Plus-Size Triathlete Proves Most of Us Don't Know What Being Fit Looks Like

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Krista Henderson is one incredible athlete. She has competed in more than 20 races—triathlons, duathlons, and half-marathons. Plus, she’s a personal trainer and a spin instructor. Now she has more thing to add to her impressive résumé: She’s the newest face of Lane Bryant’s activewear line, Livi. Henderson doesn’t have your stereotypical athletic build—and that’s the point. Lane Bryant’s newest campaign showcases super-fit women of all shapes and sizes, proving there’s not just one way to be healthy and in shape.



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The Meal-Prep Plan to Perfecting Overnight Oats

If you can’t get enough of the hearty grain but can’t be bothered to spend 20 minutes sweating over a hot stove, overnight oats are the answer. You can meal-prep these gems in less than 10 minutes, and it requires zero kitchen skills. As long as you can shake a mason jar (just like you do with a cocktail shaker), you're golden.

Step 1:

Hit up the grocery store.

Five main ingredients and a couple dashes of cinnamon is all. Get in and get out. You'll probably spend more time fighting someone for a parking spot than you will shopping.

Shopping List
3 cups rolled oats
5 cups almond milk
3 bananas
1 1/4 cup blueberries
5 tablespoons chia seeds
5 teaspoons cinnamon

Don't forget the storage containers:
Pick up three small mason jars with lids while you're at it.

Step 2:

Prep everything in 10 minutes.

Just throw everything into a jar, seal it, shake it, cool it, and wake up to a sweet and hearty breakfast.

Ingredients
1/2 cup rolled oats
1 cup almond milk
1/2 banana, mashed slightly
1/4 cup blueberries
1 tablespoon chia seeds
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon nut butter (optional)

Directions
Add all ingredients into a mason jar, give it a good shake, then seal with a lid, and leave overnight for up to three days.

Here's the (sort of) caveat.
You need to meal prep three jars on Sunday night and two on Wednesday night. Why? We don't recommend leaving your oats for longer than three days, because they will get super goopy, and we're not into that.

Step 3:

Grab a spoon and dig in.

The only effort you need to put into breakfast in the a.m. is a twist of the mason jar lid (hey, sometimes that's tough, so don't think you're being lazy!). Open the fridge, grab your mason jar, dip your spoon into the kick-ass morning meal, and try to think what life was like before you were so organized.

Step 4:

Become an oat-obsessed pro.

  • We'll say it again. Overnight oats can get soggy if they sit too long, which is why we recommend making a second batch on Wednesday.
  • You can swap in or add any milk, fruit, nut butter, or spice to the mix. The world is your oatmeal.
  • If you follow a gluten-free diet, gluten-free rolled oats are available at many grocery stores or Amazon.
  • Wish your oats were warm? Pop them in the nuker.



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Make Eggs Once, Eat Them All Week Without Getting Bored

If there was only one food we could eat for the rest of our lives, what would it be? Pizza. But eggs would be a close second. TBH, we'd love to cook them every morning when we have extra time, but who has that? We don't. But here's the good news. We found the best way to meal-prep eggs so we can eat them in the a.m. No heating up the frying pan required. We're talking about putting your muffin tin to use (it's not just for cupcakes) and making super-simple, filling egg muffins you can grab on the go.


Step 1:

Hit up the grocery store.

But check your fridge first. You likely already have a lot of these ingredients.

Shopping List
12 eggs
5 cups baby spinach
1 orange bell pepper
2 slices cooked bacon (omit if vegetarian or vegan)
1/4 cup goat cheese (omit if vegan)
1 avocado (optional)
1 loaf whole-grain bread (optional)

Also, you'll want to buy these storage containers if you don't already have them:
12-cup muffin pan
1 container with secure lid (that holds 2-3 egg muffins for when you're taking them to go)

Step 2:

Prep everything in 30 minutes.

Sundays are for eating bagels. And for spending 30 minutes making these egg muffins, so you have them ready to grab from your fridge Monday-Friday.

Make the egg muffins.
You can get the full recipe here. Seriously, it's so easy, you guys.

Step 3:

Eat your egg-loving heart out MTWTF.

Roll out of bed. Wash face. Brush teeth. Get dressed. Sprint out the... wait. You have breakfast in the fridge! Grab breakfast. Now you can sprint out the door.

Keep eggs exciting.
We love them cold right out of the fridge, and the best part is you can eat them with your hands. If you do have two minutes to spare, there are a few options that keep this simple meal exciting: Nuke them in the microwave to heat them up, add 1/4 avocado on top for more healthy fats (because avos are life), toast a slice or two of bread and make an egg sandwich, and/or douse them in hot sauce. You do you.

Step 4.

Become an egg-spert.

These pro tips will make your mornings even more stress free.

  • Store your them in the muffin tin in your fridge. They last up to five days, and you don’t need to dirty another pan.
  • Keep your avocado green by rubbing olive oil on the exposed meat, then wrapping in plastic wrap and storing in the fridge.
  • If a doughnut calls one morning and you know you won't eat all of the muffins in five days, store them in the freezer to reheat later.
  • It's five days; you have 12 muffins. Do the math. Some days you'll have two egg muffins; others you can have three.
  • Store your bread in the freezer regardless of how much you'll eat it all week. You can easily defrost in the toaster, plus it won't grow mold when you forget about it in the bread basket two weeks later. Eating Paleo? Leave out the bread and replace it with a side of precooked sautéed greens.


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The Trick to Meal-Prepping Smoothies So Your Mornings Are Stress Free

Healthy smoothies aren't usually considered complicated meals to make in the morning. After all, you're just throwing a bunch of stuff into a blender, right? Yes. But when you can't find your chia seeds, realize you're out of almond milk after you already threw the ingredients in the jug, or forgot to freeze your bananas (you hate room-temp nanners in your smoothies!), you're in for an annoying start to the day. Get prepped and organized by following these simple guidelines that guarantee a killer smoothie in three minutes flat.

Step 1:

Hit up the grocery store.

This is where your productive Sunday begins: the grocery store.

Shopping List

5 cups almond milk
5 bananas
2 cups frozen blueberries
5 cups baby spinach
1/3 cup chia seeds
1/2 cup almond butter
5 servings protein powder (optional)

If you don't already have these storage containers, you'll want to grab them too:
5 reusable baggies
1 mason jar or any BPA-free container with a lid that holds liquid

Step 2:

Prep everything in 15 minutes.

On Sunday, do your best to take a break from binge-watching The Affair (you can do it!) and set aside 15 minutes to prep your smoothie ingredients.

1. Prepare 5 individual baggies consisting of:
1 banana
1/3 cup blueberries
1 cup spinach

2. Place them in the freezer where you can see them (not under the frozen pizza).

3. Have the following readily available in your fridge (not behind the water filter):
Almond milk
Chia seeds
Almond butter

4. Keep these tools handy on the counter:
Blender
Measuring tools (tablespoon and a cup)

Step 3:

Make your smoothie in 3 minutes.

Every Monday-Friday, throw all of your prepped ingredients into the blender, give it a whirl, and enjoy. That's it.

Ingredients
1 cup almond milk
1 banana
1/3 cup blueberries
1 cup spinach
1 tablespoon chia seeds
2 tablespoons almond butter
1 scoop protein powder (optional)

Directions
1. Add all ingredients into a blender and blend on high for 45-60 seconds.

2. Pour into a mason jar or any BPA-free container and gulp, gulp, gulp. Or seal tightly with a lid if you're saving it for later.

Step 4:

Become a smoothie pro.

These tips will have you on your way to smoothie-expert status in no time.

  • The riper the bananas, the sweeter your smoothie will taste.
  • Frozen bananas are the key to better consistency, so don’t forget to add them to your plastic baggie.
  • Add your almond milk into the blender first, so you don’t need to use an additional measuring tool.
  • Add five ice cubes when blending to keep things extra chill.
  • It’s best to drink your smoothie right away. While storing it in a mason jar is definitely an option, the smoothie can get thicker and let's just say... less pleasant.
  • If you do plan on storing it, omit the chia seeds: The longer they sit in a liquid, the more they congeal and turn it super thick.
  • Fast cleanup tip: Once your blender is empty, add a dash of dish soap and 1/4 cup water, and blend for 30 seconds. It’s like a self-cleaning trick; just be sure to rinse it out after.


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Whole30 Was Named the Worst Diet—and That's Ridiculous

Every year U.S. News and World Report gathers dozens of nutrition experts and has them rank the best diets. This year, Whole30 finished dead last—well behind Jenny Craig, WeightWatchers, and even Atkins.

To say we were surprised is an understatement. We partnered with the program to launch Greatist Groups, our way of connecting readers with small teams of people who are also looking to crush Whole30 but could use some added tips and support. We don’t stand to profit from this partnership: We did it because we’re huge believers in Whole30.

Is Whole30 a Diet?

Calling the program a diet is complicated. Technically, everyone is on a diet. It’s simply a collection of all the stuff you usually eat. But most people think of a diet as something you go on when you’re trying to lose weight.

That’s the first problem: Whole30 isn’t really about weight loss. Yes, we know many people lose weight while sticking to the program, but Whole30 bills itself as a nutritional reset that changes your relationship with food. It’s about changing the way you feel. Maybe you’re bloated, or your skin won’t stop breaking out, or you’re tired all the time.

It’s much more helpful to think of the program as an elimination diet. And boy oh boy are you expected to cut out a lot! The short list: no sugar, alcohol, grains, legumes, or dairy—and no weighing yourself.

Most nutritionists don’t recommend cutting out entire food groups (unless you’re allergic). It’s not sustainable. But that’s where Whole30 differs from other popular diets, like Paleo. You do the program for 30 days and then start reintroducing the foods you cut out. If they make you bloated, mess with your skin, or leave you feeling groggy, try to keep those foods at a minimum.

Whole30 Is Difficult

There’s no sugarcoating it (pun kind of intended). Whole30 is hard—really hard. For most people, the first week is full-on withdrawal. You crave sweets, you dream of beautiful baguettes, and you’re willing to do pretty much anything to get your hands on a glass of wine.

The program isn’t for everyone. There’s a long list of no-nos, and eating out is nearly impossible. (It is easier when you’re doing it with a group of people to share the highs and lows—shameless self-promotion, we know.) The upside? You’re only eating whole foods. Really, what could be better? There are no shakes, no synthetic protein powder, no microwaveable dinners. It’s the stuff your grandparents ate (without a glass of milk to wash it all down, of course).

For most people, you’ll be eating more protein than you’re used to. It’s not a no-holds-barred approach like Atkins (and ironically, Atkins fared better in the U.S. News rankings). The founders recommend eating protein three times per day with each serving being about the size of the palm of your hand. While it’s higher than the U.S. Dietary Guidelines, it does fall in line with what many nutritionists suggest.

The Results

Hopefully, at the end of the month, you start to feel more alive (the energy boost is insane), you change how you think about eating and snacking, and you probably realize the reason you get hangry at 3 p.m. is more mental than physical hunger.

In the end, it’s only 30 days. Melissa Hartwig, one of the program’s founders, is known for saying, “It’s Whole30, not Whole365.” In the dieting world, that’s a radical idea. Most other commercial diets claim to be long-term solutions. The longer you stick with it, the more money they rake in. And even if you fall off the bandwagon, they know you’ll come crawling back when you want to shed a few pounds in the future. It’s a vicious cycle.

While Whole30 is extreme, it teaches you more about your body (and what it needs to stay nourished) than any other diet we’ve tried. And that’s something that lasts well beyond the 30 days.



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How Having a Pet Benefits Your Health

When returning home from work or any stressful activity, what a wonderful feeling it is to be greeted with love and happiness. Any pet owner knows how calming a feeling you get from hugging and petting your pet. There are many healthful benefits from owning a pet. There are no questions nor explanations to react to as your pet accepts you unconditionally. You can be rich or poor, ugly or beautiful, obese or skinny and you are accepted the way you are. How wonderful to feel accepted the way you are. There are several proven health benefits for people as mental,physical and emotional improvement to helping with social skills and even in decreasing a possibility of a heart attack.

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Have You Ever Questioned The Best Ways to Drop Weight Quickly?

The very best method to reduce weight is to lose it gradually in the very same method it was acquired which offers the body an opportunity to change and the skin to go back to it's initial shapes and size. There are methods of resolving weight issues that can assist to lose weight faster than others and there are some things to prevent too. Do you desire to lose weight quick, the majority of individuals do?

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The Difference Between BB, CC and DD Creams

With BB, CC and DD cream crowding the makeup shelves, gone are the days of simple foundation bottles as a make-up base. These beauty creams not only make it easier to apply them on the skin but are travel-friendly too, thus making you look gorgeous in minutes. However, with so many kinds of names in the market, it often becomes confusing as to the role of these creams. Let us see first what a BB cream does. BB creams were originally formulated in Germany in the 1960s by Dermatologist Dr. Christine Schrammek to help her patient's' skin in cases of facial peels and surgery. The creams were reintroduced in the Korean market 30 years later with several movie stars endorsing the products. These BB creams are an all-in-one solution for a blemish free, oil free makeup look without the cakey appearance.

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A Few Tips On Choosing The Right Diet Plan For Weight Loss

Are you looking to lose weight in a healthy and natural way? Are you flooded with fitness and diet plans from experts, friends and even from people who know nothing about losing weight? It does get quite frustrating at times when you keep getting unsolicited advice from almost everybody about weight loss, doesn't it? This is why it is important for you to know the right approach to losing weight. Some people work out for long hours at the gym but still don't knock off those extra kilos from their body. Ever wondered why? It is because they don't follow a proper diet plan. Being cautious about the food that you eat and avoiding fatty or oily food is just not enough anymore. You need to follow an accurate timetable, eat in small quantities at regular intervals and know your timings. How do you choose the right diet plan? Here are few tips that can help you in this regard.

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Is Isagenix The Best Weight Loss Program?

Isagenix is a supplement company that markets weight-loss products/programs. These products include meal replacement shakes, detox formulas and energy boosters. According to company information, there are no laxatives in any cleanse/detox formulas. This is a good because some laxatives can cause negative side effects. Some ingredients in Isagenix products have impressive clinical support, which extremely desirable when researching weight loss solutions.

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Why Ghosting on Someone Is a Totally Acceptable Move

The author, Mikayla, looking sly and smiling There’s a saying in my family, and by that I mean, there’s a saying that my family absolutely neither invented nor claims to have, but my mom said it that one time and so it totally counts, and that is, "People plan, and God laughs."

We so rarely become the people we think we will, right? Five years ago, I was a struggling actress, engaged to be married, and if you had told me then that five years in the future, I would be an elementary school teacher and single, I probably would have laugh-cried… because somewhere deep down, I knew that’s where my relationship with both my job and my fiancé were invariably headed.

I always envisioned myself as strong and whip-smart, confident, brutally honest—the kind of person who tells it like it is and isn’t afraid of confrontation. The kind of person who tells you if something is unflattering, even if you’ve obviously already spent a lot of money on it and are currently wearing it in a very public place… Look, I still think that jumpsuit is super cute, and I don’t care if it makes me look like a potato.

A potato wearing a jumpsuit that it clearly loves This potato is wearing a jumpsuit that totally makes it look like a potato. Illustration by the author, Mikayla Park. The kind of person who, after a date that didn’t set off any sparks, just flat-out tells the guy that she isn’t feeling it, instead of refraining from answering texts and avoiding emails and gently fading into the abyss… well, guess what? Most of the time, I’m not her. I’m the potato who never replied to tell you how my day was going.

Ghosting, in fact, sort of represents the larger ways in which I have failed to become that person I always aspired to be, and for that, I am actually wildly relieved. I didn’t even know about ghosting five years ago, when I became single. I was just this clueless 28-year-old who didn’t know anything about dating, because I’d spent my entire adult life in a bad relationship I can’t actually tell you about here, because the last time I did, I got a butthurt email from my ex.

For those of you who are unfamiliar, the term "ghosting" means you aren’t digging someone you went out with once or a few times or whatever, and instead of letting them know that you aren’t digging them, you simply never text them again. I get the hate for ghosting, I do. It feels irresponsible, rude, lazy... the list goes on. Ghosting is supposed to be this real moral issue, like it’s not okay to just disappear after a date, with nary an explanation, causing the other party confusion.

Ghosting was probably really hard in the olden days, amiright? The… milliner’s son or whatever asks you to go on a carriage ride, and if you’re not digging on his vibe, maybe you learn he’s a cat person or doesn’t have a lot of grain in his silo or something, it’s not like you can just never get your hat… re-hatted again. No, you would probably just suck it up and marry him, have 1,000 children, and die a few years later of scarlet fever, because there wasn’t enough grain in his silo to afford a doctor.

Two cocktails at a bar. One's trying to slip the other his number. I don't trust what's in that drink. Illustration by the author, Mikayla Park. Nowadays, however, if you are single and in your 30s like me, you’re probably on 5,000 dating sites, you’re double-booking yourself left and right, and you’ve stopped saving numbers in your phone, because your Cloud is full and you suspect that saving a bunch of contacts like F*ckboy and Weird Jeff has something to do with it. That’s modern dating, and I think ghosting is a natural byproduct of it, not a sign of callousness or thoughtlessness.

We aren’t beholden to the people we meet once over whiskey sours, thankfully, or we would all be crying over that guy from Tinder who seems really nice and even has a job and a car, but kind of sort of for some reason reminds you of that gross kid from high school and ughhhhh he seems really nice but you JUST CAN’T! And in the end, Are we not responsible for our own feelings? Ghosting should go like this: Person goes out on date. Person texts date the following day: How’s your day going? Person receives no reply. Person shrugs shoulders, perhaps says "bummer" to the mirror. Person goes back to swiping. It just doesn’t seem so complicated to me.

My mom used to tell me (another saying in our family, because my mother said it), "No one is thinking of your feelings; everyone is busy worrying about themselves." So if you were really digging on the person who didn’t text you back and can’t just go back to merrily swiping, go ahead and feel sad if someone ghosts on you… but let it be for your own sake, not because you have expectations of them. My advice, not based on personal experience at all: If someone you felt you really clicked with ghosts, go have a cry, eat a BLT, pop a Xannie, and binge-watch Ghost Adventures.

Your suffering should center around you, not the actions of someone else; suffering should be indulgent. Revel in that sh*t... then let it go, just like you need to let it go if someone doesn’t message you back. For a while there, on OkCupid (yeah, I’ve been single since that was a thing), I routinely failed to respond to messages from a particular gentleman whose face I happened to find unpalatable. One time, he sent another missive, saying: I know you read this. My premium subscription gives me read receipts, so I know you’re ignoring me.

I politely posited in response, Is not the entire premise of paying for read receipts to know when someone is ignoring you, so that you may more efficiently discern whether or not they’re interested?

He replied, Oh good, there you are. How’s your day going?

Gray Line Break

If you had told me five years ago that my failed acting career would prepare me for being single in my 30s, I would have punched you in the face. But I think how we handle ghosting has to do with how we handle rejection, and being an actor is all about rejection, which is why I think ghosting is maybe also related to the process of being an actor and trying to land a goddamn role.

If you spend a few months going out on 50 auditions, you’ll know what I mean: Try getting dressed up 50 times, making up 50 different excuses to leave work in the middle of the day, rehearsing 50 sets of lines over and over again, overanalyzing 50 different faces judging everything about you, going home, and waiting for 50 phone calls that never come. Do all that, then come back and cry to me about how that dude from Bumble who was definitely not his alleged 6’2″ never messaged you back. You won’t. You’ll be inured to the whole process.

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I know this is going to sound strange, because dating is supposed to be the most personal thing there is, but I actually think it’s the opposite, and so is acting, and this is why I feel the way I do. You want to know why you didn’t get the part? It wasn’t because you weren’t pretty enough, or thin enough, or good enough. It was because you reminded the casting director of a girl who broke his heart in middle school, or the producer has a cousin he really wants in the role instead, or you came in right before lunch and everyone was hangry and not even paying attention to you.

You can’t know someone after two drinks and a walk to your car any better than you can know someone in a five-minute audition. It never has anything to do with you. You don’t need someone’s feedback re: why a date didn’t do it for him; that does nothing for you. Dating, like art, is subjective. That’s why I don’t save numbers in my phone anymore, and I don’t mind when someone ghosts on me, and I’m definitely not going to read the comments section of this article; I just put my sh*t out there and then I let it go. I’m not sure if that sounds bitter, but to me, it feels like something gentler; the world works the way it works, some people will like my stuff, some people won’t. Unless the bearer of opinions is a cherished friend who’s telling you Yes, Mikayla, you really do look like a goddamn potato in that jumpsuit, the reasons people find to not dig you are irrelevant.

A bunch of angry spoons chases the potato, who's still wearing that dope jumpsuit. The spoons can say whatever they want, that jumpsuit is still excellent. Illustration by the author, Mikayla Park.

Dating is like trying flavors at Baskin Robbins and then just tossing those little spoons in the trash when you’re done, except it’s way less fun and more arduous, and sometimes a spoon climbs out of the trash and sends you a very long email about how inaccurate that satirical essay you published about your relationship was and how honest and kind he had always been to you and how he sincerely hopes you find peace with yourself someday.

If there’s any rule for ghosting, I think it might be this: If someone becomes sort of difficult to ghost on, as in, you are living with them or you share a dog with them or whatever, then maybe it’s no longer appropriate to incorporate ghosting as a means of escape. Otherwise, ghost away, even if just for efficiency’s sake. Your time is precious!

I would have loved to have ghosted on my ex, but the apartment lease was in my name. Of course, I really can’t talk about that.

Mikayla Park is a teacher/nonprofit creative person residing in the slums of Beverly Hills. Find her, and her two charming rescue dogs, everywhere at @mikaylapark.



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The 20-Minute Killer Pilates Sequence for a Crazy-Strong Core

Pilates is known for building a crazy-strong core, and since a strong core is the foundation for almost every bodyweight and strength exercise out there, give your abs some extra attention with this quick but killer 20-minute Pilates workout.

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These 10 moves are low impact, but that doesn't mean they're low effort. You'll perform each one very slowly and deliberately to strengthen every single muscle in your core, which is harder than it looks. But don't stress; this sequence is great for beginners and offers options to make certain moves harder as you get stronger. An exercise mat is optional. If you want to make one move (the WundaTwist) more challenging, grab two paper plates or a set of sliders. Then hit play to get started.

To recap: An exercise mat is optional. For the advanced WundaTwist, you'll need a set of paper plates or sliders.

Forearm Plank
WundaTwist (left)
Plié With Tick Tock Side Bend
WundaTwist (right)
Side Plank (right)
Parallel Squat (feet 4 inches apart)
Side Plank (left)
Rolling Like a Ball
Crisscross
Reverse Pilates Push-Up
Plank with Alternating Side Step
Down Dog With Leg Lift/Torso Rotation

Looking for more short and effective at-home workouts? Grokker has thousands of routines, so you’ll never get bored. Bonus: For a limited time, Greatist readers get 40 percent off Grokker Premium (just $9 per month) and their first 14 days free. Sign up now!



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How a Little S&M Helped Me Reclaim Sex After Trauma

The author, Jezmina, wearing a cute leather cat mask and playing with a piece of string I love dressing for my mood, so dressing for pleasure makes sense for me too. It all started when I sent him a photo of myself in a pair of blue suede chaps and nothing else. The photo was cropped so that much was left to the imagination, and his imagination certainly rolled from there. Soon he was texting me scenarios in which I was the wild cowgirl who needed taming (though not too much taming), and he was the one to do it through rigorous, intimate training routines. I delighted in taking on the role of the fantasy, a skill which I believed I honed through a diverse collection of lingerie, a love for flexibility training, and the ability to completely divorce my mind from my body. I was good at being a vessel, and just as I was settling into that habit with him, he asked, What do you fantasize about?

I typed back, Nothing.

Grief swarmed in me—I had revealed my damage.

I have probably had lovers ask before:What do you like? Do you like this? What are you into? However, it had felt cursory; I knew they had no real investment in my pleasure, whereas I was expected to balance and perform for theirs. Since I was 13, I had been buffeted through a string of abusive relationships—with some exceptions—and before that, I had a long and consistent history of childhood sexual abuse since I was 4. I have been raped, beaten, strangled, and tortured, and none of it seemed extraordinary to me at the time. My sense of my body, consent, and desires was warped by abuse, and I had grown accustomed to being used without permission. This partner, Vik, knew my history, and when he asked what I fantasized about, I understood that he was asking because he really wanted to know, because my pleasure mattered.

Now, through creativity, communication, trust, therapy, and great lube, I could make my experience my own.

When I first saw him, I was fresh off a plane, unshowered, and sleep-deprived. I shook his hand, finding a firm New England handshake to match my own, and thought, Oh no. I wasn’t prepared for him to be this attractive. It wasn’t long speaking him before I discovered his even, tranquil demeanor; perceptive intelligence; and a genuine empathy. After a time, we came together with a magnetism that woke up my entire body. It’s not fair to compare lovers, but my God, he was the best.

And though I felt safe and I felt desire, I still wanted to please rather than to know pleasure myself. His question sent me inward, through darkness. I revisited a book I picked up before my divorce for some guidance, Staci Haines’s Healing Sex: a Mind-Body Approach to Healing Sexual Trauma, which explores post-trauma sexuality through a workbook-style manual. There are many reasons why sexual trauma survivors may feel detached from their own pleasure, while others may be plagued by fantasies that feel disturbing or rooted in trauma. Haines validates each response without judgment, theorizing that periods of anhedonia, or the inability to feel pleasure; hypersexuality; fantasy; and no-fantasy are all stages that may return or dissipate, but are there for a purpose. They call for the survivor to pay attention to their individual body’s needs.

In Haines’ book, there’s a chapter entitled "S/M, Role-Playing, and Fantasy," which initially scared me off to the next chapter before I circled back around and decided to at least read it and learn something. That’s when I discovered that my previous experiences of what I believed to be power play were actually just abuse, and relieved to discover that real power play is predicated on communication, consent, safewords, awareness, and respect. Haines writes that many people, including survivors of abuse, celebrate "the safety… the power of negotiating sexual play, and the potential for sexual healing and self-empowerment through S/M" and power play. This thought floated back to me while I was texting Vik, and I realized that his fantasy was a power play scene, and that I liked it.

Seeing as how my initial response of "Nothing" was a bit of a show-stopper, and I wanted to keep exploring this, I texted back something along the lines of, "No one has really asked me that question before, and I don’t think I have fantasies of my own yet, but I’m enjoying this one of yours and I want to keep going with it."

I wish I could say that the sexy muse struck me and I came out with a slew of scenes in response to his "cowgirl who needs taming" scenario, but really, I made him do most of the work that day. It was new enough for me to ask questions like, "What would you do if I wouldn’t stay still? How would you tame me then?" These questions, however, were how I discovered that I got off on the idea of being rewarded for being "good," which first requires me to be "bad" for contrast. For me, this was huge. I could go into a psychological analysis of why I found it so gratifying to surrender, with consent, guidelines, and respect, to a lover’s scene, but I’m going to chalk it up to a deep and sensual expression of trust.

The author, Jezmina, wearing a cute leather cat mask and really flipping that male gaze on its head Try some options just for yourself at first, and then if you had fun, you might want to share some looks with others...

The more we outlined these scenes before we met, the more anticipation we created, and the clearer we were about each other’s desires. When we were together, we were already comfortable talking about sex, and so when changes or ideas came up in the moment, we knew how to communicate them and check in with each other. This allowed me to go deeper into the experience, and suddenly the word surrender meant something decadent and empowering.

But there was a slight hitch. For years, I had successfully hid the fact that for me, sex can be extraordinarily painful. I was with partners who simply didn’t care, or just as bad, who enjoyed hurting me. Not so with Vik. He noticed the small flinches, the expression in my eyes, and even internal changes when I was in pain. I explained to him that sex had always been painful no matter the position or speed, and I had no idea why, but I still wanted sex. "OK," he said. "But you need to go to a doctor. We need to know if you’re OK." Another first.

I went to the doctor, and after many exams, ultrasounds, and discussions, I learned that the marks of my past abuse were not only emotional. There were the health issues I already knew about—the endometriosis and cystic ovaries. But then the doctor revealed the masses of scar tissue, the damaged cervix, and the peculiar fact that my vaginal muscles were in a constant state of contraction. It is this latter issue that I can do something about. "It happens sometimes when a person is under a consistent threat of sexual trauma that the muscles lock in an effort to protect the body, and as a reaction to stress," the doctor told me, and she kindly congratulated me on my bravery for coming in and telling her my trauma history. "It’s because of your openness and self-preservation that I can help you. Countless women suffer in silence." Vik had prompted me, and that mattered a great deal; I may not have ever gone had he not suggested it. But ultimately, I valued my own pleasure enough that I decided to care for my body.

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I began physical therapy for pelvic pain, as well as an experimental treatment that involves administering valium internally. Or as I said to my best friend on the phone, "Turns out my pussy is like Fort Knox and now I gotta teach it to relax." Luckily, I’m a yoga teacher, and my physical therapy adventures in pelvic contractions and releases paired with stretches and exercise seemed like a lot of fun new tricks for me.

I asked my physical therapist what I should be doing during and before sex to ease the pain, and she said, "Ideally, you need to stretch for at least 20 minutes before you have sex, especially hip-openers. You need foreplay, and excellent lube, and if possible, an orgasm before penetration. Do you think your partner would be open to that?" I smiled from the table, heels together, knees apart, trying to relax my muscles around her gloved finger (as you do), and said, "Oh, I think that could be a lot of fun."

My next mission was for the best lube available to humanity, and for that, I went to Please in Brooklyn, NY. Work with my therapist at Safe Horizon and the podcast Speaking of Sex With the Pleasure Mechanics inspired me to sashay in and simply ask for what I needed. Speaking of Sex, if you aren’t familiar with it, is a fantastic show by the sex-therapist couple Chris Rose and Charlotte, and it’s geared toward all gender and sexual identities for creating a safe, informed, and ecstatically pleasurable sex life for everyone. I highly recommend it.

I was nervous when I walked into Please, but when I explained that I was looking for the best lube for vaginismus and pelvic injury, the shop assistant said, "Oh my gosh, I’m so glad you just came out and asked for what you need. I know exactly what to suggest." That recommendation was Sliquid Satin, a glycerin- and paraben-free lube that I can now say I’m all about.

It all started when I sent him a photo of myself in a pair of blue suede chaps and nothing else.

When I returned from my mission, I was electric with the optimism that maybe, after some work and pleasure, sex might not be painful, that I might have my own fantasies, and that I could actually do something to claim my body and my sexuality as my own. I was used to fear; flashbacks; dissociation; and sharp, gutting pain. Now, through creativity, communication, trust, therapy, and great lube, I could make my experience my own. While I still have memories surface, I still feel afraid, and I still feel pain on occasion, my recovery time is faster, and I’m better at grounding myself through exercises I’ve learned in therapy and the trust I’ve established with Vik.

A while ago, I texted him, "I have a very specific regimen for our next training session planned…" and spread my ideas out before him. When I was with him next, I told him how touched I was that he cared this much about my pleasure and safety, and he looked at me gravely.

"This is the absolute bare minimum you should expect from anyone," he said. And that’s true. Perhaps what I meant to express was gratitude to heal and revel in my sex life with a lover who also believes that sex should make our connections with others and ourselves better, more artful, more ecstatic. Now, with practice, I know when I want to slip on a lace bodysuit and roll out the yoga mat... and I can step into my heels, look him straight in the eye, and say so.



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9 Meal-Prep Recipes to Help You Get Mega Organized

How Can Bridal Makeup Transform You Into Stunning Beauty?

The wedding is certainly a very important life event. In most of the countries, this is considered as the most occasions of pomp and joy. People love to participate in the celebration as the gathering is full of enjoyment and pleasure. The wedding involves preparation of lots of things like buying outfits, managing guests, arranging photographers, booking of banquet halls, dresses, and several other things.

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Try Not to Tear Up as You Watch a Former Marathoner Lace Up One Last Time

Aging is a funny thing. We get smarter and wiser, but our bodies don’t always work the way they used to. And at some point we’re expected to acknowledge that our favorite things—running, lifting heavy weights, swimming in the open ocean—are too risky. Our bones are too brittle, and our loved ones are too worried.

That’s the basic premise of this moving video: A fictitious marathoner struggles to come to terms with how his body and mind are deteriorating while living in a retirement home. Eugene Merher, a German film student, created the 100-second mock advertisement for class, but after watching, we’d be surprised if we don’t see this on TV soon.



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Why Screwing Up Your New Year's Resolutions Could Change Your Life for the Better

At the start of December 2015, I was preparing for my full transformation into an organized, energized achiever. The me I'd been my whole life—the woman who wore perpetually hot sauce-stained jeans and had developed a charming rash of unknown origin on her left ankle—would step aside, and let a kitten-heeled, Economist-reading, compost-making goddess take the reins. She'd be capable and organized, and I bet she could whip up a holistic remedy for that rash too.

I suspected that this transfer of power would be a hostile takeover, so I spent the better part of the month preparing myself for the challenge. I mapped out the life I wanted for myself, writing down more than 100 resolutions across fourteen categories. My goals ranged from the grandiose (write a memoir!) to the mundane (organize the apartment!).

In Google Drive, I created my own utopia, with pie charts to map my progress, a color-coded daily schedule, and fourteen folders full of possibilities. Go ahead, check out a few of my completely achievable life goals for 2015:

RESPONSIBLE LIVING

Screwing Up Resolutions Chart 1

1. Take an online class on sustainability.

2. Make my own toothpaste (cross-check with "Physical Self" folder for how many times per week you're supposed to brush your teeth).

3. Start an online magazine about sustainable travel.

4. Figure out what sustainable travel actually is.

5. Make compost.

Dividing Line

PHYSICAL SELF

Screwing Up Resolutions Chart 2

1. Become a yoga teacher.

2. Go to yoga two times in a row without feeling like you're dying.

3. Wear more red lipstick (cross-check with "Sustainability" folder for vegan makeup brands with recycled packaging).

4. Make your own clothes.

5. Find all the buttons missing from three of your coats (cross-check with "Home" folder for where the f*ck those buttons might be).

6. Learn how to sew on a button without massive blood loss.

Some of the resolutions were more poignant. Another folder was full of longing for closeness with my clan, which was—and remains—spread across three continents.

Dividing Line

FAMILY

Screwing Up Resolutions Chart 3

1. Call grandma in Russia once a week.

2. Take guitar lessons with Dad over Skype.

3. Plan a trip to see Cousin Anya in Amsterdam before she has the baby.

Dividing Line

With so many hours spent anticipating the enormous successes that were just around the corner, New Year's Eve felt miraculous. "Bring it," I whispered as the clock struck twelve. And the next morning, I got to work: I clung to my schedule, ticking off boxes of fulfilled obligations. My apartment was practically spotless, I went to yoga, I signed up for an online course entitled "Introduction to Sustainability," I called my mom almost every day, and I started a new editing job. I even made my boyfriend breakfast, although it was admittedly a kind of pumpkin mush that he could only describe as "not soup." The first few weeks were promising... at least on paper.

How I actually felt was a different story. Obsessing over getting through my daily to-do lists, I barely left my apartment. Unplanned meetings with friends or long meandering walks were out of the question. I called my grandma out of obligation, usually as I hurried to a yoga class. Keeping the apartment spotless left no time for lipstick or kitten heels. I was stressed and disconnected, feeling only the occasional jolt of relief when the day was over, never in the process of actually performing the tasks I'd decided were so important.

Week by week, I began to slide into a full-on, slow-motion resolutions failure. It was like tripping on the sidewalk, taking an embarrassing, wobbly five steps, then hitting the pavement full force. Within nine weeks, the pie charts and the schedule were abandoned. Yoga soon followed, as did the “Introduction to Sustainability” course, as well as any attempts at homemaking.

I'm still afraid that they don't know the real me, and one day they'll discover that the person they love is actually twelve weasels in a Masha costume.

Having invested so much time, energy, and hope into this transformation, I felt devastated and guilty. Why did sticking to my resolutions feel just as terrible as abandoning them? Why in the world was there no joy in becoming who I wanted to be?

In the many months since, I've spent a lot of time trying to figure out why my plan failed so miserably. I read books like Anita Moorjani's Dying To Be Me, Wayne Dyer's Inspiration: Your Ultimate Calling, and poured over Louise Hay's website. I also tried meditation, and while that usually just turned into naptime, it also gave me space for introspection. In the end, I learned that my color-coded schedule was jinxed from the get-go. Basically, if my gigantic Near Year's Eve resolution had been a building, it would have been condemned before I lay down the first brick.

Screwing Up Resolutions Aside from the fact that my New Year's resolutions actively violated laws of time and physics, my biggest obstacle was this: I believed that once I became a person worthy of accepting, then I would accept myself. It seems logical, but there's a catch—if I believed that I didn't deserve to feel good, then how could I ever feel good? If I didn't matter, then nothing I did could matter, either.

Once I made this realization, I looked to see which of my resolutions were jeopardized by a lack of self-love. The answer was "many." One of the most raw and painful realizations came when I looked at my relationships. My family has always been on my side, offering support and love no matter what was going on in my life. But I still don't talk to them as often or as intimately as I want to. Why? Because I'm still afraid that they don't know the real me, and one day they'll discover that the person they love is actually twelve weasels in a Masha costume.

This imposter feeling has kept me from my friends too. I convinced myself they were better off without me, despite their loving emails and phone calls. The feeling kept me from pursuing my writing, from experimenting with photography, making collages out of tissue paper... and a million other things. And that feeling has been my companion for a very long time.

One thing I do love about myself is my resilience. Once I untangled the mess I had made of my resolutions, I came up with a new plan, a better plan, with just one resolution for 2017: accept my value as a human being, just the way I am.

Why did sticking to my resolutions feel just as terrible as abandoning them?

So how does one go about learning to accept herself? I had no f*cking idea, so I began by accepting my love for ticking off boxes and making lists. I swapped out my folders of cross-posted resolutions for a small notebook, where every day, I write down the things that made me feel good, self-loving actions that I took, and any evidence I found that the universe doesn't hate me.

Sometimes it's really easy fill in the blanks: a friend paying me a compliment, buying myself flowers, receiving praise at work. Other days, I really have to scrape the bottom of the barrel ("took a shower" has made it on the list a few times) but without fail, every time I add something to the list, I feel better.

I've made small shifts that feel big. I tossed a pair of boots that looked great but made me want to chop off my feet to stop the pain. I leave parties the second I'm bored, raising a few eyebrows in the process. I've started to open up to my family about my feelings of inadequacy. Sometimes the most loving thing I can do is turn down a fun offer because finishing my work feels better than playing hooky. Sometimes I blow off work for an afternoon cuddle with my boyfriend and our cat. Anytime a panicked voice screams, "But what about all the things!" I remind myself that as far as self-improvement goes, my only job is to do what feels good.

I've also stopped defending myself. A year ago, had my boyfriend made an accurate observation about me being messy, I would have made him sit through a presentation on why that's simply not true. These days, I gleefully respond with a "yep!" as I fish cookie crumbs out of my bra. It's incredibly liberating.

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My coats are still buttonless, I'm still using store-bought toothpaste, and I have come to accept that I will simply never make compost. But I did do some amazing things this year: I visited my cousin in Amsterdam and got to see bright tulip fields from the air, and I started teaching a writing class that has brought me more joy than I could have imagined… plus, I finally figured out the cause of that rash on my ankle. Ironically, the culprit was the desk chair where I had spent weeks planning out all of my failed resolutions. I’d sat there the same way every day, with one leg tucked under me, my ankle rubbing against the chair's edge day after day. In chasing down an idealized version of myself on paper, I had left my actual, imperfect, real self bruised and rash-covered. So I traded in the chair for a floor cushion, where I can sit cross-legged in front of a coffee table, a purring cat in my lap... and I feel so much better.



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I Replaced Drinking With Running, but the Results Weren’t What You’d Think

For a while there, obsessing over every detail of running—from mile split times to foam roller techniques—allowed me to ignore what was going wrong with my life. At one point, I did nothing but work and run. I was grumpy on rest days, and positively euphoric after weekend 20 milers. Perhaps I thought that if I ran far enough, I would actually find happiness. But I found that it isn’t enough to do something that’s perceived as a "healthy" activity… you also have to be performing that activity for healthy reasons.

Eighteen months ago, I moved to Paris, France, to begin the next stage of my career. While this may sound terribly glamorous, my first months weren’t taken up with long picnics on the banks of the Seine or checking out masterworks at the Louvre.

It turns out that it’s nearly impossible to rent an apartment in Paris without first providing three months of French pay stubs… which of course you can’t have until you’ve been working there for three months. This Catch-22 forced me to spend my paychecks—and nearly every waking moment—moving from hotels to hostels to overpriced AirBnBs, frantically emailing people in a second language, and trying not to get scammed by weirdos on Craigslist. Wine, cheese, and the Edith Piaf museum would have to wait.

The work I had moved to Paris for was very rewarding, but ultimately lonely. I was working with children, which was wonderful, but also meant that I spent full days chatting exclusively with the under-10 set. This made me feel like I wasn’t getting any social nourishment; my work didn’t introduce me to any adults I could try to befriend, or even just have the occasional grown-up conversation with.

My life had no balance; I had no enjoyment other than putting one foot in front of the other.

I'm hardly an extrovert, and have always relied on my friends to introduce me to other people. If I had looked harder (or um, at all), I'm sure there were plenty of expat meetups I could have attended, or French-English conversational groups I could have joined. But new social situations intimidate me; to be honest, I probably wouldn’t have gone even if someone had pressed a flyer for a "New in Town English Speakers’ Meet-and-Greet Event" right into my hand.

I had a history of relying on alcohol as a social lubricant to ease my anxieties about interacting with people, especially new ones. So it wasn’t a massive leap to find a new role for drinking in my life; I took easily to the feeling of numbness that alcohol could bring, and the way it could stop my negative internal monologue.

I Stopped Drinking and Started Running, But I Was More Miserable Than Ever My days became very simple: I would get up, go to work, come home, and then drink until I passed out. Some nights I would feel enlivened and would play some music—the early 2000s indie hits undoubtedly annoyed my neighbors—and dance around my tiny apartment. Some nights I would sink into the sofa and cry between gulps.

Staying in touch with old friends from home became the only thing that kept me going. I don't know if any of them knew anything was wrong, but some of them probably suspected it; after all, I was supposed to be living the high life in a new, amazing city, not pinging them on Facebook messenger all day.

I can't really say why I decided to do it, but one night, I asked an old friend, a nurse, for some advice about problem drinking. At this point, I didn't really need any confirmation that what I was doing wasn’t good for me, and the validation she provided was hardly what you’d call a comfort, but by sharing this thought and agreeing that something needed to be done, I felt bound to my friend to honor my word.

In the end, I realized that I had just swapped one obsession for another.

This is how I found myself sitting in AA a couple of weeks before my 23rd birthday. Although I knew I was taking a positive step toward regaining control of my life, I also felt despair about how I had gotten to this point. When it came to the sharing part of the session, I just wanted to break down in tears. The stories the others had shared—primarily about their years of sobriety and how they had turned their lives around—were inspiring, but also really daunting.

Having given up my main pastime, I decided I needed something new to keep me busy. I had been a runner in college and had completed my first marathon a year earlier, but I felt out of practice. I knew that exercise would benefit me, and give me some structure and purpose... and so started my next addiction.

I would spend my evenings pouring over running websites for tips, training plans, and nutritional advice. I ate the same three meals per day: fruit and yogurt in the morning, pasta with vegetables and boiled eggs for lunch, and a lentil curry for dinner. Every day, no meat, no sugar, no fun. I would allow myself a small treat or two a week, but gradually felt more and more guilty about it.

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I began to use running as an excuse to not address any of the other problems in my life. Not happy with your job? Well, the hours are pretty good to fit a running schedule around. Still not made any friends? Eh, they’re not worth the accompanying late nights that might mess up the running schedule.

Did I get into fantastic shape? Absolutely. But I was unhappy with everything in my life aside from my running progress, and was honestly no less miserable than I had been a few months earlier, when I’d been drinking myself to sleep. My life had no balance; I had no enjoyment other than putting one foot in front of the other.

Nearing the end of my contract with my employer, I decided not to stay in Paris. When I came home, unemployed, one of the first things I decided to do was compete in a 48-mile ultra-marathon, but I had to drop out after 30 miles due to recurrent knee problems. After that disappointment, I decided to put my running shoes away and think about what had gone wrong.

While running is certainly better for your body than over-drinking, pouring all your energy into one activity as a way to ignore other problems in your life isn’t a solution. In the end, I realized that I had just swapped one obsession for another. I Stopped Drinking and Started Running, but I Was More Miserable Than Ever Lately, I’ve decided to drink again. Yes, sometimes I have too much, but I am conscious of not letting it become a problem. And I’m running again too. Not as frequently as before, not as far, and not as fast, but I enjoy it. I chose to challenge myself again and have moved to another new city, but this time, I’ve made the effort to create a network of friends to explore the city and go out to dinner with. Am I happy? I’m happier. It’s not like I’ve had some earth-shattering revelations and become enlightened or anything grand-scale like that, but I’ve learned that a great 5K time doesn't make you happy the way that having a well-rounded life does, and I’m grateful to be where I am.



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The Resolution You Need to Make Before Setting Other Goals, Otherwise You’ll Fail Miserably

The Resolution You Need to Make Before Setting Other Goals, Otherwise You'll Fail Miserably

A few years ago my client Sara came to me mid-January and said, “My resolution is that by next year I can finally make a resolution other than lose weight.”

I asked her why she didn’t just make a different resolution this year, and she said it was because she really, really needed to lose 20 pounds first. I asked Sara how long she had been making the same resolution to lose the same 20 pounds, and after thinking about it, she answered, “About 15 years.” Then she grabbed her belly, looked me dead in the eye, and said, "This just needs to go away.”

Many people think getting motivated to reach a goal requires this kind of tough-love shaming. It's the basis for most fitness and fat-loss advertising, and we see it everywhere. Today’s no-excuses fitness memes are just the updated version of a drill sergeant screaming in your face. They both operate under the assumption that you need to be shamed into improving.

Despite the fact that studies have shown shame has a negative effect on motivation, most people continue to use it when they set goals. This creates a vicious cycle: People use shame to motivate their goals, but shame decreases motivation, which means most fail to reach their goal, and then end up with... ? You guessed it: more shame.

By the time Sara walked into my gym that day, she had 15 years of heavy shame weighing down her goal to lose weight. I flat out told her she was going to fail again if she kept the same goal and suggested she make her goal forgiveness for not having lost it yet.

“That's all you want me to do?” she asked dubiously. I laughed, because, yes. That’s it.

I told Sara that next year if she wanted to put "lose weight” back on her resolution list, I would not only support her, but I would make sure she finally succeeded. This year, though, she needed to focus on forgiveness and compassion. Sara balked, admitting she was afraid to let go. Why? Because she felt that her resolution was the only thing keeping her from blowing up like a balloon and gaining even more weight.

Maybe this sounds familiar to you: Year after year you have the same goal. Each year it gets harder to believe you’ll ever accomplish it, and each year you feel more shame that it goes unaccomplished.

Reframing Your Resolution

Trying harder is not the solution. Making resolutions from a place of shame will always end in failure. The way to make a resolution that will actually stick is to let it go for a while and work on forgiving yourself for being where you are. Eventually you can swing back to pursuing your goal. But if you want to succeed, it has to come from a place of compassion.

Making resolutions from a place of shame will always end in failure.

I’ll admit, this action plan is easier said than done. Finding self-compassion is a difficult quest, and the idea of forgiving yourself for being in an undesirable situation can seem outright laughable. But while it might take a lot more self-reflection and exploration than counting calories and drinking green juices, compassion and forgiveness are the secret pathways to successful goal setting in any area of your life. Here’s how to get started.

1. Explore your dissatisfaction with compassion, not shame.

Start by identifying the area where you’re stuck or dissatisfied in your life and approach it with compassion. This step can be difficult for people like Sara, who felt sure that shame about her weight was the only thing standing in the way of gaining more weight.

It takes a lot of courage, patience, and self-reflection to release the belief that self-shaming is helping you stay in control. If you struggle with this step, I encourage you to honestly examine how that tactic has worked for you so far. Has it helped you reach your goals? Are you ready to try a new way?

2. Forgive yourself.

Once you’re able to embrace compassion instead of shame, it’s time for the most important step: Figure out how to forgive yourself for being where you are right now. I sometimes call this step shame-busting. While shame-busting looks different for everyone, it’s often painful and utterly fraught with emotional baggage. Be prepared to face your demons and don’t be afraid to reach out for support during this phase.

Shame-busting requires two things: acceptance of the objective facts and willingness to subjectively reframe those facts in a more self-loving way. People often think they're accepting the facts when they shame themselves, but they're not.

Start by getting super clear on the actual facts. Separate your subjective stories (for instance, "I’m lazy and need to get in shape") from the facts ("This is my body today") and work to accept the literal truth of where you are. Don't be surprised if your objective list is short: You are here, in this body, right now. Try looking in the mirror every morning and repeating to yourself, "This is what I look like today."

You also need to reframe the subjective stories you tell yourself about how you got here, why you’re here, and what that means about who you are. The story you’ve believed so far is entirely subjective and must be rewritten to be kinder and more self-loving. It can be helpful to talk to people who love you. Tell them what you're working on reframing and ask for their help.

3. Ask yourself, “What if this were a gift?”

I know this sounds crazy—how could an extra 20 pounds be a gift?! Bear with me. Search for the gift in your struggle. You might be surprised to find that staying stuck has protected you from something you weren’t yet ready to handle, or that the change you’ve been trying to make actually goes against one of your highest values.

After weeks of contemplation and journaling, Sara came in one day with an answer to that question. Through tears, she told me that the extra weight she carried protected her from unwanted male attention, and that she was terrified of what would happen if she lost it and became (in her words) “traditionally attractive.” She also said that other women saw her as nonthreatening, because she wasn't skinny. The weight had helped attract a great number of kind and supportive women into her life. In short, those 20 pounds truly were a gift, and her subconscious was reluctant to part with them.

This is how rewriting your story gives you the opportunity to forgive yourself. Sara began to see that no matter how hard she tried to lose weight, she was always going to fail, because she valued safety and connection too highly.

No matter what your shame-based resolution might be, I assure you there is a very good reason you haven’t accomplished it yet. There always is. Once you find that reason, you will also find compassion and forgiveness, and be able to see the real work that needs to be done in order to move forward. For Sara, that work meant learning to feel safe in her skin, healing from an old trauma that made her believe male attention was dangerous, and trusting that losing weight wouldn’t drive away the female connections she held so dear.

Compassion and forgiveness aren’t only useful for getting you unstuck; you can also use them to help you set goals from the get-go. Ask yourself what gift your habit has been and offer yourself a replacement before attempting your goal.

Take smoking cigarettes, for example. If smoking offers you stress relief and common ground with friends, you’re going to need to adopt some new habits to fight stress and social awkwardness before your subconscious will let go of smoking.

By goal-setting from a place of compassion and forgiveness, you'll be armed with the tools you need to actually succeed.



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How to Get Over Your Fear of the Gym and Crush Your Health Goals

I know the story. You want to be about that fitness life 24/7, but you're ashamed of something everything, and you're paralyzed by that.

I get it. I've been there too. But to hell with that! Being terrified to walk into a gym is no reason to miss out on the unlimited value of being active. It's time for you to live up to your full badass potential! Here are my four foolproof ways to overcome guilt and shame associated with the gym so you can strut in there like you own the place and throw down on your health goals like a boss.

How to Get Over Your Fear of The Gym and Crush Your Health Goals

1. Ignore the 5 Percent

We have a tendency to assume everyone is worried about our perceived shortcomings—weight, age, gender, appearance, whatever. They must be saying, “I’d kill myself if I were as fat as her," "Gross, all these gay dudes are trying to take over the weights," and "God, there are just some things women shouldn’t do!”

You’re right. People do think these things. Some even have the audacity to say them. But what’s wrong with this line of thinking is that it leaves out what actually matters.

Let’s say your gym has 100 people in it. Because the universe hates you that day, five people say some extra foul sh*t to your face. You take their words to heart and run away from your health goals. But hang on. Do you hear what the other 95 people are saying?

*Silence*

They aren’t saying anything. They’re too busy fantasizing about waffles to care about you. They don’t hate you; they hate the StairMaster. Those evil looks are because you aren’t a pile of Five Guys fries (f*cking delicious-ass fries, BTW). Does it make any sense for the ignorant 5 percent to dictate 100 percent of your activities? (The answer is no.)

2. Ask for Help

Gym machines are on crack these days. Not only can they track your workout stats, but they can also guestimate your credit score, discover new dinosaur bones, and bake a fresh loaf of sourdough. It would be damn near impossible for a newbie not to be confused. And where there’s confusion, there’s embarrassment.

Gym machines are on crack these days. Not only can they track your workout stats, but they can also guestimate your credit score, discover new dinosaur bones and bake a fresh loaf of sourdough.


Lucky for you, most gyms have a great solution: a personal trainer. Before you start bitching and moaning about how much they cost, hear me out.

Option one: You bust it alone for months in all the wrong ways and seriously damage your body.

Option two: You schedule two or three sessions with someone who actually knows what a triceps is. They also teach you how to use equipment properly and efficiently. Wow! You’ll be amazed how much a little bit of knowledge can drive your confidence.

Hell, many gyms even offer a session or two for free with your membership. But even if they don’t, spending $200 on a trainer versus $20,000 in corrective surgery? C’mon, son. Hire a pro.

3. Get a Squad

There are three essential players you need in your get-fit squad: an asshole friend, a cheat-meal friend (CMF), and a you’ll-always-be-hot cheerleader.

The asshole friend is your trainer. And even though they'll be a pain, trainers are awesome (refer back to point No. 2).

Your CMF is your homie who drags themself to class with you and brings an extra hair tie. They’re also right next to you in line at Chipotle after class. You don’t go all the time, but when the carnitas call, your CMF doesn't throw shade. Extra guac and cheese? Only to balance out the extra five reps you both put in. Would your trainer approve of it? Nope, and that’s why you don’t have cheat meals with your trainer.

Just as important as the CMF is the you’ll-always-be-hot cheerleader. Mine is my boyfriend. He understands even divas aren't confident 24/7, so he’ll randomly snatch a big handful of ass to remind me that he loves that thang just the way it is. Until I meet said boyfriend, I throw on my highest pair of heels and marvel at my quads in the mirror. Dayum.

4. Be Someone Else’s Umbrella

Actor, singer, and poet Daniel Beaty once said, "Be all of you, so all of us can heal."

When all else fails, here's another reason to be yourself: Somewhere out there is someone who needs a role model. They desperately want permission to be their beautifully flawed selves, but they don't think they can withstand the sh*tstorm society throws at them.

You can be the person someone else looks up to. Don't dilute your personality to make it more palatable. F*ck that. Be all of you. Someone—maybe even someone you've never met—needs to see you in your circus freakhood and circus-freak struggle. Your freakhood is someone else's umbrella. Let them stand under it.

Above all, never forget your inherent value; the fact that you—right now, for real, no lie—are worthy of anything, especially getting to the gym and crushing every one of your health and fitness goals.


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Why You Might Want to Delete Your Fitness App, Even If It Works

Why I Deleted MyFitnessPal, Even Though It Worked I had mastered the art of feigning attention. I’d nod, lean forward, and open my eyes wide with interest, but the world felt blurry, almost underwater, as though everyone were speaking in the trombone voices of adults in Peanuts. Numbers were the only thing I paid attention to anymore, and they stacked on top of each other pristinely, forming a pyramid.

"One hundred for oatmeal," I’d think, flipping through my mental record of every calorie I’d encountered since waking up. "One hundred for Greek yogurt, maybe 50 for raspberries… let’s say 300 total, including that drizzle of honey."

I would then start planning what I’d have for lunch, accounting for every variable: Am I working out today? Will I walk home or take the subway? I’ve always preferred light dinners, but they became a game of guessing how low I could limbo to stay under my calorie cap.

The author smiling and looking to the right The author smiling and looking to the right

It started at the beginning of summer. I wasn’t feeling my best; while I hadn’t exactly put on hibernating-bear levels of weight that winter, I was carrying 10 pounds that I felt I could do without. Visions of morning runs along the Charles River and mile-long walks to Trader Joe’s danced in my head, and I was looking forward to trimming down a little and feeling healthier overall.

So I chose a number—a reasonable-for-my-body 125 pounds—and became determined to get there.

Let it be said that nutrition and exercise are not new to me. In middle school, I became a vegetarian overnight after reading about how meat is produced. That pushed me to choose mindfully and think about the big picture of my diet. Empowered to learn more about food, I picked up a copy of Nutrition Action magazine, eagerly flipping through reports on sugar intake and FDA regulations. (Totally normal reading material for a middle schooler, right)? Within days of unpacking my bags as a freshman at Stanford, I found out about a major called Human Biology, and that was it: I signed on for four years of study about macronutrients and public health.

You would think that a health fanatic wouldn’t need help in the weight loss department. If you’ve written countless well-researched papers about everything from pedometers to the benefits of vitamin B12, you should probably know what comprises a healthy diet.

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But using a calorie counter was just so appealing. The hard-and-fast logic of numbers felt much more scientific than simply choosing salads over sandwiches and crossing my fingers that it’d work out. With a system like this—I chose MyFitnessPal out of the myriad options available—you’re presented with a number of calories you’re allowed to hit in a day, a button that lets you add them up, and a reminder to stop when you get to zero. Easy.

I found the sensation of tracking my every move really satisfying. And recording all of my meals and snacks, then seeing their nutritional value in black-and-white numbers, was a genuinely effective tool that helped me make better choices overall. Through using the app, I realized that my morning oatmeal didn’t need six different toppings, that grabbing a free bagel at work wasn’t really satisfying enough to justify the calories… and that french fries add up really quickly. (Ditto for the free chips that absentmindedly disappear before your tacos arrive.)

Within a few months, I lost the weight I’d wanted to. I ate smarter portions and consumed less sugar, and I was a pro at balancing out my protein, fat, and carb intake. Even with a degree in nutrition, it was the app that brought this knowledge into my daily choices.

Food isn’t math. Food is chemistry, food is fuel, food is strength.

But the game of consistently staying under 1400 calories unlocked a part of myself that I don’t like to encourage. It’s the same part that drives me to clear out drawers and obsessively organize what’s left. It feels a strong pull toward right angles and pristinely empty countertops. It’s a part of me that creates strict schedules and feels out of control when life gets in the way of them.

The calculations consumed me. There were days when I wasn’t paying attention at work, or I’d skip out on social gatherings because I couldn’t sacrifice the calories in my diary. On top of that, life took a complicated turn: I hurt my knee while running and had to trade in gym sessions for physical therapy. At the same time, my long-term relationship with my live-in boyfriend was coming to an emotional end. While my issues with food by no means caused the end of my relationship, it’s safe to say that the same thread of anxiety wove through both, and it was terrifying to know that I had to find a new home, a new lifestyle, and a new relationship with myself… all at the same time.

I decided to use the tough transition as a fresh start. I moved into a new apartment, put my gym membership on hold, and focused on how I was feeling, rather than how I was tracking. I got back in touch with what my body needed and wanted, rather than living by a numerical boundary. After a month of data-free living, I accepted that calorie counting doesn’t fit my personality for the long haul.

And amazingly, I kept the weight off anyway. Through fitness tracking, I’d learned the incredibly valuable skill of truly understanding serving sizes (I see you and your giant cups, Yogurtland). But I also drove myself into anxiety-ridden mental calculations (walnuts are no fun to eat when you’re counting up halves). I’d let myself get to a point where I’d be angry at myself if I went even one calorie over the limit. I didn’t feel healthy when I was pedaling away on the elliptical until the screen hit a magic number that would "earn" me an afternoon snack.

The author and a friend jumping up and flashing peace signs at a Pride event

While I still believe that a food diary has its benefits, I don’t recommend it as a long-term behavior. Once you learn what the numbers look like and how to efficiently fill your dietary needs, maybe you’re ready to delete the app entirely.

Food isn’t math. Food is chemistry, food is fuel, food is strength. Yes, we often consume too many calories, but that does not leave us with one option of treating food as calories alone. A calorie is a calorie, but some calories come in the form of protein, some of sugar. One hundred calories of banana bring your body much-needed fiber and potassium, and 350 calories of bagel are, well… not much of anything, nutritionally. (But they sure taste good on occasion). Only when we truly understand the value and purpose of food will we develop a positive relationship with it.

These days, I rely on my yoga practice to stay active and be in tune with my body. Using physical, rather than mental, cues has helped guide me toward healthy choices without requiring calculations. Yesterday, I balanced in crow pose for the first time, and as I was floating up on my arms, feeling powerful, I felt a sense of achievement that a calorie-counting app could never record.

Christie is a Seattle-based freelance writer with a deep interest in why we are the way we are, and how we can be a little bit better. She's an LA native, Stanford graduate, relentless vegetarian, and coffee enthusiast. Follow her on Twitter @ChristieBrydon and Instagram @woweezow33.



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9 Dinner Salads That Won’t Leave You Hungry

How to Lose Weight Without Giving Up Carbs and Booze

I’m going to make an important list, and I suggest you take notes.

  1. Dessert
  2. Carbs
  3. Alcohol
  4. Eating after 8 p.m.
  5. Sugar—of any kind
  6. _____________

What else can you add that you've been told is bad? Maybe dairy, gluten, or non-organic foods?

Pencil

Have your list? Good. This is a painting of your life. How does it look to you? A work of art? Something that makes you smile? Maybe that’s how some of you feel, but most of you don't like the way it looks. And that's a good thing.

Because that is a list of all the things I want you to keep in your life in 2017.

Confused? Don’t worry, I'm not drunk on leftover eggnog. I’m trying to break you of the mindset that does much more harm than good. The diet industry lives in an ocean of body negativity, twisted science, and behavioral Russian roulette. Step into the wrong extreme behavior, and who knows what the long-term consequences might be. I've watched far too many people start out innocently wanting to lose a few pounds in the New Year and come out frustrated and angry at themselves.

Not cool. Not fair. Not something I'm willing to stand for anymore. And you shouldn’t either.

Diet, nutrition, and any other food-related topic shouldn’t feel like Mission: Impossible. After all, this is food we’re talking about. The stuff you need to eat every day, and the stuff you should be enjoying as part of the many joys in life. I don’t care if it’s biting into a juicy steak, enjoying some pasta, or smiling between every bite of your dessert—food should be enjoyed. And I blame the diet industry for making you believe anything to the contrary.

I don’t care if it’s biting into a juicy steak, enjoying some pasta, or smiling between every bite of your dessert—food should be enjoyed.

This January, I want you to try something different. Call it a rebellion, a revolution, or just a renaissance, but we’re taking back food and enjoyment and reinventing it with a practical, scientifically supported approach to eating, living, and being healthier. I won’t make any promises, but if you choose this approach, you won’t return next January with the same frustration.

I know you're probably thinking: “Why should I trust the man offering desserts? Sounds like a scam.” But I make a living designing fitness and nutrition for real life. That means including foods you love, creating workouts that fit your schedule, and never ever ever setting false expectations.

So let’s start with a different New Year’s checklist:

  • No juice cleanses
  • No expensive supplements
  • No restrictive approaches that will leave you miserable and reaching for every food you miss
  • No four-week fixes

The Willpower Equation

Everyone likes to talk about willpower—and for good reason: It’s a real thing that influences your ability to take on tasks. But your willpower is limited. For real. The area of your brain that controls your willpower is located in your prefrontal cortex (you might remember this from biology as the area directly behind your forehead). It’s the same part of your brain that helps you with day-to-day tasks—everything from short-term memory to focus.

The prefrontal cortex is busy at all times. So whenever you take on a new behavior—especially one as big as getting in shape, exercising, and eating better—it’s like having a massive project dropped in your lap and being told everyone else in the office is too busy to help.

The result is that new actions can be very (very) hard to execute. In fact, it’s more than your brain can handle, meaning you default to old or undesirable behaviors.

Here’s how manipulative your brain can be. In a well-known study, two groups were given a number to remember. One group needed to remember a two-digit sequence, whereas the other needed to remember seven digits (both short-term memory tasks). The two groups walked down a hallway where they were presented an option of snacks: fruit salad or chocolate cake.

What happened? Those who had to remember the seven-digit sequence were two times more likely to dig into cake instead of opting for fruit.

Researchers refer to this as "cognitive load." The more space you’re taking up in the prefrontal cortex, the harder it is to make certain decisions. That’s why you need to prepare accordingly, so you have enough willpower to take on new tasks.

This is one of the reasons resolutions are such a flawed concept. If you’re trying to change 10 behaviors at the same time, it’s nearly impossible to succeed.

Quote

Start Simple

Most people love checklists because it feels awesome to cross off items and feel accomplished. The accomplishment part is great. The long list? Not so much. Whether or not you realize it, you’re laying the foundation for failure.

Success depends on consistency more than anything. So instead of asking, “What do I want to accomplish?” ask, "What’s the easiest thing I can do every day that will help me toward my goal?”

The "every day" part is important, because we’re shifting your mindset away from nuanced, difficult tasks to practical, doable ones. When you do good, you feel good. Success breeds success, and that creates habit. And habit makes everything easier. That’s the real goal: making change feel almost too easy.

If you swear off alcohol and then go out with your friends the first weekend in January, you might feel torn: Stay with your goal or break it? Do what you love or do what you feel is necessary to succeed?

Those are not questions you want to be faced with. At least, not initially. Instead you want to create a different construct. Start with simpler tasks you can master. For example:

  • I will eat vegetables twice per day.
  • I will sleep at least seven hours per night.
  • I will drink two glasses of water with every meal.
  • I will go to the gym three times during the week.

You could list endless habits that are designed to build behaviors. But start with one task and one only. Go slow to go fast. Trust me on this one. You do not need to eat chicken and broccoli for every meal, every day. You’ll thank me come April when you’re still kicking ass, instead of jumping off the wagon before January is even over.

Making change is hard. No one wants to admit it, but it’s true. So don’t make it harder by creating too many goals at once or by focusing on goals that seem like scaling a mountain instead of going for a walk. You’ll get to the mountain, but it’s better to build up momentum.

Quote 2

Make It Easy on Yourself

The other key is to leave room for imperfection. Let's say your goal is: “I will go to the gym three times during the week." Setting a goal of three times should not be your goal if you think that's the maximum amount you'll be able to go per week. Because if you're slammed at work and only make it to the gym once, you'll feel like you've failed.

Since you want to create behaviors that are easy, seamless, and become habitual, you might want to set a goal of two times per week. Declare that it will happen and then make sure you hit your two sessions every week without fail.

You want to make it as easy as possible to succeed. We all are susceptible to a psychological concept called "learned helplessness": Fail enough, and you come to expect failure. This is the foundation of bad fitness. Yet, all too often we set goals that increase the likelihood of failure. If you make your goals easy, you’re on the right track. Small successes will create positive reinforcement.

Give yourself two to three weeks to crush each mini-goal. Once you're consistently hitting the gym twice per week (or whatever makes sense for you), then add another goal. Then another. Each opportunity will give you the chance to build a habit you can master. As time goes on, you can make the goals much more specific and difficult. But when you do, you’ll be building on a solid foundation of habits that will make it very difficult to slide back to the old you.

It’s a Jedi mind trick for kicking ass. It's the equivalent of saying: “Don’t focus on the grade you want in a class; put all your energy into learning the material.” When that happens, it’s hard not to succeed.

I wish you a year of small victories, imperfection, and cheesecake (OK, maybe the cheesecake is for me). Whatever you do, don’t paint the picture of a life you wouldn’t want to live. It’s not necessary and definitely is not needed in order to achieve your health and fitness goals.

Adam Bornstein is a New York Times best-selling author and the founder of Born Fitness, a company on a mission to cut through the noise and share what you need to know to live a healthy, happy life. He extends that mission even further as Greatest’s Naked Truth columnist. Learn more on his profile page or follow BornFitness on Facebook.



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