Fitness4Her

Women's Fitness

  • About
  • Diet
  • Exercise
  • Journaling
  • Fitness Tools
  • Women’s Fitness Blog
  • Reviews
  • Contact

Using Your Senses To Promote Your Affirmations

January 21, 2011 By Karen Ficarelli

Affirmations are positive declarations or statements that you repeat over and over to train your brain. I call this process “think to shrink.” It is an excellent tool that you possess that can help you not only lose weight, but just about any endeavor you wish to accomplish.

In order to get the best results from your affirmations, you must fully believe in the power of what you are saying to yourself. You must believe it to achieve it. With all of your senses, you must feel the reality of your affirmations.

Visualize it. Through this process you envision the new you, the one with the slimmer body as a result of the weight that you have lost. See yourself in a smaller size, doing things that you have postponed because of your current weight.

Hear it. With complete attention given to your affirmations, say them aloud and listen to the words as you repeat your declarations. Fully believe that each of your affirmations is true and completely possible to achieve.

Touch it. As you repeat your affirmations, reach out and touch your goals. Let the feeling of what your success will mean to you. Perhaps a chance to play with your children or grandchildren, maybe it’s to walk on the beach without feeling self conscious, allow the driving force behind your weight loss goals to shine. Feel its full power and believe that it is possible to achieve the body that you desire.

Be consistent. Try to say your affirmations at the same time each day. The morning is usually the best time, as it readies you for the day’s tasks and sets your mind on the path of success. Even if you only allow yourself 5 minutes, try to make it the same time of day for the best results.

Seek privacy. Choose a private place to repeat your affirmations. Saying them in front of a mirror has the advantage of showing yourself just how dedicated you are to your beliefs. But more importantly, choose a place where you can be alone and undisturbed for at least 5 minutes.

Believe it. As I said in the beginning, you must believe it to achieve it. Believe in your affirmations. Don’t say things to yourself that you simply do not believe is possible. Start out slow if you need to and add affirmations daily. Constantly repeat these positive statements to yourself as you eliminate the negative arguments within your own mind.

Filed Under: Affirmations

Sweet Surprise and Mozzarella Salad

January 20, 2011 By Karen Ficarelli

This salad is so sweet and delectable, it makes my mouth water just writing about it. Drizzle on top with a little olive oil and balsamic and the taste comes to life. Enough to serve 4 people.

2 sweet potatoes, peeled, cut into chunks
2 Tbs. olive oil
2 garlic cloves crushed
2 sweet peppers sliced
1 large eggplant sliced
1 bag mixed greens
1/2 lb. fresh mozzarella cheese, drained and sliced

Directions:

Preheat oven 350 degrees, put sweet potato chunks, oil, pepper, garlic toss cook 30 minutes.
Add eggplant, pepper and cook 10 more minutes.
To serve divide salad onto 4 plates and arrange the sweet potato, eggplant, peppers and mozzarella on top.
Add a little olive oil and balsamic for dressing.

Health Benefits:
High in Beta Carotene, fiber, antioxidants, vitamins and all sorts of nutrients. The mozzarella cheese adds just enough protein and calcium to make this salad a complete meal in one. Low in fat, cholesterol, sodium and sugar, the ideal food for a healthy diet.

Filed Under: Healthy Cooking

The Seven Sins of Unhealthy Eating

January 19, 2011 By Karen Ficarelli

Are you guilty of any of these bad eating behaviors?

1. Your meals regularly come out of a carton, a package, or over the deli counter.

2. You almost never eat alone: TV, the Internet, phone, or your favorite magazine is there for nearly every meal.

{+}

3. You find it next to impossible to walk away from free food, even if you’re not hungry – including all-you-can-eat buffets, supermarket sample tables, and those “taste me” booths at flea markets.

4. You spend more time feeling guilty about what you ate than the time it took to prepare it.

5. You eat when you’re hungry and continue eating once you are full.

6. You eat when you’re sad, mad, hurt, annoyed, irritated and even when you’re happy.

7. Your happy eating is followed by more guilt.

If you are reading this and thinking, “That’s me,” you may have fallen prey to one or more unhealthy eating styles or lifestyle habits that can get in the way of losing weight.

Sometimes, destructive eating patterns are easy to notice, such as when you turn to food every time you’re facing a problem. But often, the cues are so subtle you don’t even notice what’s happening.

Habits once formed by the brain, require very little cognitive thinking. The brain creates a quick path for the behavior to follow and doesn’t trouble itself to focus on that area anymore. That’s why until you really come face-to-face about your behavior, you don’t even notice that they exist.

So while you might recognize that you overeat when you’re very upset, you might not realize how much you eat or the types of food you choose to eat.

Behavior Patterns That Are Hard To Break

While eating styles are as individual as we are, some researchers believe they can be grouped into just a handful of behavior patterns. Many of these patterns, once discovered are much easier to break.

Some of the behavior patterns that wreak havoc on your weight loss attempts can be found below:
Food Fretting: You’re overly concerned with what you eat, and have a negative relationship with food. You feel guilty about everything that you put in your mouth and spend an hour worrying about what you ate and condemning yourself for eating it.

Mult-Tasking and Snacking: You almost always eat while doing something else — like watching TV, answering email or even cooking. You barely taste your food, because your mind is preoccupied with your tasks. All of these factors can lead to overeating.

Emotional Distress Eating: You turn to food not only during life’s traumatic moments, but anytime you feel stressed, anxious, or a little upset.

Fast Foodie Fiend: It seems as if you are “hooked”on or addicted to processed and convenience foods, and you gulp them down fast!

Solo Dining: You use food to fill a social void – and the more often you eat alone, the more you eat. Without active conversation, you will usually eat more than you would if eating with someone else. However, some people actually eat less or not at all, which is worse.

Unappetizing Atmosphere: You eat behind the wheel, at your desk, or standing up in front of the refrigerator. This keeps you from concentrating on what you’re eating, and makes it more likely you’ll overeat. You need to make eating a celebratory time, use nice china or plates, use candlelight to add ambience to your dinner hour.

Sensory Disregard: Mealtime is hectic, and you disconnect entirely from the eating experience. This leads to eating without thinking, and that usually means overeating. If your mind is on cleaning the kitchen rather than eating your meal, you just won’t enjoy it. Chances are, you’ll gobble your food, or lose your appetite during the meal, in either case, many times, the real down side is that you return to the kitchen later for high calorie snacks.

It’s times like these, when a fitness journal can help to bring about success. It brings you face-to-face with what you are eating, when you are eating, how much you are eating, and all the feelings in between.

The best way to get positive results from your fitness journal is not only writing down what you ate, but how much you ate, where you were when you ate it, the time of day it was, why you ate it, if you were alone or with someone else, and, most importantly, what else you were doing while you were eating.

After one to two weeks of journaling your food habits, you should begin to see a pattern emerge.

Your Eating Style
Figuring out your eating style is important in helping you to make better choices. Armed with the pattern you have been able to determine by using your fitness journal, you can begin to make changes so that you eat healthier.

Much of the way we eat is just habit and habits can be broken. It just takes willpower and brainpower to put those changes into effect.

Each week, make a meal plan for the upcoming week and purchase all the foods that you will need from your grocer. This will keep you from being forced to eat quick foods, when you already have a meal planned.

Choose foods that you enjoy but try to make better choices in terms of fat, sugar and sodium content. Don’t try to restrict your diet too severely or quickly unless advised by your physician. The object is to adapt to new eating styles that you can live with for the rest of your life.

Resist the temptation to grab a quick bite at a fast food joint. Although those places do offer some nutritionally sound menu items, when you drive through the window, chances are you are getting fried foods that are easy to eat from a bag.

There are many sins, or mistakes that can lead to unhealthy eating habits, but the good news is, all of these habits can be broken and changed for the better. It takes commitment to make changes but the rewards are worth

Start a discussion by leaving a comment:

Filed Under: Diet

Karens Salmon with Pineapple Salsa and Spinach & Tomatoes

January 18, 2011 By Karen Ficarelli

Salmon is such a healthy fish to eat, that I am always looking for new ways to serve it. I came up with this idea after having something similar in a restaurant. Tomatoes are a favorite at my house, so I added them and tossed in the spinach in place of rice. Of course, if you still want, you can add rice, orzo or light pasta. This recipe makes 4 servings.

4 pieces of skinless salmon fillets
2 Tbs. reduced sodium soy sauce
1 1/2 Tbs. Dijon mustard
3 Tbs. Thai sweet chili sauce
2 limes
1 ripe small pineapple
1 bag 9 oz. baby spinach
1 container cherry tomatoes

Directions:

Preheat broiler.
From limes, grate 1/2 teaspoon peel and squeeze 3 Tbs. juice.
Stir juice and peel chili sauce , soy sauce, and Dijon until blended.
Reserve 3 Tbs. of mixture to glaze salmon, set aside.
Arrange salmon on foil lined rack from broiling pan, place pan in oven and broil 5 min.
Brush salmon with reserved chili sauce mixture and broil 4 to 5 min.
Peel and core pineapple into chunks.
Add cut up pineapple to remaining chili sauce toss to coat.
To serve divide spinach and tomatoes in 4 plates, top each with salmon, drizzle pineapple juices over spinach.

Health Benefits:
An excellent source of protein, low in fat and sodium, salmon is a nutrient rich fish. A cold water fish that is recommended because of its high levels of omega 3 fatty acids, which few of us get enough of. Salmon is also high in vitamin D, giving us nearly all our daily requirements in just one serving. Add on the pineapple, chili and tomatoes to give your body the antioxidants it needs to protect itself from cancer causing free radicals. Tossed in with the spinach to give you iron and a heaping helping of Vitamins A, K and C.

Filed Under: Healthy Cooking

Is Your Pocketbook To Blame For Your Neck Pain

January 14, 2011 By Karen Ficarelli

If your neck is causing you pain, it could be that the pocketbook that you are carrying is just too heavy. Although there are numerous causes of neck pain, a fully loaded purse carried every day, can press on nerves and stress muscles in your neck and shoulder.

No matter how fashionable your big bag is, an overloaded carry all is not healthy to tiny nerves, muscles, tendons, even the tissue in your shoulder and neck. Some bags have even left bruises on their victims.

But carrying a heavy purse is not the only cause of neck and shoulder pain. Sitting at a computer for hours can also cause a stiff neck with pain that surrounds your shoulders and upper back. If you work at a desk and find yourself spending long days hunched over a computer screen, then you probably have suffered a time or two with the pain that I am speaking about.

The number one way to alleviate some of this pain is to practice good posture. I remember my fourth grade teacher emphasizing good posture and I decided right then and there to always be conscious of how I was sitting and standing.

Practicing the Pilates principle of engaging the core helps to strengthen the lower back and torso, but also works to make the upper muscles stronger too. Because emphasis is put on the stomach muscles, and drawing the navel in towards the spine, this helps to promote good posture and protect the back from injury.

If your pocketbook is giving you a pain in the neck or shoulder, try carrying a smaller purse. Don’t attempt to tote all of your possessions around in your shoulder bag every day. Surely there are some things you can leave at home, in the car or in a locker rather than lugging them around all of the time.

For those of you who spend hours in front of a computer screen, make a habit of getting up every hour or so and taking a walk or at least stretching if this is allowable where you work. If nothing else, go to the restroom and do some light stretching exercises by raising your arms and lowering them to your sides and dropping your head forward to and rotating it from left to right to ease the stiffening of your muscles.

Any repetitive motion can give you trouble over time. If pain persists or wakes you up at night, you should speak to your physician. Don’t just assume that chronic pain is caused by muscle fatigue; you may need an X-ray or other evaluation by a healthcare professional.

Exercise is a good way to strengthen your muscles and ease shoulder pain. Resistance training exercises will increase your range of motion and flexibility to protect you from injury. These exercises also relieve stress, a major cause of the common pain in the neck.

Filed Under: Women's Health

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 87
  • 88
  • 89
  • 90
  • 91
  • …
  • 161
  • Next Page »

About Karen

KAREN FICARELLI, Founder
Women's Fitness Expert
Read More about Karen

Follow Karen

For your daily dose of healthy inspiration Body, Mind and Soul!
Follow Karen on FacebookFollow Karen on Instagram

Categories

  • === Select Category Below ===
  • Women's Fitness
  • Women's Health
  • Motivation
  • Inspiration
  • Affirmations
  • Journaling
  • Nutrition
  • Healthy Cooking
  • Diet
  • Exercise
  • Reviews4Her
  • Uncategorized

Submit Product for Review

Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Fitness4Her, Inc.