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Always your best bet: Brut Champagne (lowest calorie drink going)

Pearl One

Happy New Year Thrivers!!, of course, but today I’m feeling annoyed. I don’t know if you’ve seen the video on Instagram or Facebook showing Jane Fonda’s niece looking different today than she once looked being pursued by photographers? She was clearly so uncomfortable by the attention, but they kept coming at her as she tried to make her way to her car.

It took time, but I’ve finally realized: the media uses those of us with weight and food issues like the circuses of old used so-called “freaks” who were flesh-and-blood, merely misunderstood human beings.

Our media salivates at featuring women who are morbidly obese and then showing the women after they’ve lost a hundred pounds, as in “look! She went from awful to awesome.”

And they dress it all up in, “we only want to help these people” (the reality shows) and “we want to applaud these women for all the pounds they’ve lost” (the magazines).

Holy-Cow

As I researched for this post, I was surprised to learn that the Biggest Loser has been on for 17 years! And apparently even produced copycat shows.

I’ve never seen the Biggest Loser, but I did flip by it once and saw a coach screaming at someone to run faster, or pump more weight or something like that.

At the time I thought, “how awful.” I was into my forever preservation mode at that point; I knew how to successfully lose and preserve the loss. And my success had absolutely nothing to do with being screamed at.

It’s my thought that obese people appear to be the last bastion of a group that it’s deemed fine to gawk and sneer at. Functioning drug users like Matthew Perry can snow the world because addiction isn’t visible. An addiction to food, however, can be seen. A friend called it, “wearing your problems.”

When someone is severely obese the last place they need to be is on a reality show. They need medical intervention from a caring, kind, committed source.

I don’t have the precise answer for obese people, but I can tell you that I know a lot more about it than these reality shows know.

Obese people are not circus freaks. People having real trouble with our food-porn world are human beings who need a helping hand from us. Shame on everything behind these shows.

Pearl Two

A moment on New Year’s resolutions. Like all of us, I used to make dramatic, huge resolutions that never got traction.

I finally got wise and began to make only fun and positive resolutions.

This year instead of resolving to lose twenty pounds or whatever, choose a resolution that’s relatively simple to activate like these little guys:

  • Resolve to play exciting and kick-ass music every morning before your day begins (look to the movie people for guidance. They know the importance of the right music for every scene, so let’s steal a page from their playbook. Before your day starts in earnest, crank Prince!!
  • Laugh really hard at something hilarious every single day. (I did this one year and still remember stuff I cracked up at.
  • Resolve to only shop at thrift stores throughout 2024 (of course we can’t get everything at a thrift store like I need new slipper socks, but for everything else? I’m thinking I’ll treasure at the thrift.
  • In The Inspired Eater: Fed Up’s chapter titled “14 Super Tools I Couldn’t Lose Without” choose one or two tools to be your 2024 resolution. (I’m shy to say this, but I want you guys to have a Rolls-Royce weight loss slash preservation experience in 2024. Read the book once a year forever and a Rolls-year will be yours.) Share in the comments below which habit you’re embedding.

Pearl Three

In December, we’re deep-diving into Atomic Habits

In Atomic Habits, James Clear tell us, “Success is the process of daily habits. Not once in a lifetime transformation.”

Good one, James!! I’ve always been so taken with the stories of people being “discovered” like Giselle when she was spotted at McDonalds in Brazil and was soon cat walking for Victoria Secrets. But she stole my dream becauseI wanted to be discovered, and cat walk!!

Our culture – for some reason – loves the idea of “an overnight success.” We don’t seem to want to hear stories of endless toil, constant annoyances, set-back, obstacles and so forth.  Just a thought, but I wonder if movies introduced the idea. You know, Dorothy and Toto make it back to Kansas and all is well. At the end of two hours, the ending is all about wrapping up the story and calling it good.

The insanely successful I’ve personally known, became successful by showing up – no matter what – every single boring day. I know they went down paths that they’d rather they hadn’t, but when they realized they needed a better path, they located and hopped on it.

Pearl Four

If you loved a Man Called Ove, this is your book. It’s adorable and sweet and life-affirming. In The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper by Phaedra Patrick, we meet Arthur, a widower on the first anniversary of his wife’s death. One moment, as he’s going through her things, he finds a never-before-seen (by him) fine gold charm bracelet.

And that begins Arthur’s journey that takes him around the world (Paris, London, and India). As he travels he starts to see that there’s still life to be enjoyed even if we’ve lost our darling.

I’m just a third of the way in and my attention was captured right off the bat.

Curious Charms is the perfect read over a long weekend.

Pearl Five

“Success is not built on success. It’s built on failure. It’s built on frustration. Sometimes it’s built on catastrophe.”

Sumner Redston

Christmas is so much fun for so many reasons, but I honestly love getting back to real life.

If you’ve enjoyed this post please share it with a loved one.

Have a beautiful holiday weekend.

See you on Tuesday, January 2!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

Beautifully presented “little bites” are one of the secrets to successfully losing and preserving.

Pearl One

The Big Weekend is upon us and I’m hoping you’ll join me as we head into the holiday’s endless food buffet with great tools that work well when we bring them to life.

This is exactly what I will be thinking and doing throughout the three-day weekend.

#1

I don’t go apathetic on myself. Meaning I don’t think, “Oh, it’s the holidays. I’ll eat to my heart’s content and diet later!” Thing is, I know deep-down that I care very much about making it to (and staying at) my preferred weight. I remind myself throughout the weekend that I want to make it to December 26 with my smart eating habits intact. That said, be scrupulous about tracking your daily eating in your pretty notebook you keep by the fridge. If you’re not yet tracking this weekend is the perfect time to begin.

#2

I do not let myself get hungry. I have a large breakfast by 9 a.m. and starting at noon I eat every two hours. I keep my food small and attractive. Presentation matters when we’re living the Bite-Size Lifestyle. Little bites are healthy food that you love that give you fuel in just three or four bites.

#3

I visualize. I envision the points in the weekend when obstacles will be thrown into my path and I write a solution for each obstacle. Planning in advance for challenging times is the smartest calculus for those of us who eat a bit too much.

#4

Today I’m shopping for the food I love (that loves me back). I don’t play games with this one. Our Trader Joe’s is a good 25 minutes from our house, but that’s where I’ll be today picking up the food I’m happy to reach for that makes smart eating easier: focaccia (in their bread section), small bites found in their frozen food section, and their Peanut Butter Protein Granola. (Okay, I might pick up a bottle of Brut Champagne; Brut is the driest and most low calorie of the holiday drinks.)

#5

I write in my journal daily. Noodling through each day gives me a safe space to vent about my internal landscape. When I’m mad, I journal. Same when I’m sad, bored, stressed, lonely and you get the gist.

#6

I have a long conversation with my journal about how I’m feeling when I wake up on Tuesday, December 26. I put myself into a future headspace and go into detail about the smart eating holiday eating experience that I just had. (Remember, nobody wakes up the next day thinking, “I’m so glad I inhaled the cookies last night!”)

#7

I allow myself small bites of fun-food here and there. That said, if eating anything decadent triggers you, forget what I just wrote.

Pearl Two

Turns out that we don’t shrink our stomachs when we’re losing weight. A head scratcher because my experience has been that as I lost – and then learned to preserve – I’ve ended up needing very little food to feel full.

It sure feels like my stomach shrunk.

According to the experts, there’s no actual shrinkage happening. (Unless we have surgery.)

“Our stomachs have a reflex called receptive relaxation: As food enters your stomach, the muscles relax and expand out to accommodate more volume. In fact, your stomach can expand up to five times its volume after a meal as compared to before” explains Gastroenterologist Maged Rizk, MD for ClevelandClinic.org.

Still.

For whatever reason, I need very little food to feel full. And I think that’s a good thing.

Pearl Three

James Clear wrote in Atomic Habits, “Arguably the most important skill is controlling your attention. This goes beyond merely avoiding distractions. The deeper skill is finding the highest and best use for your time, given what is important to you. More than anything else, controlling your attention is about being able to figure out what you should be working on and identifying what truly moves the needle.”

May I just say “bravo!! Mr. Clear.” My thought is that given our high-tech entertainment world it’s so easy to google our way out of life and into You Tube videos, Netflix shows, Instagram-this and Twitter-that.

“Fun” is at our disposal 24/7.

The best way I’ve found to make sense of the always available entertainment that dominates our lives in this century is to turn to our journals. Writing about what is underneath a tendency to distract ourselves is key. I was reading way too much Daily Mail (if you don’t know it, don’t go there), and my resolution for the new year is no Daily Mail. I already started in mid-November and so far haven’t yet succumbed.

The need to chill out is healthy and normal. We aren’t robots. We can’t go-go-go all day long. We need breaks

So, in your journal answer: how do I “zone out”? What is my history with a short attention span? Is there a healthier way to chill then surfing silly sites? When am I most likely to get distracted? What would it be like to plan my distractions in such a way that I’ll get more IRL experiences? I’m giving up a really goofball, time-waster site. Is there anything similar that you’d like to ditch?

Pearl Four

When you need to laugh and commiserate: I give you Bossy Pants by Tina Fey and Yes Please! by Amy Poehler

These two women are hilarious. (Tina’s starts a bit slowly so hang in there and she speeds it up.) They go into detail about their early years, their first big breaks, and details you wouldn’t think they’d share. Amy goes into when it’s safe to make a joke and when you maybe should not.

Review: I highly recommend both. They’re right up with Seinfeld’s Is This Anything?

Pearl Five

“I used to resent obstacles along the path, thinking, ‘If only that hadn’t happened life would be so good.’ Then I suddenly realized, life is the obstacles. There is no underlying path.”

Janna Levin in Tribe of Mentors

If you have an annoying food problem, please share in the comments below, and I’ll get right back to you.

I don’t have an ad budget, so if you’ve enjoyed this post please share it with a loved one.

Have a beautiful holiday weekend.

See you on Tuesday, December 26. 🙂

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

Don’t take holiday stress lying down: unless you’re lying in a bath or bed with a phenomenal book.

Happy December Thrivers!

I still need to get my niece and nephew something for Christmas. She’s 22 years old and he’s 19. Something small, but nice because I also include a gift card. Any ideas? She’s very girly. He’s just a nice college kid.

Would love ideas: Wendy@theInspiredEater.com.

Pearl One

Politics completely aside, I was driving with my son, 20, the other day and heard him laughing about “Elon Musk’s latest rocket fizzle.”

My son was smirking like, “Musk is so lame.”

My “kid” is at the age when he doesn’t listen to me anymore (which makes for super happy times, for sure), so I had to let the “teaching moment” pass, but I can share the moment with you.

When Musk is shooting up rockets that tank, he’s merely doing what all super successfuls do: at every fail point, their brains are click-clacking away and they are learning as they go.

They’re like, “okay, we’re not at optimal performance.

Yet.”

That’s it. They fail and fail and fail until they hit the target. And that’s how I lost the 55-pounds and how I maintain/preserve today.

Consider taking out your journal and writing to these questions:

  • How do I think about failing in general?
  • Why am I fine with “failing” when I was learning how to make a pie crust, but I’m not okay with “failing” around smart eating? (Given that our new century has brought us a lot of new info. to the table like developing habits.)
  • What do I tell myself when I’ve goofed up again?
  • What exactly is failure – to me – around food, my body and eating?
  • How do I cheerlead myself?
  • How do I harass myself?
  • As a kid, who talked about my weight, and how do I think my weight was perceived?
  • What’s one new thing that I know today about losing weight that I didn’t know ten years ago?

The idea is to essentially have a conversation with your unconscious about how you engage (at a deeper level) with the idea of failure and how it’s affecting your Smart Eating Lifestyle.

Pearl Two

I meta-noticed that I like to think of so-called “failures” as life essentially saying to me, “Your attempts at such-and-such project have been impressive, but no cigar. Try again.”

It’s often seemed to me that as I work to bring a dream into the world, Life is pushing back like, “Show me. Show me how much this really matters to you.” And, “no, just doing x,y and z won’t cut it. You’ve got to make it crystal clear to me if you want to bring your dream to fruition.”

If the Smart Eating Path feels elusive to you as if, “this never works for me.” Just chill and think to yourself, “hey, it’s just Life pushing back on me.”

Getting frustrated and annoyed is normal when we’re grappling with something huge. Yes, I know that you feel like you’re attempting to lose and maintain forever, but what we’re doing here cannot be put into the same category with “I’ve always been trying.” No, you haven’t been trying with these micro-tools we have today like, always carry a cold-tote, Eat Before You Eat and so on.

At that, get on with your learning curve.

Pearl Three

In Pearl Three we do a deep-dive on James Clear’s book Atomic Habits

James Clear writes, “Success is not a goal to reach or a finish line to cross. It is a system to improve, an endless process to refine.”

I love the meaning behind this quote.

This is cerebral way to say, “just keep improving on a daily basis what you want to transform.” James is big on saying that if we just do better by 1% a day, we’ll make enormous progress over the long run. That idea never spoke to me. I’m too literal, I was like, “how will I know it’s 1% and not 5%?!” But he’s really just telling us that small positive shifts every day add up.

Challenge yourself to look for good ideas when you’re around people who don’t have an issue with weight and food. Watch what they do. Be willing to walk up to strangers and ask questions. Be willing to tell yourself that there’s always new ways to continually improve on our forever-loss.

Pearl Four

Welp, I loved the first book about Hendrik Groen’s life so much that I ordered the sequel, On the Bright Side: The New Secret Diary of Hendrik Groen, 85 Years Old by Hendrik Groen and am loving it as much as the first.

The writer’s voice is like having hot chocolate with whipped cream on top, cat in lap on a snowy afternoon. I found it to be a very comforting and gentle read.

In diary form for a full year, the book details the life of a charming senior citizen living in an senior person’s home in Amsterdam.

Sounds boring, but it is an adorable read. I’m only halfway through the sequel, but these two books will be gifts to my aunt in her 70s. Highly recommend.

Pearl Five

“If you so choose, every mistake can lead to greater understanding and effectiveness. If you so choose, every frustration can help you to be more patient and more persistent.”

Ralph Marston

Once I’ve sent this post to you, I’m wrapping my kid’s keyboard in lights! It’s funny, but there are so many ways “to do” Christmas. And now I’m thinking, “let’s hear from our Thrivers in Australia!! How do you do Christmas when it’s blazing hot?”

If you like this post, I hope you’ll send it to a friend or family member. And I’d also love a follow on Instagram and Facebook.

TGIF! And have a wonderful weekend!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

This article originally appeared in SixtyandMe.

Turns out, maintaining a 55-pound weight loss – after age 50 – isn’t as easy as one might think.

Especially in December.

Quick backstory: I lost the 55 in my early 40s and have kept them off for 17 years now. I’m 59 as I type.

I love a tasty buzz as much as the next girl, but at the same time I don’t want to drink what are essentially boozy desserts and run screaming from my scale on New Year’s Day.

Having maintained my loss for years now, I have zero interest in gaining and then re-losing the weight all over again. So, behold the alcoholic calories that I rely on throughout November and December.

But First a Few Tips

Go for the Lowest Calorie Drink

When you’d love something to sip during the holidays, consider the lowest calories in the wine world: brut champagne that comes in at 65 to 95 calories for four ounces (half-cup). We’re not talking sweet champagne, our drink is the driest of dry champagnes, so look for the word “brut” on the label.

Of the hard liquors, vodka is just64 calories for one ounce (eighth of a cup).

Do Ruin Your Meal

Don’t dive into even the lowest calorie drinks until you first “Eat Before You Eat.” Remember how your parents always said, “Don’t eat this close to dinner, you’ll ruin your meal!”

Well – sorry, Dad – ruining our meal is exactly the idea for those of us losing and maintaining after age 50. Before the meals where you know you’ll be tempted, eat an apple or banana with a teaspoon of peanut butter, have a half cup of cottage cheese or a small bowl of cereal.

If you’re anything like me, being hungry at a beautiful spread is a surefire way to overeat and over drink.

Limit the Number of Drinks

Decide in advance to keep your drink limit to two. No matter how low the calories, these beautiful drinks add up.

On with the show!

Fun Recipes to Try

Santa Clausmopolitan

Forget for a second that this is the cutest holiday drink ever, it’s also – if done right – seriously low in calories too.

Begin creating your Santa Clausmopolitan by ignoring the recipes that say to rim your glass with a lime wedge and then dip in sanding sugar.

Why? Because sugar is very high in sugar.

But if you’re looking for super-pretty, rim the glass in sugar!!

The Clausmopolitan I drink is created with vodka, low-calorie cranberry juice, a splash of triple sec (high in calories so a dribble is best), fresh lime juice and fresh cranberries.

A Chilly Chocolate Peppermint Patty

This tasty drink is my very own creation. Did you know that you can buy chocolate almond milk and that it’s only about 100 calories for a full cup? (Somebody upstairs loves us.) Add one ounce vodka to your chocolate almond milk, a drop or two of mint extract, and ice. Yum.

The Snowflake Martini

This delish of a drink is absolutely the living end.

Ingredients:

  • A little white sanding sugar, for rim (although I only rim when I’m really feeling wild and crazy)
  • 1/2 cup ice
  • 1.5 oz. white chocolate liqueur (121 calories)
  • 2 oz. vanilla vodka (128 calories)
  • 1 cup of vanilla almond milk (30 to 60 calories)
  • 1 lemon wedge, for rim

Directions:

Rim your glass with the sugar, if you like to go that route. Add in the ice.

Pour in the chocolate liqueur, vodka and milk, and finish by placing the lemon wedge on the glass’ rim.

Delicious, right?!

Hot Boozy Chocolate

Don’t be scared of making your own low calorie hot chocolate – this is totally do-able.

Ingredients:

  • 8 oz chocolate almond milk
  • 2 tsps cocoa powder
  • 1/8 tsp stevia powder or 3-4 drops of liquid stevia
  • 1.5 oz vodka or 1 oz rum (64 calories)

Directions:

Heat your almond milk on the stove stirring continuously (burnt milk is not fun). Once heated, add the rest of the ingredients to your hot chocolate.

Finish up with the vodka or rum.

For fun, I squirt a bit of whipped cream on top and add chocolate sprinkles (because I’m five).

And my work here is done!

Boozy Eggnog

My darling grandma – who rarely drank – always said yes to a cup of eggnog laced with bourbon. As I got older, I realized that the quintessential holiday drink held about a gazillion calories per innocent-looking, festive cup.

But then – cue angels singing on high – I stumbled upon the nut-nog market that sent the high calorie eggnogs packing! (These eggnogs are so delish that I have to limit myself to one cup or I’d drink the entire carton. Just sayin’.)

Check out these sweet little numbers:

  • I love the Trader Joe’s nog (in the cold section by the yogurts) with its insanely low 50 calories for a half-cup.
  • The Blue Diamond Almond milk Nog is also low at 60 calories for a half-cup. (I serve this one to company.)
  • The Silk nog’s soymilk comes in at 80 calories.
  • The So Delicious coconut milk holiday nog clocks in at 90 calories for a half-cup.

Just add bourbon (100 cals for 1.5 ounces) and a light sprinkle of nutmeg to create a boozy holiday adult drink.

Dirty Snowmen

For dinner I might have a small bowl of brown rice and veggies, followed by this bad boy.

Ingredients (2 servings):

  • 1/4 cup melted chocolate, for rim (optional, I forgo)
  • 1 cup vanilla almond milk “ice cream” (if you haven’t yet known the pleasure of almond milk “nice cream” prepare to be wowed. (There are 120 calories for a half-cup, but again, this recipe is for two servings).
  • 2 cups heated chocolate almond milk (about 100 calories if you buy unsweetened)
  • 1/4 cup Baileys Deliciously Light is lower-sugar and lower-calories than the regular Baileys. About 110 calories for two ounces (quarter-cup).
  • ½ cup chocolate shavings (again optional, I only do this for guests)

Directions:

Start with rimming your glass with the melted chocolate – if that is your thing. Pour in the almond milk ice cream, heated chocolate almond milk and Baileys drink.

Top off with chocolate shavings – or whipped cream.

Yum-city!

Skinny Girl Cocktails

I should tell you right off the bat that the Skinny Girl drinks come in rich-girl prices. I love the Skinny Girl low calorie margarita, but the brand also offers pina colada, mojito and several other flavors. But the really good news is that other brands have gotten in on the reduced calorie drink game too (like Jose Cuervo). So shop around for the best prices in your area.

The Simple Vodka Soda

Pick your favorite low-calorie soda and add 1.5 ounces of vodka. Bada boom. (Soda’s been getting a bad rap of late which it totally deserves. Turns out soda is not good for us on a bunch of levels which is why I limit my diet soda drinks to once or twice a year.)

The Vodka Martini

Ingredients:

  • 2 1/2 oz vodka
  • 1/2 oz dry vermouth
  • 1 dash orange bitters
  • Garnish: lemon twist
  • For looks, add an olive-skewer

Directions:

Mix all of the liquids and add ice until chilled. Then garnish and voila.

Vodka, vermouth (105 calories for three ounces), and lemon peel.

Bottom Line (No Pun)

Anytime we substitute almond milk and “nice cream,” or reduce the amounts of high caloric liquor, we’re automatically bringing the drink recipe down to a reasonable amount of calories.

When you and I are losing and maintaining after age 50, we have to bring our best creativity to the party!

Hope you’re having a wonderful December All.

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

This is how to use the calories: make them into a wreath and hang them on the door!

Pearl One

I’m often asked, “do you stick to smart eating even on vacation (I do), but trips aren’t the only exciting part of our lives. There are many days in the year that can trip us up.

The holiday season can be a bear for lots of us just as much as a vacay. Temptation is everywhere.

Christmas is a particularly tricky month because, unlike Thanksgiving, Christmas-eating goes on all through December.

We need a December playbook.

That is, if you plan to sail into January feeling at the top of your game.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not talking about an elaborate plan of what you will or won’t eat three Thursdays from now.

No, I mean that every single morning, we draw up a fresh, new plan. If you’re like me you’re thinking, “I have enough to do, I don’t need more, but thanks so much.”

Okay, fair enough.

Slight detour: if your plan is to preserve (maintain) your current weight throughout December, it’s essential that you tell yourself that weight-preservation only happens when we call preserving a part-time job.

Back to our regularly scheduled program.

So, the first thing to do is eagle-eye points in your day that could easily cause trouble. Looking in advance for problem areas in the day means that we can plan smart solutions right at that moment before the problem even begins.

Here’s my plan for tomorrow (normally I’d write up this plan On Saturday morning).

Morning Plan for Saturday: My husband, sons, and I go out one night every December to see the lights and then eat out (usually a high-end pizza dining spot.)

The Potential Problem: Eating pizza won’t help me to preserve my weight or continue embedding my new habits.

My Best Shot: In the old days, I’d be totally triggered to chow slice after slice of pizza with my family culminating in dessert at home (because I’d already “blown-it”). My plan now is to eat well throughout the day; then when we’re looking at the lights (in the car), I’ll eat the apple that I sliced up earlier. If the apple doesn’t take the edge of my appetite, I’ll eat a small yogurt too.

Because I’d foreseen the difficulty in advance, I know to bring my cold-tote with me packed with sliced apple (don’t just grab a whole one, make eating smart easy) and a small yogurt + spoon.

Later, when we sit down to dinner, guess how hungry I am?

Exactly.

The whole idea is that when you order, you decide whether to have two pieces of pizza, or a fancy salad and not your cavewoman.

You guys, eating before you eat + morning planning is the superpower you’ve been looking for to survive December.

Pearl Two

This post partly appeared in a very old post.

Back in the day when food was my entertainment, I’d tell myself, “I’m SO BORED” and with that, I’d raid the kitchen for some “deserved” nothing-to-do-eating.

Today I deal with boredom differently, here’s what I finally figured out:

The feeling of boredom was never meant to signal us to locate and eat handfuls of M&M’s. Feeling bored is a challenge from the best part of ourselves to bring new exciting plans and ideas to life.

And excitement is different for everyone. You might be excited to travel like seeing the castles in Europe, while I want to fulfill a lifelong dream to learn Spanish. A friend might want to hike every waterfall in her state. Someone else is ready to adopt a rescue-dog.

Before I go any further, I have to add an important caveat: I’m not suggesting that if we simply embrace a new passion that the extra pounds will melt off.

But what I am saying is that when you coax your own dream-projects to life you’re establishing a better relationship internally — and feeling good about ourselves is part of a forever weight-loss.

Pearl Three

In Pearl Three we do a deep-dive on James Clear’s book Atomic Habits

James Clear tells us “You should be far more concerned with your current trajectory than with your current results.”

I think Clear is telling us that the future takes care of itself, that our work is in the now, the today, this evening and so forth.

I’ll never stop saying embed the habit, and the scale will follow. (But for December put yourself in preservation-mode).

Pearl Four

Book-Desserts!

Do I have a winner for you today. As I was reading I continually thought, “how do I explain why this book is so good?”

The plot is about a senior citizen nursing home in the Netherlands.

If you loved A Man Called Ove: A Novel, the 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared, and Eleanor Elephant is completely Fine then this is your book.

The Secret Diary of Hendrik Groen by Hendrik Groen is character-driven and hilarious. The voice of the diarist is cozy and comfy. As his diary unfolds, our guy highlights the various people and funny stories.

I loved it and was sad to see it end, but thankfully the author has written other books. My review: 100 stars. This book paired with its sequel makes an exceptional gift for readers who are tired of awful Nazi, and animals do not get hurt.

Pearl Five

While overeating would be seen by some as an indulgence of self, it is in a fact a profound rejection of self. It is a moment of self-betrayal and self-punishment, and anything but a commitment to one’s own well-being.

Marianne Williamson

Some interesting news: I finally have the book, The Inspired Eater: Fed Up! live on Amazon and I’d love it if you’d take a take a look. A review would be wonderful too.

Have a beautiful weekend!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

There’s more to Christmas then eating every calorie in sight. Start with the fur-kids.

Pearl One

Happy December, Thrivers!

I think this one will be a heavy-lifter.

I was so happy when this thought occurred to me. It really is our brains that will take us to our preferred weight, not the latest, craziest diet.

In the past, I’ve said that attempting to lose weight in November and December is just being mean to yourself. I encouraged you to maintain (I call it “holding”) through the season.

And I’ve added that it’s important to remember that the holidays are only over two or three days, and it shouldn’t be two months of overdoing it.

But!! I came up with something better.

I’m asking myself the strongest question I know of for December’s onslaught of calories.

You know the game “would you rather?”

Here’s what I’ve been asking myself:

“Would I rather eat all the things throughout December, but be completely annoyed with myself come the first of January?

Or would I rather, stick with my smart eating plan now and forgo most of the treats – not all, but most — and be thrilled to wake up on January one feeling awesome!”

Both questions are tough: do you want to “have fun” with the food in December and be sad when you wake in the new year? Or do want to be challenged to stay the couse in December and be thrilled when you wake up in the new year?

Of course, I run with the latter. I’d much rather keep my eating sane in December so that in January I’ll wake up feeling very pleased.

The idea behind this question is that when we see a plate of beautiful homemade fudge we’ll be snapped back to reality that January is — in fact — just around the corner.

Join me: ask yourself this very question at least two times every single day. Go!

Pearl Two

Our Visualization Tool. At a quiet moment this week, crash on your couch, close your eyes, and identify what the difficult moments will be food-wise in the coming week.

When you’re ready, write by pen or laptop how you’ll respond to each food-challenge.

I’ve written often about the importance of planning for get-togethers or parties so that we’re not arriving  famished to the shindig.

But what about dealing with the day-to-day of Christmas-calories?

In my life, the Scarfer starts buying Christmas cookies in October and after Thanksgiving is barely out the door begins to lay out his display every evening on the kitchen counter. (I mean, “thanks Costco!”)

Journal -write what daily challenges will trigger overeating and write how you’ll respond to each difficulty. Ask yourself this question every day and don’t mix up “fun” with fuel-food.

Pearl Three

Digging deeper into Atomic Habits

James Clear tell us in Atomic Habits, “The greatest threat to success is not failure but boredom. We get bored with habits because they stop delighting us. The outcome becomes expected. And as our habits become ordinary, we start derailing our progress to seek novelty.”

I’m so glad that Clear talks a lot about boredom because it’s a powerful force to contend with in our smart eating lives.

Have a long journal “chat” with yourself. Write about boredom and how it affects your life. Ask yourself: how do I handle the daily, normal boredom of the daily that we all deal with.

Over many years I slowly shifted from a food-focus to address almost every emotion including boredom. IF I’m bored food really does look like a little party for the mouth.

Journal-write about boredom and address how you manage it, rather than it managing you.

Pearl Four

Book Dessert!!

I read this week’s dessert selection titled Molokai by Alan Brennert when it first debuted in 2003. The story begins one hundred years ago, when the authorities take a little girl, Rachel, from her family home on Honolulu, and leave her on the island of Molokai (due to an 1866 Hawaiian king decree that those with leprosy would live out their lives on the island without spreading the disease to the main population). We watch Rachel grow up and fall in love. We also see the evolution of the disease, how as time went by thoughts about the diseased changed.

Only problem with this book? Oh, did it make me want to visit Molokai.

Molokai falls under the historical fiction genre, but is packed in historical facts about actual people who lived on Molokai and cared for the people with Hanson’s disease. It’s been twenty years since I read Molokai, and several scenes from the book still run through my mind.

Pairing Molokai with Honolulu (same author) would make an awesome gift. Highly recommended. Five sparkling stars.

If nothing else, check out the two books’ covers. Lush and gorgeous.

Pearl Five

“Don’t settle for average. Bring your best to the moment. Then, whether it fails or succeeds, at least you know you gave all you had.”

Angela Bassett

Happy December 1!! This month can be so beautiful, but tough. It’s okay, we’re up for the challenge!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

Some people are just flat-out hard to buy for, but give them a book on their favorite topic, and watch the explosion of smiles!

I’ve read all of the books below (my dad reviewed the baseball ones ) and given many of these titles to family and friends as gifts. I hope this list gives you some great ideas for the upcoming holidays!

For every woman ages 12 to 104

A Woman of No Importance the Untold Story of the American Spy Who Helped Win World War II by Sonia Purnell left me floored. The author knocks this true story out of the park having researched and written the book in such a way that you can almost feel the Gestapo just steps behind Virginia as she flees France. Review: an incredible read. My top non-fiction favorite of the year.

Miss Benson’s Beetle: A Novel by Rachel Joyce. Don’t go by the book’s cover or title. In Miss Benson, two very different women find adventure while establishing a profound friendship. This absorbing page-turner would make a beautiful holiday gift for a dear friend. I loved this book.

For the baseball lover in your life

Baseball 100 by Joe Posnanski. A life-long baseball fan talks baseball’s Greatest 100 players in history. My review: my baseball-obsessed dad LOVED it. He read that his favorite player — Stan Musial — was ranked 9th and said, “I can live with that.” High praise from my dad. He even asked me to send a copy to his best friend from childhood.

My Dad, Yogi A Memoir of Family and Baseball by Dale Berra. My mom sent me a photo of my dad reading this book. He finished it in two-reads.

For anyone who loves to laugh

Is This Anything? by Jerry Seinfeld. Jerry at his best, but you definitely want to listen to the audio version that Jerry voices. Fun. Nee. (Plus Jerry is the gold-standard in the dad and husband department.)

The Complete Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson. This is an awesome book-set for everyone. I gave a set to each of my sons. And I need my own set now (because I don’t want to accidentally damage theirs). After a rough day, it’s a sheer pleasure to sit back and enjoy the genius of Bill Watterson. My boys loved receding their own set.

I Can’t Make This Up: Life Lessons by Kevin Hart. Maybe he’s your favorite or, like me, maybe you don’t know who Kevin Hart is (“Wasn’t he in Jumanji?“). In his first book, Hart is our hero who battles monsters at every turn and triumphs in the end. While technically a memoir, this is really a motivational-map for success.

How did a kid “from the wrong side of the tracks” become one of the highest paid comedians in the world?! Hart details his life from being an unwanted pregnancy to the death of his mom and a lot more. Six stars out of five.

For the historical fiction loved one

The Splendid and the Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance during the Blitz by Erik Larson. Wow. That’s it: just wow. (One cool thing about this book: many of life’s problems seem tiny compared to Churchill’s challenge of ridding the earth of Hitler and his flying monkeys. Erik Larsen is a genius at writing thrilling non-fiction. My review: Masterpiece.

Dead Wake the Last Crossing of the Lusitania by Erik Larson. Awesome, gripping, unforgettable.

Isaac’s Storm by Erik Larson. About the biggest storm in American history that went down in Galveston, Texas. Written in Larson’s usual riveting style.

For the memoir lover

Simple Dreams: A Musical Memoir by Linda Ronstadt. Like you, I grew up listening to Linda Ronstadt’s music and never gave her much thought; but after reading her memoir, I now understand what a powerhouse Linda was in the rock world. Great read about her life.

Orange is the New Black: My Time in a Women’s Prison by Piper Kerman. I know you’ve seen the show, now read the book and get the first-hand scoop on Piper’s year in prison.

For your hiker

Wild by Cheryl Strayed. Total five-star memoir about a woman who deals with her difficult younger years by hiking the 1,100-Pacific Crest Trail. Alone. If you’ve seen the movie, the book is even better.

For the workout enthusiast (& those who want to be inspired)

These two books paired together would make an awesome gift because the two stories intertwine.

Living with a SEAL — 31 days Training with the Toughest Man on the Planet by Jesse Itzler. This book was written by the guy who married Sara Blakely the Spanx founder. (He founded a bunch of companies too.) They’re both cajillion-aires, but are very salt-of-the-earth people whom you’d love to have as neighbors. The book is funny and smart.

Can’t Hurt Me: Master Your Mind and Defy the Odds by David Goggins. Goggins is the SEAL member of whom Itzler speaks (I suggest first reading Living with a Seal, before reading Can’t Hurt Me). Awesomeness thy name is David Goggins. His story is stunning.

For the philosopher in your life

The Obstacle is the Way: the Timeless Art of Turning Trials into Triumph by Ryan Holiday. Ryan writes compellingly about how difficulties in life can empower us. This is a don’t-miss.

For the kids (5 to 8 year olds)

The Magic Tree House series by Mary Pop Osborne. This series was the centerpiece of our reading-lives when my two were little. A boy and a girl — Jack and Annie — travel our world’s timeline via their magical tree house. The kids go on adventure everywhere they land and we — the readers — learn so much right along with the pair. Titles include: Dinosaurs Before Dark, Lions at Lunchtime and Pirates Past Noon.

Whether you give each book individually or give as a boxed-set (books 1-28) your little giftee will love these books. (My kids are twenty and still occasionally say, “Yeah, we learned about that in Magic Treehouse).”

School House Rock (30th Year Anniversary). Yep, every song we loved as kids are in this boxed set. A perfect gift for students.

More for the kids (5 to 10 year olds)

The Little House by Laura Ingalls Wilder (volumes 1-9.) Like Tom Sawyer, some stories are beloved by every new generation that comes along. I read the series to my boys twice when they were little. To this day, when someone says, “All’s well that ends well,” I ask, “Who said that?” and they come back with, “Ma!”

For your female friends and family who love to laugh

I highly recommend this series of non-fiction work by Lisa Scottoline. Books one through six are my favorites. Funny, funny lady.

Why My Third Husband will be a Dog by Lisa Scottoline (the first memoir in the series).

Does this Beach Make Me Look Fat also by Sottoline. (her sixth book in the series).

Bitter is the New Black by Jen Lancaster. Such a fun read! This book is Jen’s memoir about how she and her hub pulled through the bad economy. In wonderfully sarcastic writing, Lancaster details what went really wrong, but also what went really right. She started with the perfect life (great job, great husband) to dealing with the hard knocks of no income. Jen is funny, and silly, a little boozy and all around wonderful. Lancaster wrote several funny memoirs after the first: Such a Pretty Fat, I Regret Nothing, My Fair Lazy, Bright Lights: Big Ass. Jen’s memoirs will be particularly appreciated by dog lovers.

For the fiction lovers

Sweet Sweet Revenge LTD: A Novel by Jonas Jonasson. This author is one of my favorites. Sweet Sweet Revenge is a tongue-in cheek story with well-written, lovable characters who make the most of the hilarious situations they find themselves in. If you like to learn as you laugh, this is your book. You’ll learn about other cultures and the art world. This book takes a second to get into, but from there it’s a rollicking ride. Awesome book gift for those love “humorous fiction.”

Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese. A masterpiece written by a surgeon. Mere coincidence, but I was reading Cutting for Stone while waiting to see a surgeon. As he entered the room he immediately saw what I was reading and said, “that is a great story.”

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman. This hilarious book features Eleanor, and the story is told through her eyes. She’s a little different, very literal and very lonely. We see Eleanor get to know an IT guy at her office and this sweet story unfolds from there. I fell in love with Eleanor, and years after first reading the book, still remember certain scene like when her friend takes her to a Starbuck-like place. Funny, funny, funny, but in a kind way. On Amazon, Eleanor has over 200,000 four and a half stars.

Pachinko by Min Jin Lee. This is this powerhouse writer’s first book that snagged the Pulitzer’s Fiction Runner Up in 2018, and is proof that aliens live among us.

Free Food for Millionaires also by Min Jin Lee. Standing ovation for this author’s second book. This author is on fire. I highly recommend both.

The Humans by Matt Haig. When you first start reading The Humans you might wonder if it’s a non-fiction and then think that maybe it’s sci-fi. It’s neither. It’s a five-star read, infused with a bit of magic, that’ll make you just feel good to be human. The story is about an alien who’s been tasked with visiting Earth to see what humans are all about. The alien inhabits a dad’s body and goes home to “his” family. It’s a fish-out-of-water story and has hilarious moments, but is also touching and wonderful. Makes for a perfect gift.

The Midnight Library. This Haig masterpiece is about a woman who isn’t so thrilled with her life. Nothing’s going her way and she’s ready to bow out. She ends up in a purgatory that takes her down several cool life-threads. If you’ve ever wondered, what if?, this is your read. And Haig outdid himself with the ending.

The One Hundred Year Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson – Funny and phenomenal. Everyone loves this story.

This is Your Life, Harriet Chance! by Jonathan Evison. This read falls under the really-good-fiction-that–immediately-pulls-you-in genre. It’s a thoughtful, seemingly light but a relatively thorny story about 78-year-old Harriet Chance, recently widowed, who goes on an Alaskan cruise. No hilarity ensues. Instead, Harriet begins the process of taking stock of her life, as so many do in the older decades. My review: Easy to read (meaning not a slog, grabs you almost immediately) and absorbing.

The Heart’s Invisible Furies: Novel John Boyne. I just found this new-to-me author this year (2023) and what a find! The Heart’s Invisible Furies could easily be Boyne’s Magnum Opus. Boyne’s writing is funny and poignant. This was my favorite fiction book of the year.

The Echo Chamber by our man, Mr. Boyne. Here the author takes on an entirely different genre. The Echo Chamber is written as a farce and very well done. In fact, the funniest line I’ve ever read in a book came from The Echo Chamber. After dealing with a particularly harrowing situation in his life, The Echo Chamber trounces social media and the whole cancel culture.

If you need more ideas, just shout: Wendy@theInspiredEater.com.

Happy holidays ALL!

Pearl One

A dear friend and I did a “girlfriend’s cruise” together. Over lunch one day, she asked what I thought about intuitive eating, and in a flash I realized that I’d been intuitively eating all week on the cruise ship.

At hearing her question, it got me thinking about the various weight loss methods that I’ve been asked about over the last three years.

Take a look.

Intuitive Eating

Intuitive eating is a very cerebral approach to weight loss, only to be considered after you’ve preserved (maintained) your loss for fifteen years.

No, I’m not kidding.

It’s like we need to crawl before we can walk.

When we’re attempting to eat intuitively, we’re told to “listen to our stomach’s needs”, to “honor our health” and “discover the satisfaction factor.”

Honor our health?! What does that even mean?

I never fooled with intuitive eating until I lost the fifty-five pounds and preserved the loss for 18 years. I probably went overboard and could have give IE a chance at year-15.

In the years before? No way. (It was just a beautiful idea that did not produce hard-core results.)

Look at it this way, pretend we’re in third grade and intuitive eating is in a PhD program.

Intermittent Fasting

Others have asked what I think about intermittent fasting (IF). Initially I was interested in the concept of IF, but several red flags soon popped up for me.

One, I know that I’m outside of the norm, but I don’t think that choosing the open window (time-wise) of eating is a good idea. In my experience, the best plan is to eat a large breakfast, moderate lunch, a snack in the afternoon, and a tiny dinner at 6 p.m. (Decreasing evening eating is a heavy-lifter in our toolbox.)

And two, when we’re told that “we can eat whatever we want,” it means that we’re not establishing smart eating habits along the way that will create a forever-loss.   

Overeaters Anonymous

Then we come to Overeaters Anonymous (OA). A reader asked me about OA and I told her, “I’ve never used OA myself, but I know women who speak very highly of their program.”

Why I didn’t use OA back in the day? I have no idea. A lost opportunity for sure. (I was young and likely too mortified to talk about my eating habits in public.)

If you know much about Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous, OA provides a similar support-approach. There’s no charge and they’re not commercial. OA is 100-percent about working with those of us who don’t engage well with food.

It’s my belief that pairing OA and the Inspired Eater will produce astonishing results in your life.

Pearl Two

I know.

It’s hard.

You’ll get no argument from me. Losing weight at our age is no picnic. And maintaining in December? Surprise! Not as easy as you might think either.

But amazing news: you and I can do hard things.

I repeated this gem of a saying to myself over and over when I was dealing with – like most of us — the hospital and some really invasive (rude) tests.

Because of these five little – but powerful – words I maintained my dignity when life was stuck in extra-hard mode.  

I. Can. Do. Hard. Things. Use liberally throughout December.

Pearl Three

In pearl three we closely examine Atomic Habits.

James Clear tell us in Atomic Habits, “The problem is not slipping up; the problem is thinking that if you cannot do something perfectly, then you shouldn’t do it at all…”

Ohmygosh, this quote is so me. Before I’d had my aha moment (late 90s), I was either starving (thinking that was how to lose weight) or eating everything that wasn’t nailed down.

I thought being really hungry was just part of losing weight. I assumed that thin people were just better at dealing with their hunger. And I know I thought that I was the only person on the planet who misused food. Seriously.

Where do you fall? Do you “all or nothing” it?

Because one of the biggest mindshifts you can make is allowing room for error or “slips.”

Shifting from “all or nothing” to “I’m only human and I’m learning as I go” will determine your ability to create a forever-loss for yourself.

We’re not in school anymore. The food we eat will not be graded. If we make a mistake and overdo it, the teacher will not talk to our parents, and chowing the cookies will not be on our permanent record.

Pearl Four

I don’t know why I even picked this memoir up in the first place, but I’m so thankful that I did. It’s essentially a modern day’s hero’s journey.

I Can’t Make This Up: Life Lessons by Kevin Hart. Maybe he’s your favorite or, like me, maybe you don’t know who Kevin Hart is (“Wasn’t he in Jumanji?).

In this memoir, Hart is our hero who battles very difficult people at every turn and prevails in the end. While technically a memoir, this is really a motivational-map for success.

How did a kid “from the wrong side of the tracks” become one of the highest paid comedians in the world?! Hart details his life from being an unwanted pregnancy to the death of his mom and a lot more.

Trust me, this is a don’t-miss. If life is extra-hard at the moment this book will keep you going.

Six stars out of five.

Pearl Five

“You have power over your mind – not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.” 

Marcus Aurelius

It’s a short week (in the U.S.), so then why do these holiday weeks always seem so long?!

I’m putting together a book list for holiday gift-giving, stay tuned. It’ll be in this format, “For the baseball lover in your life.”

See you on Tuesday!!

.♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

My favorite cold tote-bag to carry smart snacks.

Your powerful brain is watching everything you do.

Pearl One

Years ago, I was driving with my parents and my two boys in our van and I guess I wasn’t driving fast enough because one driver peeled out from behind me and went screaming down the road.

At that, my five-year-old son scrunched up his little face in anger and said, “There goes a. . .

“This’ll be interesting,” I thought.

“PUNK!!”

There goes a punk. Not exactly a curse word, but okay. The Scarfer uses the word “punk” occasionally so that’s where my son first heard the word.

Kids absorb everything.

My Point

Like little kids, our brains are watching everything we do.

If you weigh your protein every single time before you cook it, she’s watching and thinking, “Oh, okay we’re the kind of person who measures everything.”

If we stop eating at 6 p.m. each evening, she’s like “Got it. We don’t eat after a small dinner.”

If we have too much food leftover, she learned long ago to think, “Our tummies are not trash cans.”

If you take a bite of cookie that’s just not worth the calories and spit the bite into a napkin she’ll think, “Wow, we are serious about losing weight. We even spit out food.”

As you trek the lose-weight-after-fifty mountain, plan to prove to her daily that you’re utterly serious about smart eating

How do you prove something to your brain?

Through repetition.

She just needs to see proof that something really matters, so give her as much proof as possible.

Pearl Two

Hard question so I’ll go first. (We’ll do this backwards.)

My answer: yes, for the first three decades of my life food was definitely my primary entertainment and then I married someone who had the exact same hobby as me.

The question: is eating your hobby?

As we’ve well established, eating has been there for us when we’re having a huge emotion we don’t know how to deal with. Eating is there when we’re celebrating. Eating is there when we’re bored.

But do you also treat food like a good friend and a toy all packaged in one?

Here’s the thing, If you slowly take away one hobby – eating – something wonderful needs to replace it.

It would be cruel to take a toy from a toddler and not offer something equally as attractive in return.

For example, I love travel writing, but plenty would think, “but that’s work.” Right. But I enjoy it.

I don’t get hiking the Grand Canyon either, but plenty of people do it.

In your journal delve into what you love most in the world. Don’t expect immediate answers. Something might occur to you when you’re scrubbing the shower one afternoon.

Start by asking yourself these questions:

What part of my life is humming along beautifully and that I’ll keep in my life forever. . .

What is something that I love, but rarely do?

How do I navigate being bored, tired, drained, annoyed etc.?

And what method do I use to interrupt the, say, boredom?

I just really want. . .

I wish that. . .

Keep rolling the topic around and around in your mind.

(Small disclaimer: nobody lost weight and preserved the loss forever merely because they took up a new hobby. But having passions in life is just part of the bigger picture of losing-after-fifty.)

For me, my writing work took off around the same time that I lost the fifty-five pounds. I’d actually found something that I loved way more than food: writing and reading.

Thing is, it’s a big deal to give up all fast-food, not eat after 6 p.m., bring a cold-tote everywhere we go.

Taking away a favorite toy – food – is a cataclysmic change; be gentle with yourself and lose weight slowly.

And give yourself something amazing in return.

Pearl Three

In Pearl Three we closely examine Atomic Habits.

In Atomic Habits James Clear tell us, “How to create a good habit.

  • First law: (cue) make it obvious.
  • Second law: (craving) make it attractive.
  • Third law: (response) make it easy.
  • The Fourth law (reward) make it satisfying.”

Clear says that of course there’s more nuance to developing a new habit, but this is a very good start.

Pearl Four

I could say that the week got away from me, but the truth is while reading a book for our fourth pearl today, I got too embroiled in it. (After a thorough read, though, it’s not at the book-dessert level.)

I was considering one of these funny books.

The first two books look excellent if you want to lighten your mood. I don’t know about the third. I’ll read it and share it if here.

Comedy Comedy Comedy drama : a memoir by Bob Odenkirk. Bob is the guy who played “Saul” in Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul. I have a feeling it’ll be a great read.

Hello, Molly!: a memoir by Molly Shannon of SNL fame. I’m looking forward to reading this one.

Just being curious I googled “the best of the funny books”, and this popped up.

Titled, the Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole (1937-1969), it falls into the “humorous fiction” genre.

After I read these three, I I’ll share my thoughts. And if anyone has read one these books, please share in the comments below!!

I need a weekend of laughter.

Pearl Five

One day you will tell your story of how you overcame what you went through and it will be someone else’s survival guide.”

Brene Brown

Have a fantastic weekend everyone!!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

You and I are works of art in progress. We learn as we go.

Hello Thrivers!

I have to say, it’s been a tough week. Looking forward to a great weekend of reading.

Pearl One

Could there be more annoying words?

“It’s all about the ‘journey,’ not the outcome. It’s about what you learn along the way, and how you’ll be stronger because of the path you’ve chosen. It’s not the prize that comes at the end.”

Give me a break. When we’re very unhappy with the status quo, the “it’s the process that really counts” message just sounds like a lot of noise.

I mean, say a friend needs a hernia surgery, but first has to lose forty-pounds and can’t figure out how to lose the weight. It’s a huge, important situation in her life.

There’s nothing cute or sweet about food, eating, and our health.

“A journey” makes what we’re doing sound like a delightful train ride through the beautiful rolling countryside.

What we’re attempting here – a forever weight loss — is not a little, cute thing; it’s a big deal to shift from the yo-yo dieting world to the Smart Eating Lifestyle.

We don’t want food to have such a grip on our lives. We each want to be at a particular weight so that certain clothes will fit and we’re sick of being lured or – later — repulsed by food.

You’d like this experience to be somewhat doable, not because you’re a slacker, but because if everything is too difficult to actually work then what’s the point?! For too long we’ve all ping-ponged between “trying really hard” to “accepting what is.”

Couldn’t life just make this one process a little easier?

Yes, it can, but first we have to be honest and start calling our work what it actually is: a rigorous — sometimes grueling — trek.

Pearl Two

Once you’ve named the struggle it becomes more manageable. If you know what you’re dealing with, you bring the right tools and have a much better shot at success.

What do I consider my best tool? Every part of success starts with a thought in our minds that we then  make visible through our actions.

Take committing to bring a cold-tote along always. It starts with the thoughts,

“I need an individualized cold-tote. I don’t have one.” (This is the one I love.)

“I need to prep healthy snacks on Sunday afternoon so that I have something smart to pack in my cold-tote.”        

“I need a specific plan about how I’ll remember to take my cold-tote. (You can put your car keys in the tote.)

Every new eating habit you want to instill starts with your thoughts. ♥ 

Pearl Three

In Pearl Three we closely exam Atom Habits.

In Atomic Habits, James Clear writes, “The third and deepest layer (of habit change) is changing your identity. This level is concerned with changing your beliefs, your worldview, your self-image, your judgements about yourself and others. Most of the beliefs, assumptions, and biases you hold are associated with this level.”

This concept was new for me: the idea of “changing our identity.” So instead of merely employing smart habits, the most important piece is seeing ourselves in an entirely new light.

Last weekend, my sister was running into the grocery to get sandwiches for us. Before she left the car I said, “No chips! I don’t eat chips.” My identity has changed around what I eat. It wasn’t, “oh, should I have the chips? Or shouldn’t I?  kind of thing. It was just “I don’t eat those.”

It’s similar to offering a friend’s mom a drink and she says, “Thank you, but no, dear, but I don’t drink.”

How you see yourself in your mind’s eye is a thought. So, let’s go with “I’m very resourceful and can figure such-and-such out. How you think of yourself is is a huge component of a forever-loss.

Tell yourself, “I’m smart and I can figure this out” like 20 times a day.

         

Pearl Four

The author started writing this debut novel when she was just 16-years-old, and even though I knew her age as I read, it doesn’t seem possible that a young person could write such a sophisticated novel.

Scrolling through Oprah’s Book Club picks, I was pulled to this book because the author and I come from the same part of the world. I grew up in a snooty suburb outside of San Francisco that somewhat shoulders where the author grew up in Oakland, CA.

Nightcrawling: A Novel by Leila Mottley is rough, and gritty, and completely compelling. The novel starts with a bang (my favorite thing) and tells a fictional tale about a poor Black girl and how she manages to deal in life with a deceased dad, a mom in prison, and a brother who wants to follow his uncle to become a successful rapper.

We see the protagonist take care of a neighbor-boy whom she’s known since birth and keep him fed and going to school

Even though this is a work of fiction, she based part of the plot on actual circumstances.

Nightcrawling is gritty and rough, and nobody is saved by a rich uncle. Highly recommend.

Pearl Five

“Struggling is not the identity. You must learn to live while you struggle, such that anyone who sees you can separate the struggle from your life.”

Anonymous

The other day a friend picking me up needed to use the bathroom in my house. As she came in, I looked around and thought, “what a mess, but at least the dining room looks nice.” And then I remembered, the dining room was a wreck too.

It was, like, time to declutter. (I know, I’ve said this before.) Any tips, absolutely welcomed. Here are my challenges: I don’t know what to do about sentimental stuff like drawings from my kids and collars from my fur-kids.

Have a really relaxing weekend, Everyone !

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

My favorite cold tote-bag to carry smart snacks.

My five-star book list.