Annie's Healthy Natural Weight and Eating Blog

Annie B. Kay is a dietitian and yoga instructor on Nantucket Island, MA, who has worked for years with people interested in finding a healthy natural weight. No gimmicks. No crazy supplements or wacky diets. Just conscious choices, physical activity and awareness. Annie has also had a lifelong struggle with her own weight. Check out my website & book, Every Bite Is Divine, at www.anniebkay.com.

Friday, December 15, 2006

Survive the Merriment with Body & Soul Intact

Here it is. The holiday season. Party time, candy and cookie time, rich food time. Estimates for how much Americans gain during this season range from 5 to 15 pounds, depending on who's doing the reporting. I suspect that the weight gain phenomenon is more prevalent in New England and the northern climes, but I'd love to hear stories and strategies from those in warmer places as to their strategies for maintaining a healthy weight (and healthy habits) through this time.
Here are few survival tips:

Accept the fact that you won't be losing weight this month. Regardless if you are a party momma or a stay-at-homer, there is just more high-calorie food around. Just maintaining is a feat this time of year.

Keep on moving. Practice stress management. Tie them together. Keep physical activity top-of-mind this month, and squeeze in extra workouts, try some of the TV workouts on cable (if you have comcast on demand, check out the fitness TV - there are yoga, Pilate's, walking and many other workouts - that's what's kept me moving through the last month or two when the weather has been less reliable here on Nantucket). Physical activity is great stress management, so if you didn't get your packages in the mail on time, didn't get to cards this year, or whatever, move a little to release the emotion that sits in your body as a result of not being perfect.

Focus on the peeps, not the table. Food traditions this time of year carry deep resonance and a strong pull. For me, it's my mom's cookies, and anything resembling eggnog. It's not always easy to remember that the reason for the season is really love, hope and connectedness. I know that many family relationships can be challenging, and that can drive us to seek comfort from seasonal goodies in unhealthy quantities. There's a Buddhist practice that may be helpful in working with relationships this season. The Dali Lama describes a practice of bowing down to the difficult people in your life, and thanking them for the opportunity they have provided to help you to experience spiritual growth. Love and honor them! For me, this practice a) cracks me up a little, and b) opens me up to another way to seeing things beyond the way my conditioned judgemental mind does. Somehow, it makes it easier for me to step back and see the people who challenge me differently, and to forgive them for the pain they cause me.

Whoever you are, no matter how lonely or difficult your life is, the world opens itself to you this season. My wish for you is to feel that magic. My wish for you is that someone does the Buddhist practice of loving you when you cause them pain. And I wish you peace.

Namaste
Annie






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