3 thoughts on “3 Cute & Easy Valentine Breakfasts”
Simple and beautiful!!! Was thinking of having a girls sleepover for Kate and a few of her friends for Valentine’s Day. These will definitely be the DIY breakfast choices. The girls will LOVE to create these!!!!
Valentine’s Day is headed our way! Have women’s magazines, Pinterest, and other social media convinced you that you have to do something over-the-top and uber-creative for your loved ones on this special day? Are you feeling the pull to get yourself to a craft store to whip up something heart-shaped and fancy and awesome before February 14th? As a wife and a mom, around holidays I often feel the forceful duress of some invisible Holiday Pressure Beast telling me such things. Magazines and social media are really good at showing us how to overdo it under the guise of being a creative wife or mother. But then I try to remind myself that nowhere is it written that good wives or moms can be identified by their holiday projects. Heck, it’s a struggle just to get my kids appropriately dressed for the weather and out the door to school on time every day. So I like to think that in the absence of a glittery pink-and-red 4-foot gift basket awaiting them on Valentine’s Day morning, my family will hopefully appreciate a cute little Valentine breakfast. “Small things with great love,” right?
Here are three fun, easy breakfast ideas to make using a heart-shaped cookie cutter for whoever you call your Valentine. Basically, if you have a 2-inch heart cookie cutter and some basic breakfast essentials, you can pull these off. Happy Valentine’s Day!
1. Heart-Shaped Granola Plate
Place heart cookie cutter on a plate. Fill the inside with granola, then surround the outside with berries:
Carefully remove cookie cutter. Place 1/4 c. yogurt in a squeeze bottle or Ziploc with a small hole cut in one end. Squeeze whatever pattern you like on top of the granola.
2. Heart Egg Toast
Traditionally, cooking an egg inside toast is apparently known as an “egg in a basket” or the repellant Britishism “toad in a hole.” (Ew, can we please not call it that?) I’m going to go with “heart egg toast,” because it describes this breakfast a whole lot better than conjuring up images of eating frogs, thankyouverymuch.
To make this heart-shaped egg toast, cut into the center of the toast with a heart cookie cutter. Melt about 1/2 Tbsp. butter in a small skillet over medium heat. Place toast on melted butter, then crack 1 egg directly into the hole. Cook about 2 minutes or until egg appears opaque enough to be turned without running. Flip and cook other side an additional 2 minutes. Remove from skillet and serve immediately. Season with salt and pepper, if desired.
3. Berry-Nutella Waffle Heart
Toast frozen waffle(s). Cut through center with heart-shaped cookie cutter, Fill hole(s) with berries and decorate with Nutella.
See? Nice and simple! So go enjoy a stress-free Valentine’s Day filled with lots of love and heart-shaped foods galore!
As a future nutritionist, wholesome, healthy food is obviously a cause close to my heart. As a mother, feeding my own children this kind of food is especially important. The sad reality for thousands of children all over the world, though, is that wholesome food–or, sometimes, any food–is impossible to come by. While we here in the U.S. may hear more about the obesity epidemic, world hunger continues to be a real problem, affecting countless children in heartbreaking ways. Sometimes it can feel like this is one of those overwhelming global issues we little individuals can do nothing about, but I’m happy to say that’s not quite true.
Since last May, I’ve been volunteering on about a monthly basis at an organization here in Mesa called Feed My Starving Children. It’s a Christian nonprofit that utilizes a volunteer workforce to pack a nutrient-rich mix of vitamins, vegetables, soy protein, and rice (as well as other formulas for infants) to send to hungry children all over the world. These food mixes are specially designed to meet the needs of even the most severely malnourished kids. (Here’s a look at their nutrition info.)
According to FMSC, over 6,000 children die every day of hunger and hunger-related causes. Showing up for a couple of hours a month helps me believe that it’s possible to be a part of the solution for the little ones who live so close to that line.
My involvement with FMSC started out as a service project my sons participated in through a Catholic boys’ club, and since then, my sister-in-law and niece have joined my sons and me each time for some food packing, family bonding, and teaching the kids the importance of serving the needy. I thought I would offer a write-up of what happens on a typical food packing session at Feed My Starving Children, as well as all the reasons it’s a great volunteer experience anyone can do. If you live in the Phoenix area, or one of several other locations throughout the country, I would encourage you to sign up to spend a little time there providing for the poorest of the poor around the world.
A Typical Food Packing Session:
Upon arriving at the FMSC facility, volunteers watch an instructional video on the assembly line process of filling food bags and packing them for shipment.
Everyone then scrubs up, dons their oh-so-attractive hairnets, and heads into the packing room.
Each person finds a place at a packing table, where they will perform one job throughout the session. Two people scoop ingredients into a funnel:
Two people open bags and place them under the funnel to receive the ingredients:
One person weighs each bag to make sure it is in the proper weight range for shipment:
The next person seals the bags shut, followed by a team of two people organizing the bags into piles and packing them into boxes.
Once a box is completed, everyone at the packing station calls out how many boxes they have filled. (“Table Four, Box Ten!”) After about an hour and a half of packing, the team cleans up and heads back to the orientation area to find out how many boxes were packed during that session and how many children they can feed for a year. It’s pretty uplifting to hear those numbers! One our visit last night, our group learned that the 121 boxes we packed (destined for orphans in North Korea) would provide 26,136 meals–enough to feed 71 children for a year!
On the way out for the evening, volunteers pass through the “marketplace,” which sells FMSC apparel and handmade goods created by people in the countries FMSC serves. One of these days I’m going to buy one of their super cute T-shirts!
And finally…
Top 5 reasons why Feed My Starving Children is an ideal volunteer experience:
Flexibility: It’s crazy easy to sign up (www.fmsc.org/volunteer), there are numerous packing sessions at various times throughout every day except Sunday. There are even jobs for those who can’t be on their feet for lengthy periods of time.
Simplicity: No special skills are required to participate in a packing session. If you can scoop rice in a cup, you can volunteer at Feed My Starving Children.
Fun: You can sign up with as big a group as you like, there is the freedom to talk while you pack, and they play upbeat music throughout the session, making for a fun environment. There’s also some friendly competition with other tables around you as you try to pack as many boxes as possible.
Family: Kids as young as 5 can participate, if accompanied by an adult. As a parent, I know how hard it is to find meaningful volunteer work younger kids can do, so this is a great opportunity.
Impact: Last year, FMSC packed and sent 229 million meals to hungry children. Each package of food they send contains six meals and each box contains 36 packages. That means in the 26 boxes our table packed, there were 5,616 meals for hungry kids. It’s an awesome feeling knowing you can play a part in giving children a chance at a better life through healthy nutrition!
Last weekend, my husband Anthony and I had the opportunity to get out of town for one of our semi-annual kid-free getaways to a city we both enjoy: San Francisco. As a side project, my creative and talented husband runs a website called Make Weird Music, for which he interviews recording artists who (shocker!) make weird music. The site has been gaining some real traction lately, with interviews of several well-known artists, and Anthony wanted to keep the ball rolling by interviewing a couple of musicians in the Bay Area. Between Frontier Airlines running some jaw-dropping discount flights and Anthony’s cousin and his wife offering to put us up at their home in Walnut Creek, it was really a no-brainer for me to come along. We ended up having a fantastic Saturday enjoying the cornucopia of experiences San Francisco has to offer–a tour of Alcatraz, dessert at Ghirardelli, the lights of the Palace of the Fine Arts at night, and a possibly ill-advised through Haight Ashbury after dark–then spent a laid-back rainy Sunday wine tasting in Napa. (I suppose you could say we skipped church to go drinking. Technically true.) Visiting the Napa Valley and going wine tasting there are two things I’ve always wanted to do, so it was certainly a bucket list-checking day. I thought I would share my rundown of our experience at the eminently classy Duckhorn Vineyards.
First off, let me just say how gorgeous the landscape of Napa is–or at least was the day we visited. I had no expectations of what the place itself would look like, so it was such a delight to see vibrant fall colors on rolling hills, thick groves of trees, and of course the vines themselves stretching out in every direction from the main road. (Having lived in Illinois, the only crops I’m really used to seeing indefinitely on the horizon are corn and beans. It was strange to have that same visual of rows and rows of a crop whizzing by your window in succession like a flip-book animation, with such a different plant.) Though the vines are dormant this time of year, there’s something stark and stately about their silhouettes standing with arms wide out to the sky. In a word: gorgeous.
Of all the wineries in Napa, there’s a reason we visited Duckhorn Vineyards. Anthony’s cousin’s wife, Paola, with whom we were staying, is quite the wine connoisseur (or, if I’m being linguistically obnoxious, “connoisseuse.”) Before moving to the Bay Area, she owned and operated a wine bar in Chicago called Paola’s Vinum. How cool is that? As part of keeping a hand in the wine business, she and her husband maintain a membership to Duckhorn–one of their personal favorites. If it’s a wine bar owner’s personal favorite, I’m going to guess it’s an excellent choice! We were thrilled to have Paola and Frank with us to not only provide our entry to the winery as their guests, but their guidance on all things wine-related throughout the visit.
When we arrived, we were welcomed into what felt like a charming large home complete with Christmas decorations and a roaring fire. After following the server to an outdoor table, we were soon presented with a delicious charcuterie board to accompany the wines we would sample, along with some breadsticks that were less than stellar (easily forgivable–their specialty is wine, not breadsticks).
Then the wine glasses began to arrive. WHOA, did the wine glasses begin to arrive. Having never been to a tasting, I was not prepared for the panoply of glasses that began to crowd our tabletop. It was like if wine glasses bought lawn seats at a Dave Matthews concert, except that wine glasses don’t smoke pot and spill salsa all over your blanket.
Accompanying each glass was a card with a description of the wine and all its vital statistics: height, weight, marital status, hobbies–oh, wait, no–statistics like varietal composition (i.e. what type of wine it is), cooperage (what type of barrel it was aged in), and where it was harvested, plus comments from the winemaker.
At this point I have to joke about the detail of the “Comments from the Winemaker.” These types of elaborate descriptions about the flavor of wines always crack me up, probably because I’m an uncultured swine, but I just find it hard to believe anyone can really taste the multitude of flavors they write about on these things. (It’s not just Duckhorn, I’m talking about every wine label that waxes poetic about its contents.) Apparently, it’s not that the winemakers infuse the grapes with “nectarine, peach blossom, butterscotch, and marshmallow,” or that a peachy-tasting wine came from grapes grown next to peach trees. According to Paola, it’s that expert tasters drink the wine and describe it that way. One of the Duckhorn descriptions actually claimed the wine had “a complex nose” including of pencil shavings. Which makes me want to become an “expert taster” so I could just make stuff up, like “floral, with hints of horsehair and maxi pads,” and someone out there would nod approvingly and take another sip. But hey, it’s all part of the experience, right?
While Chardonnay is usually my go-to wine, I was eager to try everything, even if it supposedly tasted like pencil shavings. In the course of the tasting we sampled a wonderful variety of Duckhorn’s wines, from their whites (including, of course, the 2013 Toyon Vineyard Chardonnay pictured above) to their more famous reds. Surprisingly, their 2012 Three Palms Vineyard Merlot blend ended up being my favorite, and I’m not even a red wine lover–especially not a Merlot lover. Fruity, smooth, and dare I say refreshing (can red wine be refreshing?), I thought it was an absolutely perfect, compulsively drinkable red. According to its description, it had “flavors of blueberry, warm spice cake, and fleshy Santa Rosa plum.” I won’t pretend I tasted exactly that combination of flavors, but whatever I tasted was fabulous.
As a final piece de resistance, the sommelier brought out Duckhorn’s best-known wine: a red blend called “The Discussion.” The story goes that when owners Dan and Margaret Duckhorn were crafting their first vintage over 30 years ago, they had a heated conversation with their winemaker regarding the process of winemaking, finally settling on this varietal blend. They named the wine “The Discussion” to commemorate that part of their history. Of the wines we sampled, The Discussion was my runner-up favorite after the Merlot.
As I mentioned, Paola, the wine expert in our midst, was a great resource for explaining everything we sampled, but I should also note that the sommelier was very present, extremely friendly and down to earth, and seemed totally available to answer any questions. She spoke knowledgeably about the wines without coming off as elitist about them and made us wine ingenues feel at ease.
To sum up: visiting Napa was every bit as delightful a bucket list experience as I could have hoped. During our afternoon at Duckhorn, I felt the freedom of time and space to savor each wine, each nibble of cheese, each glance at the vista of vines lining the land. As a Napa newbie, I may not have anything to compare Duckhorn Vineyards to, but I would highly recommend it to anyone seeking the experience of excellent wine in a beautiful California setting. (And I highly recommend tagging along with a wine bar owner, if at all possible.) 😉
Heather is a good friend I’ve known for many years, since around the time we both got married in 2004. A wife, mother of two, and MBA-holding financial analyst (not to mention a sweet spirit with a great sense of humor), she has always had a lot going for her. For many years, however, one piece of her life was did not match up with her many other successes: her weight. Carrying over 200 pounds on her petite frame after her second child was born, she knew she needed to make a change. Starting at the end of 2013, Heather embarked on a journey toward a healthy weight. In a matter of months, she lost 55 pounds and has maintained that loss for over a year now. I’ve been so inspired by her transformation that I asked if she would consider doing an interview for A Love Letter to Food. As I look forward to a career in nutrition, I wanted to know: how did she do it? What makes her story different from so many stories we hear of weight loss attempts that fail to achieve their goals? Heather graciously consented to share her experience with me. I hope you’ll enjoy reading what she had to say about her journey.
P.S. Just a little disclaimer: Heather achieved her weight loss on a program called Take Shape for Life. A Love Letter to Food is not officially giving any endorsement for Take Shape for Life as a program, and Heather’s results are not necessarily typical (though I have lots of respect for her experience with it!).
Interview: Heather’s Story
Sarah: So, to begin at the beginning, what motivated you to start this weight loss journey? Did you have a number of pounds in mind? Were you surprised by how much you ended up losing? You know, what got you started? Was there a turning point or something?
Heather: Yeah. I knew I had been kind of out of control. For me, the number over 2 was a bad thing. So when I started, I had a moment of determination, and I’m like, “I need to lose weight and I don’t care. I’m gonna do whatever it takes.” After C (her son) was born, I knew I kind of wanted to do something. I had been going back to the gym, and trying to eat differently throughout the day. And at the end of that year—that was the end of 2013—I had a really nice pair of dress pants that I sat down and blew out the seam in the crotch because I was too big for those. And I knew that I was probably a size 20-22 and I was stuffing myself in size 18s, because I didn’t want to make that jump. I didn’t want another 2 in my life. I was already over 200 pounds. I didn’t need another indicator marker. So that’s when I told Jason (her husband), “At the beginning of the year after the holidays, I don’t care what it is. I don’t care what we do. But we need to do something.” And I had a friend that I knew had a program that she did. So we called her, and I’m like, “Sign us up.” And so she asked me the question: “What is your ideal weight?” And that was hard for me, because I’m like, “I don’t know. What should it be?” So I thought back to the lowest that I had ever been, which—consciously remembering—was 145. So I said, “Okay, 145.” Not looking at a BMI chart, not knowing anything. And actually, looking back, for my height, that’s still an overweight BMI. But to me, that was just something that I could really do and shoot for. So when I started with absolute determination, my goal in mind was 145. And I was starting out at 205 to 215-ish.
S: Okay. So you ended up losing…about that, right?
H: I actually went further down. I got down to 135-ish. And that’s when I didn’t know what to do. And then some things kind of happened, and life started kind of happening a bit more, and then I panicked and started throwing up the shields again. And then kind of stabilized out. So I’m at about 150 right now.
S: So do you feel like you’re happy there? Do you want to keep going?
H: You know, I would like to get back down. My goal is to be a healthy BMI that isn’t pushing the edge of the scale, so that if I have a holidays or Christmastime and if I gain 5 pounds, then I’m still gonna be a healthy BMI. So I don’t necessarily want to give it a number this time, but I would like to get back down and be able to do that.
S: Had you tried different methods in the past of weight loss, and what was the story with those? What happened then? What didn’t work?
H: Yeah. I was one of those perpetual dieters. I grew up with a mom that was always trying to diet and trying to do something. Talking about this and that. And grew up with a dad who would berate me in the middle of a department store because my butt was getting too big. So that was kind of hard. I even was in some the fat kids’ clubs at school where they would, like, give smoothie recipes and stuff, and I would bring them home…
S: They had fat kids’ clubs?
H: Oh, yes. Yeah.
S: Oh, geez. So weight has been an issue for a long time.
H: It has. For sure. For as long as I can remember, I’ve always felt overweight or out of place. And part of that, honestly, looking back, was that I hit puberty way earlier than a lot of people. I kinda got some curves. And it would have been okay, if, I think, in my head it would have been different. But when we were growing up, nobody really had a focus on a lot of things. Like people that ate well taught their kids to eat well. And people that didn’t were told, “Eat healthier,” but never given a guide. So I had tried random things with my mom all the time.
Also, my parents got divorced in high school, and I kind of went off the deep end after that. And I distinctly remember, like, how much I would eat. It makes me disgusted to think about it now. So those apple pie things that are full of sugar in the green wrappers, I would eat one of those in the morning. Every morning. I think they’re like 55 grams of fat or something like that. I discovered the cookies at school that were for sale, and so I’d have two to three bags of those every day. At lunch I would have a whole tray of French fries, and I would get packets of mayonnaise and I would squeeze the mayonnaise on the French fries and eat them. And it just really got out of control, and I didn’t know. I had no conscious anything to do with it.
S: You just weren’t thinking about how this was going to affect your body?
H: No, nothing. And so there were so many other things going on to worry about that it was just easy to eat and keep eating. So at the end of my junior year, I was kind of close to where I thought was good, because that was good for me. And that in and of itself was like 180 and a size 14, 16. And by the end of my junior year, I weighed 245 pounds and I was a size 24.
S: Was that your highest?
H: That was my highest. I remember that I didn’t have any blue jeans anymore that fit me. We went hiking with some family and I had to wear a skirt because we had gone shopping and I just remember sitting there crying with my mom and being like, “I don’t know what to do. I don’t want to buy these. Nothing looks good. I feel terrible.” So then I knew I needed to do something, so my mom actually got me started with Weight Watchers. I did that, and then I signed up for aerobics in P.E. for my senior year. So I was doing cardio and strength training and aerobics and eating better-ish. With Weight Watchers, it’s all based on the points, but when you think about it more logically, not all things are created equal. So I would save all my points so I could have a brownie or something. It did help, but it didn’t necessarily teach me to eat better. It just taught me to be a micro-manager of my food. But that’s when I did get to my lowest, was right after that, which was 145. But I was still a size 12.
S: So you lost—wait, 100 pounds?
H: Yes.
S: In a year? Oh my gosh.
H: Yeah. But it was stopping eating ridiculous amounts of fat and grossness. And what I realized with Weight Watchers was that I wasn’t actually eating enough on most days. So I would binge. And then I was in college and had night classes, and would go to the fast food line after night class and go home and eat because I didn’t have time and didn’t want to cook, or still didn’t quite know what I should be cooking, or how. Like people would say, “Yeah, eat healthy!” Okay? I can get a salad, but I’m gonna douse it in Ranch. And I don’t think we’re taught well.
S: So tell me about the program that worked for you. Like, what’s that called and what was the process?
H: Yeah. So the program itself is Take Shape for Life. It uses the MediFast meal replacement plan. I’m sure we’ll have to put some type of disclaimer, like “results not typical” so that we don’t get sued by everybody, right? And it broke it down. The thing that I liked best was that it said, “Eat this this often. And when you cook, here’s the list.”
S: Oh, wow. Very specific.
H: So it was very easy for me to follow, and it was very easy for me to deal with with a busy mom schedule, busy work schedule, everything. It utilizes meal replacement plans that are nutritionally supplemented, so you’re getting the good nutrition and proteins that you need through those. And then all you have to do is focus on one meal a day. And for me, that was refreshing. I knew all I needed to do was one meal every day.
S: Wow. And these bars, these meal replacements, get shipped to you?
H: Yes. So we got everything. Jason and I decided to do it together. And it was really nice because it allowed me to also step back, and instead of being neurotic about what I ate, I picked five things. I ate one “meal” every 2-3 hours, and one of the meals that you cook they call the Lean and Green. It’s protein and non-starchy vegetables, and portioned, too. So if it’s XYZ protein, it’s 6 cooked ounces. If you do 6 ounces, you add a healthy fat. And so it tells you very formulaically. And here’s the list of vegetables. Half a cup is a serving. You need 3 servings. Just very formulaic.
It became a habit. And then I just kind of created those habits and my body just got used to “This is when you eat, and you’re not gonna drink alcohol and you’re not gonna have sugary drinks. And drink a lot of water.” I’ve always been kind of a water drinker anyway. It was nice because those habits were created, and now I can easily whip together a healthy dinner with less effort than it would have taken me to make something unhealthy.
S: Did you find yourself hungry? And did you get tired of these limited options? Not so much for dinner, but for the meal replacements?
H: If I cheated, I got hungry. The plan is designed to get you in that state of ketosis, that fat-burn state. The first three days are a bugger. And that’s just getting your body used to everything. So I was hungry, but I was super laser-focused. But once I did, I had more energy. I was eating less, but I felt so much better. So I had more motivation to keep going. Staying in that fat-burn state was amazing, and it was like, magical. That’s when all the weight was just flying, flying, flying. It was very motivating to stay in that.
The meal replacements…at first it was just kind of survival: “I’m gonna do this.” I figured out the ones that I really did not like. But there were points in time that I finally turned that corner where it wasn’t about the food anymore. And I knew that whatever it was that I was putting in my mouth had the nutrition and the energy that I needed for the rest of the day. And if it was something that I really disliked because I was trying to get rid of that box or whatever, that’s what I would say to myself. “I am eating this to energize my body and give me my nutrition.” And then I would dive in.
S: So it sounds like for you, especially having had emotional connection with food, like, would you say that this was a good way of kind of breaking you of that?
H: Yes. And part of what I was encouraged to do was a workbook that goes with it. Because the program itself isn’t set up to be a weight loss program. It’s set up to be an optimal health program. So weight loss is only one of the pieces. But part of the program was also journaling. I distinctly remember a few times, like when I finally got below 200, which was in the first week—I remember writing, and I’ve read it over and over again: “Goodbye to that ‘two’ forever.” And that was fun for me. And in the back of my mind, I was thinking, “Oh, I hope it’s forever.” But the farther down the line I got, the more I realized how sustainable this really would be if I just stayed within my habits and created the habits and that repetition.
S: So this initial phase of the meal replacement is meant to be temporary. What did that look like for you? How did you know when to transition?
H: So when you hit your goal weight, that’s usually when people start transitioning. The transition is actually a very formulaic and laid-out plan as well that takes 6-10 weeks, depending on how much weight you’ve lost.
S: How long did it take you to get to that stage?
H: For me, it took seven months. But there were some ups and downs within that time. But the transition of it keeps you in the same habits, because you’re still eating six meals a day. You’re still portioning it out well.
S: And prior to this program, you feel like you didn’t have that basis [for healthy eating on your own]? In your family of origin, it wasn’t talked out?
H: No. It wasn’t. And I think there was a false perception—two false perceptions. Eating healthy is expensive. And number two, it’s hard and takes a lot of time. And with this, because I was buying more vegetables and figuring something out and just experimenting with how to cook them. I had never really chopped a bell pepper, like, fully. Like most of our vegetables were quick and easy, because most of my parents’ stuff was quick and easy.
S: I wanted to ask you about the social aspect, or even the relationship aspect, the family aspect. I know you had some kind of support network around this. What was that?
H: Yeah. One thing that I really did like about the program, and one of the reasons that I started coaching to help other people, was the connection to that network. They have an amazing network. Every week there’s phone calls on the “Habits to Health.” There’s a nurse call. It’s like a conference call that you can hop on and listen to that’s nationwide. And then there’s a doctor’s call that the medical director or one of the doctors runs. They’re recorded, so I could dial it up and listen on my way to work, and hear everybody be excited about being healthy. And that’s one of the things that I really liked, too, is that the focus was on health. It wasn’t just losing the weight. It was being a healthy person—and being a healthy person mentally and physically and even financially.
One of the things socially that was a motivating factor for me, was I desperately, desperately did not want my kids growing up and looking at me and thinking that’s what normal was. I want my kids to be healthy. I want my kids to be happy. That was definitely something I was able to use to focus. But the support community was nice. Jason did it with me, so he was very supportive.
But socially, then, we kind of hermit-ized for a few months. I didn’t want to be in social situations. I didn’t want to have to explain to people. So then we just kind of didn’t do anything for awhile. But then once we did emerge again, everybody was very encouraging. “Oh, this is great!” But then it flipped, and it became, “You’re so skinny! When are you going to stop? Aren’t you done losing weight?” And then also having people feel like they have to tell you why they can’t lose their own weight was really interesting. Kind of like the pregnant lady syndrome, where if you’re a pregnant lady, everybody has to tell you their horror stories about being pregnant.
S: Do you feel like you have experienced almost like an identity shift, like whereas before you would think of yourself as an overweight person?
H: Yes. It’s been hard for me to realign this new person, because she’s not the same as she was before, and isn’t getting the same results out of her relationships as she was before. And some of those things are changing and are scary.
But I think the other thing is, too, that I’m a little more sure of myself now. I’ve always kind of tried to be confident, but it’s almost like, “Wow, I accomplished this! This is awesome! This is life-changing! What else can I do? Let’s try something else. Let’s change that.” And I’ve shifted the way that I work and what I’m doing, just working on new and better things. I just focus energy on things differently. It’s so psychological. I got a couple of mantras, I guess, that I would just say to myself over and over and over again. As I was walking by the candy bowl, I would say it over and over again. One of them was “lighter and lighter every day.” I’m feeling lighter and lighter every day. So it has nothing to do with weight. You’re not “losing” weight. That’s one thing I like to tell people: I’m not “losing” weight; I’m releasing it. My other one was the AC/DC song: “we took the highway to hell,” but change that to “health.” And so then I was able to sing it. I’ve said it so many times that when I hear that song, that’s what I hear. Like I took a cycling class and I was ready to give up, and her last song was that. I was like, “Yes! I got this!” But just something to shift that focus.
Focusing on that end goal, and knowing that I was super laser-focused on that, when somebody did offer me something, I would say “No, thank you.” But also padding in room for error. So on my birthday, I’m like, “It’s my birthday. I’m going to eat one slice of cake and have a half a glass of milk.” But I decided those things beforehand. So before going into a situation, I would decide what my actions were going to be so that I didn’t go off the deep end. And then if I did go off the deep end, I didn’t berate myself for it. I switched back to my happy mantra, instead of repeating hundred million times about how stupid I was, “How could you do that, why would you do that to yourself? What’s wrong with you?” Those are such nasty things to say, but we say them to ourselves all the time. And that’s what has started this and has helped develop this new person that I discovered was kind of inside me, and she’s kind of cool! I like her and I want to keep her around.
S: To wrap up, is there anything additional that you would say to somebody if they were listening or reading this, maybe somebody who has tried unsuccessfully to lose weight in the past but has the desire? Someone who wants to get started? Any other words of advice?
H: Start talking to yourself differently. And journal. Journal, journal, journal. Stream of consciousness as much as you can. You’d be so surprised. And just do that head work first, because there are so many programs out there and you can lose weight so many different ways, but the focus shouldn’t be on losing weight. It should be on becoming a healthy person. Because that’s what’s going to sustain it. If you’re focused on losing weight the whole time, you’re gonna crash and burn and gain the weight back. So I think the focus on healthy living and healthy eating, and also knowing that it doesn’t have to be perfect. Like, no, I’m not eating 100% organic and this and that, but I know I’m eating better right now, and then down the line I can start exchanging out things. But just work on your head and take that next little step. And focus on the little steps so you can get through the day without getting overwhelmed with it. Take that one little step that’s gonna take you to that really cool vision that you have of a healthy life.
There was another training, maybe it was a book. I wish I could remember. She said, “It’s really easy once you realize it’s not that hard.” And then she talks about how we’re so focused on how hard everything is going to be. If we just let that go, then we can realize that it’s so easy.
S: And it’s just step by step.
H: Yeah. And not going back. Like if you berate yourself for something, then that’s taking back a hundred steps because you’ve just replayed it in your head a hundred times. I know right now what I need is more head work and more discovering what I’m hiding behind and what safe is for me right now. And then I’ll be able to drop the rest of the weight. And I know that’s not going to be a problem. But I’m working really hard on not berating myself about it and not stressing out about it, because I’m still happy and so much healthier than I have been. And I’m feeling really good.
When you live in suburban Phoenix, where the two seasons of the year are “Pleasant” and “Brutal,” you kind have to seize the rites and rituals of seasonal change where you can get them. So it is with the coming of fall. Every year when September hits, I have fantasies of what a traditional Americana autumn would be like: maple trees aflame in rust and ochre, a chill in the air, and a visit to an orchard for apple picking. In reality, the radiant-leaved trees and nippy weather are not in the forecast where I live, but it turns out that apple picking is actually in the realm of possibility.
Recently, as I was browsing the internet looking for where to buy local meat, I came across Date Creek Ranch, a family farm in Wickenburg, about two hours northwest of Phoenix. The site advertised not only grass-fed beef and organic chicken for sale, but also…did mine eyes deceive me?….APPLE PICKING!
It’s not a mirage! Like the sign says, there really is an orchard in the middle of the desert! Date Creek Ranch was opening its doors–or, rather, its winding dirt road–to the public Labor Day Weekend to pick organic apples from a 45-year-old orchard for $1.29/pound. I decided that since it was my birthday weekend and the whole in-home-yoga-party-with-friends thing I had planned didn’t pan out (long story), that apple picking would be the perfect way to celebrate. And indeed it was. Our family made the trek to Wickenburg on Saturday and enjoyed a wonderful day on the ranch picking apples to our hearts’ content.
When we arrived, we were surprised to find a bustling business. Vehicles packed the parking lot and lined the dirt road leading up to the ranch. Upon entering the farm, we saw a little pavilion selling cold pressed apple cider, lemonade, apple butter, and apple pies:
as well as the previously advertised grass-fed beef. (See their website for pricing!)
Since we suburbanites are not veteran apple pickers, it was especially nice that the ranch provided everything we needed to pick and carry our load, from a wheelbarrow:
to apple pickers (which incidentally look a lot like lacrosse sticks–am I the only one that thinks this?):
to bags for carrying. And even though there was a surprising amount of people there, the orchard still had plenty of apples to choose from, ranging from itty bitty baby-sized ones to big, hearty ones.
Here’s a look down one long row of trees in the orchard:
And our apple loot, when all was said and done:
Near the entrance to the ranch was a weighing station, complete with quaint old-fashioned scale.
We ended up taking home about 15 pounds of a variety of apples, and a quart of local honey, to boot.
An unexpected perk of hanging out on the ranch was spending a little time with the livestock. I’m not a big animal person, so all I could think as we watched these healthy-looking pigs was, I bet they’re delicious.
(No, I did not have the same thought about the horse. That would be culturally inappropriate.)
They also had a picturesque old barn where I’m sure hipsters would love to take photos looking wistful.
So….I can finally say I have realized my fantasy of going apple picking. Now I can get started on apple oatmeal, apple muffins, apple tarts–and I already made applesauce, which we polished off in 24 hours. Also, I found out we weren’t the only ones who felt so enthusiastic about it–according to their website, the ranch sold out of apples in just two days! Without a doubt, our family will be back to Date Creek Ranch next year to do it again. If you live in Arizona, I highly recommend you do the same!
Simple and beautiful!!! Was thinking of having a girls sleepover for Kate and a few of her friends for Valentine’s Day. These will definitely be the DIY breakfast choices. The girls will LOVE to create these!!!!
How fun! Happy breakfasting!
Super cute Valentine s Day food ideas to make for your family including breakfast, lunch, healthy snacks, sweet treats and desserts