Monday, April 29, 2013

Meet....my AMAZING new patio:)



For the last 3 years I have been cutting and pasting a picture of a relaxing patio on my vision board. Check out my 2012 vision board below. Now that I look back at this a little closer I am realizing how much older I am....I mean I put TIME TO PLAY underneath the pic. WOW. Anyways......




Every year it seemed making my vision of a patio come to life, it was one of only things that didn't seem to make the cut, along with surfing and horseback riding. The "personal life" section of my vision board has always seemed to take the back seat, but this year I am putting a stop to that!! You see, focusing on our business has been the #1 top priority for Landon and I for the last 3 years. Personal/work life balance has never been something we are the best at. Even though I REALLY desired having a relaxing place of my own, I never took the time to really make it happen. I picked other events and occasions over my own happiness. This is a perfect example of why making a vision board is so awesome!!! It makes you do the things you never thought you would and holds you accountable to making things that you really want happen in your life. My "ALL OR nothing" personality had to learn quickly that with home projects it is exactly that....A PROJECT and it takes time:). Landon and I got to learn something new together and potted our very first plants EVER. Not just in the 6 1/2 yeas of our relationshop...like EVER. I know it sounds a litte corny, but I feel like a real "grown up" now hahaha but really!!! I mean not only have I NEVER potted a plant, I have never even owned one. I have always wanted to, but never took the time. I am beaming with excitement and I can't wait to go home and relax on my patio:) 

Check out the pics below! Landon and I started this process about a year ago and I happy to say my relaxing outdoor sitting area is finally complete:) Isn't it pretty!!!! I think it is! Thanks babes for taking the time to make this happen even after a long week and even longer weekend. You are so amazing and I am really blessed to have a man like you in my life, who puts me and my dreams first:) I Love you! 












Friday, April 5, 2013

FIT, FAB & 40!!!


Today one of my favorite people turns 40! Jenn has been my longest running client and close friend of mine for over 6 years now. She is someone very special to me and I am so happy she chose to spend her special day with me hitting the gym!! Now that's dedication:) In honor of her big day, I created a WOD just for her! Check it out!!





Fit FAB and 40!!!
40 wall ball
40 HRPU's
40 DB rows (in the plank position)
40 Sprawls
40 sit ups
40 strict press
40 double unders

WOD to grow on...because she's that bad A$$!
3 rounds for time:
150 m sprint
40 oblique twists

Happy Birthday Jenn!!! You are so amazing and deserve nothing but the best! 
XOXO


Monday, March 25, 2013

A must read for injured souls;)



Rarely do I post blogs from others sites directly onto mine, but this right here HIT HOME for me. I wish I could have found this 2 years ago, or even last year... Oh well!! I am glad to have found it now and just had to share it. :)

Keep your head in the game- Dealing with the mind fuck of injury/illness. By Krista at http://www.stumptuous.com/

Unless it’s a truly horrific, traumatizing event (for instance, being run over by a steam roller driven by all those girls that made fun of you in high school), the worst part of an injury/illness isn’t the physical pain. Sure, physical pain can be epic. It can nag and nag and nag. You can get to a point where you’d truly consider eating a rat poison smoothie if you thought it’d bring pain relief.

But usually, once you get past the immediate event and the first few days of acute pain, the worst part of any injury/illness is psychological.

You’re scared. You’re thinking, “Will I ever play the violin again?” You’re wondering who you are if you aren’t “healthy person” any more. You’re crying on the living room floor at 3 am because your back hurts so goddamned much and all you want to do is fucking sleep but your angry spine won’t let you waaaahh!!

With any serious injury or illness, once the immediate fear and pain subside, you’re left with larger existential questions.

Along with a good program of rehab and pain management, you need a mental game as well. Here are some tips for bouncing back.

1. Understand that the mind-fuck and emotional roller coaster are both normal.

Whatever you feel, it’s normal. Your identity, your sense of “OK-ness” and safety, your worldview, your daily routine… all will be challenged.

2. Remember: Resilience is a skill.

You can learn it and practice it. The more you practice it, the better you get.

Bounce is great starter reading while you heal.

3. Allow and accept.

Allow the pain/illness/limitation to be there. Accept its presence. You don’t have to like or love it. You can hate the hell out of it. But you can hate it and still allow it to be there. It’s a kind of “this sucks, but here we are” perspective.

When you are able to allow, you eliminate resistance, which contributes to and worsens pain, stress, and suffering. Much about a chronic/serious injury is really this attachment to “healthy functional person”. Once you get past the acute pain and initial fear, this fog of emotional and psychological distress is really what does the damage.

4. Be mindful and aware.

Be present with the pain and limitation. Again, allow it to be there. But also note and observe the experience in its fullness. View it as an interesting curiosity that requires careful observation and awareness.

What are you learning about yourself, your body, and the world in this moment?

See if you can get out of your head a little bit. Notice where you feel both pain/limitation and emotions in your body. For instance:

You may feel physically tense and anxious when you try to move the owchy part. You may notice how much you go rigid with fear as you perform certain movements.
You may feel physically lethargic and empty if you are sad about the injury/illness. You may feel a hollowness or heaviness in your chest.
You may notice other parts compensating for the injury.
You may feel your face and neck tensing up if you are angry about the injury/illness. Etc.
Again, try to get out of your head and into your body. Be a thoughtful observer of your physical state, from head to toe.

5. Soften towards yourself.

Practice compassion. A common approach is something like this.

Think about being your own best friend in this moment of pain. Imagine your body and spirit being like a frightened little child. Comfort yourself. Give yourself a little hug. Your body needs love and care right now, not criticisms like “How could you be so stupid!” or “How could you let me down like this!?” If you wouldn’t say it to a lost and scared little girl who’s just fallen down and scraped her knee, don’t say it to yourself. Ever.

Yes, compassion sounds woo-woo, but it’s based on good solid neuroscience and it works.

More on compassion — I highly recommend the book.

6. Allow yourself to grieve the loss.

Yes, they are real losses.

Loss of function; loss of health; loss of a coach… these and all the other small pains that go with injury are losses. Allow yourself to grieve and be present with this grief. It’s important to metabolize grief properly, and you can only do that by spending a bit of time with it.

Notice especially where grief manifests in your body. (Again, this sounds woo-woo, but it’s quite pragmatic somatic psychology.) It’s not ”wallowing in self pity”. It’s real grieving for real losses, and must be done before you can move on.

If you’re concerned about being stuck “in the downer” for too long, make a deal with yourself — give yourself a set amount of time to feel badly, and then promise yourself you’ll move on after that. I recommend you allocate 48 hours to the initial stages of irrationality, grief, anger, etc. Those kinds of feelings will often last longer than that, but if you dedicate 48 hours specifically to allowing yourself to feel crappy and to fully exploring the depths of these emotions, the rest will go much quicker when it emerges later.

If you’re a “stiff upper lip” kind of person, guess what — part of your brain still feels sad, angry, fearful, etc. Allow yourself to be in that shitty place for at least a little while. Trust me; you will move through it and won’t stay there forever. You must first allow the negative feelings to be present. They are there for a reason. They help you heal. Then, and only then, should you move on to the next step of reframing.

7. Reframe.

Again, don’t leap to this step right away. It’s important to go through the steps above first.

Once you’re ready, think about how to reframe this experience.

Is it a moment of learning?
A moment to go deeper into learning about pain and limitation, so that in future you can be more understanding with others?
A time to indulge in more sedentary things that you always wanted to do, like reading through a stack of books?
A time to learn a new activity?
A time to reconsider your life’s priorities?
A time to mack on your cute physiotherapist? Etc.
8. Refocus.

Once you’ve gone through the above steps, and have somewhat successfully reframed the situation, consider how to refocus your energy.

Understand the difference between your attention being PLACED vs PULLED. Don’t allow the injury to PULL your attention. Deliberately and purposefully PLACE your attention.

This takes practice, of course. You’ll probably have to work on it. (See #1.)

9. Come up with a new game plan.

Athletes don’t deal in “shoulds”. They deal with what is, right now.

Football, basketball, and hockey players must constantly respond to what awaits them on the field. They can’t just keep running or skating in a straight line because that’s where they feel they should go. They are always correcting, microsecond to microsecond, for the movements of their opponents. So, think — or even better, feel — like an athlete, and stay dynamically responsive.

Come up with a new game plan as needed, and don’t be afraid to throw out the old one. Your “job” right now is to heal.

10. Do what you need to do.

Don’t fuck around with skipping your physio exercises, or sneaking out for prohibited runs, or whatever. Follow the instructions your rehab people give you, no matter how dumb or tedious you think they are.

Remember, it’s your job to get better — as much as you reasonably can. Help your body heal. If you’ve now got a life-altering disability, then you won’t obviously be back to where you were before. But you can still be a whole lot better than you’d be if you just gave up and did nothing.

Invest the time now and you’ll reap the benefits in the long run. 2 weeks off now can save you 6 months off later. A few days of aggressive icing could put you back in the game a month sooner. Etc.

Don’t try to be a hero. Nobody will be impressed unless they’re idiotic teenage MMA fans who throw around grandiose terms like “warrior” and “honour”. True courage involves thoughtful humility and being fully present with fear, rather than arrogant, ego-satisfying pigheadedness.

11. Understand that this is not forever.

A bad play, a bad game, a bad season, whatever. Each day is a new day. This is not forever. You’ll always have the chance to “reboot” later on. Good athletes are able to bounce back from setbacks. Many athletes even have a little “letting go” ritual, such as touching the bench or wiping the dirt off their hands. See if you can come up with a little “moving on” ritual that helps you symbolize starting fresh. (I like getting a haircut. All my old problems seem to fall to the floor along with the hair.)

12. Above all, understand that this is normal.

It’s a shared experience. We have all been there, or are going to be there at some point.

I watched at least three players get seriously injured during the Super Bowl. No doubt others are sitting on ice packs right now too. So think about this… you and, say, dozens of NFL players (and hundreds of other pro athletes) right now are sitting in whirlpools or on ice packs or on some physio’s table, thinking “Ah, shit.”

You’re in good company! If it’s good enough for million-dollar bodies, it’s good enough for you. No matter how much of a badass you think you are, no matter how athletically talented or enthusiastic, your body isn’t made of titanium. You’re soft and pink and mushy on the inside, and all wonders of engineering have limits. That’s reality. And it’s OK.


Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Shake it up!!!

Shake it up with Salad In A Jar!!!  

 

 


Let’s face it eating the same thing each and every week can become boring, and when this happens, we are way more likely to take a tumble off the healthy lifestyle bandwagon. When this happens, it is important to remember your goal at hand and that taking the time to SHAKE THINGS UP is so worth it!!! 

I have seen this whole Salads in a Jar idea for over a year now but have never taken the time to actually check it out. It seemed too time consuming but IT'S NOT!! And it is fun and different! The best part is you can make five DIFFERENT salads at a time, and they’ll stay fresh for the whole week, just grab and go on your way out the door! When lunchtime rolls around, you’ll be sitting pretty with your delicious salad ready to be shaken up.

Layering Salad Jars:
1) BOTTOM – organic dressing (choose a different one for every day of the week).
2) Heavy ingredients that hold up well when submerged in dressing – cucumbers, radishes, onion..
3) Heavy items that you may not want directly touching the dressing when stored.
4) Leafy organic greens/light ingredients - spinach, sprouts, kale, chard, arugula..
5) A small amount of heavy accent items – nuts, seeds, dried fruit, accent spices
6) TOP – colorful ingredients to perk up your taste buds when you pop open the jar – fruit, edible flowers, herbs..

-->Here is a great dressing recipe you can use for your salad in a jar creation
 
Balsamic Vinaigrette
Recipe from Creative Kitchen Adventures

3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
1-2 tbsp water (more or less depending on the consistency you want)
2 tbsp honey (can be replaced with agave or brown sugar)
1/4 tsp sea salt
1/4 tsp black pepper

Place all ingredients into a small lidded jar.  Or blend all ingredients in a blender for 30 seconds.  Anything with a lid works well. Shake to mix thoroughly. Stores in fridge for 1-2 weeks.

***The most important part of the layering is making sure the dressing and the salad greens(don’t touch. As long as they stay separate, these salads can be made up to 4 days in advance and will stay fresh in the fridge with a lid on. Easy to double this recipe and make lunch for all week.

What go-to recipe has helped you stay on that healthy lifestyle bandwagon?

Monday, March 4, 2013

They get $hit done!!!

It Couldn’t Be Done
By Edgar A. Guest

Somebody said that it couldn’t be done
But he with a chuckle replied
That “maybe it couldn’t,” but he would be one
Who wouldn’t say so till he’d tried.
So he buckled right in with the trace of a grin
On his face. If he worried he hid it.
He started to sing as he tackled the thing
That couldn’t be done, and he did it!

Somebody scoffed: “Oh, you’ll never do that;
At least no one ever has done it;”
But he took off his coat and he took off his hat
And the first thing we knew he’d begun it.
With a lift of his chin and a bit of a grin,
Without any doubting or quiddit,
He started to sing as he tackled the thing
That couldn’t be done, and he did it.

There are thousands to tell you it cannot be done,
There are thousands to prophesy failure,
There are thousands to point out to you one by one,
The dangers that wait to assail you.
But just buckle in with a bit of a grin,
Just take off your coat and go to it;
Just start in to sing as you tackle the thing
That “cannot be done,” and you’ll do it.





This Mother and Daughter duo is on #FIRE and is #UNSTOPPABLE. This combo right here makes for some serious success and ONE PROUD COACH:).

Way to go ladies...the skies the limit!!! 

Thursday, February 14, 2013

GFree is the way to BE!! CHECK IT!!

I am sure all of you know by now how IMPORTANT I feel it is to remain on a gluten free lifestyle. I want this for everyone and I do everything I can to help people realize this. I would do it for free if money was not such a huge accountability tool to us humans!!! Year after year, as I help more and more people, I found myself always feeling unaccomplished due to the fact that the people I loved the most were always in & out of remaining gluten free or hadn't even thought of remaining on healthy gluten free lifestyle. Well fast forward to now....times have changed!!! #grateful 



A few months back my sister and I made a trip to college station to visit our baby cousin (not so baby anymore) Stescha.While we were there I taught both of them how to eat out gluten free and it still taste yummy! I mean she is in college and people are eating QUESO and chips drunk at 3am and my sister has NEVER dieted or has had to restrict foods from her diet ( I know...lucky $itch haha) bottom line is.... I knew I had to find some really delicious foods to get them started on gluten free path. So that's what we did! You see when you are starting out on this lifestyle...taking away EVERYTHING is sometimes unrealistic! Balance is key:) We found gluten free pizza for when her friends order pizza, we went to subway and had chopped salads instead of 6imch subs and went to Jason's Deli for gluten free sandwiches and soup!!! They were shocked with how easy AND yummy  it was!


Slightly ;) intoxicated about to head to bed while everyone else was out eating queso:) Her first BIG success!! 

So when we left on Sunday, my sister committed to my cousin that they would together remain gluten free for 30 days. I am not going to lie...I was excited and skeptical all at the same time! We all texted each other pics and kept each other on track. My sister was so supportive and it was so cool to see her be that person to our cousin! I am proud to say they did it and are still going strong!! I made my cousin take a before pic...even though she didn't want to:) so she could see the difference when she lost 10 pounds from just remaining gluten free. Pretty drastic isn't it!!! So proud of her and the best part...she is proud of herself and is feeling confident and strong!

My sister is now about 70% gluten free (goal is 95%...my goal for her haha) and my cousin does her best to stay away from it all together! It's crazy how one weekend visit can make such a drastic impact on someones life. I look back onto that weekend and I am so grateful for the memories that were created but also for the opportunity I was given to help both of them be the best version of them! 

 Love you both so much!! So proud of you! 





Thursday, January 31, 2013

Time to be AWESOME....





Thank you Angie for sending me this video....made me smile from ear to ear:))). I just wanted to share this with all of you. Never forget that we decide our own AWESOMENESS...no one else.