Paleo, juice cleanses, detox diets, calorie counting, low-carb and six-pack abs seem to be at the top of the list!
“I’m new to this whole nutrition thing. Where do I start?” If your client is new to eating better, or has been stuck in a long-time rut and is ready for change, where do you start?
Of course, you don’t have to tackle all that at once. Instead, you should pick the biggest limiting factors you’re experiencing and start there. Add new practices one at a time as necessary and as you feel capable of dealing with them. Then, once nutritional deficiencies are addressed, you can start to focus on things like food quality (i.e. eat whole, minimally processed foods) and food amount (i.e. portions, calories, etc). But go slow. And be systematic.
Indeed, I can make people lean, strong, and healthy on a plant-based or a meat-based diet. I can help improve your health with organic, free-range foods and with conventional foods. I can lose weight on a low food budget or an unlimited one. It just takes a little know-how and a system for using the best practices across all diets.
This may be the most common question we’re asked. And, in some ways, it’s the most difficult to answer.
I recommend beginning with hand-size portion estimating instead. Here how it works:
- Your palm determines your protein portions.
- Your fist determines your veggie portions.
- Your cupped hand determines your carb portions.
- Your thumb determines your fat portions.
This system counts your calories for you, and gets your macronutrients lined up too, without having to do any fancy kitchen math. Plus, your hands are portable—they go wherever you go, making portion-sizing very convenient. In addition, your hands are generally scaled to your size—the bigger you are, the bigger your hands, the more food you need and the more food you get. And vice versa. Finally, it’s much easier to practice tuning into hunger and appetite cues without OCD-like reliance on calorie math.
Bottom line: you don’t need to eat grains. But, unless you have celiac disease or a FODMAP intolerance, you don’t need to avoid them either. (And even in those two scenarios, it’s only specific grains that need to be avoided). Most people follow a better, more health-promoting diet if they’re allowed grains in reasonable amounts, along with a wide array of other non-grain carb sources like fruit, potatoes, sweet potatoes, beans, lentils, etc.
However, if clients really want to get a six-pack in the healthiest possible way, they’ll need to follow these principles 90-95% of the time:
- Eat protein and vegetables at every meal.
- Include healthy fats at most meals.
- Eat a small amount of carbs post-workout only.
- Limit carbs at all other meals.
- Exercise intensely 4-5 times per week.
- Get at least 8 hours of sleep each night.
Armed with this information, you can have an honest conversation about whether your clients want the six-pack badly enough. (Or if they’d settle for moderately lean and healthy without giving up some of the other things they enjoy).
Contrary to popular media, most people s are best served by eating good quality whole foods in reasonable amounts, without having to focus on specific workout nutrition products or protocols. However, very advanced, hard-training clients and athletes have more unique needs. Endurance athletes, bodybuilders, or those looking to maximize muscle gain could add a protein and carbohydrate drink during their workout. We usually recommend about 15g of protein and 30g of carbohydrate per hour of exercise. Physique competitors, as well as people trying to maximize fat loss, could add branched chain amino acids (or essential amino acids) during their workout. We usually recommend 5-10g of BCAA or EAA per hour of exercise. In the end, rather than having one stock answer here, you need to be clear about who you’re working with. How hard do they train? How often? What are their goals? How is the rest of their diet?
However, it can be too restrictive for some folks. That’s why the Paleo diet seems to be evolving itself, right before our eyes. Nowadays it often allows things like red wine and grass-fed dairy, options that used to be “off limits”. In the end, Paleo likely gets more right than wrong. And if clients want to follow it, I can help them do it in a sane and reasonable manner. But for most, it’s unnecessary to follow such a strict dietary ideology. You can take the good from the paleo approach and get rid of the silly dogma.
- Protein deficient
- Extremely low calorie
- Blood sugar swings
- GI tract dysfunction
- Restrictive eating and deprivation
If doing a juice cleanse or detox diet helps a client get ready to make further helpful and sustainable changes in their life….all the power to you!! However, we prefer helping them build life-long skills and incorporate daily practices to improve their health, performance, and body composition without extreme (and unsustainable) things like detoxes and cleanses.
Sleep is just as important as nutrition and exercise when it comes to improving your health, performance, and body composition.
- Creating a sleep routine, including having a regular schedule
- Limiting alcohol and caffeine in the afternoon/evening
- Choosing de-stressing activities before bed
- Setting an appropriate room temperature for sleep
- Making the room dark
- Keeping the room quiet
- Waking up appropriately, with light exposure and soft noise
As for stress, it’s all about finding the sweet spot. Too much stress, or the wrong kind, can harm our health. Yet stress can also be a positive force in our lives, keeping us focused, alert, and at the top of our game.
- Meditation or yoga
- Outdoor time
- Snuggling a pet
- Listening to relaxing music
- Deep breathing
- Drinking green tea
#FitnessFixer