food you can eat. What we want to aim for is filling up your stomach, triggering your stretch receptors and telling your brain that you are indeed satisfied, and that you will not starve in the jungle.

It is why it is very important to make sure that you eat as many foods as you can that are lower on the caloric density scale. Eating a tbs of oil is NOT going to tell your brain that your stomach is full.

So this is what I do:

Start with a huge salad or a huge vegetable soup at EACH meal.
Try not to eat “compacted” food. By this I mean, things like crackers, breads, of course things like oil, potato chips, cookies/brownies. The more volume to your food the better off you are going to be. Let me state, for the record, there are people who can eat compacted plant-strong food just fine, and have absolutely no problem at all. I’m not addressing those people. I’m addressing people who identify with me as far as the amount of food they can eat or if they feel they eat A LOT more food during stressful times, and if they are trying to combat a health issue.
Try eating more intact whole grains (for the reason above). Things like oats, brown rice, quinoa. Also starches like potatoes/squash/sweet potatoes.
Drink water.
Do not drink your calories. I can’t stress this enough. Juices/smoothies are not going to help you when it comes to weight loss (especially long term weight loss). It also causes a spike in sugar, which causes a greater release of insulin, which then causes insulin resistance. For some people the occasional juice or smoothie is just fine, and for some as a treat they are just fine. But if you are overweight, or if you have T2 diabetes/pre-diabetes/insulin resistance, drinking food is not the best option for you. Disrupting fiber of food like that is not the way we were intended to eat food. Chewing is an important part to digestion and to satiety. Don’t believe me? The next time you drink your food, test your blood sugar 1 & 2 hours after you eat. The next day instead of blending and drinking all of your food,  put the same food in a bowl and eat/chew it, and then test your blood sugar 1&2 hours after you eat.
Eat whole fruits/vegetables when you can. I’m all for the occasional fruit sorbet, but for weight loss, stick to whole when possible. Frozen fruit (whole) is great!
Working out is great, but it will not make up for unhealthy choices. Workout because it is good for your muscles, bones, mental health. It’s not a great weight loss tool. So before you think “I can work it off” think again.
When you are facing a tough emotional stress in your life, have a plan.Map out how your day is going to go. Prepare the food for the week, get groceries delivered (Safeway, Giant, Instacart). Take a different route to work if you know that a certain fast food place is tempting for you. Do not keep bad stuff in your house, and if your family has the bad stuff, talk to them, or label their food, as a visual reminder.
Do not deprive yourself of healthy food. Eat until you are comfortably full. If that is 1 plate of healthy food, great. If that is 3 plates of healthy food, that is just fine. Just be sure to fill your plate up with 1/2 vegetables, and then the rest whole intact grains/beans, and make your first course a huge salad or soup.
Get moving. Doug Lisle, PhD talked about this in his interview on E2X a few months back. To combat depression the best thing you can possibly do is move. Even if it is only for a few minutes a day. The important thing is to do SOMETHING. Make sure that you plan your day to include moving – walk, dance, skip, go to the gym, swim, punch a punching bag, activity is key for combatting depression/anxiety/anger.
Get support. That could be something you start in your own town, your workplace, with your family. It could be a facebook group, or hanging out on our facebook page. We also have an amazing support community, Engine 2 Extra with live chat, and help almost any hour of the day, if that is something you are looking got.
Stay away from goals that set you up for traps. There are no goals, there is a healthy, long life. So if your weight goes up one week, it is ok, if your blood sugar is a little higher one day over the next, it is ok. The important thing is the overall pattern, over several years.
Know that each bite of non-plant strong food has the potential of triggering pleasure traps (like addiction). It’s like a smoker who goes a long time without smoking and then has one cigarette. They are more likely to go back into the habit, because their brain remembers all of the pleasure they had experienced from smoking before.
Your tastes WILL change, give it time. Have a plan, know what you are going to be eating, when you’ll be working out, and what you’ll do when you feel the urge to survive eat unhealthy food.
Most importantly, know that there is nothing wrong with you, or how your brain works. I wish I could wave a magic wand and rid all people of the guilt they feel for what comes down to, being a completely normal human being with the desire to survive. The only difference now, is that we live in a calorically abundant world, and so we have to make a few adjustments to overcome that fairly new issue to us.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Natala is the director of communications for Engine 2 Diet, she is also one of our coaches on our support site, Engine 2 Extra. A few years ago, Natala was at the end of her rope. She was on almost 15 medications daily, had out of control Type 2 Diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, issues with nerve damage, and was morbidly obese. She was just over 30 years old. She decided to take her life back by becoming plant-strong. She has lost over 200 pounds, got off of all of her medications and now has great health numbers. Natala plays the violin and studied music therapy. She became passionate about plant-strong nutrition, received her Certificate in Plant-Based Nutrition through Cornell University, a certificate in Health Promotion and Disease Prevention and is currently pursuing a degree in nutritional sciences.
We have a few more days but I know we will do fine.

Blessings and happy eating, happy life.   Elin