Core Matters

Archive for the ‘Articles’ Category

 
 
Monday, January 30th, 2012

Did your mother ever tell you your eyes were bigger than your stomach? And if you wanted more you’d have to eat what was on your plate first? Well I certainly heard all of that growing up!  -3

I also heard “there are starving children in Africa so clean your plate.” Yes, the clean plate club. To this day, I still feel guilty leaving food behind. But although I cleaned my plate growing up, it was home-cooked food and reasonable sized portions.

Today, America is majorly afflicted with PORTION DISTORTION. Serving sizes are now over 50% larger then it used to be! Remember when an 8 oz latte was a small and 20 oz didn’t even exist? Well now a 12 oz is a small. So guess what, if serving sizes are too big and you tend to eat all of what’s put in front of you, guess what, your pants are going to be tight if they’re not already.

I hear people all the time saying they eat healthy yet they don’t know why they can’t lose weight. Well even too much healthy food can pack on the pounds. I found this great portion size tool that I want to share with you all. You can click through each food group and see what the proper portion size is. If you hate counting calories or points and your most recent juice cleanse lead to a binge (shocking!) maybe simply downsizing can help you start to lose weight.

Check it out by clicking here: http://www.webmd.com/diet/healthtool-portion-size-plate

- By Sarah Currie, MS RD

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

Screen shot 2012-01-17 at 11.21.37 AMA recent study in the New England Journal of Medicine, entitled Long-Term Persistence of Hormonal Adaptations to Weight Loss, has caused a lot of buzz in the media and among my clients during the past few weeks.

In summary, 50 obese people were put on strict diets of 500 calories per day for 10 weeks.  The primary focus of the study was to track the hormones involved in appetite regulation. By the conclusion of the 70 days, only 34 of the participants remained (I too would drop out if someone only let me eat 500 calories a day!); all of which had lost significant weight.

Then about a year after the study concluded, hormone levels in many of the participants indicated that their bodies were trying to become fat again despite maximal efforts to keep the weight off.  Why?  Think about it this way – If someone has weighed 300 pounds for many years, it is impossible for it (weight) to come off and remain off after only 10 weeks of an extremely low cal, starvation diet! The body wants the weight back as its been operating like that for a long time.

I fear such studies as this one provide our increasingly obese population just another excuse not to change their diet & exercise habits. As many of you probably know, it is really stinking hard to lose weight and it’s even harder to keep it off permanently. That is why the goal with my weight loss clients is manageable weight loss and then work to maintain. Let the body adapt. Let the person’s behavior change.

Tara Parker-Pope, author of the NY Times article highlighting this study, does a great job of looking at obesity from various angles. She suggests we should give overweight people a break, that biological and genetic factors can dictate one’s habits and weight.

While I agree with her arguments to some degree, I currently view the biggest problem as deriving from our societal environment. Some people simply do not want to work very hard to lose weight and keep it off. They have succumbed to the quick-fix mentality of the diet and fitness industry promising overnight results without realizing that hey first need to figure out how and why they got so overweight in the first place.

For example, if you were raised in a household that ate ice cream every night after dinner, is that behavior likely to change by quitting cold turkey?  No!

Many barriers to weight loss exist – work, family, life, injury – I see it every day in my practice. But many or all of these barriers can be overcome if the root of the problem is understood and people are provided with the correct tools to help them succeed.

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

mensfitness_logo
Physical Equilibrium Registered Dietitian Sarah Currie was recently featured in the May online edition of Men’s Fitness Magazine. In the article entitled, “Supplement A: Are You Getting Enough of This Essential Vitamin,” Sarah comments on the importance of Vitamin A and highlights the suggested intake and lists foods rich in the nutrient such as eggs, dairy and certain types of fruits and vegetables.

But Sarah also warns that digesting  too much of the vitamin can actually be harmful. “Consuming excessive levels of Vitamin A—usually from supplementation—can cause liver abnormalities and reduced bone mineral density,” warns Currie. Additionally, long-term use of large amounts of Vitamin A might cause fatigue, irritability, mental changes, anorexia, stomach discomfort, nausea, vomiting, mild fever, excessive sweating and other unpleasant side effects.”

To read the article in its entirety, visit Men’s Fitness Magazine by clicking here.

Saturday, March 19th, 2011

Bella Cover 2011Physical EquilibrBella 2011_Physical Equilibriumium’s popular Outdoor Workout Class is featured in the March/April edition of BELLA Magazine. Included in an expose entitled “Do It Outside,” our class is presented as one of New York City’s best options for outdoor fitness and exercise.

BELLA Magazine launched in January 2011 with a focus on beauty, health and wellness. Courtney Hall is the magazine’s editor.

Click here for more information on BELLA Magazine and visit www.physeq.com for more information on our Outdoor Workout Class .

Friday, March 4th, 2011

The benefits of exercise as it relates to a person’s overall health and appearance have been reported on for years.

Offering further proof of this correlation came earlier this week, when New York Times Health & Fitness writer Gretchen Reynolds authored a supremely interesting article on a study conducted by Dr. Mark Tarnopolsky, a professor of pediatrics at McMaster University in Canada. This study, conducted over the period of one year, compared the lifespan of mice that were given the opportunity to exercise against those that were not.

The results are astounding! The mice that were not given an opportunity to regularly exercise all died within one year, due to what is identified as “malfunctioning mitochondria.”  The results for the mice that were allowed to run on a wheel three times per week is in sharp contrast. According to the article, those mice, “had full pelts of dark fur, no salt-and-pepper shadings. They also had maintained almost all of their muscle mass and brain volume. Their gonads were normal, as were their hearts. They could balance on narrow rods, the showoffs.” These mice also far outlived their non-exercising counterparts.

So what does this study mean for humans?

Dr. Tarnpolsky is not yet certain. So in the meantime, we recommend clicking here to read the full article and then head outside or to the gym for some exercise of your own!