by Julie Stewart for the Beachbody blog
Eggnog. Pumpkin pie. All-day movie marathons. The holidays have a way of making even the most resolute exercisers stumble. Some holiday traps are obvious, like marshmallow sweet potato casserole (just say no to seconds). Others are more insidious (using whole wheat bread does not make stuffing healthy). But by far the greatest obstacles to staying lean are our own misconceptions, says Rebecca Rick, M.S., RDN, a sports dietitian at eNRG Performance in Littleton, Colorado. Here are four of the most common ones, and four easy solutions to help you greet the New Year slimmer and stronger than ever.
Myth: Americans gain average of 5 pounds between Thanksgiving and January 1st
Fact: Most people don’t plump up during the holidays. The average weight gain is around 1.7 pounds, according to a study in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Your move: Don’t obsess about what you eat, but do be strategic about it, says study author Jamie Cooper, Ph.D., an associate professor of food and nutrition at the University of Georgia. If you overindulge during Thanksgiving dinner, don’t sweat it—but also don’t gorge on leftovers for days afterward. Freeze extra food to eat in small portions during the next month or two. “Be careful about how and what you eat at holiday parties as well,” suggests Cooper. “If you’re going to a potluck, bring a healthy dish, because then you’ll know you have at least one nutritious option.” (Our suggestion: Roasted fennel and farro salad.)
Myth: You’re too busy to work out
Fact: “You’re not—especially during the holidays,” says Dale Wagner, Ph.D., an associate professor at Utah State University who studies holiday weight gain. Sure, high-calorie meals make you sluggish, and cold weather makes outdoor workouts unappealing. But if you’re cashing in extra PTO days in November and December, you probably have more hours than usual to sneak in a workout despite an increased demand to play Candy Land and watch The Grinch, says Wagner.
Your move: Get creative about burning calories. “Look at additional free time as an opportunity to do things that you normally wouldn’t do,” says Wagner, who suggests cross-country skiing or snowshoeing with family or friends instead of, say, sitting around the fire or television. Performed a moderate intensity, cross-country skiing torches as many calories as cross-country running (643 calories per hour on average for a 150 pound individual), while snowshoeing is similar to hiking (379 calories per hour on average).
Myth: If you’re already fit, you’re less likely to plump up
Fact: Being in shape doesn’t shield you from the effects of overindulgence and inactivity, according to a recent study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Yes, you have more “metabolically active tissue” (i.e., muscle) than most people. Yes, your metabolism operates in a higher gear if you work out regularly. No, those benefits don’t last long or protect you from a 3,000-calorie meal, like the average Thanksgiving dinner. “Generally, the benefits start to fade after a few days,” says study author Dale Schoeller, Ph.D., a professor emeritus of nutritional sciences at the University of Wisconsin. Stretch that out to two weeks, and your belly fat can rise by 7 percent, according to a meta-analysis in the Journal of Applied Physiology.
Your move: Stay focused. You don’t have to do the workouts you normally do, but do something (like the activities mentioned above). “And if you can, increase your step count to offset the caloric cost of indulgences,” says Schoeller. A brisk 30 minute walk can burn approximately 154 calories. An even better goal is to increase your total daily step count. Shoot for at least 7,500 steps a day, and do at least 3,000 of them at a cadence of 100 steps per minute, suggest researchers at the Walking Behavior Laboratory at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Myth: Whatever weight you gain, you’ll lose in the New Year
Fact: Odds are you won’t. Although most people only gain a pound or two during the holidays, the majority of them never lose it, according to scientists reporting in the New England Journal of Medicine. Not only do most people not follow through with their resolutions, but they also don’t curb their eating habits. Indeed, people tend to buy more calorie’s worth of food between January and March than during any other time in the year, according to a study by Cornell University. Why? Because while they buy more healthy foods, they don’t cut back on the unhealthy ones. “It’s called ‘cognitive bias’,” says study author David Just, Ph.D. “You pick up more veggies than you did last week, feel good about it, and reward yourself with a treat.” The result: A higher net caloric intake.
Your move: Treat grocery shopping like vacation packing: Make a list, determine what’s essential, and leave half the remaining items on the shelf. That should give you enough indulgences to satisfy your cravings without inflating your bottom line (just so we’re clear, that’s a bad thing in the context of weight loss). Also, keep your grocery lists stored on your phone so you can figure out which high-calorie foods you indulge in too often, says Just.
So before you reach for the Rolaids, let’s put our heads together and get strategic about how we’re going to make this Holiday season the healthiest ever. Join me and a few of my pals for a Healthy Holidays online fitness and nutrition group starting November 30. We’ll talk turkey, share tips, recipes, humor and, of course we workout a little too. 30 minutes a day to be exact.
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